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It's the preview season for Magic The Gathering's sci-fi cyberpunk set, Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty, and after yesterday's mammoth reveal day we're finally onto the first real day of community-led previews. And we sure did get a lot of incredible cards revealed.Today we had TheGamer's previews, the final card in a powerful and long-running cycle, some amazing hair, and a big ol' toad for the second set in a row.RELATED: Magic The Gathering's Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty Previews - Day One RoundupAs usual, if any cards that aren't on this list were revealed today because of time zones, they'll appear tomorrow.

Hotshot Mechanic

Hotshot Mechanic

Though we saw a pilot with Kotori, the face of the blue/white Commander deck, Hotshot Mechanic is the first one we've seen in Standard since 2017's Aether Revolt. A 2/1 that can crew as if it was a 4/1 is really nice, and for just one mana it's going to speed up lots and lots of vehicle decks.

March of Otherworldly Light

March of Otherworldly Light

Nils Hamm is one of the most interesting artists working in Magic right now, and March of Otherworldly Light looks sublime. It's a shame the effect is underwhelming: you exile a creature, artifact, or enchantment with mana value X or less, and can exile white cards from your hand to reduce the amount of mana you need to pay. Though it can hit artifacts and enchantments, this is too much of a downgrade from the likes of Path to Exile and Swords to Plowshares to be reasonable.

Moonsnare Prototype

Moonsnare Prototype

A blue Springleaf Drum that can channel to put a permanent on the top or bottom of its owner's library (of their choice) ain't bad. Springleaf Drum has the same tapping ability and is colourless, but also isn't in Standard at the moment. Archelos, Lagoon Mystic is going to love this.

Futuristic Agent (translated name TBA)

Futuristic Agent

Whenever Futuristic Agent is tapped, it is a 1/1 Human Citizen that can't be blocked. You can also pay two generic and a blue to untap it. Not only is a great way to Ninjutsu in bigger creatures, the ability to untap itself at instant speed feels like it could be easily broken open for combo potential.

Leech Gauntlet

Leech Gauntlet

A Reconfigure creature that gives the attached creature lifelink is great, and its Reconfigure cost of four seems very reasonable.

Nezumi Prowler (translated name TBA)

Nezumi Prowler

Nezumi Prowler can Ninjutsu in for one generic and one black, which is good. What's even better is that it gives lifelink and deathtouch to a creature when it enters the battlefield until the end of the turn. This is a very nasty surprise to drop on an opponent after they've already declared their blockers.

Tatsunari, Toad Rider

Tatsunari

Big toads are awesome. If you want a card everyone loves, just make it a toad. Wizards seems to be catching on to this, as this is the second set in a row where we've had a massive toad following on from Grolnok, the Omnivore in Crimson Vow. Unfortunately, this card isn't for the toad, but for the human riding it. It does produce the toad, though, which apparently is called Keimi and can drive a new take on Sultai (blue/black/green) Enchantress with its life draining ability.

Assassin's Color Ink (translated name TBA)

Color Ink

This simple creature removal spell would generally be more expensive than something like Murder or Hero's Downfall. However, it costs one less if you control an artifact, and another one less if you control an enchantment. If you have both, this is actually cheaper than most other options in Standard at the moment.

Junji, the Midnight Sky

Junji, the Midnight sky

The black legendary dragon of Kamigawa continues the theme of them dying for profit by forcing discard and life loss on an opponent, or an easy bit of creature recursion. Junji feels like one of the best-suited to having a death trigger, as it being black lets it fit in nicely with a lot of Aristocrat decks.

Malicious Malfunction (translated name TBA)

Malicious Malfunction

All creatures get -2/-2 until the end of the turn, and if a creature dies it is exiled instead. It's an effect we've seen a few times recently, but only costing three mana is nice.

Bronzeplate Boar

Bronzeplate-Boar-1

One of TheGamer's two preview cards, Bronzeplate Boar seems to be part of a cycle with Lizard Blades and Leech Gauntlet. While it is the most expensive of the three, and trample is less exciting than lifelink or double-strike, it makes up for it by being the only one to give the attached creature a power and toughness boost.

Sokenzan Smelter

Sokenzan-Smelter-1

This was the second of TheGamer's preview cards, and we're calling it right now: someone's going to break Sokenzan Smelter. Being able to dump artifacts into your graveyard is a powerful ability, especially with some of the recursion and artifact-matters things going on elsewhere in Neon Dynasty.

March of Reckless Joy

Mark of Reckless Joy

The second card of the March cycle is a lot more appealing than March of Reckless Joy. You can exile any number of red cards from your hand to reduce the X cost by two. Then, you exile the top X cards of your library and can play two of them until your next turn. Other than in fringe scenarios (Laelia decks, for instance) you're only ever going to be wanting to exile two or three at most, in which case four mana is a great cost for it.

Invoke Calamity

Invoke Calamity

There are seemingly a lot of five-colour cycles in Neon Dynasty, with Invoke Calamity being the read counterpart to yesterday's black Invoke Despair. Being able to cast things for free is a great effect, even if you're only technically saving on one mana, thanks to the hefty casting cost. And yes, because the card explicitly says "you may cast", you can ignore the timing restrictions on a sorcery in your graveyard and cast it on an opponent's turn.

Rebel Outlaw (translated name TBA)

Rebel Outlaw

It's safe to say this is going to be the best hair of the set. And I love that Neon Dynasty is looking past the obvious cyberpunk tropes and is exploring more aspects of Japanese subculture with cards like this (pompadours are popular in yankii and bōsōzoku biker fashion). Rebel Outlaw gets +2/+0 for each modified creature you control, making this a potential game-winner with enough creatures out.

Twinshot Sniper

Twinshot Sniper

Being able to shock (deal two damage to) a creature when it enters the battlefield is great, but this card shows how useful the channel is going to be in Standard. Two mana for a shock that can't be countered with normal counterspells? Heck yes.

Lizard Blades

Image of Lizard Blades card from Magic: The Gathering, featuring art by Jason Kang

Lizard Blades is one of the best Reconfigure cards we've seen so far. Two mana for a 1/1 with double strike is great, and then you can just pay two mana to Reconfigure it into an equipment attached to a creature and give it double strike as well. Unless we have some ridiculous mythic rares, this feels about the limit for Reconfigure on the mechanic's first outing.

Sokenzan, Crucible of Defiance

Sokenzan Crucible of Defiance

These legendary lands are causing a bit of an uproar at the moment. Some feel they're fine, while others are concerned they're going to completely break Standard with the power of their channel abilities. Four mana for two 1/1 Spirit tokens with haste doesn't seem great, but it can be done at instant speed and can't be countered with anything in Standard right now.

Kodama of the West Tree

Kodama West

The Kodama cycle began way back in the original Kamigawa block with Kodamas of the South, North, Center Tree. Then we had the almost format-breaking Kodama of the East Tree in Commander Legends. Finally, almost 16 years later, the cycle is complete with Kodama of the West Tree. For just three mana, you can a creature that gives your modified creatures trample and fetches you a basic land whenever one deals combat damage to a player. This is going to be effectively an auto-include for so many green decks now, thanks to its ludicrous ramp potential.

Kappa Tech-Wrecker

Kappa Tech-Wrecker

With Silver-Fur Master yesterday and a Ninja Turtle today, it really looks like we're going to be able to make that TMNT-themed deck of our dreams. It enters with a deathtouch counter, immediately making it Modified, and then that counter can be removed to exile an opponent's artifact or enchantment.

Geothermal Kami

Geothermal Kami

This is… disturbing. The art is fantastic, but I hate looking at it. Geothermal Kami can bounce enchantments back to their controller's hand while giving you three life. It's weird it doesn't have flying, though.

Gloomshrieker (translated name TBA)

Gloomshrieker

Gloomshrieker has menace, and when it enters the battlefield you return a permanent from your graveyard to your hand. When Gloomshrieker dies, exile it instead.

It's Golgari reanimation, something we've seen loads of times before. It being an Enchantment creature does it give it a new angle, though, and costing just three mana for any permanent is very nice.

Asari Captain

Asari Captain

This is definitely a signpost for the red/white drafting archetype of Neon Dynasty. Warriors are a common Boros creature type, and it makes sense to combine them with Samurai to give it that Kamigawa flair. It also highlights that, although Exalted isn't a keyword in this set, it's back in spirit with lots of cards that benefit from attacking alone.

Runaway Trash Bot

Runaway Trash-bot

Combining graveyard decks and modification decks together is an interesting idea, and the flavour here is impeccable. Shove a load of artifacts into your graveyard with Sokenzan Smelter, and then throw a big Runaway Trash-bot at your opponent.

Speedy Hover Bike (translated name TBA)

Hover Bike

A vehicle with flash, flying, and a crew cost of one, when it enters the battlefield it can tap a target creature. It being a vehicle is fine, but being able to lock down an opponent's creature with a two-mana spell at the same time is excellent.

NEXT: Magic The Gathering: Everything You Need To Know About The Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty Preview Season