The creatures of Magic: The Gathering come in all shapes and sizes. However, some don't care and can trample their opponents. Trample makes the creature benefitting from it difficult to block. A creature with trample that is blocked by another creature deals damage as normal, however, if the blocking creature's toughness is less than power of the creature with trample, the remaining difference is dealt as damage to the opponent.

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This makes trample an especially good keyword for creatures with high power as it prevents them from being chump blocked (blocked by a smaller creature to prevent life point damage). Trample is most often found in the green section of the Magic color pie, but there are some cards that buck the trend. Here are the best ones.

10 Siege Rhino

siege rhino

Any player familiar with Khans of Tarkir is sure to have either fond or terrifying memories of this unstoppable freight train. For the very reasonable price of one generic, one white, one black, and one green, Siege Rhino came down and immediately Lightning Helixed your opponent. This enter the battlefield effect would normally cost you two mana on its own, so the fact that it's tacked onto Siege Rhino provides incredible value.

Once it has entered the battlefield, Siege Rhino makes combat an absolute nightmare for your opponent. The rhino's high toughness makes it hard to kill without two-for-oneing, and the fact that it has trample makes it absolutely necessary to remove. While Siege Rhino hasn't seen much play since it exited Standard, it's still a good card to keep on your radar.

9 Carnage Tyrant

carnage tyrant

Another Standard notable, Carnage Tyrant was a common card to find in sideboards back during its time in rotation. This deadly Dinosaur is both immune to being countered and incapable of being targeted by your opponent, making it a great threat against control decks.

It's a bit too costly to play this Tyrant in eternal formats, but we can hope that some kind of Dinosaur ramp deck might emerge in the far future (though that would be beyond a miracle). For Commander lovers, Dinosaur tribal is currently one of the best places to slot this beastie into.

8 Titan of Industry

Titan of Industry

Coming from Magic's latest set the Streets of New Capenna, Titan of Industry does everything the green part of the color pie is known for. Enchantment and artifact destruction, life gain, big tokens, reach, and trample are all effects well-established in green's arsenal. It's nice to finally see them all gathered together on a huge creature.

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Titan also comes with the New Capenna shield counter mechanic which can make it especially annoying to deal with for opponents who don't have chump blockers to spare.

7 Atsushi, the Blazing Sky

Atsushi Cards

Flying tramplers aren't a very common sight. Additionally, Atsushi, the Blazing Sky is one of the few non-green cards to feature trample. While the peculiarity of this card is worth mentioning, it's also a very powerful Dragon.

Atsushi provides a sky dominant threat when played on curve which most opponents will be forced to answer quickly. However, even when Atsushi is slain the card still provides you with amazing benefits. When Atsushi dies, you get to choose between creating three treasure tokens or exiling the top two cards of your library until the end of your following turn. This ability is so powerful because it's meaningful at any stage of the game, whether you need more mana to ramp out the rest of your hand or more cards to finish off your opponent.

6 Grim Flayer

grim flayer

Grim Flayer also saw a good amount of play during its time in Standard, and many thought that this Human would be powerful enough for Modern as well. Unfortunately, he hasn't seen much meta play to date. However, this doesn't mean that it's impossible for him to show up in a deck in the future. After all, this is a 2 mana value 4/4 creature we're talking about.

Even better, he also allows you to filter your draws every time he deals damage to the opponent. Thanks to trample, this great ability is likely to trigger any time you make an attack.

5 Phyrexian Obliterator

Phyrexian Obliterator

In comparison to Phyrexian Obliterator, Grim Flayer's trigger looks like a knife in a gun fight. Phyrexian Obliterator requires that your opponent have removal in the form of a card that doesn't deal damage. If they don't, they are very likely to lose the game.

It's not often that a player has enough permanents on the battlefield to spare sacrificing five. Since Obliterator costs as little as four black mana, it's even less likely that they will be prepared for it. All hail Phyrexia.

4 Worldspine Wurm

Worldspine Wurm

At a whopping cost of eight generic and three green, Worldspine Wurm is quite worthy of its name. This oversized monster is sure to leave a mark if it manages to go into combat even once. What's more, the only removal that truly takes care of it is exile effects.

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Otherwise, it simply spawns three more worm tokens with trample that will be even more difficult to deal with. On top of that, it also returns to your library if ever put into the graveyard which makes it especially fun to play in any sort of deck with tutor effects.

3 Thrasta, Tempest's Roar

Thrasta, tempest's roar

Thrasta is another powerful Dinosaur that makes a great Commander for a very strange deck: Mono-green Storm. Storm refers to an effect that makes a card copy itself when cast for each spell previously cast the same turn. As you can imagine, this is a very powerful effect to pair with Thrasta's cost reduction ability.

Additionally, every time Thrasta comes down she is guaranteed to provide meaningful value thanks to trample, haste, and hexproof until the end of the turn. Its ability to trample over planeswalkers is also especially notable for Commander games.

2 Gishath, Sun's Avatar

Gishath, Sun's Avatar full card and art background

It would feel wrong to not include Gishath, Sun's Avatar in this list. Though Gishath isn't the most competitive card in the world, he is the most popular Dinosaur Commander by far. If you can manage to get an attack in with him, you will quickly learn why.

Anyone playing a Dinosaur Commander deck wants to do one thing: play a bunch of Dinosaurs. Gishath allows you to do this without paying for any of their often expensive mana costs. It's as good as triggering your very own prehistoric stampede.

1 Primeval Titan

Primeval Titan

Last but certainly not least is undoubtedly the best card with trample ever printed. Amulet Titan has been a competitive deck in the Modern metagame for nearly as long as the format has existed, and the credit for this timeless deck's continued success largely goes to the Titan himself.

Primeval Titan's ability to search up any land, not just basic lands, from your library and place them directly onto the battlefield allows it to find powerful land effects like Hanweir Battlements, Sunhome, Fortress of the Legion, and Valakut, the Molten Pinnacle. Using these lands alongside bounce lands, Amulet of Vigor, and Dryad of the Ilysian Grove, Primeval Titan allows you to combo and instantly kill opponents with either numerous Valakut triggers or a huge, hasty Primeval Titan with double strike and trample.

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