|
On September 17 2014 17:41 Shotcoder wrote:Show nested quote +On September 17 2014 16:42 RoieTRS wrote: In a world where the best card draws are Divination, and Jace's Ingenuity (I've seen Font of Fortunes too), you aren't exactly building a deck around it. If I recall correctly, Ingenuity was perfectly fine last time it was standard legal. its not completely unplayable, but it has seen very little play(unless afcourse i am recalling it incorrectly).
|
On September 17 2014 17:48 annedeman wrote:Show nested quote +On September 17 2014 17:41 Shotcoder wrote:On September 17 2014 16:42 RoieTRS wrote: In a world where the best card draws are Divination, and Jace's Ingenuity (I've seen Font of Fortunes too), you aren't exactly building a deck around it. If I recall correctly, Ingenuity was perfectly fine last time it was standard legal. its not completely unplayable, but it has seen very little play(unless afcourse i am recalling it incorrectly ).
I remember UB lists playing it, as well as SOME Tapout Variants. Other than that, I don't think I've seen a good deck play it.
|
On September 17 2014 17:43 annedeman wrote:Show nested quote +On September 17 2014 16:42 RoieTRS wrote: In a world where the best card draws are Divination, and Jace's Ingenuity (I've seen Font of Fortunes too), you aren't exactly building a deck around it. divination barely nets business spells as your expected value is only slightly more then 1 spell and 1 land, divination is mostly a tool to make high cost spells beter as you are able to draw more land without flooding. But dig through time puts jace's ingenuity to shame so brutally, if tested quite alot in modern and it was a 2 mana cost spell more often then a 4 or higher(it was truely amazing in my matches vs jund), with an average near 3 mana(and even often when i casted for 3 i was often able to leave 2 good instants in my graveyard for snapcaster mage), in standard you expect it to be slightly more expensive, but even at 5 its better then jace's ingenuity(especially as standard decks have something like 55/45 percent spells/lands, and getting more lands is less interesting in the midgame without sphinx's revelation as a big finisher). with only 1 major downside in not being able to play the murderous cut which is also a great card.
Doesn't have to be card draw, that's just the easiest to integrate. "The deck" used to do it with disrupting scepter + moat, counterphoenix used to do it with thawing glaciers.
|
On September 17 2014 19:04 Cixah wrote:Show nested quote +On September 17 2014 17:48 annedeman wrote:On September 17 2014 17:41 Shotcoder wrote:On September 17 2014 16:42 RoieTRS wrote: In a world where the best card draws are Divination, and Jace's Ingenuity (I've seen Font of Fortunes too), you aren't exactly building a deck around it. If I recall correctly, Ingenuity was perfectly fine last time it was standard legal. its not completely unplayable, but it has seen very little play(unless afcourse i am recalling it incorrectly ). I remember UB lists playing it, as well as SOME Tapout Variants. Other than that, I don't think I've seen a good deck play it. Standard Twin played ingenuity for the mirror and cawblade. Ingenuity showed up in UW control variants at PT M15 as well.
|
On September 18 2014 02:38 MCMcEmcee wrote:Show nested quote +On September 17 2014 19:04 Cixah wrote:On September 17 2014 17:48 annedeman wrote:On September 17 2014 17:41 Shotcoder wrote:On September 17 2014 16:42 RoieTRS wrote: In a world where the best card draws are Divination, and Jace's Ingenuity (I've seen Font of Fortunes too), you aren't exactly building a deck around it. If I recall correctly, Ingenuity was perfectly fine last time it was standard legal. its not completely unplayable, but it has seen very little play(unless afcourse i am recalling it incorrectly ). I remember UB lists playing it, as well as SOME Tapout Variants. Other than that, I don't think I've seen a good deck play it. Standard Twin played ingenuity for the mirror and cawblade. Ingenuity showed up in UW control variants at PT M15 as well.
Before ingenuity, Opportunity was also regularly used.
Those types of cards are not revelations--revelations is not Fact or Fiction either.
|
How do you know how much banners do you place in your deck? I've been practicing with this link, and on average, I get 1 Wedge Land, and 2-3 Heal Lands. Is that enough mana fixing? Or would you guys advise throwing in 1-2 (maybe not 3) banners? Going to the basics of deck building for sealed pool, it's supposed to be 17 lands, 17 creatures, and 6 other spells. If you throw in 2 banners to fix your Mana, it would only leave you with 4 other spells.
Or am I doing it wrong and are banners supposed to be counted towards the total land count?
|
How do sealed events work? I'm thinking of going to my local card store on Saturday but I'm not really sure what it means to participate in a sealed event. Do you keep the cards you get from the pool? Do you only keep the cards you get from the deck you draft? How useful is my limited experience in Hearthstone Arena going to be in drafting/are there things I should look to do in a sealed event draft wise?
|
The Khans of Tarkir pre-release event will be sealed format, which means that you'll pick a clan and get a box that contains five booster packs from the set, plus one mini-pack with colors suitable for your clan. All the cards you open belong to you, and will be used to make the best 40-card deck that you can. You may only use cards that you opened in the clan box, as well as basic lands (which most shops have available for you to borrow).
Here's MTG's primer for the event: http://magic.wizards.com/en/articles/archive/feature/khans-tarkir-prerelease-primer-2014-09-15
I personally enjoy the Sealed format the most, as it lets you build a deck without having to worry about drafting well. Since I'm terrible at Magic, other folks can offer advice on how to build a good sealed deck.
|
On September 19 2014 10:57 las91 wrote: How do sealed events work? I'm thinking of going to my local card store on Saturday but I'm not really sure what it means to participate in a sealed event. Do you keep the cards you get from the pool? Do you only keep the cards you get from the deck you draft? How useful is my limited experience in Hearthstone Arena going to be in drafting/are there things I should look to do in a sealed event draft wise?
http://archive.wizards.com/Magic/magazine/article.aspx?x=mtgcom/daily/sw63
Basically you get 75 cards (not including lands). Depending on the sets, this generally means one tournament pack and two boosters. Tournament pack from the core set, boosters from the expansions (if those are around). You keep all the cards you open.
You're also provided with as many basic lands as you require by the tournament host.
The deck you submit officially has to be minimum 40 cards, and that must be exactly the deck you use in game one of every match you play. Game two and three you can sideboard anything you want in.
Very general recommendations for deck making are:
1) Stay at the 40 card deck size. There are times you can go higher, but for most newbies to limited, going above 40 cards means you're trying to force too many cards in.
2) 17 lands is almost standard. Can obviously change depending on the kinds of cards you get, but much like the 40 card limit it's something new players can't judge well.
3) In most cases, don't stray beyond two colours, with maybe a third splashed in for really important bombs. If you have a lot of mana fixing, three is sometimes viable.
4) Most important things to watch for are general colour depth, mana curve and bombs - mostly in that order. You'll win more games by playing a decent card every turn then you will playing a big bomb on turn 6 (especially if your opponent can freely hold onto spot removal). That said, a game winning card in a off-colour can be splashed in easily enough, as long as its mana cost isn't too colour intensive.
Never played Hearthstone myself, so I can't tell you how relevant it is. But I'm guessing not very.
|
Any thoughts on what you're going for in sealed event? What to prioritize? I've been listing to Limited Resources and Brian is advocating the first thing you do is see what your dual and wedge lands are and going from there.
Regarding the banner cards, they take up another spell card and are clunky. You have to pay mana to get it in play too. With a reasonable pool, I wouldn't play any banner cards.
A lot of people are saying this will be a slower format. I'm thinking there's going to be a ton of people with terrible mana bases at the sealed event - a lot of 4 and 5 color decks. I'm still thinking of sticking with two base colors and a third splash (just easier to splash now with all the Khans lands).
I always had the most fun with Simic decks, so I'm thinking I'll like Temur the most? Not really sure what I'll be going for still.
|
On September 19 2014 11:43 WolfintheSheep wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2014 10:57 las91 wrote: How do sealed events work? I'm thinking of going to my local card store on Saturday but I'm not really sure what it means to participate in a sealed event. Do you keep the cards you get from the pool? Do you only keep the cards you get from the deck you draft? How useful is my limited experience in Hearthstone Arena going to be in drafting/are there things I should look to do in a sealed event draft wise? Never played Hearthstone myself, so I can't tell you how relevant it is. But I'm guessing not very.
I mean outside of knowing what a mana curve is and keeping my deck consistent on that probably not all that useful. It sounds fun, hopefully I have the time to go Saturday and get smashed by people who have played the game way longer than me!
|
On September 19 2014 11:59 las91 wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2014 11:43 WolfintheSheep wrote:On September 19 2014 10:57 las91 wrote: How do sealed events work? I'm thinking of going to my local card store on Saturday but I'm not really sure what it means to participate in a sealed event. Do you keep the cards you get from the pool? Do you only keep the cards you get from the deck you draft? How useful is my limited experience in Hearthstone Arena going to be in drafting/are there things I should look to do in a sealed event draft wise? Never played Hearthstone myself, so I can't tell you how relevant it is. But I'm guessing not very. I mean outside of knowing what a mana curve is and keeping my deck consistent on that probably not all that useful. It sounds fun, hopefully I have the time to go Saturday and get smashed by people who have played the game way longer than me!
Hearthstone mostly feels like really good draft decks, except thats when you play constructed
|
On September 19 2014 11:59 las91 wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2014 11:43 WolfintheSheep wrote:On September 19 2014 10:57 las91 wrote: How do sealed events work? I'm thinking of going to my local card store on Saturday but I'm not really sure what it means to participate in a sealed event. Do you keep the cards you get from the pool? Do you only keep the cards you get from the deck you draft? How useful is my limited experience in Hearthstone Arena going to be in drafting/are there things I should look to do in a sealed event draft wise? Never played Hearthstone myself, so I can't tell you how relevant it is. But I'm guessing not very. I mean outside of knowing what a mana curve is and keeping my deck consistent on that probably not all that useful. It sounds fun, hopefully I have the time to go Saturday and get smashed by people who have played the game way longer than me!
Also, outside deckbuilding be sure to watch out for thiefs. You would be surprise how many ppl are ready to steal cards on this kind of events.
|
On September 19 2014 18:51 PushDown wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2014 11:59 las91 wrote:On September 19 2014 11:43 WolfintheSheep wrote:On September 19 2014 10:57 las91 wrote: How do sealed events work? I'm thinking of going to my local card store on Saturday but I'm not really sure what it means to participate in a sealed event. Do you keep the cards you get from the pool? Do you only keep the cards you get from the deck you draft? How useful is my limited experience in Hearthstone Arena going to be in drafting/are there things I should look to do in a sealed event draft wise? Never played Hearthstone myself, so I can't tell you how relevant it is. But I'm guessing not very. I mean outside of knowing what a mana curve is and keeping my deck consistent on that probably not all that useful. It sounds fun, hopefully I have the time to go Saturday and get smashed by people who have played the game way longer than me! Also, outside deckbuilding be sure to watch out for thiefs. You would be surprise how many ppl are ready to steal cards on this kind of events.
o.o I was just going to have other stuff in my back pack
|
Beyond general card game concepts like consistency vs situational cards, curving out, "who's the beat down", Hearthstone is not much help. They're different enough in my mind, it's kind of a jolt when I switch between the two. When it comes to drafting, card evaluation is sooo much easier in HS arena
|
On September 19 2014 21:06 mordek wrote:Beyond general card game concepts like consistency vs situational cards, curving out, "who's the beat down", Hearthstone is not much help. They're different enough in my mind, it's kind of a jolt when I switch between the two. When it comes to drafting, card evaluation is sooo much easier in HS arena Yea I'm just looking to have fun and play with some cards (which I haven't done with paper in so long)
|
On September 19 2014 21:06 mordek wrote:Beyond general card game concepts like consistency vs situational cards, curving out, "who's the beat down", Hearthstone is not much help. They're different enough in my mind, it's kind of a jolt when I switch between the two. When it comes to drafting, card evaluation is sooo much easier in HS arena
There is no consequence in hearthstone drafting. Nor restrictions. You'll never be passed cards you can't play so you always grab the best card in the pack. Which is the opposite in magic where the best card in the lack might not even be in your color, but you have to in order to prevent it from getting to people.
|
Only having 3 offered at a time makes choices extremely less complicated. Trying to evaluate 12 cards within a time limit and considering curve, color distribution, value, number of colored mana in the casting cost... yeah. Arena drafting is relaxing.
|
On September 19 2014 23:12 mordek wrote: Only having 3 offered at a time makes choices extremely less complicated. Trying to evaluate 12 cards within a time limit and considering curve, color distribution, value, number of colored mana in the casting cost... yeah. Arena drafting is relaxing.
My problem is basically thus: you cannot read signals in the draft because you are drafting alone, therefore you cannot draft synergy decks and are reduced to basically taking the best card out of every pack.
Cards like Undertaker, Mad Scientist,Ethereal Arcanist, Violet Teacher, and the like are all excellent cards, but much poorer in draft because you have to act like they don't have text boxes half the time. I've gone through several mage drafts where I saw only 1-2 mirror entities that I could have picked up and there were much more powerful cards (Frostbolt, Fireball, etc.) in the pack. That means all the secret synergy cards are going to be fucking horrible for me, even if I chose one early and tried to draft around it.
Basically, it means that if you want to do consistently well, you have to avoid a huge subsection of cards that are fun to play with because you can't "make the deck work". Whereas if I were drafting M15 and opened Triplicate Spirits, I could force the white Convoke/Token deck and likely get at least most of the good cards I needed provided I read the signals correctly.
Then you have the randomness where the worth of a Mage deck depends on having 1-2 Flamestrikes and 2-4 Fireballs to be good, and it's possible to see neither one of those cards at all in draft. And if all my examples happen to be Mage, it's simply because their hero power is so good to the point of being oppressive in Arena, you should always choose them when you get the chance.
Also I just realized this is the Magic thread so:
I'm going Abzan at the midnight prerelease tonight. Hoping to open some goodies for my Junk Midrange deck that's desperately in need of updating because 3/4 of my threats are rotating
|
On September 20 2014 01:13 deth2munkies wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2014 23:12 mordek wrote: Only having 3 offered at a time makes choices extremely less complicated. Trying to evaluate 12 cards within a time limit and considering curve, color distribution, value, number of colored mana in the casting cost... yeah. Arena drafting is relaxing. My problem is basically thus: you cannot read signals in the draft because you are drafting alone, therefore you cannot draft synergy decks and are reduced to basically taking the best card out of every pack. Cards like Undertaker, Mad Scientist,Ethereal Arcanist, Violet Teacher, and the like are all excellent cards, but much poorer in draft because you have to act like they don't have text boxes half the time. I've gone through several mage drafts where I saw only 1-2 mirror entities that I could have picked up and there were much more powerful cards (Frostbolt, Fireball, etc.) in the pack. That means all the secret synergy cards are going to be fucking horrible for me, even if I chose one early and tried to draft around it. Basically, it means that if you want to do consistently well, you have to avoid a huge subsection of cards that are fun to play with because you can't "make the deck work". Whereas if I were drafting M15 and opened Triplicate Spirits, I could force the white Convoke/Token deck and likely get at least most of the good cards I needed provided I read the signals correctly. Then you have the randomness where the worth of a Mage deck depends on having 1-2 Flamestrikes and 2-4 Fireballs to be good, and it's possible to see neither one of those cards at all in draft. And if all my examples happen to be Mage, it's simply because their hero power is so good to the point of being oppressive in Arena, you should always choose them when you get the chance. Also I just realized this is the Magic thread so: I'm going Abzan at the midnight prerelease tonight. Hoping to open some goodies for my Junk Midrange deck that's desperately in need of updating because 3/4 of my threats are rotating
I can't decide between Sultai, Abzan, and Mardu. I'm currently running a Red splash Black midrangey deck for the new standard rotation since it's probably the most consistent playing card list I could get with my collection ^_^ (which contains far more cards of the 2014-rtr part of the outgoing block than the 2015-theros part )
|
|
|
|