TCG Playability
Legendary Artifact Creature — Robot Turtle
When Metalhead enters, return up to one other target artifact or creature to its owner's hand. {R}, Sacrifice another artifact: Put a +1/+1 counter on Metalhead. He gains menace and haste until end of turn.
Metalhead simulates dozens of fighting styles, including Foot ninjutsu.
This legendary artifact creature from the TMT set offers versatile utility and scaling potential that makes it a compelling inclusion in multiple deck strategies across numerous formats. At four mana for a 4/4 body with built-in bounce effects, Metalhead provides immediate value upon entering the battlefield by returning up to one other artifact or creature to its owner's hand, offering flexibility in disruption, repositioning key pieces, or bouncing your own creatures for additional value. The secondary ability transforms Metalhead into a legitimate threat by sacrificing other artifacts to grant +1/+1 counters alongside menace and haste, enabling explosive turns where the artifact-heavy deck can leverage its other pieces as fuel. This makes Metalhead particularly appealing in artifact-focused strategies including Affinity builds, Urza's Saga decks, and constructed lists running sacrifice synergies. The card's flexibility shines in format-dependent roles: in Standard and Pioneer, it serves as both tempo play and evasive threat in artifact-centric midrange shells; in Modern and Commander, it slots naturally into Cheerios-style decks or Sharuum-style artifact decks where the bounce effect and sacrifice outlet synergize powerfully. With legal status spanning Standard through Vintage and including popular casual formats like Commander and Brawl, Metalhead appeals to competitive and casual players alike. The combination of ETB utility, repeatable power enhancement, and evasion through menace creates a card that rewards deck-building around its artifact-synergy theme while maintaining playability as a standalone tempo piece, making it a solid pickup for players developing artifact strategies or seeking flexible utility creatures.
Illustrated by Daniel Romanovsky