TCG Playability
Legendary Creature — Zombie Horror
Flying Whenever you cast your second spell each turn, put a +1/+1 counter on Kraum and draw a card.
Concerned for his apprentice's welfare, Ludevic sent his greatest creation to make sure Geralf got into the right kind of trouble.
Kraum, Violent Cacophony is a compelling tempo creature that rewards spell-slinging strategies across multiple Magic formats. This legendary creature enters the battlefield as a modest 2/3 flyer for three mana, but its true power emerges through its triggered ability that scales with your spell velocity. Every time you cast your second spell during a turn, Kraum rewards you with both a permanent pump via a +1/+1 counter and card draw, creating a powerful value engine that grows increasingly difficult for opponents to block or remove as the game progresses. This makes Kraum particularly strong in deck archetypes that naturally cast multiple spells per turn, including spellslinger strategies, prowess-based decks, and izzet tempo shells that excel at sequencing cheap cantrips and efficient interaction. The combination of evasion through flying, consistent growth, and card advantage makes this card especially valuable in formats where casting two spells per turn is achievable and common, such as Modern and Pioneer, where decks can leverage fetchlands and cantrips to trigger Kraum's ability reliably. Players seeking this card will appreciate its role as both a legitimate threat and a card advantage engine that punishes opponents for allowing it to remain in play. The flexibility to fit into various blue-red strategies, from tempo to control to prowess-focused builds, combined with its legitimate evasive body and the immediate value of drawing a card, makes Kraum an attractive addition to any deck that can support its mana requirements and shell it alongside sufficient spell synergies. Its legal status across Standard, Pioneer, Modern, Legacy, and Commander formats ensures broad applicability for competitive and casual players alike.
Illustrated by Artur Nakhodkin