Becoming a sad man
Becoming a sad man
First – The prequel
This is the
prequel of the sequel. A sad story about a man and his beloved deck. A deck
that was recently ripped apart and sold. This is a obituary of my beloved BW
Eldrazi Processor Deck and the Last words that I’m going to write about it.
Second – what has happened
I was
piloting BW Eldrazi Processor for about 9 months. I instantly knew when I saw
the deck that I was onto something. Playing Thoughtseize, Lingering Souls and
Path to Exile along Wasteland Strangler and Reality Smasher got me. I was
teching the deck, tweaking it, investing a bunch of money into it and now it’s
time to abandon it.
Like I has
written in my last blog, every Brew has something to pick up and learn from.
And I’ve learnt a lot from this deck. Wether it’s sideboarding, playing crazy
1-ofs, decisions that were made and won games, understanding Modern as a format
at a higher level, all these things and much more.
But it’s not only about learning and adapting, Magic is also about change – a chapter I’ve learned the frustrating way as I was struggling to came out of my “It’s all about bolting you - Mantra” (all decks I’ve played earlier needed Lightning Bolt).
Third – what has changed
In 3 words:
The Modern Format.
Not that this uncommon in any way, but the last Bannings
pissed me off. I instantly knew that banning Troll and Gitaxian Probe punted my
Brew out of competitive Modern.
Not only
because 2 great Matchups vanished, a bunch of other bad Matchups popped up.
Wether it was Storm Combo, Titanshift or Eldrazi Tron, the winds of Change left
me broken (just kidding).
Afterwards I
chipped in a bunch of even more win-Streaks, but that wasn’t enough to change
my mind. Fighting uphill is a challenge I’ll accept every day and night, but
this is not supposed to be an uphill battle – it’s a slaughter, a total mess.
Literally racing every Deck in the format is no joke – this task is up to
another Deck.
So changes
are good, but when I settled down and rage started fading away I summarized what needed to be done. There’s one big hole in the Deck – a problem
I was very aware of from the beginning on.
Fourth – the Hole
There’s one
Card in the deck that lost a lot of it’s power along the last bannings.
Relic of
Progenitus.
Look at it.
Dredge was dropping instantly. Jund was fading away because it couldn’t keep up
with Eldrazi’s sheer Power and Tron’s Resurgence. Infect kept many decks in
check. It has gone too. A bunch of more things changed in the Meta leading
towards the point that BW Eldrazi was positioned quite bad.
The
disruption was lacking (the other problem).
A single
Thoughtseize couldn’t keep up with a deck full of 5/5 Monsters and Ulamog’s and
what not. Pair this with the problem that this deck wasn’t able to present a
fast clock – there were exceptions to this rule, but they had been rare.
Finally
Lingering Souls was lackluster.
This is tough, but Souls lost a lot of it’s impact.
Most of the time I was in need of a real clock. Instead I had a 3-Mana 2/2 or
5-Mana 4/4 – that is not enough to keep up with the format’s power level and
speed. In Fact I was able to fight through all this problems and had a “fighting
chance”, but the amount of problems was increasing constantly.
I battled
through Wurmcoil Engines, Ulamog’s, Primeval Titan and so forth, but the point
in time that these Matchup’s become the Format’s Tier-1-Section is the point in
time that is worth a recap, and this recap wasn’t great.
There are a
bunch more reasons to mention, but I won’t get into detail because I want to
motivate (not de-motivate) people to pick up this deck.
Fifth – The Good things
Every loss
is a win. I try to look at it this way and learnt my lesson.
I’ll give
some more hints, tips whatever you’ll call it for future Reality Smasher’s.
The
deck accels in Meta’s with classic Midrange-Decks (everything that runs
Tarmogoyf), Aggro (Affinity, Burn to some extent, Dredge, Zoo, Living End to
some extent) and Control (with the exception of UW Control – this one packs so
much removal, it isn’t even funny).
It’s
weaknesses are the fast / resilient Combo-Decks (Storm, Ad Nauseam) and Ramp
(Eldrazi, Tron).
There are a
couple of differences in some builds, most notably the switch from Matter
Reshaper to Tidehollow Sculler. I don’t intend to piss my reader’s off, but
Tidehollow Sculler is a plain bad Card.
The
advocates of Sculler Always highlight that it’s disruption with legs. A 2/2
attached to a Thoughtseize (or vice versa). The bad news (and this one is the
critical point on this one): It costs Black-White Mana.
To be able
to put him down Turn 2 (Turn 4+ he becomes a bad joke in my opinion) someone
need to tweak the manabase this way, that a couple of utility lands must be cut
(Ghost Quarter, Mutavault, Sea Gate Wreckage, etc.). That is a huge downside –
the utility lands always provide a way of putting useless Mana into something
(Cards, Creatures and so on).
The next
problem: It is a horrendous Topdeck.
In your opener you’ll like him. Really
like him. It’s nothing better than curving Thoughtseize into Sculler into
Thought-Knot Seer. But dumping your hand, than getting handled by Abrupt Decay
and drawing the next one feels bad.
A Reshaper
instead stalls, attacks with 1 more power and nets you a card when killed. I
may be wrong on this one, but I’ve tested Sculler and abandoned it quickly. It’s
just too much deck-warping necessary to put this to work.
Last Words
As always,
my last words.
This deck was (and is still) great. It rewards good knowledge of
the Format, a tight playstyle and good sideboarding. Smashing Faces is always
great and the Value-Town Relic / Souls / Reshaper is nothing your opponent has
to joke about.
I wish I could
have done more to present kinda-like “the new hot tech”, but I must regret – I can’t,
which makes me feel sad. I hope that more people pick this deck up as it’s
quite cheap and runs a bunch of Modern-Staples that still stands on it’s own.
The investment is worth it because literally all cards are part of other
competitive Decks.
Hope you
enjoyed the article and the next week (I hope so) an article about my transition
deck Vengevine Aggro will be released.
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