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SCG Daily – Transmuting Your Way to Winning

I’m going to present another raw decklist here, and this time we are going to take a look at removing your opponent’s best resource for winning. I love Millstone, and all the related cards, but sometimes they do not get enough respect. Seeing that we are looking at adding a transmute theme, we might as well run with the Dimir guild and see where we can go.

Ravnica spoilers were coming out last year, and one of the mechanics that caught my eye seemed to be the overpowered

cycle of cards that had the Transmute ability latched on to them. In my thinking there was really no way that Wizards would

allow a series of tutors to be printed, considering how broken some of these cards are.

Needless to say, no one is demanding the banning of Brainspoil, Muddle the Mixture, or Clutch of the Undercity

Transmute cards have seen some small amount of tournament play. The most successful of these are Drift of Phantasms and

the aforementioned Muddle the Mixture, both of which are in the starting lineup of Heartbeat of Spring. Those two cards let

you get the most important parts of the combo kill and add a certain element of consistency to the deck.

Brainspoil has been played, but really… has anyone gotten something besides Battle of Wits with this one?

Some of the transmute cards have seen limited play; Clutch of the Undercity was in the very first builds of Solar Flare.

Dimir Infiltrator was in the sideboards of some Heartbeat decks as another way to get the important two drops, and Shred

Memory saw a lot of play in a Black/Green aggro deck here in Kentucky.

What surprises me is the lack of success that the Dimir Guild has seen in tournament play.

Sure, milling has not been a competent strategy since dinosaurs walked the earth, but there are plenty of tools in the

current environment to make the deck work.

I’m going to present another raw decklist here, and this time we are going to take a look at removing your

opponent’s best resource for winning. I love Millstone, and all the related cards, but sometimes they just do not get

enough respect. Seeing that we are looking at adding a transmute theme, we might as well run with the Dimir guild and see

where we can go.


What does this deck do?

Simple, it is your basic milling strategy. Glimpse the Unthinkable + Twincast = Twenty cards in your opponents

graveyard. Traumatize hits them for half their library, and eventually they lose because they can no longer draw cards.

It’s a tried and true archetype in Magic, but sadly I miss Millstone.

I also wanted to put Izzet Guildmage in here, but I saw no real need to add Red mana, and copying counterspells to me is

not that impressive.

Let’s go over some card choices…

Duskmantle, House of Shadow

I feel this is a must in the deck, but in that same vein, I do not want to randomly color-screw myself. I know there are a

lot of duals in the deck; I do not feel that having any more than two copies of the card would be helpful. You have to sink

your mana in to it (which hinders counter wars sometimes), it’s slower the other win conditions, and you cannot tutor

for it. That is why I have stuck with two.

Dimir Infiltrator and Muddle the Mixture

Both of these cards serve the purpose of finding the Glimpse the Unthinkable and Twincast. Having eight of these

tutors functions as having twelve copies of each card that wins the game. Both of them also tutor for some of the

countermagic that is in the deck, and this will be helpful in the later stages of the game, when all you need to do is

protect the win conditions.

Brainspoil

With only two Traumatize in the deck, I did feel the need to add this tutor just to be able to find the brutal sorcery.

It also helps that this card is usually never a dead draw in the Standard format, since it pretty much kills everything

(unless it has a Blanchwood Armor on it, or its name starts with Paladin and ends with En-Vec.)

Okay, I’m not funny. I’m fine with that.

Brainspoil also hits the secondary win condition in the deck, letting you get Meloku the Clouded Mirror if the need ever

arises.

Countermagic suite

I want to take control of the game, and still stand a chance against beatdown decks. Countering their creatures seemed

to be the best way to do it.

Keiga and Meloku

I assure you, these are just other win conditions. I’m sure that no one main-decks Cranial Extraction anymore,

but having a diversity of ways to win the game is actually good for you.

I think what I have shown here today is a nice skeleton of something that could be a fun deck to play in Friday Night

Magic tournaments. It does look like it would have great game against the Control decks of the environment (as long as you

hit your land drops, and can sandbag counters for when you are casting Glimpse and Twincast.) You have enough countermagic

to outlast Heartbeat. The only shifty matches that you could have would be the aggressive decks, and the sideboard could

shore those up, trading the milling cards for more creatures and removal.

Until tomorrow,

JXC