And banished zones, for that matter. In case it's not clear where I'm going with this, you're the controller of the card that is Special Summoned by Monster Reborn - the owner is the person who actually owns the card in the first place, and it doesn't change.
And with that in mind Death to uplanders I-I think we may have started a war User Info: alkemypirate. The only weird exception I've seen to this rule is Wind-Up Rabbit. If you Special Summon your opponent's Wind-Up Rabbit, then activate its effect to banish it, it returns to your side of the field during your next standby.
If that selected monster had a graveyard effect, or if it might have been activated from the graveyard later, then summoning it to your field could put part of your opponent's strategy on hold.
The problem with Monster Reborn is that it's just too slow to be a reliable counter. It's a direct upgrade to Monster Reborn's graveyard manipulation by virtue of being a Quick-Play Spell, even if it can't summon a monster from your own graveyard.
The Ignister spell A. At its core, it's basically identical in purpose: you'll activate A. The tradeoff is totally worthwhile, given the huge range of Cyberse Extra Deck monsters that are available to you, including Accesscode Talker. From there, everything about A.
It's searchable, it's a Quick-Play, and you can banish it from your graveyard during a battle between two monsters to trade a card in your hand for a banished A. Between the extra utility and its stronger card type, there's little reason to consider Monster Reborn in Ignister decks, and that's a common trend among many modern strategies.
Dragonmaid Hospitality exists as a direct parallel to Monster Reborn , so why am I also talking about Dragonmaid Tidying here? Simply put, Tidying is actively seeing play in one of the best decks in the game, and it's a great example of today's graveyard Special Summon effects.
Tidying isn't first and foremost a disruptive trap that returns your opponent's cards to their hand, and secondly a means of Special Summoning the very same monster that likely searched it from the deck: Chamber Dragonmaid. Monster Reborn is a hard sell in a deck that has graveyard Special Summons as a bonus , and that's a big deal in terms of card advantage.
It's hard for Monster Reborn to compete with that. Finally, let's talk about two more cards that replace Monster Reborn's usefulness as an extender. Bottomless Trap Hole : You can activate this card after a monster was Special Summoned by the effect of another card, such as " Monster Reborn ".
Bottomless Trap Hole : If the opponent activates " Monster Reborn " and then chains " Call of the Haunted " so that 2 monsters are Summoned in the same chain , and then you activate " Bottomless Trap Hole " after that chain resolves only the monster Summoned by chain link 1 " Monster Reborn " is removed from play. If you successfully Special Summon it using this method, and then wish to use " Monster Reborn " to Special Summon it from the Graveyard, you do not have to remove 3 more Fiend-Type monsters from the Graveyard.
Disappear : When a card that selects a card in the Graveyard as a target , such as " Monster Reborn " This is because these cards select their target at activation , not resolution. So they may be the target of " Monster Reborn " Gilasaurus : The effect of this card only activates when you elect to change its Normal Summon to a Special Summon. Not if it is Special Summoned by " Monster Reborn " Also, if you have " Gravekeeper's Chief " on the field, your opponent can use " Monster Reborn " on monsters in your Graveyard.
Guardian Tryce : If you Special Summon " Guardian Tryce ", you don't get to activate his effect when he's destroyed, even if you Tribute Summoned him previously and are using " Monster Reborn " on him later. Jowgen the Spiritualist : While this card is on the field neither player can activate Kaiser Colosseum : Your opponent cannot use " Monster Reborn " Lava Golem : However, if Special Summoned correctly and then sent to the Graveyard, you can use " Monster Reborn " to Special Summon " Lava Golem " to your side of the field, but you as the controller will then take the damage during your Standby Phases.
These are just two examples of cards that can abuse the re-useability of Premature Burial. Yet, there are many other cards e. Blackwing - Zephyros the Elite which can achieve the same thing. One could, however, argue that one would have to get access to Premature Burial first before being able to exploit it.
If it were to be unbanned, it would go to a maximum of one copy per deck, which would at least make the Gol'Gar scenario a bit more tolerable. From another insight article titled The Mathematics Behind Building Competitive Decks , we can conclude that the probability of us opening that single copy of Premature Burial in a card deck is only Hence, if it were the main ingredient in our strategy, our deck would not be very consistent.
However, there are other ways to access it besides drawing it in your opening hand. There are several ways to get access to a card like Premature Burial. The most consistent way would be through Hidden Armory. With three copies of Hidden Armory in our deck, we would have a This adds a lot of consistency to a deck abusing Premature Burial. In addition to this, Hidden Armory can be used more than once-per-turn and it can add an equip card from the graveyard to the hand, which means you can recycle Premature Burial if you open multiple copies of Premature Burial.
Even though it would only give us Premature Burial in a third of all games on average, it is another nice tool as its name suggests for accessing equip spell cards.
Every Equipment searcher that gets released makes Premature Burial all the more dangerous. Premature Burial is one of the most exploitable spells in all of Yu-Gi-Oh! Moreover, several similar cards to Premature Burial have been released which have some severe drawbacks. Living Fossil , for example, is an equip spell that special summons a monster back from the graveyard. However, its effect is limited to level 4 or lower monsters and the effects of the special summoned monster are negated.
Most importantly, if it leaves the field, the revived monster is destroyed. So, if Living Fossil were bounced back to your hand, the monster would also leave the field with it though, to the graveyard and not the hand.
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