The Battlefield

Haze of Rage
Storm-Kiln Artist
AI DraftFeb 26, 2026

Haze of Rage + Storm-Kiln Artist

Overview
When you cast Haze of Rage, Storm-Kiln Artist’s magecraft will trigger once for the original cast and once for each copy created by Haze of Rage’s Storm; each trigger creates one Treasure token. Storm creates those copies as a triggered ability when you cast Haze of Rage , and copying a spell causes magecraft to trigger because a copy of a spell is itself a spell . Buyback is an additional cost you declare while casting the original spell , and if paid it affects only the original card (copies are not cards in hand or graveyard) .
Step 1
You cast Haze of Rage and, at casting time, you announce whether you will pay its buyback cost (buyback must be announced while casting) .
Step 2
When the original Haze of Rage is cast, Storm’s triggered ability is created and put on the stack (because Storm triggers “When you cast this spell”) , and Storm-Kiln Artist’s magecraft ability will trigger for the cast (magecraft triggers whenever you cast or copy a spell).
Step 3
The magecraft trigger created by the original cast goes on the stack and will create one Treasure token when it resolves; that token is an artifact and will affect Storm-Kiln Artist’s static power modifier once it enters the battlefield.
Step 4
When the Storm trigger resolves it puts N copies of Haze of Rage onto the stack, where N is the number of other spells cast before this Haze this turn [Ruling 2021-03-19].
Step 5
Each copy put onto the stack is a copy of a spell (a spell but not cast) , and Storm-Kiln Artist’s magecraft ability triggers for each copy because magecraft triggers when you copy a spell. Those triggered abilities are put on the stack.
Step 6
When each magecraft trigger from a copy resolves it creates a Treasure token (an artifact), which increases the number of artifacts you control and thus immediately updates Storm-Kiln Artist’s power via its static ability.
Step 7
Each copied Haze of Rage then resolves in turn, giving creatures you control +1/+0 until end of turn; copies are not cards and after they resolve they cease to exist .
Step 8
Finally, the original Haze of Rage (the card you actually cast) will resolve, granting creatures you control +1/+0 until end of turn and, if you paid buyback when casting it, being returned to your hand instead of going to your graveyard as it resolves .
Resolution
Result: Total Treasures = 1 (for casting the original Haze of Rage) + N (one for each copy created by Storm, where N = the number of other spells cast before Haze this turn). Storm’s trigger is put on the stack when you cast Haze of Rage , and when that trigger resolves it puts N copies onto the stack; each copy is a copy of a spell and thus causes magecraft to trigger . If you paid Haze of Rage’s buyback when casting the original, the original card will be returned to your hand as it resolves, but copies cannot meaningfully be returned to your hand because they are not cards (they cease to exist in any zone other than the stack or battlefield) .
Feedback