andrew

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[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Hilarious that Nadu, designed for Commander but released in a Modern set, is now banned in Commander too (after it's collateral damage in Modern).

Kinda do not agree with the fast mana bans :-/ I understand their reasoning but I haven't thought they were banworthy at all.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This is so cool, thanks for sharing!

Do you have any more details on it? Was it just printed by another attendee (presumably Brothers Wilmot 😜) or is this an official wotc reprint?

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 7 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Wow this feels like a pretty significant color pie break. I realize they’ve printed black enchantment removal a few times before (Feed the Swarm) but this is an instant and seems like they’re just shifting to giving this to black now. Seems like kind of a shame to me.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 3 points 3 weeks ago

Wow that is some freaky looking artwork

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 6 points 1 month ago (7 children)

You’re absolutely right and Mark’s straw man arguments like that are pretty frustrating. I have the same meaning as you when I say stop designing for Commander as I’m sure the vast majority of others do. I don’t know if he’s being intentionally dishonest or if he just doesn’t get it still but it is 100% stop printing overstatted Commander cards that warp eternal formats and these ability soup engines-and-payoffs.

Re: playtesting I wish they would come out and say what their playtesting process is. How many people are in each group, how long do cards get active testing, etc. Barring those details I kind of disagree that they can’t do more and while they definitely cannot catch everything, their process should be sufficient to not let a Nadu get by.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 2 points 1 month ago

Yeah that's a good point, I guess since it was admittedly for Commander they were find letting it leave the 60 card formats.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 6 points 1 month ago

Exactly, the fact that "interacts with 0-mana abilities" isn't on a list of mandatory checks is just crazy to me. It just signals that they don't have any kind of process/infrastructure in place to help them see these things.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 6 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Great updates all around, kudos to Wizards for doing what needed to be done. Good changes to timing too.

I'm shocked they banned Nadu instead of some bad half-measure like Shuko though.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 7 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I appreciate them writing this and taking it on the chin here but honestly there is so much in here that's pretty damning about their design process. Nadu was a massive mistake but one that seems negligibly correctable.

Mistake 1: not enough playtesting!

Majors describes the testing they did. He cites no actual numbers or anything but I think that makes it pretty clear how deficient it is/was:

For both Modern Horizons 2 and Modern Horizons 3, we brought in a small group of contractors and worked on the set in a dedicated sprint as a collaboration between that group and a small number of play designers. The playtesting time is more dense, as the group is singularly focused on the set without other responsibilities, but shorter in terms of weeks.

Emphasis mine. I would wager that this is probably 2-3 contractors who played for probably a few weeks with the people who designed the set, a group who is obviously stuck in groupthink and can't see differently. There's no wonder they miss issues like this.

Mistake 2: changing cards again without testing

Again we have a card that was changed at the last minute and shipped as-is.

I missed the interaction with zero-mana abilities that are so problematic. The last round of folks who were shown the card in the building missed it too. We didn't playtest with Nadu's final iteration, as we were too far along in the process, and it shipped as-is.

How many times does this need to bite them before they just actually playtest every single text change? It's crazy to me.

Mistake 3: no automatic flags for certain high-risk abilities

They all missed the interaction with 0-mana abilities, OK fine. But why is there no automatic flag for high risk abilities? Off the top of my head:

  • unbounded triggers
  • triggers that draw you cards
  • triggers that put cards directly into play
  • triggers that occur whenever the permanent is targeted
  • triggers that give things to all of your creatures

Original Nadu had every one of these, and there are no doubt many many more things that should automatically create a higher scrutiny/testing regimen. They added the 2-times-per-turn cap at the last minute but removed the by-an-opponent limiter!

Software can easily flag cards that should be tested more fully, or recommend problematic interactions. They don't seem to be doing this at all, instead just accepting a certain % of failure/risk. This is so preventable.

Mistake 4: putting Commander cards in Modern sets

This one is a personal pet peeve of mine and really irritates me more than everything else. This card was designed specifically for Commander yet it went into a set ostensibly for Modern/Legacy.

In one of these meetings, there was a great deal of concern raised by Nadu's flash-granting ability for Commander play. After removing the ability, it wasn't clear that the card would have an audience or a home, something that is important for every card we make. Ultimately, my intention was to create a build-around aimed at Commander play, which resulted in the final text.

If the card is for Commander, put it into a Commander set! This is also extremely damning from a design perspective--they removed the flash ability and then didn't think the card would be played at all!

So much of this seems to be preventable with better processes or using technology in even basic ways, ways they are no doubt not even close to taking advantage of. It's a shame because these sets could be better and the playerbase wouldn't have months of crap like this, or a Pro Tour absolutely ruined by a preventable card.

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Is there any chance at all they print tokens for the power nine because of this?

[–] andrew@mtgzone.com 1 points 1 month ago

Wow it’s the art from the Urza Vanguard card!

Would love to see this in a retro frame 😫

 

Wizards rebalanced 3 cards in Historic effective tomorrow, all in RW energy and related decks:

  • Galvanic Discharge now only gives you 2 energy
  • Guide of Souls now requires 4 energy to get the counters/flying
  • Ocelot Pride now costs 1W

In response to the last Arena Champs: "Making up 58% of the field at the most recent Arena Championship 6, Boros Energy demonstrated its power at one of the highest levels of competitive play."

 

cross-posted from: https://mtgzone.com/post/727513

Sorry for the private Facebook group post but this was the only place I could find with info on the sale.

Pretty crazy bidding and a price indicative of just how much the Magic art market has grown.

 

Sorry for the private Facebook group post but this was the only place I could find with info on the sale.

Pretty crazy bidding and a price indicative of just how much the Magic art market has grown.

 

Seems like an amazing card for Tron or decks running Urza’s Saga or that can support the colorless cost. Pain lands seem more useful too. Crazy efficiency here.

 

Merfolk get a new Magus of the Moon!

 

cross-posted from /c/finance

 

Spree (Choose one or more additional costs.)

  • {2}: Search your library for a card, then shuffle and put that card on top.
  • {B}{B} - Target player draws three cards and loses 3 life.
 

This week on Limited Resources Marshall and Luis go over the big picture archetypes in MKM from top to bottom. The white decks are winning more than anything else, but the overall archetype scheme is more closely packed than you may assume. The guys also do two crack-a-packs as well as some discussion around morphs vs disguised creatures. Enjoy!

 

Under-performers:

  • [[Demand Answers]]
  • [[Hustle // Bustle]]
  • [[Due Diligence]]
  • [[Thinking Cap]]
  • [[Murder]]

Over-performers:

  • [[Museum Nightwatch]]
  • [[Extract a Confession]]
  • [[Snarling Gorehound]]
  • [[Goblin Maskmaker]]
  • [[A Killer Among Us]]
  • [[Reasonable Doubt]]
 

Not exactly MTG but a pretty random related product coming soon for those into mysticism/oracle cards:

From the team behind The Dungeons & Dragons Tarot Deck comes this officially licensed oracle deck comprising 52 all-new illustrations that celebrate the characters, creatures, and lore of the world’s largest trading card game.

Inspired by Theros, the plane where monsters prevail, mortals endure, and heroes ascend, this Magic: The Gathering-themed deck features exclusive art of Jace, the Planeswalker; Hythonia, the legendary gorgon; and well-known creatures such as the Pegasus, Chimera, Sirens, and more.

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