TCG Playability
Enchantment — Saga
(As this Saga enters and after your draw step, add a lore counter. Sacrifice after III.) I, II — Target player mills two cards, then exiles their graveyard. III — Put all creature cards exiled with this enchantment onto the battlefield face down under your control. They're 2/2 Cyberman artifact creatures.
Death in Heaven is a powerful three-mana black Saga that offers unique strategic value by combining mill effects with creature generation, making it a compelling option for mill-focused decks and innovative control strategies. The card's mechanics unfold over three chapters, with the first two chapters targeting an opponent to mill two cards and exile their entire graveyard, effectively disrupting graveyard-based strategies while filling the exile zone with potential resources. The final chapter transforms all creature cards exiled by this Saga into 2/2 Cyberman artifact creatures under your control, creating a surprising army that can apply pressure or block incoming threats depending on your needs. This unique design makes Death in Heaven particularly effective in Commander and Oathbreaker formats where it can mill opponents multiple times and generate creature tokens from their discarded threats, while also fitting naturally into Legacy and Vintage mill decks that want both disruption and a secondary win condition. The artifact creature type grants additional synergy with artifact-focused strategies, sacrifice outlets, and lord effects, allowing creative deck builders to leverage the Saga's output beyond simple combat damage. Players seeking a card that simultaneously advances their mill strategy while generating board presence will appreciate Death in Heaven's efficiency and flexibility. Whether you're building a dedicated mill deck looking for value engines or a control deck wanting multi-purpose disruption with a payoff, this Saga delivers consistent strategic advantage across multiple formats while offering the satisfying gameplay of converting opponent resources into your own threats.
Illustrated by Justyna Dura