This is a deck that abuses discard effects by pitching cards that passively replenish themselves. Squee, Goblin Nabob is the workhorse here, but he is accompanied by good friends Chandra's Phoenix and Demigod of Revenge. Along with the flashback spells Faithless Looting and Conflagrate, that is a full 20 cards that do work from the graveyard.

With all this discard fodder, we unlock the previously unplayable cards Tibalt, the Fiend-Blooded, Conflagrate, and Kindle the Carnage. Tibalt's +1 becomes a lot more enticing when you are happy to discard a third of the cards in your deck. Conflagrate looks awful on the front end, with such horrid value as 1 damage for three mana or a whopping TWO damage for five, but on the backswing it can deal a game-winning/board-wiping 7 damage (split as you choose) for just RR. To follow up a large Conflagrate, there's Reforge the Soul to restock your hand and empower Tibalt's -4 (which, conveniently, is ready to fire on turn 5 and still leave Tibalt with 1 loyalty). If you favor the brute force approach, hard cast a Demigod on turn 5. With even 1 copy in the graveyard, you can slam in with a hasty 10 damage.

Rounding out the deck, there's Chandra, the Firebrand, Lightning Bolt, and a miser Jaya Ballard, Task Mage. Chandra is good for poking and regenerating her Phoenixes, but can also cast Reverberate to end the game with a doubled Conflagrate or fill the graveyard with a second Reforge the Soul. Bolt feels uninspired compared to the rest of the deck, but it is hard to argue with raw power. Perhaps it could be replaced with a more on-theme Fiery Temper? Jaya is trying her best to be the deck's third planeswalker, but unfortunately, she is slow and vulnerable. When she's online, though, she makes sure that work gets done.

The deck plays like a combo/control hybrid, generating card advantage early and removing opposing threats while dealing light damage until it is ready to explode and end the game. With the right hand, though, it can go on the aggro path and do an impression of mono red burn with attacking Phoenixes and burn to the face, finishing with a Demigod swing. On the other hand, the deck can suffer if it falls behind. I'm looking for options to let it swing the board back in its favor. Kindle the Carnage is the hot contestant right now, but even that can fail if the engine isn't running well.

I don't know how well this deck would fare in a tournament against the established archetypes, but it is something different and very fun to play.

P.S.

Faithless Squee-ing - Sorcery

R

Flashback 2R

Draw 2 cards.