Pro MTG Online #227
Author: paz
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Pro MTG Online #226
Pro MTG Online #226
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‘BlockRogue’ Wins Game Contest
One of our very own members here at Good Gamery has won Microsoft’s Silverlight game development contest called “Dr. Dobb’s Challenge Deuce!” His entry was called BlockRogue, and you can play it right here!
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Pro MTG Online #225
Pro MTG Online #225
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Dominion: Intrigue Spoiler
Donald X. Vaccarino’s board game “Dominion” is the hottest “board” game on Earth. Next month, Dominion’s first expansion, “Intrigue” will be released. In order to prepare you for this new castle building experience, Basilisk has put together both a spoiler list and visual spoiler.
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Sakura-Tribe Elder: “I Will Fight No More Forever”
Facing an overwhelming force intent on expansion, redrawing the map and its resettling and modernizing its traditional homelands, the Elder of the Sakura Tribe has declared an end to years of armed retreat and asymmetrical warfare by surrendering to Magic: The Gathering rules manager Mark Gottlieb. The surrender took place on October 5, at Miren, the Moaning Well (now a national historic site), about 40 miles south of the Canadian border.
While the Sakura Tribe has responded to repeated attacks by giving up its traditional lands for years, it had long engaged in a practice of putting damage on the stack, wherein a rear guard would inflict a single point on the advancing army before committing ritual suicide. This practice made the tribe folk heroes among many Magic players, who, while they still settled into the seized lands, applauded the snakes’ courage, resourcefulness, and ability to keep counters off Umezawa’s Jitte.
“I always liked Steve,” said powerful wizard and Baylor College freshman Ankur Kartamian, using the common racial epithet for the tribe. “He was a good man, a common man. Sometimes he even got there, but mostly, he showed us to die as we lived, and to never make a choice between the two.”
“I am deeply saddened by his surrender,” added Kartamian’s roommate Mitchell Hart, as he tapped seven of the tribe’s ancestral mountains, plains and islands to cast a Bull Cerodon and have it enter the battlefield, “Some of us are getting together to protest this. We are considering a strongly worded e-mail, or maybe quitting Magic.” Hard then ordered Kartamian’s blockers and cast Unsummon before damage for a 2-for-1.
The Elder’s surrender was as eloquent as it was saddening:
“Tell Mark Gottlieb I know his heart. What he told me before, I have it in my heart. I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed; Seshiro is dead, Shisato is dead. The Kamigawa Block is all dead. It is the Coatl who say yes or no. He who put damage on the stack is dead.
It is cold, and we have no blankets; the little Orhan Vipers are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have left the in-play-zone and run away to the removed-from-the-game-zone, and have no blankets, no food. No one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children, and see how many of them I can find, collect and trade with my friends. Maybe I shall find them among the dead.
Hear me, my chiefs! My mana neither floats nor burns; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”Claims that this speech was written by Wizards of the Coast poet laureate Doug Beyer, and not in fact by a playing card with a snake on it, remain unconfirmed.
Gottlieb responded to his longtime foe with a knowing respect, “It is true, many of the Elder’s children have left the battlefield and gone into exile. And I wish we had made this change earlier, before so many of the Sakura Tribe had to die. But this game has a bright future; a Manifest Destiny.
The Sakura tribe is part of that destiny. It is very hard to explain to our own children the lives that are lost in what is already a decided conflict. It is merely the march of history. To live together as one people, we must put an end to these senseless murder-suicides, as courageous as they may be.
Or else the whole country might collapse, replaced by a larger budget for Monopoly or other such bullshit.”
“You just watch,” said Sachi, daughter of Seshiro, a longtime advocate for a more violent, fireball-based Orochi policy. “This will change nothing. The Sakura Tribe will keep getting played and killed by the white man and giving him land until there is none left in its library. This amicable surrender is just a fog effect for genocide. The only choice our Elder has made is to die rather than fight.”
While the exiled Orochi were promised basic land, rumors are flying they have instead been forcibly relocated to the Dust Bowl.
“Whatever the damage this has caused, it has been assigned, and it is now too late to prevent it,” mourned Sachi.
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Pro MTG Online #224
Pro MTG Online #224
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New M10 Combat System Exceptions
It is a well-known adage that the exceptions prove the rule. Magic 2010 will be making several new rules, so let us observe the practical effects of the new combat system. Combat will still work much like it used to:
- – Except if you have a combat trick
- – Except if its damage prevention
- – Except if their creature has deathtouch
- – Except if you have an Unsummon
- – Except if their creature has shroud
- – Except if you’re not double-blocking
- – Except if you’re blocking with Marsh Flitter
- – Except that card is rotating out
- – Except if you play Extended
- – Except Marsh Flitter is bad there
- – Except there might be a good combo deck in the offing
- – Except you probably won’t make it
- – Except you’ll pilot it and win the Pro Tour
- – Except… except it was all a dream
- – Except there’s still a Wizard of Oz
- – Except he was just a con man
- – Except he was never convicted due to police misconduct
- – Except that’s not how the law works here in Ravnica
- – Except you live in the Azorius section where it does work that way
- – Except for members of the Dimir guild
- – Except there are no members of the Dimir guild
- – Except everyone knows they’re everywhere
- – Except they all just pretend to not notice
- – Except for Wall of Denial
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Magic Community Reactions: M10 Rules Changes
With the recent announcement by Rules Manager Mark Gottlieb of the streamlining of various Magic: The Gathering, including the removal of mana burn, stacking combat damage, and wishing for cards in the removed-from-game zone, the local card-slinging community has been set abuzz with a veritable firestorm of controversy. We interviewed a cross-section of local players about their feelings with respect to the changes, with reactions ranging from melancholy to sadistic glee.
Rules maven Melvin Brazinsky, certified Magic Rules Advisor and Level 1 Judge applicant, was in a state of panic not seen since he lost his inhaler.
“AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!” was the most intelligible comment to come from Brazinsky.
Johnny Gordano, on the other hand, had a complaint about the changes expressible in words, as opposed to heartrending cries of rage and grief. Carefully storing two Burning Wishes, a Mirari, a Leyline of the Void, and a Walk the Aeons in his binder, he railed against what he called a “pointless dumbing-down.”
“Look at all of the functionality they’re removing! All the design space they’re closing up! Why, it’s an outrage! I shall have no part in this abomination!”
Reports that Gordano had traded for four Braid of Fire this very morning remain unconfirmed.
Some remained close-lipped about the entire situation.
“My mommy says I’m not supposed to talk to strangers” announced Timmy Jorgensen.
Spike Ferguson, notable local “pro” (9th place at Manitoba Regionals), was more noticeably sanguine about the changes.
“I guess as long as my opponents are denied the same tactical opportunities as I am, everything will be okay. Upkeep, Clique you?” Spike offered.
There were even some mildly enthusiastic responses to the changes.
“I DRINK THY MILKSHAKE, MELVIN!” exulted Vorthos Smith. Between sips of Melvin’s milkshake, he explained the reasons for his excitement.
“Forsooth and anon, these changes come as glad tidings,” babbled Vorthos.
“The sweet harmony of rules and flavor is a consummation I have devoutly wished!” he continued, badly mangling Shakespeare in the process.
“At last, the Wizard of the Coast doth listen to me, and he doth say ‘I hearest thou, Vorthos! Go forth and reign!’” he concluded. Our reporter at this point could not help but notice that he smelled of rotting bananas and self-abuse. He prayed these two smells were not linked.
“Perchance, hast thou seen mine robe and wizardly hat?”
Below: Melvin’s reaction to the rules change.
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Pro MTG Online #223
Pro MTG Online #223