Norin the Wary is one ofMagic: The Gathering’smore interesting commanders. Its big trait is how it’s rarely on the battlefield, constantly going in and out of it to confuse and burn your opponents.

What makes Norin the Way so unique is the number of ways to build a Commander deck around it. For this guide, we will focus on a hybrid strategy of burn and stax. Its goal is to cut off your opponents from being able to use their decks efficiently while slowly dwindling their life totals by utilizing Norin the Wary’s effect to act as a blink effect.

MTG Genesis Chamber card with the art in the background.

Magus of the Moon

Terror of the Peaks

MTG Norin the Wary card with the art in the background.

Confusion in the Ranks

x28 Mountain

MTG Gimli of the Glittering Caves card with the art in the background.

Valakut, the Molten Pinnacle

War Room

The decklistcontains one planeswalker, 22 creatures, five sorceries, four instants, 18 artifacts, 15 enchantments,and34 lands. Much of the deck either generates tokens, deals burn damage when creatures enter the battlefield, or makes sources deal extra damage.

Key Cards

Norin The Wary

As soon as you cast Norin the Wary,you will likely never see it again. This is because it will spend more time being exiled than it will be on the battlefield. It’s rare for no spells to be cast in Commander, so Norin the Wary will trigger practically every turn.

The only time Norin the Wary might stick around is at the very early stages in the game, where your opponents might not have turn one plays. Take this opportunity to attack with Norin to get in some minor damage.

MTG Krenko, Mob Boss card with the art in the background.

If Norin the Way manages to stay on the battlefield when your turn comes back around,ensure to attack with it before you start casting spells. Otherwise, it will just get exiled again and you’ll miss out on some free damage.

Gimli Of The Glittering Caves

With Norin the Wary constantly going in and out of the battlefield, you’ll have constant triggers of Gimli of the Glittering Caves' effect. In just one turn cycle, you’re able to amass three +1/+1 counterson Gimli, possibly even more if you have other legendary creatures being cast.

Thesecounters are very useful thanks to Gimli’s double strike. If an opponent doesn’t have creatures to block Gimli, they’ll be taking a ton of damage while you get toreap the rewards of getting Treasure tokens.

MTG Grinning Ignus card with the art in the background.

Gimli’s effect to create a Treasure token triggers whenever it deals combat damage to a player. Since it has double strike, both attacks will trigger it, creating two Treasure tokens in total.

Krenko, Mob Boss

Krenko, Mob Boss is goingto be your main way to amass a battlefield​​​​​. It starts off slow, but with just a few Goblin tokens, you’re able to startcreating dozens of Goblin tokensto attack and defend with.

Not only does Krenko help you to create creature tokens, but it alsogives you more triggers for your enter the battlefield burn effects. With how many creatures Krenko can make in one turn, this turns into devastating burn damage, especially with damage doublers and triplers on the battlefield.

MTG Disrupt Decorum card with the art in the background.

Grinning Ignus

Grinning Ignus is a cardthat is easily recastable, allowing you to constantly burn opponents with enter the battlefield triggers. Even in combat, it’s decent, as you’re able to chump block a large creature and bounce it back to your hand so it doesn’t get destroyed and you don’t take damage.

The main attraction for Grinning Ignusis its infinite combo with Birgi, God of Storytelling. This enables you to cast Grinning Ignus as much as you’d like, and in some cases, generate infinite colorless mana and lets you draw your whole deck. Here’s how the combo works.

Prerequisites: Birgi, God of Storytelling on the battlefield. Grinning Ignus either in hand (with enough mana to cast) or on the battlefield (with one red mana available).

Step 1 (only needed if Grinning Ignus isn’t on the battlefield): Cast Grinning Ignus, triggering Birgi and adding a red mana.

Step 2: Activate Grinning Ignus, returning it to the hand, and add two colorless and one red mana to your mana pool.

Step 3: Repeat steps 1 and 2.

Results: Infinite enter the battlefield triggers, infinite colorless mana (if Hazoret’s Monument or Ruby Medallion is on the battlefield), infinite draw and discard (if Hazoret’s Monument is on the battlefield).

How To Play The Deck

A Norin the Wary Commander deckis slowing your opponents down with stax pieces while burning them with permanents that deal damage when creatures enter the battlefield. Norin the Way is near impossible to remove once it hits the battlefield, as it always exiles itself when a spell is cast. This lets you keep triggering your burn permanents.

The deck’s primary source of damage is cards that deal damage when creatures enter, such as Agate Instigator, Terror of the Peaks, and Impact Tremors. Make sure to get these permanents on the battlefield as quickly as possible.

A lot of thedamage that the deck does is rather minor. While it can add up slowly, it gives your opponents time to find their answers to your stax pieces. To help, you want cards like Fiery Emancipation or City on Fire, which will make your burn damage output much higher.

The deckcan take a while to win with, as it is not at all an aggressive deck. It’svery passive​​​​​, slowing your opponents down with stax pieces such as Smoke, Blood Moon, and Ruination. While your opponents try to deal with those, you slowly amass a battlefield while dealing burn damage.

Theprimary win condition of the deck is winning through burn damage. There aren’t a ton of powerful creatures in the deck, so combat is not likely to be a path to victory (though it’s not impossible). Combat becomes stronger over time if Urabrask’s Forge has a lot of counters on it, orKrenko, Mob Boss can generate a ton of tokens.

Thebiggest downside of the deck is its likelihood to become a public enemy. As soon as you play your first stax piece, your opponents will likely focus on you to take you out before you can interrupt them more. Due to the deck’s speed and low defenses outside of stax pieces, there unfortunately isn’t much you can do about this. As such,it’s best to wait to cast stax pieces until you’re more preparedfor your opponents' offense.