Yawgmoth’s Whimsy #24: Whitewash
Fair warning: I’m writing about a FNM tourney I didn’t even win, and about a deck I don’t recommend playing. Nevertheless, this may be worth the read.
Fair warning: I’m writing about a FNM tourney I didn’t even win, and about a deck I don’t recommend playing. Nevertheless, this may be worth the read.
The eternal question has always plagued Magic: How can we bridge the Sharks-versus-Jets gulf that lies between Les Miserables fans and Magic players? Fortunately, Daniel Crane answers it!
“If one color could do everything, there would be no reason to play anything else.” – Elaine Chase, Research & Development
Strangely enough, that seems to be true.
Win $5 in StarCity credit just for sharing your wackiest multiplayer story!
I am now convinced that Alex Shvartsman must be one of the best players on Earth. All he does is travel to every Grand Prix in the world and make top eight. I’d write an article entitled”Searching for Alex Shvartsman”… But I don’t think I could find him.
Dave’s amazing tourney report. (Well, I may not have invented it, but I popularized it: The Ferrett)
Will any of Torment’s critters make it into the rarified air of Type One? Doubtful. And yet Oscar believes that one or two may be spongeworthy….
Many players bringing twenty-five cards. One deck. One graveyard. And only a couple of Avatars to share.
By new, I don’t mean that I’ll show you how Peek could be replaced with Obsessive Search, or that you can fit Basking Rootwalla into a R/G deck. Here’s some new ideas for the upcoming season.
WARNING: STRONG LANGUAGE. Why? Well, because we try to keep this a family site, every once in awhile something amuses us enough to let it through. You have been warned.
Win $5 in StarCity credit for your kookiest multiplayer shenanigans! This week: Gary”Boogerhead” Wise!
He’s written umpty-million strategy columns, so we guess it’s okay to just let Bennie go berserk, Larry King-style. We’re not sure we get it, either.
“The Deck” doesn’t really use five colors. It uses a primary, a secondary, and two tertiary colors, and a couple of cards in the last color. Green just happens to be that off-color.
He didn’t dare put in EmbOLDen or ArmAGEddon, but Peter still managed to throw together a deck based around old critters. How did it fare?
What opportunities does Torment provide for multiplayer? What opportunities does it miss? And what Card can we Break? Anthony examines the set broadly, color by color… And then channels rules-lovin’ Rizzo like it ain’t no thang.