![]() The deck often sits at the table, not doing much until the very late portion of the game, which makes the Partial Paris mulligan so vital for ditching late-game cards in favor of mana-ramp and draw spells. How this deck plays out can be described as durdly: it looks like a control deck, but there are definitely more cards in the deck that are either part of a combo or necessary in putting a combo together. While it is still a completely viable option (and I have won many game this way), changing the deck to be more self-mill allows the deck to take advantage of a full graveyard and assemble the necessary combos it needs to win from there. I had actually already had Phenax at the helm of an EDH deck, but it was one of the typical Phenax EDH decks, where I would attempt to mill out my opponents as my main win-condition. After CommanderTheory posted this article in response to a user-submitted decklist about a year and a half ago, I knew I had to make my own Blue-Black Dredge list. Phenax is probably the fourth Commander to ever lead an EDH deck of mine, and it is this very concoction that I am most proud of creating. If you click the link, a lot of information on how the deck functions is written in the description, so I would like to go into further detail about my personal experience with the deck in today’s Commander Corner. The first deck we’re highlighting is our very own Editor-in-Chief’s Phenax Dredge Combo deck. ![]() Here, we will feature decks that the staff own or brew personally, and down the line, we can feature decks submitted by users like you! Hi, everyone! Welcome to Commander Corner, the column in which The Burnished Hart will discuss all things EDH. Phenax, God of Deception | Art by Ryan Barger
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