…idea into an initial format took about a month. After that, playtesting the format and making changes took about a year. Weirdcards has a nice concentration of L1 and L2…
…with the general public by accepting donations and having a gift shop (as it were) to support our activities, as well as tax-deductible receipts. Bryan: I’m quite interested in how…
…in on and they all seem very obvious choices, yet somehow manage to not take certain aspects of the format into account. It’s as if they haven’t really played it…
…used to cheat big creatures into play quickly in order to overwhelm their opponent. Oathbreaker has one advantage for Sneak and Show, which is that we can use the namesake…
…I’m nearly trunk with power and its flexibility is not irrelephant. Puns aside, this is a colorshifted Beast Within [], which falls into an interesting power level place in various…
…breakdown how the cards in the deck slide into the pillars explained above. Ramp: This deck uses a lot of aura based ramp to allow lands to tap for more…
…abilities, and tax like effects which cause issues for an opponents’ strategies. Recursion is the act of playing cards from your graveyard. In a singleton format, it allows you to…
…have convoke, but it makes an army of creature tokens that you can then use to convoke it again. This has the potential to produce an absurdly large token army…
…of her -2 aside, she has a built in shock and a weird buff for Elementals. Her second and last ability are good utility to have in general, we should…
…it’s a catchy name. Who created Oathbreaker? The fine folks over at weirdcards.org. Read all about it in this Interview With an Oathmaker. Why is the deck limit 60 cards?…