TCG Playability
Legendary Creature — Beast Noble
Ward {1} At the beginning of your upkeep, exile the top X cards of your library, where X is the number of card types among other nonland permanents you control. You may play those cards this turn.
The vault's ultimate prize wasn't exactly what Kellan had imagined.
Loot, the Key to Everything is a powerful three-color legendary creature that rewards players for building diverse permanents-based strategies across multiple formats. This 1/2 Beast Noble costs one green, one blue, and one red mana, making it an efficient early play that immediately starts generating card advantage. The ward one ability provides built-in protection, forcing opponents to pay an additional mana to target it, which can be surprisingly effective in the early game and helps ensure the creature survives long enough to execute its core strategy. The real power lies in its upkeep ability: you exile cards from the top of your library equal to the number of different card types among your other nonland permanents you control, and you may play those cards this turn. This creates an exciting engine that scales with deck complexity and rewards players for playing a diverse range of permanents like creatures, artifacts, enchantments, and planeswalkers. In Standard and Pioneer, this card fits naturally into Naya or Temur midrange decks that already want to play varied permanents, turning your normal gameplay into a card advantage engine. In Commander, this is an excellent fit for five-color or three-color goodstuff decks, particularly those led by commanders that incentivize diverse permanent types or token generation. Modern and Legacy players will appreciate how this slots into existing strategy-based decks that naturally accumulate multiple permanent types. Whether you're looking to turn your diverse board state into raw card advantage or simply want a unique legendary creature that rewards thoughtful deck construction, Loot, the Key to Everything offers compelling gameplay across casual and competitive formats.
Illustrated by Rudy Siswanto