Get It? Unhinged Edition, Part 2
Before Unhinged came out, I wrote an article called "Get It?" talking about many of the jokes in Unglued that people might have missed. As Unstable is on its way, I decided it was time to write a "Get It?" article for Unhinged. There were a lot of jokes to talk about, so last week was Part 1 and this week is Part 2. That said, on with the jokes.
26. Feeling Under the Table
Every Un- set has a sub-game card, where you stop the game you are currently in and play a different game with the cards in your library. Richard Garfield designed the first sub-game card in Arabian Nights with
That, though, is not the only reference to the under the table subgame in Unhinged. The other is very easy to miss. On the card
27. Shall We Play a Game
One of the cycles in Unhinged is what I called the mini-game cycle. Each card, with the naming convention "[Body Part] to [Same Body Part]," makes you play a very quick mini game with your opponent. If you win, you then get some spell effect. (The cards are costed to be cheaper for the effect you get.) The cards are
Here are a few jokes in this cycle:
Head to Head – This card shows Braids being interrogated in a police-style interrogation room.
Mouth to Mouth – This card shows a breath-holding contest being held underwater. The judge is a merfolk who is timing everything on his watch. Because the blue card frame already has the feel of water, we changed the shape of the art to allow us to show more of it to get an underwater feel (and to get a porthole feel as if we're looking into the sea). We then added some fish for an extra touch.
Eye to Eye – This art is a parody of A Clockwork Orange. The eyes around the art weren't originally there, but we felt the card needed a something a little extra. My favorite is the little eye looking up in the lower right corner of the card.
Face to Face – This art shows cavemen playing an earlier version of Magic, a game called Ug.
Side to Side – This card shows Tahngarth working out at the gym with Squee "helping out."
28. Starving Artists
Edward Beard, Jr., the illustrator of
- "A-List Artists: Artists who do exactly what I say get on this list and might even get to eat."
- "B-List Artists: Artist who think they know how to draw. No food, no pay."
- "I said no skulls." (For many years, we removed skulls from any product for China.)
- "Kissing the art director's posterior keeps you alive."
- "Call ??? 10 more sketches today." (Artists always turn in a sketch for approval before delivering the final art.)
- "Artists do not sign agreement." (All artists sign an artist agreement guaranteeing them certain rights; the joke is the fascist art director doesn't want them to get those rights.)
- "No one eats until finished."
- "Looking out window is prohibited today."
Also, the flavor text is a letter to Mr. and Mrs. Cranford. Jeremy Cranford was Magic's art director at the time (this is also back when we had just one art director).
29. Stain Alive
The card is covered in food stains. Those, by the way, were actual food stains. The graphic designer ate lunch over paper that they then scanned in (with a sheet of acetate to keep the food off the scanner bed). The art was done by Jeremy Jarvis who would later go on to become the Magic art director. All of the
30. An A-Line
The card gives creatures an advantage, first strike, for having the lowest collector number. Collector numbers are always done first in WUBRG order (white, blue, black, red, green) and then alphabetically in that color. The joke in the art is that the creatures waiting in line are all white creatures with early alphabetic names. They are, in order:
Angel of Mercy Akroma's Devoted (reading The Art of War)Ardent Militia Aven Liberator
And yes,
The Yotian Solider joke in the flavor text plays into the same joke but from the opposite end. Artifacts are listed last (well, other than lands) and
31. Ripped from the Headlines
The flavor text for
32. We Went Half Way
This card is making a couple of different jokes. The name is a play on Action Jackson, a 1998 movie starring Carl Weathers. The card is parodying comic book superheroes, so we gave him a superhero outfit and an alliterative secret identity in the flavor text. (Marvel Comics has a running joke of giving many of their characters alliterative names—Peter Parker, Matt Murdock, Scott Summers, Sue Storm, etc.). Also, to play into the fraction joke, every item, save
33. Seeing Red
One of the things I like to do in Un- sets is to take evergreen keywords and tweak them. This card was first made because I wanted to do protection from wordy. It then seemed it would be fun to flavor the card as an editor. From there we came up with the idea that the editor would be editing its own card. The actual writing for the editing text was done by Del Laugel, Magic's lead editor. We had a lot of fun seeing how much we could mess up for the editor to fix. We also have one of the more risqué jokes in the set in the pre-edited flavor text. The editor character shows up on another card in the set, illustrated by the same artist, Jim Pavelec. The editor is the one casting
34. The Brain in Spain
Most of the jokes in the set don't require much prior knowledge to understand, but
35. Shiny Jokes
One of the goals of Unhinged was to cram in as many jokes as we could possibly fit. It dawned on me one day that perhaps we could even fit jokes into the premium treatment. Here are the four cards I remember having a foil-only joke:
Gleemax – In foil, the art for
Goblin Mime – The premium version has the goblin mime stuck inside a foil box.
Letter Bomb – The letter says "Sign Here" in foil.
Richard Garfield, Ph.D. – The cards is signed in foil by Richard.
36. Sticking to It
The joke of this card is that the creature is super sticky, so much so that your fingers get stuck to it. If you look in the art, you'll see all sorts of things stuck to it, weapons of former creatures that fought it, a person that formerly fought in its armor, horseshoes (it was the set's expansion symbol), the power/toughness box and even the corner of its own art. Note that like
37. Like Father, Like Son
One of the fun things of doing a second Un- set was being able to continue jokes from the first one. In Unglued, we had a creature called
Unhinged made a new card,
- The background is identical. Both picture take place in the exact same spot.
- Just as in the first picture, both father and son are sipping hot cocoa complete with marshmallows. Junior's hot cocoa, also with marshmallow, is in a bottle as he's a baby.
- Junior has a scarf just like his father except green rather than red.
- The father's mug has been swapped with a "[black mana symbol]'s Best Dad" mug.
One other subtle but funny joke: on
38. Quite the Magic Playa
The
39. Sticker Shock
This card is made to look like an R&D playtest sticker. We made it by printing up an actual sticker, writing on it (often in playtesting we'll change things on the fly—the handwriting, by the way, was Randy Buehler's) and scanning it. My favorite joke of this card is that it's stickered onto a
40. Magical Hacker
Two jokes and one historical footnote. The image in his glasses is a mirror image of the Magic web site. We actually took a screen shot and sent it to the artist. The flavor text is in leet speak. Leet is a language created by the internet to make things that didn't show up in normal text searches. Letters are replaced by symbols that look similar to the letter. The flavor text reads: "If you can read this, you are a monster geek."
41. Might as Well
"
42. Tag, You're It
- "Word to Your Mother" – A street expression involving the word "mother"
- "BFM" – Big Furry Monster is the 99/99 black creature from Unglued that is so big it takes two cards to hold it all.
- "It's Coming" – A reference to
Infernal Spawn of Evil . It's what you have to say when you reveal the card from your hand. - "I'm Coming Too" – A reference to
Infernal Spawn of Infernal Spawn of Evil . It's what you say when you activate him. - "Gotcha" – A reference to the gotcha mechanic in the set. When someone did a prescribed thing, you could say "Gotcha!" and return the card from your graveyard to your hand.
- "Mise" – A reference to the card
Mise .
I also enjoy that one of the gang members holds a literal gang sign.
43. Happy and Guay
This card is another one that has a joke that requires a little background information. Many years ago, we had an art director that decided that Rebecca Guay's art style wasn't a good fit for what they envisioned as Magic's style, so they informed Rebecca that they wouldn't be using her any more. That information eventually got out to the public and it went over very poorly. The fans were very loud in their love of Rebecca's work, so much so that the art director admitted they were wrong and started using Rebecca again. The set had an "artist matters" theme and I was making a card that could force people to discard all the non-land cards in their hand by a named artist. It dawned on me that it would be funny if you weren't allowed to pick Rebecca. We then, of course, had to have Rebecca illustrate the card, which she happily did.
44. Mental Magician
During Unhinged, I had the idea of turning Richard Garfield, Magic's creator, into a card. I also had the idea of a card that played Mental Magic (a format where you can play a card as any other card that shares a mana cost with it), and it quickly dawned on me that the two were a perfect fit. The card has a bunch of jokes baked into it. Let's walk through them:
- The name having "Ph.D." is making a joke out of the fact that in the early days the PR people made Richard use Ph.D. in his name in every interview he did. They liked playing up that he had a doctorate.
Phelddagrif , the card from Alliances that was named after him is "Garfield Ph.D." anagrammed, another nod toward the Ph.D. - Richard's halo is the color pie, in proper WUBRG order.
- The sash has pictures of expansion symbols of sets Richard worked on: (from top to bottom) Judgment, Odyssey, Torment, and Urza's Saga.
- The flavor text is meant to look like it's carved in stone.
- As I mention above, the premium version has Richard's signature in foil.
45. Too Soon
Many people miss seeing the
For those who like historical relevance, this is the card that inspired the cycle of Pact cards in Future Sight.
46. Good Boy
This card turns temporary effects into permanent effects. Obviously, the joke of the card is that the creature has gotten so big that it's cracked the frame. But did you ever figure out what creature it is? My goal was to take a creature famous for making itself bigger. So what creature is this? It's
47. A Good Symbol
- Visions – V
- Fallen Empires – Crown
- Torment – Curled Creature
- Alliances – Banner (being held by the Torment expansion symbol)
- Onslaught – Spider Thingy
- Mercadian Masques – Mask
- Urza's Destiny – Erlenmeyer Flask
- The Dark – Crescent Moon (in the sky)
Also note that Unhinged's own horseshoe symbol is also dancing in its spot, complete with arms and legs.
48. Size Matters
49. All Bottled Up
This card was inspired by the Arabian Nights card
50. Catching Some ZZZs
Reaching the Punchline
That's all the time I had for today. I hope you enjoyed the jaunt through Unhinged last week and today. If you can't tell, I'm excited for you all to see all the jokes of Unstable, but we're still going to have to wait a few months. If you have any feedback on today's column or Unhinged or the Un- sets in general, you can write to me via email or talk to me through any of my social media accounts (Twitter, Tumblr, Google+, and Instagram).
Join me next week for the State of Design 2017.
Until then, go see if you can find all the Unhinged jokes I didn't talk about.
#462: VidCon 2017
#462: VidCon 2017
28:09
For the second year, I took my daughter to VidCon, the convention for YouTube stars. As an outsider looking in, I always get a lot of insights that I can apply to Magic.
#463: Cycles
#463: Cycles
40:03
In this podcast, I talk about one of the most important tools for a Magic designer.
- Episode 461 College Visits (22.0 MB)
- Episode 460 Announcements (29.0 MB)
- Episode 459 Early Magic Trivia (21.0 MB)