In a card game full of neon explosions and anime showboating, Deadbloom Predator does something different — it creeps.
This monster from Riftbound TCG: Set 1 – Origins doesn’t shout. It doesn’t pose. It waits. And when it finally moves, it doesn’t run — it crawls. That quiet menace is exactly what makes this one of the most visually powerful cards we’ve seen so far in the set.
Art Direction
Let’s start with the illustration. The entire card is drenched in deep, poisoned greens, as if the creature was painted under bioluminescent rot. The figure itself is a horrific fusion of bark, beast, and shadow. You can’t even tell where the fur ends and the growth begins — which is the point.
The head reads like a bear or a wolf at first glance, but you quickly realize something’s wrong. The features are twisted, oversized, and unnatural. This thing didn’t evolve. It grew in the dark.
Its glowing mouth and eyes are the only truly bright points, drawing your gaze through the underbrush like lures. But they don’t feel safe — they feel wrong. That green glow doesn’t invite. It infects.
Composition & Framing
There’s a genius in how little this card reveals.
The creature isn’t lunging. It isn’t centered. It’s crouched in the bottom left, partially obscured by leaves and mist. That off-center weight makes the viewer feel unbalanced — like something’s watching from the dark, but you can’t get a clear view.
The leaves and vines in the foreground serve as both visual texture and thematic reinforcement. This isn’t just a creature. It’s part of the environment now. The jungle doesn’t contain it — it is the jungle.
And that subtle background fade into deeper blackness? That’s not a void. That’s where the rest of it might be.
Thematic Fit
This is a Shadow Isles card — one of the creepier regions in League of Legends lore. Known for ghosts, death loops, and necromancy, the Isles are all about twisted resurrection and corrupted nature.
Deadbloom Predator feels like something that was once alive, once beautiful, and is now just hunger wrapped in thorns. Even the flavor text drives it home:
“The souls of those who died unfulfilled coalesce into a form to sate those hungers.”
It’s a tragedy, not a threat. And that emotional note — grief twisted into a monster — is a rare tone for TCG art to strike well. This one nails it.
Pull Rarity
Deadbloom Predator is card #161/298, meaning it’s not part of any Champion Deck — it’s a booster-only pull. And that matters. It puts it in the same pool as chase rares and Epics.
From what we know about Riftbound: Origins booster structure:
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3 foils per booster pack
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6 Epic-rarity cards per box (24 packs)
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Alt-art cards appear roughly 1 per 6 boxes
While the rarity hasn’t been officially labeled yet, based on the 8-cost, its unique mechanics, and design complexity, this card is likely a Rare or low-end Epic. If it ends up being competitively viable or synergizes with Shadow Isles recursion, expect it to move quickly.
Value Speculation
Estimated value:
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Standard version: $6–10
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Foil version: $15–22
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Alt-art (if it drops): $35–50 — especially if the alt plays up the horror aesthetic even more
This isn’t a splashy Jinx or Yasuo card, but for Shadow Isles collectors, horror fans, or players looking to build disruption-heavy decks, this is going to be a desirable piece — especially in foil.
Read more – Super Mega Death Rocket! – Riftbound TCG: Origins
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