Command Zone: A Very Merry Karn-mas
Today is Christmas, so go open presents if you’re into that kind of thing. If not, enjoy your Chinese food or whatever else you do. However you have your December, it’s generally a gift-receiving time of year.
Unless you have a colorless Commander deck, in which case your gift-receiving started the moment Battle for Zendikar hit store shelves and provided you with a sizable helping of colorless non-artifact cards. Oath of the Gatewatch will be including another swath of these cards, greatly expanding the options available to colorless decks.
Unless you have a Karn deck, in which case you’re more worried about artifacts than eldrazi. What an exciting time we live in, folks! Colorless Commander is more diverse than ever, and today’s article is going to talk about what we can do with this archetype.
Karn, Silver Golem by Mark Zug
In the beginning, there was Karn. There was a time in Commander when Karn, Silver Golem was the only colorless commander. Before the eldrazi, this also meant that the only cards you could use were artifacts. That was fortuitous, as Karn is the perfect commander for an artifact deck.
Really, little has changed for Karn. He’s still commanding decks built almost exclusively out of artifacts and lands. New artifacts get printed, sure, but the baseline strategy hasn’t changed.
Artifacts show up in every set, but so few are cut out for Commander. Most of them serve limited, so Karn decks only get a few new toys every year.
Obviously, the major change to Karn decks will be the introduction of Wastes in Oath of the Gatewatch. Colorless decks have previously had to rely 100% on nonbasic lands, opening them up to severe land destruction and isolating them from reasonable land ramp options. Both of these problems go away with Wastes entering the format, and Karn decks have plenty of options to take advantage of this.
Solemn Simulacrum, as staple of a card as any in the format, is Karn’s new best friend. Wayfarer’s Bauble, Journeyer’s Kite, and Armillary Sphere join the legions of mana rocks that make Karn decks go. The ability to search up lands on a whim will make all colorless decks run smoother.
Mana rocks will still fuel Karn decks the best, however, and he has a doozy to choose from. My favorite is Blinkmoth Urn, which just gets ridiculous when 60% of your deck is artifacts. Basalt Monolith, Everflowing Chalice, and Thran Dynamo never waste colorless mana when all your spells are colorless. Like Sydri, Galvanic Genius, Karn can turn your mana rocks into face-pounding creatures. Don’t be afraid to run more mana rocks than you usually would, as Karn can put them all to work.
I Saw Mommy Kissing Eldrazi
Ulamog, the Ceaseless Hunger by Michael Komarck
The other side of colorless Commander is the domain of the eldrazi. While Rise of the Eldrazi only provided a handful of colorless non-artifact spells to work with, Battle for Zendikar bumped that number up big time. Oath of the Gatewatch will add even more, and suddenly we have a whole other axis to build colorless Commander decks on.
So what do eldrazi bring to Commander? As a battlecruiser format built around big mana and flashy spells, the eldrazi are pretty much the prototypical Commander race. They’re big fat fatties that swing games and cause chaos and impact board states. Eldrazi creatures see play in many colored decks because of these traits. In essence, the eldrazi get to the core of the format and play around one of its major themes.
So eldrazi decks want to ramp into big creatures as quickly as possible. Mana rocks already helped that part, and now Wastes will help even more. Just go back and reread what I said about Wastes above; this new basic land is fundamentally changing colorless Commander decks.
Eldrazi also bring an exciting piece to colorless decks: colorless instants and sorceries. Cards like Scour from Existence and All is Dust help these big-mana decks do the things other decks do (like cast spells on other players’ turns). This is arguably the space that eldrazi should be most praised for, as it was something totally lacking the colorless Commander arsenals.
Ultimately, however, decks built around eldrazi still have to rely on artifacts. We don’t have that many colorless non-artifact spells yet, and almost none of them provide mana and card advantage in the way artifacts can. Which brings me to the next section…
I’m Dreaming of a Colorless Christmas
Ugin, the Spirit Dragon by Raymond Swanland
Colorless Commander decks still overlap on many levels. While you can build a Karn deck with only artifacts and lands, you can’t yet build an Ulamog/Kozilek deck with only eldrazi-themed spells and lands.
And both of those archetypes ignore the raw power of Karn Liberated and Ugin, the Spirit Dragon. These are the only colorless planeswalkers in the game, but they’re some of the most powerful when it comes to Commander. They immediately impact the board. Karn nukes at least one permanent, making him at least a hybrid between Spine of Ish Sah and Scour from Existence. At best, he can overtake a game. Similarly, Ugin doubles as another All is Dust, providing a one-sided sweeper as soon as he hits the battlefield. Both cards are incredibly powerful in both artifact and eldrazi archetypes.
While many of the artifacts-matter cards only fit into Karn decks, plenty of artifacts benefit all colorless archetypes. Mana rocks aside, cards like Nevinyrral’s Disk and Staff of Nin fill in the holes in both archetypes. Power usually comes with a sorcery-speed cost, but there’s no denying that such artifacts are core to the colorless Commander experience.
But do the eldrazi have the ability to contribute to colorless decks in the same way? They sure do! All is Dust was already a perfect card for Karn decks, but Scour from Existence, Titan’s Presence, and Gruesome Slaughter interact in the same positive ways. Eldrazi creatures can do more than just be big fat fatties now too. Oblivion Sower is a supercharged ramp spell. Conduit of Ruin can tutor up your Darksteel Colossus. These eldrazi cards are great even outside an eldrazi deck, so don’t forget them if you’re choosing to build a Karn deck instead.
Oath of the Gatewatch will only bring new colorless eldrazi for colorless Commander decks to play with. Whether they are creatures or spells, they’ll help push the format’s weirdest color identity to new heights.
Which brings me to the end of today’s article. My traditional conclusion is edged out by a very special occurrence: my very own Oath of the Gatewatch preview card. If you’re a fan of colorless Commander decks, then hold onto your hats. Your mind is about to be blown into the next country.
Click here to GO! and see this awesome addition to the format.
Not even gonna add commentary on this. Let’s just let it stew and I’ll get back to you folks next week with my thoughts.