![]() ![]() ![]() However, he does have cards like ] and Grisly Salvage because sometimes getting a bunch of things in the graveyard quickly is stronger than getting a single card from Entomb. On the other hand, my friend plays ] as his commander, and he focuses on getting big value out of his creatures, and has more of a reanimator strategy. However, I do run Buried Alive and Reanimate, because being able to reanimate a big bomb for cheap is very helpful. Overall, my strategy is a dredge strategy, because I don't care what goes into my graveyard as long as it's there, I'm happy. The more cards there are, the cheaper Karador becomes, which means more creatures can come into play. In my Karador deck, I like dumping all of my cards in my graveyard. In EDH, you will often find dredge and reanimator blur the lines quite often, as you'll find a mix in most graveyard decks. If I happen to hit all creatures, that's 4 extra creatures for cards like Jarad and ] to take advantage of. That doesn't mean Grisly Salvage is bad by any means. The difference is that if you happen to have ] in your hand, Entomb and Buried Alive are much stronger than Grisly Salvage, as you can easily bring any card into play, vs any cards you may happen to hit with Grisly Salvage. Buried Alive and Entomb both search for specific creatures in your deck, and put them in the graveyard, whereas Grisly Salvage and Commune just dump any cards into the graveyard (on a side note, they're also helpful for digging for specific cards in your deck, but in this example, we're focusing on the part where they put the extra cards in your graveyard). In this example, Jarad is an example of a card that leans more towards a dredge strategy, and Sheoldred leans more towards a reanimator strategy.Īnother example of cards used would be ]/] vs ]/]. If all you have in your graveyard are a bunch of mana dorks, you're not getting a lot of value out of Sheoldred. On the other hand, ] wants specific creatures in the graveyard. It doesn't matter which creatures are in the 'yard, as long as there's a lot of them, Jarad is happy. Well, like others have said, a dredge strategy focuses on filling up your graveyard as quickly as possible, and then interacting with the graveyard like a second hand, or benefiting from the amount of cards in graveyards.įor example, ] really likes having lots of creatures in the graveyard. You aim to generate small advantages over the game that results in you being far ahead. ![]() If wood elves is good for 2 forests when you cast it, imagine getting a forest for casting and then sac'ing it with skullclamp for draw 2 cards only to be recast through ] or ] or ] and then recasting it for another forest. Often times, reanimator cards are creatures that can be easily recurred should they be destroyed or have multiple activations throughout the game. Grind reanimator is using creatures to generate advantage in card draw, lands, life, control, and damage through enter the battlefield/leaving the battlefield/sacrifice abilities. Your graveyard essentially becomes your second hand. Dredge can be used to toolbox by letting you fill your graveyard with creatures and selectively casting them to best fit the situation. But both can be toolbox or grind decks also. These are both examples of combo dredge and combo reanimator. I'm gonna add a little something on this real quick. ![]()
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