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134 Grand Emerald Tower. F Ortigas jr. cor Garnet rd.
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Landline: (02) 494-4066

Expansion store:
2nd floor Intrepid Plaza (outside Eastwood, beside Citibank)
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Landline: (02) 585-5999

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We’re going back to where it all started

July 8th, 2012

M13 Drafts at Titan Kapitolyo

Titan’s founding players love 40-card deck formats, and they miss them badly. Most of us have been seeking refuge in Magic Online where drafts are non-stop, but the experience of playing with real cards with friends is irreplaceable.

Titan will be going back to its roots starting this month. We started out with the primary intention of having a place where drafters can draft. We will try to bring back the drafting tradition among Filipino players again by offering alternate entry plans for the otherwise prohibitive format.

We are sure that some people miss shuffling up 40-card decks and feel that there are already too many 60 card deck tournaments around the metro; drafting should be something new and refreshing.

If you are not familiar with the format, a basic rules explanation can be found here: http://wiki.mtgsalvation.com/article/Booster_draft

Advantages of Drafting:                              

Relatively low investment - For newcomers, putting together a decent constructed deck is a huge investment.  Getting tired of your old constructed deck and building a new one multiplies this investment. Drafting will let you play a game of Magic on almost even grounds and with a relatively lower investment. The entry fees may be higher, but there were no prior investments.

Short tournament time – Some people do not exactly have the time to sit down for a 7-round tournament (plus top 8 playoffs). Booster drafts will last for about 3 hours; 30 minutes to draft, and 3 50-minute rounds of play. So if you are pressed for time but still want that Magic fix, give this format a try. If you find yourself wanting more fun after the first 3 hours, joining another draft pod will help that itch.

You do not have to win, to “win” – Winning all your matches will surely get you a handful of booster packs, but in draft, you also get the chance of winning as early as when you open your first booster pack. Players get to keep all the cards they draft, so if you are lucky enough to crack that 1,000+ peso mythic rare from your first pack, you can probably call yourself a winner already. If the contents of your booster pack are a bit low on cash value, you still have the chance of winning some boosters from the tournament prize pool.

Better than opening booster packs – Cracking some booster packs open is a lot of fun; an experience that most of us liken to eating candy. However, this moment is short, a few seconds to be exact. Aside from opening 3 packs, drafting takes this experience to a whole new level by letting you play with the cards you cracked.

The origin of innovation - Since drafting will let you play with almost every card on the set, players will see some unknown synergies from the cards that are ignored in tuned constructed formats. Whether these synergies have the potential to fit into competitive 60-card deck formats is another story.

Tournament information:

Format: Magic 2013 Core Set booster draft
When: Every Saturday at Titan Kapitolyo
Registration time: 3:00pm
Prize support: 5-3-2-2 plus promo foils

Multiple pods will be run all day

Entry options:

Cash – A Php 600 straight up payment for the entry fee.

Product and cash – If you have extra booster packs, you may also use them to enter. Just bring 3 unopened Magic 2013 Core Set booster packs and add Php 240.

Titan Draft Passes – Aside from the usual booster packs and foil promo cards, we will be awarding Draft Passes to top finishers of our Wednesday and Friday (FNM) tournaments at Titan Kapitolyo. We will also be raffling off a Draft Pass if we get more than 16 players. Draft passes earned are transferable and may be used at your own convenience.

Completed Draft Loyalty Card - The loyalty promo is back. This time, you get a stamp for every draft you join. Any entry option you use will qualify for a stamp. Get a free draft after 15 drafts. Just print this card out and bring it when you draft.

 

*Other draft formats may also be run depending on player demand

Categories: AnnouncementsArticlesmagic the gatheringStore EventsTournaments

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Weekend Review – 5/18/2011

May 18th, 2011

Standard:

The first PTQ for Philadelphia in Manila was concluded last weekend. It was the first major New Phyrexia legal Standard tourney in the local scene. Titan’s Jason Ascalon won the whole thing playing the most popular weapon of choice for the format; CAW-blade. 5 other CAW-blade players were also in the top 8, cementing the deck as the best deck (that got even better with NPH) in the format. The other 2 decks in the top 8 were RUG-twin and RUG. The full top 8 decklists can be viewed at Neutral Grounds’ facebook page.

Finishing just outside the top 8 (9th) was me, JT Porter, and my take on a mono-black midrange deck that was originally sketched by Patrick Chapin in 2 of his articles for StarCityGames. Chapin presented 2 different builds of a possible mono-black deck but did not really explain in detail how the deck and each of its components worked. Sure, individual black cards are pretty straightforward, but black decks should have all their cards working in unison and the pilot should know all the good combination plays. We were not too impressed by Chapin’s list as it seemed like it was only drawn on the table and has not been tested properly. We tried different other builds for the deck; splashing blue for JTMS and Creeping Tar Pit, splashing red for some artifact hate, and white for Stoneforge Mystic. The 2 color builds were very inconsistent and had a bad curve that we decided to revert back to mono-black, splashing green for sideboard Nature’s Claim. The big difference of our build and Chapin’s would be the disruption suite of choice. Chapin ran a combination of Inquisition of Kozilek, Duress, and Despise while we decided to drop Despise and put a 2/1 flying body in the form of Liliana’s Specter. Chapin also ran a set of Phyrexian Revokers which actually seems like a good idea given that majority of my build’s loses came at the back of a random creature with an equipped Sword of Feast and Famine.

PORTER, James
15 points

Lands:
20 Swamp
4 Verdant catacombs

Creature Spells:

4 Gatekeeper of Malakir
4 Liliana’s Specter
3 Vampire Nighthawk
1 Pilgrim’s Eye
4 Phyrexian Obliterator

Non-Creature Spells:
4 Inquisition of Kozilek
3 Duress
4 Geth’s Verdict
2 Go for the Throat
4 Sign in Blood
3 Lashwrithe

Sideboard:
1 Forest
3 Nature’s Claim
2 Go for the Throat
1 Ratchet Bomb
3 Hex Parasite
2 Surgical Extraction
1 Grave titan
1 Vampire Nighthawk
1 Duress

The deck finished 5-2, losing to 2 CAW-blade decks (both made the top 8). The loses were a bit sketchy though as we were not able to test enough sideboarded games, which meant that I was trying out different sideboard strategies during the tourney. It is a really fun deck to play specially if you or your wallet is not a big fan of JTMS, Lotus Cobra, or Stoneforge Mystic. As of this build, the deck has a total of 5 mythic rares, and has a total cash value of somewhere around “cheaper than a playset of JTMS”. With a bit more work, I think the deck could be a strong contender in the format.

Community News

Our beloved MTG distributor and the big dog of local gaming; Neutral Grounds, decided to bid farewell to their flagship branch in Robinsons Galleria. The GM; Mr. Freddie Tan (aka Mr. McMahon) discusses it in detail in their website. I am sure that everyone in the local community had their fair share of good memories in Galleria, be it spotting eye candy in the days when there were tournaments at the top floor, a lot of very large prerelease tournaments, memorable Nationals tournaments, and personally, a GP win that was scored in a once empty portion of the mall. There hasn’t been any MTG tournaments at Galleria lately but the team and friends still regularly visit that mall to pickup wholesale orders or eat at Yoshinoya (we had discounts here for a while) and DQ.

Categories: ArticlesConstructed

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Weekend Review – 3/1/2011

March 1st, 2011

Standard:
CAW-Blade, CAW-Blade, CAW-Blade, CAW-Blade, yes I wrote it four times because that’s how many players running the deck finished in the top 8 of the recently concluded StarCityGames open. If that was not enough, there are 5 more players who also ran the same deck in the top 16!

Click here for the top 16 decklists.


The next hottest thing to Jace, TMS in Standard

Legacy:

Marco Deligos is back, winning Ongkeco’s 20k Legacy tournament last Sunday. 3rd time is a charm for Team Ruthless, placing 3 guys in the top 8 and getting what seemed like an elusive win. The organizer has posted pictures on their facebook page but we still await the decklists.

There was another Legacy tournament on the other side of the globe last weekend; the other half of the StarCityGames open. Aside from the presence of Green Sun’s Zenith on almost all decks that ran green, theres no real exciting change in the Legacy metagame. Top 16 decklists can be found here.

Categories: ArticlesConstructedTournaments

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Weekend Review – 2/22/2011

February 22nd, 2011

Titan FNM Booster Draft:
Fresh off of PT and GP Paris, Jason Ascalon won the 1st draft, defeating PT Geneva Champ Mike Hron in the finals. Jason started his draft with the infect mechanic in mind, but shifted to RW after opening a foil Elspeth and picking up 2 Galvanic Blasts on the 1st Scars of Mirrodin booster.

The 2nd draft was won by dark horse Joseph Obed, who swept all 3 of his matches with a 2-0 win. His weapon of choice? RW.


The bombs were on his prize packs

Leave us a note in our facebook page (link can be found in the left panel of this site) if you are interested in drafting this Friday.

Entry options:
1. Three (3) booster packs (any combination of SOM or MBS) + Php 240
2. Php 600

Payout:
1st: 4 MBS boosters, 1 older booster, 1 FNM Spellstutter Sprite
2nd: 2 MBS boosters, 1 older booster, 1 FNM Spellstutter Sprite
3rd: 2 MBS boosters
4th: 2 MBS boosters

Standard:
Neutral Grounds ran a large Standard tournament last Saturday. We’re trying to get the results and decklists from them. We will post it once it is available.


JTQ Singapore is fast approaching; it’s time to brush up on Standard

Legacy:
The Southern Invitational Legacy tournament was also concluded last Saturday. GP Manila top 8 finisher; Adrian Marasigan, who was running a Zoo deck, won the whole thing. Team Ruthless’ Marco Deligos; playing ANT, and Jay Pangasinan; armed with his trusty Faeries deck, placed 2nd and 3rd.

Photos and top 3 decklists can be found on Zuran’s facebook page.

Vintage:
A 25-player Vintage tournament was held in KIMI and TYLER’S, Quezon City last Sunday. The finals featured Vince Ching and Luis de Leon in an Oath of Druids mirror match.

Here is the winner’s decklist:

Vincent Ching
“Vince Oath”

4 City of Brass
4 Gemstone Mine
4 Forbidden Orchard
4 Wasteland
1 Strip Mine

4 Force of Will
3 Misdirection
1 Tinker
4 Oath of Druids
3 Impulse
1 Demonic Tutor
1 Balance
1 Hurkyll’s Recall
1 Ancient Grudge
1 Gaea’s Blessing
3 Spell Pierce
3 Duress
1 Vampiric Tutor
1 Mystical Tutor
1 Enlightened Tutor
1 Brainstorm
1 Progenitus
1 Tezzeret the Seeker
1 Timevault
1 Voltaic Key
1 Sol Ring
1 Mox Pearl
1 Mox Emerald
1 Mox Ruby
1 Mox Jet
1 Mox Sapphire
1 Mana Crypt
1 Lotus Petal
1 Inkwell Leviathan

Sideboard:
4 Leyline of the Void
3 Energy Flux
3 Nature’s Claim
1 Iona Shield of Emeria
3 Pithing Needle
1 Pyroclasm

Categories: ArticlesConstructeddraftTournaments

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Weekend Review – 2/15/2011

February 16th, 2011

Pro Tour Paris:
Complete coverage from the mothership can be found here.

2 Filipino players went to Paris to compete. 2-time National team member Jason Ascalon was the man from Manila. The other Pinoy was Marcel Zafra; who now resides in Canada. The event did not go too well for us; Jason was off to a bad start with a 0-2-1 record and Marcel fell out of contention early. Jason was able to recover a bit by winning the next 4 rounds but fell short of making it to day 2 when he lost the last booster draft round to David Ochoa.

Grand Prix Paris:
Complete coverage from the mothership can be found here.

Again, we have the same players representing the country in this event. Jason Ascalon was off to a hot 6-0 start and got into a feature match with no less than one of the game’s greatest to ever play; Kai Budde (feature match link). Sadly, bad luck struck once again and Jason lost the rest of his matches for the day, missing out on day 2 by 1 win. As for Marcel Zafra, he opened a really bad sealed pool and was out of the tournament early.

Local News:
No major tournaments were held over the weekend; a wise move on the part of tournament organizers because tournament attendance tends to decline when nearing Valentines day. We did run 2 drafts last Friday though. The first draft saw 2 of the country’s loudest players; Morris Tan and Nick Ortega on top of the standings. The second was led by limited veteran Chester Sy and a person whom we thought could only play 60-card decks; Ben Solpico.

Deck on the spotlight:
UW Stoneforge Caw-Go
- Brian Kibler, Brad Nelson, Ben Stark, etc

4 Celestial Colonnade
4 Glacial Fortress
5 Island
1 Misty Rainforest
4 Plains
4 Seachrome Coast
4 Tectonic Edge
26 lands

4 Squadron Hawk
4 Stoneforge Mystic
8 creatures

4 Day of Judgment
1 Deprive
3 Gideon Jura
4 Jace, the Mind Sculptor
3 Mana Leak
4 Preordain
4 Spell Pierce
1 Stoic Rebuttal
1 Sword of Feast and Famine
1 Sylvok Lifestaff
26 other spells

Sideboard
2 Baneslayer Angel
2 Divine Offering
2 Flashfreeze
1 Negate
4 Oust
3 Ratchet Bomb
1 Sword of Body and Mind
15 sideboard cards

This decklist won Ben Stark the Pro Tour Paris trophy, and won Brad Nelson the 2010 POY trophy. I have not tried or even sleeved it myself but I guess it’s a good list.

- JT

Categories: ArticlesConstructeddraftStore Events

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Filipino Field Journal #2 by Ogie Jaro

November 4th, 2010

Last week, Ogie let us in on his experiments in the Scars of Mirrodin draft format. Ogie sent us another article this week which is supposed to be the continuation (?) of last week’s article. He presents us with 3 sample SOM-SOM-SOM drafts, topsy-turvy style.

In the last article, I mentioned that I didn’t like drafting infect, feeling that it was underpowered. Naturally I open P-Fax in the draft right after and decided to give the archetype another chance. Two Cystbearers, a Tangle Angler and more random poison dudes follow in the first pack. In the second pack, I open the dragon with Xs and Ys. I pick up a Skinrender and Grasp for removal, some tricks including a Mighty Punch, and I’m thinking that well if this thing can’t 3-0, I am never drafting infect-u again. I’m obviously the only poison drafter in the pod as I pick up a fourth pick Punch over a third Cystbearer, and wheel the virtual 4/3. In other words, all systems were go for poison.

Yeah, I won that draft but it wasn’t the dominating “as-long-as-I-don’t-disconnect-(stupid-internet-connection-i-hate-you-sooooo-much)-you-have-no-chance-scrub” that I’ve grown accustomed to. All matches went to game 3 and not once did I ever feel comfortable with the board position. A couple of times I won just because of Dragonball XYZ. Other wins could have gone either way, one even coming down to me casting Tainted Strike on one of my opponent’s creatures to stay alive and alpha strike for the win. In conclusion, I am not impressed and will avoid infecting anyone as much as possible. (That’s what she said)

Anyway, if you have no choice but to go infect-u, here are some tips:

a.) Open the poison bombs or pick up 10 stingers and lots of pump.
b.) Pray.

(There’a s primer on the GP Bochum Day 1 Coverage by the Chief for die-hard infectionados.)

By the way, a lot of people hate Blight Mamba (Morris Tan in particular) for the fect deck and I used to find it difficult to disagree, however, recent revelations (see last draft and… well that’s it) have lead me to conclude that the little snake is just a little misunderstood. He is not supposed to be a two drop. If you have another two drop in hand you play that over it and if you have to play him on turn 2, don’t regenerate when your opponent blocks on turn 3 if you have something else to play. His main role is to annoy and peck at clogged boards. He is not Kobe, more of Sasha-I-Wanna-Bang-Sharapova-Forever-Vujacic.

By the way, as I’m writing this I’ve just realized I haven’t tried Blue-Green/Black fect-u. I will try it if the opportunity presents itself, but I really don’t expect to be more succesful with blue than the more common black-green.

On a related or unrelated note (I haven’t decided) could someone sell me the monogreen fect deck for Gameday or an FNM. I wanna rip through a few opponents with a sleeveles copy of that bad boy.

The next pod, I draft the sickest pile I’ve ever had for SOM. Two each of Skinrender, Painsmith, Embersmith, Galvanic Blast, Kuldotha Rebirth and Panic Spellbomb with just the right supporting cards. The only regret I had was having to draft Venser over Arc Trail, reasoning that I could win without the two-for-one spell anyway and 10 tix is 10 tix. I was figuring out whether to play or split the finals with just a couple of picks left in the draft…

Then I got disconnected. MTGO you are so fecting cruel.

I just farm the next few drafts and my stupid internet connection loses me more events. I lend my account to Morris for a couple of qualifier sealed events but he was basically pack screwed (one pool had three dual lands… which would have been good if this was Ravnica). So, I’m basically back to where I started. I have won the last three drafts so I’m on my way back but if the connection ever acts up again… well, I might have to get off my lazy ass and finally file some refund applications.

As a parting gift, here’s an amusing pool that I went 3-0 with, I have no idea how:

1 Lux Cannon
1 Myr Reservoir
1 Prototype Portal
1 Heavy Arbalest
1 Golden Urn
1 Origin Spellbomb
1 Tumble Magnet

2 Soliton
1 Steel Hellkite
1 Myr Galvanizer
2 Perilous Myr
2 Gold Myr
1 Silver Myr
2 Neurok Replica

2 Lumengrid Drake
1 Darkslick Drake
1 Riddlesmith

1 Halt Order
1 Volition Reins

4 Plains
12 Island

Yup, that is how I roll.

- Ogie

Categories: ArticlesdraftFFJMagic Onlinemagic the gathering

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Ogie Jaro misses writing stuff: FFJ #1

October 29th, 2010

We received a text message from Ogie Jaro yesterday, asking us what our email address was; because he has an article for us. It was a pleasant surprise and something that we are honored to have here in our website. While everyone else is busy with the upcoming Gold Rush and all its trials, limited players are still busy playing limited.

Without further ado, here it is:

It has been a couple of years since I wrote “Filipino Field Journal” for the Philippine Magic mothership. The reason is pretty simple, really: I am just too damn lazy. Lazy enough that now that I’ve decided to start writing again, I find it to be too much work to try completing all the unfinished business from my previous articles or at least try to give this new series any semblance of continuity.

In any case, you may call this series a reboot, a Kuldotha Rebirth or Kuldotha Phoenix rising, call it whatever you want, just don’t call it a comeback… I’ve been here for years. (Always wanted to use an old school hip-hop reference)

This year I scrubbed out of 2 Pro Tours, 2 Grand Prix and Nationals, which basically obliterated any streak of success I claimed to have in previous years. So why do you need to read this, considering how much of a failure I have been? You don’t. But hey, it’s not like you have any other options. You can read the foreign sites all you want but it won’t satisfy your craving for good ol’ Philippine Magic writing. At least, that’s what I am telling myself to believe that my articles will be read by people other than JT (I’m assuming he has to read this when he posts it on the website) and Kurt (maybe not Kurt).

The mission which I have chosen to accept is to win all three Pro Tours and the World Championship next year, Player of the Year obviously included with all the points I’m getting, maybe a couple of Grand Prix and second at Nationals (I want to concede in the finals to Jason Ascalon, he really wants it, and I’m not that greedy). Realistically, maybe just twenty Pro Points and even more probable just winning something, anything relevant again.

The Beginning, Part 2

After a depressing PT Amsterdam (Magic-wise) and Nationals (death in the wife’s family), I stopped playing for a month or so. But with the coming of Scars of Mirrodin, the follow-up to the set where I was “pulled back in” (another old school reference, God I’m old), the call of the card siren was just to strong.

I bought 50 tix on MTGO and started grinding in the M11 drafts, hoping to make enough for an obscene number of prerelease and release events. After a handful of drafts, winning more than losing with forced UW, I found myself up 20 something tix… yeah I know, wow. I lost a couple of drafts next and was right back where I started. M11 was officialy a waste of time. I basically needed to win every single 8-4 I joined or a modest 95% of the time and open Primeval Titan and Baneslayer Angel every other draft if I wanted to get to Prerelease Nirvana.

I looked to the classifieds and was surprised to see that most of the Mythics in Zendikar and Worldwake were going for 5 to 7 tix and Jace TMS at an insane minimum of 70 tix. Fetchlands were at 4 to 5 tix and many rares at 3 to 5. I bought a Zendikar draft set and never looked back, forcing BR get there and monoblack to 180+ tix profit in a week, although opening a Jace accounted for a good bulk of that. BR was never short on playables and the pieces were redundant, i.e. the two drops all look the same and removal is removal, so you could draft any 3+ tix rare you opened while still coming up with a winning deck. For example, in one draft I took a Warren Instigator (5 tix), Fetchland (4) and Stoneforge Mystic (5) in one draft (paying for the draft itself) and still ended up with a pile that split in the finals for another 6 packs.

Sometimes Wizards just screws up and gives us draft formats like these and its always important to take advantage. The last time it happened was 9th ed draft where you just drafted Red Green 3 Power and could take WOG and painlands (when lands were still worth something). Llanowar Elf into Trained Armodon into Order of the Sacred Bell with Hammer and/or Shock in hand? GG.

Anyway, with my landfall (see what I did there?) from Zendikar, I had enough to go nuts in the SOM prerelease. I won a lot but that was due more to the quality of competition than anything else. Lately though, with the pros coming out of the woodwork, I’m at 50/50 and with the crashes and disconnects (which I’m too lazy to work out the refunds), I’ve lost most of the spoils from Zendikar. I wanted to give you a comprehensive primer on how to win in SOM, as a small reward for you making it this far in the article, but I don’t think I’m qualified yet. I do have some observations, the correctness of which has yet to be determined.

The BR Conley Woods deck and the Kuldotha Rebirth deck – I’ve enjoyed most of my success with these archetypes, but that’s probably due in part to the Zendikar drafting which is similar in strategy. Just pick 2 drops and panic spellbombs, usually good for 2-1, 3-0 if you don’t go up against any ‘insane’ deck. You can also pick up money rares since most of the pieces wheel.

Amusing (?) story – In game 3 of a finals, I was up against a bombalicious but slow deck. On the play, I opened on mountain, Chimeric Mass for zero and Kuldotha Rebirth. Got there.

The poison deck – This always seems like an underpowered deck even if you draft it right. I’m never comfortable with it and I’ve lost more than won whenever I’ve had the misfortune to draft it. If there was a Giant Growth in the set, I’m talking one to cast reasonable pump and not you Mighty Punch, then this deck would probably be more successful. I would probably avoid it in drafts that matter, even if I opened up the Hand or P-fax. However, Kazuya and PV believe otherwise and I would probably listen to the actual PT winners than Mr. No PT Day 2.

Mana Myr – I just don’t get it. They seem overrated to me. When they’re good, they’re just good. Nothing to write home about. Most of the time, they just attack for 1 on turn 3. Other times they just contribute to the brokenness that is Arc Trail.

Golden Urn – Small underrated find for metalcraft decks. I’ve never been disappointed in playing this turn 1 (to 3) to get metalcraft and make racing a little more difficult for the opponent. Sucks against poison though.

Clone Shell – Is a trap. Unless you have good targets AND sac outlets, just leave it in the sideboard.

The format seems fast but the decks that can recover against fast starts also seem to be prevalent. Bottomline, I have no idea what to tell you… just yet.

I am running a little long and just rambling so I’ll just catch up with you next week.

- Ogie

I know right; BITIN! We can discuss this further on facebook or just wait for Ogie to write the next episode.

Categories: ArticlesdraftFFJMagic Onlinemagic the gathering

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Ongkeco’s Mox Tournament: A comprehensive tournament report

October 25th, 2010

Over a hundred (114?) players played at last Sunday’s Mox Tournament at Ongkeco’s Hobby Shop. When the dust settled (around 12:30mn), Titan’s very own JT Porter (Vengevine/Survival) was across the table from Allan Jay Marallag (dredge). The finalists were somehow able to negotiate a prize split and walked home half a Mox Jet richer. JT dropped in the finals and so the match was not played anymore.

Here is JT’s short and comprehensive tournament report:

Vengevine Survival: Aggro-Combo-Control version
by JT Porter

4 Noble Hierarch
4 Basking Rootwalla
4 Wild Mongrel
4 Tarmogoyf
4 Vengevine
2 Gilded Drake
1 Wonder
1 Venser, Shaper Savant

4 Brainstorm
4 Survival of the Fittest
2 Intuition
4 Force of Will
3 Jace, the Mind Sculptor

4 Misty Rainforest
4 Verdant Catacombs
4 Tropical Island
3 Forest
2 Island
1 Pendelhaven
1 Gaea’s Cradle

Sideboard:
3 Krosan Grip
1 Trygon Predator
2 Faerie Macabre
1 Tormod’s Crypt
1 Relic of Progenitus
2 Llawan, Cephalid Empress
1 Genesis
1 Meloku, the Clouded Mirror
2 Umezawa’s Jitte
1 Plagiarize

Unused cards:
2 Llawan, Cephalid Empress – Although there were a lot of Merfolks, I never got paired against them. They still deserve to be here.
1 Genesis – If opponent has graveyard hate coming in (and I bet he does), this will be useless. Replacement recommended.
1 Plagarize – Best pitch card for FOW? What was I thinking?!

Cards wanted:
- a 3rd Gilded Drake maindeck or sideboard
- a 4th Jace, the Mind Sculptor maindeck or sideboard
- more reusable artifact/enchantment removal like Trygon Predator
- more graveyard hate because it hits both Survival and Dredge decks
- a 2nd Wonder in the sideboard because sometimes, you do need a 2nd Wonder

Per round matchups:
Round 1 vs GW aggro: 2-0
MVP: Gilded Drake/Jace TMS combo

Round 2 vs Etched Champion Affinity: 2-0
MVP: Gilded Drake/Jace TMS combo

Round 3 vs Vengevine Survival: 1-2
MVP: Survival of the Fittest
Findings: Do not take out FOW during sideboarded games.

Round 4 vs Aggro Loam: 1-1-1
MVP: None
Findings: Faced Gaddock Teeg and multiple black Leylines. You need a lot of backup plans vs hate.

Round 5 vs Vengevine Survival: 2-0
MVP: Survival of the Fittest and Force of Will
Findings: The round 3 findings have been proven correct.

Round 6 vs Dredge: 2-0
MVP: None, just got really lucky
Findings: Pray hard and kill him quick

Round 7 vs Lauren: Scooped me in

Top 8 vs Sui Black: 2-1
MVP: Beatdown creatures
Findings: Multi-dimensional strategy needed to get through all the hate

Top 4 vs GWB Survival (toolbox): 2-0
MVP: Survival of the Fittest and Force of Will
Findings: The opponent’s version had a lot of answers, diverse threats were necessary.

Finals vs Dredge: Split/Drop

Categories: ArticlesTournaments

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Views about the 2010 Philippine National Team

September 7th, 2010

Nationals has just been concluded and we have our top 4 finishers:

National Champion: Caesar Famorcan – Pyromancer’s Ascension
1st Runner up: Rommel Asiong – Mythic Conscription
2nd Runner up: Jan Ang – Mythic Conscription
3rd Runner up: Christian Joseph Lim – Jund

I received a text message from top-8 finisher Chip Jamir; asking me if I would like to take the seat as the alternate for this year’s World Championships in Japan. Apparently, Caesar Famorcan is passing down his seat in the Philippine team this year. This leaves us with the next 3 who will probably take the task of representing the country. No other players seem to be interested in becoming the alternate and so the pass-down has already reached me (I finished 12th). I still have mixed feelings about taking the seat or not but that is not the focus of this article (but I will get to that later); this will be about the members of the team that will represent us this year.

The 3 members of this National team are relatively new to the international Magic scene. Not one of them has attended a Pro Tour and they have relatively low Pro Points compared to their fellow countrymen. I do believe that they will put on a good show though, and I will tell you why as I go through each and every one of them.

Rommel Asiong:

He will be representing the Philippines as the National champion if Caesar Famorcan rescinds his seat. I remember that Mr. Asiong sent me a text message a few days before Nationals asking if we were going to do some practice drafts. Unfortunately, we did not plan to do practice drafts on paper; everything was done in Magic Online and so he was not able to join us. I think he found a different test group though. This is a clear indication of his work ethics; a desire to do some serious preparation for an upcoming big event, something that a few of us veterans have lost over time. He is even willing to practice with people whom he does not know very well; which will actually be the case for the team he will be leading. Preparation is a very important thing in the World Championships. 3 formats are very had to prepare for and take a lot of time and dedication. If what I think of Mr. Asiong is correct, he will be able to get this team together and have them ready come December.

The guy is a solid player with a few rough ends but I think that he is fit to lead this squad.

Jan Ang:

Morris Tan claims that they tested decks together because they were practically neighbours. I’m not sure how those sessions turned out but Mr. Ang finished much higher than Morris; which means that this player has got some skills. At the moment, Jan Ang may be the hottest player in the local Magic scene. He consistently finishes in the top 8 of every tournament he joins and seems unfazed regardless of whom he is playing. He destroyed every former National Champion (except Francis Profeta) that he played against in this year’s Nationals (me included). Local players have dubbed him as the Filipino Brad Nelson; a tournament wrecking ball that simply gets the job done but occasionally falls short. A lot of people believed that he could have won this year’s Nationals if Caesar Famorcan’s deck was not a very bad matchup for him. He immediately followed up his Nationals performance with a top 8 finish in a GPT the week after.

Jan Ang has a very strong desire to win and is currently on a hot streak. Let’s hope that he continues to carry that fire in the World Championships.

Christian Joseph Lim:

He was the dark horse in this year’s Nationals top 8 who was responsible for eliminating Chip Jamir; who was apparently favoured to win the tournament. Mr. Lim is a relative unknown in the local Magic scene because according to my sources (the DCI), he resides in Olongapo City. The Nationals top 8 match was the first time that I saw him play and I would say that it was not Jund’s insane draws/cascades that won him the match. I am not sure how he prepared for this event but it must have been a very difficult task for a player who does not play in the country’s mainstream tournaments very often to come up with a deck that is metagamed to the teeth (maindeck Goblin Ruinblaster and Slave of Bolas) and put up such an impressive finish.

The team in general:

If you have read this article in full and did not skip a paragraph, we can see that the National team is very inexperienced but has a common strength in the form of the way they prepare for events. They have also proven themselves as players; they would not have finished in the top 4 if they were not good enough. I have full confidence in the 3 members of the team, and so its time to move the spotlight to the 4th member.

The Alternate:

I personally feel that Chip Jamir is best suited to fill this slot. Aside from being a technically sound player, Chip likes team mates who seriously prepare for events. He can also add some much needed experience to the group and act as their mentor. I do hope that he gets the confidence for the task and joins the Philippine contingent.

As for me, I think I will sit this one out and just play again in Pro Tour Paris.

- JT

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Limited Edition (episode 1)

February 7th, 2010


Today, we have an article from long-time limited specialist Chester Sy. C is a regular drafter from Madison Wisconsin playing alongside Pro Tour champion Mike Hron for the most part of his active playing days. Although he still has the skills and ratings to play in high level events; these days, he prefers to just play casually and on very rare occasions.

We are very glad that he chose to play at Titan during the Worldwake prerelease, and we are honored that he chose to write a tourney report for us to publish in this site.

Prerelease Report: Worldwake Midnight Pre-release @ Titan
by C

Humorous thoughts in parenthesis. Heh.

So Wednesday rolls around and I get a message at like 10pm, asking if I’m playing at the prerelease. Magic doesn’t really interest me nowadays, as killing dragons (in the real world, of Warcraft) is just a tad more fun than slinging cards. I blatantly ignore the message and go get me some EPIC LEWTZ!

Thursday night, while drunk from one too many beers in the streets of Alabang, Franz calls me up asking if I wanted to prerelease it up. At the back of my head I’m like, what the f do u want from me! (but of course I didn’t say that). Apparently a lot of my officemates, including the always wacky Celsus and king of awkward nights Jem are coming. In my tipsy state, I commit (f peer pressure~).

We were supposed to meet at 9pm at the office on Friday night, but I’m obviously late (killing dragons take a lot of time) so I arrive at the very fashionably late time of 10:30pm. Passengers in the C-mobile: Celsus, Jem, Franz and me. Excited as they were, all talk on the way to the site was about them cards. I chipped in as much as I can, but I only scanned the spoiler an hour before I left the house (and I saw zero exciting cards).

So we obviously arrive at the site with 45 minutes to spare. The gang was hungry, so we stop by the BEST cheap pizza place ever (that, and I had to park my car somewhere; ulterior motive). Jem starts to talk about some guitar $h!t; some dude from some band was having some guitar lessons sometime the next day (I obviously wasn’t listening). Franz starts $h!tting out poltically incorrect jokes about sex (gender), and Celsus predicts Jem’s loot for the night as consisting of 3 Eye of Ugin and 3 Magosi, the Waterveil (what do those cards do anyway). I think about all the wasted time playing with paper when I can be killing pixels instead~

A few slices of pizza and countless number of mojos later, we arrive at the site and I register the following (might be missing a few cards):

White (14)

Bold Defense
Cliff Treader
Join the Ranks
Kor Outfitter
Makindi Shieldmate
Ondu Cleric
Steppe Lynx
Windborn Charge
Apex Hawks
2 Guardian Zendikon
Iona’s Judgment
Kitesail Apprentice
Marshal’s Anthem

Blue (14)

Caller of Gales
Reckless Scholar
Seascape Aerialist
Spreading Seas
Trapfinder’s Trick
Welkin Tern
Windrider Eel
Aether Tradewinds
Enclave Elite
Halimar Excavator
2 Mysteries of the Deep
Sejiri Merfolk
Thada Adel, Acquisitor

Black (16)

Crypt Ripper
Disfigure
Guul Draz Vampire
Kalitas, Bloodchief of Ghet
Nimana Sell-Sword
Quest for the Gravelord
Ravenous Trap
Vampire’s Bite
Bojuka Brigand
Corrupted Zendikon
Dead Reckoning
Nemesis Trap
Ruthless Cullblade
Scrib Nibblers
Tomb Hex
Urge to Feed

Red (13)

Goblin Ruinblaster
Hellkite Charger
Highland Berserker
Plated Geopede
Seismic Shudder
Shatterskull Giant
Bull Rush
Claws of Valakut
Comet Storm
Goblin Roughrider
Skitter of Lizards
2 Slavering Nulls

Green (14)

Baloth Cage Trap
Beast Hunt
Beastmaster Ascension
Harrow
Oran-rief Survivalist
River Boa
Scythe Tiger
Vines of Vastwood
Arbor Elf
Feral Contest
Grappler Spider
Graypelt Hunter
Vastwood Animist
Vastwood Zendikon

Akoum Refuge
Jwar Isle Refuge
Kabira Crossroads
Seijiri Steppe

Hammer of Ruin
Hedron Rover
Kitesail

First thing I do for normal formats like this is count the number of cards of each color I have. Black had 16, so I started with that color. It seemed deep enough for a main color. Next up was the bombs. You don’t have to dig hard enough to realize red has the most: hellkite charger (RORIX) and comet storm (fireball LEWLZ). Red did seem pretty shallow after that; fortunately there’s the two nulls that would otherwise been relegated to the bench if I didn’t play black.

So here’s the final deck, after a few curve checks (sorted to when I think I’m casting the cards):

1-drop:

Guul Draz Vampire

2-drops:

2 Slavering Nulls
Plated Geopede
Highland Berserker
Ruthless Cullblade
Corrupted Zendikon
Bojuka Brigand

3-drops:

Skitter of Lizards
Goblin Roughrider

4-drops:

Shatterskull Giant
Goblin Ruinblaster
Nimana Sell-Sword

6-drop:

Hellkite Charger

7-drop:

Kalitas, Bloodchief of Ghet

As per-need basis:

Urge to Feed
Tomb Hex
Nemesis Trap
Dead Reckoning
Quest for the Gravelord
Disfigure
Comet Storm
Kitesail

I was lucky enough to open seven 2-drops: the format seems a hell of a lot faster than most formats. Aggression is key; I’ve seen so many games in this format where one player empties out his hand by turn 5 while the other is stuck with 6 cards in hand.

I don’t actually remember any of my matches in detail, since I didn’t plan on writing a report, so I’ll just give some highlights:

(1) Went 4-0 with the deck, which was totally unexpected. The curve was decent but needed a bit of work. I thought it was good enough for 3-1, but definitely not a perfect record.

(2) All my matches went to 3 games, and all of them had the same pattern: one game where I killed the opponent on turn 6 or less, one game where I didn’t come out fast (lost all of them), and one game with actual interaction (fortunately, I won all of them).

(3) Specific cards:

a. A Sphinx of Jwar Isle may or may not have traded with a skitter of lizards in combat.

b. Nemesis trap was poop. The only time where it was useful was against a fun game against Nick (Ortega), where I killed two of his dudes with two mana. Pretty sure this should be relegated to the side for aggressive decks.

c. Comet storm was obviously the bomb. I finally DID a very skillful card in sealed (have bad luck with that). Remember lava-LOLanche? This one hits your opponent too! And as JT pointed out, IT’S AN INSTANT!

d. Slavering Nulls weren’t as hot as I thought they would be. I would take almost any removal spell over them. Ravenous Rats are almost better…

e. …except when you have KITESAIL! I admit, that’s the only reason why I played this usually garbage card, but it’s A-MAZING for aggro decks. Most of the time I just had to punch through for five or so damage, then all my stuff comes online (Guul Draz and Cullblade).

f. Dead reckoning was TERRIBLE. It’s on the level of Magma Spray I think.

g. Corrupted Zendikon was the BOMB. I was glad to have it at any point in the game. 3 mana 3/3 haster is almost too good!

(4) Combined record of the people riding the C-mobile: 10-6. pretty good, considering all of us play magic pretty casually these days. :)

(5) You get your picture taken when you play at Porter’s (Titan)! Definitely a reason to play there, if you are in search for stalkers (like me).

(6) We didn’t have time to do the Chester Challenge yet for this prerelease; will probably do it this week. (for those who don’t know, the Chester Challenge is when you try to play someone’s deck with cards from their sideboard. So far, I’m 3-1 in Chester’s Challenges :) my pool is a good one to do the challenge too; there’s a decent blue-white deck in there :)

(7) I recognized quite a few of the old-timers playing at the prerelease. To all that said hi, thanks! Nice to see old folks that still play this game :)

Alright, I think that’s it. Oh wait, still need:

Props:

(1) Porter for a well-run tournament. The whole thing was done in less than 5 hours from start to finish, which is a milestone for the Philippine magic community. I didn’t get to play at the Zendikar prerelease, but I heard similar things. Keep up the good work!

(2) Everyone that said hi!

(3) My opponents, for not bitching about my lucksack moments (and I had a few)

(4) Team Rama (the C-mobile crew might disagree, but I think we’re all team Rama wannabee’s)

(5) Shakey’s for the best cheap pizza ever. So good!

(6) Celsus for lending me sleeves

Slops:

(1) Smokers. Gtfo!

(2) Peer pressure. I didn’t get to do my dailies that day, dammit.

Comments, suggestions, rants, and raves, send to xeyloderixed at gmail dot com.

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