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Planeshift kamigawa
Planeshift kamigawa












Basically, did the audience like it? The more all of you like a particular world, the greater the chance of its return. This criterion is very similar to the Storm Scale.

planeshift kamigawa

In today's column, I'm going to explain the various factors that go into predicting whether we'll return to a world and then rate each one on the scale, with 1 being very likely and 10 being very unlikely. It's named after Rabiah, the setting of Arabian Nights, because Rabiah is a 10 on the scale (aka we're very unlikely to return there). The Rabiah Scale is about how likely we are to return to a plane in a Standard-legal set. This article and next week's column are about one of these-the Rabiah Scale. The Storm Scale was so popular on my blog that it has spawned numerous other scales. My fifth Storm Scale article was about the mechanics of Mirrodin and Scars of Mirrodin blocks. My fourth Storm Scale column was about the mechanics of Innistrad and Shadows over Innistrad blocks. My third Storm Scale column was about the mechanics of Zendikar and Battle for Zendikar blocks. My second Storm Scale column was about the mechanics of Ravnica and Return to Ravnica blocks.

planeshift kamigawa

I would later write a column introducing and explaining the Storm Scale to all of you and talking about the likelihood of the Khans of Tarkir block mechanics returning. The scale existed so I could answer questions about how likely I thought a mechanic was to return. It was called the Storm Scale because the mechanic storm was a 10. Many years ago, on my blog ( Blogatog on Tumblr), I created a scale, dubbed the Storm Scale, to indicate how likely I thought a mechanic was to return to a Standard-legal set, from 1 being very likely to 10 being very unlikely.














Planeshift kamigawa