About Drownyard Behemoth
Drownyard Behemoth, Creature — eldrazi crab, designed by Jason Kang first released in May, 2020 in the set Eldritch Moon and was printed exactly in 2 different ways. It see play in 1 formats: Commander.
A control deck that focuses on instant-speed plays and creature sacrifice could benefit from including Drownyard Behemoth, as it provides a powerful threat with hexproof that can be played at instant speed. While Drownyard Behemoth has its strengths, there may be better options available depending on the specific strategy of the deck, such as Emrakul, the Promised End or Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger. Ultimately, whether Drownyard Behemoth sees play will depend on the overall synergy and power level of the deck it is included in.
Rules
07/13/16
A creature’s converted mana cost is determined solely by the mana symbols printed in its upper right corner (unless that creature is the back face of a double-faced card, is a melded permanent, or is copying something else; see below). If the mana cost includes , X is considered to be 0. If it’s a single-faced card with no mana symbols in its upper right corner (because it’s an animated land, for example), its converted mana cost is 0. Ignore any alternative costs or additional costs (such as kicker) that were paid as the creature was cast.
07/13/16
If you sacrifice a creature with in its mana cost, that X is considered to be 0.
07/13/16
Once you begin to cast a spell with emerge, no player may take actions until you’re done. Notably, opponents can’t try to remove the creature you wish to sacrifice.
07/13/16
The converted mana cost of a creature spell with emerge isn’t affected by whether its emerge cost is paid. For example, if you cast Elder Deep-Fiend for its emerge cost and sacrifice a creature whose converted mana cost is 3, Elder Deep-Fiend’s converted mana cost remains 8.
07/13/16
There is no moment during the turn Drownyard Behemoth enters the battlefield in which it doesn’t have hexproof. The earliest opportunity for an opponent to target it is during the next turn’s upkeep step.
07/13/16
You may sacrifice a creature with a converted mana cost of 0, such as a token creature that’s not a copy of another permanent, to cast a spell for its emerge cost. You’ll just pay the full emerge cost with no reduction.
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