I only played Magic a little, but it was fun. I really want to play the Lord of the Rings TCG again. I have a good set of the Fellowship edition (every common and uncommon, and nearly every rare). My ex-boyfriend had a complete set (four of each card). We courted over the game. Posts: 1805 | Registered: Jun 1999
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I played it hardcore for about 2 years but then realized that I was spending way too much money on cardboard cards.
But I do still have a binder of all of my really good cards. I look at it every once in a blue moon and feel this huge pang of regret that I don't play anymore.
What is it about Magic the Gathering that makes it so appealing?
Posts: 1711 | Registered: Jun 2004
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Magic just had a renaissance, in a big way, in my dorm. We went from no magic playing to weekly draft tournaments, and the lounge is always covered in cards.
The new ones include ninja, and I think they captured the flavor exactly. It's awesome.
Posts: 535 | Registered: Sep 2000
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I haver a box a little larger than a shoebox jam-packed full of Magic cards. I almost tried to sell them a few months ago.
My five year old came home talking about the Yu-gi-oh cards his friends have, so I showed him my Magic collection. He doesn't know exactly what they're for, but he was in awe. I think I climbed a few notches on the ladder of cool.
Posts: 1652 | Registered: Aug 2003
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Do you mean Revised? I didn't think they started numbering the editions until Fourth Edition. But I could be wrong.
Posts: 1652 | Registered: Aug 2003
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It was called Third Edition when I was buying booster packs for it. It only started being referred to as Revised later on. But yes, I mean revised.
Posts: 21898 | Registered: Nov 2004
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I haven;t played Magic since January. *twitch* I miss it. I had an infinite loop deck where I could get infinite life and manna, and then FIREBALL! That was fun.
I play a lot of LotR CCG, too. I used to be 5th in the state, but my ratings dropped a bit. *sniff*
Posts: 4174 | Registered: Sep 2003
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Adam, that is pure eee-villll. Imagine playing that with your PMS-y wife with a Fork and a Fireball in her hand.
We've playing since Legends. I usually play red/green direct damage/stomy creatures decks. Now our two older kids are playing- Matthew is into just stompy creatures, Olivia has a fairy deck. One of my proudest moments was watching her crushingly defeat her older bother, dad, and dad's best friend with her fairies.
I'm actually right now ordering some cards to revitalise my old Verduran Enchantress deck, now that I can use it again.
Posts: 2711 | Registered: Mar 2004
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There is a program called apprentice which allows you to build decks through it and play online. Or so the theory goes. Never actually done it, but have made a couple of mock decks, which, now looking are apparently deleted.
So if you ever want to play against me, I'll build my deck in there and we'll play, although, I don't know squat about what rules are now. Jamie and I just sort of play with our own understood rules, so to speak.
Posts: 51 | Registered: Mar 2003
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adam, the traditional way to do the "denial" deck is to put in a coupla millstones. That way you deny them the ability to do *anything* while you millstone off their deck and watch them whine as their good cards go into the graveyard.. then you win when they run out of cards.
I had 4 extra devine offerings in my sideboard just because of that.
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My hubby has the most annoying denial decks.
I like to use millstone in my extra big direct damage decks. I use mana flare in those decks too. I get lots of mana that way, and can often kill just with DD.
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I like to lockdown with winter/static orbs then mill and grind away. It's such an aggravating build to play against sometimes.
Posts: 433 | Registered: Feb 2005
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My favorite was my drain life deck. I'd sit behind a wall of will o the wisps, with terrors and ashes to ashes in my hand, a royal assassin, and (back in the day when dark ritual was legal) sit and wait for a drain life and a whole mess o mana. Of course, the 2 nightmares in an all swamp deck helped in case of counter spells I had ways, in that deck, of dealing with almost anything.
Posts: 4112 | Registered: May 2001
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Currently, i have the most powerful creatureless Tourach game i can paly. Maybe Underworld dreams can be a good addition...
Posts: 1189 | Registered: Dec 2004
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My brother and I made up rules to Magic back when it was big. We spread them around at summer camp and it was extremely popular for that summer. I can't remember how we played, but I liked our version a lot better.
Everyone who plays the real way would probably hate it.
Posts: 5462 | Registered: Apr 2005
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I've stayed current in M:TG since third edition. Still play in tournaments. It's nostalgic to hear all of you guys talk about "fireballs" and "forks". I remember when the game was so different then it is now, and has been since Alliances. At first, I hated the fact that WOTC was increasing the power level of everything and starting to do expansion sets in groups of 3, but I stuck with it and it is so much more fun now. The nuances of each set and the new mechanics they design keep me coming back for more. Ravnika just hit and it's currently blowing my mind. I don't know if any of you guys remember Invasion, but if you liked that set, Rav will make you into a cardboard crack junkie ^_^. Magic is by far the most entertaining, dynamic, and non-repetitious game I've ever encountered.......FNM anyone?
Posts: 484 | Registered: Jan 2005
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I played a fair bit as a teenager, but dropped out about the time Visions was released. I got back into it during the Invasion block but stopped again after that. Then when Mirrodin was released I rediscovered my love of the game anew. I enjoy playing in Limited formats, mostly sealed deck (where you construct a 40-card deck from a random set of cards), since Constructed formats are too expensive for me and I don't like most of the sets that are currently legal in Standard (formerly "Type II;" Mirrodin block dropped from the Standard rotation last month).
Vintage (formerly Type I) is also too rich for my blood, since I don't own the requisite playset of dual lands, Mana Drains, Mishra's Worksops... the list goes on. Extended (formerly Type 1.x) consists mostly of sets I skipped. Basically, for Constructed play my hope rests with the new Legacy (formerly Type 1.5) format -- Legacy had its banned and restricted list separated from that of Vintage recently, and is now a format unto itself. You could loosely describe it as "unpowered" Vintage, but that would be doing it a disservice. Basically, you can play with everything except the most hideously broken cards. The format is new, and just begging to be busted wide open with novel deck designs. The barrier to entry isn't high because old singles that aren't chase rares are pretty cheap.
I kind of want to throw something together for Legacy, and it's been simmering along at the back of my mind since the format was officially launched. There are a couple of places that hold weekly Legacy tournaments within a 1-2 hour drive of me, but I don't want to go until I've put together something that could be faintly competitive. Most of my best cards are in green and black, because for a long time my best deck was black with a green splash for Pernicious Deed. It seems, though, that Pernicious Deed is too slow against stuff like Goblin Piledriver. I think the solution lies in Sphere of Resistance, but I'm not sure how to break it...
Er. Sorry. I'm rambling.
Really, though, when it comes to card games I much prefer Richard Garfield's second effort, Netrunner. Sadly, I don't have many people to play it with.
Posts: 10886 | Registered: Feb 2000
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If any of you are looking for some play R.I.W. hobbies, located at 5 Mile and Middlebelt in Michigan has a FNM every Friday and the prize support is ridiculous......pay out to top 16. let me know if anyone needs more specific information as I go there all the time and am good friends with the owner.
(and yes, that is the same R.I.W. that had 6 of the top 8 at Nationals, for any of you that keep up on the tournament scene)
Posts: 484 | Registered: Jan 2005
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I don't think that's very far at all from where I live... just on the U.S. side of the border, of course. However, my local store has Friday Night Magic as well -- my problem with FNM is that the Constructed play is all Standard, and I wouldn't exactly say that I thought much of the Kamigawa block. Ravnica is okay, but it's no Mirrodin. So I'm not particularly interested in making the financial investment required to play Standard. I think WotC's "one block per year" thing makes Standard too expensive. I'm also no good at draft, which is why I prefer Sealed. Posts: 10886 | Registered: Feb 2000
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I've never found that to be true, though knowing the general shape of the set is useful.
Of course, I hardly come in first with any consistency, but I do okay for myself. Its a matter of picking cards that allow you to manage the resources important in draft play and disrupt your opponent's management of those resources. Combos don't really come into play except in terms of generally complementary cards that are good on their own.
Posts: 15770 | Registered: Dec 2001
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After starting a bit late, after The Dark was released, I was able to trade, buy and win my way to a full set of Arabian Nights, my favorite expansion to this day.
Sadly, I sold most all of my collection during the great "Oh Crap I Lost My Job E-Bay Event" if 1998. That Juzam Djinn nicely paid my electricity bill.
I miss the tournaments and the just downright fun of getting together and playing.
I tended to play either "White Weenie" decks or a really weird black/green monster factory.
Posts: 2848 | Registered: Feb 2003
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quote:Originally posted by fugu13: I've never found that to be true, though knowing the general shape of the set is useful.
Of course, I hardly come in first with any consistency, but I do okay for myself. Its a matter of picking cards that allow you to manage the resources important in draft play and disrupt your opponent's management of those resources. Combos don't really come into play except in terms of generally complementary cards that are good on their own.
In that respect it doesn't seem terribly different from Sealed. The trouble is the competition for cards and colours... the draft itself, that is.
Posts: 10886 | Registered: Feb 2000
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Yeah, it helps to be familiar with how people draft. I typically just find out which colors have decent support for a deck type I like in their commons, then draft based on whichever of those archetypes I see more cards for early on. It usually works fine. By focusing less on getting certain "good cards" I'm typically able to reap many "second tier" cards which then proceed to kick the "good cards'" butt (for instance, they may get a better creature out, but I'll have three mediocre creatures. Guess who comes out on top?)
Posts: 15770 | Registered: Dec 2001
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Definitely, Jyhad is really, really fun, but you need a good group to play.
Oh, and in draft, there are certain cards you should always draft: fast mana, cards that let you ditch them (from hand or play, whatever) to draw new cards (one of the most important parts of draft games is the mid-game, when everyone's drawing too much land), cards that can directly remove some threat at any cost 4 or less, creatures costing one or two mana that are potentially three power/ two toughness or greater, multi-purpose cards (even if each purpose seems dinky, they're usually a great value), creatures with protection from some color or another, and powerful anti-specific color spells (you get a sideboard, after all, and most decks will be multi-color), roughly in that order of precedence.
Posts: 15770 | Registered: Dec 2001
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I haven't played Jyhad in forever! I still have a cool Gangrel deck somewhere in the deck boxes tnhat fill our lined closet. (And the custom fangs I always wore to play)
Posts: 2711 | Registered: Mar 2004
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A great way to improve your deck building is to go the the Magic website and build decks based on tournament winning decks. As much as you can afford to, of course.
Posts: 2711 | Registered: Mar 2004
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Like I said before, though, I don't play in Constructed tournaments. I might start playing in Legacy tournaments, but if I do, I probably won't netdeck (copy tournament-winning decks). I don't like to netdeck, as it's called, because when you netdeck everyone else is ready for you. When I'm looking to look at internet decks, I find a much better deckbuilding resource is The Mana Drain, a forum devoted to the "classical" formats (Vintage, Extended, Legacy). I find the level of deckbuilding there is way higher than pretty much anywhere else on the internet.
Deckbuilding isn't my problem, drafting is. Given a sealed deck I can often build something that faintly resembles the card pool's optimal deck. Drafting is what I need to get better at.
Posts: 10886 | Registered: Feb 2000
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