Last updated on June 11, 2026

Thrill of Possibility  - Illustration by Minttu Hynninen

Thrill of Possibility | Illustration by Minttu Hynninen

Red has the worst card draw of any color. The other four have creatures that enter and draw a card, or have card draw as a passive effect, or have an activated card-drawing ability. But red? No dice.

Something like Reckless Impulse works like a draw spell, but you only benefit if you can play the exiled cards within the timeframe. To put it another way, red doesnโ€™t have a single card draw spell as efficient as Opt. That doesn't mean drawing cards is totally out of the question, though!

Red has some good puzzle pieces looking for the right home. Maybe thatโ€™s your deck?

What Is Red Card Draw in MTG?

Demand Answers - Illustration by Justyna Dura

Demand Answers | Illustration by Justyna Dura

Red card draw, quite simply, refers to cards with a mono-red color identity that literally draw one or more cards. Impulse draw is considered a form of โ€œred card drawโ€, quotations there being quite intentional, but there's so much red impulse draw that we've left that off this particular ranking.

This means weโ€™re looking at cantrips, rummaging, and wheeling, with a focus on speed, cheap cost, and a higher number of cards drawn. Effects that nab only one card arenโ€™t really what youโ€™re looking for in terms of card draw, unless they have other uses, and anything that draws one card for 4 or more mana is too weak for this list, with rare exceptions.

#36. Dragon Mantle

Dragon Mantle

Dragon Mantle is less useful than the upcoming 1-mana spells, but it's a premium cantrip in a deck like Ghen, Arcanum Weaver. The firebreathing is also nice.

#35. Cathartic Pyre

Cathartic Pyre

There are better versions of double-rummages on this list, but the ability to act as removal makes Cathartic Pyre a useful inclusion. Choices are always good.

#34. Faithless Salvaging

Faithless Salvaging

Faithless Salvaging can be useful in decks that want spells triggers because the rebound lets you have one for free on the second turn. Itโ€™s at its best in madness decks; this and Fiery Temper are happiness-inducing.

#33. Bitter Reunion

Bitter Reunion

Bitter Reunionโ€™s rarely the flashiest card in a deck, but it pulls its weight. It works best in reanimator strategies where it discards, say, an Archon of Cruelty, then gives it haste after you drop it into play. You can also just play it early, then hold it to enable a big alpha strike later or set up explosive turns with Cryptolith Rite.

#32. Honor the God-Pharaoh + Electric Revelation + Seize the Spoils

Adding 1 mana to the cost of these spells isnโ€™t great. Is the token (Honor the God-Pharaoh), the flashback (Electric Revelation), or the Treasure (Seize the Spoils) worth it? Iโ€™d say not, in general. These are the kinds of cards that make Limited work.

These feel terrible to cast. Theyโ€™re like a Divination where you rummage first, and that isnโ€™t really good enough these days, is it? They have their place if you need actual cards instead of impulse draws because youโ€™re going for a kind of red draw-go build.

#31. Case of the Crimson Pulse

Case of the Crimson Pulse

Solving the Case of the Crimson Pulse requires a low curve to empty your hand. Which pairs nicely with this case enchantmentโ€˜s final mode because you have a better chance of playing your hand before your next upkeep to get the full value of drawing three cards a turn.

#30. Cathartic Reunion

Cathartic Reunion

This is a lot of rummaging for a cheap cost. You know how important this card is if youโ€™re running red reanimator. But it's hard to imagine playing Cathartic Reunion outside of those decks.

#29. Chandra, Spark Hunter

Chandra, Spark Hunter

Though itโ€™s not the best Chandra, Chandra, Spark Hunter still provides value, especially with draw. This planeswalkerโ€™s +2 loyalty ability turns simple artifact tokens or sac fodder like Ichor Wellspring into reliable card draw each turn. If you can do this a few turns without losing any loyalty counters, Chandra rewards artifact decks with some serious direct damage potential.

#28. Fire Prophecy + Volcanic Spite + Manhole Missile

Fire Prophecy and Manhole Missile are damage spells that draw a card (itโ€™s too loud in here to hear a Needle Drop pining to be let in). They're also premium cards in a deck running Transmogrify effects since they let you stow a finisher back into your deck to be tutored up when needed. Volcanic Spite is technically strictly better, but only if battles are involved.

#27. Dangerous Wager

Dangerous Wager

Dangerous Wager is the most all-in rummager, and the instant speed on it is awesome. Itโ€™s hard to beat drawing two for 2 provided your hand is empty. And it's hard to get a more efficient way to use your rummager to stock your graveyard than this.

#26. 1-Mana Cantrips

You can run these for their main effects, but theyโ€™re generally slightly sadder versions of Opt and Consider for spellslinger and storm decks.

Often in EDH you'll just want a 1-mana cantrip to fuel some storm or Izzet shenanigans. Haste and trample are generally the most useful effects for Commander. Overmaster is the best, followed by some haste enablers, then a bunch of effects that you might not care about other than the draw effect (glances significantly over at Warlord's Fury).

These shift order in 60-card formats. Rile is good in Stuffy Doll decks, but also works in decks with Feather, the Redeemed as their Boros commander, as a cantrip that can target Feather. Ancestral Anger is great when you can run all four. Telim'Tor's Edict is nice in a steal and sac deck, etc.

#25. Ogre-Head Helm

Ogre-Head Helm

Drawing three for 2 mana is pretty cool, but you need the right build for Ogre-Head Helm to work, like lots of tokens and unblockable things. But this reconfiguring ogre is okay as a post-board wipe rebuilder.

If the board is โ€˜sploded after youโ€™ve equipped this, it pops off as a creature that can opportunistically attack next turn.

#24. Khรขrn the Betrayer

Khรขrn the Betrayer

If youโ€™ve ever wondered what a mono-red group hug card would look like, look no further than Khรขrn the Betrayer. You get at least two cards off it and potentially more if you strike a lucrative deal with another player in the pod. If your deck needs something that attacks and maybe holds some decent equipment, this is an excellent, fun option.

#23. Tersa Lightshatter

Tersa Lightshatter

Tersa Lightshatter has a double-rummage when it enters, with huge upsides later. If you have seven or more cards in your graveyard, this randomly casts one to great benefit for aggro. You can discard or cast early burn and pump spells to threaten opponents, trusting in Tersa to finish the game with those spells cast from your graveyard.

#22. Bedlam Reveler

Bedlam Reveler

Assuming youโ€™re tossing out enough spells, this is a draw-three for , which also drops a decent prowess creature. Bedlam Reveler is here to party if youโ€™re doing burn or control.

#21. Nahiriโ€™s Lithoforming

Nahiri's Lithoforming

Nahiri's Lithoforming can really net a lot of cards in a landfall deck. Or any deck with the proper number of lands, really. Even better if you have a Crucible of Worlds lying around.

It's important to note that sacrificing the lands isnโ€™t part of the cost of the spell, so you arenโ€™t uselessly tossing all your lands in the bin if this gets countered.

#20. Chandraโ€™s Regulator

Chandra's Regulator

This is an auto-include if youโ€™re running a bunch of Chandras, but the repeated rummaging is good on its own. Iโ€™m surprised Chandra's Regulator doesnโ€™t see more EDH play given that it operates like youโ€™re sacking a Blood token every turn.

#19. Artistโ€™s Talent

Artist's Talent

Artist's Talent impresses me because that first ability is almost worth the card alone. This class enchantment is the perfect engine for a spellslinger deck, helping filter away lands (and fuel Underworld Breach) while making your mana better and stretching your Guttersnipe into a win condition. Iโ€™m less impressed if you canโ€™t do anything with the graveyard, but Iโ€™d always consider this when building Izzet decks.

#18. Herigast, Erupting Nullkite

Herigast, Erupting Nullkite

In an ideal world, you cast this as the last card in your hand, which seems reasonable considering its mana value. It costs a pretty penny even with its emerge ability, but the card draw and mana accelerationโ€™s worth it. Iโ€™m especially interested in using Herigast, Erupting Nullkite to pay the emerge cost of, say, Void Winnower or Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger.

#17. Combustible Gearhulk

Combustible Gearhulk

Combustible Gearhulk is a sweet deal. At best, you're getting an Ancestral Recall on a 6/6 with first strike. At worst, you're getting the 6/6 plus a bunch of damage dealt to an opponent. All in all, you get a lot of value on a single creature.

#16. Ox of Agonas

Ox of Agonas

Ox of Agonas is a repeatable draw three for (assuming you keep finding ways for it to die). This also assumes that youโ€™re rummaging for cards, tossing out spells, and filling up the graveyard enough to keep escaping it.

This isnโ€™t a bad card to have in your 99 if someone is trying to make mill happen in EDH.

#15. Highway Robbery

Highway Robbery

Being stuck at sorcery speed makes Highway Robbery less exciting than other Thrill of Possibility variants, but getting to sacrifice a land instead of discarding a card offers the possibility of niche synergies with cards like Titania, Protector of Argoth and Lord Windgrace, plus it makes this a better top deck if your handโ€™s empty.

#14. Magus of the Wheel

Magus of the Wheel

Magus of the Wheel acts as a decent 3/3 body for 3 mana that can be sacrificed to refill your and your opponentsโ€™ hands. Doing this at instant speed before your turn is advantageous by hopefully gassing up your hand, plus you can go deep with graveyard synergies.

#13. Seasoned Pyromancer

Seasoned Pyromancer

This is best used as the last card in your hand to net two cards and a body that can make tokens from the graveyard. Thatโ€™s pretty good. Seasoned Pyromancer canโ€™t pitch your lands and make some dorks, but it's still a self-contained gameplan.

#12. Smellerbee, Rebel Fighter

Smellerbee, Rebel Fighter

Smellerbee, Rebel Fighter accelerates aggro decks with substantial card draw. This rebel provides haste to your other creatures and a one-sided wheel can be quite powerful. This card can be especially interesting with instants and attack trigger doublers like Isshin, Two Heavens as One; giving you time on the stack to assault opponents with instants, and wheel again.

#11. Magmatic Insight

Magmatic Insight

Isnโ€™t this what you want to do with rummaging effects anyway? Pitch a land for value? Magmatic Insight does this very well. The downside is that it does nothing if youโ€™ve missed land drops, which can happen in an aggro deck when you shave lands. It's a skill-testing card that gets easier to play in Commander where you kind of always want it in hand.

#10. Thrill of Possibility

Thrill of Possibility

Thrill of Possibility provides a clean, simple source of card filtration. Itโ€™s not card advantage since youโ€™re spending two cards to draw two, but you can forgive that given this card's potential. Itโ€™s a cheap spell to sling, it works with redโ€™s increasing pool of discard synergies, and it interacts favorably with graveyard strategies.

#9. Demand Answers

Demand Answers

Weโ€™ve seen plenty of Tormenting Voice variants, but Demand Answers clearly stands out among them, even power creeping Thrill of Possibility. Throwing away random Treasure or even synergizing with Experimental Synthesizer and its ilk makes this card filtration and a synergy piece.

#8. Big Score + Unexpected Windfall

These rather expensive rummagers find their value in those shiny Treasure tokens they create. These are among the best red draw spells you can copy, plus they synergize with tons of Treasure and more general artifact cards, and you can hold them up alongside interaction.

#7. Anjeโ€™s Ravager

Anje's Ravager

Anje's Ravager nets you a lot of cards if you can keep swinging with it, which is mandatory anyway. It's both madness enabler and payoff in one, so it adds a lot of synergy to decks in the discard space.

#6. Naktamun Lorespinner

Naktamun Lorespinner

Naktamun Lorespinner prepares the table for trouble with Wheel of Fortune. This repeatable casting of the OG wheel is probably overkill, but it provides all the gas you need. If you can outcast your opponents and get down to one or fewer cards in your hand, then you can refill your hand and out-card your opponents in the long run.

#5. Faithless Looting

Faithless Looting

The emperor of looters, the ruler of the graveyard! But do you run Faithless Looting in your mono-red EDH deck if you donโ€™t care about the graveyard? Is drawing two worth the cost of losing two cards? If youโ€™re low enough to the ground, yes.

You wonโ€™t need lands at a certain point with an aggro deck, and this can help you accelerate through the floods. But is this really what you want if youโ€™re a high-cost red deck? Probably, but you might have to think twice.

#4. Fable of the Mirror-Breaker / Reflection of Kiki-Jiki

Fable of the Mirror-Breakerโ€˜s find dominance in many formats thanks to the suite of powerful abilities, with the double rummage being among the most impactful as it sculpts your hand to the situation and even stocks your graveyard.

#3. Valakut Awakening / Valakut Stoneforge

I love a good MDFC, and Valakut Awakening ranks near the top for me. Trading away bad cards for fresh ones gives you a significant advantage, but this has a huge benefit over your average wheel: You choose which cards to keep and which to ditch. Do you need to keep that Underworld Breach while digging for Lion's Eye Diamond? Go for it! This cardโ€™s potential is capped by the number of cards in your hand, making it a weak topdeck when hellbent, but Iโ€™m happy to play this over a Mountain in virtually any deck.

#2. Cool but Rude

Cool but Rude

Cool but Rude is one of the best cards from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles set because it provides red with a great draw outlet. One-for-one rummaging doesnโ€™t give numerical card advantage, but it helps sculpt a winning hand. The card draw is a nice benefit of the true power of this class, turning your discards into damage and crushing opponents alongside cards like Artist's Talent and Monument to Endurance.

#1. Wheel of Fortune

Wheel of Fortune

Wheel effects are among the strongest card draw spells in the game thanks to the raw potential. They often come with the downside of giving your opponents a bunch of cards, but you can mitigate that by ensuring you have more mana or ways to punish your opponents for drawing cards. And giving them a card or two can be well worth refilling your hand with gas.

Best Red Card Draw Payoffs

Each style of red card draw has different payoffs in mind.

Cantrips like Crash Through are best in spellslinger and prowess decks (usually Izzet). They often boost cards like Slickshot Show-Off or Vivi Ornitier, and often use cards like Thing in the Ice or Arclight Phoenix as finishers.

Burn is also a major strategy for many red decks. Draw helps you to get to cards like Torbran, Thane of Red Fell, Price of Progress, and Inevitable Defeat more reliably. The red wheels are particularly good at reloading your hand with a whole new stack of direct damage cards.

Mana Geyser

Red has some crazy ramp in the right builds. Mana Geyser, Treasure makers, and so on can power out monstrous dragons, Eldrazi, an Ugin or twoโ€ฆ one of the best ways to use excessive ramp is to draw a ton of cards, either to convert that ramp into card advantage, or to ensure you have a bunch of ways to use your temporary mana.

Red sometimes supports the draw-two theme, though usually as a secondary color. The best explicit draw payoffs in red are Human Torch, Johnny Storm, Irencrag Pyromancer, and Mad Ratter.

Wrap Up

Magus of the Wheel - Illustration by Carl Frank

Magus of the Wheel | Illustration by Carl Frank

Redโ€™s card draw isnโ€™t great compared to the other colors, but you can make it work as a reasonable approximation in the right builds. Red card draw is also the weirdest of any color in Magic, but it sparks creativity through deckbuilding challenges.

The bottom line is that you wonโ€™t want all your card draw in only one of the colors in a typical multicolor EDH deck, so finding a few red draw staples helps make your decks more consistent.

Hopefully you found a couple options today. What red card draw do you use? What would you like to use? Let us know on Twitter, in our Discord, or in the comments below. And check out our YouTube channel for more content like this.

Happy deck crafting!

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1 Comment

  • Trent February 15, 2023 3:36 pm

    In all honesty, bag of holding is a must have for decks trying to run a lot of red card draw effects.

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