Yin-Yang Bomb: Difference between revisions

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*** [http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=179496 Progenitus] could also be considered as one, as it takes two of each color mana to summon but is also one of the most powerful creatures in the game.
** More generally, gold-colored cards that require more than one type of mana to cast and creatures with abilities that require a color besides their own to use have been a staple of the game for quite a while, and are almost always designed to be stronger than equivalent single-color cards of the same cost, since they require you be able to produce multiple colors of mana and thus be more open to resource deprivation. Even before ''that'', players themselves were encouraged to field more than one color to cover the weaknesses built into each one (including spells which can severely handicap a person whose cards are all of one color).
* The ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh (Tabletop Game)|Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'' card game plays with this, the main example being the now infamous "[[Game Breaker|Chaos]]" archetype (which has been banned for years but radically shifted the metagame), consisting of three monsters summoned by removing from play a Dark-Attribute monster and a Light-Attribute monster. One of these, Chaos Sorcerer, provides the page picture. There are plenty of cards that act similar, but the most prominent example is the appropriately named "[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|Light and Darkness Dragon]]", a monster that has ''two'' attributes (Light and Dark, obviously) simultaneously. That and, well, [http://images1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20090618032117/yugioh/images/7/78/LightandDarknessDragonYG01-EN-ScR-LE.png just look at it]{{Dead link}}