Mill: Difference between revisions
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Milling is an informal game term. Milling means to [[discard]] cards from the top of a [[deck]]. "Mill" on its own implies discarding cards from your opponent's decks, but some cards "self-mill," discarding cards from your own deck for some benefit. {{C|Dwarven}} [[culture]] specializes in both, with cards like {{Card|Dwarven Axe}} and {{Card|Realm of Dwarrowdelf}}. Mill strategies often combine with [[discard]] strategies, because forcing your opponent to discard cards means they draw more cards when they [[reconcile]], burning through their deck more quickly. | '''Milling''' is an informal game term. Milling means to [[discard]] cards from the top of a [[deck]]. "Mill" on its own implies discarding cards from your opponent's decks, but some cards "self-mill," discarding cards from your own deck for some benefit. {{C|Dwarven}} [[culture]] specializes in both, with cards like {{Card|Dwarven Axe}} and {{Card|Realm of Dwarrowdelf}}. Mill strategies often combine with [[discard]] strategies, because forcing your opponent to discard cards means they draw more cards when they [[reconcile]], burning through their deck more quickly. | ||
The term [https://mtg.fandom.com/wiki/Mill comes from Magic: the Gathering], so named after the card [https://gatherer.wizards.com/pages/card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=1126 Millstone]. | The term [https://mtg.fandom.com/wiki/Mill comes from Magic: the Gathering], so named after the card [https://gatherer.wizards.com/pages/card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=1126 Millstone]. |
Revision as of 05:40, 2 January 2022
Milling is an informal game term. Milling means to discard cards from the top of a deck. "Mill" on its own implies discarding cards from your opponent's decks, but some cards "self-mill," discarding cards from your own deck for some benefit. Dwarven culture specializes in both, with cards like Dwarven Axe (1C9) and Realm of Dwarrowdelf (2R12) . Mill strategies often combine with discard strategies, because forcing your opponent to discard cards means they draw more cards when they reconcile, burning through their deck more quickly.
The term comes from Magic: the Gathering, so named after the card Millstone.