Examples of using Hour of devastation in English and their translations into German
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Medicine
-
Financial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Political
-
Computer
-
Programming
-
Official/political
-
Political
Why is this card in Hour of Devastation?
Hour of Devastation needed to focus on the Eternals.
Welcome to the first preview week of Hour of Devastation.
Hour of Devastation is top-down Bolas with a large helping of top-down Egypt.
Mel was the creative representative for Hour of Devastation.
Now we're in Hour of Devastation and things aren't exactly about building anymore.
He commands three Gods that come and wreck everything in Hour of Devastation.
Until then, may your Hour of Devastation be a little less devastating than it was for the people of Amonkhet.
Last week I began telling the story of Hour of Devastation 's design.
Hour of Devastation introduces fifteen new Deserts along with various cards that mechanically care about them.
Last week, I started my card-by-card design stories of Hour of Devastation.
Hour of Devastation will still have Amonkhet Invocations, but, for example, Ixalan block will not have any Masterpieces.
He served as the development representative for both Amonkhet and Hour of Devastation.
A big part of this is that Hour of Devastation is the reveal of what's been happening on the plane of Amonkhet.
As always,I'm eager to hear your feedback both on today's column and Hour of Devastation.
Both Amonkhet and Hour of Devastation have a graveyard component that plays into the ancient Egyptians' obsession with death.
As always, I'm eager to hear your feedback both on today's column as well as Hour of Devastation.
One of the challenges of Hour of Devastation is that it's a Nicol Bolas set but it isn't a primarily multicolor set.
As always, I'm curious on any feedback on either today's column or Hour of Devastation itself.
Well, in Hour of Devastation, the God-Pharaoh returns and, as the title of the set hints at, things take a major turn for the worse.
While the denizens see this as a righteous path to a glorious afterlife, in Hour of Devastation, we learn that Bolas has something a little more sinister lined up.
Hour of Devastation introduces a third type of Zombie, the Eternals: undead warriors crafted to be potent and deadly, yet completely obedient, combatants.
Since he didn't get a chance to design Amonkhet,the next best thing was giving him the chance to design Hour of Devastation, the other expansion set on Amonkhet.
Hour of Devastation adds a second and third Desert-caring Camel for your Camel/Desert deck, and it introduces our first black Camel(getting Camels now into three colors) and our first Zombie Camel.
We added it to a cycle of Deserts and there are a few new build-arounds, but in general,the cycling in Hour of Devastation is just more of the same.
In Amonkhet, the -1/-1 counters aremost often put on your own creatures, but Hour of Devastation starts letting you put more of them on the opponent's creatures to capture this sense of destruction.
In each of the cases above, Amonkhet was able to use themes that played into itsEgyptian-influenced top-down design to create themes that Hour of Devastation could then take and expand upon.
We knew we wanted a little"sacrifice a Desert" in Hour of Devastation, and we liked how this cycle's color requirement would work to keep too many of the cycle from ending up in the same deck.
Hour of Devastation continues this trend by including three more, all of which were designed to play into the"disaster movie" feel of the set-the Curse causes a snowballing effect, pushing you closer and closer to defeat.
With both eternalize and exert, we were able to tweak an existing Amonkhet mechanic to help turn up the volume on the parts that Hour of Devastation we wanted to focus on, but as both of the mechanics got their start in Amonkhet,it helped make Hour of Devastation feel like an evolution of the first set rather than a departure.