Hello, and welcome back to Metagame Mentor, your weekly guide to the top decks and latest Constructed developments on the path to the Pro Tour. This past weekend, we closed the case on MagicCon: Chicago, where Seth Manfield ripped the Pro Tour trophy with the breakout Rakdos Vampires deck and Rei "ctfsoc" Zhang took down the $75K Standard Open with an innovative Sultai Ramp brew.
To support the current cycle of Regional Championship Qualifiers, today's article will focus on Standard, analyzing the lessons from Chicago and the impact of Murders at Karlov Manor on the format. I'll be back next week to cover the top Pioneer stories from the Pro Tour.
The Standard Metagame in Chicago
Standard is a rotating 60-card format that currently allows expansion sets from Innistrad: Midnight Hunt forward. It was the format of choice for several new competitive events at MagicCon: Chicago. The headliner was the $75K Standard Open, a massive multi-day event with a prize pool of $75,000, as well as eight invites to Pro Tour Thunder Junction. In addition, there was the Standard Cup, a smaller single-day event where the prizes included exclusive playmats and a coveted trophy, won by Sean Burke.
Combining both events, I analyzed 568 decks. For my breakdown, I set the archetypes myself, ignoring potentially inconsistent labels on Melee. For each archetype, I determined its raw metagame share and win rate in non-mirror, non-bye, non-draw matches. The results are shown in the following table, where each archetype name hyperlinks to a well-performing decklist close to its aggregate.
Archetype | Percentage of Field | Match Win Rate |
---|---|---|
1. Esper Midrange | 15.5% | 50.9% |
2. Boros Convoke ↑↑ | 13.0% | 53.2% |
3. Domain Ramp ↓↓ | 11.3% | 51.6% |
4. Azorius Control ↑↑ | 8.8% | 54.9% |
5. Dimir Midrange | 5.6% | 55.7% |
6. Bant Toxic | 4.9% | 42.2% |
7. Golgari Midrange | 3.9% | 50.0% |
8. Mono-Red Aggro ↓↓ | 3.7% | 48.0% |
9. Rakdos Midrange ↓↓ | 3.3% | 50.0% |
10. Azorius Mentor | 2.3% | 47.0% |
11. Four-Color Legends | 1.9% | 49.2% |
12. Azorius Midrange | 1.6% | 56.5% |
13. Gruul Aggro | 1.6% | 41.5% |
14. Sultai Reanimator | 1.2% | 61.2% |
15. Simic Artifacts | 1.1% | 50.0% |
16. Esper Control | 1.1% | 42.9% |
17. Boros Control | 1.1% | 51.2% |
18. Rakdos Control ↓↓ | 0.9% | 48.3% |
19. Dimir Reanimator | 0.9% | 52.8% |
20. Orzhov Control | 0.7% | 52.2% |
21. Azorius Soldiers ↓↓ | 0.7% | 16.7% |
22. Other | 15.0% | 42.5% |
The "Other" category included such deck archetypes as Grixis Hidetsugu and Kairi, Abzan Midrange, Boros Aggro, Jeskai Convoke, Sultai Cauldron, Esper Legends, Jund Midrange, Rakdos Sacrifice, Gruul Dinosaurs, Gruul Counters, Mono-Black Aggro, Poison Ivy, Sultai Midrange, Azorius Craft, Selesnya Toxic, Naya Counters, Jeskai Prowess, Bant Control, Selesnya Enchantments, Grixis Reanimator, Izzet Pirates, Sultai Ramp, Golgari Mill, Abzan Caves, Mono-Black Midrange, Azorius Convoke, and Mono-Blue Tempo, and more.
Compared to my last metagame snapshots from January 4 and January 11, which I provided when the RCQ cycle was just starting, the most important developments come from the release of Murders at Karlov Manor. After the new set provided
Looking over the win rates, considering the sample size, most archetypes were nearly indistinguishable from 50% against the field. Azorius Control and Dimir Midrange have a favorable matchup against Boros Convoke, leading to solid results overall, but it's hard to draw strong conclusions from the available data. I will say, however, that Bant Toxic underperformed significantly. Bant Toxic struggles against Boros Convoke, and it has less Domain Ramp to prey upon than last month. Moreover, many control decks have now added
The Most-Played Cards from Murders at Karlov Manor
Murders of Karlov Manor had a substantial impact on Standard. The following table reveals the 20 most-played new-to-Standard cards across the decklists registered for the two premier Standard tournaments at MagicCon: Chicago last weekend.
Card Name | Total Copies | Main Deck | Sideboard |
---|---|---|---|
1. |
497 | 491 | 6 |
2. |
342 | 342 | 0 |
3. |
250 | 247 | 3 |
4. |
178 | 30 | 148 |
5. |
169 | 169 | 0 |
5. |
164 | 150 | 14 |
6. |
162 | 85 | 77 |
7. |
136 | 57 | 79 |
8. |
86 | 86 | 0 |
9. |
63 | 56 | 7 |
10. |
58 | 56 | 2 |
11. |
57 | 57 | 0 |
12. |
49 | 2 | 47 |
13. |
44 | 44 | 0 |
14. |
40 | 27 | 13 |
15. |
37 | 32 | 5 |
16. |
32 | 32 | 0 |
17. |
30 | 17 | 13 |
18. |
29 | 15 | 14 |
19. |
29 | 14 | 15 |
20. |
26 | 25 | 1 |
Many of these cards slotted into existing top-tier archetypes that were already popular before the release of Murders at Karlov Manor. For example:
No More Lies was an upgrade overMake Disappear forEsper Midrange. The newMana Leak was the most-played new card in Chicago, both in Pioneer and Standard.Doorkeeper Thrull stops the triggers ofDeep-Cavern Bat ,Knight-Errant of Eos , andAtraxa, Grand Unifier . MostEsper Midrange players addedDoorkeeper Thrull to their sideboard, and some even put it in their main deck, cuttingDeep-Cavern Bat .Cryptic Coat andLazav, Wearer of Faces provided Dimir Midrange with grinding power against spot removal spells and potentially unblockable creatures to triggerGix, Yawgmoth Praetor .Long Goodbye , which was adopted in various black midrange decks, is the first instant-speed removal spell in Standard that singlehandedly killsRaffine, Scheming Seer ;Gix, Yawgmoth Praetor ; orSubterranean Schooner for two mana or less.Fugitive Codebreaker andCase of the Crimson Pulse have provided Mono-Red Aggro with additional staying power and card draw in longer games, allowing them to dig for the final points of burn.Underground Mortuary andSharp-Eyed Rookie were added to various Golgari Midrange decks, supporting their creature suite and mana base.
Besides these additions to existing top-tier archetypes, Murders at Karlov Manor also provided essential support to elevate fringe archetypes and enable brand new strategies. Let's zoom in on the hottest, most innovative new decks and developments.
Sultai Ramp with Aftermath Analyst
Rei "cftsoc" Zhang is one of the best deck designers in the game right now, and I'm always excited to see their innovative combo decks. They've previously unveiled brews like Naya Fury, Jeskai Storm, RataBlade Combo, Archfiend Alteration, Spelunking Scapeshift, and Four-Color Legends, and they didn't disappoint this past weekend. Cftsoc won the $75K Standard Open with a deck that no one saw coming, earning an invite to Pro Tour Thunder Junction. I can't wait to see what Standard deck they'll bring there.
So, what does this Sultai Ramp deck do? The standout new card is
To go infinite, you need
Note that 68 cards is not a decklist registration error. It actually makes sense to me. You need a critical mass of New Capenna fetch lands to combo off, but you also need enough fetchable basic lands to play a normal game. To obtain the desired numbers, you have to go over 60. It reminds me of Hall of Famer Makihito Mihara, who made Top 8 at Grand Prix Kobe 2011 with a 64-card Scapeshift deck. It was the only way to have at least 7 Mountains for Scapeshift while retaining a sufficient ratio of blue-producing sources for
Boros Convoke with Novice Inspector
Moving to decks that are more easily grokkable, Boros Convoke is the latest hotness in Standard. It was a fringe 1% of the metagame before Murders at Karlov Manor, but after the addition of several new cards, it rose to a whopping 13% in Chicago. Jacob Powell went 10-4 with the deck shown above, which has many similarities to the Pioneer version. The curve of
There are three key new cards. The most important one is
Azorius Control with No More Lies
Thanks to Murders at Karlov Manor, Azorius Control has reemerged as a top-tier deck in Standard. It was not really a thing in January, but after gaining
Thanks to the new additions, Azorius Control in Standard now finally has a solid suite of spot removal, countermagic, card draw, sweepers, and planeswalkers. The deck appears well-positioned because, just like in Pioneer, it has a good matchup against Boros Convoke. Four main deck copies of
Boros Control with Lightning Helix
For control players, Azorius wasn't the only color pair that gained a lot from Murders at Karlov Manor: The reprint of Lighting Helix also enabled Boros Control. As a non-blue deck, it lacks countermagic and card draw, but it makes up for that with life-gaining direct damage spells. These not only help you stay alive but also give the ability to transition into an aggro role in matchups where the six main deck sweepers aren't good. The list shown above, which might benefit from additional sideboard slots against Azorius Control, went 9-4-1 at the $75K Standard Open.
This deck uses
Sultai Reanimator with Steamcore Scholar
Besides combo, control, and aggro, Murders at Karlov Manor also enabled new reanimator strategies. In this Sultai deck, the main goal is to fill up the graveyard for
While all of these cards were available before, Standard deck builders were lacking a critical mass of cards that fill up your graveyard while digging for
Dimir Reanimator with Reenact the Crime
Instead of splashing green for
The deck's main game plan is to lead with
Grixis Hidetsugu and Kairi with Push // Pull
The final new deck that I wanted to highlight, which Wentong Zhang piloted to a 9-5 record at the $75K Standard Open, exploits the new split card
The real highlight is the interaction with
Take On The Competition!
Murders at Karlov Manor has infused Standard with powerful new strategies, including the incredible Sultai Ramp deck that won the $75K Standard Open. With an abundance of competitively viable strategies, Standard features something for every play style. Pick your favorite deck or construct your own, then set out for battle at a Standard Showdown or Regional Championship Qualifier!