Mirrodin besieged prerelease houston




















Once you have opened your packs and built a deck, the actual play will be much the same as one might find at any Prerelease, that is to say a right royal good time. Prereleases are fairly relaxed affairs, where players from all echelons of the game come together to have a good time.

If you are looking for a great place to start in tournament Magic , then there is no better place to visit than your local Prerelease. Between games and matches, it is common to see players helping each other out with pulling together the best forty-card deck to build with the cards opened, and after events have finished there is ample opportunity to trade with others, or get involved in pick-up games for thems that just can't stop playing.

Building a deck for the Mirrodin Besieged Prerelease is likely to be influenced by your faction choice, but there are some patterns common to both sides. You probably want to be playing a forty-card deck the rules won't let you go any lower than forty cards, and going higher means you won't draw your good cards so much.

Realistically, staying to two colors is likely a good plan, as is playing around about seventeen lands. The fact that packs are skewed towards faction colors, and that there are still plenty of artifacts around, will only help this. I am not here to tell you which side to choose. I know that the dark ichor of Phyrexia courses through my veins, and that I'm looking forward to the rapture of cracking packs untainted by any of this Mirran nonsense, but I would urge you to pick whatever plan works for you and run with it.

For me, Sealed Deck has a lot to do with making a plan and executing it. While I will tend to follow the same sorts of rules for building a sealed deck every time prioritize removal and evasion creatures, about seventeen creatures, seventeen lands, and six spells, try to stay two colors , I also never want to go into battle without some notion of how I intend to win.

This plan is not always the same. Sometimes I will be looking to swarm out with cheap threats, and aggressively take control of the game before my opponents can draw or cast their big spells.

Other times I will have a collection of flyers that I see as my path to victory, and I'll know to save my removal to make sure that they can get through to get the job done. Still other occasions will see me playing a very defensive deck, relying on drawing big spells to end the game once I have blunted any early offence from my opponents. Having a plan helps me build decks, especially working out the last few cards to cut those that aren't quite good enough to be in my starting forty.

Most likely, Blue-white control is in some form going to be a top-tier deck, along with Valakut Ramp and some kind of Big Red deck featuring Koth. Despite the potential many aggro decks have right now, though, the fact that many of the top-tier decks will be running red means that Pyroclasm will definitely set them back by a lot, seeing how little toughness many creatures have right now.

Ezuri, Renegade Leader also looks like it could make elves huge, literally. Grand Architect , while not exactly under the radar, has a large amount of potential, both as a ramp enabler and as another lord for what could be a budding Merfolk deck.

Magic Adventures , Theory. Firstly, be warned there will be pictures at the bottom, and maybe videos to come later. So, here we go! They rely a lot less on skill and a lot more on luck in what you pull. For once, I had a very hard time picking what kind of deck I wanted to make based on what I had pulled.

My confidence decreased as I watched the guy sitting next to me switch packs with other players just so he could have the same picture on all of them… and then pulled both Elspeth and Venser. I pulled the Hoard-Smelter Dragon, which made me happy since I have a dragon deck in the works.

I managed to scrape together a red-green deck with a decent amount of artifacts. My favorite part of any event is the trading after the last round. I also have a Memoricide courtesy of Gobmas. I love my promo card, and it looks so very nice in my binder filled with promos and planeswalkers. So now, the obligatory photographic evidence that we were actually there, and the faces behind the writing!

Magic Adventures. I will mostly be writing deck building and strategy articles. I started playing in Planesift, and took a break until Kamigawa, where I have been playing since. There's also one basic land in each booster. Foil cards will show up at about the same frequency as they do in regular boosters and don't follow the rules about what booster they can show up in both Mirran and Phyrexian foils can show up in either booster.

This is something that's happening only at the Mirrodin Besieged Prerelease Event. The Mirran resistance rallies to survive and overcome. Both sides bring the full might of their arsenals to bear. As the fate of one world hangs in the balance, Magic players in our world get to enjoy all the wicked weapons this war has to offer. The entry option you choose determines which side you are affiliated with and will drastically change which cards you get…so choose wisely!



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