I spent the better part of 25 years buying Magic cards and playing Magic. If I close my eyes, I can still see the day Terry showed up for game night with a box of Revised Starter decks and encouraged us to try this new game. Our whole group bought in, then off I went to Jump School.
We had far more free time than I anticipated at Jump School, so I made friends with a fellow student who had a car, we found a game store, and I started the cycle anew. I distinctly recall seeing a card marked for $5 and scoffing, because who would pay real cash for a single card?
Little did I know what the future held (my personal record is $30 for a Mox Sapphire, which I then turned into $30 and some Underground Seas) with card prices.
Anyhow, through the years, various strategies and playstyles developed and with the explosion of the internet and hobby-related forums, those strategies (and more importantly decklists) grew collectively.
The result of all this is that I have the resources and knowledge to build solid decks for Commander and the more generic multiplayer 60-ish card formats the groups I am in play. Note that this does not translate into being able to play them all equally well, but I know they are good, because friends borrow them regularly and then win.
My biggest playstyle flaw involves impatience and blue instants, specifically countermagic. Used properly alongside blue draw spells (those I use mostly properly), a good blue deck has an immediate answer to any threat an opponent plays in the form of a counterspell. Used improperly (how I typically pilot a deck, regardless of color), the countermagic may be in hand, but the mana is tapped out to play whatever.
That there, is my issue. I enjoy doing things on MY turn, not maybe doing things on another player's turn. Not only is it rude to interrupt people, but I want to PLAY MAGIC, which involves casting things on my turn.
In the end, I always have several decks on hand that kick tail when piloted by my more patient friends.
Which, honestly, is fine with me. I only play just enough that my decks are a refreshing change of pace to an otherwise mostly static game state of known decks. Plus, at this point, my friends know that most of my decks can win - sometimes in a funny manner - if played properly.
So we shuffle up and laugh as I lose to my own decks.
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