just make what you want.
i mean those m19 set decks are there because m19 is a recent set which means most stores sell stuff from m19.
but sets are generally close in power level.
as long as your not playing the standard format (only the X most recent sets legal in standard) you could use any set you like.
If it's just you two playing kichen table magic, you can play anything. I've gone pretty deep in Pauper (only commons, but from any set) for casual pickup games, but you can really play any sets you want!
(A lot of the time, you'll do best to combine cards with themes, which means sets that care a lot about artifacts tend to work better with each other than with sets focused on, say, Pirate and Dinosaur creatures)
The thing to keep in mind is that you want to make sure you're both on the same page, because even on a budget, if one of you makes a deck of broken cards like Urza Lands, Cloudposts and/or Sol Rings, and the other's playing an M19 Preconstructed Deck, you might not have the best time.
The thing about Pauper is that the power level of that format is actually very high, and if you're unprepared, you can get blown out without realizing it (obviously, casual decks solve this problem, but at that point you may as well play freeform with the Legacy and Modern ban lists). Burn gets most of its most useful Legacy tools, while Tron more or less auto-wins the long game and Affinity can Fling a 21/22 Atog at you out of nowhere.
If you can find them, Duel Decks are usually created to be somewhat balanced against each other, and tend to be good for beginners.
Using casual deck ht**://www.mtggoldfish.com/articles/30-casual-decks-under-20-for-magic-the-gathering-core-set-2019
For 2 new newbie players. Is it ok to use different sets on the list or should I make 2 deck of the same list like
M19-Only Blue-Green Tempo for example.
Thanks
i mean those m19 set decks are there because m19 is a recent set which means most stores sell stuff from m19.
but sets are generally close in power level.
as long as your not playing the standard format (only the X most recent sets legal in standard) you could use any set you like.
(A lot of the time, you'll do best to combine cards with themes, which means sets that care a lot about artifacts tend to work better with each other than with sets focused on, say, Pirate and Dinosaur creatures)
The thing to keep in mind is that you want to make sure you're both on the same page, because even on a budget, if one of you makes a deck of broken cards like Urza Lands, Cloudposts and/or Sol Rings, and the other's playing an M19 Preconstructed Deck, you might not have the best time.
If you can find them, Duel Decks are usually created to be somewhat balanced against each other, and tend to be good for beginners.