TCG Playability
Creature — Illusion Villain
Flying, vigilance Whenever this creature attacks, mill a card. (Put the top card of your library into your graveyard.)
Mysterio's greatest talent was the ability to instill doubt in one's own senses.
This versatile blue creature offers excellent utility across multiple constructed formats, making it a solid addition for players building around mill strategies, tempo decks, or any archetype that benefits from consistent card advantage. Mysterio's Phantasm presents an intriguing value proposition with its combination of flying and vigilance, allowing you to attack without tapping while maintaining defensive capabilities. The mill trigger on each attack creates incremental library depletion that accumulates quickly in longer games, fitting perfectly into dedicated mill archetypes like Dimir Mill or Izzet Mill variants that aim to deck opponents rather than dealing damage. Even outside dedicated mill strategies, this creature provides subtle card advantage by filling your graveyard, which synergizes beautifully with self-mill payoffs such as delirium triggers, flashback mechanics, or graveyard-focused abilities that reward having specific cards in your discard pile. At just one generic and one blue mana, the casting cost is remarkably efficient, allowing you to deploy threats while maintaining mana flexibility for interaction and countermagic. The three toughness provides reasonable defensive stability against most early-game threats, while the flying evasion ensures consistent damage output and board relevance throughout the game. With legal status spanning standard through legacy and commander formats, this card offers tremendous format flexibility for collection building. Whether you're constructing a competitive mill deck, testing self-mill synergies, or simply seeking a cost-effective blue flyer with incremental value generation, Mysterio's Phantasm delivers efficient gameplay mechanics that reward strategic deckbuilding and provide meaningful impact during gameplay.
Illustrated by Piotr Dura