I think I agree in part. The only time I WON'T say 'GG' is if _I AM_ the one who stomped someone else - I'll instead say 'Well played', 'Unlucky!' or something similar. It's not directly trying to soften the blow or whatever, but I think it's still part of the sportsmanship rigmarole of being humble in victory
Yeah even if you dont mean it to be an ass, if the game was a one sided stomp, it feels weird to say GGs. It wasnt a good game. I didnt win because I outplayed you. I won because you were unlucky/inexperienced/whatever. Im a farily competitive person, but at the same time its not just about winning - its about winning the right way. I want to win because I was better, not because enemy was worse.
I've gotten really good about not getting salty. I've also learned to acknowledge that some days are just not appropriate to play Magic. If I'm overstressed from work or life, then I know that I'm probably not going to be fun to play with. At that point, I'll stay home and play something nonstressful. EDIT: Also, I agree saying "gg" doesn't necessarily mean it was a good game. To me it's like two sports teams shaking hands after a game, no matter how badly one side lost.
Hey good on ya! Yeah the game can be salt inducing but that's bc it truly is a reflection of what your mind can do/build. People want to talk about power level and things but really it's all based on the player and just how experienced they are. Not necessarily the specific cards in the deck. Also understanding it's a card GAME is very important. It's ok to feel tilted for a moment but ehh let it go, you'll have your golden day in the sun, if not for the very next play (sweet revenge lol).
I remember when I was in a pod with a combo player, myself, and two others. The other two had slow starts, and the combo player had a fast start. I wasn't able to draw into any of my removal (I play a lot of removal, just wasn't drawing any of it) so I applied pressure against the combo player's life total with a large flier I had managed to build up. He got very upset I wasn't spreading the love even though the other two players hadn't even established board states yet. The combo player was able to get half of a combo out but I took him out before they could get the other half out. He got so salty he packed up stormed out of the game store without saying a word.
Without having been there to witness all the nuance for myself, and based on this description alone, I don't think the salty player was acting 'wrong'. Perhaps by removing themselves from the store, he wanted to cool off from the frustration without taking it out on you or the other players. Sometimes it's better to say nothing than to say hurtful things when you're in the heat of a moment. Or, he could have just been being passive-aggressive, or something. Like I said, I don't have all the information, certainly not on salty combo player's state of mind.
I have found the best response to the accusation that you are focusing someone down is, "yes, I am focusing you because I respect the way you built your deck. You've built it expertly, and I'm scared of it." Its very hard to get mad at respect.
If you personally cannot show respect to your opponent, that is entirely on you. Not on anyone else. Stop being disrespectful. "Oh no, other people said 'I am sorry' in a dishonest way. Now I can never apologize for anything ever again." => That is your argument. Stop being a disrespectful shit and stop making up bullshit excuses for it. If you don't wanna be called a cunt, just don't be a cunt.
Same boat, plus, it just grinds my gears when people say “good game” when it’s clearly a one sided stomp someone didn’t have a chance of recovering from.
Theres plenty of times where ive said gg at the end of an online game and felt bad about it, i say it because the person plays well seriously. But, they lost, and its become so BM to say gg after a game now that i either feel bad doing it, or most time, i just dont say it.
@@deejkdeejk In paper sure but online how do you "say" GG in a different way? At least in Arena there is no chat so all you can do is use the exact same emote as everyone else regardless of context so I totally understand ops comment.
my favorite totally insane instance of tilt was at a big modern tournament several years ago my opponent started going on a rant about how they never lose at Call of Duty and related that to how they shouldn't lose Magic matches, I still think about it at least once a week
I got a bit frustrated a couple days ago during a tournament. 2 of my opponents took unreasonable long turns to do next to nothing. It wasnt from them attempting to do complicated combos, they would only play 2 or 3 cards. One of them consistently took 5+ minute turns. I didnt flip tables or storm out. After the match, I told her that in a tournament that has a time limit, she needs to be more mindful of how much time she takes.
I love my best friend like a brother but he once took a nearly 40 minute turn. I after that decided to ask if you can win, how are you going to win, can anyone respond? If he can win and no one has response shuffle up. I did not come to see you play solitaire and waste my time.
Saying good game was basically the closing ritual of every competitive sport I've ever played. From elementary Tee Ball to high school football, when the game was over you shook the other teams' hands and said good game, even if they stomped you 70-0. It's both a basic politeness thing as well as a sportsmanship thing. That said, I rarely gg in Magic Arena because I just concede when I don't feel like playing a particular match anymore.
I'm admittedly a guy who's needed to learn not to get as angry as I did before. I do bodybuilding as well as Magic, so if I get upset and hit the table there's a bit of a difference to if another guy there did so. Also not helping matters is the steroids. When I'm On Stack, I'm usually also not eating as much due to the cut. Which makes my temperament worse during that part of the year.
fully agree - espacially on Arena its the signal for "you are done next done" - and if the losing player is responding same way, they would also wait until the final combo is palyed and not quitting the game. Which can then end up in a nice kill where the losing player is gonna die with exactly 0 life points and not with -x trillion damage. - However, in face to face matches or even competitive rounds "good game" is more like a "I respect your gameplay" - so virtual is much different from real world gaming
@@Kyouto_c right - I assume that scooping and quitting a game cause people don't want to wait to see the combo is quite disrespectful while giving them a bad game experience at the same time - let them play their combo. It was a long way to get there, so all participants should enjoy it
Lsv was just barely talking about this topic on one of the latest episodes of limited resources. He brought it up a concept hes talked about before but basically the idea is that good game design is building variance into the game such that players can blame the game for bad outcomes. Im paraphrasing now but its interesting that intending for the players to have the option of falling into a victim mentality is one thing that makes a game great. Its also interesting to see how getting better at such a high variance game means resisting that pull. Putting the responsibility for losses on yourself as much as possible. I know so often that if you put a pro in my seat, in games ive lost they could scrape out a win. They are always playing to their outs no matter the chances. Good video. Thanks.
using 'gg' in basically any online competitive environment in the last 10-20 years has resulted in this experience. its not a genuine expression of sportsmanship anymore, its a sarcastic flex. i played competitive pokemon on simulators for years and years and the number of gg's i got that came at the end of a well-played game were dwarfed by the number of preemptive gg's i go from sweats using it as a taunt when they thought got their sweep setup after a couple turns or otherwise thought they had the game won. its seen as bad sportsmanship because for much of recent history that's in large part how its been used, sarcastically to flex on your opponents.
i end all games with a "good game". you have to take the tone of voice(if IRL) and when said (was it when the game was OVER or when they thought they won) into account to take as well meaning or a flex. if someone crys after a well meaning GG thats a them problem
@@themoops4006 Offensive GG's when they are about to win, or feel like they are, are the worst. Though it's always nice when you manage a come back after an offensive GG.
When neobrand was new and no one was expecting the turn 1 win before your opponent played a land, i would start the match by saying "sorry for the sins I'm about to commit" it lessened the salt levels.
I took UW Spirits to an RCQ fully expecting to get 0 match wins, and my first two rounds were against the Nadu players there. To quote my Nadu opp I took to game 3, "Yeah, I won, but you're the good guy here" Nadu players know what they're doing, and I don't blame them at all for doing it while the card is legal.
Really wish more players acknowledged what they know full well they are doing instead of playing stupid like the broken deck they’re playing with is kosher.
I know someone who likes to cause misery on their opponents. They love to play solitaire and have their opponent watch. They absolutely know what they are doing by picking this up.
Last Friday I played Rescaminator against Nomad Nadu in Legacy. It was bananas, all the legacy and pioneer players were gathered around. We should have gone to turns but the owner himself was like, "fuck that, I'm invested now" 😂. A lot of the legacy players said they had never seen a legacy match like that, it was more like a Vintage "Not so fast my friend" type of matchup.
The Nadu player is just playing the game. But everytime I sit at a table against Nadu I pray whoever designed it got fired and will never get a job related to game design again. It's just way too dumb and I hope it gets banned in commander too, since many casual players built the deck and are ruining games with it
nadu in brawl is not even that strong in my opinion. maybe it's just the types of deck I play but I think nadu in brawl lacks the consistency that 60 card nadu has
This past Saturday I played in a commander pod, I was playing a frog tribal deck, with frog based removal, I turned 4 made an opponents scute swarm into a frog, and he got extremely salty towards me, he had 3 lands, sol ring, mana crypt, yagra, eater of all out, it the moment I said I wanted to slow him down just a little bit, he then vented on how he wanted to play this game because he was having a ruff week. Like dude, you have the most value out this early, my other 2 players in the pod had nothing on the board, but somehow when I enchanted his scute it was a crime against humanity, and he focused all his resources to quickly kill me off in the pod, and then had the nerve to ask if he and I were going to have this beef for the next games
This sounds like the kind of player who uses tilt as a strategy, intentionally or otherwise, to keep heat off themself. If using removal on their stuff becomes a whole production, people will be hesitant to use removal on their stuff. It's terrible sportsmanship and should lead to becoming table nemesis, imo
Whether or not he's having a rough day or week shouldn't matter, for all he knows, you could be having a similarly rough day or week and you're just here to try and slow the game down so everyone has a chance to play some cards. It puts you in a better light being able to handle tough times outside of the game (whether true or not) and the opponent can't be making the excuse of a rough outside life to edge out card advantage
His week doesn't matter but honestly it sounds like his play was pretty normal. It's not that uncommon for someone to pick a target by seeing who targets them first, and especially if you two were the only threats like you said I think he even chose correctly. And as far back as I remember people wanted to clear grudges between games so that's not weird to me. No offense but honestly feel like maybe you're the one who got a little salty. And maybe you're even right to I mean if his week sucked he was probably saying and doing normal things gruffly and making you feel like it was personal, but I've seen that game pattern play out like hundreds of times with absolutely no salt involved.
"venting he wanted to play cos he had a rough week" I think those kinds of people are the ones who show up forgetting that their pod aren't npcs they can roflstomp to blow off steam. If you need to get out the stress but someone messing up your ideal play state is going to make you more stressed/salty, well... he shouldn't be playing against the unknown variable of a real person or someone he hasn't played against enough to know their game habits (which I'm assuming is the case). A game can still be a great way to de-stress, you just gotta come in with the right mindset. I'm a calm enough person that even when stressed I can take losing a game of whatever in stride (until you get that one smug ahole who has to rub your face in it), but I learned long ago if you wanna play with real people you gotta ~approach~ with the mindset of 'I can't win all the time, I just wanna chill and do things".
@@doctordistracto8390 You know that the demeanor isn't the only thing that makes a move salty right? He didn't say he was a threat either. He said he played the card against the scute player because it made the most sense in that moment. If I play one card against you when you are clearly in the lead and you proceed to target me to eliminate me as quickly as possible with a smile on your face, it doesn't make it any less salty. In my opinion at least. Now admittedly, we're getting his side of the story, but I get where he's coming from. He made an understandable play, the guy whined, tried to garner sympathy, targeted and eliminated him and then said "Hey we gonna be good here?" I'd be kinda miffed too.
For me, personally, “good game” is a statement of respect and acknowledgment after a game regardless of outcome. It’s much closer to “thanks for playing with me”.
Problem is when you say it. For example if you say gg when you win a game where some opponent disconnected and enemy team was forced to play outnumbered or surrender that is not a good thing to say.
I've had my fair share of salty moments, but most of them happen due to my own misplay or just poor decision-making on my end, so it ends up being something I keep to myself. There is this one guy at my locals who used to have a really bad time dealing with his own salt, but I played more with him in his pods to try and defuse his temper. Over time, how I manage my own saltiness has rubbed off on him, and now he's much less belligerent when things don't go his way. I'd like to think he's a much happier Magic player now. Sometimes, all someone needs is a bit of kindness and understanding to mitigate an otherwise nasty outburst at a table.
My standard is this, if my opponent got to play magic: Good Game. If my opponent didn't get to play magic: Sorry about the luck, thanks for the game. I do this because I've gotten salty and bratty at someone after being told "Good Game" after mulling to 5, getting stuck on 2 lands and discarding to handsize (the deck in question ran 25+ Land in a 60 card format). It was game 3, and winner would go into top 8. I don't remember all the details, I just remember getting so annoyed and after having a horrible game, getting told "good game", I snaped back with "do you honestly think that was a good game". Im fine with getting stomping, getting mana flooded or getting bad draws, as long as I get to play magic.
1) Empathy is important. 2) Someone else’s poor response to a situation is NOT your responsibility. I’m stuck between these 2 truths. Ultimately, where I stand, is that everybody has a different need when salting out. I try not to salt, but when I do, a smile and “good game, sorry about the bad luck” with a handshake can go a long way to remind me that my opponent took time out of their day to play a game with me, and I should be thankful, even if it wasn’t how I wanted the game to go. Because of that, I always try to be polite and thank them for their time.
Saying "Good game" has as you alluded to become largely formulaic, it's the expected polite thing to say at the end of the match. Just the same way we often say "Nice to meet you" to people who it often isn't nice to meet. No one does or should read too much into it.
imo there's _some_ validity to chosing different words when a game clearly wasn't good - I don't think "good game" is _entirely_ devoid of the meaning of its words - but by and large yes, the point of saying it is to be respectful.
Thing is, for example, if I am playing a lol, valorant, overwatch orsomething that is multiplayer, someone disconnects and my team is forced to play outnumbered and enemy says gg that is tilting. You are saying that a game where enemy disconnects and they are forced to play outnumbered is a good game, wich just pisses off anyone that was forced to play with a handicap
I don't mind losing as long as it felt like I had a chance. If its a complete blowout, then either my luck was really terrible or my deck was vastly imbalanced against my opponents'. You can't fix the luck issue completely but you Can affect the imbalance by making sure your opponents (and yourself) are honest about deck strength.
literally happened to me while playing brawl like 10 minutes ago. i was against a pantlaza deck with a jetmir cat/token themed deck and arena said "here, have your 10th land" with only jetmir and finneas ace archer on the field
Coming from someone who used to play a lot of Starcraft, one of the places where saying gg got popularized, I still go by that etiquette. Saying gg is what you say when you concede, it's equivalent to offering your hand. Back in the Starcraft days, it was considered very rude to say gg when you are winning; you only say it after the other playing concedes and says it first. Basically, saying gg when you are the one winning was seen the same as extending your hand after you swing for lethal before your opponent has acknowledged the loss. Personally, I think this is how it should still be done - it's on the loser to say gg/extend their hand first. Then again, there was more focus on that polite concession in general - not saying gg when you lost was also considered rather rude and a sign that you are massively tilted. Either saying gg first when winning or not saying it when losing would both be seen as a bit of a scandal online if a pro player did it back in the SC days. I think that kind of encouragement of the most basic of "sportsmanship" was a good thing for keeping a friendly yet competitive atmosphere around the game, similar to how you always cool down and line up for the post-game handshake in a lot of actual sports.
I’m going to disagree with putting the onus of saying gg on the losing player. I’ve thrown out the gg to people while winning the game to acknowledge how dang well they played the game. If someone gets stomped, I try my best not to gloat or look smug, if someone pushed me to barely take the win, I’ll give them props for playing so well, and hopefully if I’m the one that lost they’ll have the same kind of empathy. I think when your etiquette is spot on is when the game is one sided. If someone gets stomped, then the winning player saying gg can come across as condescending.
@@Zeferet. Yeah, league doesn't have the same culture around it as StarCraft, probably because actual concessions aren't a thing in competitive play. SC games essentially never ended via an actual victory per the game rules, just the loser typing gg and leaving the game to concede.
@@Aldrnari956 it's definitely more situational in magic since you are in person rather than online and having actual conversations. It comes down to how you say it though - it's totally fine to be like "wow, that was a really close game" if it's true, particularly if your opponent was just too caught up in everything to do a normal concession. I don't think it's proper for the winner to just say good game alone and extend the hand after their opponent scoops though. Proper sportsmanship would be for them to extend the hand/fist/verbal gg when they concede defeat in the last game of the round.
I've gotten salty from time to time, and I always regretted it right after I did it. Sometimes it's just an impulse in the moment that I need to get better at restraining. From the perspective of being the salty person, I don't think there really is a "right answer" for dealing with people getting upset about magic, and like you said, it's not the winner's responsibility to do so. I'm not really sure at the time I was getting "tilted" that there was anything someone could have said to me to make me come to my senses so to speak. Online it's easy to just quit a game that frustrates you and move on, but in the real world with real people, that's not possible, or just not proper etiquette, and being stuck in a game you don't want to be in is the worst. I'm not sure what the solution is there. lol.
I keep the taunts disabled. I don't like them. Those faceless opponents are jerks and have too much luck. . . . The problem is that MTGA makes you angry because it's a grind and forces to play when you don't want to. And the faceless opponents are just obstacles that are in the way of your grind. No wonder the developers had to reduce communication to a handful of preset taunts since the beginning of MTGA. But I find that limitation dumb, so I don't use it.
Good lord yes, was looking for this comment because all I play is arena due to being in a small rural community with the nearest store being an hour away…plus it’s just cheaper. There HAS to be a better way to encourage people to log in everyday and actually play (and hope they buy something from the shop) than just daily wins.
I never understood 'GG' myself. This has several aspects for me personally: 1. It's a modern shorthand acronym which doesn't have the same sincerity or gravity as actually saying 'Good game' [mate] to someone. Use the english language don't speak letters. 2. I am a millenial so i actually said good game to opponents as i shook their hand after a football match or made the rugby tunnel to clap them off. Usually with well played thrown in for variety. Real. Genuine. 2. When used online via the chat function it is faceless and hollow, and comes with the potential to trigger people especially when the game has not been actually 'good' or close. 4. It has become too easy to just robotically type it or mutter it across a table regardless of how the game content played out. There is a real lack of personality to this method of indicating a match played and completed. 5. I prefer 'thanks for the game' and this is what i say and type when applicable - this is far better wording which can convey: match complete, your time was appreciated, a result achieved. There is neutrality yet sincerity in these words. You are not adding an adjective to indicate the state of the match and thereby in theory can reduce triggering anyone. I actually do offer a hand - because i was raised that way, it's polite and gentlemanly to do it. To be clear - in no way does my opinion condone salty bevaviour or seek to avoid hurting some little salt mine's feelings and thereby not trigger them. I don't begrudge anyone saying it, or imply they can't say it. For me personally, well I just genuinely dislike speaking letters when english words have more agency
I'm glad you made the point about deck choice, knowing your matchups, and mulligan decisions. I was in a PTQ playing Eldrazi ramp and ended up matched up against Valakut. It was game 3, and I was on the draw. My 7 card hand and 6 card hand were serviceable, but VERY slow. I knew that a 5 card hand COULD be better, and better for the matchup. I mulled to 5, and drew up a hand that went turn 3 Primeval titan, turn 4 Primeval Titan, turn 5 hard cast Ulamog, the Infinite Gyre.
I've learned to frame it as "We're here to win. I'm not upset at you for doing what works. But i am upset at _it_ for working." Which i think is how people feel about Nadu. If it's with friends, we all kinda agree on a rule of don't play the bullshit unless we're all playing bullshit and if you play it, you'll get salted.
Ok...but...sometimes it IS the fault of the randomness of the cards that cause someone to lose. That is a perfectly valid reason behind why people lost.
That is true and important to recognize, but people are far more inclined to find randomness at fault when it isn't than they are to find themselves at fault when randomness is. The warning against blaming randomness is more a warning against snap judgements. If randomness is at fault, you can get there after determining that none of your choices were proven wrong by that game. If you're at fault in some subtle way, you'll never get there if you instantly blame the randomness which appears to have been the problem, and you'll miss an opportunity to improve.
Even if that's true, It's always better to say "What could I have done to mitigate that from happening?" Even if you could have done nothing that mentality alone will always serve you better than just blaming things outside of your control. There are also players who ARE at fault and choose to blame the randomness while ignoring all the mistakes they made in playing/building/mulliganing because it hurts their ego.
As a Pokemon TCG player, I recently had a player freak on me for saying GG because they started one pokemon and couldnt bench anything else in 3 turns. Told me "it wasnt a good game because I didnt get to play"
The only time I take issue with anyone telling me "good game" (particularly on Arena) is when opponent prematurely presumes the win with a "gOoD gAmE" for whatever reason, when there are still cards in hand/mana open, and/or other actionable choices I can make to change their presumed outcome. “The fatal flaw in every plan is the assumption that you know more than your enemy” is the flavored text on the original printing of Mana Leak for a reason.
As far as the "go and fetch a land" thing, I recently kept a 1 land hand with three 2 cost mana rocks in it thinking "sure I have like 2 or 3 turns to draw a land" I was mana screwed for the entire game. I felt the same as you. The others offered to let me grab a land but I refused on the grounds of "I did this to myself" and I had fun watching the other players play and trying to draw as many cards as I could to catch up. I think, in commander with the longer games it's OK for a very new person but I should have known better. I was dumb and deserved what I got.,
if you're running 37+ lands you should have had at least an ~87% chance to draw at least one land in your first three draws of the game. i've made this call plenty of times, you made the right decision based on the math but RNGesus stepped in and said 'not today, my child.'
A big thing there is also the level of the game. If it is a just for fun game with some friends, they are probably wanting a good, competitive game. Someone getting stomped by bad draws isn't generally good for anyone's enjoyment. If they suggest you cheat a land in such a situation, I would recommend considering things from that perspective as well.
I think it's worth having in mind that the game is just another thing in your life and offers a chance to explore the kind of person you want to be in life. Self expression, composure, overcoming difficulty, incresaing your skill. Those are all things that you learn along the way and have an opportunity to make an active choice on. I've both found myself being salty in a crushing defeat or gloating in an unlikely victory. And found that one doesn't fix the other and they both make you look and feel like a twat. So yeah, you can't control what others feel, but you can try to make better choices on your behaviour to create the best environment possible for yourself and others.
Me when the commander game has been going on for 3h and a winning board state gets wiped by a wrath for the 5th time in a row. Doesn't even have to be my board state.
@@jessewallace3805 This happens when we accidentally have 3-4 combo/control decks in a pod. We each have multiple decks (obviously), and sometimes it aligns that no one plays a deck that focuses on killing with combat damage. And those matches often drag out.
I may need to add there is a difference from being a salty player to being a toxic player, a player just getting mad and taking it to another level. Also one thing I don't like is playing someone taking a lot of take backs but then they won't let others do the same.
When I say gg after losing, it's because deep down I know the only thing in the situation I really wanted to have been different was my own performance or the outcome. If I genuinely think the game itself has real bs in it that goes beyond the tolerance for bs we need to have, then I'll postpone it. I'll say I need a minute, and then maybe I'll realize it was a gg after all, or maybe I'll stop playing the format, avenue, or person. Salt is pretending there's is nothing you can do, but you can always at the very least walk away and take a minute.
There can often be times where a game of magic isn't as great as it could be, I don't like it if I win or lose too easily due to the many factors you mentioned, but if I enjoyed spending time with the person, it's still a good game for me. I really liked the idea of asking what I could have done differently to the opponent after a rough game (or even after a narrow loss!).
As a LOL player, I don't get salty about the GG after getting crushed, I don't get salty about the my enemy laner playing Garen, I don't get salty about being camped. I get salty about them being a sore winner, I get salty of the emote spam, I get salty about the GGEZ when crushing with an intro champ.
So I play a different luck-heavy game competitively that can take like 2+ hours to complete a single game (War of the Ring), and a big trick I use there when an opponent (or myself) is starting to tilt is to just call for a short break. Not as much of a thing at an RCQ, but pausing an FNM game to "run to the restroom" or "answer a call" gives everyone a minute or two to breathe and settle, in my experience. Sometimes it's really hard to not respond to tilt with "conceding is a free action," though
I don't like using GG when I win because i don't want to rub in their face i won and it was a GG for me.... If they say it first I do say it back. Generally if they look like they are tilting or Sad they won it depends on how badly I beat them. If i smashed they really hard and they had bad draws or I just got a crazy bomb they couldn't deal with then i'll say thanks for the game and just leave unless they say something first. If the game was close I'll say so. "Oh that game was close I was worried you would remove this creature i had or draw answer x." and then if they interact we can have a discussion and if not I'll thank them for the game and go.
To me this is an easy problem to solve and this is what I do. If it is an opponent I haven't met before, I make small talk during shuffling before mulligans. Ask where they are from. How their games have gone. If they have been to this area before. If there are good food spots they know of. Etc,. Small talk. Then after the games I say "it was wonderful meeting you and good luck today" and it there is still top 8 contention I add "I hope to see you in the top 8". Then leave. Easy peazy. Just be nice and genuine. Don't just regurgitate the same statements. Ggs and all. I'm not a fan of doing that.
@@hyperchord this is true but I sorta got the implication from the video that that was case. If we are talking about how people deal with anxiety in these situations then I think that conversation could go on for hours. But you do have a fair point.
the point is whether or not you should say good game to your opponent if they just got steamrolled and are visibly frustrated about it. do you say it for the formality or should you not risk rubbing salt in the wound?
I know you marked it as a personal tangent, but as someone who's going to their first big convention for MagicCon Vegas and who also deals with asthma and a lower power immune system, I'd considered prevention for airborne disease but I really hadn't factored in the physical contact part of the equation, the fist bump is a really good and elegant solution I'll definitely be putting into action come october.
I think an important part of the deck choices point at 5:00 is that sometimes the choices you made were made in the past. You just have to try to make the best choices going forward. (This applies to life too)
This is my favorite of all your takes. It’s a game, so we should try and keep our emotions in check. When we do get frustrated, it’s important to not project that on our opponent. We should all be stewards of the game and do our best to build a positive community. I think thanking your opponent for the game is better than saying good game, because I don’t want to rub wounds. I do like to call out good plays on their part, and if I think they’ll be receptive, I’ll ask about plays during the game.
If "good game" feels like bridge too far, I reach for "thanks for the game." If my Arena opponent sends one emote beyond "Hello" i report for unsportsmanlike behaviour
I use two emotes. I use "thinking" quite a lot, to indictate truthfully that this turn is going to take a minute and I'm not tilted roping out, and I use "good game" to concede before either quitting, or fsst-passing so they can swing in.
i think the best thing to do after a game is talk about the game with your opponent, it lets you both bond over the game because you can talk about the deck your playing but more importantly you can talk about misplays that you and your opponent made so you both can improve
Although I think saying "good game" is perfectly fine, saying "thanks for the game" is arguably a much more empathetic way of communicating with someone who just lost in an unsatisfying way.
I feel like a lot of his is both very good to talk about as a community yet also very difficult to fully discuss. Each person and playgroup is different from the next, and different actions have different effects. Some people would get tilted over a "GG," others would like it regardless, so it's just hard to quite determine the best thing to do. Same with playgroups as well, mine will let you go get at least a basic land if you really are just in a bad stroke of luck with lands (unless we know they have a very low land amount in their deck, or just took 1 land. I myself never fetch for a land) I think these discussions are prob best effective with each other directly and with groups, simply so we all know how to act according to our gaming spheres.
it comes with maturity. not every game is going to go your way, and being a graceful loser is just as important as being a modest winner. Celebrate your wins, learn from your loses. plain and simple
Re: Nadu, I am reminded of one Sanford Kelly when he laid out his manifesto to Pick a Top Tier. If you want to win, play what's good. If you want to have fun with what you love even though it sucks, by all means do so, but don't blame people who do play what's good if you lose. Sagat players might not have to work as hard as you for their wins, but you're the person who chose to not play Sagat. Hate the game if you must, push for it to be changed if you feel like it should be, but don't blame the player for playing what's best, especially when you're choosing to not follow suit. And especially don't spike your stick so hard it cracks the concrete if you lose, Sanford.
I’m still fairly new to magic (within my first year) and I remember the first commander deck I built myself from scratch was mono green elves. I would be so upset with drawing 1 to 2 land hands while staring at 3 to 4 cost ramp spells for 5 draws in a row. That was until someone asked me how many lands I was playing. After counting I was only running 28 lands with 10 plus mana dorks and 10 plus ramp spells. As soon as I fixed my land base or ratios in general my player experience drastically improved.
I genuinely believe that if you're the player in a winning position and you've won the game before your opponent has conceded. Offering a handshake or saying good game is quite rude and condescending. And on other hand if youre salty about losing, dont make it about your opponent thier deck or your bad draws, etc. Just take deep breath and be the big person and saying well played and good luck in the next one 😉 👏
The language difference is important. In spanish, the equivalent of good game means "we played a great game/the game was good", so it has a different tone. Thanks for the game is even worse, it sounds like "thanks for giving me the win".
I believe there are spaces where reminding people they are just “playing a game” is actually good, and that is around non-competitive/non-sanctioned spaces. Reminding casual players that you came to FMN, commander night, draft night to play a game you like and that you can hopefully learn from your misplays, or from how more enfranchised players assess board states is good. Sometimes reminding people that you are not in a space where you are playing for a big prize or for glory lowers the stakes of whatever is happening, and so losing does not feel that bad anymore. It is also incredibly satisfying to remind a sweatlord playing in a casual space and getting tilted for losing that it is just a game, for the opposite reason.
Had a game a couple weeks ago, where the pod was two pillofort decks (Council of Four and Rex Nebula) me with voltron (Lara Croft) and Infamous Cruelclaw. The Council of Four player resolved an early Alms Collector that basically stopped my entire game plan (i was running a Wheel heavy deck, and couldn't exactly wheel with him in play), while the Rex player and the Cruelclaw got set up. At which point the pool Council of Four player found himself accidentally getting wrecked by everyone else starting to deal with the actual problems on the field. Over the course of ten turns, his commander was incidentally killed three times, and ended up costing 11 mana to replay. This basically removed him from the game, not because he was an issue, but because the cards being played to stop my Lara Croft from one shotting players were also accidentally ruining his attempts to set back up. He had a good field, and then I overloaded a Cyc Rift to keep myself alive, which forced him to rebuild - at which point the Rex player cast an Akroma's Vengeance to get rid of my equipment. This was the right play, everyone agreed to that as I had lethal against anyone, but the Council of Four player then found his field gone, for the second time in two turns. Which led to him being salty that he couldn't play the game - not because he was being targeted but because he was just collateral damage.
I definitely used to be an absolute shit when the idea of losing was on the table. I think some of it was an inferiority issue that was made worse by having some "friends" who were sore winners, and would shame the hell out of the loser. I learned better and gained some self reflection when that salty attitude became an issue for playing with people I really care about. At some point through that self reflection and playing more emotionally conservatively, I discovered that sometimes a spectacular loss is just as, or more fun than a win. In maybe a years time from pulling my head out of my ass, I learned and became probably annoyingly positive in playing Magic. I laugh and congradulate my opponents when they stomp me, and while many love the vibe, some have reacted like my attitude is "wrong". One guy gave me the stink eye for thanking them for the game. Regardless, I have some sympathy for the salty, and try to be helpful, but regardless of win or lose, I have matured and become a much more positive player thanks to being confronted with my salt.
My biggest peeve is when people in Commander play incredibly high threat stuff and then get annoyed when they’re targeted. It can’t be said enough that if you put a target on your back, people will shoot at you. I say this as a Sliver and Eldrazi player, and I’m incredibly conscious that many of my games with these decks will involve me doing absolutely nothing, because no one will take the risk of letting me pop off, and *that’s fine*. People need to accept that being the archenemy is a choice in Magic, and if you run with it an incredibly fun one at that, but getting upset when your obvious massive problem Commander is removed for the third time is not ok. Another one is when a player is using a deck that specifically counters yours, but then gets annoyed when you pay them more attention with removals. A good case of this was when I was in a three person game, and player C was the main threat. However, player B had Mother of Machines helming the deck, and I was playing ETBs as my main strategy. I stated multiple times that will have to remove MoM every time it hits the battlefield, because that’s the only way I can even play. He got incredibly annoyed when I kept to my word, even though I’d given ample warning, and stated that I can’t even begin to address player C if MoM is preventing me from doing anything other than play lands. It was a very frustrating experience, and player C (who won) actually said to me afterwards he felt I’d been unduly yelled at for what was the expected progression of the game.
As someone that’s played Magic, Warhammer (40K and AoS), and video games (semi professionally), I try not to say good game. I’ll typically say something more personalized like “thank you for the game” or “wow you totally had me” or “I could not find any more X” or something. It’s more genuine and helps to build up the community. Of course there are some people that’ll rage no matter what, and letting that roll off your back is a huge part to being in the game too. Giving them a second and seeing if they want to talk about the game is always a nice way to “talk shop.” That’s just my experience though and I admittedly don’t go hard in any kind of tournaments as I’d rather spend the time with my family.
Went to a Bloomburrow pre-release with a buddy, neither of us have played in an event in like 10+ years. We actually got matched up round 1 and I beat him 2-0, but we were having fun and treated the loss as an opportunity to go back and tweak the cards in his deck. He ended up going 6-0 in rounds 2, 3, 4, and had a better final record than me.
@9:00 Surely "stop playing" or "take a little break" is quite possibly the best response to wotc making stuff like Nadu. It's about equal parts distancing yourself from a meta you don't want to play in vs voting with your wallet. People can shout & wave their arms about how badly designed nadu is, but that ain't gonna do anything. People still buying mh3 off the shelves? Nadu stays. The only time wotc bans nadu is when they decide it's their idea to do so, or when they look at their figures and think "holy crap! Where did all our modern players go?" As far as I see it, every person stepping away or taking a little break from modern is helping to make the latter of those happen sooner rather than later.
But us stepping away doesn't stop the sale of MH3, because even non-modern players will be scouting for choice cards for either the cash or for commander. The amount of modern players could drop to 0 tomorrow and it would have 0 impact on sales. So what then, when you can give up everything and still not do anything?
If 100% of modern players quit tomorrow (to run with your scenario), then wotc would have to announce 0% tournament attendance...... that would be hilarious, and would 100% result in a nadu ban. (Which wouldn't affect the price of the card in any way, since all the commander players would still gobble it up at whatever price it exists at, right?) But then we're not talking about changing the price of the card. Doesn't matter if it's a $100 rare or a $0.10 common. The existence of the card in modern is not good for the format.
"Surely "stop playing" or "take a little break" is quite possibly the best response to wotc making stuff like Nadu." no because then they just keep making that stuff and your opinion isn't being heard. be vocal about aspects of the game you don't like just do it constructively. if everyone stopped playing modern wotc wouldn't go 'oh i guess we'd better be more careful about how we design modern cads' they'll just stop supporting modern.
That's not what I'm saying. I'm not saying "don't be vocal about it". You can be very vocal about it whilst stepping away from playing a particular format for a little while; the two are not mutually exclusive. What I'm saying is that merely being vocal about it is not the best way to make change in a format. Look at standard: the changes that have been sweeping that format didn't happen because people were vocal, they happened because people stepped away & stopped playing the format.
@@namdoolb and continuing to play while being vocal is even better. the best, even. you're going to be more informed on what's actually happening and what's continuing to be problematic. what's more likely to ge wotc's attention, every competitive player at every event thinking and saying 'yeah this is fine, nothing needs to change' or every event being bombarded with and overshadowed by complaints from its competitors? because cards in modern do get played in other formats. some modern players not buying the cards isn't going to affect sales, its not standard where 80% of the cards are chaff they're getting chased for and played in other formats.
I actually left a Friday Night Magic draft back in the day because of how rude the other players were. Actually went up against a kid who was like 13 and extremely rude in the way he acted and talked. I conceded the best of three and he was being insulting. I was 18 at the time and just starting college. I scooped up my cards walked over to the owner and told him I’d never be back if that’s was a representation of the players and how they acted. He didn’t say anything and I never went back to that place. Thankfully I found a much more enjoyable pickup group on campus.
WRT saying/emoting "good game", it all depends on the timing, amount, and which side says it first. There is such a thing as being a sore winner. Being GG'd multiple times by an opponent while I'm still taking actions is why I normally have emotes muted. I've had the table equivalent as well, where an opponent has offered their hand because they're so full of themselves and their board state. Thankfully, the stink eye is usually enough to make them retract their hand and sit back until the round is truly over.
By all accounts he's a nice guy. Just got tilted over Nadu. Has admitted his short coming and wanting to be better. I feel like the mtg community loves to tear people apart :/
@@MisanthropicCurmudgeonAs someone who was one match win from top 8 but ran into Nadu with perfect hands... I don't get it. The kid didn't design Nadu. That being said I remember beating a guy when I was 14 and he cried about the elo hit he will take. Different times same people.
@@MisanthropicCurmudgeonGoing off on a child directly contradicts being a nice guy. Guess what plenty of people struggle with mental illness and don't go off on literal children.
I'm a control player in any card game I play so I have to deal with salt often, the worst was when I stole the win from my opp in game 3 of a digimon regional. He was getting steadily more upset as the game went on insulting me for being "the type of player to bring that s***t", saying stuff like wow can't even afford to max it when he saw I some of my lower rarity cards. needless to say it culminated in the opp accusing me of cheating because I top decked a restricted cards you can only run 1 of saying I multiples and asked to see my deck to clarify. I firmly just said no but I'm more than happy to have a judge come over and do so. (yeah after getting it checked there was no issue with my deck)
For every game I start with a sol ring, I have 1 that I get a 1 lander. And for every game I get a land, sol ring, arcane signet and land tax, I get a game that I can't draw my second land. Sometimes RNGesus is on your side and sometimes it isn't. It's part of the game.
Strongly suggest people try "Chicago style" commander. It's a house rule that's been spreading around Illinois which has players shuffle two basic lands and put them under their commander. Then "any time a player would draw a card from their library, and the top card hasn't been recently manipulated (i.e. Someone knows what the top card is going to be) that player may instead draw from one of the two lands under their commander."
That sounds pretty cool for lower power commander. I do have a storm deck that if that rule was standard it would only run those two lands, though, which might get a bit silly
It's not rude to say Good Game. Even when it's not a good game, it's sportsmanship. As someone who get salty seeing it as a bad game, that's on me, not the person saying Good Game. Don't let anyone tell you how to use the game's predetermined, nearly impossible to actually be toxic (spam aside) communications to speak with your opponent; they know how to turn off emotes. If they have no emotional control, that ain't on you! Besides, getting salty every now and then is good for you. In person, always polite to extend a hand, if they connect, smile and let them know you enjoyed the game. If they flip the table, honestly that's a W long as you've got ULTIMATE GUARD CARD SLEEVES, your shield against Actual Toxicity!
Kinda dumb to talk about sportsmanship with an opponent you don’t see face to face. If it wasn’t a good game, I.e. they got mana screwed, and they don’t say GG first then keep your emote trap shut. You may think you’re being sportsmanlike but you are just rubbing it in. Honestly, the winner should never say GG first unless it was close. Let the loser decide if they want further interaction. The loser saying GG is sportsmanship. The winner doing it is gloating.
Sportsmanship is great, but sometimes it isn't a good game and lying about that is worse than just being honest about it. Sometimes its not even close, those tend to not be good games.
@@alexandercastleberry480 Don't be a salty little cry-baby. I usually say "gg", whether I win or lose. Sportsmanship matters even if you can't see the other person. The fact that saying it when I win upsets emotionally stunted children and doesn't upset normal people makes it even better.
@@hamsandwich6685 It's not lying, it's just a formality. It doesn't literally mean that it was a good game, it's just a way of thanking you opponent for playing. It's like starting a letter/email with "dear [name]" even if you don't actually have a close relationship with the person.
@@hughmortyproductions8562 i value genuine sincerity, personally, so i work to offer others that. Formality or not, i think being honest is better. Part of being honest could even mean saying something like "i dont handle losing like this well, i dont think that was a good game though" and its perfectly justified honesty when your opponent rolls you and you didn't even dent them.
My personal belief has always been that it's on the losing player to say good game, extend the hand, etc. As the winning player, if you do it, it can seem like you are trying to needle them a little, even if it's not what you actually intended. This is especially true if the opponent is hard tilting. If you say good game after they mulled to 5 twice and got mana screwed both times, it just comes off as ingenuine. What I will say if that happens though, is sorry for their draws. We've all been there, and it sucks.
I would have one quibble with this which is that magic is a game which contains lots of elements which make people tremendously salty naturally - its an intellectual puzzle you can solve but its extremely hard, in 1v1 this almost necessarily implies having been "outsmarted" by your opponent. People stake a lot of their own self worth on their own perceived intelligence and losing creates a knock to their psyche. Add in every other natural thing about competition - the randomness means someone "worse" can beat you and its unsurprising people get salty. I also think overwhelmingly we forget how it feels to lose and then feel that our opponent is being ungracious about it if someone is new to magic and their opponent stomps them and then smiles and says GG (or online where its just an anonymous GG) its very hard to perceive that as anything other than patronising. If you win and win handily I think you have a duty to your opponent to actually be kind and not just be nice, and commiserate with them if they drew badly etc. I want to observe that because I think magic players have a habit of dismissing this conversation by describing it as manchildren being salty at losing as opposed to the natural human reaction to losing and not meeting your own expectations and that there is in fact bad behaviour all around the table None of this excuses flipping the table or being an arsehole to a 14 year old on the best deck. We should socially punish (and punish at tournaments) behaviour like that. When I was debating competitively at university, tournaments had equity policies and codes of conduct you signed up to on registration. It was basically just like a standard set of "be kind to one another rules" which enabled tournaments to kick people out for bad or bigoted behaviour. I'd be interested to know if magic has a similar type of thing I certainly think policies like that do a great deal of work to make the environment fairer and more fun for everyone, as well as encouraging camaraderie between players. I'd also add, there's people in my own life I refuse to play 1v1 magic with because they cannot help but bitch about the experience of RNG or having their board interacted with to the point that you avoid making the correct decision in a game because they might get salty, I don't know how to remove those people from magic but I sure would like to.
I think with letting folks search for a basic when they're down in commander is perfectly fine so long as it's not happening every time. I think we've all had those moments where you're just miles behind everyone else at the table and not having any fun because of it. CEDH aside, I see commander as more of a "play the game to have fun (and yes there will be a winner and some losers that's just how games work)" type of format, as opposed to a "play the game to win" kind of format so letting someone who is behind and maybe not enjoying themselves because of it get some kind of helping hand isn't that big of a deal if it makes the game more fun for everyone playing
I played in a draft, and some kid, maybe 13, was my 2nd round opponent, and every turn i took, he just yelled, "Are you done yet???!?!" After 4 or 5 out bursts, I sat my deck down and said, "I'll tell you when im done, " and just sat deck down for a few minutes smiling. He stormed out of the store. 😅
I was playing mono green stompy against an opponent on Amulet titan a few years ago, they scooped on turn 3 game one and on game two they started to brag about stabilizing after playing a sideboard hornet queen. I managed to top deck a rancor and kill them regardless. They scooped it up, i offered a good game, they said "Not really" ignored the handshake and dropped the tournament.
honestly my response lately has been "Best of luck in your next games", because personally, win or lose, I'm there to play for the challenge. I don't weigh winning as heavily, rather I want to have a great back and forth with my opponent. A duel or a pod of naught but slog after slog, til the last life is spent. When I have 1v1 commander at my LGS, if I get absolutely bulldozed, I shrug and laugh it off. Can't blame my opponent for bringing his best. It's really about the mentality, and how to gracefully win and lose.
I mostly agree with your opinion on this. The only small note is that for example in League of Legends "gg" is often used as a bm. In the end of game one gg is respectful and nothing wrong with that. Saying it in middle of a game after a fight is meant for bm and tilting the opponent or the person saying is naive. Spamming it is just toxic. And then there is the context which can modify the saying multiple ways. I am from Finland and I don't want to waste my time saying something that matters little. So I never say gg in online games. Waste of time. In real life I might thank the opponent for the game, but usually I start talking to them about the game or the event and wish them good luck for next. Me being thankful for the game is implied from me still chatting to them and me wishing good luck more meaningful for the next game is only about to happen and can be changed with positive attitude, where our game is in the past and bit meaningless to be polite about it. Won't change the result.
I always try to make small talk with my opponent after a game, and especially if I can tell things aren't going well I ask about their deck and what strategy they're using, etc. But I have the advantages of playing at a local game store where everybody knows me, and being someone that people naturally have an easy time talking with. That said, we do have some players who can get pretty salty if things aren't going their way and I've seen them drop out of events after losing a round or scoop if a Commander game turns against them, and there just isn't much to do about it. They're adults, and it's not the responsibility of other players to manage their emotions. We just have to let them go.
I'm usually good at keeping things light but I do get slightly frustrated because the friend I always play with who got me into magic likes to politic and target me regardless of whether or not I'm the threat or have any board state built up. So, I do get frustrated but then I'll take a break by podding up with other folks. 🤷♂️ That's why having a community at an LGS helps so much.
My absolute fave case of dealing with a salty player was the guy in the pod who got Very Salty about someone popping off with a combo in commander... that required around 22 mana's worth of permanents and a minimum of eight lands in hand. In a slightly modified starter deck (the BLB gruul one, with the sol ring dropped for another on-theme enchantment). I wasted no time in pointing out that his own Grixis deck (Missy) was specifically built around setting up and winning via an infinite combo. Best part was one game later when we switched decks and he popped off with Missy... winning the game for the previous game's gruul player, because he forgot she had Syr Konrad on the board and every loop of his infinite burned everyone but her for 4. That said I'd been the saltlord myself in the past-- usually when I'm targeted to the point where it feels like I'm not getting as much of a chance to play (i.e. my deck is a grouphug deck built around my commander, who gets countered two or three times in a row by the same player after tapping out to recast him). tbh I feel like the right thing in that situation is to just apologise afterwards for getting a little tilted and move on to the next game, especially in commander.
On the note of Nadu though. If it really makes you upset, just play stax pieces to shut it down. Play mana breach, overwhelming splendor, winter orb, and the like. Revoke their ability to enjoy it. If you're not willing to do that, then just play around it or play with someone else. 🤷♂️
It used to be almost reflex and ritualistic for me to say it after every game. Then I faced one opponent that muttered back “Was it?” after I beat them. I’m now more careful about it and say “Thanks for the game” as my go to instead, and save the GG for actual good games.
Playing (American) Football as a kid in the 90's, we we're always told to say good game to the other team regardless of how the game went. Likewise the other team would always also say good game regardless of how the game went. Because even if we won 42-0, it's sporting to be sympathetic to the other team, and acknowledging that they probably played their best.
Man I went to a pioneer event and the guy running the event was calling me out and being rude for no reason (was my first time playing at that store). I ended up winning against him with a card (slip out the back). He talked trash to me, he had a buy the last round and spent the whole round talking to my opponent in the game I was playing about how bad my deck was and how it’s such a bad ruling that you can phase out creatures at instant speed. Not sure what that even means. I ended up winning that event and haven’t been back since. It sucks and it’s really bad when it’s the guy running the event that’s a salt lord.
I would never get salty with another player because they did something that targeted me specifically or got me knocked out early. I'd usually take it with pride like saying I got targeted because I had a good board state or I was the most threatening player at the table so they had to take me out early. And if I couldn't get my combo off, then I'd blame the luck of the draw or just my own deck building. The only thing that would fire me up is if an opponent conceded when they lost superiority in some way, not that they were losing but, if I just blew up something big on their board. Because my play style is a little more defensive, I'd usually go most of a game with little to no board and especially on arena, when my board ends up being threatening, my opponent just scoops. It's super frustrating because I play the game to play the game and it seems like everyone else is just trying to win.
Good game is to me the equivalent of “thank you for the game.” GG I usually reserve for friends I play with regularly and only online. I moved to fist bumps over a decade back and it made a huge difference to my health. People are generally familiar with and ok with it :)
I don't think I ever say "good game" to an opponent in earnest. I would argue it's not even a politeness thing. It's either out of habit, or (much more often) a way to throw underhanded shade. If I'm saying/typing gg or good game after a match to an opponent (in any kind of competitive game), it's almost 100% because that opponent was being cocky or shitty during a game that I won and I want to throw it in their face a bit in a cheeky way. If I'm earnestly wanting to be polite or respectful to the opponent after the game, I'll either say nothing, or say "thanks for the game" or "great game" or "really close game" or something along those lines.
For me personally, in a 1v1 setting in a competitive or casual setting, I tend to go the extra mile and ask firstly if they are alright, if they seem like they are starting to tilt out. But I am a weirdo, and then depending on there response see if there is some constructive feedback I can give them, mostly by asking them more questions about what made them salty in the first place. And then it’s as simple as just having a conversation with the other player I myself also can get quite salty at MtG and other competitive games, and more often than not I am salty because I don’t understand something about what went on in the game, and would be looking for feedback myself. But I know not everyone even knows what feedback to give, and a lot of the time I just need to vent to someone who at least can understand why I was getting tilted.
I think I agree in part. The only time I WON'T say 'GG' is if _I AM_ the one who stomped someone else - I'll instead say 'Well played', 'Unlucky!' or something similar.
It's not directly trying to soften the blow or whatever, but I think it's still part of the sportsmanship rigmarole of being humble in victory
Yeah even if you dont mean it to be an ass, if the game was a one sided stomp, it feels weird to say GGs. It wasnt a good game. I didnt win because I outplayed you. I won because you were unlucky/inexperienced/whatever.
Im a farily competitive person, but at the same time its not just about winning - its about winning the right way. I want to win because I was better, not because enemy was worse.
If it was a lucky stomp yeah, but sometimes stomps are indeed good games
I've gotten really good about not getting salty. I've also learned to acknowledge that some days are just not appropriate to play Magic. If I'm overstressed from work or life, then I know that I'm probably not going to be fun to play with. At that point, I'll stay home and play something nonstressful.
EDIT: Also, I agree saying "gg" doesn't necessarily mean it was a good game. To me it's like two sports teams shaking hands after a game, no matter how badly one side lost.
Hey good on ya! Yeah the game can be salt inducing but that's bc it truly is a reflection of what your mind can do/build. People want to talk about power level and things but really it's all based on the player and just how experienced they are. Not necessarily the specific cards in the deck. Also understanding it's a card GAME is very important. It's ok to feel tilted for a moment but ehh let it go, you'll have your golden day in the sun, if not for the very next play (sweet revenge lol).
I said GG in prolly 10k lol games and none of them were😂
I remember when I was in a pod with a combo player, myself, and two others. The other two had slow starts, and the combo player had a fast start. I wasn't able to draw into any of my removal (I play a lot of removal, just wasn't drawing any of it) so I applied pressure against the combo player's life total with a large flier I had managed to build up. He got very upset I wasn't spreading the love even though the other two players hadn't even established board states yet. The combo player was able to get half of a combo out but I took him out before they could get the other half out. He got so salty he packed up stormed out of the game store without saying a word.
Without having been there to witness all the nuance for myself, and based on this description alone, I don't think the salty player was acting 'wrong'. Perhaps by removing themselves from the store, he wanted to cool off from the frustration without taking it out on you or the other players. Sometimes it's better to say nothing than to say hurtful things when you're in the heat of a moment.
Or, he could have just been being passive-aggressive, or something. Like I said, I don't have all the information, certainly not on salty combo player's state of mind.
I don't feel bad for combo players
As a combo player, when I lose, it was destiny
How **dare** you employ threat assessment and pressure the most dangerous player. What a horrible person you must be 😂
I have found the best response to the accusation that you are focusing someone down is, "yes, I am focusing you because I respect the way you built your deck. You've built it expertly, and I'm scared of it."
Its very hard to get mad at respect.
Was he supposed to wait around and watch you finish the game?
I think too many people have said “good game” sarcastically or mockingly that I can’t even say “good game” out of respect of my opponent
If you personally cannot show respect to your opponent, that is entirely on you. Not on anyone else. Stop being disrespectful.
"Oh no, other people said 'I am sorry' in a dishonest way. Now I can never apologize for anything ever again." => That is your argument. Stop being a disrespectful shit and stop making up bullshit excuses for it. If you don't wanna be called a cunt, just don't be a cunt.
It's all about how you say it
Same boat, plus, it just grinds my gears when people say “good game” when it’s clearly a one sided stomp someone didn’t have a chance of recovering from.
Theres plenty of times where ive said gg at the end of an online game and felt bad about it, i say it because the person plays well seriously. But, they lost, and its become so BM to say gg after a game now that i either feel bad doing it, or most time, i just dont say it.
@@deejkdeejk In paper sure but online how do you "say" GG in a different way? At least in Arena there is no chat so all you can do is use the exact same emote as everyone else regardless of context so I totally understand ops comment.
my favorite totally insane instance of tilt was at a big modern tournament several years ago my opponent started going on a rant about how they never lose at Call of Duty and related that to how they shouldn't lose Magic matches, I still think about it at least once a week
I got a bit frustrated a couple days ago during a tournament. 2 of my opponents took unreasonable long turns to do next to nothing. It wasnt from them attempting to do complicated combos, they would only play 2 or 3 cards. One of them consistently took 5+ minute turns.
I didnt flip tables or storm out. After the match, I told her that in a tournament that has a time limit, she needs to be more mindful of how much time she takes.
I love my best friend like a brother but he once took a nearly 40 minute turn. I after that decided to ask if you can win, how are you going to win, can anyone respond? If he can win and no one has response shuffle up. I did not come to see you play solitaire and waste my time.
Saying good game was basically the closing ritual of every competitive sport I've ever played. From elementary Tee Ball to high school football, when the game was over you shook the other teams' hands and said good game, even if they stomped you 70-0. It's both a basic politeness thing as well as a sportsmanship thing.
That said, I rarely gg in Magic Arena because I just concede when I don't feel like playing a particular match anymore.
I'm admittedly a guy who's needed to learn not to get as angry as I did before. I do bodybuilding as well as Magic, so if I get upset and hit the table there's a bit of a difference to if another guy there did so.
Also not helping matters is the steroids. When I'm On Stack, I'm usually also not eating as much due to the cut. Which makes my temperament worse during that part of the year.
fully agree - espacially on Arena its the signal for "you are done next done" - and if the losing player is responding same way, they would also wait until the final combo is palyed and not quitting the game. Which can then end up in a nice kill where the losing player is gonna die with exactly 0 life points and not with -x trillion damage. - However, in face to face matches or even competitive rounds "good game" is more like a "I respect your gameplay" - so virtual is much different from real world gaming
Yeah same, i usually just concede unless my opponent is doing some janky stuff, gotta let the people play out their mtg fantasy
@@Kyouto_c right - I assume that scooping and quitting a game cause people don't want to wait to see the combo is quite disrespectful while giving them a bad game experience at the same time - let them play their combo. It was a long way to get there, so all participants should enjoy it
@@DAsrada you should probably stop using steroids
Lsv was just barely talking about this topic on one of the latest episodes of limited resources. He brought it up a concept hes talked about before but basically the idea is that good game design is building variance into the game such that players can blame the game for bad outcomes. Im paraphrasing now but its interesting that intending for the players to have the option of falling into a victim mentality is one thing that makes a game great. Its also interesting to see how getting better at such a high variance game means resisting that pull. Putting the responsibility for losses on yourself as much as possible. I know so often that if you put a pro in my seat, in games ive lost they could scrape out a win. They are always playing to their outs no matter the chances.
Good video. Thanks.
I've played so many Arena degens spamming early GGs, that I legit don't understand when they're showing respect, disrespect or just conceding.
using 'gg' in basically any online competitive environment in the last 10-20 years has resulted in this experience. its not a genuine expression of sportsmanship anymore, its a sarcastic flex.
i played competitive pokemon on simulators for years and years and the number of gg's i got that came at the end of a well-played game were dwarfed by the number of preemptive gg's i go from sweats using it as a taunt when they thought got their sweep setup after a couple turns or otherwise thought they had the game won. its seen as bad sportsmanship because for much of recent history that's in large part how its been used, sarcastically to flex on your opponents.
i end all games with a "good game". you have to take the tone of voice(if IRL) and when said (was it when the game was OVER or when they thought they won) into account to take as well meaning or a flex. if someone crys after a well meaning GG thats a them problem
And roping
@@themoops4006 Offensive GG's when they are about to win, or feel like they are, are the worst. Though it's always nice when you manage a come back after an offensive GG.
I hit GG on arena win or lose, only when I know the game is actually ending
When neobrand was new and no one was expecting the turn 1 win before your opponent played a land, i would start the match by saying "sorry for the sins I'm about to commit" it lessened the salt levels.
The acknowledgment of unfair nonsense goes a long way.
Humor is great for improving the atmosphere or defusing a yense situation, i love it
I took UW Spirits to an RCQ fully expecting to get 0 match wins, and my first two rounds were against the Nadu players there.
To quote my Nadu opp I took to game 3, "Yeah, I won, but you're the good guy here"
Nadu players know what they're doing, and I don't blame them at all for doing it while the card is legal.
Really wish more players acknowledged what they know full well they are doing instead of playing stupid like the broken deck they’re playing with is kosher.
I know someone who likes to cause misery on their opponents. They love to play solitaire and have their opponent watch. They absolutely know what they are doing by picking this up.
He won...... but at what cost?
I'd never rage at somebody playing Nadu, but I sure as hell quit out instantly when I get paired with one in Brawl Arena.
Last Friday I played Rescaminator against Nomad Nadu in Legacy. It was bananas, all the legacy and pioneer players were gathered around. We should have gone to turns but the owner himself was like, "fuck that, I'm invested now" 😂. A lot of the legacy players said they had never seen a legacy match like that, it was more like a Vintage "Not so fast my friend" type of matchup.
The Nadu player is just playing the game. But everytime I sit at a table against Nadu I pray whoever designed it got fired and will never get a job related to game design again.
It's just way too dumb and I hope it gets banned in commander too, since many casual players built the deck and are ruining games with it
More is at stake at an actual tournament in comparison to the online version
nadu in brawl is not even that strong in my opinion. maybe it's just the types of deck I play but I think nadu in brawl lacks the consistency that 60 card nadu has
@@sidneypowelstock6812 Not about strength, about how tedious and uninteresting the play pattern and turns are.
it has always been the same... let the player who lost extend the hand and say GG before you reciprocate. its a really simple rule for gaming.
This past Saturday I played in a commander pod, I was playing a frog tribal deck, with frog based removal, I turned 4 made an opponents scute swarm into a frog, and he got extremely salty towards me, he had 3 lands, sol ring, mana crypt, yagra, eater of all out, it the moment I said I wanted to slow him down just a little bit, he then vented on how he wanted to play this game because he was having a ruff week. Like dude, you have the most value out this early, my other 2 players in the pod had nothing on the board, but somehow when I enchanted his scute it was a crime against humanity, and he focused all his resources to quickly kill me off in the pod, and then had the nerve to ask if he and I were going to have this beef for the next games
This sounds like the kind of player who uses tilt as a strategy, intentionally or otherwise, to keep heat off themself. If using removal on their stuff becomes a whole production, people will be hesitant to use removal on their stuff. It's terrible sportsmanship and should lead to becoming table nemesis, imo
Whether or not he's having a rough day or week shouldn't matter, for all he knows, you could be having a similarly rough day or week and you're just here to try and slow the game down so everyone has a chance to play some cards. It puts you in a better light being able to handle tough times outside of the game (whether true or not) and the opponent can't be making the excuse of a rough outside life to edge out card advantage
His week doesn't matter but honestly it sounds like his play was pretty normal. It's not that uncommon for someone to pick a target by seeing who targets them first, and especially if you two were the only threats like you said I think he even chose correctly. And as far back as I remember people wanted to clear grudges between games so that's not weird to me.
No offense but honestly feel like maybe you're the one who got a little salty. And maybe you're even right to I mean if his week sucked he was probably saying and doing normal things gruffly and making you feel like it was personal, but I've seen that game pattern play out like hundreds of times with absolutely no salt involved.
"venting he wanted to play cos he had a rough week" I think those kinds of people are the ones who show up forgetting that their pod aren't npcs they can roflstomp to blow off steam. If you need to get out the stress but someone messing up your ideal play state is going to make you more stressed/salty, well... he shouldn't be playing against the unknown variable of a real person or someone he hasn't played against enough to know their game habits (which I'm assuming is the case). A game can still be a great way to de-stress, you just gotta come in with the right mindset.
I'm a calm enough person that even when stressed I can take losing a game of whatever in stride (until you get that one smug ahole who has to rub your face in it), but I learned long ago if you wanna play with real people you gotta ~approach~ with the mindset of 'I can't win all the time, I just wanna chill and do things".
@@doctordistracto8390 You know that the demeanor isn't the only thing that makes a move salty right? He didn't say he was a threat either. He said he played the card against the scute player because it made the most sense in that moment. If I play one card against you when you are clearly in the lead and you proceed to target me to eliminate me as quickly as possible with a smile on your face, it doesn't make it any less salty. In my opinion at least. Now admittedly, we're getting his side of the story, but I get where he's coming from. He made an understandable play, the guy whined, tried to garner sympathy, targeted and eliminated him and then said "Hey we gonna be good here?" I'd be kinda miffed too.
For me, personally, “good game” is a statement of respect and acknowledgment after a game regardless of outcome. It’s much closer to “thanks for playing with me”.
Problem is when you say it.
For example if you say gg when you win a game where some opponent disconnected and enemy team was forced to play outnumbered or surrender that is not a good thing to say.
I've had my fair share of salty moments, but most of them happen due to my own misplay or just poor decision-making on my end, so it ends up being something I keep to myself. There is this one guy at my locals who used to have a really bad time dealing with his own salt, but I played more with him in his pods to try and defuse his temper. Over time, how I manage my own saltiness has rubbed off on him, and now he's much less belligerent when things don't go his way. I'd like to think he's a much happier Magic player now. Sometimes, all someone needs is a bit of kindness and understanding to mitigate an otherwise nasty outburst at a table.
My standard is this, if my opponent got to play magic: Good Game. If my opponent didn't get to play magic: Sorry about the luck, thanks for the game.
I do this because I've gotten salty and bratty at someone after being told "Good Game" after mulling to 5, getting stuck on 2 lands and discarding to handsize (the deck in question ran 25+ Land in a 60 card format). It was game 3, and winner would go into top 8. I don't remember all the details, I just remember getting so annoyed and after having a horrible game, getting told "good game", I snaped back with "do you honestly think that was a good game". Im fine with getting stomping, getting mana flooded or getting bad draws, as long as I get to play magic.
ive been there, it sucks being told good game and they are happy they won and it was a non match, especially if it happened 2 times in a row
1) Empathy is important.
2) Someone else’s poor response to a situation is NOT your responsibility.
I’m stuck between these 2 truths.
Ultimately, where I stand, is that everybody has a different need when salting out. I try not to salt, but when I do, a smile and “good game, sorry about the bad luck” with a handshake can go a long way to remind me that my opponent took time out of their day to play a game with me, and I should be thankful, even if it wasn’t how I wanted the game to go.
Because of that, I always try to be polite and thank them for their time.
Saying "Good game" has as you alluded to become largely formulaic, it's the expected polite thing to say at the end of the match. Just the same way we often say "Nice to meet you" to people who it often isn't nice to meet. No one does or should read too much into it.
I actually say, "Thanks for playing with me" instead. Because good game or not, I'm just happy we got to play
imo there's _some_ validity to chosing different words when a game clearly wasn't good - I don't think "good game" is _entirely_ devoid of the meaning of its words - but by and large yes, the point of saying it is to be respectful.
Thing is, for example, if I am playing a lol, valorant, overwatch orsomething that is multiplayer, someone disconnects and my team is forced to play outnumbered and enemy says gg that is tilting. You are saying that a game where enemy disconnects and they are forced to play outnumbered is a good game, wich just pisses off anyone that was forced to play with a handicap
I don't mind losing as long as it felt like I had a chance. If its a complete blowout, then either my luck was really terrible or my deck was vastly imbalanced against my opponents'.
You can't fix the luck issue completely but you Can affect the imbalance by making sure your opponents (and yourself) are honest about deck strength.
Me playing Brawl on Arena: ANOTHER LAND, F THIS GAME!
literally happened to me while playing brawl like 10 minutes ago. i was against a pantlaza deck with a jetmir cat/token themed deck and arena said "here, have your 10th land" with only jetmir and finneas ace archer on the field
And another land, and another land
And im getting beaten by a one one
And another one, and another one
Four more lands in the deck till its done
I've also had multiple games in a row while playing a 44 land deck unable to draw a land so yeah the Arena shuffler is very scuffed.
Coming from someone who used to play a lot of Starcraft, one of the places where saying gg got popularized, I still go by that etiquette. Saying gg is what you say when you concede, it's equivalent to offering your hand. Back in the Starcraft days, it was considered very rude to say gg when you are winning; you only say it after the other playing concedes and says it first. Basically, saying gg when you are the one winning was seen the same as extending your hand after you swing for lethal before your opponent has acknowledged the loss. Personally, I think this is how it should still be done - it's on the loser to say gg/extend their hand first.
Then again, there was more focus on that polite concession in general - not saying gg when you lost was also considered rather rude and a sign that you are massively tilted. Either saying gg first when winning or not saying it when losing would both be seen as a bit of a scandal online if a pro player did it back in the SC days. I think that kind of encouragement of the most basic of "sportsmanship" was a good thing for keeping a friendly yet competitive atmosphere around the game, similar to how you always cool down and line up for the post-game handshake in a lot of actual sports.
Huh, Ive never thought of it like that, when I play league I always say ggwp no matter if I win or lose, just seemed like the polite thing to do.
I’m going to disagree with putting the onus of saying gg on the losing player. I’ve thrown out the gg to people while winning the game to acknowledge how dang well they played the game. If someone gets stomped, I try my best not to gloat or look smug, if someone pushed me to barely take the win, I’ll give them props for playing so well, and hopefully if I’m the one that lost they’ll have the same kind of empathy.
I think when your etiquette is spot on is when the game is one sided. If someone gets stomped, then the winning player saying gg can come across as condescending.
@@Zeferet. Yeah, league doesn't have the same culture around it as StarCraft, probably because actual concessions aren't a thing in competitive play. SC games essentially never ended via an actual victory per the game rules, just the loser typing gg and leaving the game to concede.
@@Aldrnari956 it's definitely more situational in magic since you are in person rather than online and having actual conversations. It comes down to how you say it though - it's totally fine to be like "wow, that was a really close game" if it's true, particularly if your opponent was just too caught up in everything to do a normal concession. I don't think it's proper for the winner to just say good game alone and extend the hand after their opponent scoops though. Proper sportsmanship would be for them to extend the hand/fist/verbal gg when they concede defeat in the last game of the round.
@@CaptainKeeez I agree with that
I've gotten salty from time to time, and I always regretted it right after I did it. Sometimes it's just an impulse in the moment that I need to get better at restraining. From the perspective of being the salty person, I don't think there really is a "right answer" for dealing with people getting upset about magic, and like you said, it's not the winner's responsibility to do so. I'm not really sure at the time I was getting "tilted" that there was anything someone could have said to me to make me come to my senses so to speak. Online it's easy to just quit a game that frustrates you and move on, but in the real world with real people, that's not possible, or just not proper etiquette, and being stuck in a game you don't want to be in is the worst. I'm not sure what the solution is there. lol.
I keep the taunts disabled. I don't like them. Those faceless opponents are jerks and have too much luck.
.
.
.
The problem is that MTGA makes you angry because it's a grind and forces to play when you don't want to. And the faceless opponents are just obstacles that are in the way of your grind. No wonder the developers had to reduce communication to a handful of preset taunts since the beginning of MTGA. But I find that limitation dumb, so I don't use it.
Good lord yes, was looking for this comment because all I play is arena due to being in a small rural community with the nearest store being an hour away…plus it’s just cheaper.
There HAS to be a better way to encourage people to log in everyday and actually play (and hope they buy something from the shop) than just daily wins.
I never understood 'GG' myself. This has several aspects for me personally:
1. It's a modern shorthand acronym which doesn't have the same sincerity or gravity as actually saying 'Good game' [mate] to someone. Use the english language don't speak letters.
2. I am a millenial so i actually said good game to opponents as i shook their hand after a football match or made the rugby tunnel to clap them off. Usually with well played thrown in for variety. Real. Genuine.
2. When used online via the chat function it is faceless and hollow, and comes with the potential to trigger people especially when the game has not been actually 'good' or close.
4. It has become too easy to just robotically type it or mutter it across a table regardless of how the game content played out. There is a real lack of personality to this method of indicating a match played and completed.
5. I prefer 'thanks for the game' and this is what i say and type when applicable - this is far better wording which can convey: match complete, your time was appreciated, a result achieved. There is neutrality yet sincerity in these words. You are not adding an adjective to indicate the state of the match and thereby in theory can reduce triggering anyone.
I actually do offer a hand - because i was raised that way, it's polite and gentlemanly to do it.
To be clear - in no way does my opinion condone salty bevaviour or seek to avoid hurting some little salt mine's feelings and thereby not trigger them. I don't begrudge anyone saying it, or imply they can't say it. For me personally, well I just genuinely dislike speaking letters when english words have more agency
I'm glad you made the point about deck choice, knowing your matchups, and mulligan decisions. I was in a PTQ playing Eldrazi ramp and ended up matched up against Valakut. It was game 3, and I was on the draw. My 7 card hand and 6 card hand were serviceable, but VERY slow. I knew that a 5 card hand COULD be better, and better for the matchup. I mulled to 5, and drew up a hand that went turn 3 Primeval titan, turn 4 Primeval Titan, turn 5 hard cast Ulamog, the Infinite Gyre.
I've learned to frame it as "We're here to win. I'm not upset at you for doing what works. But i am upset at _it_ for working." Which i think is how people feel about Nadu.
If it's with friends, we all kinda agree on a rule of don't play the bullshit unless we're all playing bullshit and if you play it, you'll get salted.
Ok...but...sometimes it IS the fault of the randomness of the cards that cause someone to lose. That is a perfectly valid reason behind why people lost.
That is true and important to recognize, but people are far more inclined to find randomness at fault when it isn't than they are to find themselves at fault when randomness is. The warning against blaming randomness is more a warning against snap judgements. If randomness is at fault, you can get there after determining that none of your choices were proven wrong by that game. If you're at fault in some subtle way, you'll never get there if you instantly blame the randomness which appears to have been the problem, and you'll miss an opportunity to improve.
Even if that's true, It's always better to say "What could I have done to mitigate that from happening?" Even if you could have done nothing that mentality alone will always serve you better than just blaming things outside of your control. There are also players who ARE at fault and choose to blame the randomness while ignoring all the mistakes they made in playing/building/mulliganing because it hurts their ego.
As a Pokemon TCG player, I recently had a player freak on me for saying GG because they started one pokemon and couldnt bench anything else in 3 turns. Told me "it wasnt a good game because I didnt get to play"
The only time I take issue with anyone telling me "good game" (particularly on Arena) is when opponent prematurely presumes the win with a "gOoD gAmE" for whatever reason, when there are still cards in hand/mana open, and/or other actionable choices I can make to change their presumed outcome. “The fatal flaw in every plan is the assumption that you know more than your enemy” is the flavored text on the original printing of Mana Leak for a reason.
As far as the "go and fetch a land" thing, I recently kept a 1 land hand with three 2 cost mana rocks in it thinking "sure I have like 2 or 3 turns to draw a land" I was mana screwed for the entire game. I felt the same as you. The others offered to let me grab a land but I refused on the grounds of "I did this to myself" and I had fun watching the other players play and trying to draw as many cards as I could to catch up. I think, in commander with the longer games it's OK for a very new person but I should have known better. I was dumb and deserved what I got.,
if you're running 37+ lands you should have had at least an ~87% chance to draw at least one land in your first three draws of the game. i've made this call plenty of times, you made the right decision based on the math but RNGesus stepped in and said 'not today, my child.'
A big thing there is also the level of the game.
If it is a just for fun game with some friends, they are probably wanting a good, competitive game. Someone getting stomped by bad draws isn't generally good for anyone's enjoyment.
If they suggest you cheat a land in such a situation, I would recommend considering things from that perspective as well.
I think it's worth having in mind that the game is just another thing in your life and offers a chance to explore the kind of person you want to be in life.
Self expression, composure, overcoming difficulty, incresaing your skill. Those are all things that you learn along the way and have an opportunity to make an active choice on.
I've both found myself being salty in a crushing defeat or gloating in an unlikely victory. And found that one doesn't fix the other and they both make you look and feel like a twat.
So yeah, you can't control what others feel, but you can try to make better choices on your behaviour to create the best environment possible for yourself and others.
Me when the commander game has been going on for 3h and a winning board state gets wiped by a wrath for the 5th time in a row. Doesn't even have to be my board state.
Htf do you have a game of edh take 3hrs?
@@jessewallace3805 This happens when we accidentally have 3-4 combo/control decks in a pod. We each have multiple decks (obviously), and sometimes it aligns that no one plays a deck that focuses on killing with combat damage. And those matches often drag out.
I may need to add there is a difference from being a salty player to being a toxic player, a player just getting mad and taking it to another level. Also one thing I don't like is playing someone taking a lot of take backs but then they won't let others do the same.
When I say gg after losing, it's because deep down I know the only thing in the situation I really wanted to have been different was my own performance or the outcome. If I genuinely think the game itself has real bs in it that goes beyond the tolerance for bs we need to have, then I'll postpone it. I'll say I need a minute, and then maybe I'll realize it was a gg after all, or maybe I'll stop playing the format, avenue, or person. Salt is pretending there's is nothing you can do, but you can always at the very least walk away and take a minute.
Bro is salty lmao
There can often be times where a game of magic isn't as great as it could be, I don't like it if I win or lose too easily due to the many factors you mentioned, but if I enjoyed spending time with the person, it's still a good game for me. I really liked the idea of asking what I could have done differently to the opponent after a rough game (or even after a narrow loss!).
As a LOL player, I don't get salty about the GG after getting crushed, I don't get salty about the my enemy laner playing Garen, I don't get salty about being camped. I get salty about them being a sore winner, I get salty of the emote spam, I get salty about the GGEZ when crushing with an intro champ.
So I play a different luck-heavy game competitively that can take like 2+ hours to complete a single game (War of the Ring), and a big trick I use there when an opponent (or myself) is starting to tilt is to just call for a short break. Not as much of a thing at an RCQ, but pausing an FNM game to "run to the restroom" or "answer a call" gives everyone a minute or two to breathe and settle, in my experience.
Sometimes it's really hard to not respond to tilt with "conceding is a free action," though
In my opinion this is the best video you've made. Thanks for sharing your wisdom!
I don't like using GG when I win because i don't want to rub in their face i won and it was a GG for me.... If they say it first I do say it back. Generally if they look like they are tilting or Sad they won it depends on how badly I beat them. If i smashed they really hard and they had bad draws or I just got a crazy bomb they couldn't deal with then i'll say thanks for the game and just leave unless they say something first. If the game was close I'll say so. "Oh that game was close I was worried you would remove this creature i had or draw answer x." and then if they interact we can have a discussion and if not I'll thank them for the game and go.
Thank you for bringing up the conversation. Its part of the game and a hard topic to talk about when emotions are running high / aka its stressful
To me this is an easy problem to solve and this is what I do. If it is an opponent I haven't met before, I make small talk during shuffling before mulligans. Ask where they are from. How their games have gone. If they have been to this area before. If there are good food spots they know of. Etc,. Small talk. Then after the games I say "it was wonderful meeting you and good luck today" and it there is still top 8 contention I add "I hope to see you in the top 8". Then leave. Easy peazy. Just be nice and genuine. Don't just regurgitate the same statements. Ggs and all. I'm not a fan of doing that.
Easy if you're not socially awkward and literally scared of people like most people who play these games are
@@hyperchord this is true but I sorta got the implication from the video that that was case. If we are talking about how people deal with anxiety in these situations then I think that conversation could go on for hours. But you do have a fair point.
I’ve always seen gg to mean “well played” or “well contested.” It’s basically a show of respect/sportsmanship. To me it’s the opposite of salt.
Yep, sometimes a GG is simply a Game that was Good.
the point is whether or not you should say good game to your opponent if they just got steamrolled and are visibly frustrated about it. do you say it for the formality or should you not risk rubbing salt in the wound?
Our friend who used to compete back in the day, and owned an LGS likes to say "Thanks for letting me play, guys" after he pubstomps us
I know you marked it as a personal tangent, but as someone who's going to their first big convention for MagicCon Vegas and who also deals with asthma and a lower power immune system, I'd considered prevention for airborne disease but I really hadn't factored in the physical contact part of the equation, the fist bump is a really good and elegant solution I'll definitely be putting into action come october.
I think an important part of the deck choices point at 5:00 is that sometimes the choices you made were made in the past. You just have to try to make the best choices going forward. (This applies to life too)
The streamer and the 14 year old were sitting next to me at the RCQ this past Saturday 😂
d0d0mwake
what was the rcq event?
This is my favorite of all your takes. It’s a game, so we should try and keep our emotions in check. When we do get frustrated, it’s important to not project that on our opponent. We should all be stewards of the game and do our best to build a positive community. I think thanking your opponent for the game is better than saying good game, because I don’t want to rub wounds. I do like to call out good plays on their part, and if I think they’ll be receptive, I’ll ask about plays during the game.
If "good game" feels like bridge too far, I reach for "thanks for the game."
If my Arena opponent sends one emote beyond "Hello" i report for unsportsmanlike behaviour
I use two emotes. I use "thinking" quite a lot, to indictate truthfully that this turn is going to take a minute and I'm not tilted roping out, and I use "good game" to concede before either quitting, or fsst-passing so they can swing in.
i think the best thing to do after a game is talk about the game with your opponent, it lets you both bond over the game because you can talk about the deck your playing but more importantly you can talk about misplays that you and your opponent made so you both can improve
Although I think saying "good game" is perfectly fine, saying "thanks for the game" is arguably a much more empathetic way of communicating with someone who just lost in an unsatisfying way.
I always figured if someone ever table flipped me I'd smile, take all the now grounded cards, and ride off into the sunset with a whole new deck
If someone ever table flipped a table with my cards on it, they better be prepared to flip themselves. This cardboard ain't cheap.
I feel like a lot of his is both very good to talk about as a community yet also very difficult to fully discuss. Each person and playgroup is different from the next, and different actions have different effects. Some people would get tilted over a "GG," others would like it regardless, so it's just hard to quite determine the best thing to do. Same with playgroups as well, mine will let you go get at least a basic land if you really are just in a bad stroke of luck with lands (unless we know they have a very low land amount in their deck, or just took 1 land. I myself never fetch for a land)
I think these discussions are prob best effective with each other directly and with groups, simply so we all know how to act according to our gaming spheres.
it comes with maturity. not every game is going to go your way, and being a graceful loser is just as important as being a modest winner. Celebrate your wins, learn from your loses. plain and simple
Re: Nadu, I am reminded of one Sanford Kelly when he laid out his manifesto to Pick a Top Tier. If you want to win, play what's good. If you want to have fun with what you love even though it sucks, by all means do so, but don't blame people who do play what's good if you lose. Sagat players might not have to work as hard as you for their wins, but you're the person who chose to not play Sagat. Hate the game if you must, push for it to be changed if you feel like it should be, but don't blame the player for playing what's best, especially when you're choosing to not follow suit. And especially don't spike your stick so hard it cracks the concrete if you lose, Sanford.
Rico Suave's smile after the spike lives rent free in my head
I’m still fairly new to magic (within my first year) and I remember the first commander deck I built myself from scratch was mono green elves. I would be so upset with drawing 1 to 2 land hands while staring at 3 to 4 cost ramp spells for 5 draws in a row. That was until someone asked me how many lands I was playing. After counting I was only running 28 lands with 10 plus mana dorks and 10 plus ramp spells. As soon as I fixed my land base or ratios in general my player experience drastically improved.
It’s funny to me how often topics for magic videos boil down to “how to be a normal person”
I always took GG as well done. So if you've absolutely smashed someone, I wouldn't say GG. Because I'd feel like I was taking the piss ..
I genuinely believe that if you're the player in a winning position and you've won the game before your opponent has conceded. Offering a handshake or saying good game is quite rude and condescending. And on other hand if youre salty about losing, dont make it about your opponent thier deck or your bad draws, etc. Just take deep breath and be the big person and saying well played and good luck in the next one 😉 👏
The language difference is important. In spanish, the equivalent of good game means "we played a great game/the game was good", so it has a different tone. Thanks for the game is even worse, it sounds like "thanks for giving me the win".
I believe there are spaces where reminding people they are just “playing a game” is actually good, and that is around non-competitive/non-sanctioned spaces.
Reminding casual players that you came to FMN, commander night, draft night to play a game you like and that you can hopefully learn from your misplays, or from how more enfranchised players assess board states is good. Sometimes reminding people that you are not in a space where you are playing for a big prize or for glory lowers the stakes of whatever is happening, and so losing does not feel that bad anymore.
It is also incredibly satisfying to remind a sweatlord playing in a casual space and getting tilted for losing that it is just a game, for the opposite reason.
Thanks for the video. Lots of points well made.
-- I also go for a fist bump post-match. Less contact like you said, also, no sweaty palms. lol
Had a game a couple weeks ago, where the pod was two pillofort decks (Council of Four and Rex Nebula) me with voltron (Lara Croft) and Infamous Cruelclaw. The Council of Four player resolved an early Alms Collector that basically stopped my entire game plan (i was running a Wheel heavy deck, and couldn't exactly wheel with him in play), while the Rex player and the Cruelclaw got set up.
At which point the pool Council of Four player found himself accidentally getting wrecked by everyone else starting to deal with the actual problems on the field. Over the course of ten turns, his commander was incidentally killed three times, and ended up costing 11 mana to replay. This basically removed him from the game, not because he was an issue, but because the cards being played to stop my Lara Croft from one shotting players were also accidentally ruining his attempts to set back up. He had a good field, and then I overloaded a Cyc Rift to keep myself alive, which forced him to rebuild - at which point the Rex player cast an Akroma's Vengeance to get rid of my equipment. This was the right play, everyone agreed to that as I had lethal against anyone, but the Council of Four player then found his field gone, for the second time in two turns. Which led to him being salty that he couldn't play the game - not because he was being targeted but because he was just collateral damage.
never knew you also did warhammer content, cool! Recently got back into it after being a bit done with Magic's and WOTC's shenanigans.
caring is good
I definitely used to be an absolute shit when the idea of losing was on the table. I think some of it was an inferiority issue that was made worse by having some "friends" who were sore winners, and would shame the hell out of the loser. I learned better and gained some self reflection when that salty attitude became an issue for playing with people I really care about.
At some point through that self reflection and playing more emotionally conservatively, I discovered that sometimes a spectacular loss is just as, or more fun than a win. In maybe a years time from pulling my head out of my ass, I learned and became probably annoyingly positive in playing Magic. I laugh and congradulate my opponents when they stomp me, and while many love the vibe, some have reacted like my attitude is "wrong". One guy gave me the stink eye for thanking them for the game.
Regardless, I have some sympathy for the salty, and try to be helpful, but regardless of win or lose, I have matured and become a much more positive player thanks to being confronted with my salt.
I was taught to say gg/goodgame after football/soccer or basketball games. I will continue to do so.
Depends on who I’m playing with. If I’m playing with strangers, sure. With friends? Oh hell no lol
My biggest peeve is when people in Commander play incredibly high threat stuff and then get annoyed when they’re targeted. It can’t be said enough that if you put a target on your back, people will shoot at you. I say this as a Sliver and Eldrazi player, and I’m incredibly conscious that many of my games with these decks will involve me doing absolutely nothing, because no one will take the risk of letting me pop off, and *that’s fine*. People need to accept that being the archenemy is a choice in Magic, and if you run with it an incredibly fun one at that, but getting upset when your obvious massive problem Commander is removed for the third time is not ok.
Another one is when a player is using a deck that specifically counters yours, but then gets annoyed when you pay them more attention with removals. A good case of this was when I was in a three person game, and player C was the main threat. However, player B had Mother of Machines helming the deck, and I was playing ETBs as my main strategy. I stated multiple times that will have to remove MoM every time it hits the battlefield, because that’s the only way I can even play. He got incredibly annoyed when I kept to my word, even though I’d given ample warning, and stated that I can’t even begin to address player C if MoM is preventing me from doing anything other than play lands. It was a very frustrating experience, and player C (who won) actually said to me afterwards he felt I’d been unduly yelled at for what was the expected progression of the game.
As someone that’s played Magic, Warhammer (40K and AoS), and video games (semi professionally), I try not to say good game. I’ll typically say something more personalized like “thank you for the game” or “wow you totally had me” or “I could not find any more X” or something. It’s more genuine and helps to build up the community. Of course there are some people that’ll rage no matter what, and letting that roll off your back is a huge part to being in the game too. Giving them a second and seeing if they want to talk about the game is always a nice way to “talk shop.”
That’s just my experience though and I admittedly don’t go hard in any kind of tournaments as I’d rather spend the time with my family.
Went to a Bloomburrow pre-release with a buddy, neither of us have played in an event in like 10+ years. We actually got matched up round 1 and I beat him 2-0, but we were having fun and treated the loss as an opportunity to go back and tweak the cards in his deck. He ended up going 6-0 in rounds 2, 3, 4, and had a better final record than me.
@9:00
Surely "stop playing" or "take a little break" is quite possibly the best response to wotc making stuff like Nadu.
It's about equal parts distancing yourself from a meta you don't want to play in vs voting with your wallet.
People can shout & wave their arms about how badly designed nadu is, but that ain't gonna do anything. People still buying mh3 off the shelves? Nadu stays.
The only time wotc bans nadu is when they decide it's their idea to do so, or when they look at their figures and think "holy crap! Where did all our modern players go?"
As far as I see it, every person stepping away or taking a little break from modern is helping to make the latter of those happen sooner rather than later.
But us stepping away doesn't stop the sale of MH3, because even non-modern players will be scouting for choice cards for either the cash or for commander.
The amount of modern players could drop to 0 tomorrow and it would have 0 impact on sales.
So what then, when you can give up everything and still not do anything?
If 100% of modern players quit tomorrow (to run with your scenario), then wotc would have to announce 0% tournament attendance...... that would be hilarious, and would 100% result in a nadu ban.
(Which wouldn't affect the price of the card in any way, since all the commander players would still gobble it up at whatever price it exists at, right?)
But then we're not talking about changing the price of the card. Doesn't matter if it's a $100 rare or a $0.10 common. The existence of the card in modern is not good for the format.
"Surely "stop playing" or "take a little break" is quite possibly the best response to wotc making stuff like Nadu." no because then they just keep making that stuff and your opinion isn't being heard. be vocal about aspects of the game you don't like just do it constructively. if everyone stopped playing modern wotc wouldn't go 'oh i guess we'd better be more careful about how we design modern cads' they'll just stop supporting modern.
That's not what I'm saying.
I'm not saying "don't be vocal about it".
You can be very vocal about it whilst stepping away from playing a particular format for a little while; the two are not mutually exclusive.
What I'm saying is that merely being vocal about it is not the best way to make change in a format.
Look at standard: the changes that have been sweeping that format didn't happen because people were vocal, they happened because people stepped away & stopped playing the format.
@@namdoolb and continuing to play while being vocal is even better. the best, even. you're going to be more informed on what's actually happening and what's continuing to be problematic. what's more likely to ge wotc's attention, every competitive player at every event thinking and saying 'yeah this is fine, nothing needs to change' or every event being bombarded with and overshadowed by complaints from its competitors? because cards in modern do get played in other formats. some modern players not buying the cards isn't going to affect sales, its not standard where 80% of the cards are chaff they're getting chased for and played in other formats.
I actually left a Friday Night Magic draft back in the day because of how rude the other players were. Actually went up against a kid who was like 13 and extremely rude in the way he acted and talked. I conceded the best of three and he was being insulting. I was 18 at the time and just starting college. I scooped up my cards walked over to the owner and told him I’d never be back if that’s was a representation of the players and how they acted. He didn’t say anything and I never went back to that place. Thankfully I found a much more enjoyable pickup group on campus.
WRT saying/emoting "good game", it all depends on the timing, amount, and which side says it first. There is such a thing as being a sore winner. Being GG'd multiple times by an opponent while I'm still taking actions is why I normally have emotes muted. I've had the table equivalent as well, where an opponent has offered their hand because they're so full of themselves and their board state. Thankfully, the stink eye is usually enough to make them retract their hand and sit back until the round is truly over.
ok but who is the streamer who tilted over a 14 y/o lol
By all accounts he's a nice guy. Just got tilted over Nadu. Has admitted his short coming and wanting to be better. I feel like the mtg community loves to tear people apart :/
@@MisanthropicCurmudgeonAs someone who was one match win from top 8 but ran into Nadu with perfect hands... I don't get it. The kid didn't design Nadu.
That being said I remember beating a guy when I was 14 and he cried about the elo hit he will take. Different times same people.
d00mwake
lmao he was being such a baby abt it. the kid didn’t design the card lolb
@@MisanthropicCurmudgeonGoing off on a child directly contradicts being a nice guy. Guess what plenty of people struggle with mental illness and don't go off on literal children.
I'm a control player in any card game I play so I have to deal with salt often, the worst was when I stole the win from my opp in game 3 of a digimon regional. He was getting steadily more upset as the game went on insulting me for being "the type of player to bring that s***t", saying stuff like wow can't even afford to max it when he saw I some of my lower rarity cards. needless to say it culminated in the opp accusing me of cheating because I top decked a restricted cards you can only run 1 of saying I multiples and asked to see my deck to clarify. I firmly just said no but I'm more than happy to have a judge come over and do so. (yeah after getting it checked there was no issue with my deck)
GG is the 'best regards,' at the end of the email. It's there to say 'thanks for choosing to spend some of your time on this interaction with me'
For every game I start with a sol ring, I have 1 that I get a 1 lander. And for every game I get a land, sol ring, arcane signet and land tax, I get a game that I can't draw my second land. Sometimes RNGesus is on your side and sometimes it isn't. It's part of the game.
Strongly suggest people try "Chicago style" commander. It's a house rule that's been spreading around Illinois which has players shuffle two basic lands and put them under their commander. Then "any time a player would draw a card from their library, and the top card hasn't been recently manipulated (i.e. Someone knows what the top card is going to be) that player may instead draw from one of the two lands under their commander."
That sounds pretty cool for lower power commander. I do have a storm deck that if that rule was standard it would only run those two lands, though, which might get a bit silly
I'm a commander player but your videos provide more insight then brainstorm and more value then rhystic study.
It's not rude to say Good Game. Even when it's not a good game, it's sportsmanship. As someone who get salty seeing it as a bad game, that's on me, not the person saying Good Game. Don't let anyone tell you how to use the game's predetermined, nearly impossible to actually be toxic (spam aside) communications to speak with your opponent; they know how to turn off emotes. If they have no emotional control, that ain't on you! Besides, getting salty every now and then is good for you. In person, always polite to extend a hand, if they connect, smile and let them know you enjoyed the game. If they flip the table, honestly that's a W long as you've got ULTIMATE GUARD CARD SLEEVES, your shield against Actual Toxicity!
Kinda dumb to talk about sportsmanship with an opponent you don’t see face to face. If it wasn’t a good game, I.e. they got mana screwed, and they don’t say GG first then keep your emote trap shut. You may think you’re being sportsmanlike but you are just rubbing it in.
Honestly, the winner should never say GG first unless it was close. Let the loser decide if they want further interaction.
The loser saying GG is sportsmanship. The winner doing it is gloating.
Sportsmanship is great, but sometimes it isn't a good game and lying about that is worse than just being honest about it.
Sometimes its not even close, those tend to not be good games.
@@alexandercastleberry480 Don't be a salty little cry-baby.
I usually say "gg", whether I win or lose. Sportsmanship matters even if you can't see the other person. The fact that saying it when I win upsets emotionally stunted children and doesn't upset normal people makes it even better.
@@hamsandwich6685 It's not lying, it's just a formality. It doesn't literally mean that it was a good game, it's just a way of thanking you opponent for playing.
It's like starting a letter/email with "dear [name]" even if you don't actually have a close relationship with the person.
@@hughmortyproductions8562 i value genuine sincerity, personally, so i work to offer others that.
Formality or not, i think being honest is better.
Part of being honest could even mean saying something like "i dont handle losing like this well, i dont think that was a good game though" and its perfectly justified honesty when your opponent rolls you and you didn't even dent them.
My personal belief has always been that it's on the losing player to say good game, extend the hand, etc. As the winning player, if you do it, it can seem like you are trying to needle them a little, even if it's not what you actually intended. This is especially true if the opponent is hard tilting. If you say good game after they mulled to 5 twice and got mana screwed both times, it just comes off as ingenuine. What I will say if that happens though, is sorry for their draws. We've all been there, and it sucks.
I would have one quibble with this which is that magic is a game which contains lots of elements which make people tremendously salty naturally - its an intellectual puzzle you can solve but its extremely hard, in 1v1 this almost necessarily implies having been "outsmarted" by your opponent. People stake a lot of their own self worth on their own perceived intelligence and losing creates a knock to their psyche. Add in every other natural thing about competition - the randomness means someone "worse" can beat you and its unsurprising people get salty. I also think overwhelmingly we forget how it feels to lose and then feel that our opponent is being ungracious about it if someone is new to magic and their opponent stomps them and then smiles and says GG (or online where its just an anonymous GG) its very hard to perceive that as anything other than patronising. If you win and win handily I think you have a duty to your opponent to actually be kind and not just be nice, and commiserate with them if they drew badly etc. I want to observe that because I think magic players have a habit of dismissing this conversation by describing it as manchildren being salty at losing as opposed to the natural human reaction to losing and not meeting your own expectations and that there is in fact bad behaviour all around the table
None of this excuses flipping the table or being an arsehole to a 14 year old on the best deck. We should socially punish (and punish at tournaments) behaviour like that. When I was debating competitively at university, tournaments had equity policies and codes of conduct you signed up to on registration. It was basically just like a standard set of "be kind to one another rules" which enabled tournaments to kick people out for bad or bigoted behaviour. I'd be interested to know if magic has a similar type of thing I certainly think policies like that do a great deal of work to make the environment fairer and more fun for everyone, as well as encouraging camaraderie between players.
I'd also add, there's people in my own life I refuse to play 1v1 magic with because they cannot help but bitch about the experience of RNG or having their board interacted with to the point that you avoid making the correct decision in a game because they might get salty, I don't know how to remove those people from magic but I sure would like to.
I think with letting folks search for a basic when they're down in commander is perfectly fine so long as it's not happening every time. I think we've all had those moments where you're just miles behind everyone else at the table and not having any fun because of it. CEDH aside, I see commander as more of a "play the game to have fun (and yes there will be a winner and some losers that's just how games work)" type of format, as opposed to a "play the game to win" kind of format so letting someone who is behind and maybe not enjoying themselves because of it get some kind of helping hand isn't that big of a deal if it makes the game more fun for everyone playing
I played in a draft, and some kid, maybe 13, was my 2nd round opponent, and every turn i took, he just yelled, "Are you done yet???!?!" After 4 or 5 out bursts, I sat my deck down and said, "I'll tell you when im done, " and just sat deck down for a few minutes smiling. He stormed out of the store. 😅
I was playing mono green stompy against an opponent on Amulet titan a few years ago, they scooped on turn 3 game one and on game two they started to brag about stabilizing after playing a sideboard hornet queen. I managed to top deck a rancor and kill them regardless. They scooped it up, i offered a good game, they said "Not really" ignored the handshake and dropped the tournament.
Gg is said by the losing side first. That gives the winning side the cue to reciprocate. Because winning implies a good game.
honestly my response lately has been "Best of luck in your next games", because personally, win or lose, I'm there to play for the challenge. I don't weigh winning as heavily, rather I want to have a great back and forth with my opponent. A duel or a pod of naught but slog after slog, til the last life is spent. When I have 1v1 commander at my LGS, if I get absolutely bulldozed, I shrug and laugh it off. Can't blame my opponent for bringing his best. It's really about the mentality, and how to gracefully win and lose.
I mostly agree with your opinion on this. The only small note is that for example in League of Legends "gg" is often used as a bm. In the end of game one gg is respectful and nothing wrong with that. Saying it in middle of a game after a fight is meant for bm and tilting the opponent or the person saying is naive. Spamming it is just toxic. And then there is the context which can modify the saying multiple ways. I am from Finland and I don't want to waste my time saying something that matters little. So I never say gg in online games. Waste of time. In real life I might thank the opponent for the game, but usually I start talking to them about the game or the event and wish them good luck for next. Me being thankful for the game is implied from me still chatting to them and me wishing good luck more meaningful for the next game is only about to happen and can be changed with positive attitude, where our game is in the past and bit meaningless to be polite about it. Won't change the result.
I always try to make small talk with my opponent after a game, and especially if I can tell things aren't going well I ask about their deck and what strategy they're using, etc. But I have the advantages of playing at a local game store where everybody knows me, and being someone that people naturally have an easy time talking with.
That said, we do have some players who can get pretty salty if things aren't going their way and I've seen them drop out of events after losing a round or scoop if a Commander game turns against them, and there just isn't much to do about it. They're adults, and it's not the responsibility of other players to manage their emotions. We just have to let them go.
I'm usually good at keeping things light but I do get slightly frustrated because the friend I always play with who got me into magic likes to politic and target me regardless of whether or not I'm the threat or have any board state built up. So, I do get frustrated but then I'll take a break by podding up with other folks. 🤷♂️ That's why having a community at an LGS helps so much.
My absolute fave case of dealing with a salty player was the guy in the pod who got Very Salty about someone popping off with a combo in commander... that required around 22 mana's worth of permanents and a minimum of eight lands in hand. In a slightly modified starter deck (the BLB gruul one, with the sol ring dropped for another on-theme enchantment). I wasted no time in pointing out that his own Grixis deck (Missy) was specifically built around setting up and winning via an infinite combo.
Best part was one game later when we switched decks and he popped off with Missy... winning the game for the previous game's gruul player, because he forgot she had Syr Konrad on the board and every loop of his infinite burned everyone but her for 4.
That said I'd been the saltlord myself in the past-- usually when I'm targeted to the point where it feels like I'm not getting as much of a chance to play (i.e. my deck is a grouphug deck built around my commander, who gets countered two or three times in a row by the same player after tapping out to recast him).
tbh I feel like the right thing in that situation is to just apologise afterwards for getting a little tilted and move on to the next game, especially in commander.
On the note of Nadu though. If it really makes you upset, just play stax pieces to shut it down. Play mana breach, overwhelming splendor, winter orb, and the like. Revoke their ability to enjoy it. If you're not willing to do that, then just play around it or play with someone else. 🤷♂️
It used to be almost reflex and ritualistic for me to say it after every game. Then I faced one opponent that muttered back “Was it?” after I beat them.
I’m now more careful about it and say “Thanks for the game” as my go to instead, and save the GG for actual good games.
Playing (American) Football as a kid in the 90's, we we're always told to say good game to the other team regardless of how the game went. Likewise the other team would always also say good game regardless of how the game went. Because even if we won 42-0, it's sporting to be sympathetic to the other team, and acknowledging that they probably played their best.
Man I went to a pioneer event and the guy running the event was calling me out and being rude for no reason (was my first time playing at that store). I ended up winning against him with a card (slip out the back). He talked trash to me, he had a buy the last round and spent the whole round talking to my opponent in the game I was playing about how bad my deck was and how it’s such a bad ruling that you can phase out creatures at instant speed. Not sure what that even means. I ended up winning that event and haven’t been back since. It sucks and it’s really bad when it’s the guy running the event that’s a salt lord.
I would never get salty with another player because they did something that targeted me specifically or got me knocked out early. I'd usually take it with pride like saying I got targeted because I had a good board state or I was the most threatening player at the table so they had to take me out early. And if I couldn't get my combo off, then I'd blame the luck of the draw or just my own deck building.
The only thing that would fire me up is if an opponent conceded when they lost superiority in some way, not that they were losing but, if I just blew up something big on their board.
Because my play style is a little more defensive, I'd usually go most of a game with little to no board and especially on arena, when my board ends up being threatening, my opponent just scoops. It's super frustrating because I play the game to play the game and it seems like everyone else is just trying to win.
Good game means = thanks for your time and I respect you as player, no hard feelings.
Good game is to me the equivalent of “thank you for the game.” GG I usually reserve for friends I play with regularly and only online.
I moved to fist bumps over a decade back and it made a huge difference to my health. People are generally familiar with and ok with it :)
I don't think I ever say "good game" to an opponent in earnest. I would argue it's not even a politeness thing. It's either out of habit, or (much more often) a way to throw underhanded shade. If I'm saying/typing gg or good game after a match to an opponent (in any kind of competitive game), it's almost 100% because that opponent was being cocky or shitty during a game that I won and I want to throw it in their face a bit in a cheeky way. If I'm earnestly wanting to be polite or respectful to the opponent after the game, I'll either say nothing, or say "thanks for the game" or "great game" or "really close game" or something along those lines.
For me personally, in a 1v1 setting in a competitive or casual setting, I tend to go the extra mile and ask firstly if they are alright, if they seem like they are starting to tilt out. But I am a weirdo, and then depending on there response see if there is some constructive feedback I can give them, mostly by asking them more questions about what made them salty in the first place. And then it’s as simple as just having a conversation with the other player
I myself also can get quite salty at MtG and other competitive games, and more often than not I am salty because I don’t understand something about what went on in the game, and would be looking for feedback myself. But I know not everyone even knows what feedback to give, and a lot of the time I just need to vent to someone who at least can understand why I was getting tilted.