![]() ![]() Grafdigger's Cage has no effect on this deck, and it's resilient to Surgical Extraction, or at least it was in terms of the numbers played in 2017. ![]() This 60 is a slower version than the traditional Jund shell, choosing instead a controlling playstyle, controlling the board state until the trigger can be pulled. This version can't ever suspend Living End, but instead utilizes one of the most-recent hype cards, Electrodominance. Speaking of the Worldwake creature-land, W/U Control aficionado Gabriel Nassif recently picked up a U/R Living End build. Using Simian Spirit Guide on T2 you can easily realise a modest recursion of Street Wraith and any one of the 3/4s and 4/4s in the deck not too shabby for when your opponent is untapping their lone Celestial Colonnade. Other versions run a mixture of this and Violent Outburst. While Living End can of course be suspended for an incredibly slow and very-much telegraphed casting, it's best utilised through a Cascade trigger, here provided for by Demonic Dread. This deck can spin its wheels incredibly fast. The Time Spiral cards, an homage to Balance, Ancestral Recall, Living Death, Wheel of Fortune, Eureka, and Black Lotus. But first, a look at some classic deck archetypes and how they might relateā¦ The End is Nigh ![]() There are, of course, cards out there that are effectively silver bullets against our plan, and so we'll have some counterplay for these if at all possible. The plan is to fill our graveyard as best we can, then cheat our myriad Guildgates back into play, hopefully securing the win on the spot. This line is one of high risk and high reward. So then, how does this relate to Maze's End? Read on! There's Dredge itself, happy to dump as many cards into the bin as possible, and then cheating several itty bitty bothersome monsters into play, which have a tendency to come back turn after turn after turn. UB Storm is in effect a graveyard deck, relying on Past in Flames in order to be able to recycle a big heap of cheap cantrips so as to generate massive card advantage and storm count. There's Living End, which is usually brought back out for a spin every time some new cool ETB effects get printed. Graveyard decks come in many shapes and sizes. ![]()
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