Karai the Edict Driver
Summary
This is a cohesive Orzhov graveyardmidrange PDH deck with a real identity: land an evasive attacker, convert Karai combat triggers into recursion, and bury the table under repeatable edicts, selfmill value, and grindy reanimation. The interaction suite is strong for PDH, and the commander meaningfully upgrades the sacrifice package. What keeps the deck out of PDH Optimized territory is structural: 32 lands, only 2 effective acceleration by backend count, only 5 draw pieces, and several clunky topend cards that are more smoothing than actual payoff.
Commander
Karai, Future of the Foot
Deck Verdict
Solid PDH Deck, Needs Tuning - Confidence: high


Mana curve
Mana value distribution and average cost for castable cards in the main deck.
Mana pressure & alignment
How your colored demand lines up with the mana base during your game.
Color pressure
Demand vs support share by color.
Mana integrity
Overall alignment score for your mana base.
- Mana integrity is in a good spot.
- Black sources are under-supported for this deck.
- Early-game Black commitments are heavy.
- Reduce early Black triple-pip spells or move them up the curve.
Early turn stress
Where colored and colorless mana requirements cluster across turns.
Mana Base
Benchmark-backed view of how the deck develops mana, fixes colors, and reaches commander timing in the first turns.
Mana readiness snapshot
Compact early-game checks for whether the mana base turns on cleanly.
Commander and color timing
Shows when the mana base turns colors on and when commander timing becomes reliable.
- All colors online
- Commander castable
Benchmarks that miss most often, plus the dominant reasons behind those misses.
Open the full analysis for mulligans, risky openers, benchmark miss causes, and the complete why-hands-fail breakdown.

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