Ephraim
Adepts
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Posts: 2938
The Casual Adept
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« Reply #1 on: February 04, 2005, 08:51:45 am » |
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In my opinion, neither Vintage nor Legacy is optimal for casual play. In my experience, players are much more shocked by the sight of a dual land -- legal in both Vintage and Legacy, than they are by the sight of Demonic Tutor, Sol Ring, Skullclamp, or Mind's Desire -- all banned in Legacy.
As you have said, the rules are made to be broken -- and I think that the value of casual play is that the rules aren't that strict to begin with. I don't think it's really necessary to define a specific, limiting card set. In practive, I've found that my card usage moderates itself. If I find that Burning Wish has become too abusive in one of my casual decks, I'll take it out. Likewise with other restricted goodies like Yawgmoth's Will (less so for Mind's Desire, which like as not will be the centerpiece of the deck.) The key, I think, is not to preemptively declare one format or another more suitable for casual deck building, but rather for players to be aware of the power level of their casual metagame. For many casual players, access is the primary limiting factor -- and unlike competitive Magic, casual Magic is better with an even playing field. If nobody around me has any of the cards that make Vintage broken, it would hardly be any fun for me to play with many of them (although, as I've noted, I splash them from time to time.)
That said, typically, if I am going to include something that is restricted in Vintage, I have the good manners to include only a single copy (unless it's a Peasant Magic deck -- 4DemonicTutor4L.) Of course, there are also stupid exceptions, like Crop Rotation or even borderline cards like Lotus Petal and Frantic Search. They're powerful, certainly, but really not broken without other Vintage goodies.
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Did you know that Red is the color or art and music and passion? Combine that with Green, the color of nature, spiritualism, and community and you get a hippie commune of drum circles, dreamcatchers, and recreational drug use. Let's see that win a Pro Tour.
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