To check out the full decklist for “Devour for Power”, look here.
Overview – “Devour for Power” is a G/U/B deck with a theme of cards that become more powerful by consuming creatures, cards, even parts of your turn. It has some really exciting fatties, and lot of creatures with abilities pertaining to your graveyard, and two of our favorite commanders in the entire deck series.
Like many EDH decks, “Devour for Power” has a number of different strategies – Memory Erosion
Memory Erosion and Szadek do some milling, Scythe Specter
Scythe Specter is useful for some discard, there are plenty of creatures with flying and other sorts of evasion. You don’t need to use the reanimate strategy to win, especially because you’ll have plenty of mana with which to hard-cast your biggest creatures.
Commanders – Every one of the Commander decks has three Legends of the appropriate colors that could be used as your commander. In every case, two of the commanders are brand new cards and the third is one of the series of dragons from Planeshift. “Devour for Power” has sports what many players feels is the best line-up of commanders.
Vorosh, the Hunter
Vorosh, the Hunter is the token dragon, a 6/6 with the ability to gain six +1/+1 if he deals combat damage to an opponent for only 2G. Vorosh isn’t the most exciting of the dragons, but he does have the potential to quickly be the beefiest. While the opposing Commander decks have plenty of flying to get in his way, if you can use Vorosh’s ability just once, he’s not likely to be out-fought in the air.
The Mimeoplasm is one of the cheaper commanders out there. There are a lot of Clones out there, but Mimeoplasm really kicks things up a notch by not only copying a creature (in any graveyard) but getting a power/toughness boost equal to the power of another. This ensures that Mimeoplasm will not only be stealing any convenient abilities your opponents creatures may have, but he’s also likely to be one of the biggest creatures on the board. Even if you don’t want him to come back as your opponent’s Akroma, or your own Nezumi Graverobber, you can always find a creature with the evasion or haste necessary to swing for lethal damage.
Finally, Damia, Sage of Stone is the commander we’re most excited to try out in “Devour for Power”. She’s basically Medusa, which is pretty awesome, and not only does she have the signature “turn to stone” ability known as deathtouch, she is going to ensure that in the later stages of the game you’ll have a handful of responses to anything your opponent can throw at you. Damia’s ability to fill up your hand every turn is pretty incredible, but the fact that she does it on your upkeep is even more incredible. She’s one card that I could see becoming a staple of animator decks, perhaps in conjunction with Jin Gitaxias
Jin Gitaxias, Core Augur.
Old Favorites – Besides the old graveyard favorites like Grave Pact
Grave Pact, “Devour for Power” brings back some great black and B/U creatures. Avatar of Woe
Avatar of Woe, a perennial favorite returns here to give you one more way to empty your opponents side of the board, or to pick out your favorite graveyard-fodder in order to power up your own ghouls.
Nezumi Graverobber and Patron of the Nezumi
Patron of the Nezumi recall the days of rat ninjas and provide the fantastic combo of punishing your opponent when creatures hit his graveyard and then resurrecting them as your own. Also, how did the ability “Rat Offering” get by me that first time. That is one of the funniest things I have ever read on a card.
Damia’s hand-filling ability isn’t the only way to restock the shelves in “Devour for Power. Fact or Fiction
Fact or Fiction and Windfall
Windfall are both back and both are great additions in a setting where games take a while to get going and often leave players empty handed and waiting to top deck an answer.
There are also some fun old dinos like Wrexial, who allows you to play an instant or sorcery from your opponents graveyard if he successfully deals combat damage, and Szadek who mills (and grows bigger) every time he would deal combat damage to your opponent. Luckily both of them have some pretty solid evasion built in.
New Hotness – “Devour for Power”, as I’ve said already, has some great commanders, but it also has some other new cards that might interest you. Shared Trauma, a Join-Forces (anyone may pay) sorcery that allows you to put the top X cards from the top of your library into the graveyard, will not likely be helping out your opponents at all and can ensure that you have the best possible selection for your Gravedigger/Eternal Witness.
Minds Aglow, another Join Forces sorcery, allows each players to pay to draw X cards, which might seem like too much of a benefit to give to your opponents, but when you are milling with cards like Szadek and the new Riddlekeeper (your opponent mills two for every creature he chooses to attack you with) and making him discard with Scythe Scepter, perhaps refilling his hand won’t be nearly as appealing.
“Devour” also has some pretty powerful new creatures. Sewer Nemesis
Sewer Nemesis, like Mortivore, derives his power and toughness from the size of target player’s graveyard, but he also mills that same player for one every time they cast a spell.
Skullbriar, the Walking Grave is a great early-game creature. He has haste, which hopefully will earn him one free attack, but he also grows every time he successfully damages a player. Skullbriar’s also has a special ability which (as far as I know) is completely unique: He keeps his counters in the graveyard and command zone. With as much reanimation as this deck has, he’s likely to make several return appearances, and, unless your opponent can manage to bounce him back to your hard, he’ll continue to be a threat.
Suggested Alterations – Because so many creatures in “Devour for Power” have abilities that are contingent on dealing combat damage to an opponent, it may be a good idea to add cards like Whispersilk Cloak
Whispersilk Cloak which give some extra evasion to ensure that your fatties actually make contact.
As I said above, “Devour” has several strategies going at once. If you wanted to take this deck apart both Szadek and Skullbriar would make good commanders of mill or reanimator deck, respectively. By the same token, you could switch out some of the less powerful commons and uncommons in this deck for stronger mill and reanimator cards like Exhume
Exhume or Traumatize
Traumatize.
Also, take out Desecrator Hag, she (?) is just creepy.
Verdict – This deck has great synergy and is bound to be a lot of fun. The cards complement each other well and the plentiful graveyard manipulation will ensure that you don’t get stalled out after you lose a commander or empty your hand.
Wizards has done a great job designing these decks and I don’t think there are any of them that will ultimately disappoint. That said, I think “Devour for Power” is going to have some very devoted fans as its component strategies are some that casual players have always loved.
Players have always had a love/hate relationship with MTG’s ever-changing, yet reassuringly cyclical nature. I’ve heard from gamers who left MTG for Warhammer or D&D primarily on account of the ever-changing play environment of Standard and the necessity for keeping up with the latest expansions in order to have viable decks for FNM.
Even playgroups who stay away from Standard in favor of Legacy will periodically have to buy a playset of the latest and greatest in a series of spells that is central to a long-standing deck.
On the other hand, the rhythm Wizards has established of releasing an annual (since 2009) Core Set, one block with a stand-alone set and two smaller expansions, and a multiplayer product (Planechase, Archenemy) keeps the play environment fresh and gives players and event-organizing a lot to look forward to.
While, I may not be entirely on board with the increasing number of smaller products like Duels of the Planeswalkers, From the Vault, and the Premium Deck series which have been regularly released over the past couple years, I do like the way Wizards does marketing and I’m the type that loves following the rumors and spoilers as they appear. So, for those of you like me, who want the scoop on what’s coming, here’s a taste of the next few months in Magic*:
Commander: June 17, 2011
So, the first big debut of the summer is MTG:Commander. The Elder-Dragon Highlander format has become just popular enough that Wizards is ready to take their cut. In all seriousness though, it’s sometimes difficult for the casual player or newbie to get into a format like EDH due to a small card pool. These five, one-hundred card, tri-color decks will give you a great base for building a competitive EDH deck and will cost $29.99 each. You can also look forward to 15 new cards in each deck and 51 new cards total.
Each deck will showcase three legendary, over-sized commander cards with one of these in each box being part of the Legendary Dragon series from Planar Chaos. The three colors will be a “wedge” trio, meaning they will consist of two allied colors with one enemy color.
Also, if you’re a little bit confused about why it’s called Commander and not EDH, then you’re in good company. The choice is deliberate and explained, more or less, at the official EDH site: http://mtgcommander.net/questions.html
We’ll keep you updated as we learn more about what cards will be reprinted in MTG:Commander and what new additions will be made. At any rate, we’re excited to get our hands on these decks and will be planning on finding a Release event to attend.
M12: July 15, 2011
As we mentioned on Monday’s podcast, the TCP crew hasn’t been terribly enthused by core set releases in the past. Of course, most of us started playing back in the day when core sets sported the horrible white-bordered cards that started looking “used” way too quickly and stood out like a sore thumb in an otherwise aesthetically pleasing deck. However, the introduction of black-bordered core sets didn’t do nearly as much to change our minds as the introduction of titans in M11.
The titans were an incredible addition to the standard environment and did a lot to shake up the format. If M12 follows suit, I assume they’ll be a mythic-level incentive to buying the core set in every color – that is, an incentive in addition to the reprinted planeswalkers.
Earlier this week, Wizards released what is, by far, their best promo video to date. In it we find Gideon Jura recounting in brief his inter-planar struggles (especially his encounters with Liliana Vess) and hinting that there are big changes coming in the planeswalker storyline.
The tagline for M12 is “Gather Your Allies” and at the end of the video Gideon hints that he has somehow found a way to unite the planeswalkers (at least planeswalkers who aren’t Liliana) under a common banner. Is this actually storyline? Is this just a weird way to talk about the role of the player as a “controller of planeswalkers”? There is plenty here to speculate on, but we’ll save that for a later date.
If you haven’t already watched the video, check it out.
Duels of the Planeswalkers2012: Summer 2012
In addition to the reprinting of the planeswalkers in M12, there will be a new edition of Duels of the Planeswalkers appearing this summer. The announcement by Wizards indicated that the picture below is representative of the planeswalkers that we’ll see in both M12 and DoP. So, it looks like Liliana and Ajani have disappeared (though only temporarily) and been replaced by Sorin Markov and Gideon Jura.
Based on precedent, I doubt that the M12 planeswalkers will be anything but reprints, though they may have some new name-associated cards like Jace’s IngenuityJace’s Ingenuity or Chandra’s Spitfire
Jace’s Ingenuity.Either way, I hope beyond hope that we won’t be seeing Jace, the Mind Sculptor return to Standard for another year.
Innistrad: September 24, 2011
Finally, what interests us the most here at TCP is the announcement of the next block: Innistrad. There are several things to be excited about with Innistrad. First of all, it’s the first set that the game’s creator, Richard Garfield, has co-designed since Ravnica: City of Guilds. The tagline of the set is “Horror Lurks Within” and there is already some speculation that we may be returning to Ravnica in this block.
Whether or not we can look forward to a return to the city-plane, it does look like this set will have a flavor similar to that of Torment – the black-centric expansion to Odyssey.
There’s been some debate (though I don’t know why) about whether or not this is a picture of Liliana. Let me put your minds at ease – when I right-click saved it from the Wizards announcement, the picture’s default name was “liliana_innistrad”.
We have Liliana on the throne, a corpse with a smoking chest-wound in the background, a full moon (please reprint Bad Moon), and two zombie-like husks in the background. Also, the Game Day for Innistrad is October 29-30 – as close as can be to Halloween (please reprint All Hallow’s Eve).
While I would love to see mono-block come back in a big was in Innistrad my greatest hope is that Liliana, who seems to have been left out of M12, get a makeover in Innistrad. Especially as Jace, the Mind Sculptor
Jace, the Mind Sculptor leaves standard it would be great to have a new mega-mythic game-changing remake of a planeswalker.
*You might notice that we passed over the Ajani vs. Nicol Bolas duel decks. Right now there isn’t enough information on the decks to have much fruitful speculation. We’ll let you know when we know more.