Sharing my list soon for reviews!!
#MagicTheGathering
Alrighty, deck list time https://archidekt.com/decks/19627348/enchant_dsenchante_enchantment_sac_recursion_control?sort=cmc&stack=multiple
I have added way too much details in the description but that should help contextualise the deck and give an idea of what we’re doing here
For context, I have struggled with keeping consistent land drops and I end up lagging behind especially since the deck also doesn’t have much ramp. I feel like it takes time to find tangible value in my plays, and I often end up in a situation where my commander is cast and the turn after it gets swooped into a board wipe, and I can’t do much, as casting it for 5 mana as a do-norhing feels awful when I’m not keeping up. Which may be an issue with the concept of the deck and the commander itself, so I am aware my plan may not be viable overall haha
I also feel like I often end up in situations where I have a handful of cards that do nothing with each other, so I think that shows a lack of focus and misevaluation in card quality, and most importantly, a deck relying too much on its on synergy to work.
I think in the meantime I will try to sort of overhaul the whole deck and laser focus it better, cutting cards that don’t quite do what I need and simplify it to its core mechanics, adding more low mana card draw. My aim is also to add one more land to the mix to have 40 lands + 2 land-ish cards which should allow comfort for playing control and offering good mulliganing options (my personal preference recently in my decks has been to run 38 as a bare minimum (besides a few exceptions) and usually more lands, but any polite suggestions or feedback is welcome to help me in that process, I’m feeling a bit self-conscious because I know I am terrible at evaluating card quality and building decks so be gentle pls
Thank you for reading me

The Master of Keys - Commander deck Control • Sacrifice • Enchantments • Graveyard • Enchantress • Self-Mill (1) Commander • (9) Altars • (6) Burn • (7) Cardboard fetching • (11) Cardboard treats • (41) Land • (8) Mass Disruption • (11) Mill • (3) More MORE!!!! • (12) Protecc • (4) Ramp • (10) Recursion • (10) sparkly fodder • (12) Targetted Disruption • (3) whimsical rat combo Overview Enchanté & Désenchantée is my personal take on building an enchantress deck in Esper colour with a sacrificing twist. The deck is a control deck, aiming to gain value from playing and sacrificing its own enchantments, grinding out opponents in value by recurring enchantments from the graveyard while burning them slowly, until it has accrued enough resources to give an explosive coup de grâce. Soundtrack Around the deck Inspiration The deck was inspired by the Wilds of Eldraine mechanics, in particular its role enchantment tokens combined with the Bargain mechanic, and different payoffs for putting enchantments in the graveyard like [[Warehouse Tabby]] combined with [[Twisted Sewer-Witch]] combined. I wanted to build a deck where these two cards could live without being overshadowed or concentrating the deck on a gimmick. Game plan The main game plan is to use the graveyard as an extended hand to cast enchantments from, and to recurr removal to control the game while burning opponents by casting or sacrificing enchantments. The spot removal suite is entirely made of enchantments, and most of them do not need to stick around to achieve what they need to do (some even benefit from being sacrificed, more on that later). The deck wants to win by burning players via a large amount of enchantments enterring the battlefield or being sacrified, using a payoff like [[Grim Guardian]] or [[Wicked Visitor]]. To achieve control, the deck wants to: Fill the graveyard with enchantments to cast and duds to exile, using predominantly repeatable mill effects. Remove threats or value engine using enchantments, cast from the hand or from the graveyard via [[The Master of Keys]]'s ability. Sacrifice the enchantments to put them in the graveyard, and allow them to be escaped again and again using [[The Master of Keys]]'s ability, while building up card advantage and mana. Rinse & repeat until you can push for a win. In-depths [[Asinine Antics]] This is one of the most explosive enablers in the deck list, as this can spawn a huge amount of enchantments according to how many creatures are on the battlefield, and is the easiest finishing combo to pull off as it does a lot on its own as long as it's combined with burn payoff like a [[Grim Guardian]], which makes it function like a [[Rakdos Charm]] affecting only your opponents on top of debuffing their creatures and generating a supply of fodder, and at its floor, it is a mass disruption spell to turn off big creatures. Another interesting aspect of [[Asinine Antics]] is that it can trigger any Constellation or Eerie payoffs (not just burn), so you can: generate card draw with [[Entity Tracker]]; generate mill with [[Sage of Mysteries]]; board-wipe your opponent's creatures with [[Doomwake Giant]]; phase out non-enchantment permanents with [[Skybind]]. [[Amphibian Downpour]] This enchantments provides similar value to [[Asinine Antics]], with a few key differences. While it cannot generate nearly as many auras in a single spell, it offers the benefits of turning off the abilities of the creatures it is enchanting and being repeatable from the graveyard if the original card gets destroyed or sacrificed. [[Estrid's Invocation]] This is such a fun toolbox card. You can tutor for it with an enchantment like [[Gravebreaker Lamia]] or [[The Cruelty of Gix]], then cast it to flicker the enchantment to tutor for something else, potentially on each of your upkeep; you can generate Wicked tokens on each of your turn with [[Lord Skitter's Blessing]] [[Nashi, Searcher in the Dark]] This deck was originally a Dimir deck using Nashi as the commander, where most enchantments were also creatures to allow them to be recurred in Dimir colour (the lack of white makes it nearly impossible to recurr enchantments from the graveyard). I loved Nashi so much that I initially wanted him to be a secret Commander in the deck as a main mill engine, and that's the reason why I had added a fair amount of low-mana tutors to attempt playing him consistently at the start. Unfortunately, Nashi is hard to play late into the game when the deck isn't built around him being in the command zone, you need some form of evasion, and it becomes costly in terms of card slots and mana on such a tight deck list to allow him to connect every turn. He's still good in the opening hand and can easily scale with the +1/+1 as you can always leave the enchantments in the graveyard though, so he remains in the deck.
@SqueletteCool
You have a lot of tutors, and expensive ones at that. Are they worth taking a turn off to go find a specific card?
Muddle the Mixture - Dunno if this is worth it
Step Through - 5 mana is way too much unless that wizard is critical to your deck's function
Gravebreaker Lamia - I'm iffy on this one. 5 is a lot for anything that's not payoff
Skybind - Not sure if you plan to target your own or opponents stuff. I don't know if it's worth 5 mana
@SqueletteCool Mill package
Founding the Third Path - I see that it sacs itself, but there's gotta be better mill than this
Ancient Excavation - this is win more, and there are better mill cards
Extravagant Replication - this looks like a lot of fun, but I think it'll end up doing nothing. Slow and expensive and vulnerable
I do like Demon of Fate's Design. He looks rad.
@SqueletteCool
Fear of Imposters - Cool card, but I'm wary of counterspells in commander, especially 3CMC. You have to hold up the resources and only maybe use it. Then you cast it and spend the resources and 2 other people benefit for free.
Nimble Obstructionist - Same as for above, but it's not even an enchantment. I'd only put it in a deck if I felt like countering abilities was very important.
Buried Ruin - Unless you have a specific artifact you absolutely need, I'm super meh on this.
@SqueletteCool
I like everything in your sparkly pile except the extravagant replication, and that only because I think it'll be too slow to have fun with
Your whimsical rat combo isn't the most in tune with the deck, but you knew that already. As with anything I list if you like it, you like it! Have fun with it! It might only work 1% of the time but if that's worth it, then go for it.
@SqueletteCool If you feel like you need ramp, then maybe pick 5 cards to take out and put in 5 mana rocks and see how it feels for a couple games.
Oooh random thought add Search for Azcanta. I bet that'll work well in the deck