Commanding Rivals

This morning three people gathered to duke it out on the battlefield with their chosen commanders.

It was a casual smack down using WotC Commander precon decks. I had all the precon decks from 2017 to now with me (except the anthology decks) for us to play with.

Gavin was using his own precon, while Diego and myself chose from the recent D&D ones. My precons were “naked”! I have 3 years worth of precons to sleeve. Which is a lot of decks, and I need to find the funds to purchase the Dragon Shields to do the job.

Here are the commanders we played.

  • Me – Vrondriss, Rage of Ancients (D&D precon)
  • Diego – Galea, Kindler of Hope (D&D precon)
  • Gavin – Adrix and Nev, Twincasters (Strixhaven precon)

Early on Diego established himself as a big threat. His Commander with a couple of nasty bits of equipment that gave it +10/+10 and double strike was scary. One hit death to Commander damage if it landed. Thank god there was no trample added to it.

I was way behind both of them on the land drops. So I was happy for Diego to be the big distraction as I tried to catch up and build up a winning board state (see the photo above). All I needed was to be able to chump block if attacked by him.

Luckily there were very few answers for them both to stop my flyers chipping away at them or stop me using direct damage to control their board state (ie remove potential blockers or sending Diego’s Commander to hell). It was also lucky that Diego wasn’t able to give his equipped Commander hexproof. That would have made life extremely difficult.

But in the end the dragon horde prevailed and won the game.

Next up was a learning game of Vampire the Masquerade: Rivals.

We played using the pre-constructed decks. I gave Gavin and Diego first choice and I played what was left. Below is who played what.

  • Brujah – me (rival was Gavin)
  • Toreador – Gavin (rival was Diego)
  • Ventrue – Diego (rival was me)

After a poor explanation of the rules and picking our rival we started playing.

Our first play was definitely a game of two conflicting experiences.

Gavin didn’t enjoy the game at all. He was polite and put it down to the cards he drew, and there being little he could do to make use of his clans abilities. I don’t think the poor rules explanation helped either.

I’m sure there were more rule misplays than the one we had. Well technically it wasn’t a misplay more missed rule! We missed that you could discard cards during the torpor/mend stage to heal vampires. Which would have kept Gavin in the game instead of seeing me win it. Thanks Diego for spotting that after the fact and casting a shadow over my glorious victory.

The Brujah deck I was playing was probably the simpler deck to play compared to the Toreador deck Gavin was trying to play. It is the Rivals version of a MtG aggro deck. Which is definitely one of the deck archetypes I like to play.

When Diego played Long-Term Investment I got a distinct Netrunner vibe and reminded of cards like Kati Jones.

Like Netrunner there is a lot of jargon to get used to, especially if you are not into the whole Worlds of Darkness thing. Which can add to the confusion and make the learning curve a bit more steeper than it already is.

So while Gavin won’t be playing Rivals again Diego and myself will be. I need to play the other decks. And then want to get into deck building.

But once again it was great to be playing in real life again. Especially when I win. Plus there is more gaming to look forward to at the end of the week.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.