Tag: dryad-militant

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Bruce Gray - June 9, 2014

L’eggo my Aggro – Gruul aggro budget

Fanatic of Xenagos

L’eggo my Aggro

by Bruce Gray -Casual Encounters

I like to sit down and try my hand at brewing all sorts of formats.  Pauper, sure…I love it. Modern…of course (although I don’t think I’m all that good at it!).  Casual Tribal. You bet! Standard.  Yes, sometimes I like to try and brew Standard, but with a budget twist.  Today I have a “budget” deck list that isn’t as budget as usual.  Flipping through my boxes of Standard goodies I came across a number of spicy cards that will make the deck a little pricier than normal…but I’ll suggest some alternatives to try and make some substitutions if you are playing on a tighter budget than this deck would normally allow.

 

I’ve been keen to see how the format has changed with the influx of Journey into Nyx cards and I’ll be honest…I’m a little disappointed.  Journey into Nyx has afforded a few new tricks into some of the meaner and leaner decks, but most of the decks running around are the same old archetypes that have been dominant for months now.  Mono-Black. Esper Control.  Boros Burn. All of these decks are everywhere in Standard and they all have something in common.  Can you see the common thread?

 

The common thread between all the decks is that are all packed with a gross amount of removal.  Mono-Black and Esper can draw on Hero’s Downfall, Bile Blight, Ultimate Price, Doom Blade and on and on and on.  Basically these two archetypes are packed with all the best removal and if they see a creature, they kill it on sight.  To make matters worse, if Esper really gets in a jam, out comes a Supreme Verdict to clean up the mess.  No, these decks are for sure the two main boogeymen on the scene.  Boros Burn or R/W Burn, whatever you prefer to call it this week, is also jammed full of removal but of a different sort.  Anger of the Gods, Magma Jet, Magma Spray, Lightning Strike, Warleader’s Helix are all viable in the Burn Deck and can burn out creatures with alarming speed and then turn their sights on you.  Essentially the removal package of all three decks is what makes them so viable in the format. It’s tough to lose a game when your opponent can’t keep his or her creatures on the table.  Now, there are a few decks that are capable of fighting through this barrage of death, namely the Monsters variants and sometimes Mono-Blue, but it’s a tough uphill battle for these deck on most nights. So, how can you top decks that can turn so many creatures into flaming ash?  Hmmm…

 

One option is to play no creatures.  This is why Burn decks are experiencing a relative degree of success right now.  They have little to no creatures to target with removal and so Mono-Black and Esper both have a number of dead cards in game 1 before side-boarding.  You could go the route of playing Planeswalkers…notably Elsbeth because she alone can produce more creatures than most decks can handle.  Ashiok is another viable alternative to completely mill out your opponent and deny them the chance to play their spells by having them land in the poubelle .  These strategies work…but they aren’t everyone’s style.

 

The other alternative is to try and out aggro them by just giving them SO many aggressive targets that they are overloaded and can’t cope.  This strategy is dicey at best because the format is so removal heavy from our top three contenders, so the aggro decks need to have a really strong way to punish these decks (and fast) if they hope to succeed…thus why Monsters is able to pull it all together because leaving one Polukranos or Strombreath unchecked will basically cost you the game.  However, I feel like the deck I have here could sneak in and surprise a few of the big boys by overwhelming their removal suite and then making blocking near impossible.  Let’s see what I’ve got.

Gruul Aggro Budget:

 

There’s nothing earth shattering in this list.  We have a number of aggressive 1 drops in Dryad Militant and Slitherhead and some ramp with the Elvish Mystic.  At 2 we have Brushstrider, Kalonian Tusker, and Burning-Tree Emissary.  At three we have Fanatic of Xenagos.  All of these creatures are designed to put significant early pressure on your opponent and can then turn the table and smack them if they can’t deal with them quickly.  Going up we have 1 Rubblebelt Raiders.  This guy is actually a fun little treat that can get pretty nasty if you can get him to attack with some buddies, or give him haste with Ogre Battledriver.  Ghor-Clan Rampager is a solid 4 drop, but it can also be used to pile through and give you extra reach with the trample.  Finally, Savageborn Hydra is that mythic rare that everyone has forgotten about.  His double strike ability is off the charts powerful and the ability to sink extra mana into him to do extra damage is key.  To think, you can put 2 mana into him and up his damage by 2 points every time! Load him up with some evasion and you have a winning formula. Finally, Xenagos, God of Revels, is in here because his ability to grant something haste and boost the damage done is ridiculous.

 

Some would argue, why no Experiment one?  I opted to replace the Expriments with Slitherhead for the simple reason that they would be a useful resource to me even if they got killed.  An experiment one with 1 counter on it is still a dead experiment one, where a Slitherhead in my graveyard means something else can be bigger next turn. Also,  Fanatic of Xenagos is a terrific little addition at the three slot because it comes with trample and can either be a 4/4 or a 3/3 with haste and +1/+1 until end of turn.  In either scenario, I’m just fine with this card and am happy to run it.

 

The spells are also pretty straight forward.  4 Madcap skills make blocking an early threat near impossible and can really take a bite out of your opponent.  Turn 1 Dryad Militant into Turn 2 Madcap skills and swing for 5 is stiff.  They’ll need to burn early removal spells or risk ending up in big trouble. Giant Growth is in here to add some extra reach if they opt not to block thinking they are safe for a turn.  Armed // Dangerous can be devastating at the right time to lure your opponent to block a patsy while the rest of your team slices and dices.  Finally, as a concession to the fact that we want to be attacking lots and other aggro decks may be looking to take advantage, a single copy of Fog could very well spell the end for them.

 

The strategy for this deck is simple: Attack.  Attack all the time because you don’t have the spell suite to sit and posture.  You are banking that if you get out early and apply a bunch of early pressure that they will need to expend a lot of removal resources on your game plan instead of establishing their own…and in the process give you the chance to top deck into one of your monstrous threats to close out the game.  Now, that’s the game, but let’s be real, many of these top decks have seen this game plan before and I fully prepared for it.  So, don’t be surprised if you find yourself down and out to these top tier decks.  However, if they draw below average, or you play a deck that DOESN’T pack as much removal you might be in good shape. We can talk about the psychology of losing, but to keep it simple, this is deck premised on an old tried and true strategy that the top tier decks in the format come prepared to deal with.  You might lose out, but if you surprise them or they draw poorly you’ll make them pay…and really with a budget deck isn’t that the best part?  Smashing apart a finely tuned deck with a budget deck brings great joy to my life…how about you?

 

Now, as I said, you may not call this a true budget deck, but most of the value is in the mana base.  Stomping grounds are steep.  Temple of Abandon also cost a pretty penny.  However, you can sub out the mana for Gruul Guildgates and basic lands if you need to without much difficulty.  The other high priced item on this list is Xenagos, God of Revels as he could run you somewhere near the $6 range depending on where you are looking.  This is usually more than I want to spend on a single creature in a deck, so I could replace him with Gruul War Chant to make blocking totally ridiculous and near impossible if I wanted to give this more of a true budget feel.  Otherwise everything else on the list is somewhere shy of $2 a piece meaning the deck is generally pretty affordable and packs a pretty mean bite.

 

So, before you head off to your next FNM and want to give something a little different a try…something that seems like it’s missing from the Standard Meta as the big boys all eye up each other, you might want to give this Gruul Aggro Budget a try and see if you can surprise a few of them. I know that I can hardly wait to try it out.

 

Thanks for reading and until next time keep it fun, keep it safe…keep it casual.

 

Bruce Gray
 
@bgray8791
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Eric Jeffrey Seltzer - May 18, 2014

Naya Aggro by Jamie Arnold (2nd at SCG Knoxville Standard on May 10th ...

Ghor-Clan Rampager - Naya Aggro

Naya Aggro by Jamie Arnold

2nd Place at StarCityGames Standard Open on 5/10/2014
 
An interesting Aggro deck was able to power its way into the finals of the SCG Standard tourney last weekend, although it fell just short to another Aggro deck Boros Burn. As with most Naya decks it is able to take advantage of very some of the most efficient creatures available.  This deck is exactly as it is advertised, Aggro !!! With a huge concentration of beatdown creatures it works to rapidly close the gap from 20 to zero as quickly as possible and has the tool to do it.

 

The deck works on a very strong a linear path up the mana curve from one to three in an effort to clog the board with beaters. We start it off with Dryad Militant and Soldier of the Pantheon that both unchecked can start to swipe chunks off the opponents life total. Next are the Selesnya two drops with Voice of Resurgence which is amazing against control decks or removal in general and Fleecemane Lion which given the chance will turn into a Monstrous beast which opponents will be having fits to try and remove. Then we have continued profit in three drops from Boros Reckoner which can attack into small blockers and still push through damage or act as a brick wall against attackers and Loxodon Smiter which is basically a great 4/4 for three with some added value. The sole four drop creature in the deck is Ghor-Clan Rampager but it will most often be used for its Bloodrush ability to pump an attacking creature to push through extra damage to finish off the opponent. Moving over to the spells in the deck we start first with the ever useful Brave the Elements which with almost every creature being White, Ghor-Clan Rampager is the only exception, will be a key tool enabling alpha strike pushes past defenses to destroy the opponent or a way to ensure your creatures survive to fight through removal or as blockers against a flurry of attackers. The deck also sports two different charms with multiple useful modes to take advantage of. Selesnya Charm is capable of either giving a creature a boost with Trample to push for a kill, can exile a large creature as long as it has power of 5 or more, or is able to put a 2/2 Knight token onto the battlefield which is also White to take advantage of Brave the Elements as well. The other charm is Boros Charm which can be used as direct damage to scorch your enemy, is able to save all your permanents from destruction in a pinch, or will grant Double Strike to one of your creatures if you need it to deal a final blow to take you on a path to victory. The deck also takes advantage of the new mana fixing land Mana Confluence in order to smoothly run a three color manabase using a bare minimum of into play tapped lands.

The sheer power of this deck is sure to keep it performing for the next couple of months in Standard until Magic 2015 brings a new shake-up. Naya has often been the best in terms of value for creatures and this deck continues to prove that fact. Unless there is a major shift in the meta I don’t see why this deck won’t continue to be a force to be reckoned with.

Eric J Seltzer

@ejseltzer on Twitter

Email: ejseltzer@hotmail.com

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Eric Jeffrey Seltzer - October 7, 2013

Deck of the Day: G/W Aggro (Theros Standard)

voice-of-resurgence
G/W Aggro
Erik Finnegan
1st Place at StarCityGames Standard Open on 10/6/2013

Creatures (20)

Lands (23)

Spells (17)

Sideboard

This very heavily creature centric aggro build took down the SCG Standard Open this past weekend.  With seven one-drops and 12 two-drop it starts out of the gate building up a critical mass of little guys then piles on pumps to grow them into significant threats.  Using Rootborn Defenses to shrug off sweepers like Supreme Verdict or Anger of the Gods the deck is highly resilient and able to flow a constant barrage of threats.  The clock it places on opponents is so fast they won’t have time to think.