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Commander & Change: Ephara, God of the Polis

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Flash
It should come as a thundering shock to absolutely no one reading this that I am mostly a Commander player. I play every week with a regular group, carry a deck with me just about everywhere I go, and love to play the format. However, I occasionally dive into other formats — I keep a Modern deck (budget, of course) in my case, and I occasionally flirt with Standard, mostly so I can show up to FNM and get my game on when I feel like it. Since I’m a budget player, I closely watch fellow Gathering Magic content creator Kevin Crimin’s Playing on a Budget series. He creates unique and interesting approaches to the metagame, and often serves as a launching point for my Standard decks. The fact he’s wallet-aware doesn’t hurt!

Recently, I’ve been rocking his W/U Flash deck. This deck got much stronger with Eldritch Moon; it’s mostly flash fliers, a number of which are spirits. It got Mausoleum Wanderer and, far more importantly, Spell Queller, which make the U/W spirits deck a lot stronger but also a lot more expensive. I’d rather save my pennies for Commander staples, but the deck was a ton of fun to play. It got me thinking. What happens if we apply the idea of playing almost entirely on our opponents’ turns to EDH?

So let’s step away from our exploration of the preconstructed decks for a moment and play around a little with an idea. Let’s make a deck with very, very few cards to play during our own turn and see if we can make it work. Back in the day, we used to call this “draw-go,” since you’d draw your card and say “go,” passing the turn immediately. There’s an argument for Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir, but White brings too much to the table for this deck, and fortunately, we have a God on our side.

Ephara, God of the Polis

She’s in the right colors, she’s tough to kill, she’s her own win condition, and she really cares when we play creatures on other people’s turns. Perfect.

The first thing worth noticing is the complete lack of ramp or rocks. We play a land and we pass; we’re not in a terrible hurry to get to big mana, since we don’t really need it anyway. We’ve got a good mix of dual lands, plus a Rogue's Passage, which is more important here than usual, a Reliquary Tower, and a Blighted Cataract, which can give us some extra cards later on. Play a land and pass the turn (except on turn four. Play Ephara on that turn).

Sphinx's Revelation
Since Ephara will be on the battlefield most of the game after turn four, and 28 of our 30 other creatures have flash, we’re going to draw plenty of cards. (Remember we only get one card per turn, though, no matter how many creatures entered, so we want to avoid bunching our spells together.) That said, we’ve got a few ways to really beef up our hand. Visions of Beyond is fairly often an Ancestral Recall in EDH, and it’s often worth delaying until it is. Sphinx's Revelation is here too. That card won an awful lot of Standard games, and will be great here. Ojutai's Command can draw us a card. And Keep Watch is hilarious — remember it’s an instant, so we can use it no matter who’s attacking. When the Trostani, Selesnya's Voice player attacks the Oloro, Ageless Ascetic player with 15 giant tokens, that’s a great time to play Keep Watch.

Our win condition is going to be Ephara, and we’re going to give her unblockable to make sure she can get through. At 6/5, she kills in four hits, but if we bump that up by one, we can get there in three. It’s going to depend on what we see, but most of the time turning her on won’t take too long, and we’ll just start whacking opponents. If everyone else beats up each other a bit before we start swinging, we might not need to hit four times because we may just kill with regular damage. We’re also thick with fliers, so it’s possible we could just alpha strike into a kill. The key to winning with a reactive deck, though, is to keep an open mind, open eyes, and a good sense of the entire board state. Sometimes the answer is right there and just not what you expect.

Ojutai's Command
Our answers come mostly in the counterspell variety, including Counterspell, although several of our Flash creatures have abilities which provide at least temporary answers. Familiar's Ruse is all benefit, letting us re-buy one of our enters-the-battlefield while countering a spell. Scatter to the Winds is lovely since it might leave us with a random dude, Ojutai's Command can normally get us something back, and Forbid can be reused if we really want it or have way too many lands in our hand. We’ve got some quick spot removal, too. Cards like Stasis Snare and Mystic Restraints do a good job of locking down opposing creatures while boosting Ephara’s Devotion, and Temporal Isolation is really funny on someone’s commander. Angel of Salvation can protect a few of our team, and Angel of the Dire Hour will swoop in to ruin someone’s day. Engulf the Shore and Evacuation clear the field in the event opponents get too excited or someone has too many tokens.

The only remaining cards are a couple of random fun things with flash, like Ophidian Eye, Eel Umbra, and Dictate of Heliod. Conspiracy 2 (Electric Boogaloo) has brought us Stunt Double, a clone with flash, and that seems like fun. We have a few cards which actually don’t have flash, too. Marshal's Anthem is worth sitting on until some value can be gotten. Hallowed Moonlight will shut down some explosive tokens player or someone who thinks they’re being cute with Rise of the Dark Realms. Faith's Reward can be hilarious after a board wipe. The rest of them give some kind of unblockability. Rogue's Passage is here for that purpose; Steel of the Godhead is probably the best one of the bunch, but Spirit en-Dal is a fun way to get there as well. For 1w and a flash (get it?), our commander can have Shadow, which makes her effectively unblockable. Aqueous Form and Flitterstep Eidolon round out our ways to get her through, although the auras will fall off Ephara if she loses devotion.

Ephara, God of the Polis ? Commander | Mark Wischkaemper


Wrath of God
This theme is pushed really hard here. In play-testing, it’s a blast to play, but it may or may not be able to stand up to your playgroup. One of my play-testers thought another way to keep all the cards drawn, like Thought Vessel, might be worth it. Personally, if I had more budget, I’d put in Snapcaster Mage first and Aven Mindcensor second, because those cards would be bonkers here. However, a couple more ways to give Ephara unblockable might be necessary. A couple of real Wrath of God effects might be good. Rout and Fated Retribution were both in the list till the last round of cuts, but at 7 mana for instant speed, they didn’t stay in. However, by adding a few rocks and slowing the deck down, they may be perfect. Alternately, Day of Judgment might just be the correct answer. Containment Priest is probably worth the add. Spell Queller, too, if you’ve opened one recently. This version, also, is focused on permanents with flash, but instant-speed removal spells like Path to Exile or Oblation might be better than Mystic Restraints. They don’t help with devotion, though.

This kind of deck plays out a little funny: we’re an aggro-control Voltron deck. We’re not a consistent control build, because we don’t have nearly enough control elements to expect to keep the entire board locked down for an entire game. But we’re not an aggro build, because we’re not making nearly enough little dudes to win really fast. We’ve got some light control elements with counterspells and creatures to flash in and block to stay alive, and fairly quickly we turn on our win-con, which is really difficult to deal with and kills pretty fast. Most of our creatures have some sort of enters-the-battlefield ability, so we want to watch those and make sure that we’re making good choices. We can block with Draining Whelk, for example, then flash in Quickling returning the Whelk. We prevent the damage and have another shot to counter a spell with the Whelk. Glamer Spinners is hilarious when Bruna has come out to play. Thunderclap Wyvern and Celestial Crusader can change combat math at an unexpected time. Even Hollowhenge Spirit can be a surprise, and if it keeps bouncing back for reuse, it can really mess with someone.

This is an unusual style for an EDH deck, and can put surprising pressure on a group to move through the game and take some risks. Just smile slightly each time you draw, play your land, and go, and everyone will assume you’re sitting on the counterspell. I’m also a big fan of saying “I’ll allow it” each time I don’t counter a spell, even if I’m not actually holding the counter. And hey, no one can complain you’re taking too long on your turns!

Total cost: $98.67


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