For most Magic software, including Magic Workstation and Cockatrice:
For MTG Arena:
For Magic Online (MTGO):
For others:
To play your deck at an official ("DCI-sanctioned") tournament you need a deck registration sheet. Here you can download such a sheet pre-filled with the cards in this deck!
Please note: This is not an official DCI service. So please always make extra sure that the sheet contains all the cards in your deck and fulfils all DCI requirements. If you notice anything wrong, please let us know. DCI is a trademark of of Wizards of the Coast LLC.
Viewing revision 17. There is a more recent version of this deck.
Origin:
When I started playing Magic at the 1990‘s, my original idea was building a blue-red deck. But the friend who introduce me to Magic told me that enemy color decks wouldn’t work well. So I started with white-blue instead.
It didn’t take me a long time, till I found out that it was bullshit and built my first blue-red-artifact-deck based on the combo Goblin Sharpshooter + Kormus Bell + Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth. But some years later I swipped completely to Commander. I didn’t rebuild that deck to a EDH-Deck since the Community I was playing with didn’t like land destruction anyway. So I didn’t play blue-red what became Izzet in the meantime for many years till 2015 the Mizzix-Commander-Deck was released.
So in fact, at first my Mizzix-Deck was a preconstructed one, but from the very beginning I started to personalize it. I balanced colors and put focuses on X-Spells, Buyback-Spells and the ability to copy spells.
Main strategy:
The main strategy is of course winning by direct damage due to spells like Fanning the Flames, Banefire or Red Sun’s Zenith.
Since the deck obiviously doesn’t have many creatures, it has to buy some time. One way is bouncing, removing, steeling or countering the opponents creatures for example with Capsize, Cyclonic Rift, Chain Reaction, Satyr Firedancer, Blatant Thievery, Desertion or any other Counter or creating Tokens for blocking with Docent of Perfection // Final Iteration, Release the Gremlins or Talrand, Sky Summoner.
The other way is literally buying some Time by Walk the Aeons, Time Stretch or Expropriate. Thanks to the high chance to copy Spells, Mizzix usually gets more than one Extra Turn.
Alternative win options:
Actually Mizzix doesn’t need alternative win options. But in fact, making combat damage is of course another way to win. Usually it is a mix from direct damage and combat damage.
But what if the opponent is able to gain infinite life? At the beginning, winning by commander damage was actually no realistic way. This changed after Sword of War and Peace as well as Docent of Perfection // Final Iteration found their ways into the deck. Although it is still unlikey to win by commander damage, it is at least not impossible any more especially since those cards even make Mizzix harder to block.
Last but not least winning by life loss is another option. When Psychosis Crawler is on the battlefield, each of the carddrawing X-Spells like Blue Sun’s Zenith, Invoke the Firemind, Stroke of Genius or Expansion // Explosion can be the finisher.
Synergies & Combos:
Charmbreaker Devils + Walk the Aeons or Time Stretch = possibly infinite Turns (depends on the graveyard and if Charmbreaker Devils are copied by Rite of Replication or Saheeli’s Artistry).
Charmbreaker Devils + Walk the Aeons + Blatant Thievery = possibly several Extra Turns by sacrificing the opponents Islands (depends on the graveyard and if Charmbreaker Devils are copied by Rite of Replication or Saheeli’s Artistry).
Sword of War and Peace + Chain Reaction or Star of Extinction = Saves one of my creatures from my own mass removels.
Mizzix of the Izmagnus + Sakashima the Impostor = Double Experience Counters and Double Discount for Spells.
Erratic Cyclops + X-Spells = potential finisher
2-sided (coin flip) | |
---|---|
6-sided (d6) | |
20-sided (d20) | |
Sides: |
Double-click to open card details.
Name | Hand | Turn 1 | Turn 2 | Turn 3 | Turn 4 | Turn 5 | Turn 6 | Turn 7 | Turn 8 | Turn 9 | Turn 10 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Additional Probabilities |
Please add some cards to the deck to see card suggestions.
Score | Card Name | Type | Mana | Rarity | Salt |
---|
Compare | Revision | Created | By | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Revision 30 | February 15, 2024 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 29 | February 9, 2024 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 28 | February 8, 2024 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 27 | February 4, 2024 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 25 | February 2, 2024 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 24 | January 11, 2024 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 23 | September 17, 2023 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 22 | July 28, 2023 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 21 | June 14, 2023 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 20 | June 14, 2023 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 19 | February 16, 2023 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 18 | February 19, 2022 | mtp82 | ||||
» | Revision 17 | October 18, 2021 | mtp82 | |||
Revision 16 | October 6, 2021 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 15 | February 10, 2021 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 12 | December 11, 2020 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 11 | March 6, 2020 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 10 | January 26, 2020 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 9 | December 10, 2019 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 8 | November 17, 2019 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 7 | September 23, 2019 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 6 | April 21, 2019 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 5 | November 21, 2018 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 4 | November 20, 2018 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 3 | November 17, 2018 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 2 | October 28, 2018 | mtp82 | ||||
Revision 1 | October 20, 2018 | mtp82 |