Outlaws of Thunder Junction Most Wanted Review and Upgrade Guide

Outlaws of Thunder Junction is here and we're taking a look at the Most Wanted Commander deck, to see how we can improve it


Published: April 13, 2024 10:00 AM /

By:


Art crop of Olivia, Opulent Outlaw with the text 'Outlaws of Thunder Junction Commander Deck: Most Wanted Review and Upgrades' written along the left side. Olivia in the picture is standing above an adoring crowd, flying in the sky with her Western inspired hat as fans throw treasures in the air

It’s that time, another set release is here, and new commander decks along with it. This month, we welcome Outlaws of Thunder Junction to the Magic world, with its pre-release date set for April 12th. To celebrate, we have a review and upgrade guide for a brand new pre-constructed Commander deck: Most Wanted.

Most Wanted Commander Review

As always, we start with a look at the potential commanders for the deck that have been included. There is our face commander, and an alternate commander, as well as a reprint of a legend in our color identity.

Olivia, Opulant Outlaw, Vihaan, Goldwaker, and Queen Marchesa

Our face commander is Olivia, Opulant Outlaw. It’s a fresh look for Olivia, as she doesn’t care about vampires this time. Instead, she cares about Outlaws, a batch made up of assassins, mercenaries, pirates, rogues, and warlocks. She converts them damaging players into treasure, and treasures into team buffs, serving as a solid engine for everything Most Wanted cares about.

Our alternate commander is Magic’s first three-color dwarf Vihaan, Goldwaker. Vihaan gives Outlaws haste, and vigilance, while also turning treasures into 3/3 Construct Assassin creatures on your turn. While potentially more interesting to build around, his inability to make treasure makes him worse at leading this deck.

Our last option for a commander is the reprinted Queen Marchesa. While a decent inclusion, she isn’t really suited to being our commander, as her abilities are less a match with the deck.

With all of that said, I am sticking with Olivia as our commander here.

Most Wanted Review

In Most Wanted, we have ten new cards, as well as a few Outlaws of Thunder Junction cards, and the rest are all reprints. It comes together for a coherent two-part plan: Outlaws and Treasure.

Angelic Sell Sword, Graywater's Fixer, Back in Town

There are a lot of Outlaws (assassin, mercenary, pirate, rogue, or warlock) who already care about or make treasures, so there’s a high amount of synergy here. The choice to use a batch rather than a new creature type means Most Wanted can draw on Magic’s 30 years of cards in it, and for upgrades.

Many strong treasure cards were omitted from the deck, which is a shame. Some of them are almost glaring oversights, especially when considering that the deck has mediocre reprint value. There are maybe 7 cards with a value of $5 in Most Wanted, and only one that reaches $10. Command Beacon, while needing a reprint, isn’t a great fit for the deck as Olivia is a lowish-cost commander.

Academy Manufactor, Command Beacon, and Rain of Riches
Command Beacon is the most pricey reprint in the deck.

Overall Most Wanted has a fair amount of synergy, but has some odd omissions from it, and is lacking in reprint value for the deck. This leaves us a lot of room to make improvements though!

Most Wanted Upgrades

With Most Wanted we’re wanting Outlaws, and Treasure elements here, so we’re looking for cards that fit into our plan of doing both well. Note: I’m excluding Dockside Extortionist, as that $90 card has extorted enough money from people. If you have it, run it here as a great fit.

Kellogg, Dangerous Mind

Kellogg, Dangerous Mind
Let’s start off with a few Universes Beyond creatures that fit perfectly into Most Wanted. Kelogg is perhaps the one card I would first recommend to folks here, as he’s cheap, and a perfect fit for what you want to do as an aggressive outlaw, who makes treasure and makes use of them.

Forge, Neverwinter Charlatan

Forge, Neverwinter Charlatan
From the D&D movie Secret Lair, Forge, Neverwinter Charlatan makes treasures when creatures are sacrificed, has evasion, and grows based on how many treasures you have, making him great. Wait what’s that? A protection ability that even triggers his treasure making too? Perfect.

The Master, Multiplied

The Master, Multiplied
Our final Universes Beyond creature, The Master, Multiplied is a different pick, but he is an Outlaw as a Rogue (and an outlaw Time Lord at that). The key here is that he has myriad, which is great for hitting all your opponents to trigger Olivia multiple times in a turn.

Revel in Riches

Revel in Riches
A definitive treasure card, Revel in Riches can make you a lot of treasures, and provides an alternate win condition.

Black Market Connections

Black Market Connections
Doing everything you could possibly want from a card in this deck, you are left wondering, why isn’t Black Market Connections already in Most Wanted.

Grim Hireling

Grim Hireling
This is one of the oddest omissions, as Grim Hireling is a perfect fit for the deck, as a rogue who makes treasure when you damage players, and can use treasures as removal.

Xorn

Xorn
An Elemental from Adventures in the Forgotten Realms, Xorn makes you an additional treasure each time you make one. While not an outlaw, the level of synergy with the treasure side of things is too big to ignore.

Hellspur Posse Boss

Hellspur Posse Boss
From the main Outlaws of Thunder Junction set, this Posse Boss gives your Outlaws haste, and brings with him a bit of help to push the pace forward.

Swashbuckler Extraordinaire

Swashbuckler Extraordinaire
This swashbuckling rogue lets you give double strike to your Outlaws, letting them make more treasure for you, fight better in battle, and do so for only three mana

Marionette Master

Marionette Master
Our last addition idea here isn’t an Outlaw, but it does maximize treasures, and creature growth. With Marionette Master each treasure sacrificed drains an opponent for a potentially growing amount of damage, giving you some finishing oomph

Most Wanted Cuts

To fit these cards in, we need to make some cuts. While there are a number of options for cutting, here are ten options I see for removal:

These aren’t all bad cards, but not ones that are all strong fits for the deck, and are easy enough to move on from.

That's how I Most Wanted, so share what changes you would make in the comments below, or check out oour last deck tech: Mutant Menace.

Have a tip, or want to point out something we missed? Leave a Comment or e-mail us at tips@techraptor.net


Don Parsons
| Senior Writer

A longtime lover of speculative fiction, in almost all its forms, Don joined TechRaptor in 2014 on a whim sending in an application as he was looking for… More about Don