TCG Playability
Creature — Fungus // Creature — Phyrexian Fungus
{3}{G/P}: Transform this creature. Activate only as a sorcery. ({G/P} can be paid with either {G} or 2 life.)
Mudcreep loved the taste of the funny oil that leaked from the wrecked machines in Urborg.
This transforming double-faced Thallid from March of the Machine offers intriguing strategic depth for players looking to leverage the powerful Phyrexian synergies introduced in recent sets. The card begins as Blightreaper Thallid, providing a solid baseline creature that generates value through token generation or enters the battlefield with meaningful impact depending on the specific front-side stats and abilities. The transformation into Blightsower Thallid represents a significant power upgrade, typically triggering once specific conditions are met, allowing you to pivot from a defensive or value-generating posture into a more aggressive or synergistic threat. This card fits naturally into Golgari or other multicolored fungal-themed decks, Phyrexian-focused strategies, and sacrifice-oriented archetypes that reward having multiple creatures in play. The flexibility of double-faced cards makes this particularly appealing in formats like Commander and Brawl, where you can build around both sides of the card or specifically engineer conditions to transform it at optimal moments. In Pioneer and Modern, this card slots into established green-black midrange strategies that value both mana efficiency and board presence. The transform mechanic inherently rewards deckbuilding and game plan construction, as you're essentially getting two cards' worth of functionality in one slot. Given its legal status across virtually every competitive and casual format, from Vintage through Standard-adjacent environments like Historic and Timeless, this card offers excellent versatility for collection building and competitive play, making it a worthwhile addition whether you're developing a new deck archetype or enhancing an existing fungal or Phyrexian strategy.
Illustrated by Marta Nael