Sylvan

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Sylvan
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Japanese
  • しん
  • 森羅 (base)
  • しんら (ruby)
  • Shinra (romanized)
French
  • Sylvan
German
  • Sylvanisch
Italian
  • Silvan
Korean
  • 삼라
  • 森羅 (Hanja)
  • Samna (romanized)
Portuguese
  • Silvestre
Spanish
  • Silvana
Sets
Lists

"Sylvan" (Japanese: しん Shinra) is an archetype of Plant monsters that debuted in Legacy of the Valiant.

In the TCG, "Sylvan" cards pioneered a new game term, "excavate".[1]

Design

Appearance

Each "Sylvan" monster is based on various plants and take on a variety of occupations.

Sylvan Monster Origin
Sylvan Hermitree Delonix regia tree/Hermit
Sylvan Sagequoia Sequoia tree/Sage
Sylvan Guardioak Oak tree/Guardian
Sylvan Lotuswain Lotus Blossom/Coxswain
Sylvan Bladefender Blade of grass/Defender
Sylvan Flowerknight Flowers/Knight
Sylvan Marshalleaf Leaf/Marshal
Sylvan Mikorange Orange fruit/Shrine maiden
Sylvan Komushroomo Mushroom/Komusō
Sylvan Peaskeeper Pea pod/Peacekeeper
Sylvan Snapdrassinagon Snapdragon/Assassin
Sylvan Cherubsprout Plant sprout/Cherub
Sylvan Princessprout Plant sprout/Princess
Alsei, the Sylvan High Protector Alseis plant/Byakko
Orea, the Sylvan High Arbiter Suzaku
Sylvan Princessprite Princess/Sprite

Etymology

The Japanese word shinra is shortened from shinrabanshō (森羅万象) meaning "all things in nature", hence the plant-life motif. 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.

Playing style

Almost 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. In turn, the other effects of the Main Deck "Sylvan" monsters activate when they are excavated from the Deck and sent to the Graveyard.

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. 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. 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. Cards like "Sylvan Charity" and "Mount Sylvania" are indispensable for the Deck for this very reason.

When playing "Sylvans", there is a tendency not to rely on Normal Summons, facilitating the use of "Miracle Fertilizer" without heavy repression. Such plays could include discarding "Sylvan Hermitree" with "Mount Sylvania" and then having the advantage placing the card desired by its owner. Then "Miracle Fertilizer" can be used to revive "Hermitree" to excavated the stacked "Sylvan" and draw a card.

One of the advantages of "Sylvan" is the lack of adding cards from the Deck to the hand, placing them on the top of the Deck, instead. While this may seem disadvantageous, by using cards such as "Shared Ride" or "Mistake" one can punish the opponent for adding cards or stopping them altogether, thus keeping with the pace of the Duel or slowing the opponent down without affecting the playing style of "Sylvan" player. This advantage becomes apparent against Decks that rely on adding cards to the hand, such as "Raidraptor", "Monarch", "Tellarknight", etc., or lockdowns involving "Thunder King Rai-Oh".

The boss monsters of the archetype are "Orea, the Sylvan High Arbiter" and "Alsei, the Sylvan High Protector". The latter's effect bounces cards on the field without targeting them, which can be used in benefit of its controller, by recycling cards like "Miracle Fertilizer" and/or taking target-immune opposing monsters off the field, like "Borreload Dragon", "Blue-Eyes Chaos MAX Dragon", "Supreme King Z-ARC", etc. It can also reorder the cards from the top of the Deck, setting up the excavation effect of itself or another "Sylvan" monster. The former's effect adds a card from the top of the Deck to its controller's hand, provided they correctly guessed the excavated card's name; if the guess was wrong, "Alsei" spins an opponent's card, which can give the "Sylvan" player a control over the opponent's future draws, while getting rid of troublesome cards in the process.

With the advent of Link Monsters, "Aromaseraphy Jasmine" became an essential card for the Deck, Special Summoning Plants from the Deck while also protecting Plant monsters from being destroyed by battle. It can be easily Summoned by sending "Dandylion" to the Graveyard with the effect of "Mathematician", which in turn can be Tributed as cost for the effect of "Jasmine". Another reliable Link Monster is "Skulldeat, the Chained Dracoserpent", that can be easily Link Summoned with "Blackwing - Gofu the Vague Shadow" and one of the solid Normal Summons of the Deck, such as "Sylvan Marshalleaf". Its last effect compensates the lack of draw power of the Deck, while enabling the Special Summon of a high-Level "Sylvan" from the hand and giving its owner 3 slots for Xyz/Synchro Summons.

Recommended cards

Synchro Monsters

Xyz Monsters

Weaknesses

As with any Graveyard-reliant Deck, "Sylvan" is vulnerable against cards like "The End of Anubis", "Soul Drain", "Dimensional Fissure" and "Macro Cosmos". Also, "Sylvan" monsters have very assorted Attributes, making it a cinch to cripple their field presence via "Gozen Match" and "Battle of the Elements".

References

  1. Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG Blog: Everything That’s Available for Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG (both now, and soon….)