I don’t understand the Tatyova argument of „goes infinite then doesn’t do anything“. What happens there? What situations is this talking about? I don’t agree with most things said about Tatyova, the landtappers are great, the combos are pretty thight, always felt very good playing the deck idk xD
It was popular around the start of 2022 but then it just kinda fell off. We would love to see more pilots for the deck to see what newer players can do it. It's a slower pinger deck in a world where everything is just faster.
I disagree with the TPI take. Not having a definitive version makes it less predictable because you sit down across from it and aren't sure what version you're facing. Sure, if you're always facing the same person in your local meta or always facing Ryan with his midrange list, then you know which version it is. However, confusion about how combo-y the deck was played a big role in TPI winning Riches to Rags.
@Paul-Scarecrow1779 Definitely understand your take. It does allow for a great surprise factor. Not knowing will allow for some great tricks. Although, in theory, they should all have the same flaws through the token generation.
Great insights!
I don’t understand the Tatyova argument of „goes infinite then doesn’t do anything“. What happens there? What situations is this talking about?
I don’t agree with most things said about Tatyova, the landtappers are great, the combos are pretty thight, always felt very good playing the deck idk xD
Have you played against Tor Wauki yet? I think that deck Is great and worthy of a spot :)
It was popular around the start of 2022 but then it just kinda fell off.
We would love to see more pilots for the deck to see what newer players can do it.
It's a slower pinger deck in a world where everything is just faster.
I disagree with the TPI take. Not having a definitive version makes it less predictable because you sit down across from it and aren't sure what version you're facing. Sure, if you're always facing the same person in your local meta or always facing Ryan with his midrange list, then you know which version it is. However, confusion about how combo-y the deck was played a big role in TPI winning Riches to Rags.
@Paul-Scarecrow1779 Definitely understand your take. It does allow for a great surprise factor. Not knowing will allow for some great tricks. Although, in theory, they should all have the same flaws through the token generation.
Is there a primer for malcolm kediss?
www.moxfield.com/decks/oXbkSrbw1kKMnHJDnhNF3g/primer
Dang no Konrad :(
@@aaroncaskaddon5902 Not there yet. Stay tuned for part 2.