4 Auratog
4 Cantivore
2 Endless Wurm
4 Femeref Enchantress
3 Cessation
1 Cleansing Meditation
1 Defense of the Heart
2 Enchantress's Presence
4 Rancor
2 Rune of Protection: Black
1 Rune of Protection: Green
2 Rune of Protection: Red
2 Seal of Cleansing
4 Seal of Strength
5 Plains
7 Forest
4 Brushland
4 Elfhame Palace
4 Windswept Heath |
 Cantiref
Enchantroyf.
Description of deck by it's author
(quoted):
Travis Martin decided it was high time someone
broke Cantivore (or at least put it to good use), and that someone was
him. The main deck interaction was between Cantivore, Femeref
Enchantress, and enchantments that sacrifice themselves, such as Seal of
Cleansing. Travis's deck was also full of Runes of Protection, which act
like cantrip Cantivore-specific Battlegrowths.
I took that idea and bent it around to the side, because
the first thing I did was add Auratog to the deck. Auratog is clearly on
good terms with both Cantivore and Femeref Enchantress. Next, I added
Rancor and Cessation to serve as Auratog food. Those two enchantments are
greatly beloved by the Enchantress—but Cantivore doesn't like them much at
all. So that's a bit of dissynergy… um, asynergy? unsynergy? antisynergy?…
but I can live with it as long as I'm drawing tons of cards off the
Enchantress by repeatedly sacrificing and replaying Rancor with the
Auratog. I also replaced the Phantom Nishoba that Travis hoped to fetch
with his Defense of the Heart with Endless Wurms. Something kooky that I
kept in was Cleansing Meditation. At threshold, and with an Enchantress in
play, the card says “Destroy all enchantments your opponent controls and
draw a card for each enchantment you control. Oh, and move your local
enchantments around if you want.” Can't argue with that. |
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