Fblthp, Lost on the Range
Legendary Creature — Homunculus
Ward
You may look at the top card of your library any time.
The top card of your library has plot. The plot cost is equal to its mana cost.
You may plot nonland cards from the top of your library.
- CMC
- 3
- Mana cost
- Color identity
- U
- Rarity
- rare
- Set
- Outlaws of Thunder Junction
- Price
- $0.33
- EDHREC rank
- #4624
Fblthp, Lost on the Range puts a card on top of your library whenever it attacks, then lets you play it for free if it deals combat damage — a repeatable pseudo-draw engine stapled to a 1/1 for two mana. Kellan, the Kid is the commander it was built for, but anywhere that can protect a small creature and reward topdeck manipulation will find real use for it.
Best Commanders
Commanders with the highest synergy

Kellan, the Kid
Fblthp, Lost on the Range appears in 78% of Kellan, the Kid decks because Kellan's triggered ability lets you cast spells from the top of your library for free, turning every Fblthp attack that connects into two free spells instead of one — the synergy is that direct.

Geralf, the Fleshwright
Geralf, the Fleshwright generates 2/2 Zombie tokens whenever you cast a noncreature spell, so Fblthp, Lost on the Range's free casts off the top of the library become a token factory at no extra mana investment.

River Song
River Song rewards playing cards from unusual zones and in unusual orders, making Fblthp, Lost on the Range's top-of-library manipulation a consistent trigger engine that also filters toward the cards River Song wants to cast.

Loot, the Key to Everything
Loot, the Key to Everything cares about playing cards from everywhere but your hand, so Fblthp, Lost on the Range's combat-damage trigger to cast the topped card for free is exactly the kind of effect Loot decks stack to maximize value each turn.
Gwen Stacy
Gwen Stacy rewards attacking and dealing combat damage, so Fblthp, Lost on the Range's attack-and-damage triggers align cleanly with what Gwen Stacy decks are already incentivizing across the board.
Format Analysis
Where it lives, where it can’t
| Format | Verdict |
|---|---|
| commander | legal |
| legacy | legal |
| modern | legal |
| pioneer | legal |
| standard | legal |
| vintage | legal |
| pauper | not legal |
| oathbreaker | legal |
Commander is where Fblthp, Lost on the Range actually lives — the format's longer games give it the repeated attack steps it needs to generate meaningful advantage, and the density of commanders that care about casting from unusual zones makes it a genuine build-around piece in the right 99. In competitive 60-card formats like Modern and Pioneer it's essentially invisible; a fragile 1/1 that requires combat damage to do anything meaningful can't keep pace with those formats' clock. Legacy and Vintage are the same story — legal but irrelevant. Standard is the one non-Commander format worth watching: if aggressive or tempo shells that can consistently protect and connect with a small creature emerge, Fblthp, Lost on the Range has the raw upside to warrant a look, but it hasn't broken through there yet.
Key Combos
Combo lines featuring this card
Price Context
Current price
$0.33 bulk tier
At $0.33, Fblthp, Lost on the Range is firmly bulk — you're paying next to nothing for a card that sees real play in a specific Commander shell. Given its near-total dependence on Kellan, the Kid decks for demand, don't expect significant price movement unless a broader topdeck-matters archetype emerges in a 60-card format.
Explore
Sources
Mentioned
- Kellan, the Kid
- Geralf, the Fleshwright
- River Song
- Loot, the Key to Everything
- Gwen Stacy
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.