Loaming Shaman
Graveyard hate that puts cards back rather than taking them away is a quieter mechanism than the exile clauses that dominate the category, and the enters trigger here is built around that distinction. Shuffling targeted cards into a library does the disruptive work without the finality of exile: against a deck leaning on its graveyard as a resource (reanimation, flashback, delve, threshold), burying a key target back in the deck is functionally as crippling as removing it, but the card stays in the game and can simply be drawn into a worse position. The wording does double duty. Nothing forces the targets to belong to an opponent, so a controller can reshuffle their own graveyard to refuel an emptied library or rescue specific pieces lost to milling or discard. The "any number" clause is what keeps that surgical instead of all-or-nothing, letting you choose precisely which threats vanish and which fuel returns. The 3/2 body is incidental; repeatability lives in blink and recursion effects rather than the creature itself, and that is the point of interest: an answer that interacts with the library zone instead of the exile zone. In a category that has trended steadily toward permanent, scorched-earth graveyard removal, the reshuffle remains a softer and more precise tool, and the broader space around shuffling-rather-than-exiling has stayed comparatively underexplored.





