Conditions Allow - Kitsa, Otterball Elite EDH

(Kitsa, Otterball Elite | Art by Zoltan Boros)
Slippery as an Otter
Hello, and welcome back to Conditions Allow, where I take a legendary creature with a downside and try to turn it into a strength. In my travels through Bloomburrow so far I've seen a lucky fool and a noble knight. Today I'm taking a break from fairy tail heroics to watch a professional match of otterball, starring Kitsa, Otterball Elite
Kitsa, Otterball Elite
As a Voltron commander, Kitsa, Otterball Elite
Embrace Metamorphosis
Luckily, blue does have another way to boost your creature's power. Rather than temporary power buffs, you can increase the base power and toughness of a creature by letting it take the form of another creature. These Majestic Metamorphoses
Recent sets have also ensured there are enough of this effect to make them the centerpiece of a deck. The best are Dreadful as the Storm
Lastly, I am of course including the more traditional combat tricks available to blue that make Kitsa, Otterball Elite
Something Worth Copying
With the power issue at least partially solved, we now need some spells worth copying to follow up with. There's no shortage of excellent options, but I can't think of anything I'd rather copy more than Narset's Reversal
First, though, I want to quickly mention the spells you'll be copying most often: cantrips. I wanted all of these to be cheap instants so they could be cast in combat and leave mana available to activate Kitsa, Otterball Elite
This is especially true of these three cantrips, each of which untaps a creature. Kitsa, Otterball Elite
For some actual card advantage, I'm including Ojer Pakpatiq, Deepest Epoch and Archmage Emeritus. Case of the Ransacked Lab could also go here, but I think of it more as ramp. Ojer Pakpatiq, Deepest Epoch in particular is powerful in this deck because you want instances of specific effects on every turn, and Pakpatiq lets you cast the exact same spells two turns in a row, ensuring you attack for big damage turn after turn. Archmage Emeritus, on the other hand, combos spectacularly with Narset's Reversal, drawing three extra cards every time you copy it.
Copy More Than Spells
By far the best spell to combo with Narset's Reversal, however, is Time Warp. In concert with Kitsa, Otterball Elite, these two spells let you take infinite turns. This deck isn't reliant on a combo to win the game, but it is nice as an escape button when you need it. You can even find both pieces very quickly by copying Solve the Equation, although it's better not to. Kitsa will be tapped, so you can't combo right away, and everyone will know you have the pieces in hand, making you a prime target. Unless you know you won't be disrupted before your next turn, it's better to wait and draw the two spells naturally.
Throw in a few removal spells and a couple mana rocks, and here's the final decklist.
Kitsa's Reversal
View on ArchidektCommander (1)
Creatures (4)
Artifacts (8)
Enchantments (3)
Sorceries (5)
Instants (44)
- 1 Aetherize
- 1 Anticipate
- 1 Arcane Denial
- 1 Behind the Mask
- 1 Borne Upon a Wind
- 1 Cerulean Wisps
- 1 Consider
- 1 Council's Deliberation
- 1 Counterspell
- 1 Curate
- 1 Deliberate
- 1 Dreadful as the Storm
- 1 Experimental Augury
- 1 Frantic Search
- 1 Glimpse of Freedom
- 1 Hithlain Knots
- 1 Impulse
- 1 Leap
- 1 Majestic Metamorphosis
- 1 Moment of Truth
- 1 Mordenkainen's Polymorph
- 1 Mystical Tutor
- 1 Narset's Reversal
- 1 Negate
- 1 Opt
- 1 Peek
- 1 Pongify
- 1 Radical Idea
- 1 Rapid Hybridization
- 1 Reality Shift
- 1 Refocus
- 1 Relic's Roar
- 1 Resculpt
- 1 Serpentine Ambush
- 1 Shadow Rift
- 1 Startling Development
- 1 Suit Up
- 1 Think Twice
- 1 Twisted Image
- 1 Twitch
- 1 Water Wings
- 1 Wings of Velis Vel
- 1 You Come to a River
- 1 Zhalfirin Shapecraft
Lands (35)
Kitsa, Otterball Elite certainly lacks the raw power of Eluge, the Shoreless Sea, but that doesn't mean she can't outmaneuver your opponents. Copying spells opens up a lot of opportunities for trickery, especially with an otherwise straightforward strategy. You also don't have to take Kitsa in a Voltron direction. She could helm a respectable control deck, but she's perhaps most at home in a more tempo playstyle, ensuring your disruptive spells resolve around any counterplay.
But what do you think? How have you built Kitsa, Otterball Elite? Let me know in the comments, and thanks for reading!