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#Karn Silver Golem
mtg-cards-hourly · 1 year
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Karn, Silver Golem
Artist: Mark Zug TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
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Karn and SecUnit would get along so well
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guildmageashleah · 1 year
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Karn Liberated by Dai-xt
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artsharbo · 2 years
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Jace is a stinky boy and i dont like him
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xantchaslegacy · 9 months
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Lyese
(A March of the Machine Aftermath fanfic; please give the story on AO3 a read and leave a comment if you can ;) )
Lyese was gone.
Lyese was gone, and the sky was empty.
And below, Phyrexia reeled.
...
Glissa stood alone. To every side the open sands of the Glorious Facade rolled away in shallow hills, fine grains of pearl-white sand cool and still beneath her heels.
Not even the wind stirred those grains.
And Lyese, that green sun of Phyrexia, and of Mirrodin before it, was gone.
They’ve all gone.
Every sun that’s ever graced Phyrexia.
Or Mirrodin before it.
Black reigned above Glissa. Not even the vivid-dark light of Ingle, the black sun, but an empty, blank, unbroken black. Lifeless black. Only the far edges of the sky (if you could call it a sky) were interrupted, by tilted, moldering monuments to Phyrexia and its praetors. Silent sentinels lording over nothing at all.
Glissa’s eyes searched the black.
Searched in vain.
Even without the light of the suns, she could see the plane around her clearly. The sands, the monuments, the wandering figure of the occasional phyrexian pilgrim, one of those pensive, nomadic creatures who graced the facade of late. Everything was thrown into sharp, shadow-less relief, as though illuminated on all sides by a colorless, unseen moon.
Whether this strange, source-less light was the effect of Phyrexia’s banishment to a pocket space beyond the multiverse, or of some as-of-yet unknown property of the argent shell their new Phyrexia had been built upon, no one yet knew.
Karn had said once, when Glissa was fitting him to be the next father of machines, that Mirrodin was sunless at the time of its creation. He had called it “Argentum” then, in the eponymous nature of a demigod. Argentum had been empty too, if the silver golem’s ravings were to be believed. Empty but for the blinkmoths. Empty, but beautiful and precise and rich in detail. Mathematical artistry in planar form.
A bitter smile split Glissa’s lips. Urabrask would have loved such a thing, that form-loving fool.
Now the exterior of the plane was an unending uniformity of sand, hex-plates...and these gaudy monuments to the glory of Elesh Norn’s Phyrexia.
Glory . Glissa spat a wad of tarry oil onto the ground. It shivered on the surface for a moment before soaking into the sands. What arrogance drives a conqueror to build monuments before she’s even triumphed? As if New Phyrexia were ever even hers entirely. As if she’d won us all over before she planted her ruinous realm-breaking tree and challenged all the multiverse.
She felt the lie in these thoughts as they filtered through her mind. Just out of sight over the horizon, there was a statue to Vorinclex. Further in the other direction, one of Urabrask, heretic and rebel though he had been. Phyrexians of all factions had joined in Norn’s invasion, even if some had dissented, and the monuments would not let her forget.
Glissa had walked as far as she could from those monuments for...for what, really?
An uninterrupted view of the blank, pitch nothing that surrounds us now?
Her eyes twitched; a hunter’s acuity taking in the whole expanse above. Again and again. Moment by moment. Alert for even the smallest movement or disruption to that black uniformity. A secondary set of optic nerves, connected to a lens in her eyes that saw heat signatures, flickered on and off, seeing the same blank field.
Yes, that’s exactly why I came here. Exactly why I keep returning. Confirmation that the suns have fled our sky.
No.
That they’ve been torn from their place.
White Bringer, red Sky Tyrant, the blue Eye of Doom, black Ingle...the green Ugly Child.
Lyese. Lyese was not an ugly. And she was a woman grown. A child for a time, perhaps, but it was beautiful.
No, not it.
She.
Glissa grimaced. Not at the sentiment itself, but because, no matter how hard she tried to recall, she did not know where the sentiment came from. The Mirran goblins had had a vast mythology prescribed to the suns. She had familiarized herself with that mythology, but she also knew their name for the green sun, ‘the ugly child’ was not appropriate. She knew Lyese was a name for the green sun, she also knew it was not their name for her. It was Glissa’s name for her. It had been her name for the green sun for many years, before she’d known Phyrexia’s touch.
She was so certain of it, she just couldn’t say why.
She moved forward. One step. Two steps. The facade had been as dangerous a place as any in New Phyrexia before the great invasion, but now it lay inert. Swallowing, confounding sands had fallen still. Wandering predators, the outcasts of the layers below, still haunted the corners of the place, but most had fled back into the lower spheres in the time since the plane had been cut off from rest of the multiverse.
Fertile hunting grounds, once. Now it was still and sterile. Prey could see and hear a predator coming miles off. This glorious facade was the furthest thing from the Hunter’s Maze. Even the Quiet Forge had ledges and heights for a predator to pounce from. Even the Jin’s surgical bays had tunnels and chambers to lie in ambush – and prey worth chasing.
There wasn’t much prey worth hunting on New Phyrexia now, and the hunt was no longer about growing strong for the Grand Evolution, but simple, mean survival. The plane could no longer afford to squander its resources pursuing the disparate objectives of every sphere and faction.
Glissa grit her teeth. Stepped faster. Even in the absence of wind, the cold air rushing past felt soothing.
The facade was no place for a hunter, but it was the only place she could get away.
The only place she could breath.
This is as far as any of us can go without leaving, and leaving is no longer an option.
She’d felt most comfortable above the surface of the plane for as long as she could remember. Maybe that was why she’d pushed to unleash the beasts of the vicious swarm on the Mirrans long before any other faction had deigned to emerge. It had been balm to leave the artificial light of the interior…
...to hunt and bask in the light of Lyese...
Glissa scowled. Rushed forward even faster.
Her responsibilities in the spheres below felt distant here. The facade was a reprieve. A precious rest and intermission from the burdens of being a leader, and a mother to a world thrice-orphaned.
Veins pulsed in the back of Glissa’s skull, beneath copper cables of hair. Each throb a phyrexian, waiting still in its incubating pod somewhere on the spheres below, destined to emerge too late to take any part in the invasion for which they’d been germinated and crafted. Each throb a child who would emerge instilled with an undeniable purpose they would never be able to fulfill.
And it fell to Glissa and the other remaining nursemaids of this abandoned Phyrexia to find purpose on their behalf.
Her skull pounded. She had attuned herself to the birthing pods of Phyrexia at Norn’s suggestion, but using the means of the Grand Evolution. She’d thought it a clever subversion of Norn’s machinations, to incorporate her own innovations, crotus-born organs and enhancements, into the final design of the birthing and conversion pods, but all she’d done in the end was saddle herself with a responsibility that weighed down like shackles of blightsteel.
Another succession of pulses, bringing her head close to aching.
Glissa did not want to be a mother.
The Glissa she had been before Phyrexia had not wanted to be a mother either. She hadn’t even wanted to be a warrior. Not in the way that was expected of the elves of the Tangle, at least. Though she only remembered this life in brief, erratic flashes, or those rare stretches when she dreamed, she was sure of this much. The Glissa-before-Phyrexia had only wanted to be free.
But Mirrodin was not a plane for being free. It had never been such a place, no matter how much the Mirran resistance romanticized the times before New Phyrexia’s ascendancy.
It had been sterile from the start. This much they knew from Karn. It had been empty. Unintended for any life except for Karn’s guests - the demigods that had been the planeswalkers of old. When life had been brought to its sterile surface, by Karn’s mad steward, Memnarch, that life found a hostile world waiting for it. Grain and game scraped from what cold metal would allow to grow on it. A menagerie of artifact predators that swept across the plane to cull and to kill.
Not a home , but a slaughterhouse. A petri dish for Memnarch to grow a planeswalking spark so he could steal it and leave that world of barren metal behind .
K arn had lamented Memnarch at length in his more lucid moments. He had not meant to be a parent either. The weeping regret he felt in his failure at that role had made Glissa uneasy in a way that even his most frantic ravings had not.
Perhaps because it affected me directly, in another life.
Memnarch’s world produced Glissa. Glissa and a spark that should have made her free, but made her prey instead – the indefinite prey of Memnarch the mad. That world had forced the old Glissa to be the meanest, lowest thing imaginable: a survivor. Prey.
None of that made her any more inclined toward motherhood, and neither her death nor rebirth had changed that inclination. To live as a phyrexian was enough. To hunt as a phyrexian had been sublime.
And yet she had let motherhood be thrust upon her.
Norn had been clever about it. Dressed motherhood in skins (skin...that hateful stuff) that she knew Glissa would find appealing. The role as an alpha not just for the Vicious Swarm, but for all the fledgling cubs of Phyrexia. A mentor for the incubated, the new swarm that would prey upon the every inch of the multiverse that their invasion tree could spread its branches into.
She would have an avenue to ensure the Grand Evolution benefited all factions of Phyrexia. Through the invasion, she would have brought the blessing of strength to countless worlds. Thanks to her, all would have known the freedom to evolve past the limits the incompleat put on themselves and others in compensation for their weakness. Liberation from all the expectations and trappings and manipulations and hypocrisies of “civilized” fools.
Glissa clenched her fists. Copper on copper ground together. Sand ground under her heels as she strode on.
In truth, she’d been nothing more than a nursery guard. A kept spouse keeping Norn’s house in order, worrying over germs in the womb while the self-proclaimed “Mother of Machines” stood on her parapet, conducting the actual invasion efforts.
Efforts that failed. Efforts that set back everything their New Phyrexia had worked towards.
And just like Norn’s incompetence had stolen the future of the Swarm, just as Norn’s cunning (and the interference of that worm, Tezzeret) had stolen Karn and Glissa’s place at the helm of Phyrexia years ago.
More pounding. Glissa touched the wind-cooled copper of her palm to her forehead, to ease the sensation.
If Norn was wrong to seize control, and to force herself on all the burgeoning beliefs of New Phyrexia, was I truly any better?
Hadn’t she been acting the mother to Karn then? Hadn’t she betrayed the swarm’s disdain for individuality by taking on that role? Hadn’t they excised Yawgmoth from their dogma of predators and prey for his failures? Didn’t making any one phyrexian the father or mother of machines run contrary to what she aspired to?
No. It was not the same. I sought to install leadership to oversee that nature was left alone to run its course. It was not for the glory or honor that came with such a role, but for the functionality. The practicality of it.
A rationale as fragile as the facade, but it would do for now.
That Glissa had believed Norn would ever hand her back any fraction of that power in earnest was laughable. She should have been suspicious when so many of the caretakers of the incubating and converted proved to be members of Norn’s Alabaster Host.
But she had persisted in her role, down in the depths of the spheres. A better caretaker than most of the Orthodoxy's host, at least. Even now, she had to move mountains to gather the hands needed to tend to the remaining pods. She had been so subservient to those ends during the invasion that she had not even been present on the surface to say a final farewell to Lyese, before the Zhalfirins stole her away.
Not been present for a final farewell.
Maybe it was justice, for her folly.
Glissa halted, inspecting the sands around her. She might as well have not moved, for all the change in scenery her strides had brought.
Her muscles tensed, and for a single, thrilling moment, Glissa warred with the impulse to attack the ground with her claws, and tear a new hole through the facade to Mirrex below. It would be a delicious catharsis , but she had to be a builder now, and tearing the facade down would only be denying Phyrexia space that it would badly need in the days ahead.
W aste not, want not.
Slobad was at work on a scheme to reinforce this outermost sphere into a surface they could actually build something meaningful upon. The facade had been made at first out of little but scrap metal and malice. A structure as mean as the spite that had motivated it, and just as flimsy. Norn’s mouthpieces had claimed constructing the Facade was a strategic decision. One to expedite the task of defeating the Mirran rebels by demoralizing them. Any fool could have guessed it would only aggravate. Solidify the Mirran resolve and spur them to fight all the fiercer. Norn had to have known that, but she was, in the end, a spiteful creature. A cruel creature.
It was by malice the mirrans had their suns taken from them. Had their suns blotted out.
And now those suns were lost to Phyrexia.
Maybe that was justice.
Glissa shuddered. That was not a phyrexian thought. Strength was the only justice in the multiverse. Triumph was the only vindication that held any value in the world.
And yet, Glissa could not help but feel Lyese would have found a justice in what had happened. She had always had a strong sense of justice, especially when it came to punishing the guilty. Especially after her parents had died.
Glissa blinked.
Parents? The only parent the suns of Mirrodin had was the core. And she was certain none of the goblin myths had mentioned any parent other than the great mother. Certainly not a mother and father, as Glissa felt certain Lyese had had.
Lyese is a sun, not a daughter.
Or was she a moon?
Again, Glissa tilted her eyes to where the sky was not. Lyese continued to be nowhere in sight.
Lyese had wanted to be a wife. A mother. Glissa could never empathize with that, but she wanted it for Lyese. She wanted Lyese to be happy.
Glissa scowled. Why did she know that? Where did it come from? The notion had vexed her for years, and not a single comple a ted mirran goblin had ever corroborated these notions of Lyese. They did not even know the name.
And why did she miss Lyese?
Because Lyese was strong and bright and beautiful.
She is a sun.
It is a sun.
A strong, beautiful sun.
But strong as it was, if Glissa didn’t know where Lyese was, then how could she protect it when it needed protecting? How could Glissa embrace her when she cried? How could-
Glissa grabbed at her shoulder with metal-shod fingers and gripped it tightly.
Where is this coming from?
The pain was just inconvenience for her body, but it centered her.
It was all the losing that was causing her to lose focus. Losing Karn. Losing authority to Norn and the machinations of that shit-licker Tezzeret. Losing the invasion. Losing Benzir. Losing Lukka, and so many of the Swarm’s other beautiful predators.
Losing Geth, even, had stung. Grasping, treacherous buffoon though he was, Geth had been familiar, even when New Phyrexia was not, and Glissa was quickly running out of familiar things to anchor herself when everything became heavy. She would work with Ixhel to keep this new, reduced Phyrexia intact, but she would never forgive Atraxa’s little maggot of a child for re-purposing Geth.
Everything familiar is falling away.
Glissa drove her claws deeper into her shoulder.
The pain centered her.
...
The pain helped her focus.
Glissa’s eyes snapped open.
Someone was coming.
She did not move, or make any further outward indication she noticed that the ground was vibrating, just slightly. That there was a shifting in the grains of sand in the distance behind her. A predator did not scare so easily, and…
...
...and besides, she recognized the tread of the creatures approaching her.
They were welcome.
So she waited, breathing steady. She tilted back her head, eyes scanning the sky.
Just in case.
“Glissa?”
“Is something wrong, Slobad?” She kept her back turned, but she could picture the two figures behind her. One made of solid-forged steel, guided by the keenest mind left on the plane. One huddled and bristling, but bulging with muscle that put the steel body of the other to shame. Smaller creatures bustled and skittered at this second figure’s feet.
“Just came to see you, huh? Everything alright?”
S he didn’t answer. D idn’t know what to say to that. So she let them approach, turning only when they were within five paces.
Vorinclex was still technically shorter than Slobad, even though he’d been eating and growing at a voracious pace since the Zhalfirins had separated his head from his body. It was a w ound that would normally have been trivial for him to regenerate from , but the Zhalfiri ns’ cursed time mage had cast an enchantment on Vorinclex that slowed his normally prodigious healing to less than a crawl. The spell had persisted beyond Phyrexia’s banishment to this void, and the nominal praetor of the Vicious Swarm was still no larger than a juvenile vorrac.
But he was growing, at least. Growing, and more than a match for most any creature left in, above, or below the Hunter’s Maze.
S curr y ing about Vorinclex’s legs were small, hunched, raptor-like creatures of chrome, poking at the sands and sniffing the air. T wo of them were perched on Vorinclex’ back.
Glissa gave a tight smile as one of the little chrome raptors trotted up to her, and examined her legs with small tilts of its head. Norn hadn’t tried to make a parent of Vorinclex, but he had insisted no one else was suited to raise Jin’s cannibal larvae into proper phyrexians.
Slobad coughed. “Glissa? How are you?”
“Did you smell me all the way up here?” Glissa did not like ignoring Slobad, but she still didn’t have an answer for him. Instead she ran a hand along Vorinclex’s snout. He growled appreciatively, though she knew, and he knew that she knew, that he had no tactile feeling in his steel bone carapace. “Stronger and sharper with every day. I knew that meddling mage couldn’t suppress your prowess for long.”
S lobad shook his head. “ Not Vorey. Myrabrask saw you, huh? Sent a message down to the other myr in the F urnace.”
Glissa spun around, grinding the sand beneath her heels and glaring at the nearest monument. It was in bad repair, even by the standard of the facade, sitting crooked in the sand like some titanic tree, a broad mask in the shape of Elesh Norn’s own face crumbling atop it.
And there, in the upper reaches of the porcelain metal, a dark-red form skulked, perched on the mask like a bird, half hidden with a single beady eye fixed on Glissa from atop a curved, beak-like head.
“From master of the forge to a skulking snitch,” Glissa hissed. “I wish you hadn’t put him back together, Slobad.”
Slobad shrugged. “Waste not, want not, huh? He’s been handy, hasn’t he?”
Glissa grunted, and turned away from the monument. She didn’t trust anything sneaky enough to get so close without her notice.
Still, she didn’t begrudge Slobad finding a use of Urabrask’s parts. He remained as good at skulking in the periphery as he’d been in his previous life, and honest to a fault. The information he’d gathered on the still-power-hungry portions of the Thane and Orthodoxy factions around the core kept their outer layers one step ahead of any scheming.
“So there’s nothing wrong?” She looked up from Vorinclex.
“Nothing you don’t already know about, huh?”
“Right.”
Glissa raised her gaze further, back to the sky above Slobad. On top of the utter upheaval among what was left of the Thanes and the basilica phyrexians, t here were growing concerns about how many of their offloaded resources were forever lost across the multiverse to the nigh-countless planes that Realmbreaker had linked together. Phyrexia had, in effect, gutted itself to empty out armies across every world in reach, banking on the prediction that what they spent would be replenished by the worlds they claimed. Very little had been brought back, relative to what Phyrexia sent out by the time the invasion tree had been hijacked, and the enemy had swapped P hyrexia’s place in the multiverse with this pocket of nothing where Zhalfir sat for centuries in stasis.
The lingering unrest between the spheres and the factions therein was almost trivial next to these logistical issues. The orthodoxy and the thanes did not have enough military might to exert the kind of authority they coveted. The former had spent themselves more completely than any other faction in the invasion, and the latter where as divided by in- f ighting as ever, the deaths of multiple thanes having done nothing to make their sphere more united.
The introduction of several not-fully-compleated, or even completely incompleat creatures from other planes was another issue. Branches that led out to the multiverse led right back to Phyrexia, and not every creature from the planes beyond that currently inhabited their isolated world had been brought their by their invasion forces. Ezuri, of all creatures, had allied with Vishgraz to gather these disparate planar orphans into a loose group that remained incompleat and as-of-yet unaffiliated with either the thanes, the orthodoxy, or Glissa’s even more tenuous coalition of Forge, Swarm, and Engine.
Slobad tapped a steely finger against his arm. The sound rang like a bell, soft and clear over the silent dunes. “Another council soon, yeah? See if we can’t talk our way to peace?”
Unlikely.
“Peace is a fever dream of the flesh,” Glissa answered. “I’ll settle for antagonistic coexistence at this point, so long as those fools don’t rip what’s left of Phyrexia to pieces.”
“You gotta talk to Ixhel at some point, huh?” Slobad tapped a nervous finger against his side. “Geth’s gone.”
“Geth’s gone,” Glissa echoed. She scooped up the Jin-raptor closest to her and set it in Slobad’s hand. The little creature tapped its snout against the goblin’s forearm, and started to climb its way up to the shoulder. “And a child holds the key to controlling the Thanes and the Orthodoxy both.”
“I’ll take Ixhel over the Alabaster Host worshiping some scarecrow made out of Norn’s guts, huh?” Slobad was flexing his arm up and down, making an obstacle course of the limb for the Jin-raptor. The goblin heads adorning Slobad’s shoulder moaned petulantly as the chrome creature clambered closer.
“A low-hanging fruit,” Glissa replied with a tight smile.
They hadn’t even found Norn’s pieces, in the end. Glissa had hoped, in small part, that she might at least be able to take out her frustrations on the Grand Cenobite’s corpse, but not a trace remained. She would have put a bounty out on the pieces, but the remainder of the Orthodoxy had put that exact call out already, and as far as anyone could tell from the wailing that still pervaded that inner sphere, no one had delivered.
“Three out of five spheres is more than we could have hoped for already,” Slobad remarked with a shrug, leaving the little raptor dangling from the lower lip of one of his shoulder-heads. The little thing squeaked and rasped as it pulled itself up, and started pecking the heads on the nose.
“More than we could have hoped for, and yet not enough.”
“When did you become the pessimist?” Slobad asked.
“I’m ever-evolving.”
“Still, well done so far, huh?”
Glissa nodded. She had thankfully engaged in plentiful diplomacy with the Progress Engine, even before Norn’s ascendancy over the other factions. Vorinclex’s constant and vitriolic spats with Jin-Gitaxias had made it necessary to pay that faction especial attention to ensure the sniping across territory had not unduly slowed the Grand Evolution. That groundwork had paid off in the past few months in securing gitaxian cooperation in negotiations with the inner spheres.
Slobad, in turn, had been vital to securing the cooperation of the fickle Furnace host. He and his newer, even more hidden Myrabrask.
Still, difficulties abounded. The gitaxians couldn't decide whether they loved or hated councils to discuss the way forward. One day they would be clamoring for an audience with every faction to proclaim they had divined some great advancement that would bring Phyrexia back to a state of flourishing. The next someone would press them on their research and the shrimp-spined fools would slink away to their labs and hiss that they did not wish to be disturbed. 
The Furnace layer remained taciturn and sullen. Preoccupied with their craft to the point of obsession. With Norn gone the personalities with the...loudest sway seemed content to treat Urabrask’s remains as figurehead and Slobad as a tolerant (meaning ignorable when it suited them) leader, following the hidden praetor's final dictates to persist in their quiet building and development. 
“We all have so much to offer,” Glissa said, half to herself. “If only we could act in harmony. If only we could converge naturally.”
Slobad tilted his head, quizzically. The raptor at his shoulder echoed this movement.
“Norn was wrong to partition New Phyrexia,” Glissa said, louder. “She was wrong for this desperate, sad attempt to ape the glory of the nine spheres. What has it benefited the Grand Evolution? Or the Great Synthesis, or the Great Work, for that matter? It was all for her vanity and the vanity of the Orthodoxy to be placed at the physical center, to keep Phyrexia divided into its singular colors, rather than letting them mix and make each other stronger. Divide us and lord over us, that’s what she did. We were meant to grind up against each other. To come together as a strong whole.”
Slobad nodded, though his lips were tight. “Is that what Phyrexia is?”
“It’s what it should be.”
“But is it what we are?”
It was Glissa’s turn to purse her lips. Old P hyrexia had been a parasite, ultimately, thriving only where it was able to steal and invade to claim the resources of others. What were the first phyrexians, after all, except for weak, arrogant, xenophobic, aristocratic flesh that had stolen the stronger flesh of other cultures, other bodies, to prop themselves up?
T he pounding in her head was back. Throbbing. Searing.
That was an incompleat way of looking at things, of course. The strength to steal for one’s own benefit was, after all, strength. Doesn’t the predator steal the life and vitality from the prey it consumes? Would anyone ever suggest that a predator apologize for taking that which it is strong enough to take?
Something nudged Glissa’s shoulder, nearly bowling her over and breaking her train of thought. Vorinclex had lunged at her, and was pouncing again, jaws wide.
She laughed and threw her body into a spin. Her foot landed along the side of Vorinclex’s face, and sent him sprawling sideways in the sand. The jin-raptors scurried all around them, flailing their arms and chirping shrilly.
Vorinclex swiped at her with one paw, then another. She dodged both, and when he swiped again, she knocked it aside with a savage counter-blow.
She hooted. “Such soft blows, cub!”
Vorinclex lunged again, but she seized him around the neck and threw herself onto the ground, dragging him to the sand with a heavy THUD.
They lay there entangled for a long minute, Glissa’s arms locked firm around Vorinclex’s neck.
“Better to – hrk – act than to stew in useless thoughts,” Vorinclex grunted.
“Better be strong if you wish to act against me,” Glissa grunted in return.
Vorinclex laughed at that. Most creatures would not know his laugh from the other fierce vocalizations of beasts, but he was Glissa’s own beating heart, and she knew.
The raptors knew too, and they swarmed the both of them, chirping and pecking.
The two disengaged and rose to their feet. Glissa gathered two of the raptors as she rose, and tossed them onto Vorinclex’ back, where they clung.
“A gathering then, soon.”
“Yeah.” Slobad dropped his shoulder-riding raptor onto Vorinclex’ back as well. “With Forge and Engine leadership, plus Ixhel and Ezuri. We’ll need to make sure the gitaxians behave this time, huh?”
Glissa nodded. “ The progress engine can posture all they want, but we have resources, and we’re the only factions willing to work with him and not above him. Unctus is too proud to acknowledge equals, but Malcator isn’t as fool-headed– he’ll wrangle the m into line.”
“And we trust Malcator to get the others in line?”
“I trust Malcator to know the value of having his house in order,” Glissa flexed her wrists. Both her arms looked the same now, for the first time in a long time. Her sickle lacked practicality on this new front, and she suspected, would antagonize those she wished to bring into the fold.
“Malcator’s not the only loud voice in the Progress Engine.”
“Yes, but he is the most stubborn by leagues. Unctus doesn’t have the pull to displace him, and he knows it. Threx just wants to get back to his work. We’ll have the surgical bays on our side.”
Vorinclex growled, just low enough for Glissa to detect, at Threx’s name. The chrome butcher had been all too keen to get his own claws on Jin’s children.
“Optimistic,” Slobad said.
“It’s that or defeatist. I thought you believed in New Phyrexia.”
“I’ve got brains enough to know Phyrexia’s the only thing that can save any of us. Not so sure Phyrexia can be saved though.”
“What choice do we have but to try?”
“You’re right, Glissa. You know I know that’s right, huh?”
Glissa smiled. “I know. Go back, Slobad. I’ll find you both when I return.” She tapped her forehead against Vorinclex’s. “Go. Eat and grow. I need you strong again soon, and there’s nothing worth consuming up here.”
“No.” Vorinclex nudged back against her head. “Nothing but memories. Those won’t sustain you, either.”
“No, but I’ll linger here a little longer all the same.”
Vorinclex grunted, but turned trudged away.
“Stay close”
The little chrome creatures clustered near to his sides, running at a pitter-patter jog to keep up with his longer strides. In the spheres below, Vorinclex left the larvae to hunt and forage on their own, but around the surface, or the remains of the Basilica, he kept them nearby. Norn’s ruinous interference into the Swarm’s evolutionary aspirations had made him protective, arguably to the point of detriment, in the production of new predators.
Glissa grit her teeth. Vorinclex resented as much as she did the way Norn had wasted Lukka. A fine predator, and a grand addition to the swarm. So much potential for evolution, and Norn had thrown him away to die in a pointless exercise against a whole world of beasts. Of course even an apex predator would die if pitted against a whole world. Norn had done it just to spite them. So she would have an example to point to when she needed to set the other factions against the Grand Evolution. ‘See how this planewalker who chose the path of the swarm fared,’ she would have said. ‘See how their path pales besides the glory of the orthodoxy.’
Well Norn had gotten what she deserved in the end. All her plotting and bluster and now she was pieces and parts – porcelain rubble on who-knows-what world that would do no more conquering.
Glissa wondered if her pieces were on Zhalfir, rotting under the light of...
“Slobad?”
The goblin stopped short, and turned about to face her. He’d waited a few seconds longer than Vorinclex had, but was turning to leave when she called out. Vorinclex kept his pace, stalking away with a muted urgency.
“Yeah?”
“Who was Lyese?”
Slobad shifted. His unease was not phyrexian. Not really. But he was a greater help and reassurance than anything else on this plane, and Glissa would take that, even if it came with the unease of the flesh. Even if he cried at times, when he thought no-one was watching him .
It was rare to see a phyrexian cry, but the bodily structures that allowed the process were left in place for most compleated sapients who had the capacity originally. Jin-Gitaxias, during a long-ago convening of the praetors, had explained it thusly to Vorinclex, in his usual haughty way:
"We've found it sensible to allow this biological release for imperfect emotions that might otherwise build up to tear one of the compleat apart on a psychological level. While it might do us good to remove the capacity for such a buildup entirely, eventually, at present it is too much a liability to have a large portion of our population susceptible to."
"Not that you would concern yourselves with such complexities," He had added unnecessarily, as was his habit.  "Working as you do with beasts."
“I’d tell you if I could, huh? Geth knew...but I don’t know if Vishgaz still has those memories. And besides...” Slobad grimaced. “Geth said they would break your heart. He was very happy about that, actually.”
“My heart is too strong for that.”
“Maybe.”
They stared at each other. Slobad. Vorinclex. Glissa would never let any harm come to these two. She had lost more than she could remember, but as long as she had them, she would persevere.
“Not today then,” She whispered, barely loud enough for Slobad to hear.
“Lyese is safe, though,” Slobad said. “At least...Geth told me she’d been sent away, and away from here must be some bit of safe, huh?
“Even after the invasion?” Glissa asked.
Slobad only lowered his head.
“Right. It is not in our nature to hope. Only to do.”
“We do what we can,” Slobad said. “Waste not, want not.”
Then he was off, following the prints Vorinclex had left in the sand. The onetime-praetor was gone already, disappeared into a hole at the base of a many-armed monument in the distance. Glissa turned away. She could tell by Slobad’s heavy, halting tread that he was stopping every few paces to glance back at her.
To make sure she was alright.
Alright was debatable, and beside the point. She was, at least, not without a pack. This was good. The scriptures, so far as she understood the interpretations of factions outside the Swarm, had little to say on the concept of being alone. The compleat were sufficient in all things, it was true, but outside the cowardly work of sleeper agents, it was pre-supposed in most texts that phyrexians worked among and besides phyrexians, and that in their inevitable spread across the multiverse, phyrexians would all be, always, among their peers.
All will be one.
It was good to not be alone. To have others. To have a pack.
A cluster of mites scuttled across the sands, some distance away. The creatures were slowly learning how to mold the sands of the facade into burrows and nests.
Glissa let out a slow breath.
I am not alone, but this new life is lonely, all the same. 
She’d come out here in the past, after Norn had erected the facade. There had been something comforting about the suns. The artificial light of the Hunter’s Maze had been a great achievement for the Swarm, but it was not the same as the moons...as the suns...as that daughter and child and…
...and what?
At times Glissa even missed the blue and the red and the white suns. She had come up here to the surface before to ponder them too, on rarer occasions. And their names…
Bruenna? Bosh? Raksha?
These were not the goblin names for those suns either, but Glissa was less sure that they had ever been the names of the suns, though something in her crotus-enhanced brain connected them nonetheless. 
A wave of nausea gripped Glissa, and she hugged herself closer, half by reflex to steady herself, and half consciously, copper claws pinching her arms. 
These spells had come in waves, nigh-paralyzing lows that she couldn't control, punctuating the longer, more stable periods. Standing there on as solid a surface as the facade could offer, she felt as if the ground beneath her had given away entirely. 
By the spheres, but I miss Lyese!
Glissa breathed, and spread her arms. Slowly, she flexed each hand, then her arms, then her shoulders. She was strong. She had her pack. All was not lost for her or for Phyrexia. 
So why do I care so much about a sun?
Glissa brought her hands back to her side.
Why does its absence feel like part of myself is lost?
Oil ran freely from her eyes, streaming harder than ever.
Why my worry for the sun's safety, its health, its...happiness? Glissa hardly fretted as much over these things for her own comrades, the closest of her pack excepted. 
A tremor hit Glissa’s knees. She would not fall. She would not kneel here. Still, she brought her hand to her mouth and gripped her jaw with talons of copper.
So why?
The flow of oil splashed down onto the white sands. Dark shapes formed in the pools and soaked into the grains.
Why do I miss Lyese?
"Lyese" is unofficial Fan Content permitted under the Fan Content Policy. Not approved/endorsed by Wizards. Portions of the materials used are property of Wizards of the Coast. ©Wizards of the Coast LLC.
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incorrect-mtg · 1 year
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Flavor Text Highlights - Weatherlight
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Cool - Thran Forge
“This will work,” Gerrard called to the elves as he used the forge to strengthen the aboroth, “but if it doesn’t, we won’t survive to care.”
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Funny - Null Rod
Gerrard: “But it doesn’t do anything!” Hanna: “No—it does nothing.”
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Worldbuilding - Shattered Crypt
“You must be mad to want one such as I aboard the Weatherlight. But I would be mad to remain here with my rotting family. I accept.” —Crovax
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Emotional - Tendrils of Despair
“Because I am incapable of tears does not mean I have no need to shed them.” —Karn, silver golem
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markrosewater · 1 year
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Can there be different cards sharing a name?
- "Karn, Silver Golem" - Legendary Enchantment
- "Karn, Silver Golem" - Legendary Land
- "Karn, Silver Golem" - Legendary Instant
- "Karn, Silver Golem" - Legendary Battle
I suppose you don't plan to do this, but if it ever happens, how will the rules be applied to them?
We have no plans for two different cards (save for some Un-shenanigins) sharing the same name.
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magicwithclass · 3 months
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Pigeons poop on karn. I am preserving mtg lore! This is canon just read the flavor text. That fact alone makes Xanthic statue worthy of being a reserved list card. It is also one of very few cards that begin with the letter x. If you want to make a flavor deck built around Karn silver golem than you are definitely considering this guy but this card is awful. 8 mana and this does..... nothing. It does absolutely nothing for 8 mana. Then, for 5 more mana you can make it an 8/8 artifact creature until end of turn? For 13 mana? We have eldrazi now! This is one bulk card that is probably going to remain bulk. It is just so outclassed in all possible ways and I can not think of any deck that would play this before considering 10 other more playable cards. It seems unlikely that this card will ever find a home which is sad because that means birds are probably going to continue to poop on it outside. I am pooping on it too because I cannot possibly suggest this card in any way even from a financial speculation mindset. This card WAS over 6 dollars back km spring of 2021 but if you have been reading my thoughts on other reserved list cards you will have seen the pattern that even bulk reserved list cards spiked during this time period due to massive but nonsusstainable buyouts. Most of the cards that spiked crashed not long after and today some of those cards are back to bulk prices. This card actually had a slight rebound in April of 2023 wherein was over 2 dollars. There are so many other reserved list cards under two bucks that I have no idea why this card was that expensive in 2023. Even now at over one dollar I say this card is over priced? Why would you want this card? Is is that it is colorless so it goes in any deck? There are very few cards on the reserved list that I would reccomend purchasing less than this statue. Some cards on the reserved list have strange or unique effects that could one day be broken or are off color effects. I can not imagine a day when this card should be targeted for a buyout over so many other, cheaper choices but I guess unexpected buyouts do happen. I wonder if anyone made money off of xanthic statue. It was above 6 dollars for a time and you could have bought hundreds of copies in 2020 for about thirty cents. Did anyone flip this card for about 5 dollars in profit. A 5 dollar profit isn't nothing if you had thousands of copies of this card but does anyone have that much of even bulk reserved list card? Even if they do would they be willing to sell off their monopoly for a 5 dollar profit per card? Rudy from alpha investments would not. It just goes to show that even the worse reserved list cards can lead to financial success if the stars align. You can never be absolutely sure. Will this card ever be above 5 dollars again? Maybe in fifty years and maybe if there are buyouts throughout the reserved list in general but I don't think it will hold 5 dollars in my life time. That doesn't mean you can't acquire this card and flip it at the perfect time but there are so many other reserved list cards I would suggest over this one if that is what you are trying to do but diversifying your assets is never a bad idea.
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overgrown-estate · 22 hours
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This forth group of cards saw the final story of Dominaria until that plane was revisited in the set of the same name. After leaving Dominaria behind, the story of each block would be set on its own plane. The first was Miroddin, an artificial plane created by Karn, the Silver Golem. Afterwards, the story went to Kamigawa, a plane inspired by feudal Japan.
Of all the cards above, Woodborn Muse saw, and still sees, the most reprintings. I'd love to see Doubtless One and Masako reprinted in supplemental sets. The three noncreature spells here all pretty powerful.
Would you want all of these if they were in a collection? Let me know what you think.
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coffeetime88 · 2 years
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Dominaria United story?
Oh, you mean "Karn and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Phyrexian Invasion"
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mtg-cards-hourly · 1 year
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Karn, Silver Golem
Artist: Mark Zug TCG Player Link Scryfall Link EDHREC Link
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reuxben · 4 years
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Here’s our MTGinktober for “Music,” starring Gerrard, Weatherlight Hero; Karn, Silver Golem; Mirri, Cat Warrior, and Ertai, Wizard Adept!  Windmill, windmill for the land, turn forever, hand in hand. 
Click this post’s Source link for this piece’s Making-Of.
More MTGinktober here.  
Daily art updates on Instagram and Twitter.  
Not normal,
Reuxben
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satanstrousers · 6 years
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Thanks Karn, a mood I can finally relate to
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flavoracle · 7 years
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What in Karnation? 
Yesterday on Twitter, @wizardsmagic released some amazing new key art for the Dominaria set that is coming out next year, featuring Jhoira, Teferi, and Karn. 
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While I love the new art, and I’m totally excited to be seeing those three characters again, something about Karn seemed... off. The Karn in this new art looks strangely tragic and unsettling, but I couldn’t quite deternube why. 
I mean, his cheeks look more angular and pronounced than the last time we saw him, but that’s nothing too abnormal. Different artists often vary how round or angular they draw Karns face. 
So I gathered together as many Magic cards as I could find that depict Karn in the art (collage seen above.) Here’s what I discovered... 
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In every piece of existing art I could find, Karn’s mouth is always curved downward in a permanent frowning expression. It’s kind of a hallmark of the solemn golem, whose life has been fraught with hardship and loss since he was first created. Whether his mouth is open or closed, whether he’s with friends or foes, the frown is always there. :( 
Except in the new key art, where his mouth appears to be more of a straight line. :| 
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So can someone please explain to me how taking away Karn’s frown actually makes him look even sadder than he’s ever looked before?! 
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Karn by Bad King
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