Abundance

Enchantment

If you would draw a card, you may instead choose land or nonland and reveal cards from the top of your library until you reveal a card of the chosen kind. Put that card into your hand and put all other cards revealed this way on the bottom of your library in any order.

CMC
4
Mana cost
{2}{G}{G}
Color identity
G
Rarity
rare
Set
Warhammer 40,000 Commander
Price
EDHREC rank
#1759
Buy on TCGplayer
Abundance card art
Abundance replaces your draws with guaranteed land or nonland selections, which means you never brick on a land when you need a spell — and never flood when you need action. Cultivator Colossus and Borborygmos Enraged are the headliners: both want to chain land drops, and Abundance turns every draw trigger into a free land off the top without the variance tax.

Best Commanders

Commanders with the highest synergy

01
Borborygmos Enraged

Borborygmos Enraged

61.1% of decks · synergy 0.58

Borborygmos Enraged throws lands from hand to deal damage, so running out of lands to throw is the deck's central problem — Abundance solves it by letting you name land on every draw and guarantee fuel for the next throw. At 61% inclusion, it's essentially an auto-include.

02
Flubs, the Fool

Flubs, the Fool

42.9% of decks · synergy 0.38

Flubs, the Fool cares about drawing cards and hitting specific card types at the right moment, and Abundance lets you call your shot on land versus nonland to sequence your turns cleanly. The 43% inclusion rate across a massive pool of decks reflects how broadly useful that control is.

03
Obuun, Mul Daya Ancestor

Obuun, Mul Daya Ancestor

30.8% of decks · synergy 0.30

Obuun, Mul Daya Ancestor wants land drops every turn to trigger his power-and-toughness pump and animate lands, so Abundance acts as a soft guarantee that you hit land drop number three, four, and five on curve. The 31% inclusion rate is a reliable signal that land-centric Naya builds treat it as a staple.

04
The Swarmlord

The Swarmlord

29.4% of decks · synergy 0.24

The Swarmlord generates Insect tokens whenever you draw cards, and Abundance turns a flood of land draws into deliberate nonland grabs — keeping your hand full of threats while the token count climbs. It's present in roughly 29% of Swarmlord lists for exactly that draw-sculpting role.

05
Zimone and Dina

Zimone and Dina

24.9% of decks · synergy 0.23

Zimone and Dina mills and draws repeatedly, and Abundance lets you dictate what category each draw hits so you're never wasting a draw trigger on a land you don't need. At 25% inclusion across a very large deck pool, it shows up wherever the deck wants to chain draw effects without flooding.

Format Analysis

Where it lives, where it can’t

FormatVerdict
commander
legacy
modern
pioneer
standard
vintage
pauper
oathbreaker

Abundance is legal in Commander, Legacy, Modern, Vintage, and Oathbreaker, but Commander is where it does its real work — the 100-card singleton format exaggerates variance, and a four-mana enchantment that eliminates land-flood and land-drought is worth more per game in a 40-life, multiplayer context than in any 60-card setting. In Legacy and Modern, the four-mana price tag is too steep for what is essentially a consistency tool; those formats move too fast to spend turn four on an enchantment that doesn't win immediately. Vintage can technically run it, but the same argument applies harder — there's no shell there that needs it. Oathbreaker is the secondary home: the compressed game plan and smaller deck size mean Abundance still delivers meaningful variance reduction at a cost that's occasionally acceptable.

Key Combos

Combo lines featuring this card

Price Context

Current price

unknown tier

Current pricing data for Abundance isn't available in this snapshot, so check Scryfall or your preferred retailer for the live number. Historically it has floated in the $3–6 range depending on printing, which puts it firmly in the "just buy it" tier for any deck that legitimately wants it.

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Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.