TCG Playability
Enchantment Creature — Nightmare
As an additional cost to cast this spell, exile a creature you control. Flying When this creature enters, exile target creature an opponent controls. When this creature leaves the battlefield, put each card exiled with it into its owner's hand.
This six-mana white enchantment creature represents a compelling control tool and tempo play that rewards careful sequencing and strategic planning across multiple constructed formats. With a flying body that clocks in at a respectable 5/5, the card offers immediate board presence while its layered abilities create interesting decision points throughout the game. The casting cost requires you to exile a creature you control, which initially seems like a drawback but opens up creative deckbuilding possibilities when paired with token generators, creatures with sacrifice synergies, or cards designed to benefit from the exile zone. The immediate impact comes from the enters-the-battlefield effect that exiles an opponent's creature, providing removal that doesn't permanently destroy the threat, which can be politically advantageous in multiplayer formats while also preventing certain graveyard-based strategies from gaining value. What makes this card particularly interesting is its final ability: when the creature leaves the battlefield, all cards exiled with it return to their owners' hands. This transforms it from a straightforward removal spell into a temporary lockdown piece, ideal for stalling aggressive opponents or buying time while you assemble your winning strategy. In Pioneer, Modern, and Commander, this card fits naturally into control decks, Azorius (white-blue) tempo strategies, and any shell that values creature disruption combined with card advantage. The flying evasion ensures it can attack profitably while you dictate the pace of the game, making it an excellent inclusion for players who enjoy interactive, skill-testing gameplay that rewards understanding board dynamics and predicting opponent sequencing.
Illustrated by Fernando Falcone