The only time you can only remove from play cards from your graveyard is if a card tells you to do so.
The exact timing will be down to the effect themselves. Removing them to summon Chaos Sorcerer can only be done in your own main phases, same for removing Mezuki to activate its Ignition Effect. However cards like Necro Gardna are spell speed 2, and can be activated 'any time' within certain boundaries, ie, not in chain to a Spell Speed 3 card, and must be before or during the opponent's attack phase.
You cannot simply decide to do that, for no reason. Cards will go to the graveyard or removed from play zone when directed to by an effect, or when you use them as a cost, depending on the wording of the cards.
because some cards relie on the graveyard for their effects like Marie the fallen one or sinister serpent.
No, 'Exiled' cards go to what used to be called the 'removed from play' zone. A card that is exiled from hand or battlefield, for example, never hits the graveyard, and cards in the exiled zone can't be affected by cards that look at or refer to graveyard cards.
You can bring a creature back from the graveyard in Magic: The Gathering by using cards with abilities like "reanimate," "resurrect," or "return target creature from the graveyard to the battlefield." These cards allow you to bring a creature back to play from your graveyard.
The 'remove from play' zone could be thought of as another graveyard, just with a different name. So if you are instructed to send a card there ('banished', under new terminology), you just place that card off to one side to show that it is gone from play, and not in the graveyard. A card that triggers when it goes to the graveyard, will not trigger in this case because it never went there. Cards in the removed from play zone can only be affected by things that specifically affect them, such as Burial from a Different Dimension.
To return a permanent from the graveyard strategically and advantageously in the game, you can use cards or abilities that have the ability to bring back cards from the graveyard to the battlefield. This can help you regain control of powerful cards that were previously removed from play, giving you an advantage over your opponent.
You can return a target sorcery from your graveyard to your hand or the battlefield by using cards or abilities that specifically allow you to do so, such as "Regrowth" or "Snapcaster Mage." These cards have effects that let you retrieve sorceries from your graveyard and put them back into play or your hand.
The following lists cards that allow a player to return removed from play cards to the Graveyard:Burial from a Different DimensionMiracle DigFortune's FutureDoomsday Horror
What happens is you choose a monster on your opponent controls. Then you choose monsters in your graveyard to remove from play. But you have to remove monsters from play equal to the Level of your opponent's monster. Then your opponent's monster that you chose is destroyed. Eg. If you wanted to destroy Giant Rat, then you would have to remove 4 monsters in your graveyard from play because Giant Rat is Level 4.
yes it doesAnswer:here is the card text of Rainbow Dragon:"You can remove from play all "Crystal Beast" Monster Cards in your Graveyard to return ALL cards on the field to their owner's Decks."the card didn't say "except this card" that some cards indicate like Ocean Lord Neo Daedelus.
Use a Dimensional Fissure Deck or something similar it removes from play all cards that go into the graveyard so.. there wont be nuthin in the graveyard for Sky Scourges to feed on =D
MDFC cards in Magic: The Gathering have two faces, and you can choose which side to play. When you play an MDFC card, you can play it as either side, but not both in the same turn. You can only play the front face from your hand, and the back face from exile or your graveyard.