Search-first coverage updated for March 2026

Card entity

Rolling Boulder is a strong sample card page because its preview text already implies a scaling plan

This page turns one officially previewed rare power into a reusable card entity route that can connect straight into mechanics and broader build coverage.

Class

Colorless

Type

Power

Cost

3

Status

Announced

AnnouncedPrimary-source confirmedLast updated March 11, 2026

What is officially shown today

Rolling Boulder is an unusually strong sample card page because the public preview already tells users what kind of card it is and why it matters.

The confirmed preview supports a simple summary:

  • it is a rare colorless power
  • it costs 3
  • it repeatedly deals damage to all enemies
  • that damage grows over time

Why this page connects cleanly to mechanics

Rolling Boulder is not just a standalone card name. It naturally points users toward bigger strategy ideas like scaling, patience, and how a slow payoff changes run planning.

That is exactly why it is useful as an early card entity page. It proves a card route can connect upward into mechanics instead of staying trapped as a dead-end database entry.

What this page should not overclaim

This page should not act like one preview card automatically defines a best archetype. The right first version explains the official text and a cautious strategic lens, then routes users outward.

Next clicks

Where this card search should go next

Card pages work best as bridges into the parent card hub and the broader strategy route that gives the card meaning.

FAQ

What a first card page should answer clearly

The best early card pages explain only what the public source actually shows, then route users toward broader strategy pages.

What is officially confirmed about Rolling Boulder?

Mega Crit publicly previewed Rolling Boulder as a rare colorless power that repeatedly deals damage to all enemies and increases that damage each turn.

Why is this card useful for the site structure?

Because it clearly connects a single card page to the wider evergreen idea of scaling, which helps the site bridge cards and mechanics cleanly.

Should this page claim the card is already a must-pick?

No. It should describe what the preview supports and keep the recommendation level cautious.