TCG Playability
Battle — Siege // Creature — Elemental
(As a Siege enters, choose an opponent to protect it. You and others can attack it. When it's defeated, exile it, then cast it transformed.) When this Siege enters, search your library for up to two basic land cards, put them onto the battlefield tapped, then shuffle.
This double-faced battle card represents a powerful addition to aggressive and midrange strategies across multiple Magic formats. As a two-sided card that transforms from Invasion of Zendikar into Awakened Skyclave, it offers flexibility in how players can deploy their resources and pressure opponents. The front side functions as a battle card, a card type that forces opponents to make difficult decisions about whether to block and take damage or invest resources into removing the threat. Once the battle transforms, players gain access to a creature with vigilance and haste, meaning it can attack immediately upon entering play without tapping for combat and can attack again on subsequent turns without exhaustion penalties. This combination of keywords makes the card exceptionally valuable in aggressive strategies that aim to close out games quickly while maintaining board presence. The card's versatility makes it attractive for numerous deck archetypes. In pioneer and modern, it slots naturally into aggressive red and green strategies that appreciate the early pressure combined with a mid-game threat. Commander players find value in the card's ability to generate both board presence and evasion potential across the various color combinations that support battle-focused strategies. The haste keyword is particularly relevant in formats where tempo matters, allowing players to immediately impact the game state. With legality across historic, timeless, gladiator, pioneer, modern, legacy, vintage, commander, oathbreaker, and brawl formats, this card offers excellent accessibility for competitive and casual players alike seeking a flexible threat that rewards aggressive gameplay while maintaining strategic depth through its transformation mechanic.
Illustrated by Diego Gisbert