6/16/2023 0 Comments Mtg goldfish standard bant rampThe reason why many people struggle with these strategies is that every single small thing matters a ton – in an aggressive deck for example it might not be as significant even if you end up playing a build that isn’t optimal – well… if you just curve out and kill them who cares, but in a control or midrange shell – having a wrong piece of an answer for the current metagame that doesn’t line up well is just immediately going to turn into a loss.įor a long time I was struggling with finding another cheap option and I tried both 《Arboreal Grazer》 and 《Paradise Druid》 but they were just too weak – the problem with those cards is that you actually need to play ton of lands in your deck (currently playing 29) to make 《Uro, Titan of Nature’s Wrath》 and Spiral good – if you do that though you need to make sure that your deck has enough lategame power (and good topdecks) so that you won’t just simply flood out – if you put cards like Grazer or Druid in your deck you often have these games where you either don’t draw enough lands (versions with Druid for example play less lands) – and your Spirals and Uros are bad and you are just sitting there thinking why do I have to pay 2 mana for Druid when I could just play a land instead or you just don’t draw powerful enough spells in the lategame. The way I usually approach Magic is not with a proactive strategy that tries to find ways around opponent answers, I am much rather on the other side – building my deck in a way where I can just trade resources and win a lategame with power is always my cup of tea and fortunately the most dominating decks in Standard usually tend to be that way if you build and play them correctly. That was continued untill I saw the deck from currently one of the most active streamers – Crokeyz: Bant Ramp – on the first glance it looked like bunch of random cards mashed together and could improve, but it played almost all of the strongest cards currently available in a midrange shell which is a style of a deck that I like so I was hooked. I was pondering about what deck to start battling with – the classic look at Magic Online (MO) winning decklists didn’t satisfy me and the decks that people posted on Twitter seemed medium at best. I mostly focused on Limited and Pioneer prior to Players Tour Nagoya but after a short break I couldn’t wait to get my hands on the freshly looking unsolved Standard – my strongest format. ![]() People often think that their deck is the best because they tried something else (or beat something) and it just wasn’t performing as good but they don’t realize that the same would be true for the deck they are playing now if they just picked it up – small differences that you don’t see at the beginning can look marginal but they have a huge impact on the outcome of the games. ![]() I am not necessarily saying that it’s the best 75s in the format – it is extremely difficult to play every single deck in the format to the point where you know everything about it and have a close to perfect list. While writing this I obviously have no idea how am I going to do, so it’s entirely possible that you are reading an article from a person who is going to play the next MTG Arena big money tournament or a scrub who 0-2ed □ Well anyways I can assure you that I played a lot and my decklist is good – at least given the archetype. ![]() Hello everyone! The Mythic Invitational Qualifier is going to start in about 4 hours and I’ve decided that I am going to share my Bant Ramp decklist and sideaboard plans against the most played decks in the field with you.
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