I am going to get flamed for suggesting this I am sure, but I would love to see original art, black boarded foil Serra Angel in new template for the 94 slot.
I am going to get flamed for suggesting this I am sure, but I would love to see original art, black boarded foil Serra Angel in new template for the 94 slot.
I honestly wouldn't be surprised. Every FTV tends to have cards that are worthless $$ wise. Serra Angel is a perfect card for that "slot".
How I think this would finalized. 1994 Winter Orb
1995 Hymn to Tourach confirmed
1996 Mishra's Factory
1997 Impulse confirmed
1998 Survival of the Fittest
1999 Wildfire
2000 Tangle Wire
2001 Rishadan Port
2002 Upheaval
2003 Gilded Lotus confirmed
2004 Akroma's Vengeance confirmed
2005 Okina, Temple to the Grandfathers
2006 Ink-Eyes, Servant of Oni confirmed
2007 Venser, Shaper Savant confirmed
2008 Thoughtseize
2009 Cruel Ultimatum confirmed
2010 Jace, the Mind Sculptor confirmed
2011 Kessig Wolf Run
2012 Entreat the Angels
2013 Sphinx's Revelation
I actually expect it at this point. She WAS the best card in the game back then.
She was the best creature in the game (which is also debatable), but she was not the best card.
Which reminds me of another point about best card in the game. I remember an Inquest issue where they did a top 10 of the most powerful cards in the game. I can't remember when, but I do know that #1 was Disenchant, and at that point in the history of Magic, it probably was. Enchantments and Artifacts ran the game. When you splashed White, you did it for that card even more than you did for Swords.
I think they need to make an exception for 2006, there's nothing really exciting anyway, and include lightning helix. It may not have ended up winning the tournament, but it's the key to the most famous moment in Magic history.
She was the best creature in the game (which is also debatable), but she was not the best card.
Which reminds me of another point about best card in the game. I remember an Inquest issue where they did a top 10 of the most powerful cards in the game. I can't remember when, but I do know that #1 was Disenchant, and at that point in the history of Magic, it probably was. Enchantments and Artifacts ran the game. When you splashed White, you did it for that card even more than you did for Swords.
As for Disenchant I agree, although it was probably used more to kill Artifacts (since Terror could not) than Enchantments. And the Enchantments of today and the various Enchantment-related creatures have made Enchantments more powerful than ever. But today, with all the straight-up removal in the environment, it makes little sense to waste slots for Disenchant when you can just put in Path to Exile or Doom Blade or a dozen other cards.
Never really gave thought to it being a year by year thing. Seems like an interesting thought though.
Of all speculative choices made here, I would love to see rishadan port the most. Followed closely by thoughtseize. Of course if this happens, i hop you already have your boxes reserved
As for Disenchant I agree, although it was probably used more to kill Artifacts (since Terror could not) than Enchantments. And the Enchantments of today and the various Enchantment-related creatures have made Enchantments more powerful than ever. But today, with all the straight-up removal in the environment, it makes little sense to waste slots for Disenchant when you can just put in Path to Exile or Doom Blade or a dozen other cards.
[CARD]Stasis
Control Magic
Land Tax
Cadaverous Bloom
Survival of the Fittest
Mind Over Matter
Oath of Druids
Necropotence[/CARD]
Just a few I can think of off the top of my head in the early years of Magic. Most are easily more powerful than anything printed today. The only three not banned at some point were Bloom, Stasis, and Control Magic. Control Magic is strictly better than the same versions they print now. Bloom and Stasis were ultra powerful in the decks that played them, and I can't imagine they'd every print something that turned every card into your hand into Dark Ritual that didn't require an initial mana investment.
I was referring specifically to Enchantment Auras, not regular ones. I'll agree there were plenty of more powerful Enchantments and Artifacts back then, most because no one knew how to balance cards.
This card should definitely be in. It was one of the most powerful cards printed at 4 cmc and shook up standard in a way that you had to prepare your turn 4 and make sure you had a turn 5 play to keep it from flipping. It's iconic.
I don't know why this isn't highlighted but Inkmoth Nexus is. Primeval Titan was the enabler, Primeval Titan just destroyed face with Kessig, turning a BoP into an 11/1 flier with trample was a game-ender if you didn't have the bolt.
This card caused ripples still felt today. This is why CounterMagic got Neutered, this is why we can't have nice things. Bitterblossom's power level created a knee-jerk reaction from development to give us Cascade which in turn gave us the power of a 'Jund Deck', the same combination of it's color power levels still lives on in Standard, Modern and Legacy today.
This card. This card... Oh ah-my god. This card gave heartattacks back in the day. a 4/1 trampler with haste. That was absurd, unheard of, it did WHAT?! OH. Shroud!? That card did a BLUE ability on Red Green?! This was the card that set the wheels running for what power level could be on a card, on what a Rare could be made of. Do you hate Giest crashing in your front door turn 4 for 6? This guy was the instigator, while not played anymore this guy deserves some re-recognition for his time in standard as a beast that rocked the color pie boat.
You want to talk about rocking the boat? This guy is bashing in the side of your bow with a jackhammer. With Circular Logic feeding this boy over a shock and countering magic, a super-upheaval and the pre-cursor to Legacy's favorite 'Budget Deck' Dredge, Psychatog ate up people's hearts with that bright smile. He had that same gutteral groaning feeling when he hit play of 'Crap'. Sure you x/1'd your opponent if you could nail-him mid-pump somehow with a shock or some kind of removal spell, but your goal was to 'Kill Tog Player before Tog stabilizes or kill the Tog at any means necessary. The means necessary usually mean forgoing plan A of killing the Tog Player and even then it was often you'd lose. He was one of the first 'netdecks' with the rapid broadening of the Internet around this time and a force reckoned until creature power left him in the dust.
Know how we all groan about 'pushed creatures' with Thragtusk, a 5/3 that leaves a 3/3 behind when you kill it?! Just always getting 2/1ed, one of the starters was Nekretaal, when a 2/1 first striker with kill a creature was acceptable at 2BB. But this guy. Kavu? He went there, took a picture, and shot your best friend in the face with his mouth-shotgun of fire. You got 1/1ed right then and there, and then having to spend a removal spell on this creep? 2/1ed. A 4/2 body was obscene, vomit worthy, he was so good that they didn't even make him a rare! After all Red's Rare spot was busy with Goblin Game right? This guy made waves in Standard and you still see his children today. Thundermaw Hellkite, grabbing some CA killing Lingering Souls Tokens, bashing in for 5, Thragtusk, FtK's little cousin by Marriage looking to Make Love Not War, and coddling it's chubby kid that's a fat lil' 3/3 but just a 'special child' for being disgruntled at all the time. FtK for FtV 2014!
2000 - Rishadan Port
When Jon Finkel decides that Masticore will kill you, it's too overpowered, when Jon Finkel says 'Tap on your Upkeep' on your land, little annoying. When he just completely absolves you of any form of play with the combination of Tangle Wire and Port, you know the game is going to be frustrating. Outplaying this deck took something special, or just a really good draw, after the slew of bannings following the dreaded Combo Winter of 98-99 into the underpowered yuck of Mercadian Masques Finkel decided to put a standstill to everything, even his opponents games. While the deck functioned intertwined, with no one card being the single key to victory, I believe Rishadan port played it's part more in tune than the other cards. It wasn't just a kill condition, it was color lockdown in a format with little mana fixing. Oh that and Rishadan port is 50$ and it'd be great to see in as a foil when the regular foil is about 230$, just stuff more money in my FTV please.
1999 - Wildfire
You know what made TronFires work in the 2005-6 Standard Season? Urza Lands, being able to 'get there' on turn 4-5, with signets and fellwar stone was the exact reason that we now have 'cluestones' and 'keyrunes.' Signets were good. So good that Thran dynamo did the exact same thing 6 years prior and was so good people just dusted it off and put it together again with new tools! Sure we can talk about the mess of Combo Winter and it's ilk but most of the iconic pieces are Reserved or irrelevant without context. So Wildfires is a great back up! This guy doesn't get the blue ribbon but it's the only pig that showed up to the party after the farmer shot the rest for beating his wife with a crowbar.
1998 - Wasteland
Things change. Lands change. In fact the land promises nothing, and keeps it's promise. We had strip mine which was an auto 4-of but then came Wasteland. Non-basic lands? This form of land-for-land destruction caused a change of mentality, what if playing an Island could be more profitable than playing a Tropical Island for situations like this? What if playing a Mono Color deck could be the way to go? While Sligh had been on the tongues of everyone with a limited budget, Wasteland became the final 'Gotcha' for Red players who were looked at from under the noses of those fancy 'Multi Color Decks'. Wasteland evened the playing field and became a staple form of ways to deal with problematic lands.
1996 - Wrath of God
Turn 4, I'm not dead yet? Okay try again later. Wrath of God, the Turn 4 Reset Button that every player hates to see. Usually x/1ing the aggressive player, Wrath of God provides breathing room and has become a a staple ability of White and even touching into Black from time to time. Almost all great control decks have used White in their tastebuds to utilize this powerful spell and it is if anything iconic. Wrath of God, not Wrath of Kahn, not Wrath of Buddha, not Wrath of Retail Manager, but GOD. As in God himself came down and said "Yeah see that thing you're doing? Hitting this guy? Stop it. -flips table.-" Wrath of God has been reprinted a few times, but that doesn't stop it from being named in almost every card with the same 'destroy all creatures' text.
1994 - Serra Angel
In a deck of one-ofs and a play field filled with Black Lotus and various Moxen. Serra Angel is one of the first 'overpowered cards' of Magic. A 4/4 that flies, and doesn't tap to attack, so wait.. it could attack, and BLOCK?! The creature that compared in power was Shivan Dragon, and that didn't make the cut of Zak Dolan's famous First World Champion list. This card is still iconic, the artwork holds a feel that cause oldschool players to feel a sudden rush of nostalgia that's a mix of a tickle up the spine and having to pee. Seeing one of these cards in Alpha Black Border in old collections makes you stop and pause and just remember how this M14 reject uncommon used to be the scariest thing to stare down on the other side of the table.
So that's my list. Hopefully it was fun to read, I might do articles.
...So that's my list. Hopefully it was fun to read, I might do articles.
If you do go on and write articles, you should know that its ≠ it's. Pet hate of mine when otherwise well-written prose has so many examples of THAT mistake. But it was an entertaining read
But yes, that is basically the list that I expect to see. Rishadan Port seems like it could do with a reprint, and it's hard to see another version commanding as a great a price as the original, so that concern is only partially valid. Flametongue should be a shoe-in. I don't remember Solifuge being quite as impactful as you suggest, though. Its original spoiled version was 4/3 if I remember rightly, which would have caused even bigger waves, even in today's standard. It's tricky to pick an individual card from that era. Loxodon Heirarch and Glare of Subdual were huge for a while.
...So that's my list. Hopefully it was fun to read, I might do articles.
If you do go on and write articles, you should know that its ≠ it's. Pet hate of mine when otherwise well-written prose has so many examples of THAT mistake. But it was an entertaining read
But yes, that is basically the list that I expect to see. Rishadan Port seems like it could do with a reprint, and it's hard to see another version commanding as a great a price as the original, so that concern is only partially valid. Flametongue should be a shoe-in. I don't remember Solifuge being quite as impactful as you suggest, though. Its original spoiled version was 4/3 if I remember rightly, which would have caused even bigger waves, even in today's standard. It's tricky to pick an individual card from that era. Loxodon Heirarch and Glare of Subdual were huge for a while.
Solifuge was huge after Guildpact came out. It was the Hellrider of its day.
The only card I disagree with Huntmaster, and only because I don't think they can do the double sided cards on this print run.
So that's my list. Hopefully it was fun to read, I might do articles.
Great list and an enjoyable read. Unfortunately I'm doubtful about Huntmaster for the same reasons listed above and I just don't see Port and Wasteland both making it into the set, though I'd love both and would settle for either.
MaRo and other members of R&D have said that DFC's are too hard to produce to merit printing in premium products. Apparently it's a large headache with the printers and it's very expensive.
The only card I disagree with Huntmaster, and only because I don't think they can do the double sided cards on this print run.
Why not? Ink is ink
Quote:
One small issue with this card is that it is a double faced card, which would prove difficult for WoTC to add due to the logistics involved.
What logistics?
Printing on two sides of any piece of paper in large qualities is not as simple as printing one side and then the other. The printer has to be set up to print both sides at once, and the FTV process is totally different from every other product printed so it would take the retooling of the equipment just to print one card this one year. It just wouldn't make sense to do so.
I also seem to remember MaRo answering a similar question on his Tumblr to the same effect.
If you do go on and write articles, you should know that its ≠ it's. Pet hate of mine when otherwise well-written prose has so many examples of THAT mistake. But it was an entertaining read
But yes, that is basically the list that I expect to see. Rishadan Port seems like it could do with a reprint, and it's hard to see another version commanding as a great a price as the original, so that concern is only partially valid. Flametongue should be a shoe-in. I don't remember Solifuge being quite as impactful as you suggest, though. Its original spoiled version was 4/3 if I remember rightly, which would have caused even bigger waves, even in today's standard. It's tricky to pick an individual card from that era. Loxodon Heirarch and Glare of Subdual were huge for a while.
Yeah I typed it up super late, if you wouldn't mind, if MTGSally lets me write articles, it'd be fun to have an editor to look at my stuff before I send it off.
reserved list sorry.
any of these i think has some potential:
if sideboard count then:
Spellshock for the spot
http://magic.tcgplayer.com/db/deck.asp?deck_id=37933
http://magic.tcgplayer.com/db/deck.asp?deck_id=181
http://magic.tcgplayer.com/db/deck.asp?deck_id=434
Signature courtesy of Rivenor and Miraculous Recovery
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My Pauper Cube
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Commander:
GWR Rith, the Awakener RWG
U Kami of the Crescent Moon U (Flagship Deck)
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Cube:
WUBRGX Pauper XGRBUW
I honestly wouldn't be surprised. Every FTV tends to have cards that are worthless $$ wise. Serra Angel is a perfect card for that "slot".
BGStandard Green AggroGB
UWRGModern Saheeli CobraGRWU
UBRGLegacy StormGRBU
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No card from RTR, you are missing 1993.
Check out http://www.mtgbrodeals.com/author/john-murphy/ for my EDH articles!
I actually expect it at this point. She WAS the best card in the game back then.
---
BRG Prossh, Skyraider of Kher
WUB Sharuum, the Hegemon
UGEdric, Spymaster of Trest
She was the best creature in the game (which is also debatable), but she was not the best card.
Which reminds me of another point about best card in the game. I remember an Inquest issue where they did a top 10 of the most powerful cards in the game. I can't remember when, but I do know that #1 was Disenchant, and at that point in the history of Magic, it probably was. Enchantments and Artifacts ran the game. When you splashed White, you did it for that card even more than you did for Swords.
Check out http://www.mtgbrodeals.com/author/john-murphy/ for my EDH articles!
Before Juzam Djinn, Serra Angel and Sengir Vampire competed for "best creature". Both are now almost too weak to see play.
As for Disenchant I agree, although it was probably used more to kill Artifacts (since Terror could not) than Enchantments. And the Enchantments of today and the various Enchantment-related creatures have made Enchantments more powerful than ever. But today, with all the straight-up removal in the environment, it makes little sense to waste slots for Disenchant when you can just put in Path to Exile or Doom Blade or a dozen other cards.
Of all speculative choices made here, I would love to see rishadan port the most. Followed closely by thoughtseize. Of course if this happens, i hop you already have your boxes reserved
BUGShardless SultaiBUG
Modern
URSplinter TwinUR
BWGAbzan MidrangeBWG
Standard
URWJeskai TokensURW
[CARD]Stasis
Control Magic
Land Tax
Cadaverous Bloom
Survival of the Fittest
Mind Over Matter
Oath of Druids
Necropotence[/CARD]
Just a few I can think of off the top of my head in the early years of Magic. Most are easily more powerful than anything printed today. The only three not banned at some point were Bloom, Stasis, and Control Magic. Control Magic is strictly better than the same versions they print now. Bloom and Stasis were ultra powerful in the decks that played them, and I can't imagine they'd every print something that turned every card into your hand into Dark Ritual that didn't require an initial mana investment.
Enchatments were a lot more powerful back then.
Check out http://www.mtgbrodeals.com/author/john-murphy/ for my EDH articles!
I was referring specifically to Enchantment Auras, not regular ones. I'll agree there were plenty of more powerful Enchantments and Artifacts back then, most because no one knew how to balance cards.
I bet on.
2012 - Huntmaster of the Fells.
This card should definitely be in. It was one of the most powerful cards printed at 4 cmc and shook up standard in a way that you had to prepare your turn 4 and make sure you had a turn 5 play to keep it from flipping. It's iconic.
2011 - Primeval Titan
I don't know why this isn't highlighted but Inkmoth Nexus is. Primeval Titan was the enabler, Primeval Titan just destroyed face with Kessig, turning a BoP into an 11/1 flier with trample was a game-ender if you didn't have the bolt.
2008 - Bitterblossom
This card caused ripples still felt today. This is why CounterMagic got Neutered, this is why we can't have nice things. Bitterblossom's power level created a knee-jerk reaction from development to give us Cascade which in turn gave us the power of a 'Jund Deck', the same combination of it's color power levels still lives on in Standard, Modern and Legacy today.
2006 - Giant Solifuge (Hard Runner Up Remand)
This card. This card... Oh ah-my god. This card gave heartattacks back in the day. a 4/1 trampler with haste. That was absurd, unheard of, it did WHAT?! OH. Shroud!? That card did a BLUE ability on Red Green?! This was the card that set the wheels running for what power level could be on a card, on what a Rare could be made of. Do you hate Giest crashing in your front door turn 4 for 6? This guy was the instigator, while not played anymore this guy deserves some re-recognition for his time in standard as a beast that rocked the color pie boat.
2002 - Psychatog
You want to talk about rocking the boat? This guy is bashing in the side of your bow with a jackhammer. With Circular Logic feeding this boy over a shock and countering magic, a super-upheaval and the pre-cursor to Legacy's favorite 'Budget Deck' Dredge, Psychatog ate up people's hearts with that bright smile. He had that same gutteral groaning feeling when he hit play of 'Crap'. Sure you x/1'd your opponent if you could nail-him mid-pump somehow with a shock or some kind of removal spell, but your goal was to 'Kill Tog Player before Tog stabilizes or kill the Tog at any means necessary. The means necessary usually mean forgoing plan A of killing the Tog Player and even then it was often you'd lose. He was one of the first 'netdecks' with the rapid broadening of the Internet around this time and a force reckoned until creature power left him in the dust.
2001 - Flametongue Kavu
Know how we all groan about 'pushed creatures' with Thragtusk, a 5/3 that leaves a 3/3 behind when you kill it?! Just always getting 2/1ed, one of the starters was Nekretaal, when a 2/1 first striker with kill a creature was acceptable at 2BB. But this guy. Kavu? He went there, took a picture, and shot your best friend in the face with his mouth-shotgun of fire. You got 1/1ed right then and there, and then having to spend a removal spell on this creep? 2/1ed. A 4/2 body was obscene, vomit worthy, he was so good that they didn't even make him a rare! After all Red's Rare spot was busy with Goblin Game right? This guy made waves in Standard and you still see his children today. Thundermaw Hellkite, grabbing some CA killing Lingering Souls Tokens, bashing in for 5, Thragtusk, FtK's little cousin by Marriage looking to Make Love Not War, and coddling it's chubby kid that's a fat lil' 3/3 but just a 'special child' for being disgruntled at all the time. FtK for FtV 2014!
2000 - Rishadan Port
When Jon Finkel decides that Masticore will kill you, it's too overpowered, when Jon Finkel says 'Tap on your Upkeep' on your land, little annoying. When he just completely absolves you of any form of play with the combination of Tangle Wire and Port, you know the game is going to be frustrating. Outplaying this deck took something special, or just a really good draw, after the slew of bannings following the dreaded Combo Winter of 98-99 into the underpowered yuck of Mercadian Masques Finkel decided to put a standstill to everything, even his opponents games. While the deck functioned intertwined, with no one card being the single key to victory, I believe Rishadan port played it's part more in tune than the other cards. It wasn't just a kill condition, it was color lockdown in a format with little mana fixing. Oh that and Rishadan port is 50$ and it'd be great to see in as a foil when the regular foil is about 230$, just stuff more money in my FTV please.
1999 - Wildfire
You know what made TronFires work in the 2005-6 Standard Season? Urza Lands, being able to 'get there' on turn 4-5, with signets and fellwar stone was the exact reason that we now have 'cluestones' and 'keyrunes.' Signets were good. So good that Thran dynamo did the exact same thing 6 years prior and was so good people just dusted it off and put it together again with new tools! Sure we can talk about the mess of Combo Winter and it's ilk but most of the iconic pieces are Reserved or irrelevant without context. So Wildfires is a great back up! This guy doesn't get the blue ribbon but it's the only pig that showed up to the party after the farmer shot the rest for beating his wife with a crowbar.
1998 - Wasteland
Things change. Lands change. In fact the land promises nothing, and keeps it's promise. We had strip mine which was an auto 4-of but then came Wasteland. Non-basic lands? This form of land-for-land destruction caused a change of mentality, what if playing an Island could be more profitable than playing a Tropical Island for situations like this? What if playing a Mono Color deck could be the way to go? While Sligh had been on the tongues of everyone with a limited budget, Wasteland became the final 'Gotcha' for Red players who were looked at from under the noses of those fancy 'Multi Color Decks'. Wasteland evened the playing field and became a staple form of ways to deal with problematic lands.
1996 - Wrath of God
Turn 4, I'm not dead yet? Okay try again later. Wrath of God, the Turn 4 Reset Button that every player hates to see. Usually x/1ing the aggressive player, Wrath of God provides breathing room and has become a a staple ability of White and even touching into Black from time to time. Almost all great control decks have used White in their tastebuds to utilize this powerful spell and it is if anything iconic. Wrath of God, not Wrath of Kahn, not Wrath of Buddha, not Wrath of Retail Manager, but GOD. As in God himself came down and said "Yeah see that thing you're doing? Hitting this guy? Stop it. -flips table.-" Wrath of God has been reprinted a few times, but that doesn't stop it from being named in almost every card with the same 'destroy all creatures' text.
1994 - Serra Angel
In a deck of one-ofs and a play field filled with Black Lotus and various Moxen. Serra Angel is one of the first 'overpowered cards' of Magic. A 4/4 that flies, and doesn't tap to attack, so wait.. it could attack, and BLOCK?! The creature that compared in power was Shivan Dragon, and that didn't make the cut of Zak Dolan's famous First World Champion list. This card is still iconic, the artwork holds a feel that cause oldschool players to feel a sudden rush of nostalgia that's a mix of a tickle up the spine and having to pee. Seeing one of these cards in Alpha Black Border in old collections makes you stop and pause and just remember how this M14 reject uncommon used to be the scariest thing to stare down on the other side of the table.
So that's my list. Hopefully it was fun to read, I might do articles.
If you do go on and write articles, you should know that its ≠ it's. Pet hate of mine when otherwise well-written prose has so many examples of THAT mistake. But it was an entertaining read
But yes, that is basically the list that I expect to see. Rishadan Port seems like it could do with a reprint, and it's hard to see another version commanding as a great a price as the original, so that concern is only partially valid. Flametongue should be a shoe-in. I don't remember Solifuge being quite as impactful as you suggest, though. Its original spoiled version was 4/3 if I remember rightly, which would have caused even bigger waves, even in today's standard. It's tricky to pick an individual card from that era. Loxodon Heirarch and Glare of Subdual were huge for a while.
On spoiled card wishlisting and 'should-have-had'-isms:
Solifuge was huge after Guildpact came out. It was the Hellrider of its day.
The only card I disagree with Huntmaster, and only because I don't think they can do the double sided cards on this print run.
Posted from MTGsalvation.com App for Android
Check out http://www.mtgbrodeals.com/author/john-murphy/ for my EDH articles!
Great list and an enjoyable read. Unfortunately I'm doubtful about Huntmaster for the same reasons listed above and I just don't see Port and Wasteland both making it into the set, though I'd love both and would settle for either.
Why not? Ink is ink
What logistics?
MaRo and other members of R&D have said that DFC's are too hard to produce to merit printing in premium products. Apparently it's a large headache with the printers and it's very expensive.
Printing on two sides of any piece of paper in large qualities is not as simple as printing one side and then the other. The printer has to be set up to print both sides at once, and the FTV process is totally different from every other product printed so it would take the retooling of the equipment just to print one card this one year. It just wouldn't make sense to do so.
I also seem to remember MaRo answering a similar question on his Tumblr to the same effect.
Posted from MTGsalvation.com App for Android
Check out http://www.mtgbrodeals.com/author/john-murphy/ for my EDH articles!
Yeah I typed it up super late, if you wouldn't mind, if MTGSally lets me write articles, it'd be fun to have an editor to look at my stuff before I send it off.
Possible, but unlikely. It was a 2 of in one sideboard. Yes, its a very good card, but in the major tournaments last year, it didn't win much.
Check out http://www.mtgbrodeals.com/author/john-murphy/ for my EDH articles!