In the long-term, I'd still like to find a way to make it work since it offers another really strong value engine that works extremely well with Chulane, Taller of Tales. It seems well suited for the deck, although after losing to Esper Stax a few times, I ended up cutting it for Knight of Autumn and Deputy of Detention. The other card that I really wanted to try was Fae of Wishes, as a repeatable way to tutor silver-bullets from our sideboard. Still, being able to pick up Agent of Treachery every turn for just one mana is powerful. While it was initially in the deck, it suffers some being similar to Teferi, Time Raveler (which also lets us rebuy a creature with the enters-the-battlefield trigger) but without the extra upside of shutting down counters and instant-speed interaction. One is Portal of Sanctuary, as a backup way to bounce our own creatures for value. While they didn't make the final list, a couple of other cards might be worth a look for the deck.On the other hand, the deck generates so much value with cards like Chulane, Teller of Tales and Risen Reef, it has a lot of inevitability, even if it takes a while to officially kill our opponent. In fact, Frilled Mystic is our biggest creature as a 3/2, which means we don't really have the ability to just play one big threat and win the game in a couple of turns. One of the downsides of the deck is that it doesn't really win quickly.While playing it every turn is fine, simply ramping into it with Leafkin Druid, Risen Reef, and Paradise Druid and stealing our opponent's best thing is still quite strong. As far as payoffs, the biggest is Agent of Treachery.While Chulane, Teller of Tales is expensive and does die a lot, the value quickly gets out of control if we get to untap with it, not to mention the potential of locking our opponent with something like Agent of Treachery or Frilled Mystic. Thankfully, we got to see the power of the Brawl mythic in our match against Golgari. Sadly, we won most of our games as a Bant value deck, without Chulane, Teller of Tales doing much work.On the other hand, we did lose to Sultai Oko in a close three-game match. Apart from taking down Simic Flash twice, we also beat UW Control and crushed Golgari so badly that our opponent didn't even bother to return for game two. Record-wise, Chulane Bant performed pretty well, going 4-1 across five matches.Just a quick reminder: if you enjoy the Much Abrew About Nothing series and the other video content on MTGGoldfish, make sure to subscribe to the MTGGoldfish YouTube channel to keep up on all the latest and greatest. Can Chulane, Teller of Tales make the jump from Brawl to Standard? Let's get to the video and find out then, we'll talk more about the deck! The main plan of Chulane Bant is to grind out a ton of value with creatures with enters-the-battlefield triggers and eventually use Chulane, Teller of Tales as our finisher to essentially lock our opponent out of the game by repeatedly bouncing (and replaying) cards like Agent of Treachery to yoink all of our opponent's stuff, or Frilled Mystic to counter all of their spells. This week, we kick off Throne of Eldraine season by playing a.Brawl card? While Chulane, Teller of Tales was designed to be a commander in Brawl, it's powerful enough that with the right support, it has a chance to work in Standard as well. Any new big additions to that tribe could drive a spike on the two commanders available, though, and that is what you'd be hoping for if you were speculating on its price.Hello, everyone! Welcome to another episode of Much Abrew About Nothing. I also expect dinosaur support for the next couple years (one or two cards every other set) and a revisit to the tribe eventually since it was so popular, but that will be way way later. It probably loses a little value, 20% or so at most, at rotation as people clean out binders, but I reckon it will tick up really slowly as people try it out for commander through the next few years. It is still only being used as a one-of, so I wouldn't expect the value of a card like this to go anywhere further. However, it is getting played in Modern Amulet Combo decks, and as we have seen recently, that deck has driven the prices of a few cards. Unlike what others have said, i don't see a reason it should crash miserably at rotation - no one is playing it in standard. That said, its a mythic whose price is not reflective of use in standard. I use it as my commander, but its performance, along with the tribe is pretty lackluster. This card is one of two usable legedaries in a tribe with a very small card pool.
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