I've been playing MTG competitively now for quite a while, but locally. I figured that there were enough players here to warrant a topic.
Here, you can discuss the most played trading/collectable card game in the world, and debate deck strategies and artwork, whatever, really. As long as it's relevant to the topic of MTG in general, it's fine.
I recently built a deck of Knights and Soldiers...
The deck plays incredibly well for a Legacy deck, and I may have found a new archetype. Essentially, it can be boiled down to the power of
Timely Reinforcements - The deck can be slow on creatures in the beginning, meaning that an opponent can deal some damage very easily when I'm otherwise delayed. This bolsters my power in dealing with that problem, as it deals with the life loss and creature disadvantage in one fell swoop.
Mikaeus, the Lunarch -This guy. He's insane. As soon as I get some land advantage with cards like
Edge of Autumn or even a
Harrow, I can start casting this guy with a huge amount of +1/+1 counters. This might not seem like a lot, but as soon as he starts to tap into boosting tokens and regular knights, he's overly useful.
Knight of the Reliquary - This guy. Not enough can be said about him. As soon as I start sacrificing my
Windswept Heaths into
Savannah, then sac'ing those for more, I am building up tremendously powerful Knights.
Gavony Township - This guy makes me LOL. When I don't have access to Mikaeus, or even when I do, this card pretty much allows me to seal the deal. With the mana acceleration in this deck, it's not uncommon to see a Mikaeus and one of these on turn three or four pumping out creatures with +2/+2.
And then there is what I'd consider the biggest ally in the deck, even though he's not really a Knight or a Soldier. I fail to see how a deck with low-cost creatures and spells can even consider being White without the help of the
Sun Titan. He alone provides all the recursion this deck could ever need, and he provides it well. Normally, I cast him from the hand on turn four or so, and recurse into a O-Ring to seal away a threat, then swing for huge damage. It also helps that he reads any
permanent with a CMC of 3 or less, as that opens up the door to land. This may not seem huge, but it provides even MORE ramp, which basically turns
Primeval Titan into a huge waste of money. It doesn't do the job as
well as him, but it does it and more. Versatility is the key to winning games, people.
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If anyone wants a critique of a card or a deck from moi or someone else, just post it hurr and see what people think of it.