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Although it requires a little more luck, it can accomplish this by swapping Faithless Looting for Hedron Crab. The EngineīUGvine seeks to fill its graveyard even more quickly than its Jund counterpart. Unlike its Jund counterpart which plays more of a grindy game, BUGvine wants to win yesterday, and very often throws 20+ power onto the board from the graveyard by turn four. Sultai Dredgevine (or BUGvine) can be an incredibly explosive deck. Today though, we're going to take a look at a different version, to see what changes when we swap out Red for Blue. The general consensus best-build of that deck was written about on MTGCanada earlier this year here. It was my main Modern deck for most of 2014-2015, and it performed very well at local events, including winning a local GPT. The typical Dredgevine build is in Jund (Black, Red, Green), and is actually a very competitive deck despite its infrequent appearances. This week I'm going to walk you through an alternate build of one of my favourite Modern archetypes, Dredgevine.įor the unfamiliar, Dredgevine is a Black and Green-based archetype that aggressively fills up its graveyard using effects like Dredge, discard, looting, and other forms of self-mill, and then casts cheap creatures to recur its namesake Vengevine to start doing some big damage.
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Hello and welcome back to another edition of Going Rogue, where winning isn't the goal but it often happens anyways.
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