Brainstorm
Force of Will
Lion's Eye Diamond
Counterbalance
Sensei's Divining Top
Tarmogoyf
Phyrexian Dreadnaught
Goblin Lackey
Standstill
Natural Order
“There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle".
- Albert Einstein
Which 7 do you see? I see RUG (always a strong deck).
The others either combo so they don't care, or run many answers to it.
And BUG is strong against most TNN decks.
“There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle".
- Albert Einstein
Of course you run answers to it. Doesn't mean you don't care about it.
Shardless and RUG both care about TNN, don't play past it (combo/enough fliers) and don't run TNN themselves. Shardless does okay against TNN because even if answering TNN is worse than playing it or playing past it, Shardless is consistent and the natural shell for all the best TNN hate. And it's seen a big decline for a reason. Still, let's not claim it is a no-care deck, because it isn't one. It's just the one that comes closest to successfully caring about the bloody fish.
Originally Posted by Lemnear
Shardless natural strategy is to create a ton of card advantage and clog up the board with tons of creatures to stall and overwhelm the opponent. Golgari Charm is not a good card in shardless because they cascade and run 1/1 deathtouch themselves. Liliana can be played but, the cmc3 slot is already pretty full and you if you still want to run jace (which you should) there is not really a lot of space unless you make the deck even more clunky. To run Liliana to great effect you need to keep the board on the other side clear, however shardless usually has only 4 decay to remove creatures but makes up for it with tons of bodies.
So in my opinion: No, shardless does not have the room for the best tools against TNN and neither is their natural strategy good vs. TNN because all of those random bodies do not matter. Hence the decline in Shardless makes sense and it cares A LOT about TNN:
BUG Delvers natural strategy on the other hand does well against TNN because it does evasive damage while doing a better job to keep the board clear -> so liliana and golgari charm can be played to a better effect. Still I would not go as far as to say "they don't care about TNN". They do care, but their strategy matches up well.
So in terms of BUG, Nemesis seems to have produced a shift in the meta, but as soon as one BUG deck stays Tier 1, this is a point in favor of TNN beeing "ok".
Currently playing: Elves
It's incredible that you quote my post:
and reply with this:
You do realize that I said nothing re: the top 16 as HSCK and I agreed that we'd only be discussing/analyzing top 8 data from the 33+ player tourneys. If that has since changed without me knowing, I'll gladly start including all the #9-16 TNN decks that I've been mining from these tourney results.
Also, what I said is absolutely correct. 75% of the TOP 8 (TOP 8, TOP 8, TOP 8... just so you don't strawman me again) either is running TNN or not caring about TNN at all.
________________________________________________________________________________________
Zombie did a nice job summarizing my thoughts on the meta pre-TNN and post-TNN just a page back:
Golgari Charm is not useless nor terrible in Shardless. The -1/-1 hitting your birds isn't a big deal. Relevant enchantments it can destroy:
Counterbalance
Rest in Peace
Sneak Attack
Blood Moon
Spirit of the Labyrinth
Note that the regeneration effect protects your guys from Supreme Verdict as well. Also, being black it runs all of the right cards that can actually kill TNN.
True-Name Nemesis is the Adolf Hitler of Legacy. Most hate it, but many players are still drawn in by its power and charisma. The powers that be refuse to acknowledge the truth of its aggressive and despotic designs and pursue a policy of appeasement and adaptation. Meanwhile, it invades and conquers the format deck by deck and simultaneously exterminates what it deems to be "inferior" archetypes. The format - and the world - will never be the same, for this will not end without untold misery and destruction.
Currently playing: Elves
Want to beat True-Name Nemesis? Here's what you do when your opponent resolves it, and they name you.
I know how certain people on the Source love Bob Huang's metagame analysis well in his most recent article he mentions that he finds the format to be stale at the moment. So while there aren't necessarily the raw figures to point to TNN to say its format warping (although he does point out that now 9 decks make up more percentage of the metagame than 11 did prior to TNN), it certainly doesn't make the format more fun to play or watch.
I'm not understanding his methodology. His previous article stated that he used only 129+ player tourneys, but in this most recent article, he states that he's using 100+ player tourneys. This change is important as he's comparing two "eras" against each other, but he used two different sets of data (8 round 129+ player tourneys vs. 7 round 100+ player tourneys). The change in his floor and then his comparison between the two doesn't make sense. Thoughts?
“There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle".
- Albert Einstein
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