
Lunalight Silver Hound – #DUAD-EN006
If this card is sent to the GY by card effect: You can Special Summon 1 “Lunalight” monster from your Deck, except “Lunalight Silver Hound”, but you cannot Special Summon from the Extra Deck, except “Lunalight” monsters, while you control that face-up monster. When a Spell/Trap Card or effect is activated on the field (Quick Effect): You can banish this card and 1 “Lunalight” Fusion Monster from your GY; negate the activation. You can only use each effect of “Lunalight Silver Hound” once per turn.
Date Reviewed: October 21st, 2025
Rating: 3.75
Ratings are based on a 1 to 5 scale. 1 is awful. 3 is average. 5 is excellent.
Reviews Below:
King of
Lullaby
Hello Pojo Fans,
Lunalight Silver Hound was referenced yesterday as Gold Leo’s dance partner as their effects pair up quite well.
When sent tot he grave via a card effect, Silver Hound is going to Special Summon a Lunalight monster from the Deck. This off of Gold Leo gets you to two Lunalight monsters on the board off one card. With other options like Masquerade and Kaleido Chick, in addition to Foolish Burial, Silver Hound is going to be hitting the grave and activating. Locking you into Lunalight monsters hurts if you had some tech options you wanted to summon, so you’ll have to do that first and then use Silver Hound. As for targets from the Deck, Chick is the first one that comes to mind because of its Prisma-style effect, as well as its ability to add back a Polymerization from the grave when sent via a card effect…like the Poly you are using to Fusion Summon. Blue Tiger is great when you have a Fusion Lunalight already on the field as Blue Tiger will double its ATK for the turn and Lunalights are famous for big Fusion Monsters that attack many times. And White Rabbit can Special Summon a Lunalight from the grave, in addition to bouncing Spell/Traps to the number of Lunalight monsters you control.
Negation from the grave is good, and Silver Hound able to banish itself and a Lunalight Fusion Monster to negate an effect is just below awesome, as it doesn’t destroy. When used against anything outside of something that is going to stay on the field, it is awesome. Sure, banishing two cards to negate one isn’t ideal, but you run multiple copies of those cards. Leaving a monster on the field after negating it isn’t ideal as Link Summoning is something, but if you hold your negation for an impactful moment, it will feel far-better than the -1 on paper. It’s a shame Sabre Dancer’s 3000ATK boost to a Lunalight Fusion Monster won’t trigger off this.
Great card paired with Gold Leo or honestly anything that can get it into the grave. A deck thin and Special Summon that will surely get you not only board advantage with the extra body you summoned, but also hand advantage as well. Once per turn negation of any effect as long as you banish Silver Hound and a Fusion Lunalight in your grave gives the archetype a jolt of negation, but not the omni-negation that would put them over the top and solidify their Tier 1 status.
Advanced- 4/5 Art- 4/5
Until Next Time,
KingofLullaby
Crunch$G
Every archetype wants a monster that can be good Fusion Material, and that’s what we follow up with next in Lunalight Silver Hound.
Silver Hound is a Level 3 DARK Beast-Warrior with 1400 ATK and 400 DEF. Stats are fine for a Level 3, and of course we keep DARK Beast-Warrior. If this card is sent to the graveyard via card effect, you can Special Summon any Lunalight from the Deck, but you can only Special Summon Lunalights from the Extra Deck while you control that monster. A simple monster to trigger first off with effects like Emerald Bird and Gold Leo being summoned along with the graveyard effects of Serenade Dance, plus simple Fusion Summoning using this as material will trigger its effect. You’ll likely get Kaleido Chick from the Deck to send Yellow Marten or whatever you’ll want to recover with Gold Leo, or you send Leo Dancer so Kaleido Chick can be treated as Leo Dancer for a Fusion Summon that turn. Anyways, when a Spell/Trap Card or effect is activated on the field, you got a Quick Effect to banish this along with any Lunalight Fusion Monster from the graveyard to negate that activation, giving Lunalight some negation by using Fusions sitting in the grave. HOPT on both effects once again. Silver Hound is good for the Deck to extend its plays, fine if you draw it or fine if not since either way you’ll then attempt to put it into the graveyard. You don’t have to max out on it, but you can.
In Genesys, once again the Deck is weaker without Tiger and Wolf, so you might throw in more Silver Hounds to make up for the lost space, even if it likely won’t enable as insane combos without the Pendulums.
Advanced Rating: 3.5/5
Genesys Rating: 3.25/5
Art: 4/5 Now where’s bronze?
Mighty
Vee
If Lunalight Yellow Marten is the first Lunalight monster you want to get into the Graveyard, today’s card is a close second– Lunalight Silver Hound continues our Lunalight coverage, a level 3 DARK Beast-Warrior monster. Notably, since it’s level 3, you’ll be able to send it from the deck to the Graveyard with Tri-Brigade Fraktall, enabling some very funny combo lines if you use Brotherhood of the Fire Fist – Tiger King to search Fire Formation – Tenki. Other than that, you’ll want to either be searching it with Lunalight Gold Leo, or sending it straight to the Graveyard with Lunalight Masquerade or Lunalight Kaleido Chick. Unsurprisingly, its stats are not good at all either, with only 1400 attack and 400 defense. Needless to say, your Fusion monsters are pulling overtime.
Silver Hound has 2 hard once per turn effects, the first triggering if it’s sent to the Graveyard by card effect, letting you Special Summon any Lunalight monster from your deck except another Silver Hound. You’ll be locked into Special Summoning Lunalight monsters while it’s face-up, but fortunately that restriction goes away once it’s gone, so you’ll be able to branch into Tri-Brigade combos or, more depressingly, Xyz combos. If you somehow hadn’t gotten it yet, this is your chance to grab Golden Tiger; otherwise, this is usually how you’ll field Kaleido Chick and eventually access Lunalight Tiger and Lunalight Wolf. Silver Hound’s other effect is a Quick Effect, reacting to a Spell or Trap activation on the field to let you banish Silver Hound and a Lunalight Fusion monster from your Graveyard to negate that Spell or Trap. Pretty simple stuff, but very welcome since it pairs well with the new boss monster; it’s just annoying that you have to banish a Fusion monster, though thankfully you’ll usually at least have 1 to spare in your bread and butter combo lines. Another fairly simple but strong combo piece, Silver Hound is a rare card I recommend at 2 copies. You’ll usually want to be milling it directly, but it doesn’t hurt to open it either since Gold Leo can discard it too if necessary.
+Powerful extender that can start combos in emergencies
+Spell/Trap negate complements Lunalight Liger Dancer being anti-monster
-Lock takes a bit of work to maneuver around for stronger endboards
-Requires spare Fusion monsters in the Graveyard to negate
Advanced: 3.75/5
Genesys: 3.25/5
Art: 3.75/5 The hair reminds me of a certain other wolf, that happens to be a gamer…
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