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Mar 07 2013 10:43am
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Grizzly Bear: The nickname for any 2/2 creature costing 2 mana. Named after, of course, the Alpha card Grizzly Bears (see right).

The first of its kind, this card has been oft imitated but never equaled and oft equaled, and actually oft surpassed as well. So let's talk a walk through Magic's history of bears.

Alpha had five Grizzly Bears, one in each color. And comparing them you will realize a little about what the original vision for the color pie was. (Green and red GET NOTHING!) Here are some numbers about the current state of Grizzly Bears, as of Gatecrash's printing in 2013:

  • 239 grizzly bears exist
  • 64 are mono-white
  • 14 are mono-blue
  • 23 are mono-black
  • 24 are mono-red
  • 47 are mono-green
  • 24 are multicolored (without hybrid mana)
  • 14 cost hybrid mana
  • 11 are tribal lords (not counting slivers)
  • 9 are slivers
  • 20 are guildmages (10 from each Ravnica block)
  • 8 are from "un-" sets (Unglued and Unhinged)
  • 0 are banned in any major format
  • 14 are "true grizzly bears" (they have no abilities)
  • 6 are literally bears (like, in their creature type)

The printing of Runeclaw Bear in Magic 2010 led to some discussion about the nature of bears (does turning a bear's arms into metal do nothing for its power?), but truthfully, the flavor was always a little muddy.  For instance, how many bears are represented by the plural name of a Grizzly Bears card? There's only one on Ashcoat Bear, yet it's the same 2/2. And are you telling me that a tiny, young Bear Cub is just as strong as a full grown adult?  Unless we take its flavor text to mean that its mother fights along with it. And in what world could a bear be killed by two squirrels?  But we could spend all day discussing that stuff.  I came here to celebrate the best and the worst of what's out there.

Our first category:

Best Grizzly Bear Lords

Bramblewood Paragon   5   Bramblewood Paragon
He does nothing to pump up the creatures already on the battlefield, but there are two advantages to his use of counters: creatures stay pumped after this guy dies, and it enables some counter manipulation strategies. Consider what happens with a Joraga Warcaller. And his trample bonus looks good on a Keldon Marauders.
         
Eladamri, Lord of Leaves   4  

Eladamri, Lord of Leaves
Did you know that it took 4 years and 17 sets of Goblins, Merfolk, and Zombies before Elves finally got their own lord? And he didn't even grant a +1/+1 bonus! Nonetheless, the two abilities he did provide were enough to build a tournament-worthy archetype around, even years before we'd see cards like Priest of Titania, Imperious Perfect, or Glimpse of Nature.

         
Lord of the Unreal   3   Lord of the Unreal
Illusions are already a creature type with very efficient stats, from Phantasmal Bears' U for 2/2 to Phantasmal Image's half-priced cloning. So what if we (1) made them even bigger and (2) removed their biggest weaknesses by making them untargetable?  And all for two mana, and on a body that can do some damage itself. The only thing keeping this from being higher are the small numbers of illusions in print and their lack of tribal synergy—two faults, by the way, completely lacking in our final two cards' tribe.
         
Lord of Atlantis   2   Lord of Atlantis
Lots of lords give landwalk. But they all cost 3 mana, and they're in colors other than blue, the color best able to take advantage of landwalk. And they're in tribes other than merfolk, which dilute landwalk's usefulness even further. This lord is so good that the only one on its level is...
         
Master of the Pearl Trident   1   Master of the Pearl Trident
...an imitation that came a full 10 years later! So why does this newcomer get the nod over the iconic original? Because he doesn't pump your opponent's creatures. That's power creep for ya.

  
Congratulations! And nice underwear.

 

Best Grizzly Bear Hate*
*I'm defining hate cards as ones that are useful against a certain deck type only. Meddling Mage for instance is disqualified because he is useful against nearly all decks, rather than one specific type, and is usually a 4-of in the maindeck. Regardless of the format or the time period or the metagame.

Samurai of the Pale Curtain   5   Samurai of the Pale Curtain
The bushido has prevented this fox from getting reprinted, but it is a nice boost to an already strong card.  The only things keeping graveyard strategies from dominating everything are hate cards, whether it's a Leyline of the Void or a Tormod's Crypt. Of course, neither one of those is a grizzly bear.  (But after another five years, one of them probably will be.)
         
Withered Wretch   4  

Withered Wretch
Another one! This card has greater controllability, even if it's more mana intensive.  But would you rather prevent the next five cards from entering the graveyard, whatever they may be, or just remove that singleton Iona, Shield of Emeria with an Exhume on the stack?  I miss the bushido as much as the next guy, but I think the choice is clear.

         
Kor Firewalker   3   Kor Firewalker
Silver Knight seems the obvious choice, doesn't it? But when you're facing a red deck, lifegain becomes very valuable. As any reader of Mike Flores' knows, every three life you gain negates an entire card of theirs.  Soon they are out of steam and you can crush them with what started as life advantage but turned into card advantage. First strike is a nice ability, granted, but if your guy already has protection from red, isn't it a little redundant? You can still block their 2/2 with your 2/2 and have yours live to tell the tale.  It becomes weaker against other matchups... but so does every other hate card.
         
Leonin Arbiter   2   Leonin Arbiter
At the time this was printed, fetch lands were so rampant in tournament decks that you could safely maindeck this and have it still be useful in almost every single matchup. Of course it shuts down both sides, so not every deck is able to run it in the first place, but the ones that can will irk their opponents quite a bit.
         
Gaddock Teeg   1   Gaddock Teeg
Creature decks hate Wrath of God. So they love Gaddock Teeg! This guy also hoses Cryptic Command, Faith's Fetters, Force of Will, Dragonstorm (back when that was relevant), the Zenith cycle, any number of Fireball variants, AND most planeswalkers.


Congratulations! Call me when you can stop the 3-mana Liliana, too.

 

Best Grizzly Bear Art*
* Like all aesthetic opinions, these are to be considered objective, irrefutable facts.

   

5. Goblin Firebug

What a dynamic image! What movement, what action. I'm also a sucker for the splotchy shading style of the background.

Did you know that Christopher Moeller is credited on a full 229 cards? Other impressive ones include Copper-Leaf Angel, Hypochondria, and Raven Guild Initiate.

TWO of them are better-than-grizzly-bears, Elvish Warrior on stats and Isamaru, Hound of Konda on cmc.  Hmm!  At least he didn't draw Watchwolf.

They've trusted him with powerhouses like Pernicious Deed and the Lightning Bolt reprint. On the other side, they also gave him Chimney Imp. And I have to say, he really captured its hideousness (did he know how bad a card the picture was for?).

4.Saffi Eriksdotter

What started as famous flavor text (from Ice Age's Lhurgoyf) turned into its own card thanks to the nostalgia-laden Time Spiral block. They also added to the story: although the Lhurgoyf's quote sounded like the despair of a hopeless, doomed traveler, this card's flavor text and ability made the reveal the Saffi was voluntarily sacrificing her life to save her friend. It was not a tragic accident but a noble sacrifice. What dangers one faces while traveling through Dominaria!

They also gave the card pretty cool art.

Saffi's face and posture show a mix of emotions at once. And the bending, impressionistic background heightens the mood even further. And there's one other feature of the artwork worth mentioning—

Before Time Spiral was printed, MtgSalvation posted this card's name, cost, and rules text. But they hadn't seen the art or flavor text yet, so they made something up. And having now seen the art, I can say that their prediction was eerily accurate. They wrote:

"I make a habit of running away...and no one complains
about seeing my butt all the time either." –Saffi

Indeed.

   
   

3. Zombie Outlander

There are a full ten multicolored grizzly bears with protection from a color, thanks to cycles in both Invasion and Conflux. And yet, out of all of them, this is the only one with good art! I don't even mean great art, I mean art that is not in some way painful to look at.

So what works about this one? The evocative color scheme is complemented by a watery filter. The subject itself is mostly cast in shadows, as is most of the foreground, making everything eerier. The texture on the zombie makes him actually look like he's rotting.

With my remaining space I shall make a prediction.

Scout tribal decks are about to explode.  Mark my words.  Two blocks from now, scouts are taking over.  You've heard of black winter and combo summer? We are going to have SCOUT AUTUMN.

That was a PureMTGO.com exclusive.

2. Melira, Sylvok Outcast

A lot of the time, great pictures are wasted on unplayable cards. But every so often a tournament bomb will have a killer piece of artwork, and this is such a one.

What an image! We have a light blue circle on the outside, then a dark black circle inside that, and then inside everything is a golden circle, highlighting Melira herself. Her hair is almost glowing with the light coming through it. And she has a look of stark confidence in this desolate land she's been outcast to.

"Once a pariah, now Mirrodin's greatest hope." Then why don't you change her name?

Melira, Sylvok Savior

Melira, on whom the Sylvoks depend.

Melira, former Sylvok Outcast.

Somethin'. I don't know.

   
   

1. Orzhov Guildmage

There are very few Magic cards with monochromatic artwork. Are this and the Mirrodin Stalking Stones the only ones that also have monochromatic frames?

But unlike Stalking Stones, this card makes brilliant use of the color scheme.

Look at the card frame. It's a smooth gradient from white to black. Then look at the background of the painting. It's a gradient in the opposite direction, from black to white!

In the center of all of this is the white-in-black shape floating in the foreground. Truly a great composition. It's a shame that more hybrid cards didn't do things like this. They are, after all, the only card frames with different colors on different parts of the card.

Congratulations! Now eat a burger; you look famished.

 

Notable Grizzly Bear Firsts

  5  

Barbary Apes: first functional reprint
The original Grizzly Bears was printed four times, in Alpha, Beta, Unlimited, and Revised, and it was starting to look like it would continue to be forever.  But two months after Revised's April 1994 release came Legends, the first ever set to feature functional reprints, and with these guys showing up in place of the bears. Ape was as irrelevant a tribal type as Bears, so I'm not sure what the point was, other than to establish flavor. And speaking of flavor, should these guys not have been updated to be barbarians?  They literally come from Barbary. 

Nowadays functionally reprinting Grizzly Bears has become an illustrious tradition, what with our Balduvian Bears and Cylian Elfs and Runeclaw Bears, but that all started with the apes.

         
  4  

Scarwood Goblins: first multicolored
Before the Tidehollow Scullers and Steward of Valerons and... Pygmy Hippos of the world, there was Scarwood Goblins. Now you might be wondering why, when Grizzly Bears is already in print, they would bother to make the same card with the drawback of being harder to cast. Remember, this was before Boartusk Liege or Blessing of the Nephilim were printed, so there was no upside to being multicolored. In fact, the single only booster of red creatures at the time was Gauntlet of Might—but if you were using that, why would you have forests?

It had a tribal upgrade, being a goblin. And he is cheaper than the only other 2/2 goblin of 1994, Goblin Hero. But this is still unsatisfactory, because goblin decks generally wouldn't want to dip into green. The only real answer is that back then gold cards were such a novelty and looked so impressive that they were given higher casting costs to compensate for their allure. Tobias Andrion is the famous example of this.  Still!  It worked.  I remember opening one in a pack of The Dark and being excited to see him.

         
Fledgling Djinn   3  

Fledgling Djinn: first with flying (aka the North Carolina award)
Flying bears are no longer too out of the ordinary, as seen on Gaea's Skyfolk, Leonin Skyhunter, and the slightly superior Kor Aeronaut, but back then this was definitely ahead of the curve—even with its Juzám Djinn-like drawback (and smaller-than-Juzám-stature).

When Foul Imp was printed shortly afterwards, my then-young mind worked long and hard figuring out which penalty was the lesser of the two.

         
Blood Knight   2  

Blood Knight: first red one without a drawback!
Red mages had grown used to bad creatures. White got Savannah Lions and we got Jackal Pup. Green got Grizzly Bears and we got Ironclaw Orcs. And Goblin Raider. And Mogg Toady. And Sell-Sword Brute! How aggravating! Yet we also got Lightning Bolt so we didn't mind all that much.

But then, in Planar Chaos, we got something we didn't dare to dream of: a grizzly bear creature without a drawback. More than that, it had abilities! And good ones! It seemed too good to be true.

Perhaps it was intended as a one-time-only deal allowed by the color swapping shenanigans of the set, or perhaps it was a test run to see if red could handle it without becoming degenerate. If it was the latter, we must have passed, because in the sets since then we've been given Ember Hauler, Kargan Dragonlord, Stigma Lasher, and Ash Zealot.

         
Boreal Centaur   1  

Boreal Centaur: first with a supertype
No, it's not just a parody of the existing Jolrael's Centaur. "Boreal" is a real name, and even a real word (meaning "pertaining to the North wind"). And when Coldsnap hit the shelves, this was the first ever bear with a supertype.  Other than legendary, I mean. That doesn't count.

Having that supertype allowed him to frustrate fellow Coldsnap grizzly bear Goblin Furrier.


Congratulations! Your flavor text is making me wonder why no reindeers were ever printed.

 

Worst Grizzly Bear Art

   

5. Goblin Legionnaire

There is nothing good about this oddly proportioned, oddly framed, oddly angled picture.

Look at the Goblin's torso and shoulders. Look at the people's hands. Look at the people's faces. Look at the way two people's hair is affected by the wind and one of theirs isn't.  Look at... look at... everything!

Ugh!

Of course, when it comes to Mark Romanoski art, I think it's the 8th ed CoP: Black that really takes the cake.

       
   

4. Phantom Whelp

This artist had a mission. Draw the most demented, disgusting-looking, nightmare-inducing face imaginable... and then make it stand out by having the entire rest of the picture be one single pale color. Except for a spotlight, halo glow around that face.

And this is not the only card Wayne England used this strategy on!!!

I think he just likes disgusting faces in general. See? I don't know why and don't want to.

       
   

3. (Bear Cub)

Ugh!!!

What children's book was this commissioned for, and then rejected from?

And from Ron Spencer, who should know better.  Ron Spencer, who gave us Crucible of Worlds and Hammer of Bogardan and Cabal Therapy and... well they weren't all good.

I don't want to beat him up too much though, since he is the creator of some of the best art modifications around.

       
   

2. Yavimaya Barbarian

I warned you! I tried to tell you above how disgusting the art in these protection-from cycles is.

Just look at that torso. This guy is in such pain.

What if that's the reason he's acting like a barbarian? It could be like the story about the lion with a thorn in its paw. We just need to get this guy an art transplant and he'll turn into a gentle monowhite cleric, tapping to prevent damage.

Most of Don Hazeltine's pictures are pretty cool. Of course, most of them are innocuous landscapes and don't contain any bare torsos.

       
   

1. Forest Bear

"Check this out," said Wang Yuqun.

"I can draw a bear from memory, without looking at any reference photos or anything!"

His mother smiled when she saw the result.  "That's very good, honey. I'm going to put it on the refrigerator."

Weeks later, the picture fell into her briefcase and was brought to Wizards of the Coast where they accidentally put it onto a card.

Congratulations! You are the weirdest looking bear I have ever seen. Except for possbily this one.

 

Actually Best Grizzly Bears

Of course, you can't win a tournament with good art or historically significant cards. Which ones are actually the most powerful?

Kavu Predator   15  

Kavu Predator

"But how often can I rely on my opponent gaining life?" Every game, if you pack your deck with Grove of the Burnwillows and Fiery Justice. And further complement both with (Punishing Fires) or, in some builds, even Tamanoa and Searing Meditation as well. This may sound like the dream of the Johnnies (who else would use Punishing Fires?) but it put up quite a few Top 8s about 2 years ago.

         
Flinthoof Boar   14  

Flinthoof Boar

This guy is new and he hasn't had long enough to truly prove himself one way or the other, but its stats are so obviously strong that we can take a pretty educated guess that the tournament appearances it has already had are not flukes.

         
Sigiled Paladin   13  

Sigiled Paladin

White has so many good weenies at two mana that I don't know how deckbuilders cope with the decision. When is this guy the right choice? When is it (Knight of the Meadowgrain)? Or Knight of the White Orchid? Or Precinct Captain?

         
Master of the Pearl Trident   12  

Master of the Pearl Trident

I explained before how good this guy is. So, "press rewind if I haven't blown your mind!"

         
Crystalline Sliver   11  

Crystalline Sliver

There are 76 slivers in print, all vying for your precious deckspace. But as someone much wiser than me once said, no matter what your build, you basically have to include 4x Crystalline Sliver and 4x Winged Sliver.  They're that good.

Unless it's some weird Dormant Sliver / Screeching Sliver build... but even then, you still at least want the Crystalline.

 

Burning-Tree Emissary

I have to repeat my comments for Flinthoof Boar at #14: this guy is new but pretty obviously powerful. His early success is likely to become a lasting success over time.

  10   Burning-Tree Emissary
         

Gaddock Teeg

He's good in every format, from Standard up through Vintage.

In vintage, say goodbye to your opponents' Dread Return, Unmask, Gush, Mind's Desire, Tendrils of Agony, and Smokestack. Even if Unmask and Gush are cast with their alternate costs! And don't forget X spells like Chalice of the Void.

  9   Gaddock Teeg
         

Gatekeeper of Malakir

He's a Diabolic Edict that attacks and blocks. He's a cheaper Nekrataal. He's a three-mana 2-for-1. AND he has tribal synergy. He is a good card.

  8   Gatekeeper of Malakir
         

Ash Zealot

Even if this was just RR for a 2/2 with haste, it would see play. But adding first strike and the graveyard ability?

WotC really is powering up aggro decks!

  7   Ash Zealot
         

Wild Mongrel

If you've been playing Magic for at least ten years, you know about Wild Mongrel. You know about how he was the centerpiece of one of the dominating archetypes in the Odyssey block era. He enabled madness AND threshold AND he dealt damage... all while dodging Terrors thanks to his not-irrelevant color swapping ability.

In other words, he was much better than the existing card Wild Dogs.

  6   Wild Mongrel

 

Fauna Shaman   5  

Fauna Shaman

They took one of the most broken cards of all time, Survival of the Fittest, and they slowed it down with a tap ability and summoning sickness.

It's still really good.

         
Putrid Leech   4  

Putrid Leech

Think back to the wild praise Watchwolf got when it was first printed. "So far beyond the curve!"

Well, the Leech is even bigger. And for a pretty small penalty.

         
Meddling Mage   3  

Meddling Mage

It's a regular 4-of in the highest-powered format there is. And has been a 4-of in every other format its passed through. What more do you need to know?

         
Ethersworn Canonist   2  

Ethersworn Canonist

It's a killer in affinity decks. It's a killer in defensive decks. And it's a killer in those midrange decks that play a lot of artifacts. You don't even need an all-artifact build: just make your non-artifact spell the last of the turn.

         
Qasali Pridemage   1  

Qasali Pridemage

A compelling case could be made for any of these top 3 choices being #1. I gave the nod to Pridemage because he's useful against more decks, attacks for more, and has "partial haste" since that first exalted point of damage triggers as soon as he comes out, if you have another attacker. Even if it's a piddling Birds of Paradise. But if it's another exalted creature, like Noble Hierarch, things really get nuts.


Congratulations! Are you in China or something? 

 

And before we wrap it up, I have one more list for you, of incredible import:

Most Symmetrical Grizzly Bear Artwork

Cylian Sunsinger   5  

Cylian Sunsinger
I see a few faults in your symmetry! The statue is slightly angled to the side; the clouds are uneven; the birds are a little mismatched.

Close, but we have to knock you down a few places for that.

         
Gempalm Strider   4  

Gempalm Strider
His pose is spot-on! But that quiver of arrows is lopsided, and the trees in the background mess it up.

If he was naked in outer space he could have won this thing.

         
Transluminant   3  

Transluminant
Now we're getting to the really good ones.

The position of her arms and legs are the only places to lose many points.

         
Carapace Forger   2  

Carapace Forger
Aaaallllllmost number one.  I almost gave it to you.

I looked back and forth between these last two pictures for a considerable time. It was a very close call.

In the end, what did it? The signature in the corner.

Second-best symmetry.

         
Korozda Guildmage   1  

Korozda Guildmage
Now this is some symmetrical art! The arms are perhaps a few degrees off, but the last card's arms are a little bit of a mismatch as well, with one having that big circular thing on it.

Congratulations! Now wash your hands.

And that is all you need to know about grizzly bears.

21 Comments

Standing ovation! (On bear's by Kumagoro42 at Thu, 03/07/2013 - 15:45
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5

Standing ovation! (On bear's hind legs.)

Great article, but I'm by Doctor Anime at Thu, 03/07/2013 - 17:59
Doctor Anime's picture
5

Great article, but I'm shocked that Scavenging Ooze is nowhere to be seen. It really is the best bear.

I'll take Crystalline Sliver by KaraZorEl at Thu, 03/07/2013 - 18:08
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I'll take Crystalline Sliver any day of the week. ^^

This article was great haha. by RWHope at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 03:27
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5

This article was great haha. But no mention that Moeller did the art for Saffi as well? I found it very funny after your small tangent on the quality of cards Wizards commissions him to draw.

...............did not notice by CottonRhetoric at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 04:35
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...............did not notice that

Fantastic. Love it when by RexDart at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 11:12
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Fantastic. Love it when articles take long divergent looks at the artwork. My taste in mtg art isn't quite the same as yours, and I tend to forgive alot of the quirky stuff its technical flaws, but I greatly enjoyed reading it.

Your bit on Forest Bear was hilarious. In addition to bad art, the flavor text seems woefully misguided. Personally, I think if I had bear paws I could probably have MORE fish, as bears seem rather adept at catching them. Swing and a miss, ancient Chinese culture!"

And about Bear Cub: we can't by Kumagoro42 at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 12:27
Kumagoro42's picture

And about Bear Cub: we can't blame Ron Spencer there. They told him to draw a bear cub, he drew a perfectly fine and lovely bear cub. The thing is: what the hell the creative team was thinking when they decided that a cub has the same exact statistics of a full, adult, grizzly bear? No, worse, it's plural: it's a GROUP of grizzly bears that fights as effectively as a single cub! (And don't even get me started about the flavor text: you can't justify a card mechanic with the flavor text!)

You must admit it's a pretty by CottonRhetoric at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 13:23
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You must admit it's a pretty saccharine looking bear cub. Like, completely uncharacteristic for the game it's in.

This game has cards about by RexDart at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 13:37
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This game has cards about children staying up past bedtime, and mischevious pie-theft. A cute little bear cub isn't THAT out of place.

Wild Mongrel - seriously, if by deluxeicoff at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 11:48
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4

Wild Mongrel - seriously, if this was a new card people would devote articles to it.

I give this article 5/5 by smack8001 at Fri, 03/08/2013 - 11:57
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5

I give this article 5/5 firebears.

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