Last March of the Ents
Sorcery
This spell can't be countered.
Draw cards equal to the greatest toughness among creatures you control, then put any number of creature cards from your hand onto the battlefield.
- CMC
- 8
- Mana cost
- Color identity
- G
- Rarity
- mythic
- Set
- The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth
- Price
- —
- EDHREC rank
- #957
Last March of the Ents puts every creature from your hand onto the battlefield — all at once, at instant speed if you have a creature with the highest power on the board — for seven mana. That's a massive ask on cost, but Fangorn, Tree Shepherd decks routinely hit seven mana with creatures large enough to unlock the instant-speed clause, making the cost irrelevant and the payoff backbreaking.
Best Commanders
Commanders with the highest synergy

Fangorn, Tree Shepherd
Fangorn, Tree Shepherd is the premier home for Last March of the Ents — Fangorn's triggered ability generates the massive Treefolk that both enable the instant-speed condition and immediately benefit from being dumped onto the battlefield en masse, turning a single spell into a full board refill.

Doran, the Siege Tower
Doran, the Siege Tower decks run high-toughness creatures that naturally satisfy Last March of the Ents' power-ceiling check, and deploying a hand full of walls and Treefolk for free at instant speed closes games that Doran's combat math has already made difficult to navigate.

The Pride of Hull Clade
The Pride of Hull Clade grows creatures based on toughness, so every body Last March of the Ents puts into play is both a threat on its own and a counter engine waiting to go online.

Doran, Besieged by Time
Doran, Besieged by Time leans on the same high-toughness creature density that makes Last March of the Ents explosive, and the card's ability to refill the board keeps Doran's combat-oriented game plan resilient through removal-heavy tables.

Betor, Kin to All
Betor, Kin to All rewards creature type density, and Last March of the Ents delivering multiple creature types simultaneously amplifies every tribal trigger Betor cares about.
Format Analysis
Where it lives, where it can’t
| Format | Verdict |
|---|---|
| commander | legal |
| legacy | legal |
| modern | legal |
| pioneer | not legal |
| standard | not legal |
| vintage | legal |
| pauper | not legal |
| oathbreaker | legal |
Commander is unambiguously where Last March of the Ents lives — seven mana is a meaningful but reachable number in a 40-life format, and the payoff of emptying your hand onto the battlefield scales directly with the large, expensive creatures Commander decks want to cast anyway. In Legacy and Vintage, Last March of the Ents is technically legal but faces the same problem every fair seven-drop faces in those formats: the game is likely over before you untap with it, and there are cheaper ways to cheat creatures into play. Oathbreaker gives it a narrower window in a compressed format, but green ramp signatures can occasionally set it up.
Key Combos
Combo lines featuring this card
Price Context
Current price
unknown tier
Pricing data for Last March of the Ents isn't currently available in our index, so check Scryfall or TCGPlayer for the current market rate before buying. Given its narrow competitive applications and strong Commander demand in Treefolk and high-toughness builds, supply and price tend to track the Commander-player base closely.
Explore
Sources
Mentioned
- Fangorn, Tree Shepherd
- Doran, the Siege Tower
- The Pride of Hull Clade
- Doran, Besieged by Time
- Betor, Kin to All
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.