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Pauper: The Curious Case of Writhing Chrysalis

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Writhing Chrysalis is considered the most efficient creature in Pauper history due to the amount of value its controller offers in a single play. But does being a great card justify the many ban requests?

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traducido por Romeu

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revisado por Tabata Marques

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Índice

  1. > Writhing Chrysalis is Pauper's Tarmogoyf
  2. > Writhing Chrysalis is the greatest Anti-Meta card Pauper has ever had
  3. > Writhing Chrysalis revitalized Big Mana
  4. > Writhing Chrysalis is the best creature in fair games, but irrelevant against unfair decks
  5. > Should Writhing Chrysalis be banned?

Whenever a ban debate starts in Pauper, it's common to hear some gushing comments from the community about Bridges, the original Artifact Lands, Basking Broodscale, Krark-Clan Shaman, or even Goblin Bushwhacker, or Kuldotha Rebirth, each with explanations that theoretically make sense from the perspective of how they work in their respective decks.

But one card in particular comes up surprisingly often:

Writhing Chrysalis
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The amount of complaints we see about Writhing Chrysalis is gigantic. Every video, post or article about banning ends up, at some point, with comments about banning the Eldrazi from Pauper, and most of them are based on the difficulty of responding to this creature and the fact that many decks are adopting splashes just to play it.

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But after all, does Chrysalis deserve to be banned just because it's a very efficient creature? Let's evaluate the curious case of this creature in Pauper.

Writhing Chrysalis is Pauper's Tarmogoyf

Let's go back to 2007. The Future Sight expansion had just come out, and in one of the first competitive events, a Zoo deck was using four copies of Tarmogoyf, a new creature that few paid much attention to during the previews or at launch for what it did, but for the fact that it was the first card to mention the Planeswalker type in Magic.

A few weeks later, other players were using Tarmogoyf in other lists. A few months passed, and every deck in every competitive Magic format was using Tarmogoyf - some lists adding a Magic Symbol G splash just for the card.

After its rotation, Goyf continued to be present in the eternal formats, and became an instant staple in the then-born Modern in 2011, a factor that made its price skyrocket and forced one reprint after another in Modern Masters sets until it became obsolete due to power creep.

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Writhing Chrysalis won't have the same history. At most, it has started to show up in Modern's Eldrazi Ramp lists, where it is far from being the most powerful card on the list. But its similarities with Goyf's golden era are notorious in Pauper:

  • Both are creatures whose bodies with potential to grow naturally make them bigger than any other threat.

  • Both are so efficient at what they propose (being a large, hard-to-kill threat) to the point that decks are adopting splashes to add them to lists. Variants of Naya Bully, Temur Terror, and the transformation of Black Gardens into Jund Gardens serve as proof of Chrysalis's quality in Pauper.

  • Both force a reevaluation of the way to interact in their respective formats. Lightning Bolt was the last card you wanted to have as an answer to a Tarmogoyf on turn two, and the last card you want to have against Writhing Chrysalis when it comes into play.

  • Both cost two mana. Yes, Chrysalis costs Magic Symbol 2Magic Symbol GMagic Symbol R, but the tokens make it cost virtually two mana, and most lists using it can play it on average on turn three after a Malevolent Rumble or Deadly Dispute.

  • Speaking of which, Malevolent Rumble is to Writhing Chrysalis what Thoughtseize was to Tarmogoyf: both make it easier for the card to come into play with a more robust body.

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    But should Pauper have a Tarmogoyf? Is a 4/5 or higher for two mana too much work for the format? Yes, it bypasses most of the interactions available in the Metagame, which brings up the second point about this creature and its place in Pauper.

    Writhing Chrysalis is the greatest Anti-Meta card Pauper has ever had

    Just to name a few of the widely played cards that Writhing Chrysalis dodges:

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    Also, spells like Snap are pretty bad at delaying a Chrysalis because it generates value on the cast.

    On the other hand, the best cards to deal with it today are:

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    Of these, only Cast Down and Snuff Out are among the most played cards in Pauper today, with Thraben Charm in a distant third place. Spells like Destroy Evil are very conditional, but could gain more spotlight since they work against four of the five main archetypes in the Metagame today: Affinity, Broodscale, Terror and Gruul Ramp.

    On the other hand, cards like Skred and Defile are too slow to deal with Chrysalis but necessary to hold off Kuldotha Red, while Journey to Nowhere, Unable to Scream and Extract a Confession are too conditional.

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    It's always possible to just counter Writhing Chrysalis and continue the game, but given how easy it is to cast on turn three, it's hard for a Faeries player to set up Spellstutter Sprite, while other decks can't count on Force Spike to force out their opponent's greedy mana.

    The problem is, no matter what you do, your opponent will have already generated value. We don't have Consign to Memory in Pauper to deal with both the cast and the trigger, so when faced with a Counterspell, your opponent will have two Eldrazi tokens to speed up the next turn, or even to chump block on later turns.

    This same dilemma is seen with removals. Yes, Cast Down and Snuff Out deal with the bigger creatures and are two of the most played cards in Pauper, but the tokens stay.

    They'll cast other powerful cards in the following turns - an Avenging Hunter or a Boarding Party, or they'll be fodder for the Basking Broodscale and Sadistic Glee combo, or they'll ensure that your opponent optimizes the use of colors in their deck by paying the colorless costs with tokens - in the long run, the value they'll generate will be felt, and let's not even mention what might happen if your opponent have another Writhing Chrysalis in their hand that will soon be looking at you as a 6/7.

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    Finally, Chrysalis has Reach, and one of the inherent aspects of Pauper since the last decade was the importance of Flying in the format.

    Historical staples like Spellstutter Sprite and Kor Skyfisher benefited greatly from being able to attack “over” blockers and create micro-interactions, like Ninja of the Deep Hours to reuse ETBs, not to mention the abundance of new creatures that have come out in the last few years that also made this mechanic important for the competitive Metagame.

    Chrysalis single-handedly changed the dynamic of Flying because now all of these creatures have to deal with it, or hold interactions specifically for it - a problem inherent in other cards that we commonly debate banning, like Krark-Clan Shaman or Basking Broodscale, and also in cards that were banned in Pauper in the past, like All That Glitters.

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    Writhing Chrysalis revitalized Big Mana

    Before the release of Modern Horizons 3, green was by far the weakest color in Pauper, usually serving as support and splash for Weather the Storm in Black Gardens, or occasionally appearing in focused archetypes like Elves or Walls Combo, but traditional Big Mana like the various Cascade decks that emerged with Commander Legends had long since ceased to exist.

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    Writhing Chrysalis helped bring this strategy back by providing a super efficient mid-curve powered by the already known engine of Arbor Elf and Utopia Sprawl, which was also complemented by Malevolent Rumble, bringing this archetype back to the scene as one of the best competitors while also revitalizing other Midranges like Jund Gardens, which had also been declining in the last few months.

    Writhing Chrysalis is the best creature in fair games, but irrelevant against unfair decks

    A creature like Tarmogoyf is only as good as its body in two situations: maintaining attrition in the game and pressuring opponents in non-interactive games. Writhing Chrysalis is excellent in the first case, but terrible in the second.

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    Consider any archetype that is faster and less attrition-oriented, focused on closing a specific combo and/or creating an unbeatable board position. In these cases, Chrysalis' value comes down to being a four-mana 4/5 or a 2/3 that puts two "extra mana" into play - which is a lot of value on its own, but negligible when you don't have to worry about interacting with it.

    But except for Broodscale Combo and, to some extent, Dredge, all other non-interactive archetypes are limited to Tiers 2 or 3 because the quality of answers is much higher than it once was: a Breath Weapon or Drown in Sorrow is an almost instant defeat for Elves, excessive removal is a problem for Walls, and graveyard hate that is already necessary for other archetypes delays many turns for Dredge or completely stops its chances of winning the game - the result is that, although Chrysalis does not excel in these matchups, the Metagame is more hostile to these decks.

    Should Writhing Chrysalis be banned?

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    The answer depends a lot on each player's view on how its insertion into Pauper is beneficial or detrimental to the format's overall health. If we were to weigh the pros and cons of the card as presented above:

    Pros

  • It helped catapult Ramp decks back into the competitive Metagame.

  • It is excellent because Pauper is a format that, except for Broodscale Combo, is battlefield-oriented and attrition-based. But its presence against non-interactive decks is of little relevance.

  • Because it is a natural predator of so many Pauper cards and strategies, it forces the Metagame to adapt and find new ways to build decks.

  • Despite its effectiveness, its presence in the Metagame today is around 18%. As a comparison, the most played card in Pauper is Deadly Dispute, with 34%.

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    Cons

  • It provides too much value with a single card and for a negligible cost that makes it splash-worthy while establishing itself as a mainstay in two of the best Pauper decks today, making it the most played maindeck creature in the format, tied with Refurbished Familiar.

  • It grants Broodscale Combo a fair and efficient backup plan that makes the archetype harder to counter.

  • Creating tokens on cast makes it easier for the opponent to optimize their mana the next turn and makes most fair trades against it unfeasible. Interactions like Toxin Analysis and Krark-Clan Shaman / Crypt Rats are needed to make resource parity fair for the opponent.

  • As a Metagame predator, it undermines a lot of what Pauper took for granted, and it would require an entire format overhaul just to deal with it, even if Affinity and Broodscale were banned today.

    Conclusion

    Given the arguments above, there is no doubt that Writhing Chrysalis is a divisive card in the Pauper community. Like other cards that are pillars of the format, it straddles that famous fine line where it only needs a small push or the right combination in a new expansion to make it too prevalent.

    The support it receives from Malevolent Rumble, the way it entered the Broodscale Combo and made the archetype much more efficient, or the way it is finding its way into other lists that are not Ramp and do not care about Eldrazi make this card an easy target for ban requests.

    My current stance on Pauper is that the format doesn't need bans and the main justification is that removing any card from the format today would mean unbalancing the competitive metagame - yes, there are five or six decks that have been at the top for a long time, but Pauper has always existed this way, even back in the days when the best decks were limited to Faeries, Monarch, Tron and Stompy.

    There are a few cards that we could consider, and they have already been mentioned in other articles or videos. In one of them, for example, I mentioned the possibility of “trading” Deadly Dispute for Prophetic Prism, thus maintaining the manafixing that some lists require without the decks having access to an Ancestral Recall when sacrificing Ichor Wellspring.

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    I also commented on how Krark-Clan Shaman is an absurd limiter for go-wide decks like Elves, but I have to admit that as long as Breath Weapon and similar spells exist, and we don't have access to cards like Imperious Perfect, Elves will continue to have problems with sweepers with or without it, and Shaman plays a fundamental role in holding back threats like Writhing Chrysalis or Basking Broodscale.

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    Another recurring statement in my Pauper content is that banning Basking Broodscale or Sadistic Glee is a matter of when and not if since two-card combos tend to be improved until they reach Metagame dominance - it hasn't happened yet, it could take years to happen because apparently the current Pauper card pool doesn't allow the deck to continue evolving, but it will eventually reach that point, and we should let the hammer fall on it only when that moment comes.

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    As for Writhing Chrysalis, I'm much more interested in the changes it could cause if Broodscale Combo or Deadly Dispute / Krark-Clan Shaman didn't exist than imagining a format without it.

    There are few times when a card is so powerful that it acts as a counter to the entire Metagame just by doing good things and bypassing the format's main answers to it. If the feels bad exists, it's because your deck isn't prepared to deal with it, and if it isn't, it's a good time to consider what changes could be made to get around the Chrysalis factor.

    It may be impossible to imagine, today, what changes to make to deal with Chrysalis without automatically losing to other decks, but it seems more prudent to understand that this is a matter of the Metagame as it stands today rather than directing anger at a single card - and in these moments, it's good to remember that no Metagame lasts forever.

    Thanks for reading!