Hello and welcome back to the weekly set retrospective! This week, we will take a look at the second half of Future Sight, a set so full of money cards that I had to split up the analysis! Let’s dive in!
Tarmogoyf
Mark Hinsz recounts this past weekend’s expeditions at Star City Games’ Open events, where he placed in the Top 8 in Standard and the Top 16 in Legacy.
Chad takes a look at the cyclical nature of different formats and how you can use this to your advantage.
Mark Hinsz explores some uncharted opportunities Green Sun’s Zenith has in Legacy, pointing out silver bullets and worthy considerations that may help in those sigh-worthy matchups.
Mike Hawthorne places 34th place in SCG’s Open Legacy tournament in Indianapolis, piloting New Horizons. Recap his nine rounds, learn a bit on sideboarding, and see the tweaks he’d make to the deck.
So, here is the third part of Ryan’s review of Innistrad. That is a SWEET review you might say. THE END.
Innistrad by Ryan, the second part. Now with 100% more random follower on Twitter contest! Get in and get winning!
Dissension, the third (and chronically-misspelled) set in Ravnica, showcased the remaining three guilds. We were introduced to the hellbent Rakdos, the gene-splicing Simic and the board-stalling Azorius guilds. Ravnica block is good for a couple money rares, but it didn’t go as casually deep as I thought it would when I first thought about the block. Dissension has a few nice tournament staples aside from the obvious shocklands – let’s take a look at the set!
Josh Rayden shows us how to be prepared for a prerelease. Find out which thirty-three cards you should pay attention to at your local prerelease and why some cards may not be worth picking up quite yet.
Joshua Justice takes a closer look at rares mythics and playable commons and uncommons with his set review of Innistrad.
Neale lines up a howling good time without laying a finger on a Werewolf. It’s new-school Commander all the way!
Chad takes apart some key Innistrad spoilers to target in pre-order