Reconstruct History — Tombstone Stairwell & Infernal Genesis

by
Trent Trombley
Trent Trombley
Reconstruct History — Tombstone Stairwell & Infernal Genesis
(Left: Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell | Art by Dom! | Right: Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis | Art by Ron Spencer)

Salt Thrower

Welcome back to another installment of Reconstruct History, where we look at popularity trends over time for cards and archetypes here at EDHREC!

This week, we're delving into two wonky, wild, mono-black enchantments that give tokens to our opponents: Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell and Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis.

Tombstone Stairwell
Infernal Genesis

Similar to our installment a few weeks back on Outpost SiegeOutpost Siege and how its popularity may have been affected by the printing of Prosper, Tome-BoundProsper, Tome-Bound, I wanted to take a look at these two cards in relation to the release of the salt-inducing (yet ironically salt-averse) Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive.

Toxrill, the Corrosive

Spoiled in late October 2021, this card generated a lot of chatter on sub-Reddits, Twitter threads, and videos alike. Proponents of Toxrill (full disclosure: myself included) were intrigued for a number of reasons, which I'll try and summarize in my own terms here:

  • It's a Slug. That alone probably explains some 25% of the 2,000+ Toxrill decks out there.
  • Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive is undoubtedly powerful, but sits at a high mana value without access to green ramp, which I like. It feels like an old-school commander in that way.
  • The flavor is pretty spot-on, from slime counters to the inexorable way it slowly eats the living.
  • It has a hint of tribal elements, but in a more control-oriented shell, whereas most tribes tend to emphasize offense.
  • For you metal fans out there, there's a slug-themed band called Slugdge that has a track called Salt Thrower. It seems perfectly fitting for Toxrill.
  • Finally, and most importantly, it makes use of otherwise wonky cards that want to give opponents creatures, and to do so consistently.

It's that last point that inspired our installment today, as not many control decks (nor tribal decks for that matter) typically want to actively give creatures to opponents. How often do you see tribal control decks running Akroan HorseAkroan Horse, Dowsing DaggerDowsing Dagger, or even LifelineLifeline just to generate... Slugs?

Both Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell and Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis provide a semi-consistent means of giving opponents small tokens, which at the end step will trigger Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive to put slime counters on them. Barring an anthem effect, this will just kill all the 1/1 Minion creature tokens made from Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis, effectively giving you as many Slug tokens as the mana value of cards flipped from the top of your opponents' libraries.

For Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell, it turns out old cards weren't written so clearly; its 'Oracle' text actually states that the Zombie tokens get destroyed at the beginning of each player's end step. While they are 2/2s, and therefore won't die from Toxrill's slime counters directly, Toxrill only cares that they were destroyed and that they had slime counters on them, thus giving you more Slugs. With both Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell and ToxrillToxrill in play, you effectively make X Slug tokens each end step, where X is the total number of creature cards in all enemy graveyards. In one turn of the table, you'll get more Slugs than you can count. That's bonkers.

Had Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive not made the splash it did, I wouldn't have looked into these two cards, but Toxrill has exceeded expectations, racing far above a snail's pace to the top position out of all the Innistrad: Crimson Vow legendary creature options from the set. It's a distant lead, too; there are some 3,000 decks between it and Runo StromkirkRuno Stromkirk in second place. As such, Toxrill's page is oozing with information, and has left quite the data trail for us to follow popularity of odd cards such as these.


Criteria

Let’s start by outlining some criteria:

  1. Metric: Rank (out of possible black cards)
  2. Cards analyzed: Black enchantments that have potential to consistently give creature tokens to opponents. Let's be honest: I'm just going to look at Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis and Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell here.
  3. Timeframe: Last two years (January 2020 – January 2022)
  4. Breaks: Monthly intervals

There are a lot of other similar cards that could work here - think members of the 'Hunted' cycle like Hunted HorrorHunted Horror or Hunted PhantasmHunted Phantasm, or perhaps think of Genesis ChamberGenesis Chamber, Slaughter SpecialistSlaughter Specialist, and Clackbridge TrollClackbridge Troll.

While these are all viable considerations in a Toxrill deck, I wanted to see how Toxrill may have specifically affected older, wonkier enchantments like the two above rather than a general suite of all cards.


Results

Plots for both Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis and Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell can be seen below in the carousel. Feel free to scroll through to see either card. Additionally, I included a more zoomed-in version of these plots, manipulating the Y-axis so the changes in rank don't get so smoothed out by the larger Y-axis.

Rank score of black enchantments that gift creature tokens over last 2 years (2020-2022)

This is pretty interesting to see, as there's an incredible amount of up-and-down seen in both of these cards.

That's a ton. The average rank change for both held pretty steady leading up to Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive being spoiled:

  • Average rank change in Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis prior to Toxrill spoilage: Mean = 196 change in rank, Median = 104 change in rank
  • Average rank change in Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell prior to Toxrill spoilage: Mean = 85 change in rank, Median = 76 change in rank

Sure enough: we see the biggest upswings in rank corresponding directly to the spoiling of the Slugthe Slug itself.


Time to Reflect

Time to Reflect

With all that out of the way, let's take some Time to ReflectTime to Reflect!


Price

Tombstone Stairwell

Let's start with Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell, which, like a lot of Reserved List cards (cards that Wizards of the Coast has claimed they won't ever reprint), has followed a pretty unidirectional trend upwards in the last few years.

We see one significant uptick from $11.08 (Oct. 30, 2020) to $21.50 (Nov. 1, 2020), likely corresponding with Commander Legends and the release of Thalisse, Reverent MediumThalisse, Reverent Medium, another powerhouse with Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell. However, the largest surge in price clearly dovetails with Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive's preview/release in September 2021, soaring past $25 in many cases, but seems to be steadying now that some of the hype has diminished.

Infernal Genesis

As for Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis, talk about a diamond in the rough. It was the Weekly Winner back in December 2021, going from bulk rare (~$0.50) to bananas prices ($10) overnight. In an age where mana values seem to be getting leaner and six-drops aren't as prevalent, it was intriguing to see how much hype it got both price-wise and popularity-wise. It does curve into Toxrill quite well, but as of now, it's only made it into 25% of Toxrill decks, so I'm curious to see where this price holds long-term.


Other Bad Gift Givers

We've already highlighted the unique utility of these cards, and how they relate to the controlling shell of most Toxrill decks, but where else might we make use of them?

Check out Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell's page or Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis's page and you'll find some sweet homes for them, like Syr Konrad, the GrimSyr Konrad, the Grim, Grismold, the DreadsowerGrismold, the Dreadsower, and Thalisse, Reverent MediumThalisse, Reverent Medium.

Syr Konrad, the Grim
Grismold, the Dreadsower
Thalisse, Reverent Medium

Our very own EDHRECast host Joey Schultz is a huge Syr Konrad, the GrimSyr Konrad, the Grim fan, and has spoken multiple times on how crazy good Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell is with Konrad's ability. If Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell sticks around while Syr KonradSyr Konrad is in play, it's likely just certain death for all opponents. It deals 4X damage to each opponent every round, where X is the number of creature cards in all graveyards. It's not just a 'spicy' inclusion, it's 2,200,000 Scoville Units of Carolina Reaper, which, practically speaking, is death. Currently, the Stairwell only finds its way into less than 10% of Konrad decks. Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis only makes it into 11 total Konrad decks, and I personally think this card is underplayed for Konrad, considering it also mills cards on each player's turn, which could potentially cause more creature cards to hit the graveyard and thus trigger Konrad!

Grismold, the DreadsowerGrismold, the Dreadsower practically created the strategy of giving opponents creature tokens and immediately punishing them when those creatures die. If you haven't gotten to see a Grismold, the DreadsowerGrismold, the Dreadsower deck yet, I envy you. He gets big, fast. Oh, and he has trample.

Finally, Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell seems pretty darn good with Thalisse, Reverent MediumThalisse, Reverent Medium. Would you like an army of flying Spirit tokens in just one turn rotation? Why yes, please!

Kardur, Doomscourge
Sengir, the Dark Baron
Sarulf, Realm Eater

There are some less-obvious budget commanders that also work well with these cards. Kardur, DoomscourgeKardur, Doomscourge loves the fact that the Tombstone Zombie tokens have haste, since it means they can swing at opponents with Kardur's pseudo-Goad ability and will likely die in combat, to boot! Sengir, the Dark BaronSengir, the Dark Baron gets real swole when all those tokens die, and Sarulf, Realm EaterSarulf, Realm Eater will gladly chow down on all those Zombie and Minion tokens!


Brotherly Gift-stocrats

Normally, I don't do deck techs in this series, but this seems a special occasion, since these cards are so unique to the Commander format.

A few years back, my brother and I joked about one day going to a MagicFest Commander event and show up to the same table, both with Shattergang BrothersShattergang Brothers decks to play in the same pod. The idea was that his would be built as a Stax deck, emphasizing resource denial (e.g., Tainted AetherTainted Aether, Burning SandsBurning Sands), and mine would be a Group Hug deck, giving away resources (e.g., Sylvan OfferingSylvan Offering) that would subsequently need to be sacrificed.

Shattergang Brothers
Tainted Aether
Sylvan Offering

It was a total gimmick idea, but the release of Rampaging FerocidonRampaging Ferocidon (Ixalan, 2017) and later Varchild, Betrayer of KjeldorVarchild, Betrayer of Kjeldor and Grismold, the DreadsowerGrismold, the Dreadsower (Commander 2019) actually got us thinking about it more seriously, to the point where we actually just jammed the two strategies into one list and called it 'Gift-stocrats.' Kresh the BloodbraidedKresh the Bloodbraided led this deck for a little while, but people astutely pointed out the nonbo of Kresh and -X/-X effects, where he won't get any counters when those creatures' power totals were shrunken down. We therefore switched it back to Shattergang Bros.Shattergang Bros. for flavor purposes.

Both Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis and Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell seemed particularly fun here to foster an all-out mass casualties deck. The idea is the same: give away creature tokens, and punish opponents when they die (Burning SandsBurning Sands, EarthlinkEarthlink, Grismold, the DreadsowerGrismold, the Dreadsower), or punish our opponents when those creatures come into play in the first place (e.g., Tainted AetherTainted Aether, Rampaging FerocidonRampaging Ferocidon). It's one of the few times that Primal VigorPrimal Vigor working for opponents is a good thing!


Brotherly Giftstocrats

View on Archidekt

Commander (1)

Creatures (22)

Artifacts (6)

Enchantments (15)

Instants (8)

Sorceries (11)

Lands (37)

Shattergang Brothers

Obviously, it's still very much a gimmicky deck, probably definitely trying to do too many things in one shell, and in the wrong pod, it can make for a very sour experience. Even so, it's honestly been a fun experience to theory-craft as WotC releases more cards like GrismoldGrismold and Syr KonradSyr Konrad. Additionally, it's been really fun co-brew a list, rather than brewing something solo and getting feedback later.

My brother and I both got our copies of Tainted AetherTainted Aether around the same time during the holidays last year, and it's not often you get to say, "Nothing brings family closer together than the holidays... and land destruction."


Conclusion

Wherever you may fall on the topic of Toxrill, the CorrosiveToxrill, the Corrosive or Shattergang BrothersShattergang Brothers, I hope you agree with me that both Tombstone StairwellTombstone Stairwell and Infernal GenesisInfernal Genesis feel distinctly like Commander cards, despite being printed more than 20 years ago when the format wasn't even a thing. They actively give creatures to opponents, which can be used against them or used politically, and they scale to the multiplayer nature of the game in some fascinating ways.

What do you think? What's your take on these cards, or some of the neat homes for them? Have you ever co-brewed a gimmick deck, and if so, what was it?

Sound off in the comments below!

Trent Trombley

Trent has been playing Magic since the early 2000s, when instead of exercising in a summer sports camp, he was trying to resolve a Krosan Skyscraper on the sidewalk (it always ate a removal). He saved up his allowance to buy an Akroma Angel of Wrath on eBay, only to find out it was a fraudulent post, forever dashing his hopes of ever getting a big creature to stick. He’s since “grown up” and, when he’s not working on his dissertation in Archaeology, spends too much time thinking how to put Cipher in every one of his decks and digging for obscure cards (see photo).

EDHREC Code of Conduct

Your opinions are welcome. We love hearing what you think about Magic! We ask that you are always respectful when commenting. Please keep in mind how your comments could be interpreted by others. Personal attacks on our writers or other commenters will not be tolerated. Your comments may be removed if your language could be interpreted as aggressive or disrespectful. You may also be banned from writing further comments.