Price of Progress: Being Ichi
Will Price | 02:41PM on Wed Mar 25 2009Despite some concern about whether or not we would be welcome at a mono-Japanese hobby store, Zeilend and I went down for the FNM draft last friday. We had been doing a lot of drafts on the tcgplayer utility to try and get familiar with the sets again. I hadn’t drafted since the week of the Conflux release, and Zeilend hadn’t played Magic in about 6 months.
After a short subway ride + walk, we arrived at the store around 5:30pm. We watched a little Legacy action and registered for the draft. We got a full 16 people, so the organizer split us into two pods. Thankfully, he put Zeilend and I together so that she could translate for me. Luckily for both of us, the organizer also elected to use English packs for our pod. There was some grumbling about this and Zeilend told me that it was not a popular decision. Instead of handing out packs as prizes, all the rares would be pooled after the tournament and the players would re-draft them according to place.
Draft begin!
I don’t remember the specifics of the draft, but in the 1st pack I 1st picked a Naya charm, 2nd picked a Magma Spray, and picked up two Druid of the Anima and two Dragon Fodders. Both Fodders tabled back to me, getting them 8th and 10th pick.
2nd pack I 1st pick FOIL Sarkhan Vol, 2nd pick Resounding Roar, 3rd or 4th picked a foil Wild Nacatl, and also got a Rakeclaw Gargantuan, 2 Mosstodon, an Exuberant Firestoker, and a Naya Panorama.
3rd pack I 1st pick Armillary Sphere, passing a Nicol Bolas, which the player to my left windmill slammed. I end up getting a couple Matca Rioters, a Wild Leotau, a Beacon Behemoth, a Viashino Slaughtermaster and a Paleoloth!!!
I end up with around 23 playables, and decide to play my Gustrider Exuberant main deck since I had 5 creatures with power 5, and I imagined recurring it with Paleoloth might be a nice way to break a stalemate. I ended up playing one Swamp that I could mise to pump my Slaughtermaster and Matca Rioters.
Zeilend’s deck looked pretty scary. She had a blue and black Capsule, three Glaze Fiend, 2 Parasite Strix, 2 Sedraxis Alchemist, Resounding Wave, Fate Stitcher, Puppet Conjuror, Oblivion Ring, Sanctum Gargoyle, Grixis Slavedriver, and some Landcyclers. Basically, the BDM dream deck.
Apologies to all opponents for not knowing their names, I could not read them. I got by with gestures and one-word sentences.
Round 1 I get paired against a five-color deck that seemed heavily Jund. The guy had a lot of Unearth, some pingers, and both Sprouting and Scarland Thrinax. I lost game 1 to a pretty quick draw. He got both his Thrinax out, and starting growing the Scarland. We were trading hits back and forth and I thought I was winning the race until he started counting up all his creatures. “Soul’s Fire?” I asked. “Hai.”
I got pretty aggressive draws games 2 and 3. Game 2 I surprised him with lethal off of a Viashano Slaughtermaster that got pumped by Resounding Roar.
Game 3 I hit Wild Nacatl, Druid, and then 5-power creatures until he scooped.
1-0
Round 2 I am against another five-color deck. I kept a really loose hand game 1, six lands and shiny Sarkhan Vol. I runner four straight lands and scoop it.
Game 2 we both mulligan, and I think he must have been missing colors because he barely played anything the whole game, even though he was making land drops. Maybe he just kept a slow hand since he saw no spells from me game 1. I played guys, turned them sideways, and won pretty quick.
Game 3 he mulligans and keeps a 1-lander. He misses his 2nd land drop, but I have mono-forests and am beating with a 1/1 Nacatl (this is humorous to his friends who are observing us). He starts drawing lands, but I make a Druid and start dropping big men. I end the game quick by pumping up a Slaughtermaster with a Resounding Roar again.
2-0
Last round and I am paired against the other 2-0 from our pod. He was the player to my left that I had passed the Nicol Bolas to, and like my first two opponents he was also playing five-color. Game 1 he has the option of playing a Wretched Banquet on my Druid or my 1/1 Matca Rioters. Of course he chooses the… Rioters. Druid was the only source of non-green mana I drew all game, and I am pretty sure he would have rolled me if he had just killed the Druid.
Game 2 I side in Molten Frame, thinking I could use it to blow up an Obelisk. Of course I drew it in my opening hand and saw that it would not be nearly as helpful as I thought. I had a pretty good curve, mising my Swamp for my Slaughtermaster, and allowing me to make 4/4 Rioters. Imagine how excited I was when my opponent makes a turn 4 Tower Gargoyle, giving my a target for the Molten Frame. Since he had shown me no artifact Creatures game one, he was pretty shocked to see that I had brought it in. Rather than try to explain that I had misread the card, I said nothing and let him believe I was just that good. He drew some more removal, but I was getting in for damage and made a good trade with Resounding Roar. My opponent top decks a needed land and windmill slammed a Charnelhoard Wurm. He is at 4, and I have two 1/1 goblin tokens in play. Luckily, I top deck Naya Charm and swing with both tokens. He blocks 1, and I charm to regrow my Resounding Roar, pump the unblocked token, and win.
3-0
I won the pod, which meant I was the “Ichi” and would get first pick of the rares. The winner of each pod also got a Kitchen Finks FNM promo, which was pretty nice. I tried to convince everyone that the Path to Exile should be laid out with the other rares, hoping that I could pick it 9th. They didn’t get the joke, and shuffled it in with the other uncommons to be dealt out. I first picked the foil planeswalker, and also got a Sphinx Summoner, Death Baron and Mindlock Orb.
So that was my draft in Japan. I don’t think my deck was really spectacular, but it was definitely well matched against the slow decks that my opponents built.
Next time on Price of Progress: Extended decks, a topic I have been putting off for too long.
~WillPoP
Price of Progress: Back From Japan
Will Price | 12:37PM on Mon Mar 23 2009Just got back from a week in Japan. I had never been before, although many people I know have gone multiple times for PTs and GPs. I went out to visit my friend Zeilend, who has been studying there this year. Luckily she has become quite good at Japanese and was able to function as my translator all week. Three things you should know about Japan:
1. Food: The food, at least in Nagoya where I stayed, is neither healthy or various. Every restaurant pretty much had identical menus. Also, most of the food is fried, and there are rarely any vegetable offerings. That being said, the food is very tasty, and some places have all-you-can-drink deals (alcoholic or non) for reasonable prices. I recommend Shochu, which is like a very smooth vodka. I do not recommend mixing it with whiskey.
2: Public Transportation: The buses and subways are very nice. There is very little waiting time and I never experienced any delays. The big difference is that the price per ride scales depending on how far you travel. This makes public transportation a much less affordable experience than it is in New York. Fortunately my hotel was located in the middle of the city, so I never had to spend more than $3 a trip. I do not recommend taking the bus, as even the Japanese do not seem to know how it works.
3. Trash: There are no trash cans on the street, anywhere. This is strange because there are vending machines and convenience stores everywhere, so there are ample opportunities to purchase snacks and generate trash. You will end up having to carry your trash with you until you find an opportunity to get rid of it. For me this usually meant keeping it in my backpack until I got back to my hotel.
Japan was awesome, and I’m glad I had someone to show me around who was familiar with the language and the culture. Zeilend, being a Magic player, was nice enough to take me to an FNM draft while I was there, so I will be posting a little tournament report in a day or two (spoiler alert: I won). I have also been modifying that BW extended deck I posted a few weeks ago, and I will follow up with a new list and some testing results at the end of the week (spoiler alert: I added Tarmogoyf). If anyone has any good travel stories, post them in the comments!
~WillPoP
Kiki-Jiki Got There: A Rogue Success Story
bdm | 11:47AM on Mon Mar 23 2009Congratulations to Jonathan Loucks on not only winning his PTQ this past weekend but doing it in grand style with a home brewed deck that is not what you might expect at this poing in the Extended metagame. Jonathan popped up in a chat window on Friday and we had the following conversation:
Jonathon: I’m casting Kiki-jiki tomorrow, fyi me: Kiki Mite Get there? Jonathon: +reveillark & trinket mage
You may remember Kiki Mite Get There as a Day Two deck from GP Philadelphia played by Zeilend Powell and featured in my column. At the time it seemed like an interesting deck that was relatively unaffected by rotations but it never picked up much traction. Then along came Loucks with his eye for the rogue build and desire to qualify for the Pro Tour — often mutually exclusive qualities in terms of execution.Here is the deck Jonathan played and that you will almost certainly be seeing in the closing weeks of the PTQ season.
Kiki-Jiki gets Friki-Diki
Jonathan Loucks — Winner
PTQ Honolulu — Seattle
4 Flooded Scrand
1 Windswept Heath
1 Wooded Foothills
1 Polluted Delta
2 Sacred Foundry
2 Steam Vents
1 Hallowed Fountain
1 Plains
1 Mountain
1 Island
3 Rugged Prarie
2 Cascade Bluffs
1 Ancient Den
1 Great Furnace
1 Academy Ruins
1 Tolaria West
4 Pestermite
3 Trinket Mage
3 Kitchen Finks
3 Kiki-Jiki, Mirror Breaker
2 Reveillark
1 Body Double
4 Mana Leak
3 Thirst for Knowledge
3 Gifts Ungiven
1 Resurrection
1 Firespout
1 Wrath of God
1 Pyrite Spellbomb
1 Sunbeam Spellbomb
1 Pithing Needle
1 Chalice of the Void
2 Engineered Explosives
1 Chrome Mox
SB:
1 Shatterstorm
1 Kataki
1 Hurkyl’s Recall
1 Tormod’s Crypt
1 Volcanic Fallout
1 Firespout
1 Wrath of God
1 Pact of Negation
1 Sower of Temptation
1 Stifle
1 Trickbind
1 Cannonist
1 Rule of Law
1 Duergar Hedge-Mage
1 Gilded Light
Congratulations Jonathan. Hopefully you will be writing about this deck real soon for one of the strategy sites or perhaps get an interview in Top Decks or The Week That Was. If only we had a way to make that happen around here.
Podcast: Flores and Price of Progress - Part 2
Matt Wang | 12:58AM on Thu Mar 19 2009Podcast: Flores and Price of Progress - Part 5
Matt Wang | 05:17PM on Wed Mar 18 2009Podcast: Flores and Price of Progress - Part 4
Matt Wang | 05:15PM on Wed Mar 18 2009Podcast: Flores and Price of Progress - Part 3
Matt Wang | 05:12PM on Wed Mar 18 2009Podcast: Flores and Price of Progress - Part 1
Matt Wang | 04:54PM on Wed Mar 18 2009Flores and Price of Progress - Part 1
Enjoy! Let me know if there are any issues.
Honolulu Bound: Part 1 by Frank Lepore
bdm | 10:05AM on Mon Mar 16 2009
Honolulu Bound: Part 1
Ft. Lauderdale Extended PTQ
January 24th, 2009
So on New Years, at around midnight or so, my friend Brad sent me a text message that said “Happy New Year!” I responded to the sentiment by saying, “Happy New Year, buddy! We both ‘q’ in ’09!” A week or so later Brad made good on my prediction and actually won the first PTQ of the year in Atlanta with Lightning Angel. I was both shocked and proud, as over the past few years I’ve watched Brad go from a mediocre player, to someone I completely respect in this game. Though now I had to complete the other half of the resolution and make sure Brad wasn’t going to Hawaii alone.
My first foray this year was an eight hour drive to Mobile, Alabama, where I went 5-1 with Faeries only to lose the bubble match to Zoo. It was a disappointing 16th place to say the least. We drove home and I was intent on making it to every PTQ this season, and I began planning for the next weekend in Ft. Lauderdale. I tested everything from TEPs, to AIR, to Sea Stompy, to some black/white Orzhov concoction that I thought might be good in this format. At that point I really just wanted to play fun cards like Descendant of Kiyomaro, Shining Shoal, and Ghost Council and not have to think as much as would be required by playing Faeries. But alas, that isn’t how we win PTQs, a lesson I’ve slowly learned over time. Read the rest of this entry »


