Thursday, May 23, 2013

Suvnica Week 3 Review, Part 3: Giants of Flesh and Steel (Guild Legends)

And so we finally get to the heart of the Week 3 review. Guild champions and leaders are really able to help drive home what the guild is all about. Let's check out the submissions.

Azorius

Jay Treat suggested a fix for my text-to-small-to-reasonably-print Headmaster Nareen. 


Now he's just text-too-small-to-reasonably-read-without-getting-a-migraine. I'm really not sure that players will know from the card text that they can play those cards as though they had flash or were instants, but even so, this guy needs an overhaul. I like the mechanic, but it's really not worth the amount of space it eats up.


Jonas Sckazinski offered this guy for my Azorius Academy vision. In addition to being a champion, he's a lord for the scholar token mechanic that Jonas was suggesting. I do like the design, although I don't know that the tribal element should be a primary mechanic on a plane with Suvnica's guild structure. Also, being a Wizard crowds his type line too much and doesn't really add anything.

Orzhov




lpaulsen offered this guy for Jay Treat's Orzhov (Purity through mass violence). It plays up the mass violence angle through maximizing the value from Day of Judgment effects, and feels both White and Black. 


Jules made this one for my Orzhov (Assassins for the betterment of society). A fantastic design, and a nice riff off of Hunter of Eyeblights. I might specify that the counters have to be +1/+1 in the second line, but it definitely looks like a lot of fun either way.

Golgari


Lobster667 and lpaulsen both designed a legend for my vision (monopolistic exploitation over natural resources).

lpaulsen made this guy:


Nailed it. Two abilities that haven'r really been done before, an elegant package, fits directly into the vision. Fantastic. 

Lobster667 made this guild leader:


Something feels a little off about this guy. I think mostly because he in no way rewards you for playing black creatures. All of your green creatures become awesome when he's on the board (probably a little too awesome - there's very little benefit to not immediately wipe your own board for cards and life the second he hits the battlefield) while your Black creatures sit on the sidelines listening to Elliott Smith and feigning apathy. I think that if you just collapsed the abilities and had it skip Zombie creatures in general... "Whenever a non-Zombie creature you control dies, draw cards equal to its power, gain life equal to its toughness, and return that creature to the battlefield under your control. That creature is now a black Zombie in addition to its other colors and types." Still a powerhouse ability, but he cares about at least some of your black creatures and makes you jump through at least one more hoop to reap the awesome.

Gruul



Jules made this one for Chah's Gruul (Fire and destruction to clear room to grow). There's definitely a lot of disconnect between the two abilities, so I'm wondering whether it's worth it to keep both. If I had to lose one, it would definitely be the first, since it doesn't immediately strike a chord with the creative vision and feels more {B}{G} than {R}{G} in any case. 

Boros



Lobster667 made this for his own Boros vision (community striving towards individual freedom in peaceful/caring way). Although the keyword abilities doesn't really scream peaceful or caring, he did play up the control element I saw this vision embracing. That said, if your opponent doesn't have some sort of removal, this guy might as well say "You win the game," or, more likely, "The game is a draw." It completely forecloses your opponent from attacking meaningfully, and he can't be killed attacking in unless your creature can deal lethal first strike damage. He fulfills the guild vision of peace, but shuts down the game of Magic that you're playing in the meantime.

The fix that first comes to mind is to keep his third line but limit the damage prevention to combat damage to creatures. If they can still hit you, then the game is still a game. There are probably a number of other ways to make him powerful and interesting without shutting down the game, but that's at least a start.

5 comments:

  1. I disagree about Hegemon Iraglog. The first ability is very clever, but that sort of repeatable land destruction is unprintable.

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    1. I think that the fact that it's a) symmetrical and b) limited to nonbasic helps, but development would probably kill it.

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    2. I disagree see helldozer http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=205360

      this is not only repeatable but you can do it numerous times per turn if they are nonbasic. also you destroy non basics but have to sac basics. not as broken as you think. thoughts?

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  2. Krarrg probably isn't clean enough to print, but the abilities aren't disconnected. Together they lead to a game where the pressure on the battlefield is always rising and you never know when it's going to explode, making for the same tense moments are draw steps with Miracles, only with fewer gameplay issues. On top of that, the last ability slowly fills your graveyard for the first ability so that it becomes more impactful as the game goes on.

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    1. They're pretty anti-synergetic, though. Drawing a creature and wiping out all your saprolings is a sad thing.

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