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Unbeatable magic the gathering decks
Unbeatable magic the gathering decks






unbeatable magic the gathering decks unbeatable magic the gathering decks

Something decidedly cheaper to end on, this mono-red aggro is a classic Standard format play that gets results if you know what you’re doing and build it right. At $20, he’s another chunk of change if you want to run four of him in your deck, but he’s likely to stay relevant in the Standard marketplace for some time to come. There is also blue-white legendary planeswalker Teferi, Time Raveler, who limits your opponents to casting only during sorcery times. This beast is high value at $44 or so, and some builds are running four, so if you want to go all in it will cost you a pretty penny. The legendary elder giant is a powerful ally, at 6/6 for a combined cost of 1-three-green-three-blue that gives you three life every time it attacks. Agent of Treachery makes an appearance, as does another mythic rare Uro, Titan of Nature’s Wrath from the Theros set. These are valued at around $15 at the minute, from Throne of Eldraine, so are a decent investment with a reliable turn-around if you want to get them quick.īlue, white, and green makes some key alterations.

unbeatable magic the gathering decks

Mythic rare Brazen Borrower is the selling point, with flash, flying, and an instant ability that lets you bounce non-land permanents back to an opponent’s hand. Brineborn Cutthroat, a 25 cent uncommon that had flash and gets a 1/1 counter when you cast a spell during your opponent’s turn, is a fine get for the price, as is the Frilled Mystic, who also has flash and counters a spell when it enters the battlefield, though the doubled-green, double-blue mana means interest probably won’t ever get too high. There’s also considerably more creatures here, at 20, and many of them can be found cheaply. The next priciest lands, Fabled Passage, the blue-and-red Steam Vents, and the Ketria Triome, producing blue, red and green mana, will set you back roughly $7-$10 each. We’ll start with the blue, green, and red, which is a little easier for the more inexperienced collectors out there. The former is cheaper as of now, as the latter tends to be upwards of $600 to put together, sometimes stretching over $700, due to some very specific rares. Another triple-color control-esque offensive, this time there’s two central combinations players tend to go for: blue, green, and red, or blue, white, and green. This thing skews expensive, but it’s worth it. Raugrin Triome, a rare land from new set Ikoria that provides red, white, or blue mana, is slightly cheaper at the moment at just over $8, so it’s worth tracking some of those down in the new boosters. The rare Fabled Passage, allowing you to put a basic land into play untapped if you’ve already put several lands out, is priced at $12 currently, or Sacred Foundry, which generates red or white mana, not far behind at $11.52. The lands are where a lot of the accumulated value comes from. There’s also the rare sorcery Shatter The Sky that destroys all monsters with power 4 or greater, or Shark Typhoon, an enchantment that turns noncreature spells into tokens. A fairly cheap card, this is one to keep an eye on given its usefulness. From there, a few commonalities emerge, such as the uncommon counter-spell Dovin’s Veto, which counters a noncreature spell and can’t be countered.








Unbeatable magic the gathering decks