TCG Playability
Legendary Creature — Human Wizard
When Gisa and Geralf enters, mill four cards. Once during each of your turns, you may cast a Zombie creature spell from your graveyard.
"These fiends are slightly less tolerable than you." "A sentiment that warms my heart, sister."
This legendary creature represents a powerful synergy engine for graveyard-focused strategies across multiple Magic formats. At four mana for a 4/4 body with evasion potential through its typing, Gisa and Geralf immediately generates value upon entering the battlefield by milling four cards, which fills your graveyard with resources while thinning your library. The mill trigger is particularly advantageous because it serves dual purposes: it enables your graveyard-based strategy while simultaneously searching for the specific cards you need to execute your game plan. The second ability is where this card truly shines, allowing you to cast a Zombie creature spell from your graveyard once per turn, effectively giving you access to repeated casting opportunities that would normally be impossible. This makes Gisa and Geralf an exceptional fit for Zombie-themed decks, self-mill strategies, and any archetype built around leveraging the graveyard as a second hand. Players gravitate toward this card because it creates consistent card advantage while advancing your board state turn after turn. In formats like Pioneer and Modern, it slots perfectly into dedicated Zombie decks and mill-based strategies. The format legality across historic, timeless, legacy, and vintage means this card has applications in virtually any constructed format you're interested in playing. For Commander enthusiasts, Gisa and Geralf functions as either a powerful commander or an excellent inclusion in the 99, generating exponential value in longer games. The ability to repeatedly cast creatures from your graveyard transforms what might otherwise be discarded cards into legitimate threats, making your deck significantly more resilient and flexible in matchups.
Illustrated by Aaron J. Riley