Another piece of hate I don’t see a lot of people discussing (for Legacy) is Tabernacle. Many people don’t seem to realize that if your opponent has a creature go to the graveyard the Bridge will be exiled. Another great way to get rid of Bridge is to kill one of your own creatures. Obviously some of these forms of graveyard hate are more effective than others but shutting down their graveyard has a huge effect on their engine.Īnother way to hate is to remove the key pieces from their graveyard (such as Bridge from Below) with Surgical Extraction or Extirpate. Fortunately there a lot of options for this including Rest in Peace, Grafdigger’s Cage, Bojuka Bog, Leyline of the Void, Relic of Progenitus, Deathrite Shaman, and more. This is something I believe you need anyway if you’re playing in any Eternal format because Dredge is not the only deck that uses the graveyard that is worth trying to shut down. How to Hate on Dredgeįortunately no matter what format you’re in there are a few key elements to hating on Dredge and the first is packing some graveyard hate. As Erin Campbell said when she was a guest on the ‘Leaving a Legacy’ podcast, Dredge likes to defy the normal rules of Magic and play a different game. Personally I actually really like and respect Dredge but hopefully the following makes it less scary. Then (again in Vintage or Legacy) you also use Bridge from Below to spam your opponent with tokens which can not only attack but can also be sacrificed to Cabal Therapy or Dread Return.Īs you can see there is a lot going on and it doesn’t quite work like a normal Magic deck, which is why people tend to get intimated. While doing this you also cheat creatures into play like Narcomeba or if you’re playing Legacy or Vintage, Ichorid. No matter what format you’re playing Dredge does have one overarching idea: use the namesake mechanic (instead of drawing you mill a number of cards that is set on the card with the mechanic and return that card from your graveyard to your hand) to dump as much of your deck into your graveyard as possible. Believe it or not Dredge really isn’t that scary, and like most things in Magic knowledge is power! The Basic Engine I’m not going to dive too deep into the different decks but instead I just want to touch on some of the basics since most people seem to find Dredge petrifying. Even if you just end up with the top three cards of your library in your hand by pure chance, you didn’t “draw” them, so the Library won’t see them or cost you any life.This week I’m going to talk about one of the most talked about decks right now in Modern, Legacy and Vintage. This even works with cards like Abundance, which replace you drawing a card from your library with putting a certain type of card into your hand. You won’t put back any cards (the cards you dredged back to your hand weren’t “drawn” this turn, after all) and you won’t pay any life, effectively giving you the Library’s full benefit for free. ![]() Then, when you’re asked to put two cards in your hand that you’ve “drawn this turn” on top of your library… you don’t have any. This means that with the Library, you can dredge three times in a row if you want (assuming you have 3 cards with Dredge in you graveyard). For example, Dredge, which works any time you would draw a card. Hello readers! Today’s tip will be a short but simple one concerning Sylvan Library and what happens when you combine it with effects that replace drawing.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |