TCG Playability
Creature — Squirrel Warlock
Deathtouch {T}: Until end of turn, you may cast creature spells from your graveyard by foraging in addition to paying their other costs. If you cast a spell this way, that creature enters with a finality counter on it. (To forage, exile three cards from your graveyard or sacrifice a Food. If a creature with a finality counter on it would die, exile it instead.)
Osteomancer Adept is a strategically versatile creature that opens up entirely new avenues for graveyard-focused strategies across multiple Magic formats. This two-mana black creature combines immediate board presence with the Deathtouch keyword, making it a respectable threat that trades favorably with significantly larger creatures. However, the real power lies in its activated ability, which transforms your graveyard into a second hand by allowing you to cast creature spells directly from your graveyard by foraging—exiling three cards from your graveyard or sacrificing a Food token. The addition of a finality counter on creatures cast this way provides a clever safety net, ensuring those recursed creatures bypass the graveyard entirely if they would die, enabling multi-turn value generation without fear of losing your investment to exile effects or repeated graveyard interaction. This card fits naturally into several established deck archetypes. In Standard and Pioneer, it powers self-mill and sacrifice strategies that benefit from filling your graveyard as a resource. In Modern and Legacy, it slots seamlessly into Food-based decks, aristocrat strategies, and graveyard-focused lists that already run cards like Stitcher's Supplier or Murktide. Commander players will appreciate its synergy with cards that generate Food tokens or self-mill, while the creature-heavy recursion complements reanimation themes perfectly. The foraging mechanic creates decision-making moments and deck-building constraints that reward thoughtful construction. Ultimately, Osteomancer Adept rewards players who build around its unique mechanic, transforming resource management into a competitive advantage.
Illustrated by Daniel Zrom