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Ranked: 10 Most Underrated Planeswalker Cards In Magic: The Gathering

Planeswalker cards are some of the most iconic and splashy cards in all of Magic: The Gathering. Featuring key characters from the game’s story, Planeswalkers traditionally feature numerous activated abilities that provide them with a level of flexibility while also toting potentially game-winning ultimate abilities.

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While there are several Planeswalkers such as Jace, the Mind Sculptor and Oko, Thief of Crowns, whose powerful abilities are quite notorious, there are many useful Planeswalker cards that don’t get nearly as much attention as they should. So here's a look at the ten most underrated Planeswalker cards in Magic: the Gathering.

Kiora, Behemoth Beckoner

Kiora, Behemoth Beckoner is one of the many uncommon Planeswalkers from War of the Spark. Like each uncommon planeswalker from War of the Spark, this Simic planeswalker has a static ability, as well as a single minus ability. For only three mana, this Kiora can provide quite a great deal of value. Allowing her controller to draw a card whenever a creature with power four or greater enters the battlefield under that player’s control, Kiora’s -1 can also be activated to untap any permanent, such as a land. This means that for three mana Kiora is able to simultaneously supply both mana ramp and card draw.

Jiang Yanggu, Wildcrafter

Another uncommon War of the Spark planeswalker, Jiang Yanggu, Wildcrafter is a perfect card for any green deck that features +1/+1 counter synergies. With a -1 that can put a +1/+1 counter on target creature, Jiang Yanggu’s static ability states that any creatures with +1/+1 counters his owner controls can be tapped to produce one mana of any color.

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This means that in +1/+1 counter heavy decks, this card can be a stellar source of mana ramp, potentially turning each of a player’s creatures into a mana dork.

Saheeli, Sublime Artificer

While the other two iterations of Saheeli tend to get a lot more attention due to their notorious infinite combo and status as a commander respectively, the uncommon Saheeli, Sublime Artificer is far from a bad card. Saheeli is an Izzet Planeswalker for three mana that has a static ability that produces a 1/1 servo artifact creature token whenever this card’s controller casts a non-creature spell. Not only can this quickly produce a board state, but these tokens pair well with Saheeli’s -2 ability that can temporarily make an artifact such as a servo into a copy of another artifact or creature until the end of the turn.

Elspeth, Sun’s Nemesis

The most recent iteration of Elspeth, Elspeth, Sun’s Nemesis is a four-mana white color planeswalker that excels that making 1/1 human soldier tokens and providing creatures with temporary power improvements.

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While her abilities pair well with a traditional “white weenie” strategy, this iteration of Elspeth is notably the only Planeswalker in the game that is able to reliably recur itself from the graveyard thanks to the card having an Escape cost of six mana.

The Royal Scions

Like, Saheeli, The Royal Scions is an Izzet Planeswalker card for three mana. Starting with a somewhat high loyalty of 5, this card has access to not one, but two +1 abilities, one of which allows a player to draw and discard a card, the second of which temporarily buffs a creature, giving it +2/+0, first strike, and trample until the end of the turn. For only three mana, this card provides a great deal of flexibility. Unfortunately, at the time of its release, The Royal Scions was greatly overshadowed by the ever-broken Oko.

Jeska, Thrice Reborn

One of the two Planeswalkers introduced in Commander Legends, While Jeska, Thrice Reborn was largely overshadowed by Tevesh Szat, Doom of Fools, it's still an excellent card in its own right. A mono-red planeswalker for only three mana, While Jeska’s -X can spot remove up to three targets simultaneously, her 0 ability triples the target creature’s combat damage output for a turn. This allows a player to potentially deal disgusting amounts of damage early into a game when paired with aggressive creatures and equipment.

Sorin, Vengeful Bloodlord

Sorin, Vengeful Bloodlord is an Orzhov Planeswalker for four mana that has a great static ability that provides all creatures and planeswalkers under its owner's control with lifelink as long as it’s their turn. Most notably, Sorin’s -X allows him to return a creature with a mana value of X from the graveyard to the battlefield. As Sorin starts with 4 loyalty and has a +2 ability, he can easily be used to return several key cards from a player’s graveyard to the battlefield.

Ugin The Ineffable

A colorless Planeswalker for six mana, with the sheer value supplied by the card, it’s hard to see how it hasn’t become a Commander staple. Reducing the cost of all colorless spells its controller casts by two mana, With a +1 that exiles a card from atop its controller’s library, creating a 2/2 spirit that puts the exiled card in its controller’s hand, Ugin simultaneously protects itself while drawing cards. As if this weren’t enough, Ugin’s -3 can be used to destroy any permanent that’s one or more colors!

Jace, Mirror Mage

Jace, Mirror Mage is a blue Planeswalker that has the distinction of being the only Planeswalker in Magic to have the kicker ability. If Jace’s kicker is paid, its controller creates a token copy of Jace, providing twice as much value. With a +2 that can scry two, thanks to the copy, Jace essentially allows its controller to dig four cards deep into their library each turn, potentially drawing cards when needed with his 0 ability.

Chandra, Acolyte Of Flame

A red Planeswalker for three mana, Chandra, Acolyte of Flame is an excellent card that synergizes in a variety of strategies. Toting two 0 abilities, Chandra can put additional loyalty counters on other Planeswalkers when in a “Superfriends” deck, or create two 1/1 tokens each turn, functioning as an engine for Aristocrats decks. Chandra is even able to help a player cast spells from their graveyard, allowing her to assist instant-heavy decks such as storm decks to access additional cards on their turn.

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