Assassin's Creed Set Review - Minotaur

Labyrinth Adversary by Narendra Bintara Adi
White | Blue | Black | Red | Green | Artifacts & Lands | Allied Colors and Shards | Enemy Colors and Wedges | Reprints | cEDH
Something Stirs Under Crete
Greetings, everyone! I'll be honest in admitting I was not expecting to be writing a review for this set, but alas, fate had other ideas.
Now, I don't know a whole lot about Assassin's Creed. Most of my knowledge comes from playing Assassin Creed: Brotherhood, watching the 2016 movie, and general gaming culture osmosis. I know enough to know what it's about, but not enough to call myself a fan of the series. That said, I am interested to see what Magic's take on the franchise looks like and whether the Beyond Boosters they're packaged in has the same success as March of the Machine: The Aftermath.
This small set is legal in the Modern Format, so like with my review of Modern Horizons 3, it will be written with Minotaur Commander and Minotaur Modern decks in mind, so let's plug into the Animus and see what our past can tell us about our future.
Black
Petty Larceny
The effect is interesting in that we are stealing two of our opponents' top cards that we can use at any time, which is perfect to set up a surprise turn with the secret cards and in general create card advantage that can't be interacted with by our opponents. However, Petty Larceny
That means it's only useful to Minotaur EDH decks, where we can expect our commander to deal combat damage to an opponent. To me, that lands squarely with Neheb, the Worthy
However, this line of thinking obscures the fact that the card is best used with Magar of the Magic Strings
Conspiracy, Cover of Darkness
I'm grouping these two cards together because they are both excellent reprints that operate on similar wavelengths.
Conspiracy
This allows the utility creatures like Species Specialist
Cover of Darkness
Red
Alexios, Deimos of Kosmos
Alexios
The way Tahngarth
The Spear of Leonidas
This weapon excites me for one reason and one reason only: each mode given on the Spear offers a little something for every Minotaur deck in EDH.
Bull Rush is primarily effective with the combat side of Minotaurs. Giving double strike to a creature already buffed up by our keyword lord Minotaurs will melt our opponents in the right circumstances. In addition, with Tahngarth
Summon creates a body, so we can have something to protect us if we go for an all-in attack. Alternatively, if we're playing a more niche sacrifice-themed Minotaur deck, it creates a useful body to repeatably create to fuel our various sac effects.
Revelation slots in well with the discard themed decks or Magar
While each mode is primarily beneficial to each flavour of Minotaur kindred decks, all other modes are still useful, and that flexibility is what impresses me the most.
Labyrinth Adversary
Well well well, the actual factual Minotaur! Here he is! The monster that lives in the labyrinth beneath Crete's palace. My jaw dropped when I saw this spoiled. I knew the Minotaur was in Assassin's Creed: Odyssey, but I held little hope this set would actually include him, so I'm pleased as punch over here in my corner.
Now to the actual card. Overall, it's fine. At four mana, I don't think I would play this in a Modern deck. However, in EDH I think it'll find a nice home. Being four mana actually helps its case, as the three mana slot is highly competitive, so even though its stats and ability are fine at four mana, psychologically I find it easier to justify including in my decks than if it was cheaper.
The Labyrinth Adversary
Colorless
Mjölnir, Storm Hammer
Mjölnir
It then has the added ability of punishing players that tap out, as each opponent receives damage for every creature that is tapped, so decks that have mana dorks or try to match our aggressiveness will feel the burn. In a way, this discourages opponents attacking us when we go for a full offensive, as the crack back will only sting harder.
Another possible application is to include this with Mogis, God of Slaughter
Smoke Bomb
Smoke Bomb
Unfortunately, this isn't Teferi's Protection
I think it's better to evaluate this card as a political tool for your pod. Smoke Bomb
Desynchronization
And we emerge form the Animus wiser from the lived past experiences. I, for one, feel reasonably pleased by what the set offered, more so than most sets releases these days, and I think that's due to this set being Commander- and Modern-focused, without all the chaff that a draftable set needs to contain.
I'm not overly impressed with the set as a whole outside of the Minotaur Lens, but it would be wrong for me to deny that there are gems in this set. Only time will tell if this iteration of the Aftermath-styled boosters lives past this product.
I believe it won't long until Bloomburrow previews begin, and while I don't anticipate Minotaurs to be present in the cutesy animal world, you never know what might turn up.
Until then, see you later, and be sure to check out the Assassin's Creed reviews on the Commander's Herald and EDHREC.