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Beware! Trolls!

The Russian tech expert is here to help you find a way to break the metagame for this weekend’s Kansas City Open. Bring on the trolls!

These days are amazing for players and deckbuilders. Standard metagame significantly shifts every week, and there is still a lot of space for innovation. Today I’m presenting the deck that, I believe, will be the best at the Standard portion of the SCG Open in the City of Fountains. Finding the right way between Dungrove Elder and Snapcaster Mage, I came to the conclusion that Cudgel Troll is the best creature in Standard right now. Therefore, this article is mostly about trolls, and you’ll find two of them in my decklists.

Sea Troll or Surfing Through the Metagame

Mono Red was over the top just three weeks ago, and now this deck is barely playable. A week later, Brian Sondag R/G Wolf Rump walked over the corpses of Solar Flare, showing itself to be the perfect example of “next week’s deck.” Brian’s deck unsurprisingly ended as the most popular choice among top 8s of States. Mono-Black Infect, Wolf Run Green, and Township Tokens emerged as high-level decks at the SCG Open: Baltimore top 8 some days later. History is unfolding before our eyes, and I think that Standard is far from equilibrium now.

The coexistence of Kessig Wolf Run decks clearly shows the metagame’s diversity. These decks will probably evolve independently (as did Valakut and Eldrazi Ramp) because, while having similar ideas, they have different weaknesses and different good matchups. Moreover, some players are trying to splash mana ramp for additional colors or even use colorless cards. I expect a little decrease of aggressive strategies in favor of U/B Control, so Dungrove Elder will be the weapon of choice for green mages, as it was in the finals of SCG Open: Baltimore.

The best choice for tomorrow’s tournament should have good matchups against U/B Control and Primeval Titan decks. Moreover, it should be able to win very fast, before Titans (either green or black) come and ruin our day. Mono-Black Infect must also be considered as an important part of the test gauntlet, but I don’t think that it will be extremely popular, despite the fact that deck is actually good. So, I‘m planning to adapt for Infect and other decks with the sideboard, while the key is successful opposition of Mono-Green and U/B.

Albino Troll or the Echo

Now it’s time for the little flashback. Yesterday was a year since my very first article was published here as a part of the StarCityGames.com Talent Search. I am very pleased to write here, and I want to thank Ted Knutson, all the SCG team, and all my readers for this great adventure and amazing opportunity!

P.S. To be honest, the best part of writing was the motivation to overcome my laziness and to start improving my English.

P.P.S. I’m pretty sure that Lauren started hysterically laughing or hysterically crying at this point. Someday I will submit an article without grammar problems. I promise! [I’m going to remember this! —LL]

When I realized that anniversary was coming soon, I surfed MTG-related websites to determine if my work had some influence. Okay, I was ready to find nothing, but something has actually been found. (Un)surprisingly, my most discussed deck was U/W/R Allies—funny, casual-friendly, and very interesting to play.


The deck was able to overrun opponents very fast, while not being afraid of sweepers. Titans were problematic, but they were not relevant at the time when I built Allies. Real threats—the devastating Day of Judgment and Gideon Jura—were easy to avoid for a sufficient amount of time.

Seeing this list now, I want to sell my soul to Mephistopheles Rosewater in exchange for Mana Tithe’s reprint in Dark Ascension. A good one-mana counterspell is crucial for aggro-control decks. R/U/G Snapcaster Mage / Werewolves can play many counterspells, but it is relatively slow and has a weak late game against U/B, so this choice is out of consideration.

After some tests with different blue decks, I convinced myself that I don’t want to play Mana Leak over Gavony Township; so the deck that I wanted to build slightly took its form: G/W aggro, fast enough to outrace Inkmoth Nexus, and powerful enough to provide more early pressure than control decks could digest.

Charging Troll

Township Tokens is the most popular G/W deck, but it is definitely not my deck of choice. Why? It’s slow midrange with its best second drop being Intangible Virtue and is full of cards like Shrine of Loyal Legions—powerful at the proper time, but useless in the late game (where the deck will end up because of the lack of early aggression). Do you want to convince me to play such a deck in a metagame full of Titans?

Remember the token generators used in the famous B/W Token deck. Spectral Procession and Cloudgoat Ranger. And… Kithkin wasn’t considered a “token deck” while having the same cards. It is because Spectral Procession, Cloudgoat Ranger, and Windbrisk Heights were great and high-value cards by themselves and especially in combination. Midnight Haunting is not close to Spectral Procession, so why should I play it?

Only two good token generators are available right now—Hero of Bladehold and Blade Splicer—so I tried to build something with these cards when I saw the deck from the finals of GP Brisbane. I was immediately sold. I’ve tested the deck and realized that, despite seven manadorks, it still has problems providing early pressure. I also put Thrun, the Last Troll into the maindeck: old troll is just a perfect threat against any control deck, and fast mana allows Thrun to swing early.

After additional tweaks and ruthless cuts of all singletons and narrow cards, my deck looked something like this:


I don’t recommend playing this deck, and it’s easy to understand why: The mana curve is far from even “acceptable.” The second problem is that Blade Splicer is not as good as I wanted her to be, so I decided to add some swords. The draft then looked somehow similar to Geist of Saint Traft decks, but Thrun is so much better than the hexproofed ghost, so I never looked back. Bant decks weren’t even considered: I know they exist, but I don’t want to play three-colored aggro in this format.

The comparison with Geist decks led me to an interesting statement: if I want my token deck to provide early pressure, I should agree that Thrun, the Last Troll under Angelic Destiny is the best token! Obviously, swords and powerful enchantments only worsened the mana curve problem, especially when I added four Mirran Crusaders (who are industry standard in Angelic Destiny decks).

To solve this problem, I decided to cut all the Splicers and then run a search on the StarCityGames.com spoiler generator, searching for a two-mana creature for the replacement of Elspeth Tirel (who is too slow to fit into the new deck). I intended to try them all, or almost all. I ended up with a huge amount of options, which would never properly fit into the sixty-card restriction.

Search Results

I didn’t know how to clearly show the mana curve problem until Lauren Lee showcased an amazing tool for sealed decks to the SCG authors. First, I looked through the letter without significant attention—I don’t intend to write Limited articles—but later I realized that this tool is just amazing. So, I’m introducing “Build your own G/W Aggression!” This “sealed pool” is primarily to build a green-based deck with many mana dorks, but I also included additional cards (like Champion of the Parish and Grand Abolisher) to allow building of a white-based deck (for the comparison of both versions).

Notes:

  1. Use the “cost” button in the upper-right corner of the pool to sort by mana curve;
  2. there is some free space under the pool to hide my own build until you try to build the deck;
  3. there are many real sealed pools on Lauren’s blog (Mulldrifting.com if you somehow don’t know). They are amazing as practice for Limited PTQs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Uthden Troll (just because he’s soooo cute)

Okay, you’ve probably tried to build some decks (hope you had fun), and now it’s time to show my own attempt.


Was your maindeck similar to mine? I would be glad to see your comments about differences. There are some controversial slots, but overall I’m very pleased with these seventy-five.

Jade Mage is not exciting, but she is a two-mana creature, and she is better than Viridian Emissary as a midgame topdeck. They both are annoying threats against control. Although I can see Mayor of Avabruck in these slots in some circumstances, Jade Mage is good for me right now. Simultaneously, Skinshifter definitely does not belong in this deck because his ability costs mana each turn, while the deck tends to use as much mana as possible. Mentor of the Meek is just a “random creature”: I don’t want to play more than one, but I also don’t want to play just one Blade Splicer, and I don’t want to play a two-mana creature instead of Mentor.

Garruk, Primal Hunter is the most controversial point. Elspeth is definitely too slow and useless in many matchups, but both Garruks are viable choices. I finally stopped on Primal Hunter because he is so stupidly good against control decks. But the other one should definitely be used if Infect becomes a serious problem—the ability to “fight” is even better against these anorexic, sick creatures. I thought about playing three copies, but finally decided to run a single Overrun. This card is not the primary win condition, but it’s a good way to take an opponent by surprise.

The sideboard features a lot of different stuff, divided and as wide as possible. There are many two-ofs, which may become less diverse according to metagame. First candidate to cut is Timely Reinforcements (I don’t believe in Mono Red); second one is probably Act of Aggression.

The next point is Mono-Black Infect. You have a ton of removal—Mortarpod (who kills about twelve creatures), Beast Within, Dismember. Keep in mind that the opponent will probably side in Phyrexian Vatmother. The goal in this matchup is to prevent Lashwrithe from being equipped and to remember about the existence of the hasty Dragon (sorry, but I can’t write the Dragon’s name without a billion of mistakes, so I call him just “infected dragon”). Opponent also has a ton of removal and a reasonably fast clock, so this match is not an easy one. Green creatures are good at chump-blocking Phyrexian Crusader (Saprolings!), so your chances will be higher if you’re able to control the skies over the battlefield.

The rest of the sideboard is mostly self-explanatory: options against Inkmoth Nexus ramp (Mortarpod, Beast Within, Act of Aggression, and Leonin Arbiter), against Blade decks (Gideon Jura and Beast Within), and even options against Mono Red (Timely Reinforcements). Leonin Arbiter is probably better than Mana Leak against Wolf Run decks: he delays land drops for the turn, but he also adds a 2/2 body!

The last and the most interesting tech that I found in the spoiler generator is Suture Priest. Turn-2 Shrine of Loyal Legions? Cool story, bro! Priest is weak by herself (mostly because of opposing Mortarpod), but if you’re able to equip her with sword or at least Mortarpod, she improves significantly. Suture Priest doesn’t win games alone, but with Priest you’ll normally have more threats than your opponent can handle.

The deck has proven itself great and interesting to play during my testing; turn-3 attack for twelve is just unfair, and less powerful starts are normally good enough to punish opponents. Moreover, the deck has enough flexibility to be tuned for almost any metagame. I hope you find it a legitimate choice for SCG Open: Kansas City or for any other way of PWP grinding that you chose for tomorrow. Good luck!

Bonus section: Golgari Grave-Troll

The last but not least for today: I want to congratulate Dmitriy Nikitin and Dmitriy Moiseev, who were respectively 17th and 21st at Legacy Grand Prix Amsterdam. For the record, they were 17th and 34th at Legacy GP Madrid a year ago, and now they proved themselves as well-respected Eternal specialists on this side of the Atlantic Ocean. You can find Nikitin’s R/G/W Aggro Loam in the GP coverage while I want to post Moiseev’s deck right here: his list includes the troll (whom I promised at the beginning of the article).


The deck is full of great and unusual card choices (how about Yosei, the Morning Star?) and very well tuned (Dmitriy is the man who will not stop until his deck is ideal), so I clearly recommend it as a choice for the Legacy part of SCG Open: KC.

That’s all; good luck to everyone playing this weekend!

Valeriy Shunkov

@amartology in Twitter