2024’s EDHighlights - Kastral, the Windcrested

by
Cooper Gottfried
Cooper Gottfried
2024’s EDHighlights -  Kastral, the Windcrested
Kastral, the WindcrestedKastral, the Windcrested | art by Jesper Ejsing

Early birds and night owls

Hello there! Welcome once again to EDHighlights, the mini-series where I build decks for the year's most popular commander for each color combination. As 2024's set releases have finished, I'll take a look at the most popular releases from the past year. 

I've built a deck for each monocolored commander (you can find those at this link), and I'm now moving on to the two-color commanders. We'll be kicking things off this week with an Azorius deck, and our first kindred deck in the series. This deck will be led by… Kastral, the WindcrestedKastral, the Windcrested!

Kastral, the Windcrested

I love Bloomburrow, I love birds, and I love creature-heavy Azorius decks. This is the first deck in the series that I'm actually considering buying in paper. Needless to say, I'm pretty excited about KastralKastral.

KastralKastral is, surprisingly, a bluejay (according to the MTGWiki). Given her name, I would have assumed she's a kestrel, but I guess that the fine folks making cards thought that would be too easy. But, whatever type of bird she may be, she's leading this deck. Let's get brewing!

It's a bird! It's a plane!

KastralKastral is a 4/5 Bird Scout with flying for 5 mana, and she has an ability that gives us a benefit whenever a Bird bonks one of our opponents. When one of our Birds connects we get to do one of three things:

  1. Put a Bird from our hand or graveyard onto the battlefield with a finality counter on it.
  2. Put a +1/+1 counter on each of our Birds.
  3. Draw a card.

All of these are great, and this deck will work best when we're able to get to make this choice more than once each turn. As for this deck's small twist, we'll be making the most of both KastralKastral's text and our other typal synergies. Every creature in this deck will be a bird!

A family that welcomes birds of all feathersA family that welcomes birds of all feathers

Birds of a feather flock together, and Magic's Birds are no different. There are a few cards from both recent and not-so-recent Magic history that work well when we have a board full of Birds. Keeper of the Nine GalesKeeper of the Nine Gales can act as a repeatable bounce spell, for the low cost of tapping two birds.

Another old one, Kangee, Aerie KeeperKangee, Aerie Keeper is SLIGHTLY janky but can act as a great anthem and mana sink in the late game. And, the much newer KnightfisherKnightfisher will make a ton of tokens over the course of the game (and it's name alone makes it worth a slot in this deck).

Keeper of the Nine Gales
Kangee, Aerie Keeper
Knightfisher

There's also Crookclaw ElderCrookclaw Elder, which turns each of our creatures into card draw if we'd rather hold them back in combat. We can even negate its high mana cost with our commander's ability, making this avian more advantageous. Similarly, Seaside HavenSeaside Haven can sacrifice our birds for cards.

This card is particularly good with our commander in play, because we'll be able to reanimate any birds we throw into the bin. And, although five mana is admittedly a bit much for this effect, MurmurationMurmuration has found a slot too. It makes Storm CrowStorm Crows, buffs our birds, and is just overall a really fun card to slam on the field.

Crookclaw Elder
Seaside Haven
Murmuration

We've got other, non-Bird-focused flying-synergies too. There's classic anthems like Empyrean EagleEmpyrean Eagle, anthems that get even better if we can put them into the graveyard like Kangee's LieutenantKangee's Lieutenant, and even the second appearance of KangeeKangee as an anthem.

Empyrean Eagle
Kangee's Lieutenant
Kangee, Sky Warden

There's also cost reducers, like Watcher of the SpheresWatcher of the Spheres and Warden of Evos IsleWarden of Evos Isle, and protection for our board in the form of Unsettled MarinerUnsettled Mariner. Overall, birds (and some of their changeling friends) provide a wide array of effects for our lofty battlefield.

Watcher of the Spheres
Warden of Evos Isle
Unsettled Mariner

Maintaining brilliant plumageMaintaining brilliant plumage

One important thing to note about Kastral is that, while she can cheat out creatures from our hand or recur them from our graveyard, those creatures enter with finality counters on them. If they would die, instead they're just exiled. So, like any good Commander player, I'm going to do my best to get around that.

First, let's talk about the deck's blink subtheme. There's a few cards that really stand out here, like Gossip's TalentGossip's Talent. This card fills our graveyard, lets our smaller creatures punch through in combat to trigger our commander, and can blink our creatures to get rid of their finality counters.

Just an absolute all-star in the deck. Meneldor, Swift SaviorMeneldor, Swift Savior is great too, it's a bird that can blink one of our other birds every turn. Even though it's only a 3/3 for four mana, its ability makes up for those lackluster stats.

And, finally, Splash PortalSplash Portal can blink a creature and replace itself in our hand for just one mana. If it weren't a sorcery, this would be in contention as one of the best blink spells in Magic.

Gossip's Talent
Meneldor, Swift Savior
Splash Portal

As an added bonus, this blink subtheme will allow our creatures to re-trigger their enters triggers, meaning that Scouting HawkScouting Hawk, Irregular CohortIrregular Cohort and Aerial ExtortionistAerial Extortionist and all our other creatures with ETB effects become even better.

Scouting Hawk
Irregular Cohort
Aerial Extortionist

There are two other interesting ways to get rid of finality counters: the recently-revivified Power ConduitPower Conduit and recently-released Senu, Keen-Eyed ProtectorSenu, Keen-Eyed Protector. Power ConduitPower Conduit can straight up remove the finality counters while making a creature stronger, and SenuSenu actually WANTS to be exiled. Then, admittedly less interestingly, staples like EphemerateEphemerate are here too,

Power Conduit
Senu, Keen-Eyed Protector
Ephemerate

Storm crow descending…Storm crow descending…

Like any good typal deck, Kastral and Co. will be making use of some less-type-specific typal-synergy cards. Kindred DiscoveryKindred Discovery shines here, just like it does in most kindred decks, and puts in extra work when we cheat out a feathered friend with our commander.

I'm also a big fan of the two Bloomburrow village lands that slot into the deck. Lilypad VillageLilypad Village can help to fill the graveyard with more targets for KastralKastral, and Lupinflower VillageLupinflower Village can put more birds directly into our hand in a pinch.

Kindred Discovery
Lilypad Village
Lupinflower Village

With that bird's-eye view of the deck, let's take a look at the decklist…


2024's EDHighlights - Kastral, the Windcrested

View on Archidekt

Commander (1)

Creatures (42)

Enchantments (4)

Lands (33)

Sorceries (5)

Instants (10)

Artifacts (5)

Kastral, the Windcrested

 

 

Everybody's heard about the bird!

That's it for this week's article! As someone who does research on migratory species conservation, and as someone who just loves birds, this was such a fun deck to build. My favorite Bird in this deck is probably Harrier StrixHarrier Strix. It's a 1/1 flyer for just one mana, and it can help us filter for more cards if we have extra mana.

In real life, though, my favorite bird is the Pine Siskin. I research these little guys as part of my job, and I think they're just cool looking. What's your favorite bird (in real life or in Magic)? I'd love to know, so let me know in the comments below. I'll see you all next week!

Cooper Gottfried

Cooper is a student at Brandeis University, where he’s Editor in Chief of its community newspaper, The Brandeis Hoot. He’s played Magic for a few years, starting in earnest when he was gifted a precon during the summer of 2022. His favorite Magic card is Denry Klin, Editor in Chief, and he bets you can't guess why.

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