![]() ![]() Rearrange the order of the top 3 cards of your Deck. Places 1 Plant-Type monster from your Graveyard to the top of your Deck.Īdd 1 "Sylvan" Spell/Trap Card from your Graveyard to your hand. Places up to 5 "Sylvan" card from your Graveyard to the bottom of your Deck. Places 1 "Sylvan" card from your Deck to the top of your Deck. Otherwise, places it on the bottom of your Deck.Īll Plant-Type monsters you currently control gain 300 ATK and DEF.Īdd this card from your Graveyard to your hand. ![]() Special Summons this card from your Graveyard.Įxcavates the top card of your Deck, and if it is a Plant-Type monster, sends it to the Graveyard. Special Summons 1 Level 4 or lower Plant-Type monster from your Graveyard. Special Summons 1 Level 1 Plant-Type monster from your Deck. Cards like " Sylvan Charity" and " Mount Sylvania" are indispensable for the Deck for this very reason. However, this mechanic can also place handy cards on the bottom of the Deck, so before blindly excavating the cards, it is recomended to use effects that reorder the cards on the top of the Deck, in order to make the most of the strategy. Their effects also let the player, if no Plant monsters were excavated, send potentially dead draws to the bottom of the Deck, thus allowing good draw advantage. Their basic playing style involves excavating other "Sylvan" monsters from the Deck and sending them to the Graveyard, in order to activate their effects, ranging from card destruction to monster revival. In turn, the other effects of the Main Deck "Sylvan" monsters activate when they are excavated from the Deck and sent to the Graveyard. The word " sylvan" refers to an association with the woodland, specifically that which inhabits the wood, is made of tree materials, or comprises the forest itself.Īlmost all "Sylvan" monsters have the common effect of excavating a number of cards from the top of the Deck, and sending any excavated Plant monsters to the Graveyard. This could also allude to the concept of kami, or "Shinto gods/spirits" that are omnipresent. ![]() The Japanese word shinra is shortened from shinrabanshō (森羅万象) meaning "all things in nature", hence the plant-life motif. Each "Sylvan" monster is based on various plants and take on a variety of occupations, with touches of various aspects of Shinto, Japan's chief religion. ![]()
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