TCG Playability
Artifact — Vehicle
Haste Whenever this Vehicle attacks or blocks, return up to one target creature that crewed it this turn to its owner's hand. Crew 1
For those who need to make a quick departure without attracting undue attention.
Getaway Car is a versatile artifact vehicle from Streets of New Capenna that offers excellent tempo and evasion value in a compact three-mana package. This card excels in aggressive strategies that leverage the crew mechanic, providing immediate impact through its haste ability while offering a unique bounce effect that rewards tactical play. The four power and three toughness makes it a relevant threat on the ground, and the single crew cost means it's incredibly easy to activate with almost any creature in your deck, from token generators to existing board presence. The bounce effect is where Getaway Car truly shines, as returning a creature that crewed it creates multiple advantages: it protects your creatures from removal, enables creature-based combo synergies, resets enter-the-battlefield triggers, and allows for recursive strategies with creatures that benefit from returning to hand. This makes the card particularly attractive in creature-focused strategies like Boros vehicles, tempo decks, and tempo-aggressive archetypes that can abuse the bounce interaction. The extensive format legality across Historic, Pioneer, Modern, and Commander makes this a staple consideration for players building in multiple formats. In Commander specifically, Getaway Car fits naturally into any red or white-focused vehicle deck, particularly those helmed by commanders like Syr Atraxas or Shorikai, Genesis Engine. For competitive constructed formats, the card shines in aggressive shells where the tempo swing of bouncing a creature while dealing four damage is devastating. Whether you're looking to protect key creatures, generate additional value, or simply apply early pressure with evasion, Getaway Car delivers flexible, efficient gameplay that rewards skillful sequencing and deck construction.
Illustrated by Donato Giancola