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Autres
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Révision affichée: 21. There is a more recent version of this deck.
The deck is for a casual environment and the context is a creature based meta with lots of interaction.
This was originally a Glissa, the traitor with deathtouch tribal deck, but slowly evolved into its own deck, keeping the deathtouch theme, while the Glissa deck took its own path towards a artifact creatures focused deck instead. Nonetheless, both decks still have one thing in common: they want to kill opponents' creatures to get value, although they do it in a different way. This deck aims to kill specific creatures, the ones that were assigned a bounty counter, so that with Chevill's triggered ability every removal spell becomes a cantrip. The theme of the deck is to go on a hunt and collect bounties by killing dangerous creatures or planeswalkers, with the help of other creatures that also gain advantage whenever an opponents' creature dies. You'll enjoy this deck if:
At first glance, it's clear that Chevill is a low cmc Commander and that allows it to be on the battlefield quite early, even just for defensive purposes, as deathtouch lets it trade well. This also mitigates the fact that its triggered ability takes place during the upkeep, so it does nothing the turn it comes into play.
Note that the triggered ability doesn't say "you may" do, so the first decision that should be taken carefully is the target of the bounty counter, especially in multiplayer games. The undesirable situation is a bounty counter sitting on a creature for several turns without you being able to claim the bounty. It also appears that other opponents will do what they can to not let you draw that card, so this should also be taken into consideration when assigning the bounty to a permanent.
Therefore I'll outline some factors to take into consideration when deciding where to put your bounty counters:
From a broader perspective, Chevill is the type of commander that might be overlooked at first, but people quickly realise it is very powerful when built around, but here comes the twist: at that point it could become the target of removal, but that's not a problem at all and you can turn it to your advantage: sometimes you should use it as a bait so that your opponent wastes a removal (and potentially loses a turn) on it and then cast one of the bigger threats in your arsenal, that they won't be able to answer. You can later recast it for 4 mana if needed, but you might not need it as some other creatures can just take over the game on their own.
There are several secret commanders that can take over the game in combination with other cards that are already in the deck anyway, like Grismold, the Dreadsower or Sarulf, Realm Eater with the boardwipes, Fynn, the Fangbearer with all the deathtouch creatures and Saryth, the Viper's Fang giving deathtouch to every attacking creature, Glissa, the Traitor with Executioner's Capsule, Glissa Sunslayer with Rancor and Sword of Once and Future. There are several viable strategies available even without your commander, so sometimes it's better to eat an early removal with it if it means your opponent not being able to answer your next threat.
The gameplan is quite simple, put bounty counters on enemy creatures/planeswalkers and get rid of them to seize the rewards. Being able to do this every turn allows you to have a smooth flow of cards. In addition to this, your other draw engine is Generous Patron, which synergizes incredibly well with Tetzimoc, Primal Death and Termination Facilitator. The latter also supports putting bounty counters on the battlefield, in part mitigating Chevill's limitation of only one bounty counter at a time. For the deck to run smoothly a solid, diverse removal package is included, and choosing which ones to use at any time is part of the challenge. Ideally you want to pace it with the bounty counters you are able to put, so there's no need to use too much removal all at once. This deck might feel oppressive to play against in some cases. There is a very small reanimation package included in Tyvar, Jubilant Brawler, allowing you reanimate some of your small creatures and your commander, and Sword of Once and Future can help recur removal spells from the graveyard, as many of your removal spells are 2 cmc or less.
Ideally you want to have at least three lands, a cmc 3 creature and a low cost removal spell in your starting hand. Chevill will cover the two mana play if you want to play on curve, and usually it's best to get it out as soon as possible. If you don't have removal in your starting hand, but you are able to play creatures on curve can threaten early attacks that is also a good alternative, especially if you happen to also have a protection spell. In this case, the opponent might be forced to block so you don't actually need removal as far as you choose the bounty target wisely. So the most important thing to consider when deciding to keep a hand or not is your ability to hit three land drops consistently, as from there there are different card advantage tools that can smooth out your draws. Also be mindful of mana fixing, as there might be rare situations in which your starting hand has nothing you can play, because of the high number of basic lands: Nighthawk Scavenger, Glissa, the Traitor and the black boardwipes have quite strict mana costs so be mindful about them if you get them in your starting hand. Bushwhack and Grisly Salvage help fixing your mana in those situations, so if they are in your starting hand it's a good incentive to keep it.
Because of the deathtouch tribal theme, Fynn, the Fangbearer proves to be a solid win condition in the early game if left unchecked, especially in the 1vs1. Grismold, the Dreadsower also grows into a huge threat quite quickly and interacts gracefully with the boardwipes and has to be answered. Hooded Blightfang can drain opponents in long games.There are no real win conditions other than those and the deck plays out as stax/control, aiming to win through combat damage and card advantage after clearing the field. The thrill of the hunt is the goal after all, winning is a side effect.
The deck obviously works well against creature based strategies, while it might struggle against a control deck and superfriends strategies, both for the lack of creatures and the counterspells and because it lacks quick answers to planeswalkers. It's also weak to protection spells or hexproof, although there are ways to bypass that in the deck already, and Bonds of Mortality may replace some other card if these effects become more relevant. But still, fizzling a removal spell might slow you down immensely or even get you stuck, so be aware of untapped mana. It works quite well against tokens and go wide strategies thanks to several board wipes that mainly affect creatures with low toughness. Fliers are obviously a weakness of this deck and the only counterplay is to try to kill all their fliers before they take over. Lifegain decks can lead to very long and grindy matches as this deck has no real alternative win conditions except for poison counters, but that's only one card and the deck doesn't have a lot of evasion. No data for now against mono red, but I would assume the incidental lifegain from Chevill might help surviving the first few turns.
Many different cards may go into this deck, so it's far from final, and some cards are always being tested while others are not completely convincing yet.
Elvish Mystic it's a classic, but could be replaced by an Arboreal Grazer later on, as it's one of the only creatures that dies to our own board wipes.
Azusa's Many Journeys replaced Llanowar Loamspeaker, which is a good mana dork with a lot of toughness that dodges our boardwipes and serves the more aggressive side of the deck, but sometimes sits without doing nothing for many turns, while the saga can provide additional utility.
Sakura-Tribe Elder auto-include.
Leyline Prowler provides mana ramp, fixing, some lifelink, deathtouch synergies and can wield bows as well.
Our commander is the main card draw engine especially in the early game.
Generous Patron gives a card boost with manageable downside as it enters the battlefield and then becomes a card draw engine together with the commander and/or Termination Facilitator, Tetzimoc, Prima Death. Every proliferate effect also works with this, although at the moment there's only one card with proliferate.
Drivnod, Carnage Dominus can double up Chevill's death triggers so that you draw two cards every time a creature with a bounty counter dies. It also interacts with other death triggers in the deck, like Grismold, the Dreadsower, Sarulf, Real Eater (only for creatures) and Glissa, the Traitor.
Deathreap Ritual acts as redundancy if our commander is unavailable, and can justify accelerating the pace of our deck with the removal on each turn instead of waiting an entire turn cycle.
Interaction mainly plays out as a thick removal package made of both spot removal, board wipes and edicts. Removal takes up to 1/6 of the entire deck.
Infernal Grasp is the best unconditional removal at that cost and life is usually not a problem as there's plenty.
Go for the Throat is quite good in most matchups, although some artifact creatures might be there every once in a while, but still one of the best spot removal.
Executioner's Capsule is a nice way to ward off attackers with its threatening presence, plus it becomes repeatable if Glissa, the Traitor is on the battefield.
Viridian Longbow is another repeatable removal that lets you ping opponents' creatures, so with deathtouchers it's enough to kill the target. It's quite oppressive and can be repeated multiple times with cards like Tyvar, Jubilant Brawler and Saryth, Viper's Fang. There are many valid archers in the deck.
Drown in Sorrow and Pestilent Haze allows you to get rid of those pesky little tokens in go wide strategies, without hitting your own creatures.
Gix's Command is a flexible modal spell that can both bypass protection and be a board wipe or refill your hand.
Putrefy is a fantastic flexible removal spell.
Bushwhack can be used for mana fixing or removal according to the situation.
Casualties of War is just devastating.
Golgari Charm can be used as a combat trick, protection spell, boar wipe and enchantment removal, so it's an incredibly flexible spell and must have.
All the boardwipes interacts gracefully with Grismold, the dreadsower
Vraska. Swarm's Eminence can buff the deathtouchers and provide 2 creatures at the same time, protecting herself, so it's important even just for board presence.
Hooded Blightfang adds some drain effect to all deathtouchers and helps getting rid of planeswalkers, while being a fantastic defender.
Fynn, the Fangbearer provides an alternative win condition, and with the many deathtouchers it's an additional threat. It's also good value for its cost and has amazing art.
Tyvar, Jubilant Brawler acts as a reanimation tool for many of the small creatures in the deck, commander included. Moreover the untap ability acts as pseudo vigilance and can also allow you to kill multiple targets with Viridian Longbow.
No boots are included for now, because our commander being on the field is not an essential factor for the deck to work and it's low cmc, so recasting is not a problem. There are however a couple instants to protect other pieces and make the opponents fizzle their removal.
Gaea's Gift is both a defensive and offensive spell that gives a whole lot of nice keywords and a +1/+1 counter.
Tamiyo's Safekeeping can protect any permanent, which is very flexible.
Saryth, the Viper's Fang provides optimal protection and gives deathtouch to other creatures, which can be really dangerous on Grismold, the Dreadsower for example. It also has an interesting untap ability that interacts with Viridian Longbow.
There might be too few unconditional enchantment removal in the deck.
Casualties of War is quite high costed and splashy.
Glissa Sunslayer needs to connect and can be chump blocked.
Sarulf, Realm Eater needs to be alive during upkeep and affects your permanents as well.
Grisly Salvage provides a bit of card selection and mana fixing during the first turns.
Glissa, the Traitor and Glissa Sunslayer are just powerful hunting partners for our commander. Glissa, the Traitor can recycle Executioner's Capsule and any of the equipments if they get destroyed. Glissa Sunslayer can give card advantage, kill planeswalkers and flip Battles, even if they are not in this deck. They both wield equipments like champions.
Quirion Beastcaller is an early threat than can attack and trade for something and distribute some counters later on. Best if played on curve, tends to be useless if drawn mid to late game.
Sword of Once and Future provides some useful protection and instants/sorceries recursion, as many of your removals are in the 2 cmc range.
Halana, Kessig Ranger acts as free removal paired with the many deathtouch creatures;
Thornbite Staff + Viridian Longbow turns the commander into Machine Gun Chevill, basically a board wipe (and any deathtoucher for that reason). But the total mana cost to cast and equip the staff is six mana, so it's quite slow. It's also not easy to decide what to cut at the moment. It would work nicely if played before a Vampire Nighthawk, being a Shaman, which also isn't in the list right now.
Bonds of Mortality is a great situational enchantment, especially if the opponents start using Heroic Intervention kind of effects, it could replace Pestilent Haze in some matchups.
Speaking of cards I don't have yet, Bounty Hunter, Murderous Rider, Royal Assassin, Noxious Gearhulk, Varragoth, Bloodsky Sire, Strionic Resonator are all good cards that could be added if the deck eventually transitions to the Commander format. Quest for Renewal also looks great.
Possible upgrades are the mana base and some staples like The Great Henge that are currently out of my budget range.
Revel in Riches can be an alternative win condition that's in line with the deck's strategy.
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Score | Nom de Carte | Catégorie | Mana | Rareté | Salt |
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Révision 64 | Mai 23, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 62 | Avril 14, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 61 | Avril 14, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 59 | Avril 7, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 58 | Mars 26, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 57 | Mars 26, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 56 | Mars 22, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 55 | Mars 11, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 54 | Février 27, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 53 | Février 17, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 52 | Janvier 23, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 51 | Janvier 20, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 50 | Janvier 15, 2024 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 49 | Décembre 27, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 48 | Décembre 21, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 47 | Décembre 21, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 46 | Décembre 13, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 45 | Novembre 28, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 44 | Novembre 28, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 43 | Novembre 26, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 42 | Novembre 26, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 40 | Novembre 26, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 39 | Novembre 14, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 38 | Novembre 9, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 36 | Octobre 25, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 24 | Octobre 2, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 23 | Octobre 2, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 22 | Septembre 28, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
» | Révision 21 | Septembre 28, 2023 | Sheng96 | |||
Révision 20 | Septembre 28, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 19 | Septembre 26, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 18 | Septembre 26, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 16 | Septembre 25, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 15 | Septembre 20, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 11 | Septembre 15, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 10 | Septembre 6, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 9 | Août 22, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 8 | Juillet 25, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 7 | Juillet 25, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 6 | Juillet 21, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
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Révision 4 | Juillet 20, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 3 | Juillet 19, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 2 | Juillet 19, 2023 | Sheng96 | ||||
Révision 1 | Juillet 19, 2023 | Sheng96 |