![]() If I want a fifth way, I’ll add a second Kolaghan’s Command to the maindeck. My favorite mixture is two Abrupt Decay in the maindeck with a third in the sideboard along with the Kolaghan’s Command. I’ll play as few as two maindeck ways to destroy a Chalice of the Void, and four in the entire 75, ignoring Engineered Explosives. It’s a pretty easy rule to forget when you’re trying to finalize your list, so try not to forget. The first is simple: don’t fold to Chalice of the Void. ![]() There are a few golden rules I apply whenever I’m fixing my maindeck removal suite. That said, I don’t think it’s the most difficult of matchups to begin with, but it’s a defensible argument for why you’d want to play three Blackcleave Cliffs and one Blood Crypt. Now if Boros Burn is popular, I would consider a third Blackcleave Cliffs over the second Blood Crypt. This is often how I try to play my “Thoughtseize mirrors” when I can. This rarely matters, but does have value in slower matchups when you’re trying to put Lurrus in your hand and cast it on the same turn. I personally like having a second Blood Crypt which gets you up to seven fetchable sources of mana. A Nurturing Peatland drops you down to fifteen red sources which, to me, is just too low for the value it provides the deck. The deck already runs four copies of Urza’s Saga, a Forest, a Swamp, and an Overgrown Tomb. The biggest reason I dislike this land is because it adds another non-red source to the deck. Sometimes it will be nice when you can draw a card you’ve seen with a Dragon’s Rage Channeler, but that rarely comes up. It’s also at its best when you have Wrenn and Six on the battlefield, but I’d much rather be returning Urza’s Saga to my hand. It takes up a slot that could go towards Blackcleave Cliffs or my preferred second Blood Crypt. I just don’t like Nurturing Peatland in the deck. ![]() My preferred combination is the following: Sideboarding (aka feeding my brothers and sisters fish for the day)įor the most part, the Jund Midrange (Lurrus) manabase has become homogenized with:.What’s the play: Ragavan or Dragon’s Rage Channeler.Today’s article will be broken into sections as we discuss: That, or until Wizards of the Coast (WotC) bans Ragavan. No, I’m here to bestow upon you a lifetime of midrange knowledge so that you can craft the tools necessary to continue winning for months or even years to come. My goal for this article is not to feed my Jund brothers and sisters fish for a day. I can’t believe I lost to such a good matchup… ![]()
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