Weaponized Scrap

{4}

Artifact Creature — Construct

CMB1Mystery Booster Playtest Cards 2019#111rare
Border
black
Frame
2015
Pull rate
~1 in 121
Illustrator
Tyler Wright
Found in
Mystery Booster Booster Pack (Convention Edition)
Printings2
CommanderNot legalModernNot legalStandardNot legal
Format legality
AlchemyNot legal
BrawlNot legal
CommanderNot legal
Competitive BrawlNot legal
DuelNot legal
Future StandardNot legal
GladiatorNot legal
HistoricNot legal
LegacyNot legal
ModernNot legal
OathbreakerNot legal
Old SchoolNot legal
PauperNot legal
Pauper CommanderNot legal
PennyNot legal
PioneerNot legal
PreDHNot legal
PremodernNot legal
StandardNot legal
Standard BrawlNot legal
TimelessNot legal
Tiny LeadersNot legal
VintageNot legal
Upgrade (This creature enters covering another artifact you control. If it can't, exile it. Ignore the artifact it's covering. Anywhere this card goes, cards underneath it also go. It has haste.)
6/6
Market · per finishspark updated 5h ago · prices as of 2026-07-12
Nonfoil+0.0%
$0.43
$0.25 low$0.24 gap
Cheapest playable copy$0.23· across 2 printings

Rulings

6 · latest Nov 12, 2019 · one tap opens all
  • WotCNov 12, 2019

    An artifact can be upgraded more than once.

  • WotCNov 12, 2019

    Enters-the-battlefield triggers won’t trigger when an artifact with upgrade overlays another artifact.

  • WotCNov 12, 2019

    If a player’s commander is upgraded, the resulting creature is still their commander. If it leaves the battlefield, the commander can be put into the command zone instead, and the other cards move to the expected zone.

  • WotCNov 12, 2019

    If the upgraded object moves to the top or bottom of its owner’s library, that player chooses the relative order for its component cards without revealing that order.

  • WotCNov 12, 2019

    If you can’t choose an artifact you control while applying a permanent’s upgrade replacement effect, it doesn’t move to or enter the battlefield at all and instead moves to exile.

  • WotCNov 12, 2019

    The card with upgrade moves to the battlefield, but it doesn’t enter the battlefield. Instead it overlays an artifact you control. That artifact becomes represented by the new card – if it was tapped, it’s still tapped; if it had counters on it, it still has those counters; if it was attacking, it’s still attacking; and so on.