Party Thrasher
Creature — Lizard Wizard
Noncreature spells you cast from exile have convoke. (Each creature you tap while casting a noncreature spell from exile pays for or one mana of that creature's color.)
At the beginning of your first main phase, you may discard a card. If you do, exile the top two cards of your library, then choose one of them. You may play that card this turn.
- CMC
- 2
- Mana cost
- Color identity
- R
- Rarity
- rare
- Set
- Modern Horizons 3
- Price
- $2.68
- EDHREC rank
- #2111
Party Thrasher turns exile-and-cast effects into a direct damage engine — every spell you cast from exile pings any target for 1, which snowballs fast in decks that exile multiple cards per turn. The cost is that it does nothing on its own, so you need a steady exile-cast pipeline before it earns its slot; pair it with Pia Nalaar, Consul of Revival and it starts dealing meaningful damage as early as turn three.
Best Commanders
Commanders with the highest synergy

Pia Nalaar, Consul of Revival
Pia Nalaar, Consul of Revival continuously exiles the top card of your library and lets you cast it, meaning Party Thrasher triggers on almost every spell you play, turning the commander's core mechanic into a consistent damage source.
Gwen Stacy
Gwen Stacy exiles cards and rewards casting them, so Party Thrasher slots in as a free damage rider on every spell fired off the exile zone — converting already-incentivized play patterns into chip damage that adds up quickly.

Fire Lord Zuko
Fire Lord Zuko generates repeated exile-and-cast opportunities, and Party Thrasher converts each of those casts into a ping, giving the deck a secondary win condition that operates entirely on the same axis as the commander.

Faldorn, Dread Wolf Herald
Faldorn, Dread Wolf Herald rewards casting spells from exile with Wolf tokens, and Party Thrasher doubles down on that same trigger point — every exiled spell now produces both a body and a point of damage.

Laelia, the Blade Reforged
Laelia, the Blade Reforged exiles cards whenever it attacks or you cast from exile, creating a self-reinforcing loop that Party Thrasher taps directly to accumulate damage over a combat-heavy game plan.
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 where Party Thrasher lives — the 100-card singleton format means exile-and-cast commanders are a defined archetype, and the card slots cleanly into that shell as a passive damage engine that opponents must answer or lose to attrition. In Legacy and Vintage, the card is legal but has no realistic home; those formats don't support slow enchantment-based payoffs when faster options exist for every role it fills. Modern is the same story — exile synergies exist, but Party Thrasher's payoff is too incremental and fragile for a format that demands immediate impact. Oathbreaker is the only other 60-card-adjacent variant where it might see fringe play, again only in dedicated exile-cast builds.
Key Combos
Combo lines featuring this card
Price Context
Current price
$2.68 cheap tier
At $2.68, Party Thrasher sits in the cheap tier — low enough to be a no-brainer inclusion in any Commander deck already built around exile-and-cast, with no real budget barrier to entry. It's a niche card with a narrow home, so don't expect the price to move meaningfully in either direction.
Explore
Sources
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.