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Tappedout manaless dredge
Tappedout manaless dredge





tappedout manaless dredge

Two things are important to making the combo work: finding both combo pieces and finding a window to combo when our opponent is unlikely to be able to kill our Faceless Haven at instant speed (which is the primary way opponents can beat the combo).At the end of our turn, Faceless Haven turns back into a land and gives us a Platinum Angel that most decks can't kill because Standard decks are really, really bad at killing lands! In case it wasn't clear in the video, here's the combo: play The Book of Exalted Deeds, play Faceless Haven, get up to six mana, use three to activate Faceless Haven (typically, we tap Faceless Haven for mana and then activate it because we're not planning to attack with it anyway), and then put The Book of Exalted Deeds' enlightened counter on Faceless Haven.Normally, I shy away from playing best-of-one, but in some ways, Exalted Deeds Combo is uniquely suited for the format. Oh yeah, this was recorded during an early-access recording day on Wednesday (thanks to Wizards for the free account to use!) where best-of-one was the only option. Record-wise, Exalted Deeds Combo was pretty insane: we ended up going 7-1 across eight best-of-one matches.Just a quick reminder: if you enjoy the Much Abrew About Nothing series and the other video content on MTGGoldfish, make sure to subscribe to the MTGGoldfish YouTube channel to keep up on all the latest and greatest. How good is the combo of The Book of Exalted Deeds and Faceless Haven? Let's find out on this week's Much Abrew About Nothing! Otherwise, there aren't really any main-deckable land-destruction spells in the format (and not even many great sideboard land-destruction spells), which means if we can get the enlightened counter on Faceless Haven, let it go back into land form, and choose to never turn it into a creature again, we usually have an unkillable Platinum Angel, which is pretty absurd. While Field of Ruin exists for a couple more months, it isn't heavily played. This week, we're getting our first taste of our new Adventures in the Forgotten Realms Standard format with a combo that I've been dying to play ever since it was previewed (and got a chance on Wednesday with a free stocked account from Wizards!): Exalted Deeds Combo! The goal of our deck is simple: find The Book of Exalted Deeds, find Faceless Haven, get to six mana to put The Book of Exalted Deeds' enlightened counter on Faceless Haven (preferably while our opponent is tapped out so they can't interact with Faceless Haven in response), and then trust that having a land version of Platinum Angel means that we'll eventually win the game when our opponent runs out of cards in their library! The deck takes advantage of the fact that Standard simply doesn't get playable land-destruction spells. Hello, everyone! Welcome to another episode of Much Abrew About Nothing.







Tappedout manaless dredge