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Five Cards You Should Be Playing In Modern

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Hello, loyal readers! Fear not, the clickbait garbage of Buzzfeed and Facebook has not spread to Modern Nexus. You will not find “How To Save $40,000 With One Simple Trick”, “Five Ways to Save Your Failing Marriage” or “Personal Trainers Hate Him” nonsense here. What you will find is grounded, common sense information backed up with facts and elaborated eloquently with pithy semantics. Whether you are brewing up some new decks or deliberating over your last couple sideboard slots, These Five Cards You Should Be Playing Will Change Your Life! Let’s do it.

Worship art

What follows is a short list of cards that have impressed me recently, both playing with and against them. By no means is this list exhaustive, and I’m sure there are cards out there I’ve missed that should probably also be seeing play. My hope is I will be able to accurately describe my thought process, both to encourage discussion, provide a basis for my opinion, and serve as a model to be analyzed, improved upon, or (should it be deemed worthy) used by others to help in their own analysis. Card quality/playability fluctuates drastically due to the ever-changing nature of Context, which will make Kitchen Finks unplayable in some metagames and an all-star in others. In no particular order…

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Kitchen Finks

Okay, so maybe some order. If there’s anything I’ve learned about writing: transitions. Eventually I’ll learn grammar and sentence structure (right David?!). [Editor's Note-*eye twitch*]

Kitchen Finks has impressed me every time I’ve seen it cast, and is the primary motivation for this article. I was first “re-introduced” to Kitchen Finks as a three-of in Joseph Herrera’s SCG Charlotte-winning Jund Midrange sideboard. Rather than playing narrow spells like Feed the Clan to fight Burn, Joe found room for three Kitchen Finks to provide him precious lifegain, while also giving him sideboard options for other matchups. Kitchen Finks quickly proved its worth against Affinity, Merfolk, and Zoo/Company decks. It absolutely wrecks Grixis Delver (assuming they aren’t playing/can’t find their Pillar of Flame) and can help grind Grixis and Jeskai Control decks out of answers. Finks helps greatly in the Grixis matchu specifically, offering an inherent way to combat Grixis' two-for-ones like Kolaghan's Command with a creature that requires multiple kill spells to remove permanently.

Kitchen FinksKitchen Finks is at its best when trading with small creatures, leaving us up a card and up life. Most of the spells it trades with cost less than two mana (Goblin Guide, Merfolk without Islandwalk, Snapcaster Mage, Memnite) so its three CMC can often be a little awkward. As a result, Kitchen Finks is often seen alongside green acceleration like Birds of Paradise and Ignoble Hierarch (like in my Bant Knightfall list), but not always if you ask Yuuya Watanabe (U/W Control). This acceleration is often necessary to allow Finks to come down quick enough to either trade with creatures or stunt our opponents’ development as they spend mana removing it. As Yuuya has shown, slowing opponents down, and pairing Kitchen Finks with Blink effects like Restoration Angel on the opposite end of the spectrum, is also highly effective.

Kitchen Finks excels in midrange metagames composed primarily of aggressive decks. It is often seen in green decks like Jund Midrange and Abzan, but U/W Control is one example of a “non-intuitive” archetype that employs his talents. Finks is also within Scapeshift’s range, though they often play Thragtusk as they can easily afford the bigger effect for a higher price. Finks becomes a liability when combo is rampant, but Living End, Amulet Bloom, and Grishoalbrand are currently at an All-Time-Low. Go get that value!

Dispel

Ever since the printing of Tasigur, the Golden Fang and Gurmag Angler fundamentally changed the way we build decks in Modern, Dispel has been an absolute all-star.Dispel Before, Dispel was a liability against the plethora of creature decks in the format, but today even creature-heavy lists like Elves and Naya contain great targets like Collected Company. Similar to Tarmogoyf, delve creatures force opponents to keep in removal after board to interact (as 4/5’s and 5/5’s are just a little too big), which walks them right into our Dispels. Playing as Grixis, I've won many gameson the spot when I countered a Collected Company, or Path to Exile aimed at my Gurmag Roadblock, for one blue mana. Dispel is still excellent in the blue mirrors, and great against combo as well. Any deck with a or tempo element can appreciate the cheap interaction it provides (Grixis Delver/Control/Twin, Merfolk, Knightfall) and even pure combo and control can use it as well (though Jeskai and U/W often opt for the more versatile Negate instead).

Should Jund Midrange/Affinity/Tron become a majority of the metagame (which we are actually starting to see now) Dispel’s value goes down, but only slightly. I would say we are coming out of a couple week window where Dispel was absolutely maindeck-playable, but the argument can still be made for its inclusion: it is great against Burn and punishes decks relying on “cheating” the bare minimum amount of interaction. Punish them!

Slaughter Pact

This little guy has shown up here and there, and has been great every time.Slaughter Pact When Twin was dominating Modern, Jund turned to Slaughter Pact to help fight the archetype, though it proved largely unnecessary as Liliana/Thoughtseize/Exterminate! were often good enough. It does fine work against Amulet Bloom, and is passable against other creature decks, assuming we build to mitigate its downside. Decks that pack things to do that don’t require mana, like drawing cards with Dark Confidant or activating abilities of planeswalkers, can “work around” the lost mana that comes with Slaughter Pact, but the real trick is to pair the free spell with a strategy that can use the tempo advantage.

Pairing free spells like Gitaxian Probe with Monastery Mentor is nothing new, but now Slaughter Pact starts to look a lot better as we can take advantage of more free spells without having to play bad cards like Mutagenic Growth. Mardu has always been a step below Top Tier in Modern (as losing Snapcaster Mage, other blue spells, and Tarmogoyf is just a little too much) but a Mardu Tokens deck with Monastery Mentor, Young Pyromancer, cheap removal, and discard is a strong core, and will show up one day when someone finds the right list. Look out for Slaughter Pact: this guy has a habit of popping up in those slightly off the radar decks like B/W Tokens and Suicide Zoo.

Aerie Worshippers

This tech was introduced by Jeff Hoogland in his innovative Kiki Chord list from SCG Cincinatti.worship Most decks in the format have difficulty killing everything, which makes Aerie Worshippers a pretty resilient soft-lock in many matchups. Burn can’t beat it outside of a Destructive Revelry, which can be non-intuitive to bring in against the Aerie Worshippers deck, depending on what we’re playing. Decks like Affinity and Collected Company really have no hope. We just have to kill Affinity’s Blinkmoth Nexus’ and dodge Qasali Pridemage or similar effects against the Company decks. Even Grixis Control has trouble beating it, as it is impossible for them to remove it once it resolves (now that the latest Grixis list has moved away from Cryptic Command). Aerie Worshippers punishes the lack of sweepers in the format and takes advantage of an over-reliance on cheap, interactive one-for-one removal to fight Goblin Guide and Deceiver Exarch. Splashy, unique enchantments like this can take a stale metagame by surprise (as Bitterblossom was doing a few months ago) and I’m sure there are other gems like Aerie Worshippers out there just waiting to be exploited.

Gut Shot

My personal favorite, though probably the narrowest, Gut Shot is an interesting choice because any deck can play it, but only a few want to.Gut Shot For those that do, however, Gut Shot is really great right now. Shooting down Birds of Paradise, Glistener Elf, Delver of Secrets // Delver of Secrets, Dark Confidant, Signal Pest and others on turn one, Gut Shot has no shortage of targets in Modern. I like Gut Shot for many of the same reasons why I like Slaughter Pact, so we can think of it as a really narrow Slaughter Pact without the drawback (and committal to black). As I said earlier, any deck can play it, but if we’re putting cards like Gut Shot in our deck we really need to work to get some “extra value”. Young Pyromancer and Monastery Mentor help, as does Abbot of Keral Keep (not just for the prowess, but also for an extra free spell we can cast off our Abbot flip). I was really impressed with Patrick Chapin’s Temur Prowess list from GP Oklahoma City (so impressed I did a video series on it here!) and that deck loved squeezing every drop of value out of seemingly unimpressive spells. Gut Shot won’t be blowing anyone’s minds, but when you hit someone with it, it definitely feels… (exercising restraint).

Conclusion

So there we have it, my short list for a few cards that I feel should be seeing more play in Modern. I specifically strayed away from proven cards that just don’t have good shells (Thalia, Guardian of Thraben, Bloodghast) and chose to focus on malleable cards that can fit in multiple strategies. What do you think? Are there any cards I missed? Do you think the cards I mentioned should not see play? Let me know in the comments below! Thanks for reading and I’ll see you next week, when I give you 7 Signs Aliens Walk Among Us.

Trevor Holmes
The_Architect on MTGO
Twitch.tv/Architect_Gaming
Twitter.com/7he4rchitect

Posted in Modern, TechTagged , ,

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10 thoughts on “Five Cards You Should Be Playing In Modern

  1. Gut Shot is actually a card I consider to play in some my decks, like for example in Blistering Rage build and Young Pyromancer ones to get bits of value. Don’t think it can actually shoot lots of things in my local meta, but as a sideboard option to fight infect it’s very nice.

  2. Worship is one of those cards that make 8th and 9th edition not seem right in Modern. I had it in my Abzan sideboard before but too many decks have surprising outs to it

  3. the first 2 cards are actually played 🙂 dispel i meet very often, most of the delver and twin decks are bringing this in against my Paths.

    finks are amazing, they are played, but should be played more 🙂 the thing is that 2 green mana is sometimes hard to get, if you’re playing Jund. for abzan decks it should be an auto include in the 75.

    slaughter pact is cool suprise kill spell, i played it before and i liked it a lot. but sometimes, it is hard to find a slot for one… too many good removal spells to compete with pact. (and it can’t kill Tas, Rhino…)

    worship is awesome ^_^ some decks can’t simply get rid of it and i like to bring it in very often.

    however gut shot just doesn’t seem good enough for me. for a meta full of delvers yes, but it just can’t kill a flipped delver… except for mono-blue and mono-green aggro decks, each color has a better removal. and merflolks have Vapor Snag, mono-green has a Dismemer. i’d rather pick that one.

    anyway, thanks for a good article, even if i disagree it was good to read it!

  4. I have play tested worship in UW merfolk decks and it has been surprisingly solid. Yes it is a 4 drop and that hurts a bit, however considering master of waves is a 4 drop and is played in almost every top merfolk deck. While Worship cannot be put on the battlefield using aether vial, it still offers an insane amount of value! The benefit of worship is that, like you said, most decks do not feature a lot of enchantment removal. Because of this if you can protect your initial play of Worship you don’t even need to worry about losing a battle amongst fair decks, and some unfair decks as well. In order to win alll you have to do is make sure they have an island and that they haven’t killed your 4 master of pearl tridents lol

  5. Great article, Trevor. I think you went 5/5 in your list of underrated cards. I’ve heavily considered Gut Shot as a way to attempt to hose Affinity and Elves (my worst matchups as a Merfolk player), and several people have considered UW Merfolk with Worship.

    I don’t know how Dispel and Kitchen Finks still manage to be under the radar, given how consistently good they’ve been (and how consistently they show up in good decks). I think another underrated card that could have been tossed in the pile is Voice of Resurgence, but maybe we’ll see those in another article.

  6. Speaking as a Delver player, I would describe Finks as “incredibly annoying”, but not quite to the level of wrecking me. (That would be Tusk) When I’ve played against it, it usually blocks Tasigur/Angler twice, meaning its something like a gain 14 life spell for 3. Very very good, but not unbeatable. This is splitting hairs, of course, it should definitely see more play.

  7. Dismember seems to be the better choice than gut shot sure you lose two more and it cost 1 more mana but remember taking out a creature played on turn 3 or 4 drops is a lot better than killing off a creature played on turn 1.

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