Origins

The other weekend I played in the MTG Origins prerelease agent. I’ve been going to these regularly now, and either I’m getting better or my opponents are getting worse because for the last few times I’ve won prizes. This time was no different.

I decided even before attending – and not knowing anything about the set – that I was going to choose black if given a choice. And so I was, and so I did. In events like these it’s virtually impossible to make a monocoloured deck and it was quickly apparent after opening my additional boosters (that came in the box with a pack of all black cards) that white would be my second colour.


The deck virtually made itself since I had a low of low cost white creatures with the new mechanic Renown (including 3 Topan Freeblades and 2 War Oracles) in addition to 3 each of these two cards:


More than a quarter of my entire deck consisted of copies of the above four cards! This would serve me well, and I easily dispatched almost all my opponents (most of whom chose blue as their colour). Of the 9 matches I played, I won 7. This was enough to get me 2nd place and a prize of 3 booster packs.

But let’s talk about my third opponent, the guy that beat me 2-1. Let’s talk about him…

Firstly, he had a playmat and sleeved cards. The sleeves are not at all unusual (I use sleeves for instance) but he made a point of telling me – even before introducing himself – that both came from a tournament he played in. He was very serious about everything (which is unusual at such events) and I could tell he very much wanted to win. I was tired and chilling out and bemused by his approach.

He insisted on rolling the dice to see who starts himself (typically each player rolls individually) and shuffling my entire deck rather than cutting. He kept a sheet of paper on which he recorded life that he had obviously printed himself since it had separate columns for sources of damage (so he was recording things like ‘-4 combat’, ‘-2 sorcery’ etc). After my first use of mana he reached across the table and turned my lands so they were exactly 90 degrees when tapped! It was surreal.

But then it got worse. I leisurely picked up my graveyard to flip through it and he actually said “Pause game. Are you looking through your graveyard?” He actually said the words ‘pause game’ out loud! And then when I confirmed (obviously) that I was, he called for a judge, to which he asked if it was against the rules for him to ask me what colour I chose at the start of the tournament.

The judge said yes it was and he shouldn’t ask me but by then it was irrelevant. I was irked. I was irked. So I ignored the judge and said “I chose black, but my deck is mostly white. It has 16 land, 14 creatures and ten spells, and is mostly based around fast white renowned creatures. Would you like to know anything else?”

I could tell this irritated him, but I didn’t care. He was taking a casual event far too seriously. The rest of our games were mostly silent πŸ™‚

He ended up beating me. I won the first game easily (which made him icy) but the second was very close. I should have won convincingly except for the fact I misread the above card, thinking it was destroyed when the second ability was used (and therefore I didn’t use it every turn as I should). Although he beat me, he had only 2 life left at the end. We were therefore even going into the third match, in which I was mana-screwed and soundly defeated. These things happen.

I’ve gone to many of these events and never come even close to playing someone this irritating (did I mention he announced out loud every phase change like “Entering post combat phase”). It’s guys like him that give MTG a bad name.

Good thing there’s guys like me there to keep it cool  πŸ˜‰

5 Responses to “Origins”

  1. Bernard says:

    It’s been a while since I played, but you are allowed to look through your graveyard at any time right?

    I think given the style of playing we used to do, we would have had a lot of fun with that guy.

    I wonder what if he would have done if you started making sound effects when tapping land, casting spells and attacking? πŸ™‚

  2. mycroft says:

    Maybe he was deliberately being a jerk. Maybe his brain just works like that and he couldn’t help it. Either way, it sounds unpleasant.

    At the last tournament I attended, there was a young guy who seemed downright apologetic about attacking his opponent. He kept saying things like, “I’m sorry, but this is war.” It takes all sorts πŸ™‚

  3. Florence says:

    I laughed so hard when I read your post, then I really lost it once I hit the comments. I wish I had been there!!!!

    When I played against techno viking one time he reached across the table and made sure all my lands were tapped at 90 degrees, following it up with something like “it’s respectful to your opponent to tap your lands at 90”. He invaded my personal bubble!!!! I was so mad…

  4. Robert says:

    I remembered after making the post the one thing about this guy that irked me the most: the lands in his neck were all FOIL. This meant he brought them himself, which meant he must have brought about 90-100 lands with him since he couldn’t have known what colour he was going to play!

    I wonder if he cleared it with the judge in advance that he could use his own lands? πŸ™‚

    AW: didn’t you tell me a story once about you or Rob intentionally making noises while tapping or tuning the cards 180 degrees or something? Wasn’t there also one time you (or Bernard or Rob or Pat) insisted on browsing graveyards every single turn just to psyche the opponent?

    This was wasn’t being clever by the way. He was just an ass πŸ™‚

  5. mycroft says:

    The sound-effects artist was a guy named PH. He ran a (multiland-assisted) three/four-colour deck based around Circles Of Protection, with some combination of Goblin Artillery, Hurricane, Pestilence, etc. as the kill cards. It changed over time. Shouldn’t have worked, except that he played and played the thing, honing it for the local metagame. So anyway, you’d find yourself losing to the crazy pile AND having to listen to P.’s special noises for various cards, e.g. the GA would “click-click” to load, then “boom” to fire. Just as well he was a likeable chap.

    The graveyard story doesn’t press any buzzers. Maybe B. told ya that one.