Last updated on October 27, 2025

Blood Artist (Double Masters 2022) | Illustration by LA Draws
Black is the color of darkness, evil, and death in Magic, but also ambition and indulgence. The creatures that manifest from black mana embody these characteristics. From sewer vermin and rotting zombie corpses to nefarious demons and blood-sucking vampires, black has a large scope of iconic creatures.
Today we’re exploring the best of the best. Ready to take a look into the abyss? Let's get into it!
What Are Black Creatures in MTG?

Metamorphosis Fanatic | Illustration by Andreas Zafiratos
I’m defining black creatures as creature cards with a mono-black color identity. This list will have a focus on Commander and account for the current state of the format. If you want to focus on the legendary mono-black commanders, you might like this list.
Let’s go over some exclusions first. These cards only have black in their color identity. Sorry Toxrill, the Corrosive, we all know you’re a Dimir card at heart. I’ve excluded banned cards like Griselbrand as well.
Finally, I’m excluding black creatures whose relevance is tied to non-Commander formats. Dark Confidant, Hypnotic Specter, Grief, and Cauldron Familiar all have historical relevance across different Constructed formats, but don’t have a meaningful impact in Commander. This is a list of the best current black creatures, not the best of all time.
Even with these restrictions, it was hard to narrow this list down, and we’ve got plenty of heavy-hitting black creatures to discuss.
#74. Stitcher’s Supplier
Graveyard-centric decks are ecstatic to mill six cards for a single mana. Stitcher's Supplier does just that in installments, usually providing a chump block or disposable sac piece in between.
#73. Shriekmaw
I’ve heard old-school Magic players refer to cards like Shriekmaw as “187 creatures”, 187 being the penal code for murder in California. Shriekmaw’s cheap evoke ability makes it more flexible than something like Nekrataal, although Ravenous Chupacabra is also in the conversation.
#72. Osteomancer Adept
Bloomburrow‘s Osteomancer Adept provides a creature-exclusive Underworld Breach effect, which promises to be broken. Sure, it’s not the reliable combo engine Breach is, but you can get plenty of value from this black squirrel. Since you can forage with Food tokens or cards from your graveyard, you don’t even need to be too self-mill centric.
#71. Qarsi Revenant
We’ve come a long way since Vampire Nighthawk. How about a Nighthawk that turns something else into one when it dies, or when you incidentally mill it or discard it? Qarsi Revenant is peek 2020s midrange slop, great in some match-ups and weak in very few.
#70. Mikaeus, the Unhallowed
Mikaeus, the Unhallowed was an early two-card combo boogieman in Commander. Combined with Triskelion and later Walking Ballista, this “Mike & Ike” combo usually ends games on the spot. Mikaeus isn’t quite as popular now, but just as potent as ever.
#69. Custodi Lich
Monarch transforms unexciting cards into Commander playables. Custodi Lich gives you the crown and eats a creature of an opponent's choice on ETB, then does it again if you ever manage to steal The Monarch back.
#68. Sepulchral Primordial
The Gatecrash Primordials have all seen casual Commander play at one time or another. Yes, even Sylvan Primordial, which was legal up until 2014. Most of them sit in the background now, but Sepulchral Primordial is still capable of warping games. It’s like three Puppeteer Cliques in one, and kudos to you if you manage to snatch a flicker effect with its ETB.
#67. Metamorphosis Fanatic
Metamorphosis Fanatic was designed to be broken, and it’ll feel that way when you pull off its miracle cost. The key here is that it’s not even that bad of a card to just cast straight-up, but you’ll go out of your way for some topdeck manipulation to get it for cheap.
#66. Cavalier of Night
Cavalier of Night is a Bone Splinters/Unearth hybrid, and one-third large lifelinking threat. Add that all together for a great board-breaker if you can manage the triple-black casting cost.
#65. Cemetery Desecrator + Noxious Gearhulk
The choice between Cemetery Desecrator or Noxious Gearhulk is a perfect “why not both?” scenario. Desecrator provides graveyard hate, planeswalker removal, and triggers a second time on death. Gearhulk gains life, hits creatures of any size, and has artifact synergies. Either way you get a menace creature that pops a threat on ETB.
#64. Syr Konrad, the Grim
Syr Konrad, the Grim damages your opponents for creatures dying, creatures being discarded, creatures leaving your graveyard, creatures being flipped over, creatures having drinks spilled on them, creatures wearing hats in their art—you get it. It’s a real kitchen sink of an effect, and an uncontested Konrad means a swift end to the game.
#63. Bloodthirsty Conqueror
They staple the Sanguine Bond effect to other cards fairly often, but they rarely reuse the Exquisite Blood text. That makes Bloodthirsty Conqueror less replaceable for decks that want to pull off the Sanguine Bond combo, and it’s not too shabby as a giant lifelinking vampire when you play it fairly.
#62. Valgavoth, Terror Eater
Valgavoth, Terror Eater nailed the big bad villain feel, adding a new busted reanimator target to decks that aren’t interested in casting their creatures. It has a ridiculously costly ward ability and dominates any board it lands on, and it’s worthy of all the worldbuilding that took place around it in Duskmourn.
#61. Vito, Thorn of the Dusk Rose
Vito, Thorn of the Dusk Rose ties Sanguine Bond to a 3-drop creature. It’s just as much of a combo piece alongside Exquisite Blood, and Vito’s activated ability can get the party started immediately.
#60. Geralf’s Messenger
Undying and persist are notoriously exploitable mechanics. If you can remove the +1/+1 counters from Geralf's Messenger, you can sacrifice it repeatably and keep triggering undying. This works with any undying creature, but Messenger’s ETB ability turns this combo into a wincon.
#59. God-Eternal Bontu
God-Eternal Bontu lets you cash in superfluous permanents for extra cards. It’s also a scary threat on the battlefield and threatens to come back a few turns later if it dies or gets exiled.
#58. Herald of Anguish
Black artifact decks are somewhat niche, but Herald of Anguish is an absolute house in those decks. It comes down for as little as 2 mana, chews through your opponents’ hands, and threatens to take out small creatures. It complements the Necron Dynasties precon perfectly.
#57. Lord Skitter, Sewer King
Lord Skitter, Sewer King from Wilds of Eldraine does its best work as a source of tokens, perhaps for a token strategy or as continuous sacrifice fodder in aristocrat strategies.
The incidental graveyard hate really pulls its weight, too. It can be painful to find room in the 99 for cards like Relic of Progenitus and Soul-Guide Lantern that interact with the graveyard, so I highly value cards that happen to eat away at that resource.
#56. Marionette Master
Marionette Master is a huge beneficiary of the prevalence of trinkety artifact tokens like Treasures and Clues. Pump its power with Cranial Plating and your opponents start dropping real fast.
#55. Primaris Eliminator
Primaris Eliminator can either pick on one threat or Massacre a single player’s board. Just don’t target yourself and you’ll get good results from this card.
#54. Author of Shadows
Author of Shadows is another card that I don’t see often enough relative to how good it is. It annihilates your opponents’ graveyards and snags a spell for later use. Plus, it’s a shade warlock. How cool is that?
#53. Nether Traitor
Ignore shadow on Nether Traitor, because this is a combo creature through and through. These combos often involve Phyrexian Altar, which will come up again later with some of the best black combo enablers.
#52. Vilis, Broker of Blood
Your pain is Vilis, Broker of Blood’s gain. Losing life draws you cards, whether that’s from Vilis’s activated ability or simply getting hit by a creature. Eight-drops need to overperform to justify inclusion in your deck, but the Broker delivers.
#51. Erebos, God of the Dead
Barring opponents from gaining life can sometimes shut them out completely. That’s only part of what Erebos, God of the Dead offers. You also get the Greed ability, and we all know Greed is good. Erebos can also come to life and battle with enough devotion, although I’d advise against turning your Theros gods into creatures too often.
#50. Aclazotz, Deepest Betrayal / Temple of the Dead
I love big, dumb value engines that top the curve of midrange decks, so I’m pleased to slot Aclazotz, Deepest Betrayal in decks when I can.
This black bat god works best in Commander decks that care about discarding cards but holds its own in any deck that focuses on value-generating two-for-ones. Slowly stripping your opponents of their resources and getting the occasional card or Bat token provides plenty of value.
And even if your opponent kills Aclazotz, Deepest Betrayal, you get some rare black ramp from Temple of the Dead and the ever-present threat that Aclazotz may rise again.
#49. Unstoppable Slasher
This sort of life-halving ability rarely shows up on a creature this aggressive. I mean, people still think Quietus Spike is playable. Coming back from the ‘yard pushes Unstoppable Slasher over the top, though fun fact: If you put a -1/-1 counter or stun counter on it (or any counter, for that matter), then kill it, it won’t come back.
#48. Necron Deathmark
Regardless of whether you think Cemetery Desecrator or Noxious Gearhulk is better, I’m confident that Necron Deathmark is an upgrade over either. Flash tremendously changes the way a card like this plays out, and it comes with some free incidental mill. You can thank Warhammer 40k for busted cards like this.
#47. Poxwalkers
Poxwalkers is obnoxiously persistent. Something as simple as casting your commander lets you bring this back, where the deathtouch body happily trades off to repeat the cycle.
#46. Plaguecrafter
This slot goes out to all the universal edict creatures, which includes Fleshbag Marauder and Merciless Executioner. Plaguecrafter tends to be the best of the bunch since it can snipe planeswalkers or attack players’ hands if they have nothing to sacrifice.
#45. Creeping Bloodsucker
Creeping Bloodsucker might not look like much, but I assure you that it’s one of the strongest role-players among black creatures.
The trick is playing this black vampire in decks that care about the damage or lifegain. This card notably gains 3 life, which is the threshold for many lifegain payoffs, including The Gaffer, Sorin of House Markov, and The Book of Exalted Deeds. As for that triple ping, look no further than something like Ob Nixilis, Captive Kingpin.
Since this black creature deals damage instead of losing life, it works with cards like Curiosity and Tor Wauki the Younger, plus any number of damage doublers. This card’s value greatly exceeds its mana cost if you put it in the right shell.
#44. Overlord of the Balemurk
The Overlord cycle is amazing all-around, and Overlord of the Balemurk proves its worth across multiple formats. Imagine if Ransack the Lab just became a random 5/5 creature on a later turn with no further mana investment. Impending is sweet, and I hope to see it more in the future.
#43. Emperor of Bones
Emperor of Bones carries the coveted Modern Horizons 3 set symbol, so I don’t really have to say much to convince you that it’s good. This is a cool take on graveyard hate and reanimation, and it gives your +1/+1 counters a unique angle.
#42. Grave Titan
There’s a real debate as to whether or not Grave Titan holds up in present-day EDH. It’s definitely fallen from a staple inclusion to a mere option, but army-in-a-can cards like this can still close out games.
#41. Mastermind Plum
For better or for worse, pretty much any deck can access a hoard of Treasure tokens. Mastermind Plum supplies those decks with an excellent payoff: black card draw. In the right deck, perhaps Prosper, Tome-Bound or Ognis, the Dragon's Lash, this black wizard makes every spell you cast cantrip. That level of card advantage wins grindy games.
#40. Elegy Acolyte
Here’s another midrange monster from 2025. Elegy Acolyte is reminiscent of Gix, Yawgmoth Praetor with a token-making ability. Void just isn’t hard to enable, and the rewards here are way more generous than they need to be. Lifelink is a welcome addition, but this card really didn’t need it.
#39. Morbid Opportunist
Morbid Opportunist blows my mind as an uncommon because it holds up when compared to rares like Midnight Reaper or Grim Haruspex. It doesn’t have the same ceiling, but it triggers off opposing creatures dying, which results in a higher floor.
#38. Massacre Girl
If you see the word “massacre” on a black card you know something’s about to go down. It just so happens that with Massacre Girl, everything’s going down. It usually only takes a single X/1 on board to ensure that Massacre Girl’s the last creature left standing.
#37. Jadar, Ghoulcaller of Nephalia
Jadar, Ghoulcaller of Nephalia is a top-notch token generator. You can’t stockpile the decayed zombies the same way Bitterblossom would, but all it takes is a sac outlet to get your money’s worth. Jadar basically pays for a sacrifice cost once per turn and replaces that sacrificed token free of charge.
#36. Carrion Feeder + Viscera Seer
Carrion Feeder and Viscera Seer are some of black’s best sacrifice outlets, being only 1 mana each and providing some additional benefits. They’re both integral additions to aristocrat decks.
#35. Umbral Collar Zealot
We’re back in the age of good free sac outlets, and Umbral Collar Zealot stands out as a pushed version of this archetypal creature. It has great stats and an unrestricted sacrifice effect that extends to artifacts, which lets it cover a ton of bases for aristocrats decks.
#34. Warren Soultrader
Another free sac outlet, MH3-style. A sac outlet that produces mana seems like a recipe for disaster, so I have to imagine they were aware of the combo potential with Warren Soultrader when they printed it. It’s even a zombie for Gravecrawler! Add your favorite Blood Artist variant and you’ve got a win.
#33. Razaketh, the Foulblooded
Given the choice between Razaketh, the Foulblooded and Vilis, Broker of Blood, I’d rather have Razaketh’s tutoring ability. As long as you have life to spare and creatures to sac, you can tutor as much as you see fit.
#32. Vindictive Lich
There are so many moments where you can dangle Vindictive Lich over your opponents’ heads and threaten to clean them out of resources. It’s never the best card in your deck, and yet it’s always a problem on board.
#31. Sidisi, Undead Vizier
Exploit makes Sidisi, Undead Vizier trickier to use than Rune-Scarred Demon, but the sentiment is the same. Any creature that can unconditionally tutor as an ETB is going to make rounds in Commander, and Sidisi’s as good as they come.
#30. Hoarding Broodlord
Demonic Tutor happens to be a very good card. What if it came stapled to a giant dragon? Hoarding Broodlord is pretty expensive, but you get excellent value from it. Black’s no stranger to casting spells from exile, especially when paired with red, so this black creature works as a tutor and potential ramp target. Convoke takes the edge of the daunting mana value.
#29. Massacre Wurm
There’s that “massacre” word again. As much as we like to think of Commander as a format full of over-the-top battlecruisers and combos, the reality is that most boards are cluttered with trinkets and dorks. Enter Massacre Wurm, which has been devastating token decks and small creatures since its first printing in 2011.
#28. Ophiomancer
Ophiomancer is a top-tier token generator that excels in every deck except, ironically, snake decks. As long as you can make use of the extra snake token each turn, Ophiomancer’s happy to charm out another one on the very next upkeep. When you’re not sacrificing them, these deathtouch creatures make for surprisingly good blockers.
#27. Gonti, Lord of Luxury
Gonti, Lord of Luxury isn’t the first creature with this type of ability, but it is the progenitor of the “steal and cast with any color of mana” text we see so often these days. It's often refered to as “the Gonti ability”, and even now it still feels so, so good to resolve the aetherborn.
Black Cat, Cunning Thief is a supercharged Gonti that pushes up the curve but has double the output. The ability to grab lands is a nice bonus here, too, which makes this Cunning Thief a realistic alternative to Gonti in the command zone.
#26. Sadistic Hypnotist
Sadistic Hypnotist is great for two things: keeping your opponents’ hands empty and making your friends leave. If you want to win games of Magic at the expense of your social life, give Hypnotist a spin.
#25. Marionette Apprentice
MH3, blah, blah, blah. There’s an argument for Marionette Apprentice as the best Blood Artist of all time, and even if it’s not number one, it’s towards the top. As with Umbral Collar Zealot, the fact that this keys off artifacts (while it also makes one with fabricate) opens up so many more opportunities to play it.
#24. Barrowgoyf
The lhurgoyfs from the Graveyard Overdrive precon were no joke. Which set was that deck from again? Oh right, MH3. This is another over-tuned 3-drop that just embarrasses other creatures at the same point on the curve, and it can connect in combat to basically draw you a card with selection each turn.
#23. Archon of Cruelty
I like to joke that Archon of Cruelty is Kroxa, Titan of Death's Hunger and Uro, Titan of Nature's Wrath all bundled up into one card. The mana cost keeps this in check, but no one ever intends to play one of the best black ETB cards the fair way.
#22. K’rrik, Son of Yawgmoth
Yawgmoth is a household name when you’re talking about black creatures. Turns out the Father of Machines left behind some offspring, including K’rrik, Son of Yawgmoth. This card lets you substitute life for mana via Phyrexian mana, a tradeoff you should always have your eye out for in Commander.
#21. Braids, Arisen Nightmare
When optimized, Braids, Arisen Nightmare is a real terror to play against. If you can land it early with a Dark Ritual or similar ramp effect, you’ll start out-carding everyone and pressuring life totals immediately.
#20. Krav, the Unredeemed
When you’re sacrificing creatures, you’re usually hoping to gain life, draw cards, or grow a threat on board. Krav, the Unredeemed does all of the above and can sacrifice itself in a pinch. This card is so strong I’d look to run Regna, the Redeemer for no reason other than being a personal tutor for Krav.
#19. Mirkwood Bats
Forget The One Ring. Forget Orcish Bowmasters. Mirkwood Bats is the true most fearsome card to come out of Lord of the Rings. Pretty much every deck creates and sacrifices tokens even if it’s not trying to, and this is a legitimate wincon in decks focused on the strategy.
#18. Mindslicer
Mindslicer falls into the same category of miser cards as Sadistic Hypnotist. It’s slightly easier to use, but leaves you hellbent as well. Have a plan when this happens, and expect retaliation from the rest of the table.
#17. Gwenom, Remorseless

Bolas's Citadel in the command zone is a phenomenal tagline. It’s vulnerable for a turn before it threatens to win the game, though that’s nothing a little Lightning Greaves can’t get going faster. It’s one of the better cards to come out of Marvel’s Spider-Man.
#16. Bloodghast
If you’re looking for a recursive body and you play lands in your deck, look no further than Bloodghast. This creature comes back into play on any land drop and pairs especially well with fetch lands.
#15. Gravecrawler
While I believe Bloodghast is a better recursive creature, I consider Gravecrawler a more universally powerful card, mostly due to its obscene combo potential. It’s one of the easiest cards to combo with Phyrexian Altar, which is one extra zombie away from a repeatable loop.
#14. Grim Hireling
A single hit from any creature represents two Treasure tokens from Grim Hireling, and this compounds with each opponent you hit each combat. Those tokens can be used to pick off creatures, or better yet, cashed in for mana to cast game-winning spells.
#13. Kokusho, the Evening Star
Kokusho, the Evening Star was banned during the early stages of EDH and later re-evaluated and banned only as a commander. It’s since been unbanned, but don’t let that fool you into thinking it’s any less powerful. One Kokusho death represents a 20-point life-swing, and Kokusho almost always comes back for seconds.
#12. Pitiless Plunderer
One of Magic's best pirates, Pitiless Plunderer snuck through the cracks before the era of “this ability triggers once each turn” rules text. An early proponent of the Treasure mechanic, the lack of limitations on this ability makes it a cornerstone of numerous infinite combos.
#11. Gix, Yawgmoth Praetor
It took Gix over 30 years to get a proper card, and no, I don’t count that weird Gix Vanguard thing. Gix, Yawgmoth Praetor does the character justice, evoking Edric, Spymaster of Trest, but hurting people for drawing cards. The activated ability looks silly but exchanges your hand for a shot at some goodies from an opponent’s library.
#10. Sheoldred, the Apocalypse
Sheoldred, the Apocalypse proves that you don’t need a lot of words to make a powerful Magic card. Deathtouch is hilariously irrelevant on Sheoldred since the draw-and-drain ability and the oversized body already make the card a menace to deal with. Sheoldred actively punishes opponents for drawing cards to find an answer.
#9. Crypt Ghast
Crypt Ghast was one of the first cards I recognized as a “kill-on-sight” creature. It still holds up as a black mana doubler, and I’m always satisfied with how effective extort is in multiplayer games.
#8. Sephiroth, Fabled SOLDIER / Sephiroth, One-Winged Angel
Here's what aristocrats looks like these days. The strategy has always been defined by frail creatures and finnicky sac outlets, but Sephiroth, Fabled SOLDIER proves you can push the sacrifice package further. The front side is already a burly sac-draw engine, but Sephiroth, One-Winged Angel closes out games in a hurry, if you're able to transform it.
#7. Gray Merchant of Asphodel
Gray Merchant of Asphodel made its appearance in the original Theros set and has never stopped being a relevant Commander card since. It’s one of the most common wincons in black decks and often stabilizes your life total when it doesn’t flat-out win the game.
#6. Dauthi Voidwalker
Dauthi Voidwalker invalidates graveyard strategies, attacks through just about anything thanks to shadow, and trades out for a card of your choice when the time is right. It can’t block, which is a minor downside compared to the long list of benefits it provides.
#5. Opposition Agent
Opposition Agent, Jeweled Lotus, and Hullbreacher form a trifecta of offensive cards from Commander Legends. “Oppo” isn’t nearly as bad as the other two, but leads to some agonizing gameplay moments. Not-so-fun fact: Did you know you can look at a player’s hand while controlling them with Opposition Agent?
#4. Yawgmoth, Thran Physician
The Father himself makes his appearance. Yawgmoth, Thran Physician is one of the best sac outlets, discard outlets, and repeatable proliferate effects out there, which all adds up to one of the best black creatures in Magic.
#3. Tergrid, God of Fright / Tergrid’s Lantern
Players fear an active Tergrid, God of Fright, as they should. Sacrificing permanents and discarding cards becomes a liability, and you’d be surprised how often you take these actions with no coercion from the Tergrid player. Tergrid's Lantern doesn’t come up often, but I wouldn’t turn down the extra utility.
#2. Orcish Bowmasters
Lord of the Rings' Orcish Bowmasters tips past powerful into oppressive. Good Commander decks rely on tons of card advantage and this tiny little creature punishes that. And playing small creatures. While providing sacrifice fodder!
It’s the complete package, disruption dialed all the way up to a win condition. In any format where this is legal, you should fear the Bowmasters. Who doesn't love one-shotting a player in EDH by casting this on turn 2 and Wheel of Fortune on turn 3…?
#1. Blood Artist
Blood Artist has become the blueprint for so many similar creatures, but none are quite as effective as the OG itself. Zulaport Cutthroat is a close second, but Blood Artist triggering on any creature dying puts it firmly into first place, making it the backbone of any aristocrats strategy.
Best Black Creature Payoffs & Enablers
Black creature-based decks can branch out into many different strategies. One of the most popular is sacrifice-themed decks, often dubbed “aristocrats” decks. These decks look to flood the board with expendable creatures, pair them with cheap sac outlets, and use Blood Artist-type effects to convert this into damage. Creatures like Carrion Feeder and Viscera Seer thrive in these strategies.
Devotion lends itself better to black decks than it does most other mono-color decks. Between Gray Merchant of Asphodel, Erebos, God of the Dead, and K'rrik, Son of Yawgmoth, there are plenty of creatures that demand a heavy devotion to black.
Black creatures also tend to offer some of the best ETB removal. Shriekmaw, Noxious Gearhulk, and Necron Deathmark are only a few of the “187” creatures mentioned here, and they’re all capable of building a board state while picking off opposing threats.
If you’re looking for payoffs that explicitly call out black creatures, you can search up lords and anthem effects that boost them. Bad Moon is a super-basic effect, but you have alternative options like Ascendant Evincar, or any of the black-adjacent Liege creatures like Ashenmoor Liege. Balthor the Defiled brings all black (and red) creatures back into play, if you’re interested in mass reanimation.
Sac outlets in general make good use of black fodder, but Flare of Malice specifically demands a nontoken black creature to cast it for free. It’s a great surprise use of an expendable creature you plan on getting back anyway.
Greatness, At Any Cost

Dauthi Voidwalker | Illustration by Sidharth Chaturvedi
This has been an absolute marathon of black’s best creatures in relation to present-day Commander. There are many more cards that could’ve made the list, or historically significant creatures that have had their place and time. However, the list presented here includes the best of the best from among creatures that still have an impact on the Commander format.
If you think I missed any important ones (and surely a few slipped through the cracks), I’d love to hear about them in the comments below or over in the Draftsim Discord.
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3 Comments
Putrid Imp, hard base for reanimator
Phyrexian obliterator didn’t make the list? Or did I miss it, because that card has always and will always just do work.
I mean, it’s a classic, but it’s not really in contention for a best creatures list in the 2020s if you ask me.
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