Sideboard

Instant (4)

Artifact (3)


Maybeboard


A Black/Red mill deck? Absolutely.

Blood Crypt is a fitting environment for the atrocities herein to be committed. It covers the red and the black; the blood and the ash.

Bloodstained Mire is a gruesome testament to a land befouled by abhorrent sacrifice. Conjure up the appropriate mana you need with this land.

mountains and Swamps round out the mana pool; lands tainted by despair.

Altar of Dementia —steeped in gore and stained with blood, it functions as the centerpiece of the deck. This depraved slab of stone encourages us to sacrifice our own creatures to invoke the milling of cards from the opponent’s library. The more powerful the sacrifice, the greater the effect.
Selecting which creatures to include was definitely the most difficult aspect of deck design. I feel as though this area needs improvement, but as of now these are the bodies I’ve settled on. Each creature has characteristics that homogenize well with the theme of the deck and with one another.

Gravecrawler is recursion personified. We can offer him up to the altar and mill the opponent for two cards, after which he can return from the graveyard at his leisure. With 3 other copies of itself plus 4 copies of Haakon, and an additional 8 other changelings that count as zombies, returning Gravecrawler to play won’t be an issue.

Changeling Outcast and Universal Automaton each count as all creature types. They both benefit from this static trait and function as enablers because of it. As mentioned above, they provide an open door for Gravecrawler to return to the land of the living. Yet they themselves receive an invitation to leave the graveyard, cordially sent by one Haakon, Stromgald Scourge .

Haakon, Stromgald Scourge has a stringent requirement to be played, but once he’s on the battlefield he becomes a key piece for the recursion of many of our other creatures. While in play, Haakon will allow us to play any and all knights directly from our graveyard. Syr Konrad, the Grim and both changelings fall under this umbrella.

Frogtosser Banneret was recently promoted to maindeck from the sideboard. What it allows us to do is far too valuable to leave it in reserve; I’m very grateful amicdeep suggested it. When Altar of Dementia and Haakon, Stromgald Scourge are in play this little rogue will enable an infinite mill interaction. Simply sacrifice Universal Automaton to the altar, then recast it from the graveyard (with Haakon’s permission) for its casting cost -1 (so for free!). Then repeat the process to mill out the opponent’s library in one explosive play.

Note I’m debating the idea of replacing Frogtosser Banneret with Dragonlord's Servant . For our purposes it’s functionally identical, except a bit more robust at 1/3 instead of 1/1.

Kroxa, Titan of Death's Hunger is our largest threat. Rules text specifies that we may indeed cast him for his normal (non-escape) casting cost, and before the mandatory sacrifice effect triggers we may voluntarily offer him as sacrifice upon the Altar of Dementia . Once in the graveyard, feel free to disinter him by paying his escape cost. If that wasn’t enough, whenever he enters play or attacks he forces a discard with potential life loss.

The main strategy revolves around sacrificing creatures upon the Altar of Dementia and then one way or another returning them to play to repeat the process. It’s a fairly non-interactive, closed loop system. The problem is that it isn’t too difficult to disrupt our plans. So a few cards have been included to try and preemptively interrupt any counter strategies the opponent may have up their sleeve.

Thoughtseize lets us thwart the opponent’s plans before they become a threat.

Inquisition of Kozilek is usually ranked behind the aforementioned card, but in this particular deck it’s arguably more valuable. It could be used to disrupt the opponent, yes, but it really shines when used to dump Haakon, Stromgald Scourge into the graveyard from our own hand.

Lightning Bolt used to be main decked here as creature removal, but tappedout user Saccox (who builds amazing budget decks, which you should check out) suggested a game changer card. Nameless Inversion qualifies as a knight, so with Haakon, Stromgald Scourge in play it can be recast indefinitely from the graveyard without being exiled, as is so commonly the drawback of playing non-creature spells from there. It costs an extra mana as opposed to Lightning Bolt , but don’t forget—with Frogtosser Banneret in play, Nameless Inversion costs one less mana to cast. It counts as a goblin/rogue!

Engage the opponent with a two pronged assault of traditional life loss from creature attacks, and milling made possible by Altar of Dementia sacrifices.

Aim to get Frogtosser Banneret , Haakon, Stromgald Scourge and Altar of Dementia in play, then mill out the opponent using Universal Automaton .

Alternatively, with Frogtosser Banneret , Haakon, Stromgald Scourge and Carrion Feeder in play, buff the zombie ad infinitum using Universal Automaton .

I recently updated the sideboard, thanks in part to the excellent suggestions Icbrgr and amicdeep offered. I’m now satisfied with the state of the sideboard; I feel it’s in a good place and offers some performant upgrades that are easily swapped in and out.

Kolaghan's Command is a fantastic utility card that needs no introduction. I don’t know how I missed it, but thanks again Icbrgr.

Carrion Feeder is a major sideboard upgrade. Also recommended by amicdeep, it functions as an alternate wincon. Replace Altar of Dementia with 4 copies of Carrion Feeder , then sacrifice Universal Automaton to it instead, buffing it in the process. Chain that together a handful of times (for free through Frogtosser Banneret and Haakon, Stromgald Scourge ) and the zombie becomes a massively pumped up threat.

Syr Konrad, the Grim was demoted from maindeck to sideboard. Too mana intensive to cast reliably, he’s better suited just to slot in once in awhile for variety’s sake. If you do manage to play him, he does synchronize rather well with the deck. Creatures will most certainly be leaving and returning to play on a regular basis, so he chips away at opponent’s health bars slowly but surely.

Profane Memento is a leftover placeholder card from an earlier build of this deck. It can help offset life loss from fetches and shock lands, particularly if you lean heavily into the mill potential this deck has.

At the end of the day there are far better ways to mill; I just thought it would be neat to create a deck that does so but not using the traditional colors associated with milling.

Look! The altar will be ripped apart, and the ashes that are on it will be spilled out.”

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Casual

93% Competitive

Revision 7 See all

(3 years ago)

+1 Dragonlord's Servant maybe
Top Ranked
  • Achieved #3 position overall 3 years ago
  • Achieved #1 position in Modern 3 years ago
Date added 3 years
Last updated 1 year
Legality

This deck is Modern legal.

Rarity (main - side)

4 - 0 Mythic Rares

24 - 4 Rares

4 - 11 Uncommons

16 - 0 Commons

Cards 60
Avg. CMC 1.60
Folders Modern, Modern, modern, Intrigue, Read Later, Non-Meta, but still expensive
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