Financial Divergence - Sisay Stax vs Sisay Shrines

Sisay, Weatherlight Captain | Art by Anna Steinbauer
Legendary Budget, Legendary Deck
Hello, everyone, and welcome to Financial Divergence, where we look at strategic decisions in deckbuilding through the lens of budgetary restrictions. In this series we're looking at popular commanders and seeing how budget can impact strategic divergences when choosing a primary strategy.
For a series overview and some additional context, you can check out the first article in the series here.
Today we're talking about one of those kill-on-sight commanders that you see at the table often enough to develop a complex, and one of the most popular commanders of the past two years: Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
A Tale of Two: Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
I see a lot of Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
Then, if we look at budget builds, we see a very different picture begin to take shape:
These selections of cards couldn't be more different. Let's explore: what do these selections of cards tell us about the strategic decisions that have been influenced by budgetary constraints?
What do these two decks have in common?
Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
It's not always true, but legendary permanents tend to be very powerful because they are designed and balanced with the disadvantage of being legendary: you can't have more than one of any given legend on your side of the battlefield. That doesn't impact our singleton format a lot, but it does say something about the fact that the more legends you have in play, the more likely your opponents are to interact with you. Kethis, the Hidden Hand
Legendary tribal (which is truly a core theme for both builds of Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
Another thing that both datasets have in common shouldn't surprise anyone: mana ramp and fixing!
If you want to play five colors and you want to reliably activate Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
Where do the decks diverge?
The biggest difference, from my research, has to do with which legends are in the mix for Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
When we look at our commander with a modest budget in mind, we see some key cards pop up to the surface that all point in a very distinct strategic direction: enchantress Shrines. As someone who fondly remembers Kamigawa block, when I saw the previews for Sanctum of All
Want to burn someone out to close the game? We have a Honden of Infinite Rage
If we change the budget of our build, the data shows us a deck with a very different core gameplan: Najeela stax. Sisay, Weatherlight Captain
Timing is everything, though, and having control of the board helps make sure that when you land Najeela you can immediately close the game. Cards like Ashiok, Dream Render
Strategic Takeaways
- Sisay, Weatherlight Captainplays very differently depending on your goals. The early game is going to feel pretty similar, but the mid game varies drastically. The difference between landing a turn-five Honden of Life's Weband a turn-five Teferi, Time Ravelerinto counterspell backup is tremendous.
- Stax has a place. One of the things that stood out from this research is that stax has a place in the EDH ecosystem, and it seems like the best place will be that place that demands interaction from all sides. Stax feels more balanced at tables ready with Force of Wills and Silences than it does against something like the Wilhelt precon from Midnight Hunt.
- Tutor effects do a lot to make repetitive play experiences, but also enable niche strategies. Shrines is a deck that seems like it has a lot of love, but it's hard to build without reliable tutors available. Outside of something like Sisay, Weatherlight Captainbeing able to find them, you are left with simply drawing these 11 cards naturally, which means there isn't really much of a strategy to build around.
Budget Gems
While I was doing this research, I came across several inexpensive and overlooked cards that seem worth taking a look at.
This card has a niche effect, but in five-color, base-green decks this card seems like a great way to transform a budget manabase into something really effective and versatile. At around a quarter, this card seems like something worth picking up given the specificity of the name and the niche effect.
Sterling Grove
The last card I saw that seems underutilized is Edge of Autumn
Wrapping Up
That's all for this time. What do you think about the differences between the two strategies? Which would you like to build and play? What other commanders would you like to see us discuss?