Lash of the Balrog
The template here is Diabolic Edict rewritten as targeted removal, and the escape clause is what makes the trade honest. Edict-style sacrifice effects let the opponent choose the victim; this one names its target, which is a strictly better outcome when the board matters, so the cost had to move somewhere to pay for that upgrade. It lands on you rather than the opponent: to kill precisely what you want for a single black mana, you feed a creature to the graveyard. That reframes what looks like premium removal into an engine piece. Where death triggers matter, the sacrifice stops being a tax and starts being a second spell, letting one card clear a blocker or combo piece while also feeding an aristocrats payoff. The
alternative is the safety valve for the games where you have nothing worth sacrificing: it lets the card resolve as a five-mana unconditional kill spell rather than a dead draw, so the sorcery never bricks even when the sacrifice half is off. That flexibility is why the additional-cost structure exists at all: the card asks what phase of the game you are in and prices itself accordingly, cheap and synergistic when your board is fodder, expensive and clean when it is not. It is aristocrats-adjacent removal wearing the frame of a black staple, and the gap between paying with a creature and paying
is where the deckbuilding decision lives.


