Hey everybody, long time, no see.
This past weekend was the Aether Revolt PreRelease, and while Tams was hard at work making changes for our upcoming move, I decided to goof off and play Magic both days. Today, I'm going to break down my Saturday pool, talk about how I constructed my deck, and how my matches went.
Saturday.
As you can see, Aether Revolt is very artifact heavy. In my pool, artifacts basically looked like a sixth colour pile. My initial sort also didn't immediately eliminate any of my colours, although a closer look at both red and blue had them out of the running fairly quickly. The real deciding factor was my rares.
I opened (and ended up playing) three fairly good green ones. The real question was could I get away with playing black or red?
I even put together a black/red deck which looked like it had potential. There was a lot of decent removal, and my creature count was bolstered by my artifacts, but in the end, I decided that the green/white deck was stronger. See below.
For a full breakdown of why I ran what I ran, check out my video report on our YouTube channel. For now, let me break down the games.
Round 1
My opponent was playing an Esper artifact deck, and got serious value out of Hidden Stockpile. I think I probably would have been able to tempo him out early if I had drawn less than ten land in either of our games, but with him lining up his draws, and me stuck dropping forests and saying go, there wasn't much I could do to keep him from running me over.
Round 2
I was happy to play against someone I'd never met before. As a regular at our LGS, I recognize most of the people who you see at the regular events, but the great thing about PreReleases is that they bring out new players, or people who are just excited for the new set. My opponent was playing a green/white deck as well (a common theme, as I discovered), and I had much better luck with my draws, and after the first game slugfest (we traded damage back and forth right down to the wire), my opponent got stuck on two land in the second game, and couldn't defend himself. I should mention Dawnfeather Eagle.
During game one, when our life totals were quickly and dramatically changing in a downward direction, I may not have won had it not been for the eagle. In addition to the fact that it represented an extra three damage immediately, not having to choose whether to attack with a creature or hold it back meant that suddenly I was a turn ahead in damage, and had shields up. It did outstanding work, and I anticipate it being a turn five blowout in draft until people figure out the need to take turn five off to block against a white deck.
Round 3
After a hard loss and an easy win, I was looking forward to seeing what my deck could do in some real games, and round three... Sort of got there. Game one had me Mulligan into a fine hand which didn't let me draw another land, ever. Not so great. Game two, though, was another beautiful slugfest. My opponent played red white with plenty of removal, but once I stuck something with four toughness, he had a hard time coping. Again, the Dawnfeather Eagle did good work, and basically finished the game. I wish I could say that game three was as good, but he didn't have any better luck on two land than I did, and the damage was completely one sided.
Round 4
Ah, the match I'd been waiting for. At a record of 2-1, I finally got paired against my friend, sometimes ally, sometimes nemesis, John as Always from
The Mana Leek. John was playing a fairly powerful, if unreliable kind deck(which you can check out
here), and even though he played his promo Freejam Regent, his hand of ten out of sixteen lands didn't really prove very challenging. I was sad, but also content.
Round 5
By this point I was tense. My deck had performed well against little opposition, and had buried me against stronger threats. I didn't really feel like I deserved my 3-1 record, forgetting or course that crafting a solid curve and just having things to do is a legitimate strategy.
My round 5 opponent was playing blue/green, and had, among other things, an Aethertide Whale, which ran me over before I drew my third land in game one. Arg. Game two was a different story, and with the Whale safely under my Fairgrounds Warden, I was able to punch in with my Aerial Responder until she was dead, meanwhile climbing up to 37 life.
In game three, I took a few early hits until I managed to trade away creatures, clearing the board, and then drop my Greenwheel Liberator and my Outland boar, then removed what creatures she had left and dealt 8 to her face three turns in a row. It was a swingy game, but I came out on top.
Round 6
At a record of 4-1, I knew that I was in the running for the top 8. What I didn't know, was whether a final record of 4-2 would be good enough to prize. I sat down across from my opponent determined to win.
My opponent had the same plan. He was playing blue/black with a splash that I can't quite remember. Black was the colour which ended up mattering.
Game one saw us trading damage early, but I managed to top deck my removal three turns in a row and kept the board clear while he took two a turn until eventually conceding (one turn too early in my opinion).
Game two started much the same way until he stabilised and played a Herald of Anguish. I died quickly, not having drawn any of my fliers.
Now that I'd seen his win condition, I thought I had game three fairly well in hand. I got in for early damage, and even got my life up to 22 for most of the game, but eventually the demon came out. That was fine, all I needed was a kill spell. Any kill spell, even a fight spell... Which I didn't draw.
The games were good, we both played well, and the decks were solid. There's no shame in losing an honest match.
All said and done, I came in 16th of 62, with a record of 4-2, and more importantly, I had a blast!
Before I end it here, I should mention the decks I didn't have to face, but I sure heard about. There was one lucky player who opened two copies of Tezzeret as well as a masterpiece Pithing Needle, and then there was the guy who played all seven of the rares from his pool. I believe he was Naya with at least one planeswalker, though someone said he had both Ajani and Nissa. I believe this deck existed, but as it didn't win the tournament, I doubt it was as consistent as it was powerful. Anyway, PreReleases are great fun, and I suggest everyone try one, if you get the chance.
Tune in tomorrow for part 2 of my post PreRelease report!
Thanks for reading,
- Step.