Conditions Allow - Winter, Cynical Opportunist EDH

(Winter, Cynical Opportunist Art by Andrew Kuzinskiy)
Winter Delirium
Magic: Foundations is barreling towards us, but there's still plenty to explore within the house of Duskmourn. Of all the house's many denizens, there is probably no one better suited to guide you than Winter, Cynical Opportunist
Winter, Cynical Opportunist
With five toughness and deathtouch, Winter, Cynical Opportunist
Filling the Graveyard
Most Commander decks want to ramp in the first couple turns of the game, but reanimator decks don't need to cast their big spells. Instead, they want to get them into the graveyard quickly with the help of Stitcher's Supplier
The next most important set of cards for this deck are ones with two types. These help to minimize the number of cards you need to exile from your graveyard to hit the four card types, which also means you get to bring more permanents back with Winter. Grist, the Hunger Tide
Interacting With the Locals
All this mill is well and good, but you need to hit something worth reanimating as well, and the bigger the better. Noxious Gearhulk
Of course, the deck can't be all permanents. Building around Delirium means you need to hit as many card types as possible. Eyeblight's Ending
Heavy Hitters
Part of the fun of playing reanimator, however, is reviving big, splashy creatures that are too expensive to cast, not just casting glorified Doom Blades for free. These cards are highly customizable to what you want to play, but there are a few factors to keep in mind. First, Winter, Cynical Opportunist pulls cards from your graveyard during your end step, so cards with enter the battlefield abilities are more valuable than haste-y creatures. For this reason, I'm including both Overlord of the Balemurk and Overlord of the Hauntwoods, since their abilities trigger when they enter and again when they attack on your next turn. Demonic Covenant, on the other hand, is much more awkward. It also triggers at your upkeep, so it won't do anything until the end of the turn after you bring it back, but making a 5/5 flier that draws a card every turn is pretty good, so it'll make the cut as well. Finally, Demolisher Spawn is a thematic Overrun effect for this deck that turns your medium-sized utility creatures into real threats.
Another important aspect of Winter, Cynical Opportunist's ability is that your permanents come back with finality counters so that they'll be exiled instead of destroyed. This stops you from bringing them back again. In order to get around this, I'm including Springheart Nantuko, which you can bestow onto a powerful creature in order to make token copies of it every time you play a land. One Demolisher Spawn is bad enough, but two or three are nearly unstoppable.
Alternately, you can lean into Winter's exile effect and use Whip of Erebos for quick bursts of power throughout the game. Graveyard decks are often shy about letting their big threats get exiled, since a large part of the archetypes strength comes from the fact that their creatures simply don't stay dead. Winter, Cynical Opportunist forces you to consider reanimation slightly differently, however. You can't bring the same threats back over and over, so you need to press your advantage quickly, before your opponents can respond. Whip of Erebos complements that playstyle perfectly, whether you bring back Mire Triton for a little extra mill or Greater Tanuki for a big life point swing.
A Little Extra Value
Rounding out the deck are a few smaller cards that ensure you hit your land drops and keep up with decks trying to go wide. Token-makers, like Bitterblossom and Formless Genesis, are also extremely powerful with Demolisher Spawn. The most important thing about these last few cards, however, is that they are all two types. As always, this ensures you hit Delirium easily, even while exiling at least two cards from your graveyard every turn.
Winter
View on ArchidektCommander (1)
Creatures (27)
- 1 Arasta of the Endless Web
- 1 Burnished Hart
- 1 Cityscape Leveler
- 1 Courser of Kruphix
- 1 Deathcap Cultivator
- 1 Demolisher Spawn
- 1 Dryad Arbor
- 1 Gravebreaker Lamia
- 1 Greater Tanuki
- 1 Millikin
- 1 Mire Triton
- 1 Necron Deathmark
- 1 Noxious Gearhulk
- 1 Nyx Weaver
- 1 Ornithopter of Paradise
- 1 Overlord of the Balemurk
- 1 Overlord of the Hauntwoods
- 1 Perennial Behemoth
- 1 Sakura-Tribe Elder
- 1 Shigeki, Jukai Visionary
- 1 Six
- 1 Skull Prophet
- 1 Solemn Simulacrum
- 1 Springheart Nantuko
- 1 Stitcher's Supplier
- 1 Twitching Doll
- 1 Ursine Monstrosity
Artifacts (5)
Enchantments (9)
Planeswalkers (5)
Instants (7)
Sorceries (4)
Lands (38)
- 1 Boseiju, Who Endures
- 1 Command Tower
- 1 Dakmor Salvage
- 1 Darkbore Pathway // Slitherbore Pathway
- 1 Darkmoss Bridge
- 1 Darksteel Citadel
- 1 Deathcap Glade
- 1 Evolving Wilds
- 1 Exotic Orchard
- 7 Forest
- 1 Llanowar Wastes
- 1 Necroblossom Snarl
- 1 Nesting Grounds
- 1 Nurturing Peatland
- 1 Overgrown Tomb
- 1 Shifting Woodland
- 5 Swamp
- 1 Takenuma, Abandoned Mire
- 1 Temple of Malady
- 1 Terramorphic Expanse
- 1 Treasure Vault
- 1 Tree of Tales
- 1 Twilight Mire
- 1 Underground Mortuary
- 1 Undergrowth Stadium
- 1 Vault of Whispers
- 1 Viridescent Bog
- 1 Woodland Cemetery
Winter, Cynical Opportunist requires you to do a little more work than other reanimator commanders, but if you can get all the pieces in place he's capable of some powerful moves. He also forces you to reconsider how you play a reanimator deck. Whether you're trying graveyard shenanigans for the first time, or looking for a new, unique twist on the archetype, Winter, Cynical Opportunist may be what you're looking for.