Encore: MTG Mechanic Explained
There's a particular kind of satisfaction in watching a creature you've already lost come roaring back from the graveyard - not once, but in multiple copies, each hunting down a different opponent. That's the promise of Encore, one of Magic's most distinctly multiplayer-minded keyword abilities.
What is Encore?
Encore is a keyword ability found on creature cards. When a creature with encore sits in your graveyard, you can pay its encore cost to exile it and create a number of token copies equal to the number of opponents you have. Each token has haste, must attack its designated opponent that turn, and is sacrificed at the beginning of the next end step.
Think of it like a final, glorious curtain call - the creature gives everything it has left, one last time, before vanishing for good.
Encore is effective in two-player games, but it really comes alive in multiplayer. In a four-player Commander pod, you're producing three tokens simultaneously, each pointing at a different opponent's face. That's a lot of pressure from a single graveyard activation.
Format check: Encore was designed with Commander in mind and was introduced in Commander Legends (2020). You'll find it primarily in Commander preconstructed products and supplemental sets rather than in Standard-legal sets.
How Encore works - the rules
Here's the official wording from the Comprehensive Rules (November 14, 2025 - Edge of Eternities):
CR 702.141a - Encore is an activated ability that functions while the card with encore is in a graveyard. "Encore [cost]" means "[Cost], Exile this card from your graveyard: For each opponent, create a token that's a copy of this card that attacks that opponent this turn if able. The tokens gain haste. Sacrifice them at the beginning of the next end step. Activate only as a sorcery."
A few things worth internalising here:
- Activated, not triggered. You choose when to use it, paying the cost like you would a creature's tap ability. It's not automatic.
- Sorcery speed only. You can only activate encore during your main phase, when the stack is empty - the same restriction as casting a sorcery.
- The original card is exiled. You're not reanimating the card itself. You exile it, then create copies. The card is gone from your graveyard permanently.
- Tokens, not the real card. The tokens are copies, which matters for things like "dies" triggers and replacement effects. They don't return to your graveyard when sacrificed.
- Haste is built in. The tokens attack right away. You don't need a separate source of haste.
- Attack if able. Each token is directed at a specific opponent. If something prevents a token from attacking - like a fog effect - it still has to try.
- Sacrificed at the next end step. This is the next end step, not your next end step. So if you activate encore on your turn, the tokens die at the end of your turn.
Common misunderstandings
"Can I use encore at instant speed?" No. The "activate only as a sorcery" clause pins this firmly to your main phase with an empty stack.
"Do the tokens deal combat damage to the player I choose?" They attack that player, yes - but the opponent can still block with their own creatures. The tokens aren't unblockable by default.
"What if I have no opponents?" You'd create zero tokens and exile the card for nothing. This essentially can't happen in a real game, but it's worth knowing that the number of tokens scales directly with opponent count.
Strategy - playing with and against Encore
Building around Encore
Encore is at its best when the creature it's on has a powerful attack trigger or enters-the-battlefield-adjacent effect. A creature that just has a static buff isn't getting much extra value from three temporary tokens. But a creature whose ability fires every time it attacks? That's three triggers pointing at three different players in one swing.
Take Briarblade Adept as the textbook example from the source rules: whenever it attacks, a creature an opponent controls gets -1/-1. Activate encore with three opponents, and you're giving -1/-1 to three different creatures simultaneously. That kind of board-wide pressure is hard to ignore.
Some considerations when building a deck to use encore well:
- Self-mill and looting effects help you get encore creatures into the graveyard faster. Cards that let you discard or mill yourself are useful setup.
- Cost reduction for activated abilities can make expensive encore costs more manageable.
- **Graveyard protection** matters - if an opponent exiles your graveyard before you activate encore, the card is gone. Being thoughtful about when you activate is often more important than whether you activate.
Playing against Encore
The cleanest way to stop encore is graveyard hate. Exiling the creature card before the opponent activates the ability shuts it down entirely. Popular tools like Rest in Peace or Tormod's Crypt do exactly this.
If the encore has already been activated, remember that the tokens must attack - so you can leave up creatures that are good blockers. The tokens do have haste, but they don't have trample or evasion unless the original card did.
In Commander specifically, be aware of the political dimension. Encore tokens attack all your opponents, which means it's not just your problem. Sometimes the table has a shared interest in stopping (or allowing) a big encore activation.
Cards that grant Encore to others
Two cards can give encore to creatures that don't naturally have it:
- Wire Surgeons - grants encore to artifact creatures in your graveyard
- Sliver Gravemother - grants encore to Slivers in your graveyard (and yes, Slivers sharing their abilities with each other while the tokens are in play is as chaotic as it sounds)
Notable cards with Encore
These are the cards I find most worth knowing about if you're exploring the mechanic:
Briarblade Adept
The clearest demonstration of how encore is meant to work. A 3/4 Elf Assassin that weakens an attacker every time it attacks - with encore, that effect distributes across your whole opponent pool at once. Clean, intuitive, and a good entry point for understanding the mechanic.
Sliver Gravemother
The flagship encore card from Commander Legends: Battle for Baldur's Gate (2022). She's a Legendary Sliver that grants encore to every Sliver in your graveyard, costing a single {B} per Sliver regardless of the original mana value. In a Sliver deck, she turns your graveyard into a resource that scales dramatically with opponent count. She's also your commander, which means you can build the whole deck around her.
Wire Surgeons
A more niche enabler, but fascinating in an artifact creature deck. Paying to give encore to a powerful artifact creature you've already lost can be a serious late-game threat. Worth knowing about if you're running an artifact-heavy Commander build.
History of Encore
Encore debuted in Commander Legends (November 2020), a set designed from the ground up for Commander. The mechanic was created to capture the multiplayer spirit of the format - one activation affecting the whole table, rather than a single opponent.
It has since appeared as a one-off mechanic in Commander preconstructed decks released alongside:
- Streets of New Capenna Commander (2022)
- The Brothers' War Commander (2022)
- Commander Masters Commander (2023)
- Outlaws of Thunder Junction Commander (2024)
- Murders at Karlov Manor Commander (MKM, 2024)
- Modern Horizons 3 Commander (MH3, 2024)
The mechanic draws clear lineage from older graveyard-recursion keywords. Unearth (from Shards of Alara, 2008) is probably its closest ancestor - pay a cost, exile from graveyard, get a hasty creature that's sacrificed at end of turn. The key difference is that unearth brings back the original card rather than creating tokens, and it doesn't scale with opponents.
Flashback (originally from Odyssey, 2001) shares the "exile from graveyard to activate" cost structure. Myriad (from Commander 2015) shares the "create tokens attacking each opponent" effect. Encore essentially combines the best ideas from both in a single ability, which is a neat piece of design history. ✨
Because it appears exclusively in Commander products rather than in Standard-legal sets, encore has never been a factor in competitive formats. It's a format-specific mechanic in the truest sense - designed for the table it was built for.















