About Throes of Chaos
Throes of Chaos, Sorcery, designed by Igor Kieryluk first released in May, 2019 in the set Modern Horizons and was printed exactly in 6 different ways. It see play in 1 formats: Commander.
A deck that focuses on casting spells at various mana costs and has a good amount of land cards to utilize Retrace would benefit from including Throes of Chaos. While it can provide value through Cascade and Retrace, other cards like Bloodbraid Elf or Ancestral Vision may offer more consistent and immediate impact, potentially making them better choices for competitive play depending on the deck's strategy and goals. Throes of Chaos could see play in a more casual or experimental deck looking to take advantage of its unique abilities and synergies.
Rules
03/19/21
A spell’s converted mana cost is determined only by its mana cost. Ignore any alternative costs, additional costs, cost increases, or cost reductions. For example, Bloodbraid Elf’s converted mana cost is always 4.
03/19/21
If the card has in its mana cost, you must choose 0 as the value of X when casting it without paying its mana cost.
03/19/21
The converted mana cost of a modal double-faced card in exile is that of its front face. If the last card you exile is a modal double-faced card, you may only cast the back face if the resulting spell would also have a lesser converted mana cost than the spell with cascade.
03/19/21
When the cascade ability resolves, you must exile cards. The only optional part of the ability is whether or not you cast the last card exiled.
03/19/21
You exile the cards face up. All players will be able to see them.
06/14/19
Throes of Chaos does nothing as it resolves. All of its chaos happens before it resolves.
06/14/19
When a spell you cast with retrace resolves or is countered, it’s put back into your graveyard. You may use the retrace ability to cast it again.
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