Hot off the heels ofsweeping Pioneer and Modern bannings,Magic: The Gatheringis back with some more banned cards, this time in the Commander format. Four major cards took a hit in this wave of bannings, with various responses from the community.

Of the four cards, only one of them being banned is a legendary creature and, of course, that creature is Nadu, Winged Wisdom. The Simic Bird Wizard has been a terror in playgroups since its release, but why exactly was it a problem for Commander players? We took a look at Nadu and the environment around it to see why this commander was banned.

Image of the Magic the Gathering card Nadu Winged Wisdom etched foil version by Daren Bader

What Is Nadu, Winged Wisdom?

Nadu, Winged Wisdom is a three-mana commander from the incredibly popular Modern Horizons 3 set. Even at three-mana Nadu is aggressively powered, having a 3/4 stat line, flying, and a wildly good ability. Nadu’s ability effectively lets you getfree explore triggers each turn.

With Nadu in play, your creatures allgain the ability to reveal the top card of your libraryanytime they’re targeted by a spell of ability.

Image of the Magic the Gathering card Shuko by Tim Hildebrandt.

If that revealed card is a land, it goes into play. If that card is anything, it goes into your hand. The ability only triggers two times, but that’s stilla ton in a deck designed specifically around one ability.

So What Made Nadu So Good?

Nadu’s ability, despite only triggering twice per turn per creature, provided a ton of value.

With the right cards,specifically equipment like Shuko and Lightning Greavesthat cost zero mana to equip, can quickly run through all your creatures in a turn,giving you tons of triggers of Nadu’s explore-like effect.

Crafting Nadu in Magic The Gathering Arena.

There are some very silly cards that you wouldn’t even imagine that become absurdly good in Nadu-based decks, or rather were absurdly good before Nadu got banned.

Legends Insant Sea King’s Blessing, for example,lets you target any number of creatures, both yours and your opponent’s, and turn them blue for the turn.

Magic The Gathering Cover

This one-mana spell can give you a ton of Nadu triggers, andsince it is at instant speed, you can do it during your opponent’s turn, after you have burned through your two trigger limits on your turn.

Since you are in both blue and green, you may expect a solid counter package on top of everything to keep Nadu and your other cards safe and a solid ramp package outside of Nadu himself.

Nadu also encourages plenty of landfall effects as well, since you canpower through lands from the top of your deck,while at the same time providing consistent card advantage as you effectively draw all the nonland cards you encounter.

Was Nadu Unstoppable?

By no means was Nadu unstoppable.Nadu has some very obvious lines of play, withgames playing out fairly consistently in both card choice and direction. The deck can be a tad bit slow, especially in higher levels of play where faster decks shine.

This type of deck is alsoalmost entirely centered around the commander,so if your opponents repeatedly target your Nadu over and over again, or have some sort of way to semi-permanently deal with it withcards like Song of they Dryads and Witness Protection, you’ll be out of luck very quickly.

The main problem that Nadu caused it to be banned is thateverything takes a long time to do.

Remember when we said you can quickly burn through your Nadu triggers with a piece of equipment like Shuko? Well, if you have five creatures in play, and you want to get ten triggers off of Nadu,you have to trigger each instance one at a time to resolve them properly.

So that means you have to:

Between then, you might have drawn a card that you might want to play, so you have todetermine if you want to play anything elsebefore moving Shuko to another creature.

If that revealed card is a land, it also enters untapped, so if you were tapped out before drawing more cards, you couldrealistically reveal more landsuntil you have enough to cast another spell.

Then yourepeat that for another eight times in this scenario. All this does is create very oppressive board states that both take a long time to resolve everything and don’t actually win you the game on its own.

Even if Nadu isn’t your commander,it can still cause situations where games take an exorbitant amount of time for just one player’s turn, while not really going anywhere.

Where Can You Still Play Nadu?

Interestingly,Nadu is not banned in Magic: The Gathering Arena’s Brawl format, which in many ways mirrors Commander format.

Since a few mysterious hints at the future of Arena suggest thata true Commander counterpart is on its wayin the near future,you may still get your Simic fix digitally.