Last updated on August 14, 2025

Raffine, Scheming Seer | Illustration by Veronique Meignaud
Confession time: My inner demon absolutely loves cracking open boosters of sealed Magic cards. You never know what you’re gonna get, like a box of chocolates or something. Most days I have to keep my demon at bay, but others, I unleash it on my local game store… and my bank account.
But you know what? Sometimes you have to partner up with a demon to get things done. There’s got to be like a thousand folk tales, an anime, and at least one Netflix movie about it. All of Magic’s demon commanders are here, ready for your bloody signature on their accursed contracts.
Care to make a pact with a demon?
What Are Demon Commanders in MTG?

Kuro, Pitlord | Illustration by Jon Foster
Demon commanders are legendary creatures with the demon creature type, usually large, expensive black fliers with game-ending abilities. There are a few exceptions: Transform cards like Elbrus, the Binding Blade and Westvale Abbey become demons but aren’t legendary creatures on the front side. As Alchemy exclusives, Kardum, Patron of Flames and Gutmorn, Pactbound Servant can’t be your commander either, at least not outside of Brawl.
Some demons are so legendary that they’ve returned over and over in Magic’s story. Ob Nixilis has at times been a planeswalker, but he’s currently without a spark. Rakdos is so notable that he lends his name to the Rakdos Guild on Ravnica and the overall color pairing in Magic.
The Completionist Section
Most of the commanders on this list are demons themselves, but I’ve included a few non-demons with particular synergies. Granted, not all the commanders that have “demon” in their rules text are here; Clavileño, First of the Blessed turns your vampires into demons, so some demon payoffs can be useful, but that’s a vampire commander at its core. And while Boris Devilboon generates 1/1 Minor Demon tokens, are you really running this guy as your commander?
Inquisitor Eisenhorn investigates, fittingly, and it makes a demon token. But that token is legendary, so this isn’t the demon commander you’re looking for. Tivash, Gloom Summoner is a lifegain commander that makes demon tokens too, but you don’t have enough access to red.
I hesitate about leaving Tasha, the Witch Queen off the main list. You’re in better colors for horrors, but Tasha makes Demon tokens, and it steals your opponents’ cards, a space demons also explore. But the synergies aren’t as direct as Raphael, Fiendish Savior or Kaalia of the Vast, so I’m giving Tasha some words here and moving on.
Unranked: Griselbrand
Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.
Griselbrand is banned in the format, but I include it here in case someone wants to get pedantic with me.
#62. Lady Orca
Yeah, I’m even including the vanilla legend from Legends. Hi, Lady Orca. Bye, Lady Orca.
#61. The Balrog of Moria
Exiling your commander doesn’t matter so much, which makes at least half of The Balrog of Moria’s text interesting. You can’t cycle from the command zone, which makes the other half irrelevant. Splat.
#60. The Balrog, Flame of Udûn
Great. Now I have to talk about tucking. In Magic slang, that’s when something gets sent to the bottom of its owner’s library. You’re welcome.
When an opponent’s legendary creature dies, you may want to tuck The Balrog, Flame of Udûn under your library and use Grenzo, Dungeon Warden to get it back. You also have the choice to just put it back in the command zone, which you might want to do if Grenzo’s not around.
#59. Kuro, Pitlord
Listen, not all demons can be winners. Kuro, Pitlord shouldn’t be your commander. It costs 9 mana and taxes you to keep it on the field. The only saving grace is that you can pay life to reduce the power/toughness of an indestructible creature.
#58. Yukora, the Prisoner
If anybody’s using this as their commander, they aren’t saying much about it. Yukora, the Prisoner doesn’t really do a ton. You’re either taking advantage of the mass sacrificing or you’re avoiding it entirely by playing ogres.
#57. Ardyn, the Usurper
Ardyn, the Usurper gives great keyword soup to your demons and makes some really strong demon copies out of trash. It is an expensive noble, and a glorified enchantment that produces demon copies of cards and powers them up. The keywords do great work to improve all your demons, so the ceiling is high, but at eight mana the 4/4 is often irrelevant and the creature card type a liability.
#56. Kyoki, Sanity’s Eclipse
Kyoki, Sanity's Eclipse is a spirit/arcane-focused black commander, but that feels like something that belongs to the Standard format of its time. Kyoki exiles pieces from your opponents’ hands, but it doesn’t let you look at their hand and/or choose the card. No randomness, either.
#55. Kothophed, Soul Hoarder
Kothophed, Soul Hoarder specifically cares about your opponents’ permanents hitting the graveyard from the battlefield. You get cards and lose life. Sounds fine on the surface, but I can think of a bunch of sacrifice-oriented decks that would just laugh at this. Even tokens hit the graveyard before they disappear, but someone could easily finish you off by starting an infinite ETB/LTB loop or something.
#54. Nefarox, Overlord of Grixis
Voltron the exalted, is it? Nefarox, Overlord of Grixis is a flier that’ll force your opponents to sacrifice creatures when it attacks alone. Necrogen Communion from Phyrexia: All Will Be One is a solid addition to this deck.
#53. Kagemaro, First to Suffer
Kagemaro, First to Suffer has one job, and that’s clearing boards. It’s as big as your hand, which is a good reason to run infinite hand size cards. Black without blue isn’t the most efficient at filling its hand, though.
#52. Shimatsu the Bloodcloaked
Mono-red sacrifice fodder almost instantly means Treasure tokens or goblin tokens. There’s not really much space to develop your Shimatsu the Bloodcloaked otherwise.
#51. Spirit of the Night
Spirit of the Night is, reductively, keyword salad. It’s a battlecruiser that doesn’t do anything besides exist as a big, stronk demon. It’s an option, but you can find commanders that cost less money and can front a better deck. Save this one for a better home in someone’s 99.
#50. Garland, Knight of Cornelia / Chaos, the Endless
I like Garland, Knight of Cornelia as a graveyard enabler, and occasionally I switch to an inevitable voltron strategy. This 2-drop annoys my opponents, but have I won with the Chaos, the Endless side? Not yet.
#49. Orca, Siege Demon
Nein bitte Orca. Not as my Rakdos commander. Orca, Siege Demon is a creature-death payoff, so it’s at home in a sacrifice deck. Probably best suited as lieutenant or a captain or something.
#48. Razaketh, the Foulblooded
Foul indeed. Razaketh, the Foulblooded is a sacrifice outlet that tutors any card to your hand. Sure, it’s a trampling flier with 8/8 power/toughness, but it also costs 8 to cast.
#47. The Emperor of Palamecia / The Lord Master of Hell
The dork that is The Emperor of Palamecia does not bother me at all. What excites me is The Lord Master of Hell that counts the spells you played, milled, discarded or whatever and puts them into a solid group slug strategy that just needs a method to safely attack.
#46. Shelob, Dread Weaver
I see the cheaper, mono-black Shelob as a support piece. If it’s in the command zone, you need lots of ways to kill your opponents’ creatures and mana to either grow Shelob, Dread Weaver with +1/+1 counters or grow your board using your opponents’ cards.
#45. Orcus, Prince of Undeath
Orcus, Prince of Undeath has a modal ETB, and I’m not totally sold here. Either you’re wiping low toughness creatures or you’re returning some creatures to the battlefield with haste. Kind of opposite ends of the spectrum. Sometimes being multi-talented doesn’t mean you excel at any of them.
#44. Malfegor
I’m not enthused. I guess you could use Malfegor for a discard or madness deck. Your Bone Miser will probably file a grievance with your union and ask to be assigned to a better post.
#43. Ob Nixilis, the Fallen
Ob Nixilis, the Fallen gives you a reason to play mono-black landfall. Dread Presence and Retreat to Hagra are a good start, and Liliana of the Dark Realms is a strong planeswalker here.
#42. Sol'Kanar the Tainted
Sol'Kanar the Tainted does a lot, but there’s not really an obvious shell to build around it. It’s a big, elemental demon with a lot of 5s on it. It has to be around on your end step to give you value. You can focus on that last mode for blink benefits, but I’ve also seen some players lean into a chaos theme.
#41. Rakdos the Defiler
Rakdos the Defiler forces everyone to sacrifice permanents! It’s your tax for attacking with it, and it’s your opponent’s tax for not having an answer to it. Demon typal is the obvious place for this, although I’m wondering when we’re going to get an effect that lets you give “demon” typing to lands. Not holding my breath for it, though.
#40. The Speed Demon
The Speed Demon makes the podium among the best speed payoffs. It can amount to the accelerated life loss from a Phyrexian Arena, but it doesn't need to reach max speed so if you're stuck in second gear, you still double up on the staple black enchantment and good card draw.
#39. Demonlord Belzenlok
Mono-black big stuff? Demonlord Belzenlok wants you to drive that lane. At least one of its abilities enables one of the most well-known infinite combos.
#38. Ob Nixilis of the Black Oath
Planeswalkers don’t have creature types, but Ob Nixilis never really stops being a demon, right? Ob Nixilis of the Black Oath can pump out Demon tokens, and it can give you an emblem that plays into the sac outlet role that’s so common with demons.
#37. Ob Nixilis, Unshackled
In Commander, Ob Nixilis, Unshackled “only” chomps on a quarter of your starting life total. I don’t think I’d run this as my commander, though. It’s nice if it resolves, but it also feels like removal bait. Fetch lands alone are a reason to want to see this thing gone. If I were to build around this Ob Nixilis, I’d probably make it a demon deck or one that doesn’t really care about whether its commander is around.
#36. The Beast, Deathless Prince
Oh, look, a demon that cares about playing with your opponents’ creatures. Color me surprised (tone indicator: ironic).
The Beast, Deathless Prince has a casting trigger, which conflicts with commander tax. You need lots of other creature theft effects to untap The Beast and get a card from it, and you don’t even have access to blue.
#35. Sol’kanar the Swamp King
Sol'kanar the Swamp King has the same mana cost Sol'Kanar the Tainted, and it’s a lot lighter on the word count. Swampwalk is very situational, but gaining life from your opponents’ black spells is neat.
#34. Kaalia, Zenith Seeker
No matter the incarnation, Kaalia groups a bunch of big fliers under one banner, those being angels, demons, and dragons. As a Mardu commander (), Kaalia gives you access to a wide spread of them. Kaalia, Zenith Seeker gives you an ETB that grabs up to one of each of the relevant creatures to your hand, which is fine and fair. The original Kaalia makes for a far better commander for your beefy fliers.
#33. Rakdos, Patron of Chaos
Any MTG set that features the Ravnica plane needs its Rakdos representation, and Murders at Karlov Manor is no exception. Between card advantage and forcing your opponents to sac their stuff, Rakdos, Patron of Chaos’s end step trigger really embodies that damned if you do, damned if you don’t element of dealing with demons.
#32. Jerren, Corrupted Bishop / Ormendahl, the Corrupter
Jerren, Corrupted Bishop can be a human-centric commander, which is a bit cultish for a demon. Shadowborn Apostle is a human as well as a cleric, but you don’t have to limit yourself to that strategy. There are plenty of humans in mono-black.
#31. Vito, Fanatic of Aclazotz
Reusable sacrifice outlets are key in a Vito, Fanatic of Aclazotz build, since this Orzhov commander rewards you the more that you sacrifice permanents. Any permanent will do, which means there are plenty of avenues to take. You can totally go the creature route, especially since you’re in good colors for white’s token doublers and triplers.
#30. Seizan, Perverter of Truth
Seizan, Perverter of Truth is going to gnaw on everyone’s life totals and libraries. It’s card draw rather than milling or discard, but that just makes it that much more of a fit for a wheels theme.
#29. Vilis, Broker of Blood
Should you choose to accept it, your pact with Vilis, Broker of Blood involves paying life and mana to remove creatures by diminishing their power and toughness (yay for getting around indestructible). Paying life also gets you cards.
Exsanguinate your opponents, and don’t leave home without your faithful Gary (Gray Merchant of Asphodel).
#28. Mortarion, Daemon Primarch
Oh, this could get confusing. Yes, Mortarion, Daemon Primarch is a demon in MTG. Its end step ability gives you a mana sink to help you widen your board with menacing warriors. It depends on the life you’ve lost during your turn, but black has lots of ways to fiddle with your life total.
#27. Taborax, Hope’s Demise
Taborax, Hope's Demise is a demon cleric that cares about your creature deaths. If your clerics are dying, so much the better! Mono-black clerics is the place to bend the singleton rules of Commander with Shadowborn Apostle.
#26. Varragoth, Bloodsky Sire
Aren’t demons by their very nature a little roguish? Varragoth, Bloodsky Sire’s boast ability easily enables digging for your combo pieces. You can focus on Ad Nauseam if you want, but you can also build a less single-minded deck by going demon-focused.
#25. Hidetsugu, Devouring Chaos
Be honest, Hidetsugu, Devouring Chaos players: Have you ever won a match and declared it “Game Ogre?” Or perhaps said: “Get Shrek’d?” Shrek Universes Beyond when, by the way?
The first scrying ability on this commander lets you filter toward the second ability. Rakdos colors with a burning sacrifice outlet is a good place to start, no doubt.
#24. Imskir Iron-Eater
Modern Horizons 3’s Imskir Iron-Eater is a Rakdos artifacts commander that benefits from a mix of token and nontoken artifacts. One of its abilities cares about the mana value of artifacts that you sacrifice, which means your tokens and cheerios won’t be of any use. Treasure is great in this deck, since it helps with Imskir’s ETB ability, but you can also use it to pay for the activated ability. You don’t tap Imskir to activate it, meaning you can go more than once in a turn if you have the mana to do so.
#23. Krav, the Unredeemed
Krav, the Unredeemed is trusted partners with Regna, the Redeemer for an Orzhov () commander combo. One’s a sac outlet, the other’s a token generator. Can I make it any more obvious?
#22. Rakdos, the Showstopper
Demons, devils, and imps. Oh my!
Rakdos, the Showstopper clears the board of its adversaries when it enters the battlefield. Red has haste enablers, so it’ll be easy to get a quick 6 damage to someone’s face if you drop this with the right support on the field.
#21. The Balrog, Durin’s Bane
The Balrog, Durin's Bane is your commander if you want a representation of this ancient evil from Lord of the Rings in the command zone. It gets cost reduction based on the number of sacrificed permanents, and there are lots of ways to increase that count. There’s Treasure and other expendable tokens, and there are plenty of other demons with sacrifice outlets built into their text. It can only be blocked by legendary creatures, so it’s more likely to trade with a commander or another big, scary threat. The extra removal when this Balrog dies nearly guarantees that you trade with another commander, or that you nab another as part of the collateral damage.
But since the Balrog is in Moria, goblins and orcs may be a fun way to lean in on the flavor (and use some of those LotR creatures that you may not have another home for).
#20. Gyruda, Doom of Depths
Using Gyruda, Doom of Depths as a commander means that you can’t use it as a companion. That also means that your deck isn’t necessarily restricted, but you probably want to run mostly even-MV creatures for those times you trigger Gyruda’s ETB. Milling opponents and stealing their cards are two of my favorite things to do in Magic, and that’s definitely the demon talking.
#19. Shelob, Child of Ungoliant
“Look who’s climbing up my wall… Black and hairy, not so small.”
Shelob, Child of Ungoliant is the biggest spider commander printed so far. A Golgari commander () is a perfect color identity for spiders; you can run almost any spider ever printed, including Arasta of the Endless Web for some Spider token generation. I just love the flavor of turning your kills into food tokens. Note the phrasing: They lose their other card types, but not their abilities.
Grab all your favorite arachnids from across Magic’s Spider-Verse Multiverse! Just make sure to have a Rule 0 conversation about filling the board with, you know, spiders.
#18. Rakdos, the Muscle
Any time a card has both an outlet and a payoff, it’s worth close inspection. Rakdos, the Muscle cares about sacrificing creatures, naturally, and you benefit when your nontokens go under the axe. There are plenty of self-recurring creatures, ones with good death triggers, that you don't mind tossing away to keep Rakdos alive.
#17. Shilgengar, Sire of Famine
It’s easy to miss that Shilgengar, Sire of Famine is an Orzhov commander when you just skim the ranks of legendary demons. Shilgengar’s sacrifice outlet gets much better when you’re dealing with angels, and once again the Dan Brown/Robert Langdon references write themselves. Blood tokens are an interesting mechanic we don’t see much, and this frankly reminded me that the Rakdos demons that need artifacts to sacrifice could also get Blood-y.
#16. Clive, Ifrit's Dominant / Ifrit, Warden of Inferno
Clive, Ifrit's Dominant is an interesting card design. You pay for a scalable wheel based on your devotion, then another six to flip into the saga, Ifrit, Warden of Inferno and basically destroy a creature as a 9/9 before ramping up to do it again. Lots you can do here with discard payoffs and a massive commander.
#15. Hidetsugu and Kairi
The team-up commanders from March of the Machine are full of fun and flavor. You get a mashup of abilities and colors and creature types; it’s just great. Hidetsugu and Kairi is no exception. Pairing an ogre with a dragon gives flying to this Dimir commander team. Yikes. Being able to cast instants and sorceries that you exile for free is as good a reason as any to load up on cloning spells.
#14. Magnus the Red
I see lots of potential for Magnus the Red. Its abilities point toward a spellslinger commander; Young Pyromancer can be your early game and Ovika, Enigma Goliath can be your mid-to-late game. An Izzet commander is in good colors for Treasure (Storm-Kiln Artist + Xorn) or for artifact animation (Rise and Shine and Masterful Replication come to mind).
#13. Lord Xander, the Collector
Lord Xander, the Collector represents the life cycle of a creature on the battlefield: It enters, it attacks during your combat phase, and then it dies. And Lord Xander has triggers for each stage of life. You’re likely to attack most, so a mill focused deck is a solid choice. The extreme version of that deck makes use of cloning effects to get a bunch of 6/6s with a milling attack trigger. Just look at that card art. You have to call that a Loki deck, right?
#12. Raphael, Fiendish Savior
Commander Legends: Battle for Baldur’s Gate’s Raphael, Fiendish Savior cares about more than just demons, but if you want to run as many versions of Rakdos, Ob Nixilis, and the Balrog as possible, this is one of the ways to do it. Demons tend to be big creatures, and occasionally fliers, so giving them lifelink is fantastic. A lot of good Rakdos cards ask you to pay life as part of your deal with these devils, so your demonic attacks are a way for you to get some of your strength back.
#11. Valgavoth, Terror Eater
Valgavoth, Terror Eater requires a lot of ramp and is limited as a mono black commander, but gets brownie points as an incredible reanimation target that many black decks want to get in on. Either way you put this in play is fine. The point it is, even if you lose a bunch of resources along the way, Valgavoth can absolutely take over.
#10. Kardur, Doomscourge
Here’s a demon berserker that gives you lots of potential. Kardur, Doomscourge can be your forced combat commander. You could also run sacrifice fodder that you attack with but sacrifice to other outlets so that they’re guaranteed to die as attackers, enabling lifegain/life drain.
#9. Falco Spara, Pactweaver
Falco Spara, Pactweaver may come in with a shield counter, but it doesn’t care which kind of counter you use to cast cards from the top of your library. Your Bant commander has access to green and white, so +1/+1 counters are almost mandatory. You can also remove -1/-1 counters, like the ones you can put on Devoted Druid to untap it. Yes, that means that you can get an infinite combo with Falco, the Druid, and Sensei's Divining Top.
#8. Ob Nixilis, Captive Kingpin
Holy heck! An Ob Nixilis that’s actually a great demon commander! Thanks, March of the Machine: The Aftermath.
Ob Nixilis, Captive Kingpin is oddly enough a commander with red in its identity that doesn’t want you to run damage doublers. Pingers are the order of the day, as is a mandatory copy of All Will Be One. Roiling Vortex is also a good source of 1 damage, and it lets you pay to shut down lifegain.
#7. Be’lakor, the Dark Master
Warhammer 40K is a treasure trove for demon lovers. As your commander, Be'lakor, the Dark Master loves its demons, both with its own ETB and when your other demons enter the battlefield. “Dark Master” is an appropriate epithet; there aren’t many better commanders to oversee a bunch of demons.
#6. Valgavoth, Harrower of Souls
To get rid of Valgavoth, Harrower of Souls, or leave Duskmourn: House of Horror chances are you need to pay life. The triggered ability is so easy to trigger, your opponents will help you do it. This turns into a huge Valgavoth and a healthy amount of cards to make it a supreme value in Commander.
#5. Rakdos, Lord of Riots
Red and black players look at the casting cost on Rakdos, Lord of Riots and snort. Did you know you can make an infinite ETB/LTB loop if you cast Ancestral Statue during a turn that you’ve claimed 4 life from your opponents? Demon-focused isn’t a bad option, but the cost reduction can let you do red-black good stuff if that’s more your style.
#4. Ziatora, the Incinerator
“Demon Dragon” is a creature type pairing that should strike fear into any planeswalker, whether in lore or among the player base. Ignore all the demon dragons you’ve already read about.
As one of the best Jund commanders, Ziatora, the Incinerator is in great colors to focus on Treasure tokens, between Revel in Riches, Xorn, Bootleggers' Stash, Old Gnawbone, and many more. You can also lean into the dragon theme or into sacrificing high-powered creatures.
#3. Raffine, Scheming Seer
The demons that are aligned with the crime families from Streets of New Capenna are each so good. Raffine, Scheming Seer, one of the best Esper commanders, costs only 3 mana to get out, which is cheap for a demon. Raffine doesn’t have to be part of your offense to have a target creature connive. You’re in the right colors to dig for cards with a wheels theme, and Elenda and Azor is a good piece to help you get a wider, more “conniving” board. I think the sphinx would tear me apart for that one.
#2. Jetmir, Nexus of Revels
This fat cat (complimentary) encourages you to go wide with pride. As a Naya commander (), Jetmir, Nexus of Revels‘s color identity is perfect for pumping out a bunch of tokens. Stacking power buffs and tossing around keywords are great for a commander to offer, and Jetmir’s fairly cheap for its abilities and power/toughness. Its excellent anthem effect also counts and buffs all your creatures, so there’s really no downside.
#1. Kaalia of the Vast
One of the best Mardu cards in the game, Kaalia of the Vast is among the more popular commanders, and given the creature types it cares about, I can see why. Its attack trigger is far more repeatable than the other Kaalia’s ETB, though Zenith Seeker’s ETB sets up this one’s attack trigger for some nice synergies. Mardu attack triggers make Isshin, Two Heavens as One a superb support piece. And when you’re looking for A) big fliers that, B) have attack triggers, you get your pick of some of the best and flashiest cards to slap onto the table.
Best Demon Commander Payoffs and Synergies
Demons are as old as Magic itself, so there are bound to be some payoffs we're contractually obligated to talk about.
Liliana's Contract is a demons-matter enchantment that gives you an alternate win-con for having differently named demons. They don’t have to be legendary, and you’re playing Commander. See where this goes? Demonic Counsel is a perfect compliment since it is the most accessible tutor for demons, and for today's purpose, every bit as effective as Demonic Tutor. Unholy Annex / Ritual Chamber is a room that makes Sheoldred, the Apocalypse super happy just for keeping a demon around.
Ob Nixilis, the Adversary’s first ability gets a little better if you’ve stuck it in a demon deck. Herald of Slaanesh is a haste enabler and a cost reducer for demons. Mark of the Oni lets you take and keep control of an opponent’s creature if you’ve got ‘em.
Shadowborn Apostles can take up plenty of slots in your deck so that you can easily pull your demons onto the battlefield.
Bloodthirster is a demon built for the Commander format. Whenever it deals combat damage to a player it gives you an extra combat phase. Notice how many of these demons have payoffs that revolve around attacking? Reaper from the Abyss has a morbid ability that lets you reap non-demons.
Aspiring Champion has a combat damage trigger that helps you tutor creatures onto the battlefield. It'll sacrifice itself to start off, giving you a sacrifice and death payoff, then replace itself with a creature. If that’s a demon, it’ll deal damage as it enters the battlefield.
Canonized in Blood rewards you with +1/+1 counters for sending permanent cards to your graveyard (descending) each of your turns, and you can trade in the enchantment for a Demon token. Ancient Cellarspawn is a cost reducer that adds a great bonus of life drain that puts cost reduction on the map. Though mentioned above, Raphael, Fiendish Savior tops it off with lifelink which is a game altering keyword ability, like when the villains get a hold of the good guy's weapons at headquarters, let the devilish grins commence.
Commanding Conclusion

Ziatora, the Incinerator | Illustration by Chris Rahn
Well, that was an adventure. There are quite a few demons I wouldn’t trust in the command zone, but there are nearly just as many I’d happily build around. There’s a lot of sacrificing and burning going on, but Streets of New Capenna and Warhammer 40K gave us demon commanders that splash into other colors and do other things, and Final Fantasy brought quite a handful of demons too.
Which demon do you run as your commander? Do you go all-in on demons or keep them in the command zone as finishers? Let me know in the comments below or over on the Draftsim Discord!
And to close, allow me to butcher a Blur song: “You should cut down on your demon life, mate. Get some exorcise!”
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2 Comments
I think Ardyn, the Usurper is a new one that should be added here.
Ardyn will definitely get a consideration when we update this list again.
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