All posts by Darren

Simic Aggro Thoughts

As you know from the previous post my Simic deck won last weekends Standard Showdown.

I also had that mini rant about basically the local meta being a bit stale with the same decks being played each week. The week before the pirate deck I came up with ended up mid table. I still have the mono blue mill to try in anger. Although it has been fun to play in the casual play.

But with all this in mind and partaking in the side of the game I really like, deck building. I’ve decided to rebuild the Simic deck with a different focus. My initial version of the Simic deck had a ramp element, and that is the side I decided to focus on and be a bit more aggressive.

But before I go any further it’s probably best I give my boiler plate get out of jail disclaimer for my decks.

I’m not claiming these are the best decks in the world, they certainly are not top competitive decks. They are hopefully fun, affordable (subjective I know) decks. I don’t try and keep to a target price point. I try and use as many cards in my collection as possible to keep my costs down. I’m certainly not a master deck builder claiming this deck will win tournaments, if it is fun to play and does it thing then I’ll be happy.

Right with that out of the way back to the conversation about this “new” deck.

It’s going to feel odd playing with so many creatures now, and so few spells.

But with the theme being ramp and aggro, the Llanowar Elves had to be back into the folder, along with the Steel Leaf Champions. We all know the dream starting hand of 2 forests, a Llanowar and Steel Leaf in this type of deck.

With 8 creatures that can tap for mana, 2 cards in the sideboard that have the Convoke mechanic (creatures I control can tap to add mana to cast the card) and Growth Spiral I think I have the ramp side covered. Oh and Song of Freyalise will help with the ramp.

I went with Evolving Wilds over Open the Gates as my mana fixing because Evolving Wilds puts the basic land I fetch on the battle field tapped. While Open the Gates doesn’t, it goes to hand and costs a forest to cast. Plus I’m not playing Guild Gates in this deck. They are too slow. This deck needs to come out sprinting, not walking. Lands that come in tapped are therefore out.

This deck also has a plan to handle the aerial threat of flyers with the classic two for one Crushing Canopy. Whether I like it or not enchantments are apart of the meta. So this card allows me to handle both. There is also Sagittars’ Volley in the sideboard to handle those 1/1 weenie fliers.

I’m also playing some fog cards which hopefully will nullify an attack and leave it open for me to swing in with lethal. Or ride out the storm if sleep has been played.

Naturally with Carnage Tyrant and Nullhide Ferox I have creatures in place that combat control decks. There is also Thrashing Brontodon included as part of the anti-enchantments plan.

Impervious Greatwurm, the buy-a-box promo. Probably unplayable, definitely not competitive. But it’s a fun card, that with the ramp and it’s convoke could be cast easily. With that on the battlefield even Ghalta looks punny.

So that’s enough of justifying my decisions for this deck. Let’s look at the mana curve.

Would like it under 3 For the AMC but I’ll live with it. Fitting Siren Stormtamer into the deck somehow would bring it down. But that’s a card to try after some testing.

Here is the initial deck list. What would you take out or add?

Creatures:27

4 Llanowar Elves
3 Hydroid Krasis
4 Incubation Druid
4 Steel Leaf Champion
3 Thrashing Brontodon
3 Nullhide Ferox
2 Zegana, Utopian Speaker
2 Carnage Tyrant
2 Ghalta, Primal Hunger

Spells:11

3 Growth Spiral
3 Root Snare
2 Song of Freyalise
2 Crushing Canopy
1 Vivien Reid

Lands:22

2 Breeding Pool
2 Evolving Wilds
10 Forest
2 Hinterland Harbor
5 Island
1 Woodland Stream

Sideboard:15

4 Frilled Mystic
1 Carnage Tyrant
1 Impervious Greatwurm
1 Root Snare
2 Crushing Canopy
4 Pause for Reflection
2 Sagittars’ Volley

Winner,winner, Hydroid Krasis dinner

Friday evening saw an impromptu gaming session with Jonathan. Don’t worry this bit is going to be short.

Our first game of the evening was the current hotness (and at the moment Jonathan’s and mine prediction for game of the year! And let’s face it this game has set the bar pretty high for the others coming out this year.) Wingspan. I actually started off with a hand of all five starting cards, which meant no resources. All of the cards were one or two resources to play, plus the buzzard was a zero cost card to play. So my first action was playing that buzzard. Jonathan started off very slow, and never really did get a lot of birds out. But even so, the gap between our final scores wasn’t massive. I took the victory by five points.

Our second game of the evening was the Judge Dredd: The Cursed Earth game.

This is a licensed game that Osprey Games has produced using their other game The Lost Expedition as the starting point.

I liked The Lost Expedition (which I got at the UKGE last year) although it is brutally hard to beat.

In this update basically, we have a theme that I love (I’ve been reading Dredd for decades). And a theme that is being used by Osprey again later in the year when I believe they are releasing a Judge Dredd version of Wildlands called Judge Dredd Helter Skelter (and also why I’m selling my copy of Wildlands. I like Wildlands, but if I have to choose between a fantasy theme and Judge Dredd then JD wins).

The actual theme, art and storyline work very well together in this game. It would be fair the theme and art would have done nothing for Jonathan. It’s sci-fi. Not his cup of tea as us oldies would say.

Production wise they have got rid of the insert (that didn’t handle sleeved cards), added a storage box to hold the tokens and meeples that also acts as a divider in the box to help organise the cards. The cardboard tokens are a bit thin for my liking. I’d have liked something a bit thicker and robust. But at least the box now holds all the cards sleeved nicely.

You now have three modes of play. Solo, co-op and competitive. Which is nice. Jonathan and I only played a co-op game. It’s also nice that the game has that race element to it where you are racing the villains to get to Max Normal who is hiding in the Cursed Earth somewhere. Plus there is a mechanic where you battle a villain if you end up in the same region as them. Which we didn’t get to try out. We never caught up with the villains.

Having not played The Lost Expedition since the expo, we were rusty on the iconography. So we had to keep referring to the rules to refresh our memories on the ones we couldn’t remember but also on how the new icons worked also. The Psi icon was particularly interesting as a mechanic, and gave a hard choice. You would basically be adding an additional card to the encounters, but the choice was did you do it blind turning over the top encounter card and add it, or take a hit on Anderson (I think it was health) draw an encounter card each, make a case for playing the card you had drawn to be the one added to the encounter row over the other players card. Then adding the card decided by the players, discarding the other card. So a little control over your future!

Like it’s predecessor this game is brutal. But I enjoyed it. Need to try the competitive mode next.

Our final game of the evening was Hanamikoji. We rattled off four plays of this. It’s still a great, quick, two player game.

A great evening of gaming with one of my fav people to game with (the others know who they are) at a great host The Luxe Cinema. Who must have been fed up seeing me that day.

If you haven’t guessed the title of this post is a big spoiler for what follows.

Yesterday was Standard Showdown day once again.

I decided to play my Simic deck. The decision was mainly based on the lack of movement in the local meta. A minority of players are trying new decks. The majority are using the same deck week in week out, with the odd change once in a while. Which to be truthful is a bit boring.

There was only one game I felt a little guilt over. That was round 2 when I played a newish player whose deck really wasn’t competitive with the decks I knew most folks had. I think their deck was a slightly modified Planeswalker deck. It certainly wasn’t a fair match up against my deck. Counter, counter, smash. That’s my game plan. The guys deck was not going to disrupt that plan. It was a quick game.

Having won the first two rounds, I was worried about meeting Andy Hall in round 3. Or round 4 come to think of that. But John did me a solid in round 2 by beating him. A shock victory. But one that meant if I kept winning we would be unlikely to be matched up.


Round 3 did see me play against his son though (his son had won FNM the previous night). I wasn’t much concerned about this match up. I’d beaten it previously with this deck. I thought it’d go 2-1. But I aced it with a clear win.

The final round was against John and his merfolk deck. This could have gone either way. Probably the least confident of winning for the day. Plus there was a little pressure to win. If I lost, then it would be all down to the WotC algorithm once again to decide the top four or five. And based on it’s workings I wouldn’t finish top. I needed a win.

Game 1 I won comfortably. Game 2 was quick and John’s deck just overwhelmed me before I could counter anything or get bodies out. We had a decider. Which went my way. I got to the start of an oppressive board state. That had oozes out that were growing quicker than his merfolk, Krasis on the board, counterspells in hand. And mana.

Unusually Vivien Reid actually hit the battlefield four times yesterday, and got me creatures, and just as important allowed me to trigger her ultimate. So I had that emblem out. I hardly get to play her, having just the single copy in the deck. So it was nice to get her out and doing her thing.

I was the only undefeated player yesterday. And I think it’s the first time I’ve gone undefeated also.

There was talk about levelling the playing field out so some of the really new players could take part. The idea of just welcome packs, or just Planeswalker decks were floated. But there is in about 3 weeks a natural time to do something like this when the new Challenger decks come out. So that weekend will be Challenger decks only I believe.

Standard Showdown Stats

Standard Showdown Participants: 10

Rounds: 4

Round 1: Kar-Fai (Red burn/aggro)Win 2-0

Round 2: Win 2-0

Round 3: Nathan Hall (Golgari)Win 2-0

Round 4: John (Simic merfolk) Win 2-1

Record: 4-0

Final Position: 1st

Prizes: 1 participation pack, 2 boosters for winning and a Standard Showdown pack (foil Assassin’s Trophy inside).

A Night on the Town in New Angeles

Finally FFG have released the Gencon and Pax Unplugged Genesys Android adventures that they ran. Along with the pre-made characters that they used with the adventures.

Now that I’m able to read the adventures I can decide whether they fit into the planning I’ve been doing.

After an initial skim reading of the adventure I think considering how I’ve planned to start the campaign (read an early look of the player handout here) this is something I could use later in the campaign.

I really like that not only have FFG released these two adventures but that they have tweaked them so that they can be played with your own characters, and that they have advice for starting the second part if your players made different decisions.

It was worth the wait.

You can read the full FFG press release with links here.

Wisbech: Made in Minecraft – The Movie!

In a rush to write the earlier post I couldn’t wait for the YouTube release of the movie that was showed at The Luxe as part of the Wisbech; Made in Minecraft launch.

I was in too much of a hurry to share with the world my I’ll thought out thoughts on the matter.

But better late than never. All good things come to those that wait (which will be a bloody long time for readers of the this blog waiting for something good to appear on here).

So here for your viewing pleasure is the Wisbech: Made in Minecraft movie.

Wisbech: Made in Minecraft

The afternoons plan was to a) post a package, b) maybe go collect my copy of The Judge Dredd RPG.

I achieved the first part of the plan. And I was still undecided on the second and final part. Whilst making my mind up I thought I’d pop my head in The Luxe and ask my friend Nathan if he could get the link for the data that was used to make up the Minecraft model of Wisbech. Why would he have that?

Heck The Luxe was only being used to host the launch of Wisbech: Made in Minecraft project this afternoon.

But somehow I ended up watching the whole presentation instead of doing the second part of the plan.


From a technical stand point it was interesting how they did things. They even had an art teacher from the local secondary school there showing off their Minecraft creation that was the school fully modelled in the educational version of the game. It even had some educational use built in. The bit they showed was a ‘who done it’ murder mystery that was in fact a maths lesson!

The short movie of clips from within Minecraft of the Wisbech model with voice overs from interviews of citizens of the town, was interesting. And I think as a proof of concept was good. But I think something that expanded on that idea and used more interviews of a wider selection of the town, more memories of the older members of our community. Maybe even model some of those historical buildings no longer here (like the gas works). It also struct me a bit Aardman animation like with the animation and voice over.

I know they were pushing the education and intergeneration thing. But for me my real interest lies in using the world created for use with the The End of the World: Zombie Apocalypse RPG. Instead of using a small A5 size street map of Wisbech. I could have the survivors navigating their way round the zombie apocalypse using the Wisbech Minecraft map.

Read the Official Announcement with out The Wisbech Standard copying and pasting it and passing it off as their words.

Hoist the Jolly Roger

The weekends gaming was a weekend of playing MtG.

Naturally Saturday was Standard Showdown at my FLGS The Hobbit Hole. Usually I write the whole thing with a round by round summary. With a deck list tagged to the end if I played a new deck or tweaked the deck.

But I thought I’d change it up a little in this post.

I’d taken the new pirates deck with me for John’s daughter to play if she wanted to. However she was not feeling well. So I decided I’d change things up and play it myself.

Knowing John’s merfolk deck was a bad match up for the pirates (it negates the copies of Walk the Plank) I still tested the deck against his. The games were not complete walk overs, but still it lost.

I got off to a flying start to Standard Showdown with back to back wins. Although the games against Andy were made a lot easier with him getting mana screwed both games. In one of the games he mulliganed down to three cards. There was a bit of guilt during those games. An unusual feeling for me. But sometimes that’s the way the cards fall. As an MtG player it’s something you come to accept is part of the game. It’s not fun when you are experiencing it. A hint of optimism is always helpful. You just hope it’s a temporary blip. Or that any moment you will start getting the land and that it’s not too late to turn things round. But there is also an element of inevitability in the current game as your opponent plays lands, get their eggs in a row and finally puts you out of your misery.

Apart from my games against Mr Hall (one of the stores elite four) the ones I lost against Michael were pretty close. But even then with Mr H it wasn’t that I didn’t have answers in my deck, and my deck needed tweaking. I had answers just didn’t get them.

In the friendly games I played with the pirates deck it lost. The mono blue mill also lost in a friendly game. If I was able to mill once more for two cards it would have won. Naturally the Simic deck won it’s friendly game.


Standard Showdown Stats

Standard Showdown Participants: 10

Rounds: 4

Round 1: Simon (Gates Deck) Win 2-0

Round 2: Andy Win 2-0

Round 3: Andy Hall Loss 0-2

Round 4: Michael Loss 0-2

Record: 2-2

Final position: 5th

Sunday morning saw me being messaged by Dale to see if I wanted to meet up. So we did that afternoon at The Luxe. I took along the three standard decks I have currently for us to play with.

Dale and I spent the afternoon chatting and playing MtG. I had a great afternoon. But I’m sure Dale must have been bored with the MtG chat.

Deck plans:

Before Standard Showdown started Saturday John showed me a card he pulled during FNM the night before that did really well for him. It was Twilight Panther.

I immediately took a liking to it. It needs a swamp to activate its ability. But it’s a white version of Skittering Heartstopper. A card I like. Opponents are not keen to block a card like this with big creatures because with the mana open it takes that blocker out.

I like the idea of playing a deck with both of those cards in it. So that makes it Orzhov or white/black.

Looks like I have some card research to do know for a new standard deck.

A couple of gaming sessions last week

Last Wednesday stood out from the other Wednesdays that occur during March by being the second Wednesday of the month.

That was an important distinction, because the second Wednesday of each month just so happens to be the monthly meet up for our gaming group Fenland Gamers.

Games that hit the table that night were Reykholt, Wingspan and Perudo/Liars Dice.

It was great to have a good turn out (for us) of 7. On the whole our monthly meet ups tend to be our best attended meet ups. With the Friday fortnightly meet up usually getting three or four people turning up.

According to the Facebook club page we have 107 members. But as the above paragraph implies very few active/participating members.

We’ve tried different days for the sessions, based on feed back from members. But they have seen lower attendance. Often with the members who suggested the particular day not attending.

I think if my maths is correct our current home for playing is our fourth since the clubs birth. We’ve been lucky and found generous hosts that have allowed us to game for free. The locations have been a school, pub, hotel and currently a cinema. All with free parking, and no charge to attend (it’s part of the groups dna not to charge for attending).

So it makes us wonder just exactly how do we improve engagement/attendance?

Anyway last week was a good week for gaming. Not only was it the monthly meet up, but there was also a Friday evening gaming session.

The evening started off with a game of Via Nebula. This time we played with the more advanced side of the board. Still a quick, fun game.

But the big story of the evening a new member turned up with their copy of Tokyo Highway. Jonathan had been keen on playing this game. The name hadn’t rung any bells with me. But when he described it, the penny dropped. I’d seen photos/posts of Facebook but not really paid attention to them or the name of the game.

As the amount of photos I took shows visually this game is great table top theatrics. It looks fun and chaotic at the same time.

I may be wrong, but I think this might be the first dexterity game to hit the table at a game night.

I liked this a lot. It was a blast to play. The rules are pretty simple. But there is a bit of depth involved. You are planning your turn and adjusting your plans before your turn based on the actions of those before you. Trying to optimise that scoring opportunity.

The fact you basically have two modes to the game as well is also nice. The basic set up and the more advanced that uses obstacles as well.

Plus I won the first game, and was first loser in our second.

A very big thank you to The Luxe Cinema and it’s amazing staff for once hosting us last week.

A hoy there my hearties


Before I present the deck list and my “analysis” of the deck here is my get out of jail disclaimer about these decks.

I’m not claiming these are the best decks in the world, they certainly are not top competitive decks. They are hopefully fun, affordable (subjective I know) decks. I don’t try and keep to a target price point. I try and use as many cards in my collection as possible to keep my costs down. I’m certainly not a master deck builder claiming this deck will win tournaments, if it is fun to play and does it thing then I’ll be happy.

Sufferer’s of this blog will remember not too long ago, a couple of Standard Showdowns back, I played the daughter of the owner of the FLGS in one of the rounds. She had constructed a pirate deck the evening before that needed some work. There were a few one of’ s, which meant it wasn’t consistent.

I liked the idea/theme of the deck. It just needed some tinkering. So I’ve done some tinkering and come up with a Dimir Pirate Aggro deck.

Like my friends daughter I will be using Hostage Taker and Forerunner of the Coalition. Although if memory serves me rightly she only had one copy of Hostage Taker. I can’t remember the other cards she had in her deck. Which is probably best. Starting with a clean slate so to speak.

So I went through the stack of cards digging out all my pirates. I’m not splashing red, so those pirate cards are out. Which was a great way to eliminate a load of cards. It was hard enough getting down to the 75 for this deck as it was from the two colours.

So this is an aggro deck. It needs to hit the ground running. Sadly none of the cards have haste. So it needs to be swinging in for damage turn 2 the latest. Turn one is play a land, and a one drop. Turn two play a land, play a duress, and hit for damage and drop another one drop. Turn three is hopefully another land and the first Forerunner of the Coalition. And so on. That’s the prefect start.


I thought the Timestream Navigator will provide a useful distraction to the opponent, and if allowed to be used that all important extra turn. Who needs Nexus of Fate?

Between Hostage Taker and Kitesail Freebooter there is removal to take care of the creatures Walk the Plank can’t deal with (basically her dad’s merfolk deck).

Naturally the sideboard has a plan to take out those nasty Carnage Tyrants and Ghalta’s that one or two players are using in our local meta in the form of Dino Hunter. And the sideboard has more removal and hopefully a way to get rid of token spam.

So I’m excited to play this deck in a few test games now. The lands could be better. I’d like the Dimir shock land and check land in this deck. But that’s an expense I’m not going to splash out on. I definitely don’t want guild gates in here they would slow the deck down. It was hard enough using the two Submerged Boneyards. Maybe I could put in a couple of Evolving wilds. The ratio of the basics also needs tweaking to be more in favour of swamps.

Ok here is mana curve for the deck.

I’m happy with that. The CMC is about what I want for this type of deck.

Ok here is the deck list I have come up with for this initial Dimir Pirate Aggro deck.

Creatures:30

4 Grasping Scoundrel
4 Siren Stormtamer
4 Dire Fleet Poisoner
4 Kitesail Freebooter
4 Timestream Navigator
4 Forerunner of the Coalition
3 Slippery Scoundrel
3 Hostage Taker

Spells:8

4 Duress
4 Walk the Plank

Lands:22

10 Island
2 Submerged Boneyard
10 Swamp

Sideboard:15

4 Dinosaur Hunter
1 Warkite Marauder
4 Deadeye Rig-Hauler
3 Golden Demise
3 Vraska’s Contempt

What would you change?

There be treasure

I know it’s been quiet on here for a couple of days. Much to the relief of everyone I would imagine.

So what have I been doing? Not much really, hence the lack of posts. I did hit the video by Colville talking about the West Marches format for running D&D.

It’s an interesting idea for running D&D for a large group of players interested in playing the game.

The problem with the majority of Colville’s videos are that they make you want to go and try it for yourself. Which I suppose is the whole purpose of them.

Although I like the sound of running a version of a West Marches style game assuming that enough players are interested, in reality it’s not likely to happen in the foreseeable future. I’ve still to DM my first game (it’s getting closer).

However I did like the idea of a treasure map to give to the players at the start of the West Marches campaign. I think it’s something that could be utilised elsewhere.

So using Adobe Sketchbook I’ve decided to attempt to create a treasure map, and develop my rather poor drawing skills. It’s also working on my Sketchbook skills. An app that has been on my iPad for a long time, but I’ve not used. So there is a learning curve there too.

The plan would be to have two versions of the map. The initial basic map (minus the hexes) showing the general locale and maybe the location of one or two known landmarks/dungeons. It would then be up to the players to keep the map updated as they progress further out into the world. If they make mistakes on the map, the idea is not to correct them.

The second version of the map would be for me the DM. Naturally this will be more informative, have notes, and the hexes. The hexes will allow me to judge distance, set up zones/areas. It would also be the accurate map naturally.

The nice thing about this is it can be used in not just a West Marches game but also in a “regular campaign” at the start. It’s interesting that none of our party in the game I am a player has bothered to create a map. The first map we have was given to us!

Close but no cigar


The postman broke the morning routine with a delivery that I wrote about in yesterday’s post. Otherwise there was no other deviation from my routine. My viewing whilst enjoying my morning caffeine fix was Northern Rescue on Netflix.

You also read about the 3D stuff I picked up on the way to my FLGS The Hobbit Hole yesterday. So nothing extra to report on that. Except I got soaked.

Whilst waiting for Standard Showdown to start I managed to play some friendly games with Kar-Fai who was there for Pokemon this week. Before his tournament started we managed to squeeze in three games. Two of which were with my mono blue mill deck, and the third was my Simic deck.

Friendly result: Win 2-1

In this weeks Standard Showdown there were 9 participants, which meant 4 rounds.

Round 1 Dean’s Nephew

I thought my day was off to a bad start when I rolled a 2 for who would go first. But Dean’s nephew rolled a 1! I wasn’t expecting that. I’d go first.

My opening hand was 6 lands and a counter spell. I decided to risk it. At least I’d hit my land drops. I drew into a second counter spell on my turn 2. If nothing else I could delay things a little.

The cards were kind to me, I was able to frustrate whilst getting my pieces into play. And the inevitable happened, and I took the first win.

Game 2 saw me win comfortably also. Helped a little by my opponent not getting all their land drops.

Result: Win 2-0

Round 2 Rob (blue/white mill?)

I think this was a first time playing Rob. I had no idea what to expect. But that’s the fun of the game. Does your deck have the answers for whatever your opponent has in their deck?

It was an interesting match up. There was little pressure on me early on in our games as Rob was playing walls. They only became a problem once he played the enchantment that switched off the defender, and allowed them in combat to do damage based on their toughness. Mix in a little control and mill and it was an interesting deck.

However if my deck is given that time to get its eggs in a row then it’s game over. And Rob’s game plan gave me that time.

Result: Win 2-1


Round 3 John (merfolk)

Once more John and I end up playing each other during a Showdown. During this season John’s deck has had the better of mine. Because of the nature of Standard Showdown between Saturday’s you tweak your deck based on the local meta. John had removed his Simic Ascendancy from his deck. Not sure what he replaced it with. He commented that he hasn’t seen the replacement card since adding it! My deck at the moment is fairly stable. If there are going to be any tweaks now it’ll be to the sideboard I think.

I took the first game comfortably. John sideboarded some cards in. He needed to be quicker off the mark he said. And he was in game 2, and took that one easily.

Game 3 the decider. Back to being frustrating while getting my Ooze and Krasis into place, before swinging in with massive damage.

I thought the games would be close based on previous experience. But these were not as close as our previous games had been. Which surprised me a little.

Result: Win 2-1

Pay attention to your opponents Planeswalker That’s the lesson from this friendly game. Especially when it’s about to ultimate and kill you. My excuse is I was distracted trying to end the game quickly to get on with the next round.

Friendly game: Loss

Round 4 Andy Hall (Blue/Black)

I nearly had a bye. Andy had gone off to collect his daughter and wasn’t back to start the round. But he did eventually turn up. Andy was sitting on a 2-1 record at this point to my 3-0. Boy was I feeling the pressure. Andy is one of the stores top players. I’d played him once in the previous season of Standard Showdown, and had my butt handed to me.

Game 1 was a back and forth, but I got some pieces out and got the win. I was happy I had won a game. Achievement unlocked.

Game 2 was evenly matched until Andy got out his 6/6 flyer that I had no answer for and didn’t draw into one. Andy got the win.

These were intense games. Both control decks. Hardly exciting to watch. Play a land, and pass turn. Waiting to react to whatever the other player did. A battle of the minds, waiting for the other person to blink first.

It was going to happen at some point in the day, and the deciding game was when I finally got mana screwed. It was quick and one sided. The lack of mana, particularly blue was enough of an advantage for Andy to execute his plan.

Result: Loss 2-1

As the dust settled there were four of use on 9 points. Andy and I were offered a play off for top spot. But I was happy to take second place based on the WotC algorithm.

Final position: Second with a 3-1 record

Prize: 1 participation pack, 1 pack for second place, and 1 Standard Showdown pack (had a baby Karn in it – I have 3 of these now so tempted to build a deck round him).