What is graveyard hate?
Limit or stop interaction and abuse of graveyard shenanigans. Usually this involves exiling things from the graveyard, or making things in the graveyard otherwise untargetable.
How do you protect against graveyard hate MTG?
The best way to protect your graveyard is to protect yourself. Bojuka Bog and similar cards target the player, not the graveyard itself. Giving your self hexproof with Witchbane Orb or Orbs of Warding would be a good place to start.
What is a graveyard in MTG?
The graveyard is the pile into which you discard, where instant and sorcery spells go once they have resolved, and where permanents go when they have been sacrificed, destroyed, or “put into the graveyard” due to a state-based effect. The threshold and delirium mechanics also make use of the graveyard.
How do you fight the graveyard hate?
You either need to spend a turn removing a hate card, or you need to keep enough mana open to counter one. Trying to be faster loses against Leyline of the Void, and possibly against cheap permanent or instant-speed graveyard removal.
Can you give your graveyard Hexproof?
Well, there’s Ground seal, but its effect also applies to you! Giving yourself hexproof stops cards that target players. It doesn’t stop global effects, continuous effects, or effects that target cards in graveyards.
Do Tokens hit the graveyard?
A: Tokens go to the graveyard as regular creatures, and are removed as a “state-based effect” when a player gets priority again. They stay in the graveyard long enough to trigger abilities, like the one of Soulcatchers’ Aerie, before they are removed.
Is Milling considered discarding?
No, milling means putting cards directly from their library into the graveyard. Indeed. OP, this means that not only does mill not count as drawing, it doesn’t count as discarding either.
Is dredge discard?
Each draw is individual, and you can choose to replace both, one, or none of the draws with a dredge (provided you have enough cards with Dredge in your graveyard). After you draw and/or dredge, then you discard two cards.
How do you counter Bojuka bog?
From a strategy standpoint viciously attack the players running the bog as they can’t play bog if they’re dead. Player removal works 100% of the time. Another work around is [[Entomb]] a shuffle titan into your grave in response to the trigger which also would save the grave.
Why do so many people hate the graveyard?
Reasons for this list (with some examples to get hyped about): Graveyard hate really sucks to have to put in your deck. Most players don’t want to “waste” a slot for it so this list features cards that don’t just hate the graveyard and so don’t feel like as much of a waste.
Do you have to have graveyard hate in your deck?
Graveyard hate really sucks to have to put in your deck. Most players don’t want to “waste” a slot for it so this list features cards that don’t just hate the graveyard and so don’t feel like as much of a waste. Some of these cards feel like win conditions in their own right, see Necromancer’s Covenant
What can I do to stop abuse of graveyard shenanigans?
Limit or stop interaction and abuse of graveyard shenanigans. Usually this involves exiling things from the graveyard, or making things in the graveyard otherwise untargetable. Filters: By default, filters show all colors for all formats.
What’s the best way to remove cards from the graveyard?
Maybe you’re making an Eldrazi deck and removing from the graveyard is an easy way to get a ton of Eldrazi food! Night Soil is a good way to bounce cards in and out of the graveyard with Eldrazi for example. Options are always good for those on a budget! Shred Memory is a cheap and effective way to tutor for something like…oh idk…