Showing posts with label Temur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Temur. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

MTG FNM Report - Final Big Standard - Temur Dragons

A couple weeks ago, I took a slightly retooled version of my Temur Dragons deck to Outer Limits in melville to play my last FNM before Theros Block rotated out of standard. Here's the deck I ran:

Mainboard
Sideboard
4x Elvish Mystic
3x Rattleclaw Mystic
1x Hangerback Walker
4x Frost Walker
1x Deathmist Raptor
1x Managorger Hydra
4x Savage Knuckleblade
4x Thunderbreak Regent
2x Surrak, the Hunt Caller
3x Stormbreath Dragon
3x Sarkhan Unbroken
3x Crater's Claws
3x Stubborn Denial
1x Treasure Cruise
4x Temple of Epiphany
2x Temple of Mystery
1x Temple of Abandon
3x Wooded Foothills
3x Shivan Reef
1x Yavimaya Coast
2x Mana Confluence
2x Haven of the Spirit Dragon
4x Forest
1x Mountain
4x Disdainful Stroke
3x Feed the Clan
3x Destructive Revelry
2x Anger of the Gods
2x Wild Slash
1x Treasure Cruise

The deck is very similar to the one I played before, with the sole addition of Stubborn Denial. Last time I saw a lot of spots where it would be great, so I decided to run them mainboard. 


Round 1: 2-0 vs Mardu Midrange
For the second week in a row, I drew the Mardu Midrange deck in round one. I do think it's a good matchup for me, and the result seems to bear me out. Sarkhan was fantastic value, being a 4/4 dragon and eating a Hero's Downfall in game one and worked with a stubborn denial in game two to be two dragons, three cards and a threat post wrath. 

Round 2: 2-0 vs BW Aggro
In the second round, my creatures were just bigger than my opponents. Sarkhan was massive value and having stubborn denial for the removal spells meant that I was just too much for an aggressive deck to overcome.

Round 3: 2-0 vs Esper Control
The third round saw me paired up against a non-dragons version of the Esper control deck. Sarkhan was great again, but the man (or monkey) of the match was definitely the Knuckleblade. The ability for it to bounce to blank removal was in full play, and that combined with Stubborn Denial meant I could keep my guys alive long enough to punch through the control deck.

Round 4: 2-0 vs RB Dragons
In the last round, I played a very tight RB Dragons deck. It actually played out a little strangely as I landed a Knuckle-Monkey and sat behind the activation and counter spells until I could smash through for the win. The threat of activation on the monkey means he can attack through just about anything and lets me race against a deck that doesn't play as many creatures as I do. 

So I went 4-0 for the week and didn't drop a single game on the way to the win. I was perfectly happy with how the deck worked and was also quite pleased with my play. I couldn't have asked for a better send-off for the big standard environment and I had a great time.

This deck stays mostly intact after rotation, though the loss of the Elvish Mystics and Stormbreath Dragons are certainly going to be problematic. We'll have to see what I come up with for the next FNM.

-Odd
"The Temur have no patience for subtlety." -Stubborn Denial, flavour text


Friday, 18 September 2015

MTG FNM Report - TeMore Dragons

A couple weeks ago, I took a slightly retooled version of my previous Temur Dragons list to FNM at Outerlimits in Melville. Here's what I brought to the table:

Mainboard
Sideboard
4x Elvish Mystic
3x Rattleclaw Mystic
1x Hangerback Walker
4x Frost Walker
1x Deathmist Raptor
1x Yasova Dragonclaw
1x Managorger Hydra
1x Boon Satyr
4x Savage Knuckleblade
4x Thunderbreak Regent
2x Surrak, the Hunt Caller
3x Stormbreath Dragon
3x Sarkhan Unbroken
4x Crater's Claws
1x Treasure Cruise
4x Temple of Epiphany
2x Temple of Mystery
1x Temple of Abandon
3x Wooded Foothills
3x Shivan Reef
1x Yavimaya Coast
2x Mana Confluence
2x Haven of the Spirit Dragon
4x Forest
1x Mountain
4x Disdainful Stroke
3x Feed the Clan
3x Destructive Revelry
2x Anger of the Gods
2x Wild Slash
1x Treasure Cruise

This time I took out the four Goblin Rabblemasters that I played previously and replaced them with four different three drops to get a feel for which I would prefer to play. 






Round 1: 2-0 vs Mardu Midrange
The first game was a super tight race, but Surrak put me ahead for the win. In game two my opponent got stuck on three lands for a few turns and I managed to draw enough guys to play through his removal and finish him off before he could really get going. I played Yesova once, and while she traded I never got to activate her ability. I also decided that in this matchup, Stubborn Denial would have been much more useful than Disdainful Stroke.



Round 2: 1-2 vs Abzan Rally the Ancestors Combo
In the second round, I played down against a really sweet combo deck using Rally the Ancestors. I must admit, I had no idea what was going on and he crushed me game one.

The deck works by using Rally the Ancestors to return a bunch of cheap creatures including Mogis Marauder and Nantuko Hust to attack for massive damage all at once.

I threw the match with a really bad misplay in game three where I had him chump blocking on the ground and tapped out to play Sarkhan. I should have left mana open to counter the Rally that destroyed me on the next turn. Oh well... we live and learn.



Round 3: 2-1 vs Abzan Evolutionary Leap
It seemed to be my night for playing Abzan combo decks. This round I was matched up against a deck using Evolutionay Leap to sacrifice a bunch of cheap value creatures like Black Cat and Sulti Emissary, cycling through the deck to a succession of Flashbag Marauders and  Siege Rhinos.

I managed to win in the air  thanks at least partially to Sarkhan who seemed like great value. Disdainful Stroke was also good, but again, I think Stubborn Denial would have been better.

Deathmist Raptor saw the board a few times, and was quite underwhelming.




Round 4 - 2-1 vs Mono-White Aggro
The last round saw me playing up against the only undefeated player and a Mono-White Aggro deck. He ran over me in game one,but Feed the Clan was spectacular in games two and three, giving me the time to stabalise and beat him with dragons in the air. I sideboarded out Frostwalkers, but I'm not sure if I should have left them in to trade early. Maybe Surrak could come out when I'm not trying to race on the ground instead.

All told, I went 3-1 on the evening and I think I came second. I had lots of fun with my deck and saw some cool brews from my opponents. None of the new three drops really stood out to me, but that just means they need more testing. I do think that next time I'm going to try some Stubborn Denials either in the mainboard or the sideboard.

-Odd
"You are beneath contempt. Your lineage will be forgotten." Disdainful Stroke, flavour text

Monday, 31 August 2015

MTG FNM Report - Temur Dragons

This week I threw together a Temur Dragons list and ended up at Outer Limits in Melville for Friday Night Magic. Here's what the deck looked like:

Mainboard
Sideboard
4x Elvish Mystic
3x Rattleclaw Mystic
1x Hangerback Walker
4x Frost Walker
4x Goblin Rabblemaster
4x Savage Knuckleblade
4x Thunderbreak Regent
2x Surrak, the Hunt Caller
3x Stormbreath Dragon
3x Sarkhan Unbroken
4x Crater's Claws
1x Treasure Cruise
4x Temple of Epiphany
2x Temple of Mystery
1x Temple of Abandon
3x Wooded Foothills
3x Shivan Reef
1x Yavimaya Coast
2x Mana Confluence
2x Haven of the Spirit Dragon
4x Forest
1x Mountain
4x Disdainful Stroke
3x Feed the Clan
3x Destructive Revelry
2x Anger of the Gods
2x Wild Slash
1x Treasure Cruise

The plan of this deck is straightforward: Play dudes and smash. It is mostly efficient creatures (many with haste) with a little ramp and a full four Crater's Claws to finish off an opponent who manages to stabalise. This deck is mostly an excuse to play my three Sarkhan Unbroken, who I like to call Sarkhan the Misnamed because he is fully broken. 

Round 1: 2-0 vs GW Aggro
I won the first game by drawing all three Sarkhans and while he could deal with the first two, the third one stuck and easily took over the game. I sideboarded out the Rabblemasters for burn in game two and ran over my opponent with Frostwalkers and Knuckleblades. 

Round 2: 2-0 vs Temur Midrange
The thought of a mirror match had not crossed my mind before starting the tournament, but that's what I ended up with in the second round. I was running dragons, while my opponent was fielding more of a ground force and the flying really won this round for me. I sideboarded out the Rabblemasters again, this time for Disdainful Strokes which managed to counter an Arbor Colossus that would otherwise have been a big problem. 

Round 3: 0-2 vs GB Elves
I hadn't seen anything like this deck before, and I didn't have a plan or an answer. It operated a lot like a combo deck, playing all the one drop mana elves into Collected Company or Chord of Calling into Shaman of the Pack for huge chunks of damage. I made a poor keep in game 1 and boarded out Frostwalkers for game two. It didn't really make any difference as my opponent went off long before I could put in under enough pressure. 

Round 4: 2-0 vs GW Manifest
My opponent didn't draw any of his Whisperwood Elementals and I managed to outrace him in the air thanks to my dragons. Managorger Hydra was frightening in game two though. I think my matchup is quite good against Green White as my creatures can mostly just attack through anything my opponent plays. 

So I went 3-1 on the night and got third, having only lost to the eventual winner of the tournament. I was mostly happy that the deck preformed as expected and it was great dun attacking in for massive damage. I only had to sideboard out the Forstwalkers once, so I think they're absolutely viable... the same cannot be said for the Rabblemasters. As much as it pains me, they seem to be poorly positioned in the current metagame and I will have to try out some alternatives in the next tournament. 

-Odd
"'As the clans carved out their territories, we saw allies where the Mardu saw only obstacles.' -Yasova Dragonclaw" Frostwalker, flavour text