I can see this doing pretty well in commander, actually, especially in token based decks. Imagine being able to pick and choose what cards you want to follow up with after that huge battle-of-an-attack-phase?
What's funny is that like, a few months ago I had rediscovered this card and put it in my EDH deck. People read it as being a lot worse than it really is, so I actually hadn't really seen it used much in the format. Reminder guys, this thing causes card advantage, not just filtering.
Honestly, the Jund commander deck is pretty much my Lyzolda deck + Green, but it is uncanny just how many cards they share.
Aehetag
★★★★★ (5.0/5.0)(1 vote)
This can be fun with any infinite sac setup. You basically tutor for a card and fix the rest of your deck.
TheWrathofShane
☆☆☆☆☆ (0.0/5.0)
Gross. But over long periods of time (which commander does well at) this is like a colorless tutor.
MrShinyObject
☆☆☆☆☆ (0.0/5.0)
Today I had Primal Vigor out before casting Prossh with some eldrazi spawn and after sacrificing nearly all of the kobolds to a Goblin Bombardment I got to tutor out of practically half my library.
I severely underestimated this card in Dark Ascension. Definitely keeping it in the deck, maybe getting another for a different deck.
Arachibutyrophobia
☆☆☆☆☆ (0.0/5.0)
Took me a long time to realize that it never sacs.
TheWallinator74
☆☆☆☆☆ (0.0/5.0)
That awkward moment when you get two eyeball counters from killing a cyclops...
Comments (8)
Not to mention it's easier to get a hold of than some other cards (Sensei's divining top, scroll rack, etc.)
Honestly, the Jund commander deck is pretty much my Lyzolda deck + Green, but it is uncanny just how many cards they share.
I severely underestimated this card in Dark Ascension. Definitely keeping it in the deck, maybe getting another for a different deck.