Comprehending Competitive - Black in cEDH

Vampiric Tutor by Raymond Swanland
Competitive Color Breakdown
White | Blue | Black | Red | Green | Multicolor | Colorless | Lands
G'day, Jake FitzSimons back in black with another Comprehending Competitive.
As dangerous and dastardly as the swamps from whence its mana comes, black is likely tied for the strongest color in cEDH. With risky combos, the original rituals, the biggest draw spells in the format, and the best tutors in the history of Magic, sometimes black feels like cEDH incarnate.
If you've ever felt your life total wasn't working hard enough for you, black might be your color. Read on and find out which spells you'll need before you leave your precious swamp and venture into the meta.
Acceleration
You don't think of black when you think of fast mana in traditional EDH. Big mana? Sure, the dastardly duo of Cabal Coffers
All five are busted with a capital B, but I've ordered them roughly by power. Dark Ritual
It can be a turn-one Necropotence
Advantage
Affectionately named Bob after Bob Maher Jr., the muse for Ron Spears' iconic Ravnica artwork, Dark Confidant
I could write an entire article about Ad Nauseam
But with an appropriately crafted deck, Naus may well be the best card in it. It's unusually expensive for a cEDH staple, but when that staple can draw you upwards of thirty cards at instant speed on a good day, five mana doesn't seem so bad. Sure, you might leave yourself within bolt range, but what does it matter if you're winning this turn? This "no pain no gain" attitude is core to black's identity as a color, and competitive Commander takes it to the extreme.
If you've never gone off with Ad Nauseam, you should try it at least once; it's exhilarating. Sometimes you'll get it off with a full life total, in which case it's a forgone conclusion. But what makes it exciting is when you're already bruised and bloody. Maybe you lost too many Mana Crypt
Or maybe, just maybe, you're halfway through resolving it, you've flipped fifteen cards already, and you're looking pretty good even though you're at four life, but it's fine because all you need is just a little fast mana, even a tutor would be enough to get you there, never mind the fact there's a Force of Will
You can feel the sweat on your brow. The slight tremor in your fingers. You can't help it, your hand drifts toward your library and everyone holds their breath. You just want one... more... flip...
That's when it gets interesting.
Peer Into the Abyss
One of the things I love about cEDH is getting to play cards that don't have a home anywhere else. Rightly banned in Legacy and restricted in Vintage, it's remarkable Necropotence
Citadel hasn't found the home in cEDH its most ardent fans hoped it would, but there's tremendous potential here. Whether cheated into play or run out early with rituals, Bolas's Citadel
Combo Potential
The notorious forbidden tutors. Both are playable in their own right (albeit extremely dangerous in the case of Demonic Consultation
Playable in their own right, but usually combined with Worldgorger Dragon
A relative newcomer to cEDH, not even a year old. Risky, as executing it will leave you empty-handed. Best paired with a Silence
Not a combo in and of itself, but the enabler to end all enablers. Doomsday
Like Doomsday
Interaction/Protection
A noticeable weak point for black in cEDH. Usually black must rely on blue counters, white silences, green uncounterable clauses, or dig to the bottom of the barrel and try:
Single card hand disruption is usually weak in multiplayer formats, but sometimes you just need to deal with problems before they become problems. You'll usually see these two in Golgari and Rakdos decks, although they've fallen out of fashion recently. You'll also run into Imp's Mischief
As for removal, black has fine tools for removing creatures and handling creature-centric combos. Deadly Rollick
Stax
It pains me to write about Opposition Agent
Yet another asymmetrical stax piece with card advantage to boot. Some of the strongest combos in cEDH rely on their yards, which makes Dauthi perfect for attacking the meta. Moreover, the void pile will become more versatile with every passing turn. Nobody wants to get in a counter war with the void. Have you ever cast an Eldrazi titan for free? I have, and I have Dauthi to thank.
For such a clunky textbox, this notorious card is surprisingly simple. Basically, nobody can get more cards in their hand than they began with when you first played Chains. If you want a simple breakdown, follow this link. Chains sees play as a combo piece in the The Gitrog Monster
Tutors
Despite my efforts to convince people otherwise, tutoring remains one of the most polarizing things you can do in Commander, but here in cEDH, where we try to vanquish variance, tutors thrive. They roam free, abundant and unshackled as they search for combos, counters, and card draw.
While every color has playable tutors specializing in specific card types, black can search unconditionally. You can fetch for whatever you like without revealing your target, adding flexibility and reducing the information your opponents receive.
Each of these tutors have their place, with only minor differences in execution. The two-mana tutors pull directly to hand, but are less useful on turn one as a result. Opening hands can go from garbage to godly based on the presence of a single Vampiric Tutor
Wishclaw Talisman
Black is also great at tutoring directly to the graveyard. This is crucial for reanimation shenanigans. Entomb
Miscellaneous Goodies
I almost filed Praetor's Grasp under tutors before I moved it to combo potential, which was a moment before I brought it down here. It's hard to classify. Despite its wildly varying targets, Grasp provides a lot of utility. It's often used to find a missing combo piece, tutor an answer out of someone else's deck, or in particularly shameful cases, to steal someone's only win condition. Grasping a Gitrog player's Dakmor Salvage
Here it is, the only board wipe regularly seen in cEDH. It gets around indestructible, it only costs three, and you can pay a specific amount of life in order to save your beefy creatures. A seriously powerful catchall answer that this writer feels is underplayed right now.
Ah, Yawgmoth's Will
Doesn't combo the way Animate Dead
Welcome to the Black Parade
A parade indeed. I'm open to dissenters, but I'm increasingly certain black is the strongest color in cEDH. The sheer redundancy of tutors, the power of the win conditions, the quality of fast mana and the incredible finality of cards like Naus, Peer, and Doomsday is just incredible. Even if all it brought to the table was tutors, the consistency alone would be enough to warrant its inclusion in any color pairing.
This article has looked at black at large, but if you're so devoted to black you consider yourself a human equivalent of Gray Merchant of Asphodel
Now get out of my swamp.