Monthly Archives: March 2018

Dinosaur Tribal Commander Deck V2


For the time being this is my final version of my Dinosaur Tribal deck for Commander.

It’s not that too different from before. There is one extra dinosaur, which is the Polyraptor. On the spell front the lightning bolt, Ashes of the Abhorrent and Rain of Thorns are gone. Lightning Greaves is in, as is a Madblind Mountain in the lands.

In games Zacama once out on the battlefield is devastating. Talk about controlling the battlefield with those activated abilities. I don’t think much more needs to be said about the deck. So here is the version 2 deck list…

Creatures:38

1 Kinjalli’s Caller
1 Drover of the Mighty
1 Otepec Huntmaster
1 Raptor Hatchling
1 Atzocan Seer
1 Deathgorge Scavenger
1 Frilled Deathspitter
1 Kinjalli’s Sunwing
1 Rampaging Ferocidon
1 Ranging Raptors
1 Ravenous Daggertooth
1 Thrashing Brontodon
1 Wayward Swordtooth
1 Forerunner of the Empire
1 Grazing Whiptail
1 Imperial Aerosaur
1 Knight of the Stampede
1 Raging Regisaur
1 Ripjaw Raptor
1 Charging Monstrosaur
1 Charging Tuskodon
1 Crested Herdcaller
1 Imperial Ceratops
1 Raging Swordtooth
1 Regisaur Alpha
1 Snapping Sailback
1 Bellowing Aegisaur
1 Burning Sun’s Avatar
1 Carnage Tyrant
1 Etali, Primal Storm
1 Sun-Crowned Hunters
1 Thundering Spineback
1 Gishath, Sun’s Avatar
1 Polyraptor
1 Wakening Sun’s Avatar
1 Zetalpa, Primal Dawn
1 Zacama, Primal Calamity
1 Ghalta, Primal Hunger

Spells:30

1 Blazing Volley
1 By Force
1 Commune with Dinosaurs
1 Silent Gravestone
1 Sol Ring
1 Abrade
1 Lightning Greaves
1 Path of Mettle
1 Blood Sun
1 Commander’s Sphere
1 Crushing Canopy
1 Darksteel Ingot
1 Gift of Paradise
1 Growing Rites of Itlimoc
1 Harvest Season
1 Herald’s Horn
1 Karmic Justice
1 New Horizons
1 Sweltering Suns
1 Teferi’s Protection
1 Huatli, Radiant Champion
1 Return to Dust
1 Fumigate
1 Huatli, Warrior Poet
1 Vanquisher’s Banner
1 Kindred Charge
1 Planar Cleansing
1 The Immortal Sun
1 Star of Extinction
1 Zendikar Resurgent

Lands:32

1 Blighted Steppe
1 Blighted Woodland
1 Blossoming Sands
1 Boros Garrison
1 Command Tower
1 Fertile Thicket
5 Forest
1 Jungle Shrine
1 Madblind Mountain
5 Mountain
1 Opal Palace
1 Path of Ancestry
5 Plains
1 Ramunap Ruins
1 Rugged Highlands
1 Scattered Groves
1 Stone Quarry
1 Sunpetal Grove
1 Wind-Scarred Crag
1 Windswept Heath

BTN February 2018

OMG I’ve just realised I haven’t done this post yet! What they heck have I been doing? I’ll try and keep this one very brief. I better get on with it then…

February was a dire month for games played. Apart from MtG, I played 3 games! But with illness taking me out of action for 2 weeks or more, bad weather and life events hitting some of those I play with. It’s possible to think it’s amazing that I managed as many as I did.

The final section as usual presents the data graphically so we can try and see trends.

My Game of the Month…

No new games this month, so nada for this most prestigious award.

Worst Game of the Month…

Yep you guessed it nothing qualifies for this either.

Hopefully hitting the table in March…

One more attempt to get these three games to the table before moving onto something new. ▪ Suburbia – I really need to get this to the table. It’s been sitting in my collection for a while now. It’s shameful I haven’t played it yet.

Ghost Stories – another classic that has been sitting in my collection. About time this saw the light of day also.

Tao Long – I like abstract games, and I really need to get this Kickstarter to the table.

  • The fortnightly Friday Evening Gaming at The White Lion (or FEG@WL as I call it). The next one is next Friday.
  • Every second Tuesday of the month we have our monthly meet up. This month that second Tuesday has been and gone.

There is a MtG Commander event (if enough people sign up) next weekend.

If you are in the area and want to attend one of the events, please visit the Fenland Gamers Facebook page for further details about the event. Hope to see you there.

Spicing Up Commander

I’ve been testing the decks that I have built for Commander, but plain vanilla Commander game after game can get repetitive for some. So I have used a couple of things from other parts of the MtG Universe/Products to spice things up a little.

The first up bit of spice we used was the Planechase cards that came out I want to say around 2012. Now I’m not interested in the decks that they did. I wanted the Planechase cards themselves and the special dice that were done for them. Luckily over a year ago I picked up the full set of these cards (or I believe that is the case) from Magic Madhouse. I want to say I got the dice from them also, but my poor memory is also saying eBay for them. But I’m pretty sure it was Magic Madhouse. Either way I have the dice to go with the cards.

They are are not normal dice btw. Oh no. They are still 6 sided, but only 2 sides have anything on them. As the photo on the left shows. If you roll the Planechase symbol (that circular one that looks a bit ying/yang) then you get the Planechase part of the card, if you roll the Planeswalker side you planeswalk to a new plane and Planechase card.

So how do you use the Planechase cards in the game of Commander? We used a single common deck. Once we have established who the first player is, the first player at the start of their go turns over the top of the deck. If the Planes part of the card specifies a You, we have that refer to the person who has just done the planeswalk, and they get the benefit/penalty. Otherwise it applies to everyone. On a players go, whenever a player can cast a sorcery they can also roll the Planechase die. The first roll is free each turn, but from then on the cost to roll the die goes up by 1 mana. So a second roll would cost the player a single mana, a third roll 2 mana and so on.

We have found that playing with the Planechase cards a fun experience. The suspense of seeing what planes we are going to and how it changes up the game play was exciting. We did hit one that was a board wipe!

Our next bit of spice is a recent one from the tail end of 2017, Explorers of Ixalan (EoI). Now the nice thing about this is that you can (or could) just pick up the game side, ie the tiles, for around £11. When EoI is setup things look more boardgamie.

You can claim one tile each turn, the number on the tile is the mana cost to claim the tile. You are also able to reserve a tile until your next turn (there is a token for this). Sadly the 3 cost tiles can’t be claimed until there are no 1 cost tiles touching it. And the same for the 6 cost tiles in the middle. These when claimed can have an instant effect on the game, or they could be a quest that stays with you until the condition is true. Or the final tile type is a site that gives you an on going ability for the game.

I’d played the initial game with Dale last year when I first got it. It was a nice variation to MtG for 2 players. It worked really well with 4 players in Commander.

The nice things about these 2 bits of spice is that they give players something to do with spare mana, or the mana they have if they are not drawing and lands.

Our final bit of spice is the archenemy cards from the Archenemy Nicol Bolas set from 2017 I think? This gives you 20 archenemy scheme cards you can use in a 1 against 2/3 players. It is possible to pick up just the archenemy scheme cards, otherwise you will be forced to pay out £35 roughly to get them. But you do get 4 decks worth of cards you can cannibalise for deckbuilding and the rather cool life tracker that came with the Commander Anthology. I’d love to have the archenemy scheme cards from the original archenemy release, I think that these are different to the Nicol Bolas ones. However getting these seems rather elusive and expensive. Which is a shame. WotC should reprint these separately in a single pack for people to play with. I don’t care about the MtG decks that came with the scheme cards. Keep that value out there, just get the scheme cards into players hands. Give players a choice of multiplayer formats. I know one thing if I could get them I’d be using them with my students. Not just in Commander games but in regular deck games also.

The game I played using these the card draw just wasn’t with us against the archenemy. Which meant we were killed off rather quickly. However despite this brief use of the scheme cards, the students still wanted to play another game using them. So that should tell you something about how much fun this format of the game is.

I’m sure that there are other ways to spice up a game of Commander. I think there was even an episode of The Command Zone about this very thing way way back, or last year. But these from my experience have been fun and changed things up a little.

Rivals of Ixalan Commander Favourites Part 1

Ok so the verbal diarrhea is back. I’m going to bore you with some of the cards I like from Rivals of Ixalan for Commander.

As you can see my first cards are The Immortal Sun (TIS) and Blood Sun (BS). At the time of writing TIS is going for around £7, and BS for a more reasonable £1.50 on Magic Madhouse.

So why do I like them in Commander? Well TIS does a lot for it’s 6 mana cost. Switching off Planeswalker loyalty abilities is really useful. In my local Commander meta (ie the students I play Commander with at work) there are one or two Planeswalkers in the decks. Heck I even use them in my Dinosaur tribal deck and a couple of others. I don’t mind taking the hit from this ability on my own Planeswalkers to stop an opponent using theirs. Getting the extra card draw each turn is immense. Card advantage and hopefully getting to a card you want faster is not something to be laughed at. But then I can cast my spells for a reduced cost on top of that! Then the universal buff to all my creatures of +1/+1. I think the value this card gives me when it hits the battlefield is way more than the 6 mana it costs me.

BS on the other hand is a great card. 2 and a mountain, I draw a card, and switch off all those non-basic lands except for generating mana. It means when I play a non-basic land it doesn’t come in tapped, or force me to return a land to my hand. Ok I won’t gain a life either, but then I won’t lose one. Yeah it benefits my opponents also. But it stops them tapping and sacrificing a ramunap ruins to do me 2 to the face.

I currently have both cards in the 2 decks I have built (Dinosaurs Tribal and Mono Red) and the Wizards one I am upgrading.

Tron Angels – mono white deck

I had to build this deck, angels are cool. Especially Archangel Avacyn and the Felicia Day look a like Archangel of Thune (wish I could take credit for that one, but that goes to Day 9 and the MtG show that they used to produce for the Geek and Sundry YouTube channel).

Naturally I would like Archangel Avacyn to transform into Avacyn, the Purifier. Sometimes I will throw a wall or Honour Guard under the bus, after I have flashed her out in the combat stage to get her to transform straight away.

But the transformation I really am after is from Gisela and Bruna to get Brisela, Voice of Nightmares out. I’ll happily play Gisela as early as possible, chump block with her, whatever. I’m not really worried if she gets to the graveyard. Playing Bruna allows me to fetch Gisela from the graveyard and instantly get Brisela at the end of that turn. The double card creature truly is an amazing thing to see on the battlefield.

The main thing I needed to solve for this deck was surviving long enough to play all these beautiful costly angels. The solution I game up with was 10 walls, 2 Tocatli Honor Guards. I’m basically using Winged Shepherd for it’s cycle ability, but can also be pulled back from the graveyard using Bruna if need be. Authority of the Consuls puts an end to haste and flash causing creatures to etb tapped, and gives me a life. Cast Out gives me that bit of getting removal of big threats. And Rout is just a good ol’ board wipe. Although Overwhelming Splendor is a funny card to play.

This deck also needs some serious ramp. That’s where the Tron Lands come into play. All three out they tap for 7 mana. I also get a little discount with The Immortal Sun, and creature buff. And with the Tron lands it’s 6 cost is nothing. I’ve had this out turn 4!!

So here is the all important deck list that I know you are dying to look at and pick holes in.

Creatures:29

4 Wall of Hope
2 Angelic Wall
2 Tocatli Honor Guard
4 Wall of Omens
2 Gisela, the Broken Blade
2 Angel of Invention
1 Angel of Sanctions
3 Archangel Avacyn
2 Archangel of Thune
2 Linvala, the Preserver
2 Winged Shepherd
3 Bruna, the Fading Light

Spells:9

1 Authority of the Consuls
2 The Immortal Sun
2 Cast Out
2 Rout
2 Overwhelming Splendor

Lands:22

2 Evolving Wilds
8 Plains
4 Urza’s Mine
4 Urza’s Power Plant
4 Urza’s Tower

Sideboard:15

2 Angelic Wall
1 Gisela, the Broken Blade
1 Linvala, the Preserver
1 Bruna, the Fading Light
1 Authority of the Consuls
2 Demystify
2 Searing Light
1 Ashes of the Abhorrent
1 Dazzling Reflection
1 Cast Out
2 Rout

For fun I did play a version of this deck with a couple of Approach of the Second Sun slotted in. That was fun, and an easy card to cast with the Tron lands.

Commander Decks Update

So that is the deck, it’s now going to be broken up and used to form the basis of an Angels Commander deck.

If I haven’t forgotten anything then I think this is the list of my planned Commander decks that I want to build.

  • The just mentioned Angel deck
  • A Death and Taxes deck
  • Elves

I currently have 3 Commander decks in progress.

  • A dinosaur commander deck
  • A mono red deck with land hate in it
  • Upgrading the Arcane Wizardry Precon.

The dinosaur deck is nearly if not there. You have seen the deck list already for the initial effort. When you see the “final” deck list I don’t think that you will see much difference.

Mono red is also close to being there I think. I’m waiting for a couple of cards to arrive that need fitting in. Then I need to come up with a version without the land hate.

I have a Wizards deck with some changes made to it. But there are a few more to do to this one. I have those changes on the way.

It’s Clobbering Time

I know it’s been rather quiet on here lately. Well I am a firm believer of if you haven’t got anything to say then don’t say anything. Which really will surprise friends, family and work colleagues, because I talk a lot of crap. However you already know about the man flu, and life events that took out a couple of weeks of play. Then as everyone knows the weather last week kind of killed things off.

Surprisingly I did play some Magic last week.

As the photo above shows although not perfect we have at least enough room in my classroom to play Magic during breaks.

Sunday saw our party of brave adventurers return once more to the world of Gloomhaven. Oh SPOILER ALERT!!

The plan from our previous time in the Gloomhaven universe was to help out the local law enforcement and bring down a local crime lord. A local crime lord that we had already done the bidding of, by murdering some Inox caravan raiders. Just to teach them a lesson on behalf of the crime lord. Yeah our hands were dirty from that. Reflecting back on it, that mission if you remember didn’t sit well with me. Our mission was to infiltrate a warehouse in Gloomhaven owned by the crime lord. Sadly this mission was denied to us. Between our times in the Gloomhaven universe, Justin had visited his brother and they had started a new campaign, with new characters. Although they hadn’t started off with the intent of doing our planned mission. They ended up doing it anyway. I was a bit salty about this.

I have to admit I’m not a big fan of this mechanic that the designer built in to Gloomhaven. I think almost to a point that it may actually ruin the game for me. Or more specifically this play of the game. I still enjoy the game, and the mechanics. But I don’t like that missions etc can be denied from me. We had decided we were going to do the warehouse mission, but we can’t now. We won’t get to see the end of that story arc, or experience that mission and atone for our acts of murder. I know there is the argument, that “oh, we went along to the warehouse and found that it had been already raided”. But I don’t like that.

After a little debate and ruling out some watery options because we didn’t meet the mission requirement, our party settled on visiting the Windswept Highlands.

This new mission was heavily pushed by Charlie. Possibly because it offered the chance for him to make inroads on his characters objective for the campaign. We were on look out for some ingredients for an alchemist. All we had to do was visit the plateaus of the windswept highlands, fight against strong winds battering us around those plateaus. Oh and the small matter of defeating the indigenous monsters, such as sleeping spitting drakes, and the sun and wind demons. The spitting drakes would wake up if attacked or we were next to them.

There were also 3 treasure tokens we had to get to to open up 3 doors. The third and final treasure token when collected would open the door that would allow us to get to the exit point and victory. Naturally opening a door would not reveal anything good. My suspicion was more monsters.

If that wasn’t hard enough if one of us ended up exhausted then that was it mission over. The only plus point was if we got exhausted on the exit point we were ok.

My mission objective was to be the first person to kill a monster. Sadly this was not going to happen. Because of a road event, and not being able to clear a blocked path of a rock fall we started off this mission with 2 cards in our discard pile. Obviously this was to show how exhausting clearing heavy boulders away was. Not exactly a good way to encourage us to do the right thing in the future, putting us at a disadvantage before we even start killing stuff.

I got separated from the others when I opened the first door and then had a battle with two wind demons. Whilst the others went off to try and open the other 2 doors. Sadly the overwhelming odds of lots of sun and wind demons, plus the sleeping spitting drakes proved too much for the party. Despite the others in the party achieving their individual mission goals, it was all to no avail. Despite being a big bruising brute that likes to rush in and clobber things, Edmunds character took too much damage from the superior numbers. His character became exhausted and that was all she wrote. The mission was over and we had failed. None of the completed personal mission objectives mattered.

The wind mechanic introduced was interesting. At the end of each round our characters if able to would move 1 hex on the board left, up, right and down depending on the turn. It meant you had to think about where you finished your turn, because if you finish in the wrong place you could end up blown into a trap or worse blown into a space next to a sleeping spitting drake. I felt it did capture that being battered by gusts of strong wind.

Our first defeat. I’m sure that we will experience many more throughout the campaign. But still I was hoping we would of had a longer winning streak before suffering our first loss. I know how an Arsenal fan feels now.

Also over the weekend I was looking at some mono red land hate cards to put into this mono red Commander deck I am building. That Boiling Seas is awfully lonely at the moment and needs some friends. The nice thing about this land hate is that it slows and cripples my opponents, while leaving me mana rich. I’m waiting for Blood Moon to hopefully drop a little in price once Masters 25 hits FLGS this month. I’m not sure really who my Commander for the deck will be. I may play it with a different Commander each time to see which one is best.

Right hopefully now all the other events are out of the way and normal service has been resolved.