And that’s just what showed up in the top 64 this weekend. Instead, it’s a cog in any number of machines. Collective Brutality is neither of these. Cryptic Command is a once-powerful tool that is beginning to peek its head out in blue control strategies. Razorverge Thicket was the one standout card in a re-imagined familiar archetype. This is a historical low for the card, and with any renewed interest in blue control in Modern, expect prices to climb convincingly towards $30 or more. Prices on Cryptic have fallen hard over the last several years, with a second reprinting in Modern Masters 2015 dragging the card all the way to $20. Add to this the printing of Torrential Gearhulk, who does a Snapcaster Mage impression in some cases better than the original, and you can see that the seeds are sown. Ancestral Visions has already started to crack into Modern, and slowing down some of the fastest decks in the format would make a lot of room for blue control strategies, of which Cryptic would be a key component. If Wizards ever pulls the handbrake on these strategies, say by removing Become Immense from the format, blue control strategies will be poised to come roaring back. Cryptic used to be a major component of Modern, falling by the wayside in recent years as Infect gained popularity, and has been further suppressed by other ultra-fast builds such as Shadow Zoo and Dredge. Kyle Boggemes’ Jeskai Flash was also packing a pair. Madcap Moon was running two Cryptic Commands, and it wasn’t the only deck in the room to do so. It’s far from a hard lock against the format, but strategies like Dredge are going to find it maddeningly difficult to beat in most situations. This is essentially a UR control deck that incorporates the Madcap Experiment/Platinum Emperion combo, which for the uninitiated, is a four mana sorcery which, if it resolves, “tutors” and puts a Platinum Emperion into play, handily protecting the controller’s life total. Razorverge isn’t played quite that much yet, but will it be within the next six months?Īnother surprise deck to show up in the top 32 was Madcap Moon, placing 25th in the hands of Robert Graves. We shouldn’t expect too dramatic an upward shift in price just because of Tom’s success, but this certainly provides a boost to a card that’s got the exact same supply profile as Blackcleave Cliffs, which hangs around $20 today. Razorverge is in the $7 to $8 range today. Not only will players looking to pick up this build of Tron need copies, it also validates selection of the land in other strategies when players wonder what GW land they should be using. Grove of the Burnwillows was an expensive and prohibitive card in Tron, and switching it for Razorverge Thicket is going to open the door for more players to get in. Razorverge Thicket has quietly been climbing in price and popularity in Modern for quite some time, as Melira, white Tax builds, and various Collected Company decks all employ it, as well as a smattering of other strategies. His largest departure from the standard Tron world is that, because of the color shift, he eschews Grove of the Burnwillows for Razorverge Thicket instead. Two World Breakers snuck in alongside two Ugin, the Spirit Dragons, and other than that, most every other card in the main deck is familiar. He’s ditched the Pyroclasms for Path to Exiles, likely as a response to the more singular and/or recursive threats of Shadow Zoo, Infect, and Dredge. It looks much like the GR build, with only a few small tweaks. In a departure from the typical GR build, he showed up to to the SCG Modern Open with GW Tron. Tom Ross, fan favorite, gave viewers yet another deck to be excited about this weekend. And watch this YouTube channel to keep up to date with Cartel Aristocrats, a fun and informative webcast with several other finance personalities! Well, this post sure took on a crazy and wonderful life of its own.Don’t miss this week’s installment of the MTG Fast Finance podcast, an on-topic, no-nonsense tour through the week’s most important changes in the Magic economy. “And then I’m going to juggle that damage briefly before dropping it right on my own head anyway.”Īh, see this is what happens when you forget exactly what a card does lol. Isn’t pal deflecting palm rotating? Standard is BFZ, SOI, and Kaladesh “For my next trick I’m going to do 50+ damage in a single turn… just not to someone I’d actually want to.” If you don’t reveal any artifacts, then you’ll reveal all the cards in your library, “shuffle” your library by put the cards in a random order on the “bottom” of the empty library, and take damage equal to the number of cards revealed this way.
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