Well, I gotta agree with what the OP is talking about. It's basically the same kinda story at my game group (which is partly why I've dropped out of EDH mostly, and have focused on legacy recently).
The playgroup has a UR artifact combo deck, a mono U artifacts, multiple BUG graveyard decks, a UB control deck, UB ninjas, RUG cascade, a 5c control, and multiple UG goodstuff value grinder decks. All of them outside of the ninjas share a surprisingly high (or not surprising, really) number of pieces. Most of the peeps here could probably end up building the entire deck and be probably 90% correct for each deck.
I've tried shaking it up in my groups by playing a mono U 'colour-control (blind seer', mono white combo, RB suicide aggro, and a zedruu voltron. The other peeps in my meta were generally really into the idea of my decks, but they're mostly a very 'roll-player' sort of deck, where it's got an outside chance for a win.
It's not too bad, since i dont generally mind losing, but its the idea that we're seeing the same old cards over and over again. It feels like it's only ever my decks that sport those "wait.. what does that do?" kinda cards.
Until something big happens to shake up my local meta, i'm not planning to update any of my decks at all. It just doesn't feel like its worth my time anymore.
Most of the never-to-be-surpassed cards existed at the format’s inception. It’s always just been a question of how much power you’re willing to sacrifice for innovation, and vice versa.
To me, it sounds like you’ve found a formula you think is best, refuse to move off of it, and then blame the format for your own stubbornness.
To be more constructive: I tend to think of some plan that I want to enact, and then build the deck to maximise my ability to execute that plan. If your plan is always just “win” then that’s probably why you don’t see much variety in your lists.
Most of the never-to-be-surpassed cards existed at the format’s inception. It’s always just been a question of how much power you’re willing to sacrifice for innovation, and vice versa.
To me, it sounds like you’ve found a formula you think is best, refuse to move off of it, and then blame the format for your own stubbornness.
To be more constructive: I tend to think of some plan that I want to enact, and then build the deck to maximise my ability to execute that plan. If your plan is always just “win” then that’s probably why you don’t see much variety in your lists.
Well...I'm don't feel that this is the case. I don't have a formula beyond "what's the plan" and "does this card fit my plan". I only have decks that have a somewhat strange strategy or at least unusual in EDH, and make it a point to scour the game's past as much as possible to fit that plan as well as possible. I don't think it's the best way to play, but as of now, it's the best way i know of to keep the game casual enough to not scare off/price out new players and varied enough not to bore off invested/old players.
My lists USED to be to just 'win', but that got old quick, and made the playgroup pretty stale. I'm complaining probably more about the others in my playgroup for being unable/unwilling to take the seriousness/spikiness of the game down and not just 'win'. So maybe it's unfair to say it's all EDH as a format's fault.
And it's pretty much as you say. If one is stuck in a group where everyone is focused on just 'win', then they take all the powerful spells in the old days of the game, couple them with all the creatures of the modern era, and there's the deck. Not sure how to force people to move away from that. I've even tried talking to them (the horror)!
My comment was directed at OP, not you, sorry for any miscommunication.
I don't really have good advice for someone who's meta is powerful enough that any attempt at innovation becomes a huge handicap. I've been in more or less powerful groups, with more and less powerful opponents, but there's always been enough wiggle-room that, between my advantages in budget, build experience, and play skill, I haven't had any trouble making off-the-beaten-path lists win a reasonable amount of the time. If someone feels they're trapped in a competitive meta and don't want to be, all I can suggest is talking to them or finding a different group to play with. In my experience the vast majority of metas are around the 75% level.
Most of the never-to-be-surpassed cards existed at the format’s inception.
I don't know. Surely old cards had some really broken ass *****cards. But things like Avacyn, Sheoldred or cyclonic rift looks pretty new to me.
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How i feel about competitive players and casual players in EDH: The competitive are german tourists, the casual are italian tourists, both in a italian beach. The italians asking themselves "why are the germans here?" make a legitimate question, the answer is because the beach is beautiful, no matter the country you came from. The italians wanting to ban the germans are dumb, because if the germans pay for their stay and follow the rules like everyone else, they have the right to be in the beach. Hovewer, if the germans started to ask themselves "why are the italians here?"... they would be dumb as hell.
Most of the never-to-be-surpassed cards existed at the format’s inception.
I don't know. Surely old cards had some really broken ass *****cards. But things like Avacyn, Sheoldred or cyclonic rift looks pretty new to me.
We're talking NEVER to be surpassed cards. None of those - maaaaybe cyclonic rift, but even then not really - are anywhere near that camp.
Wotc could totally print a slightly better sheoldred or a slightly better avacyn, or even a slightly better rift - in standard. Maybe it's not likely, but it's definitely not impossible. Power creep is a thing.
WotC printing a slightly better sol ring in standard? Never ever ever ever ever going to happen, not if power creep runs its course for a thousand years. Hell, I'd be shocked if a strictly-better worn powerstone was ever printed in standard, and that card is already several orders of magnitude less powerful than ring and crypt.
If you want to find never-to-be-surpassed cards that aren't super old, you're probably looking more for something like skullclamp or treasure cruise, not big dumb beaters that had a minimal/acceptable impact on other competitive formats. If there weren't bannings in constructed, then it's safe to say that wotc doesn't feel they made a mistake (and arguably didn't), and may well push the envelope further in the future.
Also, none of those cards (arguable exception of cyc rift) are really doing any serious damage to this format either, imo. Sure, they're good, but I'd put sheoldred and avacyn pretty low on the list of "what's wrong with EDH these days".
Honestly, i don't know.
Yeah old cards have some serious ***** in it. Lot of broken horrors: fast&furious mana, absurdly cheap tutors, cards that are really easily broken by combo
Yet if you try to make the fairest deck possible, even if you try to get away from this broken *****, you still get the "deckbuilding fatigue" OP talked about.
In my meta we try to be really fair and durdly and so on. No fast mana, no fast tutors, no 2-card combos... generally we try to not win before turn 7-8.
And still when we are making a deck we are like "this slot should be for card X, it's too good no matter what general/strategy i'm playing".
Sheoldred may not be as broken as ancestral recall, but surely way better than any other similar effects. Bye bye reya dawnbringer and debtors' knell. Everytime i make a black deck, i ask myself "why i am not putting sheoldred in?"
Same for white and avacyn
Same for green and craterhoof
Same for blue and cyclonic rift. Recently some friends of mine builded blue decks. One of them had cyclonic rift. After playing it a couple of times, the other ones are like "we should totally jam this on in" even if they are all completely playing different strategies. Right now the only thing preventing my meta from becoming a cyclonic rift ****-fest is its price tag.
Some cards are just way better than the other. You mention standard getting better version of them but i doubt it. Sheoldred is reanimating every turn + killing creatures every turn + an evasive body. Avacyn is indestructible + everything is indestructible + huge, evasive, vigilant body. They are clearly overloaded. Did they broke stand/modern/legacy/vintage? nope. Are they worse than other old cards? nope. But they are still overloaded and so easily included into any deck... they just promote goodstuffing instead of creative deckbuilding.
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How i feel about competitive players and casual players in EDH: The competitive are german tourists, the casual are italian tourists, both in a italian beach. The italians asking themselves "why are the germans here?" make a legitimate question, the answer is because the beach is beautiful, no matter the country you came from. The italians wanting to ban the germans are dumb, because if the germans pay for their stay and follow the rules like everyone else, they have the right to be in the beach. Hovewer, if the germans started to ask themselves "why are the italians here?"... they would be dumb as hell.
Call me a fool, but I don't think Sheoldred or Avacyn are that great. Good at what they do, yes, certainly, but not the sort of thing I'm just going to jam into any deck in their colors. If I'm playing Kaalia (never gonna happen, but let's say) then sure, Avacyn is great. If I'm playing reanimator, then sure, Sheoldred is great. With tokens, craterhoof. But I'm not setting aside slots for those cards by default, or even close. Out of all my white decks (which, given that I've built over a hundred decks, is probably quite a few) I think I've only run avacyn once or twice. Sheoldred and craterhoof, same deal. Again, call me a fool. But I'm sure not suffering any major loss in win% because of it, from what I can tell. To me, outside of good synergy, these are mostly goodstuff cards, and a bunch of random goodstuff cards just don't hold a candle to a well-built deck with a cohesive plan.
I mean sure, sheoldred overshadows reya. But you can still run Reya if you don't have access to black, or you're playing kaalia and want redundancy, or you're building angel tribal, or you just want to. Yes, power creep is a thing, but it's not like Reya as a standalone card wasn't always crap. She was kind of OK in oldschool reanimator and that was a long, long time ago.
Cyc rift I have put in nearly every blue deck I've built though. You've got me on that one. That's probably as close to a true auto-include as exists in the format outside of fast mana.
I don't buy this argument of "oh, you're playing X color, so you have to play X card". Even if we're operating on the, imo, mistaken assumption that sheoldred/hoof/avacyn are auto-includes. If you're playing to win as your primary goal, then forget about sheoldred, there are waaaaaaay more powerful things available in this format. And if you're not playing to win at all costs, then guess what? YOU get to draw the line in the sand about what is and isn't fun to play with. You can choose not to include those cards if you don't want to. Nobody is twisting your arm. You can make plenty strong decks with or without them.
If your meta is becoming stale and refuses to move off them, then that's one thing, but personally that doesn't bother me too much, so long as it's not veering too close to cEDH. I always find it fun to run circles around the unimaginative goodstuff decks, personally.
Call me a fool, but I don't think Sheoldred or Avacyn are that great.
I don't think you are a fool, it's just a meta call.
From what i have saw, auto-includes are a thing even in less competitive metas.
The sky isn't falling and my meta won't die for sure, but since, as you said, power creep is a thing, i hope they won't print another sheoldred, avacyn or cyclonic rift in the near future.
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How i feel about competitive players and casual players in EDH: The competitive are german tourists, the casual are italian tourists, both in a italian beach. The italians asking themselves "why are the germans here?" make a legitimate question, the answer is because the beach is beautiful, no matter the country you came from. The italians wanting to ban the germans are dumb, because if the germans pay for their stay and follow the rules like everyone else, they have the right to be in the beach. Hovewer, if the germans started to ask themselves "why are the italians here?"... they would be dumb as hell.
I don't think you are a fool, it's just a meta call.
From what i have saw, auto-includes are a thing even in less competitive metas.
The sky isn't falling and my meta won't die for sure, but since, as you said, power creep is a thing, i hope they won't print another sheoldred, avacyn or cyclonic rift in the near future.
I play mostly at LGS "commander night"-type metas. So, not a fully stable group, but tend to see a lot of the same faces. I've played a couple different metas in the US, in the UK, and now in NZ. I've really never felt running those cards (except rift) was important, necessary, or even optimal.
If you're just hard-casting those cards without some plan to cheat them out, I think most good decks will either be fast enough that, by the time you play them, you're already in big trouble or outright dead, or they're controlling enough that playing a big expensive clunker with no immediate impact is going to be trivial to answer, if it even needs answering at all.
I really think you're vastly overstating the power level of avacyn and sheoldred to put them in the same list as rift. Nearly any blue deck is improved by rift, but I reeeaaaaally don't buy that any white deck is improved by avacyn. Unless you can reliably cheat her out and/or plan to armageddon, she's just not that great. She costs a ton in a color that's not great at ramp, and a lot of the good removal doesn't care about indestructible. There are way better things to do with that much mana. A deck just doesn't get to run very many cards at that mana cost and still be effective. Is Sheoldred really the bomb you're going to win the game with? Idk, I've seen a lot of sheoldreds cast, and the number that were a significant part of a victory is pretty low.
I think auto-includes are more of a thing in 75%-ish metas. Below that, people are running whatever jank suits their fancy. Above 75%, auto-includes exist, but don't tend to be big dumb clunky bombs like sheoldred, so much as efficient answers like swan song and swords to plowshares (swords is one I might compare to rift - not so much sheoldred). And so long as your meta is around 75%, I don't think it's particularly difficult to win with a smart cohesive build, rather than a bunch of dumb "auto-includes". So I really don't buy that any meta exists where Sheoldred or Avacyn are necessary, by any stretch.
The playgroup has a UR artifact combo deck, a mono U artifacts, multiple BUG graveyard decks, a UB control deck, UB ninjas, RUG cascade, a 5c control, and multiple UG goodstuff value grinder decks. All of them outside of the ninjas share a surprisingly high (or not surprising, really) number of pieces. Most of the peeps here could probably end up building the entire deck and be probably 90% correct for each deck.
I've tried shaking it up in my groups by playing a mono U 'colour-control (blind seer', mono white combo, RB suicide aggro, and a zedruu voltron. The other peeps in my meta were generally really into the idea of my decks, but they're mostly a very 'roll-player' sort of deck, where it's got an outside chance for a win.
It's not too bad, since i dont generally mind losing, but its the idea that we're seeing the same old cards over and over again. It feels like it's only ever my decks that sport those "wait.. what does that do?" kinda cards.
Until something big happens to shake up my local meta, i'm not planning to update any of my decks at all. It just doesn't feel like its worth my time anymore.
Legacy - Solidarity - mono U aggro - burn - Imperial Painter - Strawberry Shortcake - Bluuzards - bom
To me, it sounds like you’ve found a formula you think is best, refuse to move off of it, and then blame the format for your own stubbornness.
To be more constructive: I tend to think of some plan that I want to enact, and then build the deck to maximise my ability to execute that plan. If your plan is always just “win” then that’s probably why you don’t see much variety in your lists.
EDH Primers
Phelddagrif - Zirilan
EDH
Thrasios+Bruse - Pang - Sasaya - Wydwen - Feather - Rona - Toshiro - Sylvia+Khorvath - Geth - QMarchesa - Firesong - Athreos - Arixmethes - Isperia - Etali - Silas+Sidar - Saskia - Virtus+Gorm - Kynaios - Naban - Aryel - Mizzix - Kazuul - Tymna+Kraum - Sidar+Tymna - Ayli - Gwendlyn - Phelddagrif 4 - Liliana - Kaervek - Phelddagrif 3 - Mairsil - Scarab - Child - Phenax - Shirei - Thada - Depala - Circu - Kytheon - GrenzoHR - Phelddagrif - Reyhan+Kraum - Toshiro - Varolz - Nin - Ojutai - Tasigur - Zedruu - Uril - Edric - Wort - Zurgo - Nahiri - Grenzo - Kozilek - Yisan - Ink-Treader - Yisan - Brago - Sidisi - Toshiro - Alexi - Sygg - Brimaz - Sek'Kuar - Marchesa - Vish Kal - Iroas - Phelddagrif - Ephara - Derevi - Glissa - Wanderer - Saffi - Melek - Xiahou Dun - Lazav - Lin Sivvi - Zirilan - Glissa
PDH - Drake - Graverobber - Izzet GM - Tallowisp - Symbiote Brawl - Feather - Ugin - Jace - Scarab - Angrath - Vraska - Kumena Oathbreaker - Wrenn&6
Well...I'm don't feel that this is the case. I don't have a formula beyond "what's the plan" and "does this card fit my plan". I only have decks that have a somewhat strange strategy or at least unusual in EDH, and make it a point to scour the game's past as much as possible to fit that plan as well as possible. I don't think it's the best way to play, but as of now, it's the best way i know of to keep the game casual enough to not scare off/price out new players and varied enough not to bore off invested/old players.
My lists USED to be to just 'win', but that got old quick, and made the playgroup pretty stale. I'm complaining probably more about the others in my playgroup for being unable/unwilling to take the seriousness/spikiness of the game down and not just 'win'. So maybe it's unfair to say it's all EDH as a format's fault.
And it's pretty much as you say. If one is stuck in a group where everyone is focused on just 'win', then they take all the powerful spells in the old days of the game, couple them with all the creatures of the modern era, and there's the deck. Not sure how to force people to move away from that. I've even tried talking to them (the horror)!
Legacy - Solidarity - mono U aggro - burn - Imperial Painter - Strawberry Shortcake - Bluuzards - bom
I don't really have good advice for someone who's meta is powerful enough that any attempt at innovation becomes a huge handicap. I've been in more or less powerful groups, with more and less powerful opponents, but there's always been enough wiggle-room that, between my advantages in budget, build experience, and play skill, I haven't had any trouble making off-the-beaten-path lists win a reasonable amount of the time. If someone feels they're trapped in a competitive meta and don't want to be, all I can suggest is talking to them or finding a different group to play with. In my experience the vast majority of metas are around the 75% level.
EDH Primers
Phelddagrif - Zirilan
EDH
Thrasios+Bruse - Pang - Sasaya - Wydwen - Feather - Rona - Toshiro - Sylvia+Khorvath - Geth - QMarchesa - Firesong - Athreos - Arixmethes - Isperia - Etali - Silas+Sidar - Saskia - Virtus+Gorm - Kynaios - Naban - Aryel - Mizzix - Kazuul - Tymna+Kraum - Sidar+Tymna - Ayli - Gwendlyn - Phelddagrif 4 - Liliana - Kaervek - Phelddagrif 3 - Mairsil - Scarab - Child - Phenax - Shirei - Thada - Depala - Circu - Kytheon - GrenzoHR - Phelddagrif - Reyhan+Kraum - Toshiro - Varolz - Nin - Ojutai - Tasigur - Zedruu - Uril - Edric - Wort - Zurgo - Nahiri - Grenzo - Kozilek - Yisan - Ink-Treader - Yisan - Brago - Sidisi - Toshiro - Alexi - Sygg - Brimaz - Sek'Kuar - Marchesa - Vish Kal - Iroas - Phelddagrif - Ephara - Derevi - Glissa - Wanderer - Saffi - Melek - Xiahou Dun - Lazav - Lin Sivvi - Zirilan - Glissa
PDH - Drake - Graverobber - Izzet GM - Tallowisp - Symbiote Brawl - Feather - Ugin - Jace - Scarab - Angrath - Vraska - Kumena Oathbreaker - Wrenn&6
I don't know. Surely old cards had some really broken ass *****cards. But things like Avacyn, Sheoldred or cyclonic rift looks pretty new to me.
Wotc could totally print a slightly better sheoldred or a slightly better avacyn, or even a slightly better rift - in standard. Maybe it's not likely, but it's definitely not impossible. Power creep is a thing.
WotC printing a slightly better sol ring in standard? Never ever ever ever ever going to happen, not if power creep runs its course for a thousand years. Hell, I'd be shocked if a strictly-better worn powerstone was ever printed in standard, and that card is already several orders of magnitude less powerful than ring and crypt.
If you want to find never-to-be-surpassed cards that aren't super old, you're probably looking more for something like skullclamp or treasure cruise, not big dumb beaters that had a minimal/acceptable impact on other competitive formats. If there weren't bannings in constructed, then it's safe to say that wotc doesn't feel they made a mistake (and arguably didn't), and may well push the envelope further in the future.
Also, none of those cards (arguable exception of cyc rift) are really doing any serious damage to this format either, imo. Sure, they're good, but I'd put sheoldred and avacyn pretty low on the list of "what's wrong with EDH these days".
EDH Primers
Phelddagrif - Zirilan
EDH
Thrasios+Bruse - Pang - Sasaya - Wydwen - Feather - Rona - Toshiro - Sylvia+Khorvath - Geth - QMarchesa - Firesong - Athreos - Arixmethes - Isperia - Etali - Silas+Sidar - Saskia - Virtus+Gorm - Kynaios - Naban - Aryel - Mizzix - Kazuul - Tymna+Kraum - Sidar+Tymna - Ayli - Gwendlyn - Phelddagrif 4 - Liliana - Kaervek - Phelddagrif 3 - Mairsil - Scarab - Child - Phenax - Shirei - Thada - Depala - Circu - Kytheon - GrenzoHR - Phelddagrif - Reyhan+Kraum - Toshiro - Varolz - Nin - Ojutai - Tasigur - Zedruu - Uril - Edric - Wort - Zurgo - Nahiri - Grenzo - Kozilek - Yisan - Ink-Treader - Yisan - Brago - Sidisi - Toshiro - Alexi - Sygg - Brimaz - Sek'Kuar - Marchesa - Vish Kal - Iroas - Phelddagrif - Ephara - Derevi - Glissa - Wanderer - Saffi - Melek - Xiahou Dun - Lazav - Lin Sivvi - Zirilan - Glissa
PDH - Drake - Graverobber - Izzet GM - Tallowisp - Symbiote Brawl - Feather - Ugin - Jace - Scarab - Angrath - Vraska - Kumena Oathbreaker - Wrenn&6
Honestly, i don't know.
Yeah old cards have some serious ***** in it. Lot of broken horrors: fast&furious mana, absurdly cheap tutors, cards that are really easily broken by combo
Yet if you try to make the fairest deck possible, even if you try to get away from this broken *****, you still get the "deckbuilding fatigue" OP talked about.
In my meta we try to be really fair and durdly and so on. No fast mana, no fast tutors, no 2-card combos... generally we try to not win before turn 7-8.
And still when we are making a deck we are like "this slot should be for card X, it's too good no matter what general/strategy i'm playing".
Sheoldred may not be as broken as ancestral recall, but surely way better than any other similar effects. Bye bye reya dawnbringer and debtors' knell. Everytime i make a black deck, i ask myself "why i am not putting sheoldred in?"
Same for white and avacyn
Same for green and craterhoof
Same for blue and cyclonic rift. Recently some friends of mine builded blue decks. One of them had cyclonic rift. After playing it a couple of times, the other ones are like "we should totally jam this on in" even if they are all completely playing different strategies. Right now the only thing preventing my meta from becoming a cyclonic rift ****-fest is its price tag.
Some cards are just way better than the other. You mention standard getting better version of them but i doubt it. Sheoldred is reanimating every turn + killing creatures every turn + an evasive body. Avacyn is indestructible + everything is indestructible + huge, evasive, vigilant body. They are clearly overloaded. Did they broke stand/modern/legacy/vintage? nope. Are they worse than other old cards? nope. But they are still overloaded and so easily included into any deck... they just promote goodstuffing instead of creative deckbuilding.
I mean sure, sheoldred overshadows reya. But you can still run Reya if you don't have access to black, or you're playing kaalia and want redundancy, or you're building angel tribal, or you just want to. Yes, power creep is a thing, but it's not like Reya as a standalone card wasn't always crap. She was kind of OK in oldschool reanimator and that was a long, long time ago.
Cyc rift I have put in nearly every blue deck I've built though. You've got me on that one. That's probably as close to a true auto-include as exists in the format outside of fast mana.
I don't buy this argument of "oh, you're playing X color, so you have to play X card". Even if we're operating on the, imo, mistaken assumption that sheoldred/hoof/avacyn are auto-includes. If you're playing to win as your primary goal, then forget about sheoldred, there are waaaaaaay more powerful things available in this format. And if you're not playing to win at all costs, then guess what? YOU get to draw the line in the sand about what is and isn't fun to play with. You can choose not to include those cards if you don't want to. Nobody is twisting your arm. You can make plenty strong decks with or without them.
If your meta is becoming stale and refuses to move off them, then that's one thing, but personally that doesn't bother me too much, so long as it's not veering too close to cEDH. I always find it fun to run circles around the unimaginative goodstuff decks, personally.
EDH Primers
Phelddagrif - Zirilan
EDH
Thrasios+Bruse - Pang - Sasaya - Wydwen - Feather - Rona - Toshiro - Sylvia+Khorvath - Geth - QMarchesa - Firesong - Athreos - Arixmethes - Isperia - Etali - Silas+Sidar - Saskia - Virtus+Gorm - Kynaios - Naban - Aryel - Mizzix - Kazuul - Tymna+Kraum - Sidar+Tymna - Ayli - Gwendlyn - Phelddagrif 4 - Liliana - Kaervek - Phelddagrif 3 - Mairsil - Scarab - Child - Phenax - Shirei - Thada - Depala - Circu - Kytheon - GrenzoHR - Phelddagrif - Reyhan+Kraum - Toshiro - Varolz - Nin - Ojutai - Tasigur - Zedruu - Uril - Edric - Wort - Zurgo - Nahiri - Grenzo - Kozilek - Yisan - Ink-Treader - Yisan - Brago - Sidisi - Toshiro - Alexi - Sygg - Brimaz - Sek'Kuar - Marchesa - Vish Kal - Iroas - Phelddagrif - Ephara - Derevi - Glissa - Wanderer - Saffi - Melek - Xiahou Dun - Lazav - Lin Sivvi - Zirilan - Glissa
PDH - Drake - Graverobber - Izzet GM - Tallowisp - Symbiote Brawl - Feather - Ugin - Jace - Scarab - Angrath - Vraska - Kumena Oathbreaker - Wrenn&6
I don't think you are a fool, it's just a meta call.
From what i have saw, auto-includes are a thing even in less competitive metas.
The sky isn't falling and my meta won't die for sure, but since, as you said, power creep is a thing, i hope they won't print another sheoldred, avacyn or cyclonic rift in the near future.
I play mostly at LGS "commander night"-type metas. So, not a fully stable group, but tend to see a lot of the same faces. I've played a couple different metas in the US, in the UK, and now in NZ. I've really never felt running those cards (except rift) was important, necessary, or even optimal.
If you're just hard-casting those cards without some plan to cheat them out, I think most good decks will either be fast enough that, by the time you play them, you're already in big trouble or outright dead, or they're controlling enough that playing a big expensive clunker with no immediate impact is going to be trivial to answer, if it even needs answering at all.
I really think you're vastly overstating the power level of avacyn and sheoldred to put them in the same list as rift. Nearly any blue deck is improved by rift, but I reeeaaaaally don't buy that any white deck is improved by avacyn. Unless you can reliably cheat her out and/or plan to armageddon, she's just not that great. She costs a ton in a color that's not great at ramp, and a lot of the good removal doesn't care about indestructible. There are way better things to do with that much mana. A deck just doesn't get to run very many cards at that mana cost and still be effective. Is Sheoldred really the bomb you're going to win the game with? Idk, I've seen a lot of sheoldreds cast, and the number that were a significant part of a victory is pretty low.
I think auto-includes are more of a thing in 75%-ish metas. Below that, people are running whatever jank suits their fancy. Above 75%, auto-includes exist, but don't tend to be big dumb clunky bombs like sheoldred, so much as efficient answers like swan song and swords to plowshares (swords is one I might compare to rift - not so much sheoldred). And so long as your meta is around 75%, I don't think it's particularly difficult to win with a smart cohesive build, rather than a bunch of dumb "auto-includes". So I really don't buy that any meta exists where Sheoldred or Avacyn are necessary, by any stretch.
EDH Primers
Phelddagrif - Zirilan
EDH
Thrasios+Bruse - Pang - Sasaya - Wydwen - Feather - Rona - Toshiro - Sylvia+Khorvath - Geth - QMarchesa - Firesong - Athreos - Arixmethes - Isperia - Etali - Silas+Sidar - Saskia - Virtus+Gorm - Kynaios - Naban - Aryel - Mizzix - Kazuul - Tymna+Kraum - Sidar+Tymna - Ayli - Gwendlyn - Phelddagrif 4 - Liliana - Kaervek - Phelddagrif 3 - Mairsil - Scarab - Child - Phenax - Shirei - Thada - Depala - Circu - Kytheon - GrenzoHR - Phelddagrif - Reyhan+Kraum - Toshiro - Varolz - Nin - Ojutai - Tasigur - Zedruu - Uril - Edric - Wort - Zurgo - Nahiri - Grenzo - Kozilek - Yisan - Ink-Treader - Yisan - Brago - Sidisi - Toshiro - Alexi - Sygg - Brimaz - Sek'Kuar - Marchesa - Vish Kal - Iroas - Phelddagrif - Ephara - Derevi - Glissa - Wanderer - Saffi - Melek - Xiahou Dun - Lazav - Lin Sivvi - Zirilan - Glissa
PDH - Drake - Graverobber - Izzet GM - Tallowisp - Symbiote Brawl - Feather - Ugin - Jace - Scarab - Angrath - Vraska - Kumena Oathbreaker - Wrenn&6