In combo, his drawback is actually an advantage. In beatdown, you will always be able to untap him. Plus, both his creature types are very relevant. Amazing card! 5/5
BenjaminMiddleton
★★★★☆ (4.0/5.0)(2 votes)
If i combo nettle sentinel with heritage druid can i tap nettle on the turn that it comes into play as if it weren't affected by summoning sickness?
Or like attacking and tap based abilities do i have to wait until my next turn?
person1234
★★★★☆ (4.0/5.0)(5 votes)
You can tap him for heritage druid the turn he comes into play. The word tap and the symbol tap are two different things.
rubber
★★★★☆ (4.6/5.0)(6 votes)
Isamaru with vigilance at common and not legendary? Huh? Plus the Heritage Druid...I've seen a 60-ish damage Grapeshot turn 2 by the elf combo. Why did they make this card so good?
MDStrawHat
★★★★☆ (4.2/5.0)(6 votes)
Love this card. Might as well be a 2/2 with vigilance because lets face it when are you not gonna satisfy the condition of playing a green spell.
drunyon
★★★★☆ (4.6/5.0)(5 votes)
This is one of the best elves ever printed, and one of my favorites. He's a great beatdown elf, and a fantastic mana producer with things like Birchlore Rangers and Heritage Druid.
If you get him out in play with Earthcraft and Elvish Guidance, you can basically get all the mana you could ever want.
Not only is it a good card, but to make it good you have to play "correctly', strategy wise. A good newb card in both it helps you learn the game, play better, and have a decent creature while being easy to understand.
Necrokeryx
★★★★★ (5.0/5.0)(2 votes)
There are three 2/2 creatures in green for one mana. (four if you count an unglued card, but I will not)
This is by far the most reliable card for green aggro. Of the other two, Pouncing Jaguar puts you behind the mana curve, and Ghazbán Ogre is arguably pretty good as well, but can easily backfire on you.
This card's drawback is more like a balance factor to it's other ability, as if you're playing green aggro with green's famous combat tricks, it will pretty much have vigilance during the turns that really matter. This is an amazing card for green aggro. It's kind of surprising how few 2/2 creatures green has for one mana, being the color of huge, effecient creatures.
In case you're curious, Ghazbán Ogress is the unglued card.
TheWrathofShane
☆☆☆☆☆ (0.0/5.0)
2/2 for with a drawback thats actually an upside, in a strong tribe.
Cydrius
☆☆☆☆☆ (0.0/5.0)
In casual play, this gets pretty fun alongside Sprout Swarm.
Tap to convoke Sprout Swarm, Sprout Swarm untaps it. Nettle Sentinels basically has "Sprout Swarm costs G less."
Comments (14)
can i tap nettle on the turn that it comes into play as if it weren't affected by summoning sickness?
Or like attacking and tap based abilities do i have to wait until my next turn?
If you get him out in play with Earthcraft and Elvish Guidance, you can basically get all the mana you could ever want.
This is by far the most reliable card for green aggro. Of the other two, Pouncing Jaguar puts you behind the mana curve, and Ghazbán Ogre is arguably pretty good as well, but can easily backfire on you.
This card's drawback is more like a balance factor to it's other ability, as if you're playing green aggro with green's famous combat tricks, it will pretty much have vigilance during the turns that really matter. This is an amazing card for green aggro. It's kind of surprising how few 2/2 creatures green has for one mana, being the color of huge, effecient creatures.
In case you're curious, Ghazbán Ogress is the unglued card.
Tap to convoke Sprout Swarm, Sprout Swarm untaps it. Nettle Sentinels basically has "Sprout Swarm costs G less."