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Cryptic Cruiser

{3}{U}

Creature — Eldrazi Processor

BFZBattle for Zendikar#56uncommon
Foil

"The seas are no less imperiled than the dry lands. This fight is mine as much as it is yours." —Kiora, to Gideon Jura

Border
black
Frame
2015
Pull rate
about 1 per booster–1 in 1449
Illustrator
Svetlin Velinov
Found in
Battle for Zendikar MTGO Redemption Foil · Battle for Zendikar MTGO Redemption · 2 more
Printings1
CommanderLegalModernLegalStandardNot legal
Format legality
AlchemyNot legal
BrawlNot legal
CommanderLegal
Competitive BrawlNot legal
DuelLegal
Future StandardNot legal
GladiatorNot legal
HistoricNot legal
LegacyLegal
ModernLegal
OathbreakerLegal
Old SchoolNot legal
PauperNot legal
Pauper CommanderNot legal
PennyNot legal
PioneerLegal
PreDHNot legal
PremodernNot legal
StandardNot legal
Standard BrawlNot legal
TimelessNot legal
Tiny LeadersNot legal
VintageLegal
Devoid (This card has no color.) {2}{U}, Put a card an opponent owns from exile into that player's graveyard: Tap target creature.
3/3
Devoid
Market · per finishspark updated 14h ago · prices as of 2026-07-12
Nonfoil+0.0%
$0.07
$0.01 low$0.00 gap
Foil+0.0%
$0.16
$0.10 low$0.02 gap
Cheapest playable copy$0.07· across 1 printing

Rulings

9 · latest Aug 25, 2015 · one tap opens all
  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    A card with devoid is just colorless. It’s not colorless and the colors of mana in its mana cost.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    Cards with devoid use frames that are variations of the transparent frame traditionally used for Eldrazi. The top part of the card features some color over a background based on the texture of the hedrons that once imprisoned the Eldrazi. This coloration is intended to aid deckbuilding and game play.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    Devoid works in all zones, not just on the battlefield.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    Face-down cards in exile are grouped using two criteria: what caused them to be exiled face down and when they were exiled face down. If you want to put a face-down card in exile into its owner’s graveyard, you must first choose one of these groups and then choose a card from within that group at random. For example, say an artifact causes your opponent to exile their hand of three cards face down. Then on a later turn, that artifact causes your opponent to exile another two cards face down. If you use Wasteland Strangler to put one of those cards into their graveyard, you would pick the first or second pile and put a card chosen at random from that pile into the graveyard.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    If a card loses devoid, it will still be colorless. This is because effects that change an object’s color (like the one created by devoid) are considered before the object loses devoid.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    If a replacement effect will cause cards that would be put into a graveyard from anywhere to be exiled instead (such as the one created by Anafenza, the Foremost), you can still put an exiled card into its opponent’s graveyard. The card becomes a new object and remains in exile. In this situation, you can’t use a single exiled card if required to put more than one exiled card into the graveyard. Conversely, you could use the same card in this situation if two separate spells or abilities each required you to put a single exiled card into its owner’s graveyard.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    If a spell or ability requires that you put more than one exiled card into the graveyard, you may choose cards owned by different opponents. Each card chosen will be put into its owner’s graveyard.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    Other cards and abilities can give a card with devoid color. If that happens, it’s just the new color, not that color and colorless.

  • WotCAug 25, 2015

    You can’t look at face-down cards in exile unless an effect allows you to.