I’ve been playing Magic off and on since the mid-'90s, though some of the “off” periods have been pretty long.

I used to help run Pauper events on MTGO, before Pauper became an officially sanctioned format.

Check out this Magic-related web site I made: https://housedraft.games/

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • Are we talking about cookie tins, or what? The article doesn’t have pictures of the actual product, and doesn’t describe them as anything other than “promotional tins”. We know they’ll contain five booster packs plus two cards, so I guess that puts a floor on how small they could be.

    I’d expect you could fit about four cookies, depending on their size and shape, in the space taken up by five booster packs.




  • Commander players have a thing called “Rule 0” that basically says you can change whatever rules you want as long as your whole playgroup agrees to it. But if you want to get your changes accepted on a broader scale, so that you could go to a store event or a big tournament and expect other players to be familiar with them, that’s a much taller hurdle. Can you convince the community that your banlist is better than the official one and also better than any other fan-made ones? Can you get stores to support it – keeping in mind that they have to curry favor with Wizards in order to maintain WPN certification, be allowed to pre-order the amount of product they want, etc.? If you could do it successfully, you’d basically be building a grassroots competitor to the Commander Format Panel. Not impossible, but it would be an uphill battle for sure.










  • Nobody is reading this post six months later, but I’m putting my post-rotation list up here in case I ever want to point someone to it.

    About
    Name Poison Burn

    Deck
    7 Island
    2 Plains
    4 Seachrome Coast
    3 Floodfarm Verge
    3 Adarkar Wastes
    3 Mirrex
    4 Skrelv, Defector Mite
    4 Crawling Chorus
    4 Prologue to Phyresis
    4 Experimental Augury
    4 Serum Snare
    4 Bring the Ending
    4 Soul Partition
    3 Gadwick’s First Duel
    4 Distorted Curiosity
    3 Arcane Proxy

    Sideboard
    3 Ephara’s Dispersal
    4 Not on My Watch
    3 Rest in Peace
    3 Annex Sentry
    2 Reject Imperfection

    The maindeck is very similar. Floodfarm Verge has been a fine addition to the manabase. Soul Partition is a serviceable replacement for Fateful Absence.

    I could have condensed the whole match-ups section in the original post down to this, which is still true:

    • You are heavily favored against control, especially domain control, which you almost can’t lose to. New in the post-Duskmourn meta is the ability to add time counters to Overlords when you proliferate (Arena doesn’t select them automatically, so remember to click them yourself).
    • Midrange and combo decks are an actual challenge.
    • Aggro is a very poor match-up. Two thirds of the sideboard is dedicated to fighting red decks, and you’re still not favored against them.

    Take out the Arcane Proxies for the Rest in Pieces when facing any deck that makes heavy use of its graveyard – your Helping Hand or Squirming Emergence strategies. It’s not a panacea, because they’ll have stuff like Into the Flood Maw or Tear Asunder, but it should buy you some time. Incidental reanimation like Unstoppable Slasher is not worth diluting your own plan for.

    Against base-red aggro decks, bring in the Ephara’s Dispersals, Not on My Watches, and Annex Sentries in exchange for your Proxies, Duels, and two each of Bring the Ending and Distorted Curiosity (I’m still fiddling with the exact balance on those last two). It is rarely safe to block with Sentries, but I run them anyway because the opponent is likely to bring in Urabrask’s Forge, and they’re your best answer to it. You can beat the red decks after sideboarding, just don’t expect it to happen regularly. It’s tough to find a window to get any poison counters on them because you need to be warding off potentially lethal attacks as soon as turn 2. Be very aware of whether your opponent might be able to cast Snakeskin Veil, which can single-handedly ruin your entire defensive strategy. Make them make the first move: if they send an attacker into the damage step with only one power, take it and be glad it wasn’t more.

    The Reject Imperfections are catch-all answers for anything you might not be otherwise prepared for. If you suspect your opponent will bring in graveyard hate, use them to replace a couple of your Proxies.

    Almost nothing in this deck will survive the 2025 rotation, so enjoy it while you can!