TCG Playability
Sorcery
You may pay {B} rather than pay this spell's mana cost if there are thirteen or more creatures on the battlefield. Each player sacrifices thirteen creatures of their choice.
"A demonic pact is all fun and games until the bill comes due." —Liliana Vess
Blasphemous Edict is a powerful mass sacrifice effect that offers remarkable flexibility in its mana cost structure, making it an excellent addition to any black deck looking to leverage creature-heavy board states. This sorcery demands each player sacrifice exactly thirteen creatures of their choice, but the true innovation lies in its alternative casting cost: if thirteen or more creatures are on the battlefield when you cast it, you can pay just one black mana instead of the full five-mana cost of three generic and two black. This cost reduction transforms Blasphemous Edict from a situational bomb into a genuine format staple, particularly in creature-focused matchups where both players have developed substantial armies. The card shines in sacrifice-focused archetypes like Aristocrats, Zombies, and creature-heavy Midrange strategies, where you've already planned to sacrifice your creatures for value through cards like Blood Artist, Zulaport Cutthroat, or Viscera Seer, giving you significant card advantage while decimating your opponent's board presence. Even at full cost, the symmetrical nature of the effect becomes asymmetrical when you've built your deck with sacrifice synergies in mind. With legality across Standard, Pioneer, Modern, Legacy, and Commander formats, this card provides options for competitive and casual players alike. Its flexibility, powerful effect at an efficient rate, and synergy with sacrifice-themed strategies make Blasphemous Edict an outstanding value pick for players building around creature tokens, sacrifice outlets, or looking for a game-ending board wipe that rewards you for playing the game proactively.
Illustrated by Andrew Mar