I am admittedly not very experienced with Modern so I am interested to see what the results of GP Madrid show for the evolution of the format. Swiftspear having prowess throws a wrinkle into using damage spells like Anger or Lightning Bolt to answer the board, though, so maybe the white removal like Path to Exile is better. This may be where red gives the deck an advantage, particularly for Anger of the Gods. Stopping Cruise helps a bit against the U/R Delver decks, but Delver of Secrets and Monastery Swiftspear can still create an overwhelming start. I think most control decks in Modern will prefer Dig to Revelation, though there may be arguments for the reverse in certain situations.Īs far as beating the delve draw spells, Remand seems great since they won’t be able to recast it easily. A similar consistency comparison could be made between Dig and Revelation, since Revelation draws you more total cards, but after seeing the card in action in Modern, Legacy, and Vintage, it seems like Dig Through Time is just insane. Obviously in fast decks like U/R Delver the one mana spell is more relevant. The conventional wisdom about comparing Dig to Treasure Cruise in more consistent formats (like Modern and Legacy) was that the one mana draw three is better than two mana draw two of your top seven. ![]() One of the questions for control in Modern after Khans is whether Dig Through Time replaces Sphinx’s Revelation. And knowing when to do what seems quite complex. The right balance between all three of these effects (self-mill, delve, and reshuffling) probably requires careful adjustment. Ideally you’d be filtering the cards you don’t want out of the deck, essentially tuning it for the current matchup. The deck strikes an interesting balance between filling up its graveyard, exiling it to delve, and reshuffling the rest with Elixir. There may not be enough graveyard support, though. The numbers on Remand, Negate, and Spell Snare could all fluctuate given the expected metagame (perhaps replacing Negate with Mana Leak if that is preferred), and I wonder if it’s possible to load up all four copies of Cruise in addition to Dig. The deck looks like a lot of fun, and I’d be interested to see where it goes if Cuneo or Black refine it further. The rest of the deck is a fairly straightforward control build, with Celestial Colonnade as the preferred way to actually win the game (if you don’t accidentally mill them out first). The fact that your maindeck enabler happens to be serious hate for the combo deck is particularly appealing given the dominance everyone is predicting for Jeskai Ascendancy in the first few Modern tournaments. And if their answer is to Glittering Wish for a single Wear//Tear in the sideboard, you can counter it (and their Swan Song) or just have two Orbs in play. Since Ascendancy relies on tapping and untapping mana-producing creatures a nearly endless number of times, being milled every time that happens puts a real damper on things. There’s also the added benefit of stopping the Jeskai Ascendancy combo deck dead in its tracks. There are a lot of interesting synergies with the Orb plan, including Oust basically serving as Doom Blade. If you mill too much you can reset with Elixir of Immortality (and find lost Elixirs with Memory’s Journey) and you can recur lands with Crucible of Worlds. The deck plans to mill both players with Mesmeric Orb (and itself with Thought Scour) while using that to its advantage to fuel Dig Through Time and Treasure Cruise, and provide targets for Snapcaster Mage. U/W Control - Andrew Cuneo 2 Snapcaster Mage Since Cuneo’s is the one available, let’s take a look. A U/W deck Andrew Cuneo used to 3-1 a Modern daily event on Magic Online is the coolest one I’ve seen so far.Ĭuneo attributes the deck to Sam Black, but Black indicated that his version was somewhat different. The potential to cast your very own Ancestral Recall is extremely powerful and finding the best two cards in your top seven could be just as good in the right circumstances. The only question is how to build the best deck to take advantage of the graveyard-consuming alternative cost. ![]() Of course the Jeskai Ascendancy combo deck is making waves, but the biggest impact for eternal formats so far seems to be a pair of blue cards with delve. Monastery Swiftspear is joining U/R Delver lists in Modern and Legacy, and the reprint of the Onslaught fetchlands is giving Modern decks of all colors more flexible manabases. Khans of Tarkir is already proving that it has the potential to shake up every constructed format, not just Standard.
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