If you held a massive tournament with a format that allowed basically every card printed since 1996, but with the requirement that your deck had to have been legal for a single Type II format at one period of time (meaning for example, you could play a Necro deck that was legal in 1996, with Strip Mine, Hymn to Tourach, 1 Ivory Tower etc., or a Fires of Yavimaya deck that was legal in 2001, with Rishadan Port, Saproling Burst etc but you couldn't mix the two)...which deck do you think would come out on top?
Which decks do you think would also fare well?
Yawgmoth's Bargain + Mana Vault + Memory Jar + Megrim
Bargain + Vampiric Tutor + Yawgmoth's Will + Grim Monolith + Dark Ritual
(Was it Type 2? Saber Bargain?)
"Want all, lose all."
Bring Your Own T2 format covers this question but only in the post-bannings world; from what I've seen Urza/Masques Tinker takes the cake. Then again, if considering pre-bannings formats too, who knows what you might uncover.
I am pretty sure the top 5 (no particular order) goes like this:
Academy
Megrim/Jar
Necro
Clamp Affinity
CawBlade (if New Phyrexia was included)
Academy, Megrim/Jar and Necro is without a doubt broken. Clamp Affinity can pull off fast wins out of nowhere. Laugh all you want now but CawBlade with Mental Misstep can actually go toe to toe with the mentioned decks above and is the most consistent of all.
I am not sure that the old necro decks would compete with a lot of the newer printings. I played Necro in standard, and unless my memory is deceiving me it would not be in the top tier.
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If you want to talk about any Caw deck, it was definitely the Splinter Twin hybrid list. It only existed for like 3 weeks, but it wasn't even close to fair. Caw-blade was just Caw-blade, but this deck functioned like the Dark Depths Thopter Extended deck that was equally unbeatable.
The short period where CB-Top was legal in Standard with Bob, Jitte, Remand, Disrupting Shoal etc was also fairly absurd. If a tournament of this format was run, I would probably put this on the short list of winners.
IPA-OTJ-7th Tog would also be fairly insane in the meta as a fair deck with Force Spike, Duress, Counterspell, FoF, etc.
I'm pretty sure broken jar takes the cake in this discussion.
But jar was never legal in standard I thought.
Also I dont think tinker would be that busted, they only could get phyrexian colossus and processor at best?
Well here's a list of some possible decks if a 16-deck tournament were to be run. I played the game the most from 1996 until 2001 or so, so after that my knowledge is pretty limited.
Oh also, each deck would play roughly according to the rules of their time. So the Prison deck would be able to tap its Winter Orb with Icy Manipulator and so on.
1. Academy Combo (~1997)
2. Necro (~1996)
3. Caw-blade (~2011)
4. Affinity (2004)
5. Replenish (2000)
6. Tinker (2000)
7. Psychatog (~2001)
8. Prosperous Bloom (~1997)
9. Sligh/Red Burn (whichever is most powerful, probably involving Pups and Fireblasts)
10. Turbo Stasis (~1997)
11. The Prison (1997ish, Winter Orb/Icy Manipulator/Swords to Plowshares/Balance. Some deck should be packing Balance)
12. ?Bargain Combo (Bargain/Will/Ritual)
13. Fires of Yavimaya (2001)
14. Jund
15. ? Possibly an Oath of Druids deck?
16. ? One of the strongest from 2005-2010
I'll do the inverse of the above post and cover the more modern era. Didn't start Standard until IPA-OTJ, so list should be mixable.
1. Academy (obvobvovo)
2. Necro (also obvobvobvo)
3. Replenish
4. Tinker
5. Faeries
6. Counter Top
7. TwinBlade
8. Clamp Affinity
9. Jund
10. Mythic
11. UB Faeries (TSP + LRW with Ancestral Visions)
12. Fireblast + Pup Sligh or Zen-Shards Red.
13. IPA-OTJ-7th Tog
14. Fires
15. Some kind of Bargain deck (Either the Zvi Show and Tell one or Sabre)
16. Something old school with stuff like Balance and Strip Mine.
Pros Bloom is definitely outdated and is worse than a TON of other combo options (Dragonstorm, Dredge, pure Splinter Twin, Elf and Nail, KCI just off the top of my head). Jund and Fires are competing for the honor of worst deck on the list in my mind.
I'd probably put money on Necro, Academy, Faeries, or CB-Top to win.
The seven cardinal sins of Legacy:
1. Discuss the unbanning ofLand TaxEarthcraft.
2. Argue that banning Force of Will would make the format healthier.
3. Play Brainstorm without Fetchlands.
4. Stifle Standstill.
5. Think that Gaea's Blessing will make you Solidarity-proof.
6. Pass priority after playing Infernal Tutor.
7. Fail to playtest against Nourishing Lich (coZ iT wIlL gEt U!).
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* Maverick is dead. Long live Maverick!
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I think people should play that out, IRL, and film the whole shebang!
"Want all, lose all."
There was an article series like that if I'm not mistaken, the most broken Extended decks battling it out.
Edit: Here's the extended one:
The Ultimate Extended Tournament
And the Standard one:
The Ultimate Standard Tournament
Necro when Type II had a restricted list would roll many legacy decks. Do you understand that you could play strip mine, balance and black vise in standard?
Edit: The first winter / spring of standard you could play 4 black vise and I believe 4 balance (not necessarily together) it was dark/revised/fe.
Prosbloom was probably a block-deck primarily, and was probably slower than the other combo decks. I also wanted to include a deck that uses some of the more broken enchantments like Recurring Nightmare, so I put RecSur into the open slot, along with the 2008 Faerie Deck, which is from the underrepresented mid-2000 period and also wins a lot in "Bring Your Own Type 2" tournaments. I also wanted to include one more older deck that uses a classic "super-broken combo," so I have bumped Prosbloom in favor of Vise Age from 1995.
This is what the All-Time Tournament List would currently look-like...
1. Academy Combo (1998)
2. Necro (1996)
3. Affinity (2004)
4. Caw-Blade (2011)
5. Replenish (2000)
6. Tinker (2000)
7. Psychatog (2001)
8. RecSur (1998)
9. Sligh (1997)
10. Turbo Stasis (~1997)
11. The Prison (~1997)
12. Sabre Bargain (1999)
13. Fires of Yavimaya (2001)
14. Jund (2009)
15. Faeries (2008)
16. Vise Age (1995)
I'm compiling lists of each of these and messing around with them to get a feel for how they played.
Note: This tournament would be fully-intended to be a "Battle of the Format Warpers," meaning each deck would be included in its MOST broken and feared form. Necro will have 4 Strip Mine, 4 Hymn to Tourach, Affinity will have its 4 Skullclamps, RecSur will play by its pre-errata rules, as will Prison in regards to Winter Orb/Icy Manipulator, and it will also have Land Tax and Balance...and Vise Age WILL be sporting Channel/Fireball.
In other words, a serious slobber-knocker.
Also, as was mentioned above, CounterTop is probably known enough to get a slot too. Perhaps a playoff between CounterTop, ProspBloom and two of the weaker decks in the current list would determine who gets 2 slots in the main draw.
Ooh, I'll check it out.
You could win a SCG open with either fully powered Type II Necro or Vise Age. No control deck can deal with 4 x Strip Mine and 4 x Black Vise with Winter Orbs. Oh you landed a germ and SFM? Balance. Taste the Vise. Necro would blow apart the loose mana bases of most Legacy decks, the only deck that would stand a chance would be burn ironically enough. Hoping the Necro player 7'ed himself. Granted if they untap they might Lake-Ritual-Drain the Burn player :)
Vise Age actually looks embarrassingly bad. The presence of Vise might force slower decks out of a metagame, but I can't imagine that deck being able to come close to beating any of these decks without a turn 1 Vise.
Also, the more I think about it, Fires was just a bad Mythic or Jund.
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