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 Saturday, July 22, 2006

Magic:the Gathering is having a bit of resurgence around our home of late.  Last weekend I pulled out the Ravnica cards I bought for the New Year’s Gaming event out on the coast.  The idea was to see if we could create some interesting draft tournaments from the card set.

We started by sorting all of the cards into common, uncommon, and rare piles – a total of about 260 cards.  We shuffled thoroughly and created 9 simulated booster backs (12 commons, 2 uncommons, and 1 rare in each pack).  Time for a booster draft with nine randomly chosen boosters.

Jacob and Matthew play Magic

A booster draft is simple to run – allocate three boosters per player and start by having each player open a single booster. Choose a card you want from the pack and pass the rest of the cards to your left.  Repeat until each player has 15 cards and continue with the other packs until each player has a total of 45 cards.

Now each player has some time (usually about 30 minutes, but we take less) to build a deck of at least 40 cards total, including lands.  I like limited format events like this because it involves deck building, deck tuning, and playing, all in a short period of time.  The meta-game of Magic (deck building and analysis) is appealing to many, but I only have the time and patience for it in a, well, limited way.

We had fun playing with our decks, and I continued to coach the boys on deck building and playing strategy.  There are a lot of subtleties to play that a casual player overlooks.  I wouldn’t call myself an expert, but I do understand the timing rules pretty well and have a decent handle on play strategies.  Oh, and everything I learned about strategy I learned reading the first 10 issues of The Duelist.

Last night the boys I did a backdraft, where you follow the booster draft format but instead are trying to draft the worst possible card set.  From this set, one of your opponents will try and build a 40 card deck from the (supposed) trash you left.  This is harder than it sounds, especially with a block like Ravnica which is designed to work fairly well with 3 or even 4 color decks.

Finally, I’ve decided to join a casual Magic: the Gathering Online league with Ravnica block cards.  Matthew over in my Rip City Gamers group is running the league and it sounds like fun.  I actually prefer playing Magic online (real-time) than most other online games (BSW, etc.).  Should be fun.

Sunday, July 23, 2006 12:26:31 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
Booster draft is about the only way I can tolerate Magic since it allows you to focus on skill with the cards you have rather than dollars spent on lots of packs of cards.
Monday, July 24, 2006 4:09:41 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
Unlike Erik, I can tolerate (and actually enjoy) other forms of Magic. However, booster draft is by far my favorite way to play, and just about the only way it will hit the table in my group. One of the Lumbersmiths still has an unopened box of the final Ravnica set, so we'll be having another booster draft night soon.
Saturday, July 29, 2006 2:31:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
My oldest son, who is about to turn 7, has recently become obsessed with magic. He wanted to learn Yu-Gi-Oh, so I bought a couple decks, learned the rules and decided if I was going to spend the time teaching something it had might as well be Magic since I have a few thousand cards sitting around. He loves it. Obviously we are keeping things fairly simple, but he seems to be picking it up fairly quickly. The "stack" still eludes him, but frankly with the decks we have built it's not too much of an issue. I'm reminded again about what makes magic so great, and also what can make it so frustrating (mana screw/flood).

It's also pretty hilarious seeing my 6 year old playing my 4 year old in magic. It's pretty much solitaire, but they both really seem to get a kick out of it.
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