TCG Playability
Enchantment
When this enchantment enters, exile cards from the top of your library until you exile a nonland card. You may cast it without paying its mana cost if that spell's mana value is 8 or less. If you don't, put that card into your hand. When a Dragon you control enters, return this enchantment to its owner's hand.
This red enchantment offers explosive potential for players looking to generate card advantage and cast powerful spells ahead of schedule, making it particularly valuable in dragon-focused strategies and big red decks across multiple formats. The card's primary strength lies in its dual functionality: it provides both immediate mana advantage through free spell casting and card selection through the exile trigger, creating a powerful engine that rewards players for building around dragons. When Breaching Dragonstorm enters the battlefield, you'll exile cards from your library until hitting a nonland card, then you can cast that spell for free if its mana value is eight or less, or add it to your hand otherwise. This creates explosive turns where you're cheating expensive threats into play while still maintaining card advantage. The second ability is equally important strategically—whenever a dragon enters the battlefield under your control, the enchantment returns to your hand, allowing you to recast it and trigger its draw engine repeatedly throughout the game. This synergy makes it particularly strong in dragon decks that run multiple dragon threats and ramp spells. Players seeking aggressive red strategies will appreciate how this card turns your deck into a consistent threat generator, essentially turning the top of your library into additional play opportunities. The card sees play across Standard, Pioneer, Modern, and Commander formats, with particular strength in dedicated dragon decks where it can chain multiple triggers. Whether you're building a competitive dragon shell or a casual brew, Breaching Dragonstorm provides the kind of value and explosive potential that transforms good draws into game-winning sequences while remaining resilient through its return-to-hand mechanic.
Illustrated by Danny Schwartz