Tuesday, August 6, 2019

The Knights of Thorn VI

So, keeping up with the tempo I set for myself to finish this post before last Saturday (which I almost made.. just forgot to post it :)), my report for the knights of Thorn. Because the long matches I sometimes played, I did not take as much pictures as I normally do. I'll compensate with a decklist, something I normally don't really do because I like to keep with the spirit of home brewing. Although I admit, sometimes when I have no inspiration at all, I like to scroll through decklists to get some inspiration and too just look at old cardboard, so I like to stare at decklists every now and then. I also did not take notes of all my games somehow, but I have some memory of how everything went. If I miss something my opponents said or did, sorry guys!

For the knighs of Thorn, there is a different restriction than other tournaments in that 10 reprints with same art and same border are allowed. This leaves for a little more room for Peter and me to build 2 decks that are to our liking without having to worry about rares we don't have. This mainly goes for dual lands by the way. We built a skies deck for Peter with Serra Angels and Ghost Ships, and since I promised Timmy the Sorcerer from the Timmy Talks youtube channel to play a deck with Timmy (prodigal sorcerer, for those that don't know :)) this year, I started off with 4 prodigal sorcerers. And then you start thinking, what can I do with those? I mean, they're not aweful, but they're exactly top tier either. I played with the idea in my mind for a while and started off with thoughts about colors. I ended up with green being the best option, because I could play living plane with Tim, and sylvan library with Sindbad, a creature I also love a lot. After a couple games and some card shifting, I ended up with this.


Obviously not a top tier deck. But good enough for me to want to give it a try, and since winning was not the object here, I went for it. And then changed some things in my head as we were driving to the tournament.


I figured meekstone would be good with only 1/1 creatures and I did not want to miss out on Chaos Orb and Strip mine. I might have changed one or two more cards, bit since I did not take a deck picture before stripping the deck I'm not entirely sure this was the final list, but close enough for this report I think. There was absolutely no way I was going to get into the Top 8 with this deck, so I had prepared a deck for the interesting no-core-set side event in which I would be entering after (probably) losing all my matches.

Unfortunately, in round one I was paired against Marten, who's not only an excellent player, but also one of the few people I had shown my deck to before the tournament, so there would be no element of surprise in this match.

 
You do want an element of surprise when playing this guy.

And apart from playing as good as he is, Marten then proceeded to play some pretty obscene plays right from the start. 


stuff like this..



In game 2, after having lost game one, I thought I would have a pretty good opening seeing my hand. Then this happened:

 

Yes, he dropped a land, 2 moxen, a sol ring and then played wheel of fortune on turn one. Well, that's not good when you want to take a mana advantage :)

He then proceeded to play Sol'kanar the swamp king and started swinging. When I tried to stop the onslaught with the control magic I had sideboarded in, Marten played balance (which is kinda of a killer because of his mana advantage with the moxen), then Su-Chi and the beatings continued. He finished it off with a recall on his timewalk and his fireball (he had played the Time Walk before the balance) and finished me of with a forked pyrotechnics. 

And here I was, thinking I actually had a chance :)

Well, that wasn't a good start...  I was expecting to lose, but this was a massacre :)

In round 2, I was paired against Anies, who played Erhnam/geddon. And Djinns there were plenty. He played a quick Djinn, which I killed with pyrotechnics and Timmy after being attacked once. The turn after the first Djinn was killed, he played another. I fireballed it and pinged with Timmy to kill it. And then the turn after that, you guessed it: another Djinn.. By then I was out of firepower and he just ran over me before you know it I was down two matches.

In round 3, I think I played Edo, but I didn't note a name with the game. He was also not playing his best deck, because he had borrowed that to one of the other players. That did not mean there was no punch though:


Fortunately for me, my deck was running as it was supposed to:


Drawing cards with Sindbad is nice by itself and amazing with Sylvan library. And I was able to win the match by attacking someone with a maze of ith :) Doing damage with a maze of ith is strangely satisfying. At least I could say I won one match that day :)

Round 4 I played Hero, also a Oldschool/Ancient veteran who was playing some cards he had not played before, Gauntlets of Might.  Game 1 I was able to win because my deck did what it was meant to do:


In this game, I just used Sindbad to gain some card advantage by drawing a couple of lands. Still pretty good, even without the Sylvan Libary. 

Game 2 and 3 were a different matter though. Even though I played some basic land and moxen, I was not able to get them fast enough to get over this:

 

He basically just burned me to death with lots of mana from his mountains which all produced RR instead of R, in game 3 there was not much difference: he played blood moon, a couple of mana vaults, then first fireballed me for 7, and then disintegrated me for 13. He even had an earthquake just in case all of that wasn't enough :) 

 

In Round 5, I played Thilo who was playing a twiddle/vault/stasis mix. In game 1 I played an early 1/1 (I no longer remember it that was either an Elf or a Sindbad, after a while you get less focused :)) and he played a Tabernacle at Pendrell Vale. I thought about it a bit, and decided to just go for it and played Living Plane. I figured there wasn't much of a problem stalling my opponent while I was waiting for the right cards to show up. He proceeded on his turn, passed the upkeep, and drew a card. When I pointed out to him that all his lands would be dead, he flinched. He asked me about the upkeep and I explained about the effect of the Tabernacle and the living plane together, and asked him if he wanted to turn back and pay the upkeep. He thought about it for a while and then conceded. I hadn't figured out what he was playing by then, but it makes sense. You're not going to do anything useful with your extra turns or keep up your stasis in play if all your lands have an upkeep. 

Game 2 was more exiting and he kind of surprised me with his stasis because I thought he was just playing twiddle/vault. I just kept playing, waiting for the right moment and the right cards. Waiting does not really hurt the deck I was playing. When the time was right, before my turn, I played Red Elemental blast, backed up with a counterspell. He countered back twice, but was then left without any untapped lands. So I drew a card, passed the turn and waited for the stasis to go away. I then played Energy Flux to keep his howling mine and time vault busy, and waited for a couple of extra lands to show up. I powersinked something and then played Living Plane and Pyrotechnics in one turn. That was what it was supposed to do and enough to win the match. 

So, a 2-3 at the end of the swiss. Not bad for something that is basically a fun deck :) And then it was on to the side event while the top players were going for Top 8.  I will write a separate post about the side event as soon as I find the time. Like always in oldschool, there was lots of nice guys (are there no ladies playing oldschool? I remember seeing a lady participant in an Ancient Tournament I organized, but I think that was the last one I met..), lots of good games. Oldschool is amazing. May it live forever :) Thank to Mari for organizing this event and thanks to all who showed up to play. Till next time!


a large part of the Dutch oldschool community and some foreign friends :)








Sunday, July 28, 2019

The Raging Bull series

Wow, time flies. It feels like only a short while ago but it's been months already and in about one week I'm going to play my next Oldschool event in Belgium (Gaea's Avengers). These days there are so many tournaments I hardly get to organizing one myself. There used to be years I organized Ancient or French Oldschool five or six times a year, now there are so many tournaments I can't even find the time to visit them all. Maybe the Camel Trophy will see an Ancient side-event to prevent that format from dying out. But anyway, I'm digressing. That many tournaments also means I'm sometimes just to busy to write coverage. I was kind of planning to do two events in this one post, but then it would just be too long. I kept it at the RBS and will be writing a Knights of Thorn report later.

The Raging Bull Series (RBS for short) is a full Swedish tournament, meaning you can't play any reprinted cards, just card from the original series. This means building two decks for Peter and me would be a challenge. Even though I have a nice collection and Peter has been buying some Oldschool stuff that was somewhat affordable, building two decks with cards from the original sets was not going to be easy and the decks were bound to be at least a bit suboptimal because some cards would be lacking. We don't have a full set of UL duals between us, so playing multicolor decks would present a problem while building decks.  Fortunately, we both are beyond wanting to win a tournament above all. We mainly want to play and have a good time, even though I do want to put up a fight with whatever deck I'm playing with.

After some looking through our cards, we decided on a G/U Agro berserk deck for Peter and I would build an ode to a deck I played in a Type I tournament somewhere in 1996 with Rene, another friend of mine. We both played a "creatures suck" themed deck which relied on Moat and The Abyss to prevent us from being overrun and I used Tetravus for the win. Rene used Clockwork Avian back then. After looking for an original Clockwork Avian and finding I don't actually own one, I decided Tetravus would be the better option anyway and went with that. The original deck used four mana drains to get out one of the two Tetravusses, but since Swedish rules prevent me from doing that, I cut out one Tetravus and added a coffin, which would give me some more control and an option to build lots of tetravites. I could not remember the exact decklist we played way back when, but somehow I could find no space for swords to plowshares when I put all the cards I wanted to play on the table. So in the spirit of fun and not being a Spike (this time :)), I just left them out to see what would happen.

adding some cards to Peters deck



















I did not want to die that easily and thought adding an Ivory Tower to this deck would work nicely. A moat and a tower also make a castle together, and I do like castles. We playtested a couple of games, and I thought the deck wasn't so bad it would lose everything outright, so we stopped thinking about how the decks could be better and just played some more games with different decks.

While playtesting my "real" Swedish Land tax/lands Edge deck was still in sleeves, so I played a lot of proxies before deciding it was good enough.We changed quite a bit after this.
On the day of the tournament, you realize why Amsterdam is both great and sucks if you want to reach a place in it by car. We parked somewhere on the edge of the center and took a tram to the gaming cafe 2klaveren where the tournament was going to take place. There we met with lots of familiar faces and finished our decks with some last minute changes I thought of while driving. We then had to wait for some Italians who were fashionably late and after that we were finally ready to play some matches. Game on :)

First round I was paired against Mari, organizer and winner of the Knights of Thorn. This was going to be a tough match. I started off game one with an early ivory tower and a maze of ith while Mari was playing merfolk and serendib efreet. The decision to add some Ivory Towers to my deck was paying off in this game.


This bought me enough time to let my deck develop and after a while we were in this boardstate:


After a mind twist this was pretty much game. I still don't know how I feel about that card. On the one hand, it's goddamn awful, on the other hand, so are many other cards in the format, so might as well let them see play. In the second game I played a first turn library (which was immediately stripmined) an early Abyss, which also bought me time to win the game.

Round 2 was against Robbert-Jan, who was playing a black aggro deck with Juzam Djinns. I do love Juzam Djinn, even though I tend to lose a lot when I play with them :) I did not see that on turn one though, when he opened with a Library of Alexandria. I quickly played my disrupting scepter to prevent it from getting out of hand right away.

It's hard to see through the glare, but that's a disrupting scepter right there :)
He decided to go for a quick win and played a Juzam Djinn for BB2. I then played my WW2 card to make sure I could sit there and wait to win:


It was just one of those games where you just get the answer for the stuff your opponent plays. Since I did not play swords to plowshares, the Djinn would have been a big problem, even with the Ivory Tower. Now it just wasn't. There was no way to bypass the moat and all the while I was sitting in my Ivory Tower. On to game 2. And then cosmic balance was restored after I faced this:


There was no coming back from that. Creatures followed and I was crushed quickly, just as a deck like that is supposed to work.

Game 3 developed more slowly and cosmic balance swung back to me. I then did some pretty obscene drawing to answer everything: I played quick Ivory tower followed by timetwister. A moat after he played a mishra's factory and then an Abyss after he played a Hypnotic Specter. I had kept both in my hand to see if I could lure him into playing stuff, but you have to draw them to play them. I was lucky I drew those things early. Eventually and we ended up in exactly the board state I remembered for this deck from way back when:

Moat, Abyss, Tetravus: total awesomeness:)
So I won this match 2-1. Feeling pretty good about this deck by now, I managed to get out what I wanted and had won a match with it. In the meantime Peter had crushed someone with a 24/3 Serendib Efreet, so his day was already a success.

On to round 3, I played Tom, who was playing a black/white control deck with underworld dreams, disenchants and Cuombajj witches. Here I was again happy with my Ivory tower. Even after Tom got a underworld dreams in play, there was no problem. I could just ignore it as I was gaining more life then I lost every turn and things got ugly when I also got out my disrupting scepter. Before long, I got to do this with my lifecounter for the first time:

I hope this happens many times more :)



















Neither my single mishra's factory nor my Tetravus showed up to finish it off though, so I ended up with this boardstate:

Well, I came to play old cards, and I got to put most of mine into play this game :)
Fortunately, Tom did not mind me playing most of my deck. Oldschool players are awesome like that. Thanks Tom!
The spirit of oldschool :) Kudo's to Tom for keeping up his spirits against this! I probably would have quit by now :)
In game 2, balance was restored after he quickly played some creatures and factories and ran over me before I could get out a moat, balance or ivory tower.



Game 3 was not starting well for me, with only 2 cities of brass early on after Tom destroyed one of my lands. I managed to get out an Abyss before balancing, and that stalled out the game for a while, so we ended up 1-1.



In Round 4 I played David, who was playing a ton of artifacts with the intention of killing you with a howling mine/underworld dreams combo. Needless to say, my Ivory Towers were the cards of the game.
Underworld dreams? Sure! No problem!
There was however, the problem of actually winning in this situation. I mean, I was not going to die from the underworld dreams, but winning was going to be a challenge:



Eventually, I was able to pull of the win because of Tetravus' special ability to make more creatures, which allowed my to bypass the multiple copies of maze of ith on the table. It's always nice when you can pull something of just because of a particular card in your deck that does something that no other card in the format does. I ended up winning the match because of this.
















On to match 5, which paired me against Evert, who has plenty of top 8 finishes and wins under his belt, so that was going to be a tough one. It was a hard match with lots of twists. Some of the key moments:



a quick refill for the agro deck. Yippy..... :(

 

Always nice when your opponent starts off with an ancestral.
Hurkyls' recall, love this card.
That special feeling when you play an early library of alexandria... and then your opponent plays 2 vises in a row :(
The card of the match..
It was a game that took a long time and ended up in a 1-1. But damn, I knew ankhs and vises are good (i've played them both in a mono red atog deck for over a couple of years now, you can see a match of it played on Timmy Talks) but this was a really, really hard game which Evert probably would have won if we had more time. 

So with three wins and two draws I was able to squeeze into the top 8, not bad for an pretty un-tuned deck with coffin/tetravus for a win condition. 

I was paired against Nick in the top 8, who was playing a serious version of the deck and is also an excellent player. To top that off,  he opened with Library of Alexandria and countered my trying to get ahead with a time walk with a main deck red elemental blast. This was obviously not good. There is no way you can beat the deck when it's drawing more cards than you are, and this was starting off with that right from turn one. To see more of this match, watch this video on link: Timmy talks. The video is titled the deck vs the deck, but as you can see, my deck is not really the deck. Timmy was kind enough to point that out at the top of the comments section. Thanks Tim! Hope this deck inspires some to do some home brewing!

Some more impressions of the rest of the tournament:

Being stuck with no untap phase, I would be desperate too...



Nick in the semi-finals

 Thanks to the organizers and players for a great day. Till next time!


Monday, April 22, 2019

A conversation on hypothetical Dutch oldschool rules

With pretty much everybody making their own rules these days, we never really got around to posting this. I almost did somewhere last year, but then I got sucked into some pretty busy period at work, and there are quite a lot of oldschool tournaments in our country I visited (and organized as well) so it never materialized. I'm not really sure we need an extra set of rules, but then again, I'm not really sure some of the decisions that are floated every now and again are my cup tea either. I mean really, unrestriced strip mine? I remember when that was reality, and being screwed out of mana just because your opponent drew 2 or 3 strip mines in the first couple of turns is a good way to make people hate the game. It will just be 3 extra slots of cards you will see in pretty much every top tier deck. How is that fun? And why would we do that just because literally one someone thought it was a good idea? 

Anyway, this conversation did take place and we almost made our own set of rules official for some of the tournaments we organize, but for now it's just a hypothetical situation. That doesn't mean it won't happen though. Maybe we'll get the Belgians to join and we'll make it the North Sea rules and ask the English to join as well :) Who knows. It's one of the nice things about an unofficial format that's just about playing for fun. The conversation:

B: You know, at the latest tournament one of the guys asked me if we're going to update the rules.
A: Oh, why?
B: Because apparently, the French have updated their rules, and since we're playing by the French rules, that would imply we change some things.
A: That makes sense. So what did they change?
B: Well, tapped creatures don't do damage anymore
A: That sounds good! It makes Mishra's factory less of a powerhouse.
B: And they unrestricted black vise
A: I've always wondered why that was restricted in the first place. If you can play 4 vises and have mana-burn, maybe you wouldn't really need to restrict mana drain because control would be less good in the first place. So, sounds good. Shall we update the rules?
B: wait, there's more..
A: Oh, what?
B: They also unrestricted recall and maze of ith
A: What?
B: Yup. At least, that's what the guy said. I've got to look up how that works.
A: Errr.. so while lots of people are complaining about how good the deck is, they make it possible to recall their ancestral, regrowth, demonic tutor, strip mine and braingeyser more than once? That sounds like a really bad idea..
B: I don't know. The Swedes also did it and some people seem to think it hasn't changed all that much.
A: I really don't think people recalling their Ancestral or Mind twist more than once would make things better..
P: I think it sounds like an exellent idea!! I mind twist you.. and then ancestral, again... and again and again!!
B: Thanks Peter.. I feel much better now :s
A: And spending an eterinity plowing to get through 2 or 3 mazes of ith does not seem like a particularly fun thing to do either.. It's not like there weren't enough good lands already..
B: I remember being mind twisted twice in one game during the last Draconian Cylix. I agree, it's not the greatest of experiences. Well, let's not kid ourselves, it just plain sucks, but then again, that was always possible with regrowth and recall. 
A: So what do the Dutch rules say?
B: There are no Dutch rules. There's Dutch people playing by Swedish and Dutch people playing by French rules. And some stuff in between with Swedish rules with reprints allowed. That would be the Ravenna rules I guess. I don't think there's Dutch people playing by EC rules so that's it. 
A: Oh right. Yeah. No Dutch rules. Just Dutch guys following rules from other guys.
B: So, what are we going to do?
A: So were those all the rules changes?
B: I think so, I'll have to look into it.
A: Well, I'm not going to stand for people recycling power over and over again. That sucks. We're not going to do that if you ask me.
B: Well, we could make our own set of rules, that would fix the problem. Since there are no Dutch oldschool rules, we could start them right here and now.
A: Sounds fine by me. Go for it. I'm fine with pretty much everything exept the recall.
B: OK. Here goes..

After this conversation, I did some googling, and found there are actually two sets of French oldschool rules that both seem to be in effect for different events in France. One over here on the bazaar of moxen site: http://www.bazaar-of-moxen.com/en/mtg-pairings,37/old-school-rules,c285.html, which is the set we derived our set of tournament rules from. Since there is no update there, I think they are still in effect for certain eventes. There is also a more recent set over here: https://www.magicbazar.fr/article/65-old_school_rules_and_banlist. This last one was used for the 2018 eternal weekend. When I looked through that update, I found that most of the changes were indeed there, exept the unrestricting of recall. This kept our concerns about the changes in check, meaning we can keep the Dutch and French oldschool rules in sync right now. So, the rules are updated but now called Dutch Oldschool Rules. They're the same as the latest French Oldschool rules for now, but to prevent any misunderstanding in the future, we'll just call them Dutch from now on.

Sunday, April 14, 2019

The Hill Giant cup Hilversum april 7th 2019

These days there are so many nice oldschool toernaments in our country, hardly a month had passed since the last one I was in. In this first weekend of april it was time for the Hill Giant cup, which is hosted by Joep in the Vendetta game store in Hilversum. I have been to 2 giant cups last year, and they were great, so I was looking forward to it. For those of you that want to see deck lists, there are some scattered around this article.



Like always, I playtested some decks with Peter, then thought about what I would play for a couple of days, and then decide to play something pretty much untested. I just couldn't make up my mind though. Would I play a titania's song deck, or would I play a deck with the UL personal incarnation which has been staring me in the face ever since I won it, ehhh… two years ago I think. In the end, I just could not decide, so I modified the deck I played in the Camel Trophy. It had gotten me to the finals there and it was still sleeved in it's box, so it wouldn't take long. And I do like playing with my pixies. They're old and worn, but they've been with me for a long time and they always bring back memories of 25 years of playing magic. Plus, since the deck had performed so well in the Camel Trophy, I thought a Top 8 place would be a real possibility. If I could make that, it would be 3 in a row after Top 8 in the Palladins of the North and finals in the Camel Trophy. Spoiler alert: even though the deck worked just fine, a top 8 was not meant to be this day. 





I picked something oldschool to wear that day,  my Vampire shirt with an illustration by Tim Bradstreet for the Vampire card game. Although it's much less known than MTG, it has been alround for a long time (since 1994) and it still has a following to this day. I started playing in januari 1995 and still play it with friends a couple of time a year. I think I read a blogpost by Magnus on oldschoolmtg.com where some guys pull out a box of Jyhad (as the game was called before it was renamed to Vampire: the Eternal Struggle later) but they can't really figure out how to play the game because there are too many rules. So Magnus, if you're looking for some guys who can explain to you how it works: there's plenty of decks waiting for you over here and we would love to teach how it works :) If you take me up on the offer, I'll buy you some Dutch beers. I hear they're really good. 

Anyway, I'm degressing. Tim Bradstreet has done some of the artwork for Vampire cards and books (there's also a tabletop roleplaying game with the same theme) and if you've never seen them, check out some of his illustrations: Tim Brandstreet images. Love them or hate them, you've got to admit they're a lot better than the generic artwork we see on cardboard these days. I fall in the love them category, but it could be that's because I've been looking at them for 25 years now. The shirt I have is from '95 I think and I only wear it on special gaming occasions. The Hill Giant Cup counts as such a special occasion. I would run into more oldschool gaming accessories during the day, but I'll get back to that later. 

I picked up Thijs and Peter in Arnhem and we were off to Hilversum. It's only an hour's drive and since we were talking all the way, we were there before we knew it. I parked at a place that is supposed to be free parking on a sunday, so I'm hoping I won't get a ticket sent after me. We arrived at the gaming store about 20 minutes before the tournament would start. The weather was good, so there were some guys at the table in front of the store enjoying the sun. Or the binders of old cards on the table. On second thought, I think they were paying more attention to the binders full of cards than the sun. After we registered I greeted a lot of familiar faces who were all happy to be here to flop some old cardboard. I picked up some cards we had ordered from Robbie so Peter could play his 4th Su-Chi without having to borrow it, we finished the decks and by them it was time to play! 

I scribbled down some short notes between the rounds, I will try to make sense of them here:

Round 1 (damn, I forgot to put down a name)

He was playing UWR and it was a close match. What I remember is him destroying some of my efreets and cities with City in a Bottle (damn, that card is good) and he disintegrated my Preacher. The preacher was not very lucky the entire day by the way, he did not get to convert even one creature to my side. I got the advantage in both games with early speedy creatures, and won the match 2-0.

Round 2 (Bob, with a deck I would call Trolls & Trikes :))

Bob had two very good openings. This was his first turn play:





He put on the pressure quickly and destroyed one of my lands, and since I wasn't drawing that many lands I could not keep up. This left me with the option I went for: to tutor for a balance and cast it a turn later. I could not even play it the same turn. By then I was down to so few life I figures the game would be over. He had a lot more mana, and I had much less life. And he was playing red. But somehow, his luck had run out by then. I cast a Serra Angel, pretty much expecting to be bolted out of existence, but somehow he didn't draw a burn card for 5 turns and Serra went all the way to win me the game! It was amazing how that went. 

The second game I had sideboarded in COP read and greater realm of preservation. I got the greater realm early on in the game and kept stalling him with the Icy Manipulator I had also boarded in. He had a Rukh Egg and a diamond vally which made a tough blocker for my Serendib Efreets, so I kept both of the ones I had drawn in my hand, waiting for something to happen. Than Library of Alexandria happened, and I figured I would draw something to win with quickly. That took quite a long time though, and he kept attacking me, forcing me to keep mana free for the greater realm. And since I needed a city of brass for white mana (I had not drawn tundras and just one savannah), that still took some of my life. After a long time, an Erhnam Djinn showed up, but I needed to make sure he would not block it to death or block it with his Mishra's factory and then bolt it. So I waited for a disenchant for the factory he did not attack with, attacked, disenchanted the factory and played regrowth on my time walk which I had cast really early in the game. That sealed the deal. 2-0. Wow. After him opening twice with moxen and sol ring. This just goes to show you just have to keep playing till the end, something good might happen along the way.

In the meantime: Peters deck was doing what it was good at. Copying stuff. His opponent played a Su-Chi, and this was Peters awnser next turn:


Turns out he had been waiting for something to copy for quite some turns then, and he took full advantage of it :) He won this game.


Match 3 (Jimmy, the deck)

Jimmy is a frequent top 8/top 4 player and probably the best "the deck" player in the Dutch oldschool community. I expected a very hard match.

In game 1, I was happy with the decision to keep playing a lot of disenchants main deck. I disenchanted early, drawing out counters and then played Erhnam Djinn, Serra Angel and then armageddon. As I had expected, he plowshared one of my two creatures (the Serra) but I was able to keep the Djinn in play. 1-0.

In game 2 I sided my 4th disechant, dust to dust en red elemental blast. That last one usually comes unexpected as I don't play any red cards main deck. I played an early Serra Angel again, which Jimmy countered using up his Black Lotus. We exchanged blows with mishra's factories while I was waiting for him to play something bigger. I think this was somewhere around turn 9 or 10. I had drawn my power sink on turn 3 and wanted to use it for all it was worth. Jimmy cast recall for 2 (with one of the cards he took back being an ancestral recall), which I power sinked. He countered my power sink, but was out of mana after that. I would have decide the game now, but I was confident that would work out since I had a time walk and fireball in my hand. I attacked, cast time walk, attacked again and played fireball for the win. 2-0. I was really happy with this win. It took agressive but cautious play to win and before the match I expected Jimmy to have the advantage. But I made it!

Match 4 (Jeff BWU with landdestruction, dreams, disenchants and power. Oh, and Cuombajj witches)

In game 1 I kept an opening hand with Mishra's factory, sol ring, ancestral recall, time walk, 2 Erhnam Djinn and 1 Argothian Pixies. I figured I would either draw blue mana of green mana within a couple of turns since more than 1 in 3 cards left in my deck was a blue or green mana source. This was not meant to be though. After 3 turns, I still had not drawn any mana at all, and on turn 4 Jeff disenchanted my sol ring. I lost the game without having drawn any blue mana and only one green. Shit happens, I suppose. The fact I kept this hand kept bugging me the rest of the day, even though some of the other players I asked about it told me they would have kept it too. 

Game 2 I opened with no land, two moxen, black lotus and Serra Angel. And an Erhnam. Again, not the best hand, but although maybe a gamble, I decided to go for it and dropped the Serra on the table on turn one. Jeff opened with a Library of Alexandria and went frantically looking for something to take care of the angel. And he got it just in time, when he was at 4 life :( He took out my Serra and took full advantage of the Library. In the meantime, I had drawn an Whirling Dervish, but he destroyed my green mana source one turn before I got my second, so the Dervish stayed in my hand. The card advantage was just too much. I could not keep op, so he won 2-0.



Since this match had not taken long, I had some time looking around and spotted Martens awesome lifecounter:



This is a modified 1995 reaper life counter. Apparently, somewhere around that time, a Magic chess set was also made, and Maarten got these parts from the inventory of a game store gone bust some years ago. It looks awesome, and feels very heavy as it's all metal. Then Marten pulled out some more original 1994 life counters, still in their packaging:


Wow. I was impressed. He had kept them a long time, but figured oldschool players might enjoy these, so he was selling them off. And then.. he had a surprise for me. Because he appreciates the tournaments I have been organizing and this website so much, he gifted me one! I didn't know what to say :) I always hope people enjoy the tournaments and this site, but I never figured someone liked it that much. So I picked the one with the female (I think Elf) warrior on it because it fits the theme of the deck I was playing. Thanks so much Marten! I really, really appreciate it! The life counter is now in my home where it is displayed together with the other two classic life counters I have.



Again, thanks! I enjoy looking at it every day and look forward to using it in future events.

And then it was time for Match 5 (Evert, troll disco/beast).

This was not much of a match-up for me. In game one, I felt good about my hand since I had disenchant and 1 small and 2 big creatures in my hand, but I never got to playing most of that since an early Mind twist took them away and the advantage was too much to overcome. In game 2 he opened with a Library of Alexandria, and it was pretty much the same story :) And it did not help that this was my opening hand in game two:




So I just missed the top 8. Had I managed to pull out a win or a draw in one of the two last games, I would have been in, now I was out. But not to worry, there was still the Revised only side event, and I had brought a deck to play in that as well. But there were still people playing, and Roy and Marten were in an intense game in the final turns. The time has been called, Marten is in his supposedly last turn, after which Roy will get the last turn of the 5. Roy has just played wheel of fortune and Su-Chi t keep Marten off his back in the last turn. This is Martens hand after the wheel:


This is one of those magic puzzles. You have one turn left, no go and win even though your opponent is at over 10 life. 



After Marten won with this puzzle, the Revised only event started. My first match-up was against white weenie. After game one, we both were amazed about how statistics work. I mean, really, what are the odds of him drawing 4 savannah lions and me 4 dark rituals. These are literally all the cards we drew during the game:


In case you were wondering, the earthquake was the game winner together with the Sengir Vampire. In the second game I even managed a rare sight:


I managed to get a counter on my vampire without it being destroyed or removed from the game. I got to attack for 5! That almost never happens, at least not to me. 

My deck was working pretty good in this match-up, but I got crushed by Joep with his white deck with main deck meekstones and a lot of disenchants, so I did not get to disk away his meekstones. Oh, and the balance that took 3 of my creatures out also wasn't helping :)

This gave me some time to watch the last parts of the tournament. Here Evert has his Guardian Beast/Chaos Orb combo working, which is just brutal. Jeff is not amused:


After taking out several of Jeffs lands (starting with the maze) Evert easily won that game and was on to the finals. The finals were between Everts Troll Disco and our Belgian regular Antoine who was playing the Savannah Lions/Serra/counter deck which has been very successful at a lot of tournaments around the world. In the end, Evert won out, proving that Troll Disco with beast really is a T1 deck in old school mtg.

Thanks to Joep for organizing this event, thanks to Vendetta for hosting this day, thanks again to Marten for giving me that awesome lifecounter and of course, thanks to all of you for showing up. I've loved playing with old magic cardboard for almost 15 years now, and it warms my heart to see so may enthusiasts of old school/ancient magic. May we play this format in good spirits for a long time to come!

And for those of you that like decklists, here are some that were published: