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Jazal's Cat Stampede

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Jazal Goldmane
In this experiment, we learn to make nacatl clowder.

I’m a fan of cats, so when I saw an interesting synergy between Magic: The Gathering Commander (2014 Edition)’s Jazal Goldmane and an older Cat card, I just had to pounce on it.

Clearly, Jazal rewards us for having a lot of attacking creatures. That means he plays nicely with cards like Storm Herd, Nomads' Assembly, and Increasing Devotion. He’d be quite strong in a tokens-themed Commander decks with those cards, perhaps with Rhys the Redeemed commanding the way.

However, the card that jumped out at me was Nacatl War-Pride. The War-Pride has been attacking with armies of its own creation since Future Sight, and with Jazal, they become that much more lethal.

But there are a few pieces of the lethal-damage puzzle missing between these two.

What’s the Glaring Weakness?

Nacatl War-Pride
Jazal Goldmane scales based on the number of attacking creatures we control, and Nacatl War-Pride scales based on the number of creatures the defending player controls. That means, in order to really maximize this relationship, we need our prey to control a bunch of creatures.

Fortunately, there are ways to make that happen. Hunted Troll, for example, could help do the job. My only reservation here was that my 4-drop slot was a bit crowded—oh, and I ended up running zero non-God, non-Cat creatures, so the Troll would break that soft guideline as well.

Forbidden Orchard is the go-to choice for such a situation, as it can solve our problem while simultaneously fixing our mana. We give our opponent the most innocuous of creatures while setting up a great attack with a Jazal War-Pride.

Sylvan Offering walks the edge of our Cat boundary here, as it creates Elf and Treefolk tokens, but it scales exactly with the amount of mana we have available, and it also give our opponent a bunch of 1/1s. The Treefolk could be an issue, but we should have enough Cats to sneak around.

The Stampede

Nylea, God of the Hunt
The next issue is that once we have all our Cat tokens, we still have to break through. After all, we only have as many creatures as our opponent (well, maybe a couple more), so he or she should have sufficient blockers, right?

Well, fortunately for us, Nacatl War-Pride doesn’t care whether the defending player’s creatures are tapped. This seems obvious as we read the card and consider what it does, but when it plays out in game, it can come as a surprise. If our opponent attacked with two creatures and left two back, when our War-Pride attacks, it’ll make four tokens even though our opponent only left up two blockers.

Nonetheless, we should still have a contingency plan for when there are sufficient blockers on the other side of the table. Sure, with Jazal, those creatures are all probably dying anyway, and we can resume attacking next turn—albeit with fewer tokens—but it’s more interesting if we just end the game in one massive, final turn.

Thus, we need trample. Nylea, God of the Hunt isn’t a Cat, but Nylea's Emissary is, and while we’re not running that card, cats like hunting, so I think Nylea counts. Nylea’s trample boon will be greatly appreciated, and in return, Nacatl War-Pride offers three green mana symbols in devotion. If we don’t have Jazal to spend 3ww on, Nylea does plenty of good work with 3g.

Electrickery
When looking for trample-granting effects, for some reason, I couldn’t resist Stampede. It only gives +1/+0 and trample for the turn, and its art features aurochs, but it should do the job. For less mana, less surprise, and less power—but more permanence—consider Primal Rage instead. Ignore the moggs.

Finally, the last option in solving this problem has nothing to do with trample. Since the creatures we’re giving to our opponent are primarily 1/1s (darn you, offered Treefolk), any spell that hits all creatures for 1 should do the trick of removing them. That said, we don’t want to kill our own Elves—we’d like to have pumped them with Jazal first, and since he can only pump while we’re attacking, we need an instant.

So the plan is to attack, gain Nacatl War-Pride tokens, pump with Jazal Goldmane, cast our 1-damage-dealing instant, and then move on to blocker declarations, at which point our opponent should have far fewer creatures than we do and subsequently die. So what is the best option for a 1-damage-dealing instant?

I propose Electrickery. It’s versatile early, and we can use it to kill off an early opposing Llanowar Elves or the like. We can even just kill off a Spirit token we gave away with Forbidden Orchard if we need to break through with a Cat or two. Also, this particular card won’t even hit our own Sylvan Offering Elves, as it only hits creatures we don’t control, so we don’t even necessarily need Jazal for the synergy—Nacatl War-Pride, Sylvan Offering, and Electrickery could very well do the job.

Catsistency

Wild Nacatl
Cats don’t necessarily lend themselves to combos, so the remainder of the deck is here to stick to the Cat theme and perform as a G/W midrange deck. Wild Nacatl, Loam Lion, Fleecemane Lion, and Qasali Pridemage are all Constructed-worthy Cats, and they fill in our 1- and 2-drops.

Mirri, Cat Warrior and Brimaz, King of Oreskos are a couple important cat figureheads as friends of the famous Gerrard Capashen and Ajani Goldmane, respectively.

Finally, perhaps Healer of the Pride will give us a bunch of life with all these tokens we’re creating. A 4-drop that gains us life in an aggressive deck with a combo finish may not be exactly where we want to be, but at least she’s a Cat. If you wanted change your spots for Hunted Trolls, here you go.

Speaking of finding room for things, you might want to give Hunting Cheetah a try. As a Portal Three Kingdoms card, copies of this one are pretty pricey, but when they connect, they can fetch shock lands to help out Wild Nacatl and to help us consistently reach the 3ggg we need to actually cast Nacatl War-Pride. And if you try this list out on Magic Online, the Masters Edition 3 Hunting Cheetahs should be quite a bit more affordable.

If you love cats, if you bought three copies of the white Commander (2014 deck), if you have stacks and stacks of green Future Sight uncommons, or if you just want to see what Ajani’s home was like on Naya, give this deck a try.

Andrew Wilson

@Silent7Seven

fissionessence at hotmail dot com


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