Back to Aether Revolt

Peema Aether-Seer

{3}{G}

Creature — Elf Druid

AERAether Revolt#119uncommon
Foil

"The Great Conduit connects us all."

Border
black
Frame
2015
Pull rate
about 1 per booster–1 in 1087
Illustrator
Howard Lyon
Found in
Aether Revolt MTGO Redemption · Aether Revolt MTGO Redemption Foil · 2 more
Printings3CombosIn 3
CommanderLegalModernLegalStandardNot legal
Format legality
AlchemyNot legal
BrawlLegal
CommanderLegal
Competitive BrawlLegal
DuelLegal
Future StandardNot legal
GladiatorLegal
HistoricLegal
LegacyLegal
ModernLegal
OathbreakerLegal
Old SchoolNot legal
PauperNot legal
Pauper CommanderNot legal
PennyNot legal
PioneerLegal
PreDHNot legal
PremodernNot legal
StandardNot legal
Standard BrawlNot legal
TimelessLegal
Tiny LeadersNot legal
VintageLegal
When this creature enters, you get an amount of {E} (energy counters) equal to the greatest power among creatures you control. Pay {E}{E}{E}: Target creature blocks this turn if able.
3/2
Triggered you get an amount of {E} equal to the greatest power among creatures you control.

Plays as: Energy Payoff

Market · per finishspark updated 10h ago · prices as of 2026-07-12
Nonfoil+0.0%
$0.12
$0.01 low$0.00 gap
Foil+0.0%
$0.26
$0.18 low$0.10 gap
Cheapest playable copy$0.12· across 3 printings

Rulings

12 · latest Jun 7, 2024 · one tap opens all
  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    Energy counters are a kind of counter that a player may have. They're not associated with any specific permanents.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    Energy counters aren't mana. They don't go away as steps, phases, and turns end, and effects that add mana "of any type" can't give you energy counters.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    If a spell or ability with one or more targets states that you "may pay" some amount of {E}, and each permanent that it targets has become an illegal target, the spell or ability won't resolve. You can't pay any {E} even if you want to.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    If an effect says you get one or more {E}, you get that many energy counters. To pay one or more {E}, you lose that many energy counters. You can't pay more energy counters than you have. Any effects that interact with counters a player gets, has, or loses can interact with energy counters.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    Keep track of how many energy counters each player has. Potential ways to track this include writing theme down on paper or using dice, but any method that is clear and mutually agreeable is fine. (At higher levels of tournament play, dice may not be allowed for tracking counters that players have.)

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    Some spells and abilities that give you {E} may require targets. If each target chosen is an illegal target as that spell or ability tries to resolve, it won't resolve. You won't get any {E}.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    Some triggered abilities state that you "may pay" a certain amount of {E}. You can't pay that amount multiple times to multiply the effect. You simply choose whether or not to pay that amount of {E} as the ability resolves.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    Some triggered abilities that state that you "may pay" a certain amount of {E} describe an effect that happens "If you do." In that case, no player may take actions to try to stop the ability's effect after you make your choice. If the payment is followed by the phrase "When you do," then you'll choose any targets for that reflexive triggered ability and put it on the stack before players can take actions.

  • WotCJun 7, 2024

    {E} is the energy symbol. It represents one energy counter.

  • WotCFeb 9, 2017

    The amount of {E} you get is determined as Peema Aether-Seer's first ability resolves. If the greatest power among creatures you control is somehow negative, you don't get or lose any {E}.

  • WotCFeb 9, 2017

    The controller of the target creature chooses which attacking creature that creature blocks.

  • WotCFeb 9, 2017

    The target creature blocks only if it's able to do so as the declare blockers step begins. If, at that time, the creature is tapped, it's affected by a spell or ability that says it can't block, or no creatures are attacking its controller or a planeswalker controlled by that player, then it doesn't block. If there's a cost associated with having the creature block, the player isn't forced to pay that cost. If that cost isn't paid, the creature won't block.