The Tens of EDH 6: Budget Replacements

Tuition

miracleHat

11 April 2016

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The Tens of EDH

Budget Alternatives to Consider





Introduction .1

Why must I do this introduction every single time:
Welcome to the sixth installment of the series The Tens of EDH. As written in the title, this series looks over the parts of EDH, also known as ‘Commander’, in groups of Ten. The author and creator, me (miracleHat), hopes that you will enjoy this article and the content within. Since opinions and perceptions do differ, this might not be for everybody. Please keep the comments nice and civil, and if you disagree with any, nothing, or all of this, please post it down below.


Introduction .2


While reading this article, you might be remembering something else that I have written: hint hint. Getting straight to the point: article is going to be looking over budget alternatives that you might not have considered to run, or even knew about. If you have unlimited monies: this will not be as applicable to you. However: if you want to keep your wallet with some money in it, then this might be a bit more applicable and helpful. Before we begin, some notes for you to consider! First: I am going to stray away from the budget staples that everybody knows, and instead look at different alternatives to broaden your knowledge! Second: prices fluctuate. The cards that I mention as being too expensive might become budget later after this is written, and vice-versa. For this article: I will not be attempting to mention cards that are over $5, though there are going to be exceptions. A final thing before we begin: I will attempt to go over every color, but certain colors excel in certain areas (blue has the best counterspells) and are lacking in others (blue sucks at ramping), there will be imbalances.




#10

The Tutors

There are a lot of expensive tutors to choose from. The biggest offender is the infamous Imperial Seal, but there is also Stoneforge Mystic, Transmute Artifact, Gamble, and Natural Order to name a few. There are not many people that are willing and have the ability to spend the $900 for 3 of those cards for their Kresh the Bloodbraided EDH deck. So: here are some budget alternatives for you to consider:
Ethereal Usher | Diabolic Revelation
Ring of Three Wishes | Long-Term Plans
Jarad's Orders | Firemind's Foresight
Fierce Empath | Fleshwrither
Wargate | Reshape





#9

Non-Creature Card Draw

Drawing cards is fun, really fun! Sometimes, this type of fun costs a lot, and we are not referring to mana. Timetwister is the biggest offender on this list, with Jace, the Mind Sculptor, Regal Force, Consecrated Sphinx, Sylvan Library, and Sensei's Divining Top following. Some budget alternatives include:
Baleful Force | Mystic Remora
Recurring Insight | Dark Prophecy
Notion Thief | Snake Umbra
Theft of Dreams | Abzan Beastmaster
Deathreap Ritual | Horn of Greed





#8

Creature Ramp

There are two different forms of ramp that we will be going over: Creature Ramp and Non-Creature ramp. This section is over creature ramp, while the next will go over ramp via spells. For creature ramp: both Oracle of Mul Daya and Azusa, Lost but Seeking have jumped in price and are now out of many people’s budget. Nirkana Revenant and Rofellos, Llanowar Emissary are also too expensive for many people: but fear not! The list of budget Creature Ramp spells that are out there and that you should be going after:
Birds of Paradise | Magus of the Coffers
Dreamscape Artist | Magus of the Vineyard
Crypt Ghast | Courser of Kruphix
Morgue Toad | Wood Elves
Rattleclaw Mystic | Elves of Deep Shadow

It is important to note that Courser of Kruphix is not true ramp. It does have synergies with other cards, and is easily turned into an Oracle of Mul Daya. Birds of Paradise can be gotten for less than $7 on ebay or used (depending on the edition).




#7

Non-Creature Ramp

After going over some of our favorite creatures, let’s go look at some non-creature ramp spells. Now: while being considered cheap (the stereotypical Rampant Growth and Kodama's Reach), these cards can be quite expensive: Grim Monolith, Mox Diamond, and Mana Crypt take up the mana-rock’s with a random Three Visits and Mana Reflection bringing up the rear. So let us look over some premier budget ramp spell choices for consideration:
Skyshroud Claim | Izzet Signet (the signet cycle)
Far Wanderings | Altar of Shadows
Black Market | High Tide
Xenagos, the Reveler | Journeyer's Kite
Tezzeret the Seeker | Burnished Hart

Like with Courser of Kruphix: Journeyer's Kite and Tezzeret the Seeker are not ramp spells. Many times though, they normally tutor for some form of mana, either in the form of artifacts or lands, warranting them a spot in this list (Tez is normally used as combo fetch; but that is not the point).





#6

Counterspells

Counterspells are the most powerful spells in the game. Being able to completely nullify a spell before it can do anything is ridiculous. Unfortunately, the most powerful of these counterspells are really expensive: starting with Mana Drain, while Force of Will, Cryptic Command and Pact of Negation follow. Thankfully, there are a myriad of budget counterspells:
Countersquall | Spelljack
Mystic Snake | Last Word
Arcane Denial | Circular Logic
Deprive |
Rebuff the Wicked | Delay

Yes I consider Cryptic Command a good counterspell!





#5

Targeted Removal

There are two forms of removal that we will be looking over: Targeted Removal and Mass Removal. This section (targeted removal) will be going over the budget options of the cards that removal singular (mostly nonland) permanents. The biggest budget offenders are: Karn Liberated, Vindicate and Path to Exile. Without further ado, here are you budget Targeted Removal:
Hero's Demise | Swords to Plowshares
Krosan Grip | Council's Judgment
Chaos Warp | Rapid Hybridization
Capsize | Putrefy
Hull Breach | Oblation





#4

Mass Removal

Here we go: Mass Removal. Boardwipes, targeted removal hitting multiple targets, destroying all creatures, all lands, and all permanents: all of the fun stuff! We are not talking about Doom Blade, Terror, and Naturalize; we are talking about Overwhelming Forces, Damnation, and Burning of Xinye! Except we want budget options:
Wildfire | Lure
Tempest of Light | Inundate
Decree of Pain | Pernicious Deed
Bane of Progress | Akroma's Vengeance
Bane of the Living | Blasphemous Act





#3

Lands

Ok here it comes. I swear to god if anybody mentions, “What about Budget Dual Lands”, I will turn you into a goat and sacrifice you to the Tappedout Gods! We should already know the budget dual lands try this! Before we look over the budget alternatives, here are some of the most expensive utility lands (and lands in general): the tabernacle at pendrall vale, Bazaar of Baghdad, City of Traitors with Cavern of Souls and Dark Depths capping the wallet out. But you don’t need them, if you can get any of these budget options:
Buried Ruin | Mystifying Maze
Arena | High Market
Mistveil Plains | Opal Palace
Reliquary Tower | Strip Mine
Sea Gate Wreckage | Shinka, the Bloodsoaked Keep





#2

Big Creatures

Everybody loves big smashy creatures right?! Unfortunately, some of these big smashy creatures are very, very expensive and we aren’t talking about mana costs in this context! One of the most expensive beaters is Zodiac Dragon, but very few people actually use this gargantuan of a dragon (note: even though Zodiac Dragon is a dragon, he lacks flying(!): proof). Instead, people say that you have to run: Ulamog, the Infinite Gyre, Avacyn, Angel of Hope, Craterhoof Behemoth, and Blightsteel Colossus if you are going to run a beatdown stompy deck, but that is not true if you are on a budget! Check out these replacements if you want to make a stompy-smashy-budget deck:
Void Winnower | Darksteel Colossus
Greater Gargadon | Avenger of Zendikar
Dragon Tyrant | Lorthos, the Tidemaker
Terastodon | Demon of Death's Gate
Bosh, Iron Golem | Prime Speaker Zegana





#1

Other Utility Cards

So this is the vague category. We are going to be looking over 5 utility cards that are way too expensive for many people and looking over a budget counterpart for your consideration. Note: I am only looking over five cards that for I don’t bore you out with 10 different, and many times niche, cards. WARNING! The ‘budget replacements’ might not fit with my $5 cap (keep this in mind when commenting please!). Without further ado:

Crucible of Worlds

There is no easy supplement for this card, but both Groundskeeper and Titania, Protector of Argoth can function the same way, but they both need other cards on the battlefield to work properly.


Yawgmoth's Will


One of the easiest replacements for this deck is Past in Flames, but if you are not an instant/sorcery deck and instead a creature deck, you might wish to consider Rise of the Dark Realms to recur your graveyard.


Survival of the Fittest


The first thing that comes to mind—for most people hopefully—is Fauna Shaman as a replacement. People tend to forget it that Fauna Shaman is unfortunately out of budget range. However, do not fear, a new and budget card for you to use if you do not have access to the creature or enchantment: Evolutionary Leap. Though you have to land a creature first, Evolutionary Leap is the premier budget option for those who cannot afford Survival of the Fittest or Fauna Shaman.


Akroma's Memorial


Now this is a fun card! Give all of your creatures the abilities that Akroma has herself! Unfortunately, Akroma's Memorial is hard to find in trades, and is out of the budget range that we are using! There are two cards, one of them older, and the other just being printed, that function the same as Akroma's Memorial and can even be better (in certain circumstances)! I am referring to Concerted Effort and Odric, Lunarch Marshal! Both of those cards are very similar to Akroma's Memorial in that they buff up all of your creatures with a variety of abilities!


Nether Void


Being honest: this is a horrible card to play and playing against. We should not run this or the budget replacements: ever. However: there are people who want to run this card and if they want a budget replacement, here you go: Decree of Silence, Winter Orb, Stasis, and every budget stax card that you can get your hand on. That is all.





Conclusion .1


For the obligatory conclusion, thanks for reading this sixth installment… I hope that you enjoy it and you continue reading. Please upvote, subscribe, comment and all of that vain fun stuff.


Conclusion .2


I hope that you readers enjoyed reading, or just looking over the article! I went over the 10 categories most likely to be played across different archtypes, and went over some of the more unconventional cards that you might not have considered or even heard of (Morgue Toad and Bosh, Iron Golem)! A final question for you all: do you have any silver bullet budget cards that you wish to share with us that you have found super helpful? I know that I am looking for new budget cards and there are going to be some that I have missed, so what are they?
Again: thanks, it means a lot!

The content featured in this article may not be necessarily the views or beliefs of the author, tappedout.net, or other parties


This article is a follow-up to The Tens of EDH 5: Surviving The Early Game

lemmingllama says... #1

Good article overall! Saw a couple cards I had forgotten about.

Also a couple quick editing things. Countersquall is listed twice in counterspells. Titania, Protector of Argoth is misspelled. And in conclusion 1, this is the sixth installment.

April 11, 2016 6:45 p.m.

Spootyone says... #2

My bad. It's sometimes hard to catch all edits. Fixed.

April 11, 2016 8:27 p.m.

Unlife says... #3

not bad, but Burning of Xinye is a budget card, the fav reprint is about $2 on tcg

April 11, 2016 8:29 p.m.

Egann says... #4

Excellent article. I'm not sure I agree with some of your inclusions, but I've probably found 3 or 4 new cards which will become staples for me.

Cards I recommend:

  • Crystal Ball is an excellent poor man's Divining Top. It costs more, and it can't dodge removal, but it's ability to scry as opposed to reorder means you won't turn your top-deck into three islands.

  • Thespian's Stage is a great, cheap land which scales to the power of your opponent's mana base. Definitely worth it if you're playing people with extensive collections.

April 11, 2016 9:26 p.m.

trinitok says... #5

One card that I always receive compliments as being a "hidden gem" and is very good for budget blue control magic decks is Corrupted Conscience. It takes control of someone's creature and then gives them infect. I imagine it isn't played more often because of its cmc and infect. Nevertheless, it is still one of the best hidden gems I know of out there.

April 11, 2016 11:39 p.m.

Onion_duck says... #6

Why is it titled "Non-creature Card Draw" when it includes several creatures? Anyways I've always loved Bloodgift Demon for extra card draw and I don't see it in a lot of deck lists. It's a Phyrexian Arena on a 5/4 Flyer for only 5 mana. Seems pretty good to me and it's super cheap.

April 12, 2016 12:33 a.m.

TheRedMage says... #7

Don't forget:

  1. Tutors: Congregation at Dawn and Sterling Grove
  2. Noncreature Card Draw: Honden of Seeing Winds, Triumph of Ferocity and one of my personal favorites Recurring Insight
  3. Creature Ramp: Fatestitcher is probably one of the most underplayed cards in EDH.
  4. Noncreature Ramp: Braid of Fire if you can make it work
  5. Counterspells: Swan Song
  6. Spot Removal: Mortify, Deglamer and Drana, Kalastria Bloodchief
  7. Wraths: I feel like I should point out that if you really are the type of person that doesn't enjoy having friends, you can pick up FTV Burning of Xinyes for like a couple bucks, so I wouldn't really consider big offenders. My pick for "cheap wraths you might not know about" are Retribution of the Meek and Ixidron
  8. Lands: Flood Plain, Bad River, Rocky Tar Pit, Mountain Valley and Grasslands
  9. Big Creatures: Dread Defiler, Stormtide Leviathan

Finally my pick for a random underused card is Tainted Strike. You only need to get somebody after they say "Ok, I'll take 9" once before they forever live in fear.

April 12, 2016 3:22 a.m.

GobboE says... #8

Love your articles, great writing!

On budget counterspells, a poor man's Force of Will can be Thwart

April 12, 2016 3:41 a.m.

Guftders says... #9

While you do state Ethereal Usher as a tutor, you've neglected to mention the better Transmute options, namely Muddle the Mixture, Perplex and Clutch of the Undercity. Also missed out Increasing Ambition.

Of course, each of the three transmute options also fit into other categories as well, such as counterspells (which is what makes them better than usher). Also Misdirection is functionally similar to Force of Will.

Also, in , we have Jarad's Orders.

April 12, 2016 7:39 a.m.

metalevolence says... #10

I think a lot of folks overlook that Burning of Xinye is not functionally identical to Wildfire. Burning is usually pretty bad because it only causes you and one opponent to each sacrifice four lands, leaving the other player's/players' mana unharmed.

There are a lot of genuinely terrible cards mentioned in this post and a lot of great budget cards were overlooked, but I suppose it will still help people get the idea.

April 12, 2016 8:11 a.m.

MagicalHacker says... #11

For anyone looking for even more budget options in these and other categories, feel free to use the staple list resources on my profile and organize by price in the drop down menu on the respective list.

April 12, 2016 8:34 a.m.

Seeri says... #12

Dismiss is a very good replacement for cryptic

April 12, 2016 11:12 a.m.

miracleHat says... #13

My apologies for the errors/typos that I missed.

Also: my apologies that I was unable to get ALL of the staple cards. I was hoping get a wider spectrum of cards, rather than going, "Dismiss, Flood Plain, Bloodgift Demon, Deglamer, Mortify etc... Now go make a budget deck filled with staples." The point was to increase card knowledge for some of the newer players who might not have known what cards such as: Ethereal Usher (transmuting for an abundance of cards), Inundate etc. I doubt that many of the newer players knew that Altar of Shadows was a viable card for their mono-black deck (filling two roles ramp and removal), or using Lure as a boardwipe by putting it on a deathtouch creature. Heck: even Snake Umbra to so save their general while drawing cards and increasing damage!

Point is: if you are reading this to learn all of the staples, prepare to learn about cards that aren't staples but are just as good and applicable. You might learn something new :)

April 12, 2016 1:19 p.m.

TheRedMage says... #14

miracleHat: Do Flood Plain and friends see that much play in your groups? I don't think I have ever seen one of those in a deck around these parts. I was honestly suggesting them thinking they were a nice cycle some people might not know about.

April 12, 2016 1:28 p.m.

Guftders says... #15

The Flood Plain cycle is a good budget replacement, but outside of their original printing, of which only allied colours were printed, only 3 of them were reprinted in the modern frame:

April 12, 2016 1:37 p.m.

Onion_duck says... #16

Was not aware Bloodgift Demon was a staple. I see it in so few decklists on this site. Just wanted to share a budget card I found super helpful.

April 12, 2016 1:44 p.m.

metalevolence says... #17

miracleHat Altar of shadows is objectively an awful card though. Even in EDH, 7 to cast + 7 to activate is just horrendous. Off the top of my head, Corpsehatch is about a thousand times better if you're looking for a removal spell that makes mana. There's probably some even better card I'm forgetting.

Likewise, ethereal usher... Not useless, but 3 mana sorcery super narrow tutor hardly has applications. As opposed to say, Dizzy Spell, an underrated tutor which finds all kinds of great, commonly played stuff like Sol Ring, Exploration, Swords to Plowshares, Vandalblast, Entomb, Mystic Remora, Vampiric Tutor, Reanimate, Nature's Claim, Nihil Spellbomb, Green Sun's Zenith, Pongify, Pithing Needle, etc etc

Maybe I should write my own article...

April 12, 2016 2:27 p.m. Edited.

Spootyone says... #18

metalevolence: You're welcome to submit your own piece for the site, but perhaps do so without so much vitriol.

April 12, 2016 3 p.m.

metalevolence says... #19

Spootyone What did I do that was vitriolic? Pointing out that cards are bad is not a personal attack on the writer.

April 12, 2016 3:22 p.m. Edited.

Spootyone says... #20

metalevolence: It's possible I misinterpreted your comments, but it felt like, at least to me, you were coming off a little hostile. If I'm wrong, then I'm wrong. Interpretation of words can be hard on the internet.

And like I said, if you feel like you wish to make your own piece on the subject, I am more than willing to take a look at it.

April 12, 2016 3:41 p.m.

miracleHat says... #21

metalevolence: please do write an article for this site that is EDH Based. It is one of the reasons that I started up series: in the hopes that many more users would start writing. It would be great if you would be able to cater yours towards the more competitive EDH audience: while mine can stay more casual.

Now: while Dizzy Spell does tutor up for a lot of cards, that you mentioned, it is valid to note that Ethereal Usher does tutor up:
Consecrated Sphinx, Niv-Mizzet, the Firemind, any of the titans (besides primeval), Eternity Vessel, Felidar Sovereign, any of the spirit dragons (Kokusho, the Evening Star), Catastrophe, Narset, Enlightened Master, Akroma's Vengeance, Mikaeus, the Unhallowed, Deadbridge Chant, Mindslaver, Caged Sun, Grip of Chaos, Mind Over Matter, Hive Mind, and many other powerful staples that can be used in a myriad of ways.

If you wanted to compare Ethereal Usher to Dizzy Spell: the usher is better for late-game, and the d-spell is best for explosive plays early on if you want to spend 3 mana early game for an Exploration. Ethereal Usher has applications outside of being a tutor. One of my favorite plays that I have witnessed was tutoring Celestial Mantle with the usher, then reanimating the usher and giving the Bruna, Light of Alabaster unblockable, while it had the celestial mantle attached to it. In the late-game, Dizzy Spell can mitigate the general damage from Kaalia of the Vast, stop a Cold-Eyed Selkie, but when compared to the power off the usher, it is lacking. Why tutor for a Nature's Claim with Dizzy Spell, when you can run Ethereal Usher and get Austere Command? Why save yourself 3 combat damage points when you can make your voltron general unblockable and kill the opponent before they attack with their Cephalid Constable?

Altar of Shadows is a weird card. It takes a lot to set it up: but when it works, it works. Running proliferate cards (Contagion Engine), Doubling Season (i know it isn't budget), Energy Chamber (I remember it's wording correct right?!), and a whole host of other card: it can easily provide you with >14 mana over the course of 2-3 turns. It is important to note that it kills creatures that have swords (Sword of Feast and Famine) equipped to them, has the potential to completely destroy many voltron decks, and many other uses (preventing a combo). While it does cost 14 mana to kill one creature, the longer that it stays out: the more creatures that you can kill, the more mana that you can get back,the more flexibility and control over the board that you have.

Spootyone/metalevolence: Metal wasn't being hostile/vitriolic, he was just stating an opinion that is valid under his own beliefs, which I have addressed.

Edit: @TheRedMage, not overly much but I see them referenced continuously and they are good if you run cards such as Amulet of Vigor or Fatestitcher

April 12, 2016 4:54 p.m. Edited.

TheRedMage says... #22

Altar of Shadows the mana cost is honestly a bit pricier than I am usually willing to pay for a removal spell.

My main problem is that its color identity is . If it were colorless, some mono-red decks would want it since they are often hurting for way to destroy creatures out of burn range, and it would probably even be great in Kurkesh, Onakke Ancient. But, come on, in black? Even only considering repeatable creature destruction depending on your deck you can have Attrition, the old Dictate of Erebos/Grave Pact double whammy, Pestilence, Drana, Kalastria Bloodchief, No Mercy, Season of the Witch, Slaughter, Visara the Dreadful, Avatar of Woe and Witch's Mist just to name some (in no particular order of being good, weird or build-around-y). And that's not even considering the plethora of spot removal spells that you can just fire once.

I guess it can be good, but I don't really see it. Do you run it in any of your decks? Is there any deck that it has overperformed in?

April 12, 2016 5:24 p.m.

UpsetYoMama says... #23

Nice list! There a couple on here that I wasn't aware of. I've somehow overlooked Circular Logic for years even though I love graveyard decks.

Oblivion Ring or Banishing Light is another great budget removal option.

Also worth noting, even though you have it under Targeted Removal, Council's Judgment doesn't actually target. The voting part can make it rough in multiplayer, but usually people can figure out to exile the Avacyn, Angel of Hope or whatever other problematic thing is on the table.

April 12, 2016 5:27 p.m.

miracleHat says... #24

@TheRedMage: I have not played with it in paper, but on cockatrice 4-player matches Altar of Shadows was a card that, when left alone, was great for the Kresh the Bloodbraided counter-edh deck that I ran. It was easy to go turn 3: Kresh the Bloodbraided, turn 4 Altar of Shadows, (and when it was actually cheaper) turn 5 Seedborn Muse + Hardened Scales. Now that doesn't work so well for the budget players... The deck cost $125 paper...

To hopefully end this Altar of Shadows madness conversation: by itself Altar of Shadows is sub-optimal, but when utilized correctly and placed in the proper deck it will do what you want it to do. Also: who the hell is going to kill an Altar of Shadows, that card is garbage right (they say... next turn you have 5 free black mana for the rest of the game and can control a fair amount of the game because of that one card)!?

P.S.Warning: do not run it in rakdos/dimir deck, it will FAIL in those stereotypical builds.

April 12, 2016 5:40 p.m.

lemmingllama says... #25

Just to suggest a type of deck that could use Altar of Shadows, something like a Shauku, Endbringer deck could certainly use it. Very quickly it pays for itself and more, plus you are already ramping hard. Example because shameless self plug. Bringing the End

April 12, 2016 5:44 p.m.

UpsetYoMama says... #26

Wouldn't the niche fit of Altar of Shadows make it a card that shouldn't be on a staple list?

April 12, 2016 5:53 p.m.

miracleHat says... #27

What do you mean by 'niche fit'? There are a plethora of cards that could be considered 'niche fit' that have been referenced in this article. For [insert reasons here], Altar of Shadows is the one that met the magnifying glass. I personally think that Altar of Shadows is an undervalued, underplayed card that deserves more credence for what it is and does. Same with Deathreap Ritual, Morgue Toad, Last Word, Greater Gargadon, and Lorthos, the Tidemaker!

For a casual, budget player: having access to (almost) unrestrictional creature-removal that interacts with a wide-set of cards is great!

@UpsetYoMama: I (personally) have mentioned the word 'staple' ~5 times: and in none of them were the (hopefully) in the context of, 'here is an article filled with staples'. This is an article of "I can't afford Karn Liberated! So I just learned about a colorless card that also costs 7 colorless and destroys creatures, in the form of Altar of Shadows! Yes it is worse, and yes it is slower, and yes I will have to work with it to make it work, but wow, destroying creatures and gaining mana?! And it is 1/200th of the $$!"

April 12, 2016 6:31 p.m. Edited.

UpsetYoMama says... #28

I guess I made an assumption -- that if the article was about "budget replacements," then those were replacements for EDH staples. By niche fit I meant a card that can only work well around a certain build or in a certain environment. Most staples are staples by virtue of their powerful and easy application to any number of decks. If this article isn't about staples, then my question does lack value.

Sadly, it looks as if you completely ignored my other comment and just took offense to me calling Altar of Shadows niche. Which is a shame, because I did find the article helpful.

April 12, 2016 9:57 p.m.

BerserkWin says... #29

I like Staff of Nin for card draw when I'm not playing black or blue (which is most of the time - TIMMMAHHH!). Even better is, of course, Mind's Eye, but that card is getting up there in price. A nice alternative to Eye and good in it's own right is Farsight Mask... again, when blue and black's better card draw isn't available to you because of commander choice. I've started including Mask in most of my commander decks. Three 1/1's hit you? Draw 3!

April 13, 2016 5:55 p.m.

RupertPhd says... #31

this article and the comments are great. i just put 7 new cards in my tcg cart for $1.50.
on Morgue Toad, unless you're playing grixis i'd rather have Basal Thrull. and then i'd rather have Dark Ritual or Bubbling Muck or Wayfarer's Bauble.

April 14, 2016 6:20 p.m.

metalevolence says... #32

Yeah, color identity rules really kill the opportunities to use the unfortunate toad. My Balthor deck makes use of Basal Sliver and Blood Vassal though. Also Overeager Apprentice is surprisingly good in a deck that likes to discard.

April 14, 2016 6:25 p.m.

miracleHat says... #33

Both of you are correct, but I like the toad for the unforeseen Negate/Spell Pierce/Swerve. 50% of the time, it works EVERY time.

April 14, 2016 7:47 p.m.

CheeseBro says... #34

God, i love Mystic Remora. Play it turn one, and even if you just sacrifice it turn 3-4, you have probably draw 4+ cards off of it. I play it in Brago so i dont really have to pay upkeep (only one)

November 1, 2016 8:27 p.m.

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