![]() ![]() Not if you have a group of religious fanatics devoted to shattering or disenchanting all the axes, maybe some powerful wizards Malestrom Pulse the battlefield when the fighting is over. Actually, why even sharpen it? Just cut myself and get a new one. Your entire campaign would have to revolve around how you stop the world from being overrun by bloodforge axes. A few centuries of war and you'd have land fills with these things. One battle and you'd easily make 10,000 or more. There would be literally hundreds of thousands of these axes everywhere. They say his final wish in life was for war eternal, and by his blade it continues to this day." ![]() "Long have legends spoken of The Bloodforged Battle Axe, it ushered in great war and fueled it spread all have seen one but none the original as it is said to reside in the Lich King's Necropolis. My guess is its only non-legendary because they would have to give it text to ignore the legend rule. I like to thing this is THE Bloodforged Battle Axe, not just a Bloodforged Battle Axe. It seems like a pretty awesome magical axe if you but it in the hands of an evil lich, each warrior killed arises with a new axe. I dunno I could see it working in a D&D campaign. I'm pretty sure this would get rejected as stupid by my D&D group and we let quite a few ridiculous things slide into our campaigns. An axe that draws blood and starts it's own ritual to make copies of itself then drops to the ground for someone to pick up. If this had started in reverse (as flavor), I don't think it would have made it past initial discussion because it's a bit lame as a concept. It's more that this card strikes me as something that started as purely a mechanic and then someone overlaid some clumsy flavor on top of it to try and explain it. Suspension of disbelief is not a problem for me at all. And, if we've accepted cat people and planeswalkers and magical jittes and etc etc then there's not really a problem making another leap here. ![]() Makes sense to me when you factor in the art. Since the blade looks mystical with the purple *****, I imagine the flavor is that once the axe gets planeswalker blood it just starts the ritual process on its own. Publishers use these marks when books are returned to them.It's forged by blood, and when you hit a player you're drawing blood.
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