Prime Material Dragon – Old School YuGiOh Card Reviews
Prime Material Dragon is one of many powerful YuGiOh cards
from the Phantom Darkness set. Of course, that set is best known for literally
destroying competitive play for several months thanks to the printing of Dark
Armed Dragon. One card that has become a bit forgotten though, is Prime
Material Dragon, which thanks to its pair of abilities has more judge rulings
tied to its name than most cards.
It might be surprising that a card that can both gain you
life and prevent destruction effects hasn’t seen competitive play in the
Yu-Gi-Oh TCG since 2014. There really aren’t any cards like Prime Material
Dragon that can do all the things that it can. Through 2008, the year in which
it was first printed, the golden Dragon was a staple in both Monarch and Dark
Armed Dragon (DAD) decks. This was thanks to its two abilities:
·
Any effect that would
inflict damage to a player increases their Life Points by the same amount,
instead.
·
During either player's
turn, when a card or effect is activated that would destroy a monster(s) on the
field: You can send 1 card from your hand to the Graveyard; negate the
activation, and if you do, destroy it.
Prime Material Dragon was mostly played for its ability to
prevent the destruction of a monster or monsters on the field; but, the first
ability to gain life whenever damage would otherwise be inflicted did come up.
After all, burn decks did exist, such as Chain Burn, thanks to Chain Strike
being printed in Cyberdark Impact. Fortunately, burn players could get around
Prime Material Dragon with the continuous trap card Bad Reaction to Simochi,
which would then turn the life gain back into damage.
There is also a funny combo with Dark Snake Syndrome and
Prime Material Dragon, which ultimately gains both players such a ridiculous
amount of life points that the game will inevitably end in one player decking
out. This was one way you could “beat” Dark Armed Dragon decks, although it
wasn’t exactly a consistent or good strategy; but, this situation did happen as
Chain Burn decks could stall for quite some time if they could keep Dark Armed
Dragon himself from coming down and picking off burn’s stall cards.
A common misconception about Prime Material Dragon, though,
is that it could turn paying life points as a cost into life gain. This doesn’t
work because paying life points isn’t inflicting damage. Of course, there were
likely many local tournaments where sneaky players tried to get away with this.
It’s incredible how many forum posts people would literally post saying that
you could gain 5000 Life Points by playing Cyber-Stein and activating his
effect to summon a Fusion Monster for the cost of 5000 life points. Other cards
that people tried to use in this way were Mirror Wall, Power Bond, and even The
Winged Dragon of Ra!
This same major misconception with Prime Material Dragon
applied to several other popular cards that required losing Life Points
as a cost. Another of these was trying to use it alongside Soul Charge to gain
1000 life points instead of losing 1000 life points for each monster
resurrected with it. This still doesn’t work, because although you’re not
paying life points, you’re still losing life points as a cost, which in the
rules of Yu-Gi-Oh is essentially the same thing.
One wonders how many games were wrongfully decided by the
consequences of these misconceptions and people cheating their way to an easy
victory because of them. Back in 2008, with some unscrupulous duelists clearly
attempting to cheat their way to easy wins using Prime Material Dragon’s first
effect, some players called for it to be banned; this never happened, of
course, because the reasons people asking for its banning quoted were people
simply not reading the card properly.
How Would You Best Use Prime Material Dragon in 2008?
Besides some other corner cases with cards that would
inflict damage, Prime Material Dragon basically existed to negate Bottomless
Trap Hole, Mirror Force, Torrential Tribute, and other destruction effects. The
only ways opponents could beat Prime Material Dragon back in 2008 were counter
traps such as Divine Wrath, Pulling the Rug, or Solemn Judgment. It wouldn’t be
until the printing of Solemn Warning that players had a more cost-effective and
less situational answer for Prime Material Dragon.
Fortunately, the next set after Phantom Darkness was Light
of Destruction, and Judgment Dragon sends cards to the Graveyard rather
than destroys, so Prime Material Dragon was powerless to do anything in that
case; although it was still plenty handy against Lightsworn cards that did
destroy like Ryko, Lightsworn Hunter.
Another deck Prime Material Dragon proved good against was
Gladiator Beasts, as Light of Destruction brought with it the Beast’s best
Fusion Monster to that point in Gyzarus. Having Prime Material Dragon and a
card in hand meant Gyzarus couldn’t choose to destroy your monsters, and both
Gyzarus and PMD have 2400 ATK.
The only way that the Gladiator Beasts could deal with it
was to either crash their Gyzarus with the Dragon or use a bounce effect such
as Compulsory Evacuation Device. After the printing of Intercept in The Duelist
Genesis, some Gladiator Beast players would sideboard this not just against
Monarchs, but to steal a copy of Prime Material Dragon.
What Was the Best Deck for Prime Material Dragon?
As we said previously, Prime Material Dragon ended up in a
lot of top Dark Armed Dragon and Monarch deck lists throughout 2008. But, it
would see play well into 2014 in a variety of strategies, mostly Dragons and
Monarchs. The first top deck to feature Prime Material Dragon, though, wasn’t
any of these strategies, but instead Billy Brake’s Perfect Circle deck which
got Top 8 at SJC Houston in Februrary 2008.
The one copy of Prime Material Dragon was actually in
Brake’s sideboard, and it was mostly to counteract the Magical Explosion First
Turn Kill (FTK) decks that were still popular at that point. Prime Material
Dragon absolutely hoses Magical Explosion since the trap card’s effect does
indeed inflict damage. Of course, Prime Material Dragon also meant Dark Armed
Dragon couldn’t destroy monsters with its effect without being destroyed
itself; so, DAD would actually have to hit over the Prime Material Dragon instead
with its 2800 ATK before it could clean up.
This is why pairing the Prime Material Dragon with Light and
Darkness Dragon was so effective; the LADD would keep negating Dark Armed
Dragon’s effect and when all your monsters are destroyed because of LADD being
destroyed, Prime Material Dragon would be a prime choice (pun intended) to be
revived.
The best decks that could take advantage of Prime Material
Dragon were Prime Monarchs (who typically ran two copies in the main deck) and
Disaster Dragon all the way into 2010. This is because of Red-Eyes Darkness
Metal Dragon being able to easily revive Prime Material Dragon from the
Graveyard. These Disaster Dragon decks performed quite well and in some small
part thanks to Prime Material Dragon being both a solid beat-stick and a way to
ensure key creatures wouldn’t be destroyed.
Prime Material Dragon in Duel
Links
Interestingly enough, Prime Material Dragon is one of the
trickier monsters to acquire in the Duel Links game. It’s an Ultra Rare that you can only get through special
events with the use of an UR ticket which are given out from such events.
However, once you have a copy, it can prove very useful in certain Duel Links
strategies.
One card that does work well with Prime Material Dragon is a
continuous trap card called Aegis of Gaia. You gain 3000 life when it comes
into play, but when it leaves play you take 3000 damage. But, because this is
actual damage being dealt, Prime Material Dragon turns that into lifegain. This
means you can gain 6000 life from a single card in combination with the Dragon.
As a lowest rarity card in the Chaotic Compliance pack, this isn’t a hard combo piece to acquire.
Another card to use alongside Prime Material Dragon is the equip
spell Axe of Fools. The equipped monster gains 1000 ATK and has its effects
negated, but its controller takes 500 damage to the controller of the monster.
This card works both offensively and defensively, but with Prime Material
Dragon on the field, you can put it on one of your own monsters and beat down
with it while gaining life every turn. Just remember that if you have Prime
Material Dragon and you put Axe of Fools on an opponent’s creature, they will gain the Life Points.
Because the metagame of Duel Links is quite different than
regular YuGiOh, many decks play very specific strategies and tend to be all in
on them. If you know you’re
going up against a burn strategy, Prime Material Dragon is perfect to play. If
you’re
up against a deck you know relies on using effects to destroy your creatures,
again, having Prime Material Dragon at your disposal can easily win you a game.
All in all, Prime Material Dragon is a very useful card to either
build a janky deck around Aegis of Gaia or just to have against certain
match-ups in the Duel Links solo adventure. If you happen to grab a UR ticket,
this is a great card to spend one on.
How Good is Prime Material Dragon in 2024?
Prime Material Dragon saw tons of play in 2008, but it was
quickly outclassed by the Synchro monster Stardust Dragon when it came to
negating destruction effects. Still, being a Dragon, especially one that’s Light attribute, it
continued to see quite a bit of play in various Dragon centered decks. In 2024,
though, there are so many cards that serve as “omni-negates,” cards that can
negate anything for a minimal cost or no cost at all. This leaves Prime
Material Dragon as a card that power creep has pushed out.
There is a place where Prime Material Dragon can prove powerful,
however, and that’s
in the retro Edison format. Named after the Shonen Jump Championship that took
place in Edison, NJ in April 2010. This format is so beloved by players as
there was no best deck that took over the format. Unfortunately, that format
ended with the release of The Shining Darkness in May. Still, because of the
crazy competitive diversity of the “Edison”
format, it’s
become the second most popular retro format to Goat Format, supported by
tournaments with real prize support.
Prime Material Dragon stands as a great anti-meta card against
some of the best decks in the format. Volcanics have a hard time as they can’t use their Blaze
Accelerator to destroy monsters, nor can they do burn damage with Volcanic
Shell, as long as Prime Material Dragon is in play. Other popular decks such as
Gadgets, Gravekeepers, and Gladiator Beasts (as we mentioned earlier) have a
lot of trouble removing Prime Material Dragon, as well.
The only issue, though, is that Prime Material Dragon didn’t really fit well into
a lot of the best decks at the time. It was usually a sideboard card, at best.
That being said, it does show up occasionally, but sadly rarely in a top deck
list at the retro format tournaments being held for Edison format up to this
day.
However, Prime Material Dragon and its very existence did do one
amazing thing for the game of YuGiOh. It made decks that focused entirely on
burn damage a bit trickier to play, since you never knew if a Prime Material
Dragon was going to come down and ruin your day. The Magical Explosion FTK deck
lost much of its competitive edge, as although it could still win on the first
turn, if it didn’t,
and the opposing player was able to drop a Prime Material Dragon, suddenly the
win condition was worthless. It could protect itself against most destruction
and made cards that dealt damage worthless.
The Light-attribute Level 6 Dragon may be extremely outclassed in
2024 YuGiOh, but it’s
an important part of the game’s
history. Without this card, many decks wouldn’t have had an answer to Gladiator Beasts, Gadgets, and
other decks that relied on destruction effects to snowball their card advantage
engines.
Prime Material Dragon is probably my favorite card from The
Phantom Darkness because of just how versatile it proved for me and many other
YuGiOh players back in 2008. It continued to be somewhat relevant all the way
into 2014 before fading into obscurity. Technically, it’s available on Master
Duel, but no one plays it. Still, thanks to Duel Links, this little rattlesnake
of a Dragon continues to grace in-game decks to this day.
~ Amelia <3
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