The Evolution of Spellfire
From the mists of the past, these words come from the young who have experienced the original birth. This is a history, from one fan's experience, about the growth and evolution of the game he loves. Spellfire has come a long way (just look at any player with only first edition that has no idea what a Rule Card, Regent, Thief Skill, or Dungeon is or does) since 1994. It is the second oldest CCG, with only Magic: the Gathering being its senior. This magical journey will help when looking for old cards, or to understand WHY for Lord's sake they made cards without powers. We'll start our journey with the release of the game...
Booster
#2 - Ravenloft - August 1994 - Making their premier at GenCon '94 in clear
plastic packages, not that which we know them in today. Many new
concepts were brought in this set. First and most obvious, Ravenloft
became the 4th world to formally join Spellfire. This sent also gave
us for the first werebeasts (Loup Garou, Sir Heirgaard, etc) and the first
real undead (sorry, but 4 allies and one champion don't qualify to me).
Also, some new game concepts came up. First, we got the concept of
Limbo from two cards (Strahd Von Zarovich [#100] and Ring of Reversion
[#63]). Also, this set gave us the first arguement that created the
Order of Activation (The question, if you care, was that of Midnight, Goddess
of Magic vs. the Ring of Reversion). Finally, we had one more type
of new card: The Rule Card. There were only 3, but rule cards are
such a core concept now, it's wierd to think of not having them.
Also, this is the only set printed to date that was not printed with chase
of any sort. Landmark Cards: Dementilieu (#11); Quirk of Fate (#26);
City States (#30); Conjure Grave Elemental (#35); Tarokka Deck (#56); Ring
of Reversion (#63); Flesh Golems (#73); Loup Garou (#79); Headless Horseman
(#88); and Strahd Von Zarovich (#100).
Booster
#3 - Dragonlance - September 1994 - This set added a lot to the game of
Spellfire. First and formost, Dragonlance became the 5th world of
Spellfire. Also, this is the set that first started denoting champion
race. This included dwarves, elves, and kender (there still is only
2!). This caused much of the past cards to get bluelining, which
means that even though Drizz't Do'Urden doesn't say Elf(Drow), he still
is. Another major concept never fully followed up on was cards that
were effectively based on the time of day outside of the game (such as
various wizards of the _____ robes, Dagger of Night (#65), and Time Shift:
spells) . We also had the first time we use what is now the standard
chase configuration (1 chase per 4 packs). This gave TSR many headaches,
as apperently the boxes were poorly labeled and many purchasers thought
that it was a chase a pack. Finally, the last big advance that this
set gave us swimmers, who were champions that could attack realms other
than the lead one if the realm showed coastline, and earthwalkers, champions
who could attack any realm regardless of position (but not restrictions).
Again, this was the cause of much blue-lining in the original Spellfire
Reference Guide. Landmark Cards: Mithas (#1); Reorxcrown Mountains
(#15); Raistlin Majere, Wizard of the Black robes (#31); Flint Fireforge
(#37); Brine Dragon (#45); Blamblower (#56); Bronze Dragons (#97); Crossed
Blades (c#8); Takhisis's Helmet of Power (c#18); and Medallion of Faith
(c#25).
Booster
#5 - Artifacts - May 1995 - This set, on the whole, is my personal favorite.
While it's got lots of power, that isn't the reason. This booster
add no new concepts. Instead, it took the under developed concepts
in the game, and expanded to make it playable with inventive powers.
Artifacts were made for many worlds that had few, rule cards had a rarity
less than full rares, we found holdings for any world, all champions got
better powers, and Dark Sun finally had enough realms to be a viable theme.
This was also the first of two sets that had only 20 chase instead of 25.
However, it was also a set that started using only 1 rare per pack.
Landmark Cards: Wand of Orcus (#1); Obsidian Man of Urik (#14); Rod of
7 Parts (#21-27); Bag of Holding (#28); Temporal Stasis (#53); Deflection
(#54); Korgunard the Avangion (#75); Drawmij (#85); Ur Draxa (#91); Anchient
Kalidnay (#92); Onad the Weasel (c#6); Young Strahd (c#8); Amulet of Spell
Protection (c#17); and the Dragon Font (c#20).
3rd
Edition - October 1995 - This is where we really started correcting the
mistakes of our forefathers. This set, like 2nd edition, took out
20 of the rares (notable losses this time included Disintegrate [#393]
and Discovery of Spellfire [#401]). However, it also included the
editing of 150 cards from previous sets with powers that didn't work, had
no powers at all, or needed to be corrected to reflect correct casting
times. The rules also changed, limiting one of any event in a deck.
It also indirectly caused 4th edition rules to come out early, because
there was a combo that allowed a player to take an infinite amount of turnes
in a row. That's the real reason 4th ed rules say a limit of one
of any card. Landmark Cards: Ruins of Zhentil Keep (#3); Cormyr (#5);
Evermeet (#29); War Party (#54); Karlott the Shaman (#63); Joliet the Rash
(#78); The Horned Society (#117); Arch-Druid (#189); Kevin's Blade of Doom
(#206); Sadira (#260); Dispel Magic (#346 & 358); Gatekeeper (#422);
Weasel Attack (#428); Estate Transference (#437); and Starving Artist (#439).
Booster
#8 - Runes & Ruins - February 1996 - This booster was a tribute to
all old TSR products in the 70's and early 80's. This booster did
allow AD&D to become a full fledged world. The cards play well,
but there were many mechanical problems that litter the set. For
instance, all realms in this booster have the back printed upside down,
being very reminicent of many 1st edition realms. Another key mistake
they made is that all the wizards in the set had the wizard spell icon.
The other big thing this set gave Spellfire was Unarmed Combat Cards, in
this case, only useable by heros. Also, we had the first artifacts
that were attached not by world, but by champion type. Overall, one
of the better sets, with a fairly strong chase set. Landmark Cards:
Isle of the Ape (#1); Barrier Peaks (#7); The Lost City (#16); Bigby (#28);
Vecna the Arch-lich (#34); The Keeper (#43); Intercession (#48); Tyranthraxus,
the Possessing Spirit (#55); Volcanic Eruption (#64); Star Gems on Martek
(#74-78); The Rahasia (#83); Haymaker (#92); Dream Team (c#1); Manshoon
of the Zhentarim (c#6); Undead Regeneration (c#7); Runes of the Future
(c#13); Gib Kcir (c#16); Dispel Psionics (c#17); and Boots of Fharanghn
(c#21).
4th
Edition - July 1996 - This is still easily the most saught after set of
cards. 4th Edition was a completely new set of 1-500 cards, with
a 20 card chase set (1 chase per deck). The deck still was bought
with a double-deck format, but the other deck box held a Draconomicon Booster
pack. This set brought back all the key cards from various past sets,
and really brought great strength to the game. Tis a pity they ran
out so quickly. The set strengthened all worlds and themes, and made
them viable for high level play. This is also the first time we see
unarmed combat cards for dragons, undead, elf(drow) [still only 1!], and
UCs for any champion to use. It also gave us the new designation
of Adventurer and Dwarf(mul). Landmark Cards (and there were a ton!):
Stonefist hold (#24); Ull (#25); Ur Draxa (#32); Dragon's Crown Mountains
(#39); The Mistmoor (#44); Blood Sea of Istar (#57); Nightmare Lands (#64);
Lair of the Eye Tyrant (#68); Fortification: Bailey (#84); Celestial Jewel
of Sarimie (#100); Dance of the Red Death (#112); Hurricane! (#140); Wrath
of the Immortals (#157); Rings of All Seeing (#171); Dark Haven (#188);
Arrow of Slaying (#200); Skeletal Lord (#217); Athasian Sloth (#230); Marauder
(#233); The Dreaded Ghost (#246); Helm (#255); Kalid-na (#279); various
adventurers (#289-297); Yumac the Cold (#311); Moraster (#339); Chevnerik
(#347); Arlando El-Adaba (#351); Limited Wish (#382); Re-target (#389);
Faith-Magic Zone (#405); Nature's Throne (#461); Throne of the Pharaohs
(#466); Remnis (#481); Midnight Goddess of Magic (#487); Iuz, Avatar of
Evil (#488); Rule Lawyer's Delight (491); Sea of Dust (#504); Etherial
Champion (#508); and The Winner's Cape (#520).
Booster
#11 - Nightstalkers - September 1996 - This was a very unique set.
First and most odviously, every card in the set is a photo card, as opposed
to just the usual chase set. This set focused on two things.
Like the previous set, this booster focused on the old undead and made
them fearsom again. New unarmed combat cards for undead, and other
boons to the previously alive are found throught the set. The other
major theme is the two new card types: Thief champions and thief skills.
This made yet another card type to deal with (are rarely counter), but
overall, it wasn't a huge effect yet. Landmark Cards: Nelanther (#4);
Falknovia (#5); Cromlin (#7); Assassin's Guild (#14); Cavern of Ancient
Knowledge (#18); Complete Suprise (#25); The Guildmaster (#28); Jacqueline
Renier (#32); Julio, Master Thief of Haslic (#34); El-Hadid (#40); Orcus
(#44); Trumpet of Doom (#53); Herald of Mei Lung (#54); Use Poison (#63);
Nemon hotep (#67); A Sure Thing (#74); Level Drain (#97); Bag of beans
(c#11); Gib _________ (All designers, c#18-23); Den of Thieves (c#24);
and Mad Scientist's Laboratory (c#25).
Booster
#13 - Fiends - This set was never produced. The image to the left
you see is from Dragon Magazine. This set was set to be produced,
but Wizards didn't see enough money in the line to continue it. However,
there are some interesting residuals left over from it. This includes
the originally planned chase list. Kevin Melka was working on it,
and sent it to Ogre for editting when the order came down. Here,
for your enjoyment is the original chase list: Fiends
Chase Cards. It was supposed to bring the world of Planescape,
screwed over by the sucky Blood Wars game, into Spellfire.
There almost was another set put out by Wizards of the Coast. In
an appraising of all their old card lines, they planned a "classic" series
for all its old card games, most prominently Netrunner, Battletech, and
Spellfire. Jim Butler created the set based solely on fan suggested
cards, and playtesting was used to see which cards were solvent.
However, this plan was thrown away by Wizards when Netrunner: Classic didn't
get the sales numbers they wanted (which was their own fault, since it
was not printed enough and not distrubuted well). Therefore, Spellfire:
Classic was thrown away, but became the working basis for the on-line boosters.
On-line
boosters:
Without corporate support, Spellfire still continues to be an active game. The quest began by being only the second game to survive to keep the game alive by making new cards (the first was Mythos). Therefore, we got these sets:
Booster #13 - Inquisition - Spring 2001 - Titled both to put the magazine Inquest into its place (the magazine loved to mock out favorite game), and to show we survived Wizard's inquisition of old TSR properties, Inquisition made the game thrive once more. It sought to fix the problems found in tournaments with current rules and cards. Instead of adding new card types or worlds, it lets the fans speak as Mike "The Ogre" Huebbe create the set and made it official for all tournaments and play. The cards can be downloaded from the official Spellfire site (www.spellfire.com) and has an official on-line guide (Reviewing an Inquisition). It had 99 cards with no chase so it would easily fit into page holders. Landmark Cards: Castle Arborgate (#1), The Shadowlands (#2), Arena of Dori the Barbarian (#3), Castle Moovania (#12), Mij Retlub, the Spellfire Oracle (#14), Dragon Mountain Kobald (#20), The Grim Reaper (#26), Etarkine (#31), The Gathering (#43), The Apocalypse (#47), Guild of Adventurers (#52), Ogre's Horned Helm (#67), Slap! (#78), Dispel Illusion (#83), and Mimic (#88).
Booster #14 - Millenium - Spring 2002 - This second on-line booster came
out in 2002. This was produced by the "Spellfire Triumverate": Mike
Huebbe (repressenting the judges), Steve Naus (representing retail), and
Hayden William Courtland (representing the fans). Again, based on
fan suggestions, they created a 99 card set. However, they added
a new concept to Spellfire that has been in Dungeons & Dragons for
years: dice. Many cards required rolls to find their effects or level.
While protested by some fans, the set has gotten general approval and is
the most recent part of the canon and tournament scene. These cards,
like Inquisition, can be downloaded for the official spellfire website
(www.spellfire.com), and have an
un-official guide in process (Grading a Millenium).
Landmark cards: Duergar (#1), Aurumvorax (#8),
Feinoue, Void Shaper (#14), Cockatrice (#17),
Doomgrinder (#21), Rigged Dice (#22),
Corruption (#29), Amish Nick (#41),
Insanely Good Fortune (#47), Two Fisted Player
(#51), Kronos the titan (#62),
Poisoned Oasis (#68), Gellidus, Dragon of
Ice (#73), Hornung's Randomness (#78),
Bansmareton (#79), Wealthy Oriental Vassal
(#81), Elven Towers (#89),
Stomp (#92), and Stunning Fist (#98)
If you have any information that may add to this page, please send it to me at DUgorek@hotmail.com. Thank you for reading the work of a devoted fan.