Anje, Maid of Dishonor
Blood tokens are the connective tissue here, and this Vampire is built to turn a passive tribal trigger into a recurring sacrifice loop. The entry trigger is deliberately throttled: it fires once per turn regardless of how many Vampires flicker or flood in at once, so the payoff is a steady drip of artifacts rather than a combo enabler. That restraint matters, because those Blood tokens do double duty. Left alone, each is a rummaging outlet that filters a dead card into a live one. Fed to the second ability, each becomes two points of drain, as does any expendable creature already on the battlefield. The design fuses the loot-and-discard engine that Blood tokens were built around with the aristocrat drain that black-red Vampire decks have chased for years, and it does so without asking for an outlet from elsewhere: the sacrifice engine is stapled to the body. The 4/5 frame is the quiet part of the package, large enough to trade up in combat and survive most spot removal, so the board pressure stays real while the engine hums. What makes the two halves lock together is that the resource one ability generates is close to the resource the other spends: Blood in, drain out, with the rest of the board (tokens, chaff, spent Vampires) standing by as fuel once the tokens themselves run dry.

Top Decks
Played Alongside
- Blackcleave Cliffs1× together
- Blood Crypt1× together
- Bloodtithe Harvester1× together
- Boseiju, Who Endures1× together
- Castle Locthwain1× together
- Concealed Courtyard1× together
- Den of the Bugbear1× together
- Duress1× together
- Fatal Push1× together
- Mountain1× together


