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Rebound
Keyword Ability
Type Static
Introduced Rise of the Eldrazi
Last used Doctor Who
Reminder Text Rebound (If this spell was cast from your hand, instead of putting it into your graveyard as it resolves, exile it and, at the beginning of your next upkeep, you may cast this card from exile without paying its mana cost.)
Storm Scale 3[1][2]
Statistics
26 cards
{W} 34.6% {U} 30.8% {B} 7.7% {R} 11.5% {G} 11.5% {B/R} 3.8%
Scryfall Search
keyword:"Rebound"

Rebound is a keyword ability introduced in Rise of the Eldrazi which appears on instants and sorceries, allowing them to be replayed a second time for free on the caster's next turn.[3][4] It returned in Dragons of Tarkir.

Description[ | ]

If the spell with Rebound was cast from hand, it is exiled as it resolves. At the beginning of its controller's next upkeep, the player may cast it again without paying its mana cost. In Rise of the Eldrazi, all colors had access to Rebound, but at most three each.

Rebound was confirmed on March 2, 2015, as one of the returning mechanics in Dragons of Tarkir, where it was associated with Clan Ojutai and limited to Blue and White[5] In both Storm Scale articles for Dragons and Rise, Rosewater marked it as a successful spell mechanic that fit and synergised with many other mechanics and considered it a 3.

It then appeared once on a new card in Commander 2017, and twice in Modern Horizons[6], thrice in Modern Horizons 2, and a single card in the Adventures in the Forgotten Realms Commander release.

Rules[ | ]

From the glossary of the Comprehensive Rules (March 8, 2024—Fallout)

Rebound
A keyword ability that allows an instant or sorcery spell to be cast a second time. See rule 702.88, “Rebound.”

From the Comprehensive Rules (March 8, 2024—Fallout)

  • 702.88. Rebound
    • 702.88a Rebound appears on some instants and sorceries. It represents a static ability that functions while the spell is on the stack and may create a delayed triggered ability. “Rebound” means “If this spell was cast from your hand, instead of putting it into your graveyard as it resolves, exile it and, at the beginning of your next upkeep, you may cast this card from exile without paying its mana cost.”
    • 702.88b Casting a spell as an effect of its rebound ability follows the rules for paying alternative costs in rules 601.2b and 601.2f–h.
    • 702.88c Multiple instances of rebound on the same spell are redundant.

Rulings[ | ]

  • If a spell with rebound that you cast from your hand is countered for any reason (due to a spell like Cancel, or because all of its targets are illegal), the spell doesn't resolve and rebound has no effect. The spell is simply put into your graveyard. You won't get to cast it again next turn.
  • If you cast a spell with rebound from anywhere other than your hand (such as from your graveyard due to Sins of the Past, from exile due to cascade, or from your opponent's hand due to Sen Triplets), rebound won't have any effect. If you do cast it from your hand, rebound will work regardless of whether you paid its mana cost (for example, if you cast it from your hand due to Maelstrom Archangel).
  • If a replacement effect would cause a spell with rebound that you cast from your hand to be put somewhere else instead of your graveyard (such as Leyline of the Void might), you choose whether to apply the rebound effect or the other effect as the spell resolves.
  • Rebound will have no effect on copies of spells because you don't cast them from your hand.
  • If you cast a spell with rebound from your hand and it resolves, it isn't put into your graveyard. Rather, it's exiled directly from the stack. Effects that care about cards being put into your graveyard won't do anything.
  • At the beginning of your upkeep, all delayed triggered abilities created by rebound effects trigger. You may handle them in any order. If you want to cast a card this way, you do so as part of the resolution of its delayed triggered ability. Timing restrictions based on the card's type (if it's a sorcery) are ignored. Other restrictions are not (such as the one from Rule of Law).
  • If you are unable to cast a card from exile this way (because there are no legal targets for it, for example), or you choose not to, nothing happens when the delayed triggered ability resolves. The card remains exiled for the rest of the game, and you won't get another chance to cast the card. The same is true if the ability is countered (due to Stifle, perhaps).
  • If you cast a card from exile this way, it will go to your graveyard when it resolves or is countered. It won't go back to exile.[7]
  • Multiple instances of rebound on the same spell are redundant.
  • The rebound effect is not optional. Each instant and sorcery spell you cast from your hand is exiled instead of being put into your graveyard as it resolves, whether you want it to be or not. Casting the spell during your next upkeep is optional, however.
  • If a spell moves itself into another zone as part of its resolution (as Arc Blade, All Suns' Dawn, and Beacon of Unrest do), rebound won't get a chance to apply.
  • If a spell you cast from your hand has both rebound and buyback (and the buyback cost was paid), you choose which effect to apply as it resolves.
  • You'll be able to cast a spell with flashback three times this way. First you can cast it from your hand. It will be exiled due to rebound as it resolves. Then you can cast it from exile due to rebound's delayed triggered ability. It will be put into your graveyard as it resolves. Then you can cast it from your graveyard due to flashback. It will be exiled due to flashback as it resolves.
  • For the rebound effect to happen, Cast Through Time needs to be on the battlefield as the spell finishes resolving. For example, if you cast Warp World from your hand, and as part of its resolution it puts Cast Through Time onto the battlefield, Warp World will rebound. Conversely, if Warp World shuffles your Cast Through Time into your library as part of its resolution, and doesn't put another one onto the battlefield, it will not rebound.
  • If you cast an instant or sorcery spell from your hand and it's exiled due to rebound, the delayed triggered ability will allow you to cast it during your next upkeep even if Cast Through Time has left the battlefield by then.
  • If you cast a card from exile "without paying its mana cost," you can't pay any alternative costs. Any X in the mana cost will be 0. On the other hand, if the card has optional additional costs (such as kicker or multikicker), you may pay those when you cast the card. If the card has mandatory additional costs (such as Momentous Fall does), you must pay those if you choose to cast the card.
  • If a spell has restrictions on when it can be cast (for example, "Cast [this spell] only during the declare blockers step"), those restrictions may prevent you from casting it from exile during your upkeep.
  • If you cast a spell using the madness or suspend abilities, you're casting it from exile, not from your hand. Although those spells will have rebound, the ability won't have any effect.
  • Similarly, if you gain control of an instant or sorcery spell with Commandeer, it will have rebound, but the ability won't do anything because that spell wasn't cast from your hand.

Examples[ | ]

Example

Distortion Strike {U}
Sorcery
Target creature gets +1/+0 until end of turn and is unblockable this turn.
Rebound (If you cast this spell from your hand, exile it as it resolves. At the beginning of your next upkeep, you may cast this card from exile without paying its mana cost.)

Cards that grant rebound[ | ]

Trivia[ | ]

  • Rebound was featured as rules card 4 of 5 in the Rise of the Eldrazi set.

References[ | ]

  1. Mark Rosewater (February 29, 2016). "Storm Scale: Khans of Tarkir Block". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  2. Mark Rosewater (November 21, 2016). "Storm Scale: Zendikar and Battle for Zendikar". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  3. Mark Rosewater (May 24, 2010). "On the Rebound". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  4. Tom LaPille (May 28, 2010). "Controlling the Rebound". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  5. Matt Tabak (March 2, 2015). "Mechanics of Dragons of Tarkir". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  6. Matt Tabak (May 31, 2019). "Modern Horizons Mechanics". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  7. Gatherer ruling on Staggershock

External links[ | ]

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