Ask Ken, 08/03/2004
In last week’s draft, I had a hand of: Infused Arrows, Suntouched Myr, Thought Courier, Raise the Alarm, Arcbound Worker, 2 Swamps. Do you mulligan this hand or not?
In last week’s draft, I had a hand of: Infused Arrows, Suntouched Myr, Thought Courier, Raise the Alarm, Arcbound Worker, 2 Swamps. Do you mulligan this hand or not?
Let me be clear and say that I think Qumulox is a good, solid finisher for my deck. He has won me countless games. The only times I have been unhappy to draw him is when I couldn’t find the UU in his cost, which said more about a problem with my mana base than anything else. If you have been following along with your own Nuts and Bolts experiment and want to keep the deck to budget-proportions, keep Qumulox right where he is.
For my own deck, however, I guess I’m going to try and up the style points.
Our favorite Type One curmudgeon hasn’t been heard from in weeks!
So how exactly did the World’s newest Magic prodigy make it to the Dutch National team, home of some of the best Magicians on the planet, in his first ever Nationals event? We have the full story, right here.
Follow Romeo as he takes you through his average Magic week, complete with awful new deck ideas, actual playtesting sections, and the usual assortment of cheesecake.
Rich Jacques (one of our regulars) got the Wall deck at my deck challenge. Rich got paired up against Erhnam and Burnem in the fourth round, and complained bitterly about losing to River Boa two of the games. “He has four Boas, and I have only four Swords! I have no other way to deal with them!” I picked up his sideboard to find he had sided out Stinging Barriers. “Uh Rich, these guys are pretty good against one toughness creatures. “Oh my God!” yelled Virginia State Champion Wes Moss, one of Rich’s friends. “That’s like the best card in your deck. Why’d you side it out?”
So last week I get an e-mail from an R&D member who happens to be the original creator of the Nuts and Bolts preconstructed deck discussing some possible additions to the deck…
This one will cover my favorite topics, Black draft. Black is my current favorite son. It is severely underdrafted and very deep once you get out of the first pack. This color has aggressive cards, control cards, and they all work well together.
Once I saw that 4CC was really out in forceat the Power 9, I wondered why it didn’t do better. Unfortunately I don’t have the answer. A possible explanation is improper metagaming. Decks like Fish and Suicide Black thrive on taking advantage of the weaknesses of the upper tier decks to get ahead. 4CC operates on a similar principle, hoping to have the tools to handle whatever it sits down in front of it. Today I’m going to search around in the toolbox and figure out what the”right” tools are.
I’ve been teasing to the main event for nearly a week now, but it’s finally time to talk about Steve and Keith’s big Power 9 tournament, held monthly at the Quality Inn in Metarie, Louisiana.
I probably should have done this long ago, but here is a list of all Standard-legal”cogs” (artifacts of zero or one casting cost) and some commentary from me on whether I think they have a shot at making the deck. The Forums are taking on a great community feel, and I know a lot of people are taking their own cog decks in many different directions. For that reason, I’ll make this list comprehensive by including cogs that I’m already using and have already abandoned. Consider it your own handy-dandy cog deckbuilding reference.
Why is it that every time I play Journey of Discovery, I draw a land for the next two turns?
I swing with the Dragon, taking Mike down to eight. Then I cast Mindslaver and activate it. Mike uptaps his permanents, hands me his hand, and I draw…
From my own deck.
Serendib Jim was named after, of course, Serendib Djinn from Arabian Nights. Much like the mythical Arabian merchant in these old stories, Jim was a wheeler and dealer. He wasn’t much for organizing tournaments or rules knowledge or playing the game, but he knew how to trade. Back in those days, nobody could trade cards as well as Jim. This is how he kept Magic in the store even after the tournaments there floundered – the profits he brought in from one lopsided trade after another made the owners of the business very happy indeed.