So Many Insane Plays – Winning In Vintage On a Budget
[SCROLL DOWN TO READ THE ARTICLE!]
Become a StarCityGames.com Premium Member and receive exclusive access to top-level strategies, new decklists and entertaining reports from many of the best players and writers that the game has to offer! This includes "The Innovator" & Worlds finalist Patrick Chapin, 2010 Player of the Year Brad Nelson, Classic Theorist Mike Flores, Hall of Famer Brian Kibler, GP and SCG Invitational Champion Gerry Thompson, StarCityGames.com Director of Sales Ben Bleiweiss ...and many, many more!
PLUS! StarCityGames.com Premium members now have an EXCLUSIVE WEEKLY NEWSLETTER sent just to them with the latest tech, exclusive content and exclusive deals along with unprecedented access into America's largest Magic: the Gathering sales database, and can view lists of StarCityGames.com's top-selling items - broken down by category, format legality, and rarity - in real time! When it comes to trading, increased knowledge equals increased profits - and increased knowledge is just one click away for our Premium members!
A StarCityGames.com Premium Membership gives you exclusive access to the best Magic: the Gathering content available and is an amazing bargain for just pennies a day! When you're ready to start getting more out of this game, click here to join StarCityGames.com Premium today!
If you are a valid StarCityGames.com Premium member and still cannot view the article, please consult this FAQ.
For years I’ve received private messages and emails to write about "budget" decks in Vintage. Although the calls have slowed to a trickle in recent times, they still arrive in one of my many inboxes every now and then. My response has always been the same.
Writing about Vintage with the express purpose of trying to find ways to make Vintage playable to the "budget" player is anathema to me.
This is not because I’m a remorseless cretin. Nor it is economic elitism. Rather, my interest in Magic pretty much centers around my fascination with Vintage as a format. To me, Vintage is a game distilled into its purest elements. It is an elegant dance of logical connectives interacting in scintillating and ingenious ways. Finding ways to make Vintage playable to players based on cost considerations diminishes the beauty and fun of the format to me. That’s why I’ve always been a supporter of proxy tournaments (a proxy is a card modified to represent another card – for example, modifying Welding Jar into Black Lotus. The rules can be found here). I play Magic because I adore Vintage and I hope to convey that feeling to others through my writing. My articles, since the very beginning, were an attempt to speak about a format at its highest level, not at its lowest.
Vintage has always seemed budget impermeable. The format since its inception has been defined by the Power 9, cards whose expense is far out of the range of many players. Although that still remains true, a convergence of unlikely events has now put playing competitive Vintage within reach of virtually all Constructed players: unusual metagame oscillations, ubiquitous proxy tournaments, and the convergence of upper tier archetypes that do not run full power have produced a metagame opportunity where the very best decks can be piloted with minimal power and minimal expense. The very top level competitive Vintage decks are now within reach of virtually all American Constructed players, and many European players as well.
So what are these anomalies? First of all, this is the first time in the history of Vintage where there are multiple top tier decks that can be piloted on five proxies. Second, it is also the first time that the most powerful decks, in terms of raw brutalizing strength and speed, are also the cheapest.
The reasons for this are complex, but can be briefly summarized. With the temporary exceptions usually cut short by waves of restrictions, Mana Drain decks have been at the center of the Vintage metagame since pretty much Brian Weissman’s The Deck. Mana Drain decks fueled Keeper, Psychatog (winning the first Vintage championship in 2003), Control Slaver (winning the third Vintage championship in 2004), and Gifts (winning the fourth Vintage Championship in 2006), each in succession. Mana Drain decks not only had to run most of the power - Black Lotus, 5 Moxen, Ancestral Recall, and Time Walk - but they also ran four Mana Drain and usually a Library of Alexandria, all $100+, big money cards. This put even a bare-bones Mana Drain deck, even with 10 proxies, out of the range of most players. And if Mana Drain decks weren’t ruling the roost, Mishra’s Workshop type decks or fully powered Combo decks based around the $100+ Grim Tutor were the most powerful decks. In short, there has never been a time in Vintage where you could play the best Vintage decks fully powered, optimally built, with ten proxies or less.
Moreover, even if you could in the past, your options were slim. For instance, in 2004, UR Fish - a deck that only ran a handful of power - was crushing major Vintage tournaments, including the first, where three were in Top 8. Historically, in the best case situation, there have been a few (perhaps 2-3) budget-oriented but generally underpowered (at least by Vintage standards) decks that can be made to compete with "the big boys." This is not true today. Not only are there multiple great decks that can be piloted without needing full power and without needing pricy cards like Mishra’s Workshop, Mana Drain, or Grim Tutor, but in fact most of the Tier 1 can be run without needing such cards. Most shockingly, in a ten proxy environment, you can run multiple top tier decks without owning a card that costs over $20.
This is the most opportune time conceivable for budget players to think about playing Vintage. Truth be told, this is not an article that most Vintage "regulars" will be happy to read about. Experienced Vintage players won’t like the prospect of facing you with a deck that you were able to cheaply build that wins on turn 2 through multiple counterspells.
In this article I am going to briefly survey these decks. My hope is that you will be interested in playing these decks in the upcoming StarCityGames.com Mega-Weekend. If you want to win Grand Prix style money, this is your best chance to try Vintage. You can win the next StarCityGames.com Power 9 tournament with a deck that should be cheaper than many Standard decks (thanks, in part, to the expense of Tarmogoyf)!
In Vintage today, it is a common tournament practice to permit players to use proxies, with the understanding that not everyone can afford to buy Black Lotus. Although this is the general custom, it is not the universal custom. DCI sanctioned tournaments, such as the Vintage Championship, do not permit the use of proxies. In addition, many European tournaments will remain no-proxy tournaments. For those players, I will show you decks that can be used to win tournaments without a single power card, or expensive ($50+) old-rare, in them.
The first deck I want to talk about is a deck I’ve been writing about for the last month. That deck is Reveillark Flash.
| Hulk Flash Featured by Stephen Menendian on 2008-04-06 (Vintage) | ||
Artifacts 1 Black Lotus 1 Lotus Petal 1 Mox Emerald 1 Mox Jet 1 Mox Ruby 1 Mox Sapphire Creatures 1 Body Double 1 Body Snatcher 1 Carrion Feeder 1 Mogg Fanatic 4 Protean Hulk 1 Reveillark Instants 1 Ancestral Recall 4 Brainstorm 1 Chain of Vapor 4 Flash 4 Force of Will 1 Misdirection 1 Mystical Tutor 4 Pact of Negation 2 Summoner's Pact 1 Vampiric Tutor |
Sorceries 1 Demonic Tutor 4 Merchant Scroll 2 Ponder 2 Thoughtseize Basic Lands 3 Island Lands 3 Flooded Strand 3 Polluted Delta 2 Tropical Island 2 Underground Sea | 1 Heart Sliver 4 Virulent Sliver 4 Leyline of the Void 1 Hurkyl's Recall 2 Rebuild 3 Reverent Silence |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
This deck has the stamp of brokenness. Under the right conditions, all you need to win the game is two mana. This is the deck that Patrick "The Innovator" Chapin swears by as the best deck in the format. This deck does not run all of the Power 9, nor does it have that many expensive dual lands. (For an overview of how to play this deck, check out my Ultimate Vintage Primer.)
In a ten proxy field, the following cards should be proxied:
1 Black Lotus
1 Ancestral Recall
4 Moxen
2 Tropical Island
2 Underground Sea
That leaves the following expensive cards:
4 Force of Wills. These are available for just over $20 apiece. You can also hit up your friends for these cards, as they are very common, especially if you can find some Legacy players in your area who will let you borrow them for a weekend. Many collectors or casual players will also have a playset of these cards.
3 Flooded Strand
3 Polluted Delta
These cards are the other "expensive" cards from the deck. Again, I would recommend that you scrounge around for them, as these cards were only printed a few years ago and see heavy play in Extended and Legacy as well as Vintage. Unless you live in Sassaskatchwan, you should have little trouble rustling up some of these. In the worst case scenario, you may be forced to run four or five fetchlands instead of six… and that’s fine too. I prefer more fetchlands as shuffle effects, but running a few more basic Islands could actually be the better way to go.
Beyond those cards, the only expensive cards that remain are:
2 Thoughtseize
1 Demonic Tutor
1 Vampiric Tutor
1 Misdirection
Thoughtseize is currently in print. If you play Standard, you probably have these. The other three cards will cost you anywhere from $6 to $15, depending upon the condition and version. Demonic Tutor is a very old card, but it’s also not that rare. It was printed as an uncommon from Revised. If you don’t have one, this is a card you certainly will be able to borrow from anyone who has played Magic for more than a couple of years. Almost every older, casual player will have one of these. You should be able to trade for one for a playable Standard rare and a little something besides.
Vampiric Tutor may be a little harder to acquire, but easier to find. It was legal in Extended for a very long time and has been reprinted in 6th Edition. Once again, although it is a worthwhile Vintage investment for the price, this is a card you should easily be able to borrow.
At the time of Grand Prix: Columbus last year, Flash was being bought up for about $1.50 a piece. It was promptly banned in Legacy and is now only legal in Vintage. While many Vintage players are enjoying Hulk Flash, there simply isn’t the demand there once was for Flash in this format. You should be able to find a Legacy player who still has a playset or four of this card.
Most of the remaining cards from the deck are currently in print: Ponder, Reveillark, Body Double, Pact of Negation, Summoner’s Pact, and Bile Urchin (which you can play over Mogg Fanatic). The remaining cards can be cheaply acquired: Merchant Scroll, Brainstorm, Lotus Petal, and Chain of Vapor are all inexpensive cards.
The sideboard is also easily acquirable. Virulent Slivers can be found laying in used Future Sight draft piles or common boxes at your local shop for pennies. Reverent Silence is a quarter card. Leyline of the Void may be a bit pricier, but it is still a very common card.
It won’t be quite like building White Weenie in Standard, but building Vintage Hulk Flash should be a lot easier than building many Standard decks and probably most Extended Decks. More importantly, it will be a lot more rewarding.
Vintage is unlike any other format. There is no substitute for it strategically, and the thrill you’ll get from playing and winning in this format on a budget is an opportunity you shouldn’t miss! If you have never won a game on turn 1 before, this is your chance!
There are also many substitutes that can go into the deck. If you can’t find a Lotus Petal or absolutely need to proxy another card, Elvish Spirit Guide is just fine as another mana source. He can be tutored up with Summoner’s Pact to help you win in a mana pinch. You can also try to use shocklands instead of duallands if you absolutely must. The additional two life you take from Breeding Pool instead of a Tropical Island should make no difference in the world in the long run. Flash is not about a damage race.
I know some of you don’t play Vintage in proxy tournaments. I haven’t forgotten about you. Here is how I might build Vintage Hulk Flash if you are truly the most budget strapped player:
| Ultra-Budget Hulk Flash Featured by Stephen Menendian on 2008-05-04 (Vintage) | ||
Artifacts 1 Lotus Petal Creatures 3 Elvish Spirit Guide 1 Heart Sliver 4 Protean Hulk 4 Virulent Sliver |
Instants 4 Brainstorm 1 Chain of Vapor 4 Flash 4 Force of Will 1 Mystical Tutor 4 Pact of Negation 2 Summoner's Pact 1 Vampiric Tutor Sorceries 1 Demonic Tutor 4 Duress 3 Merchant Scroll 4 Ponder Basic Lands 4 Island Lands 2 Breeding Pool 4 Flooded Strand 1 Polluted Delta 3 Watery Grave | Stats: Average mana: 1.57 Average creature mana cost: 3.58 Average creature power: 2.92 Average creature toughness: 2.92 Deck Composition: Basic Lands: 6.67% Sorceries: 20.00% Instants: 35.00% Creatures: 20.00% Lands: 16.67% Artifacts: 1.67% |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
This is about as cheap as I can reasonably make this deck, and it’s pretty darn inexpensive. Obviously, upgrades would include:
Thoughtseize over Duress
Tropical Island and Underground Sea over the shock lands
Reveillark combo over Sliver kill
But this deck is still capable of doing amazing things, including winning the game on turn 1 with multiple counter back-up. If you can afford the Reveillark kill, I would strongly recommend it – it should only cost a couple of dollars more.
The next deck I want to share is a deck you are all probably familiar with. It is also a deck that has increasingly performed well in recent Vintage tournaments. It has several variants, which I’ll share with you.
The first is Manaless Ichorid:
| Manaless Ichorid Featured by Stephen Menendian on 2008-05-04 (Vintage) | ||
Artifacts 3 Chalice of the Void 4 Serum Powder Creatures 1 Angel of Despair 2 Cephalid Sage 1 Flame-Kin Zealot 4 Golgari Grave-Troll 4 Golgari Thug 3 Ichorid 4 Narcomoeba 4 Stinkweed Imp 3 Street Wraith Enchantments 4 Bridge from Below 4 Leyline of the Void |
Sorceries 4 Cabal Therapy 3 Dread Return 4 Unmask Lands 4 Bazaar of Baghdad Land Creatures 4 Dryad Arbor | 3 Ancient Grudge 3 Contagion 3 Emerald Charm 4 Reverent Silence 2 Bayou |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
This list placed second in a very large European Vintage tournament, netting the pilot probably a decent amount of prize money. This deck is dirt cheap. The problem here won’t be the expense, as almost everything here can be acquired for well below $5. It will be the effort in rounding up all of these cards that will create the most work.
First of all, Bazaar of Baghdad will need to be proxied. Beyond that, I would use the remaining six proxies to proxy whatever else you can’t find.
My first piece of advice is to find someone who has played Ichorid in Extended and see if you can borrow most of the parts from their deck. Cards like Stinkweed Imp, Dread Return, Cabal Therapy, Bridge From Below, Golgari Grave-Troll, Cephalid Sage, Flame-Kin Zealot, and Narcomoeba can all be found in the Extended decks. In short, well over half the deck can just be imported from the Extended lists. The remaining cards are going to be obscure Vintage oddballs, like Serum Powder, which can be picked up very cheaply, and somewhat more valuable rares like Chalice of the Void, Unmask, or Leyline of the Void. Almost all of the more expensive cards can be replaced with something else. Some players don’t run Chalice or Unmask at all. Take a look at some Vintage Top 8 data or my article archive for other Ichorid lists. Alternatively, just post a question in the Vintage forum to this site and someone will help you out.
If after testing, you decide that this deck is too inflexible for you, I have good news. The Mana Ichorid versions have been doing very well, often winning on turn 1, and are almost as inexpensive for a 10 proxy player.
| Mana Ichorid Variant Featured by Stephen Menendian on 2008-03-16 (Vintage) | ||
Artifacts 1 Black Lotus 1 Lion's Eye Diamond 1 Lotus Petal 1 Mox Sapphire Creatures 1 Angel of Despair 1 Cephalid Sage 1 Flame-Kin Zealot 4 Golgari Grave-Troll 3 Golgari Thug 3 Ichorid 4 Narcomoeba 4 Stinkweed Imp |
Enchantments 4 Bridge from Below Instants 1 Ancestral Recall Sorceries 4 Breakthrough 4 Cabal Therapy 4 Careful Study 3 Dread Return Lands 4 Bazaar of Baghdad 3 Cephalid Coliseum 3 City of Brass 4 Gemstone Mine 1 Underground Sea | 4 Leyline of the Void 4 Chain of Vapor 4 Contagion 3 Emerald Charm |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
The main difference between this deck and the Manaless version is that you’ll have to spend more of your proxy slots on the power cards like Black Lotus and Mox Sapphire. Nonetheless, the remaining cards can be easily acquired. Breakthrough and Careful Study are the two big differences and can be acquired very cheaply indeed.
Once again, if you are playing in a no-proxy environment, fear not! Ichorid can still be yours! The Extended Ichorid list can perform just fine in Vintage.
You can run this list:
| Dredge An Extended deck, by Nikolaus Eigner 2nd place at a Grand Prix tournament in Vienna, Austria on 2008-03-09 | ||
Creatures 1 Cephalid Sage 1 Flame-Kin Zealot 4 Golgari Grave-Troll 1 Golgari Thug 3 Ichorid 4 Narcomoeba 4 Putrid Imp 4 Stinkweed Imp Enchantments 4 Bridge from Below Instants 2 Darkblast 2 Tolarian Winds |
Legendary Creatures 1 Akroma, Angel of Wrath Sorceries 4 Breakthrough 3 Cabal Therapy 4 Careful Study 3 Dread Return Basic Lands 1 Island Lands 4 Cephalid Coliseum 4 Polluted Delta 2 Underground River 4 Watery Grave | 4 Pithing Needle 1 Ancestor's Chosen 1 Blazing Archon 4 Leyline of the Void 4 Chain of Vapor |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
I would invest, however, in a Lotus Petal and a Lion’s Eye Diamond. A turn 1 Breakthrough responding to the cracking of a Lion’s Eye Diamond means that you should have a good chance of winning on turn 1! Also, you should find a way to add green so that you can run Reverent Silence too.
Flash and Ichorid are widely regarded as two of the best decks in Vintage. There is another deck that is not quite as widely accepted as a top flight deck, although it still has its proponents, including myself. That deck is GroAtog. GroAtog was by far the best performing deck last year. There was a metagame shift to Mishra’s Workshop decks, which has caused many GroAtog pilots to switch to other decks, prominently Tyrant Oath.
Ironically, the more recent metagame shifts with the printing of Reveillark for Flash, the increasing incidence of Ichorid decks, and now Tyrant Oath bodes well for GAT packed with Duress effects. I would even consider running a seventh Duress effect in the mainboard to fight Flash and Oath.
| GAT Featured by Stephen Menendian on 2008-01-13 (Vintage) | ||
Artifacts 1 Black Lotus 1 Mox Emerald 1 Mox Jet 1 Mox Ruby 1 Mox Sapphire Creatures 4 Quirion Dryad Enchantments 1 Fastbond |
Instants 1 Ancestral Recall 4 Brainstorm 1 Cunning Wish 4 Force of Will 4 Gush 2 Misdirection 1 Mystical Tutor 1 Vampiric Tutor Sorceries 1 Demonic Tutor 3 Duress 1 Empty the Warrens 4 Merchant Scroll 4 Ponder 3 Thoughtseize 1 Time Walk 1 Yawgmoth's Will Basic Lands 1 Island Lands 3 Flooded Strand 3 Polluted Delta 2 Tropical Island 3 Underground Sea 2 Volcanic Island | 2 Pithing Needle 3 Yixlid Jailer 3 Energy Flux 1 Ancient Grudge 1 Berserk 1 Echoing Truth 1 Fire / Ice 1 Oxidize 2 Red Elemental Blast |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
This deck is amazing and a perfect, ridiculously powerful deck that can be played well under 10 proxies if you have the dual lands.
So, between GAT, Flash, and Ichorid, you have three fantastic tournament options that give you an excellent shot at winning power at the StarCityGames.com Mega Weekend.
If those decks don’t appeal to you, there are a few other budget options that you can explore from my Vintage primer. I would also look at the primer for tips, hints, and strategic advice on how to play some of these decks.
The other deck that is very budget friendly is Goblins, now with Earwig Squad courtesy of Morningtide. Check it out:
| Goblins Featured by Nino Mas on 2008-03-16 (Vintage) | ||
Artifacts 4 Aether Vial 1 Lotus Petal 1 Mana Crypt 1 Sol Ring Creatures 4 Earwig Squad 3 Gempalm Incinerator 4 Goblin Lackey 4 Goblin Matron 4 Goblin Piledriver 4 Goblin Ringleader 4 Goblin Vandal 4 Goblin Warchief 2 Skirk Prospector 1 Stingscourger Tribal Sorceries 1 Warren Weirding |
Basic Lands 4 Mountain Lands 3 Badlands 4 Bloodstained Mire 1 Strip Mine 2 Taiga 4 Wooded Foothills | 3 Extirpate 3 Krosan Grip 3 Pyrokinesis 3 Cabal Therapy 3 Shattering Spree |
![]() |
![]() | |
| Download this deck in Apprentice format! |
Download this deck in Magic Online Text format! | |
This deck might be a home for Shadowmoor’s Vexing Shusher.
Today is the day to jump into Vintage. The format is widely considered to be in a golden age of sorts, despite the fact that Reveillark Flash has created some consternation. I expect some of those concerns to fall away with the printing of Faerie Macabre.
Not only is Vintage extremely fun to play at the moment, but it is extremely accessible. If you love Magic, Vintage is a format that you must try. It will feel like a different game, because it is, but it is utterly fascinating. If you enjoy Extended, then Vintage is like an amped-up version of that format. Ichorid is the same, and the UBG deck decks are basically no different. Instead of X Level Blue, you play GAT or Oath.
Given the shape and contour of the current metagame, you have a number of choices with ten proxies so long as you own dual lands. I have focused on the decks that I think might be most advantageous for the budget player to put together, with an eye to cost and power.
If you’ve been curious about this format, or if you regularly read my column but haven’t actually played the format before, I urge you to try it. This is the best moment to get off the couch and try Vintage. The format is fast, fun, and there is nothing like it. Even if you aren’t excited about the prospect of playing Vintage, the cross-training of a Vintage tournament can very well open your eyes to features of Magic that you haven’t encountered before that will help you tighten up your skills and experience a whole new world of magical play.
Our editor, Craig Stevenson, recently messaged me. He had been to an Italian Vintage tournament, and despite years of being forced to read my articles, it took the experience of watching Vintage in person to get him to want to actually play the format. I don’t have the ability, outside of the use of video, to infect you with the Vintage bug. But if you are even curious, I would urge you to consider this to be the perfect opportunity to see what it’s all about in person. Although I’ve tried mightily to convey my passion for this format, a format I believe to be incredibly rich and utterly unique. There is no substitute for the experience of Vintage in tournament play. Don’t make the mistake Craig did and wait until you see it to want to try it. Experience the golden age of Vintage while it lasts.
Until next time…



















Tuesday, April 29th - With the release of Shadowmoor, the Red deck has once again come to the forefront of many designers’ and players’ minds. Today, I’d...
Tuesday, April 29th - Fresh out of a two day conference on Continuous Effects, Building a Local Community, hyper-linked Comp Rules, Professional Conduct as a...
Tuesday, April 29th - Triple Shadowmoor is, or soon will be, the draft beverage of choice across the globe… yet even before the set sees its official release,...
Tuesday, April 29th - Today’s Nick Eisel article saw Nick sharing his thoughts on the powerful U/W decks available when drafting triple Shadowmoor. Not to be...
Wednesday, April 30th - I’ve always hated “pick orders,” because they’re often very arbitrary and many cards relate to one another in a tier-system,...
Wednesday, April 30th - Last week I wrote about the Persistence mechanic, touching on some ideas and concepts that I hope inspired some of you to give the...
Wednesday, April 30th - Shadowmoor is here, and the world has gone Hybrid Crazy! Of course, the descent into craziness isn’t so...
Wednesday, April 30th - Whenever new cards are added to the Constructed mix, the first port of call is often the Red Aggressive deck. With Shadowmoor packing a...
Friday, April 25th - Hello everybody, and welcome to another Prerelease Edition of the Magic Show. This week we’re in Nashville, TN and talking about the...
Friday, April 25th - With Shadowmoor at our fingertips at last, all of the information that is really needed to figure out what the Standard metagame might look like at Pro Tour: Hollywood is now known. With the very last card now...
Friday, April 25th - Magic Online Version 3 is finally here, and with it comes a barrage of problems, complaints, and requests. Players across the world are...
Friday, April 25th - One of the stronger fringe strategies from Extended, Mono-Red Burn, has a number of excellent cards in the...
Friday, April 25th - With Pro Tour: Hollywood on the horizon, Pro-level thoughts on Standard continue to be well guarded. Of course, with a new set in the mix,...
Monday, April 28th - Some of the "crap" cards suggested for my "Crap Rare Contest" turned out not to be crap, but actually format-defining. And you broke them...
strong>Monday, April 28th - Last week we discussed a RDW list that received a lot of response both on the forums and via email. It was clear players wanted to...
Monday, April 28th - Take a look at some of the most powerful combos from Magic's newest set! Doug takes a look at the new staples, compelling combo cards and...
Monday, April 28th - Today’s Innovations sees Patrick Chapin open up his hefty mailbag, packed to the brim with requests for help from the great and good of... 










