Enter the God-Eternals
Sorcery
Enter the God-Eternals deals 4 damage to target creature and you gain life equal to the damage dealt this way. Target player mills four cards. Amass Zombies 4. (Put four +1/+1 counters on an Army you control. It's also a Zombie. If you don't control an Army, create a 0/0 black Zombie Army creature token first.)
- CMC
- 5
- Mana cost
- Color identity
- BU
- Rarity
- rare
- Set
- Starter Commander Decks
- Price
- $0.22
- EDHREC rank
- #11325
Enter the God-Eternals does four things at once — deal 4 damage, mill four cards, create a 4/4 Zombie, and grow a target creature — for five mana at instant speed. That density of effect is why Gisa and Geralf lists run it: the damage clears a blocker, the mill fuels graveyard recursion, and the token replaces itself on the board immediately.
Best Commanders
Commanders with the highest synergy

Gisa and Geralf
Gisa and Geralf turns every card Enter the God-Eternals mills into a potential free cast, so the spell does double duty — clearing a threat and loading the graveyard engine at the same time.
Format Analysis
Where it lives, where it can’t
| Format | Verdict |
|---|---|
| commander | legal |
| legacy | legal |
| modern | legal |
| pioneer | legal |
| standard | not legal |
| vintage | legal |
| pauper | not legal |
| oathbreaker | legal |
Commander is where Enter the God-Eternals earns its slot, specifically in Dimir and Grixis graveyard or Zombie tribal decks that want to mill themselves and deploy threats simultaneously. In competitive 60-card formats like Modern and Pioneer it's too slow at five mana with no immediate game-ending payoff, and Legacy has enough efficient interaction that a sorcery-speed-equivalent pile of value rarely makes the cut. Oathbreaker can house it in the right shell, but the format's lower life totals make the 4-damage clause less relevant as a win condition.
Key Combos
Combo lines featuring this card
Price Context
Current price
$0.22 bulk tier
At $0.22, Enter the God-Eternals is firmly bulk — a high-effect card that's been reprinted enough to crater in price. That makes it an easy inclusion to justify; the only reason not to run it in an eligible deck is that five mana is a real commitment, not that it costs anything to acquire.
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Sources
Mentioned
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.