• macros@feddit.org
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        1 month ago

        To explain this to the uninitiated: (First follow another explanation of the original combo)

        In Magic spells are not in effect immediately, instead they go on the stack, before they are resolved. Spells from a stack are resolved in LiFo order, so last in, first out. Instants, like Gut Shot, can be put on the stack at any time by any player (simplified).

        So Enemy gets his 21 mana with channel, you let that resolve, he has 1 life. He pumps it all into the fireball, now you act. While fireball is on the stack you cast Gut Shot, paying with 2 life of your 20. It goes on the stack. Your enemy hopefully has no response, without any mana left in his pool, and he looses his last life and the game.

        When a player looses the game all his spells are removed from the stack, so you really win and there is no draw.

        You stopped his combo with 4 cards worth unreal amounts of money with a single card worth about 50ct.

        • PunnyName@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          You start with 20 life.

          Each of these spells must be played on your turn.

          Mox Ruby is free to play with a 0 casting cost. Tap that (turn it sideways) to add 1 mountain (red mana: 🌄) to your mana pool. You don’t remove it from the board.

          You have 1 mana in your mana pool: 🌄

          Black Lotus is free to play with a 0 casting cost. You can turn it sideways, remove it from the board into your graveyard pile, and add 3 of any color to your mana pool. Choose green for forests: 🌲🌲🌲

          You now have 4 total mana: 🌄 🌲 🌲 🌲

          Channel costs 🌲🌲. Cast that, remove 🌲 🌲 from the mana pool, and pay 19 of your 20 starting life, so that you gain 19 colorless mana (can be used for most spells). Place Channel into the graveyard pile.

          Your mana pool will now have a total of 21 mana: 🌄 🌲 + 19 colorless

          Fireball costs 🌄 + any amount of mana you decide, up to how much you have available. So you then use your remaining 🌲+ 19 to do 20 damage to your opponent.

          You win with 1 life remaining.

        • toomanypancakes@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          With those four cards you can turn 1 kill. Magic typically starts with each player at 20 life. Black lotus adds three green mana. Channel costs two, but lets you pay one life to add one generic mana as many times as you want. Mox ruby pays for the red in fireball. Pay 19 life for 19 mana, with the last green you have 20 extra mana to invest into fireball, dealing 20 damage to your opponent and ending the game.

        • Atropos@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          This is a first turn win in MTG (with ridiculous old, expensive cards).

          The first card on the left lets you get three free green mana (currency used to cast cards). This is used to cast the next card, which requires green.

          The next card let’s you sacrifice your own health and turn that into mana. This only gives colorless mana.

          The third card is another free mana, this time red. One red is required to cast the 4th card.

          The 4th card does enough damage to your opponent to kill them.

          If you draw this hand, your opponent has zero ways to respond, and the game is no longer fun.

          • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            If you draw this hand, your opponent has zero ways to respond, and the game is no longer fun.

            Of course, that’s the joke. The only winning move is not to play.

            There is a meta-joke in that there are a few ways to respond to this, but only if you know it’s coming. @SkyezOpen@lemmy.world responded with one. If your opponent also has a way to get fast mana out, a simple Lightning Bolt will also do it if it’s inserted between your Channel and Fireball. Or anything that counters your fireball, which will leave you standing there with your pants down around your ankles, 1 life, and probably an empty hand.

            Then the meta-meta-joke is if you are known to be packing this combo, people around you will deliberately structure their decks around countering your stupid 1 turn win (if they will even allow you to employ it at all, given that Black Lotus is very, thoroughly, extremely banned specifically because of this combo), but this requires making sacrifices to their usual strategy and then you can show up unannounced with a different deck instead…

        • morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          Been a bit, so welcome to corrections.

          Assuming you get these all in your hand turn one,

          Black lotus and mox ruby have zero mana cost, play those. Use the black lotus to give you two green and one of your choice to pay for channel, sacrifice 19 life to add 19 mana to your manapool. Use the mix ruby to pay the red mana cost for fireball and then use the 20 mana in your manapool as the x cost, make opponent take 20 damage and you’re done.

          Unless it’s changed, artifacts dont suffer from summoning sickness so you can use the tap abilities out the gate.

          There’s some counters like Foil, Force of Will that I think could work or Misdirection. Can’t recall if there’s any instants that do damage that you can discard or exile cards from your hand instead of paying for because that could work too as fireball is a sorcery (if I recall how the stack works correctly)

          • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Correct, any instant (or interrupt, if you have cards from expansions old enough to still have them) will work. Fireball is a sorcery and is slower, so instants/interrupts will resolve first.

            You also have the potential to be scooped if you do not win the coin toss and don’t get the first turn. There are tons of single cost interrupts and various fast tweaky creatures that can deal small amounts of damage on the first turn, and all your opponent has to do is shave off one single point of life from you and this won’t work.

      • Buglefingers@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        This is a wild turn one combo that will win if both players have the same starting life. Assume 20 life each, you play the first card to give you 3 green mana, you play the second card using 2 green mana. This card let’s you use 19 of your life for mana leaving you at 1 life and 19 manager + 1 from the previous card. You play the third card which gives you one red mana (totals are 20 green, 1 red) and finally now you can use the last card by paying one red and X (X can be any number you choose as long as you can pay it). In this case X is going to be 20, for the 20 green you had dealing a perfect 20 damage to the other player leaving them at 0 life and yourself at 1 life.

        This combo works for whatever life total as long as yours is greater than or equal to Theirs

        • Owl@mander.xyz
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          1 month ago

          I don’t know anything about Magic so I only understood half but thank you for the detailed explanation!

        • Karjalan@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          I recall there is a similar thing you can do with haste 1r goblin and +x/+0 spell.

          I thought there was a way to get the mana without that green sorcery, though I don’t quite remember how

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        This is a first turn win if you draw all four of these cards in your opening hand.

        Black Lotus and Mox Ruby can be put down on your opening turn, and since they are not lands you are not limited to playing just one of them. If you are poor you can substitute the ruby with a regular old mountain. Basically, I only employ the ruby here to firmly illustrate that I am indeed an asshole.

        If you are poor, cheeky, and lucky you can replace the Black Lotus with 3 Lotus Petals and still theoretically draw all the cards you need to do this with your opening hand.

        1. Sacrifice the Black Lotus for 3 green mana.
        2. Spend 2 green manna on the Channel, pay 19 life, gain 19 colorless mana.
        3. Tap the Mox Ruby for 1 red mana.
        4. Use that 1 red mana to cast Fireball. Dump all 19 colorless mana from your Channel, plus the one green left over from the Channel into that fireball which adds up to 20.
        5. Fireball does 20 damage to your opponent. You take 19 damage from Channel. You are left at 1 life, but your opponent is dead.

        Normally M:tG games start with both players at 20 life. But it doesn’t matter if you play some weird format where everyone has more; all you do is sacrifice all but 1 of your life and dump it into fireball plus the one left over green mana from the Lotus. As long as both players have the same life count or you don’t have less life then your opponent for any reason, you win.

        Realistically, just being able to show people this hand will discourage them from engaging you at all in any type of no-holds-barred play. They’ll hide behind their silly Modern or Commander formats or whatever, where Black Lotus is banned and Channel is either restricted or banned.

        Wimps.

  • isaaclyman@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    This was my experience with MTG. Dude was all excited to “teach” me how to play, made a deck for me and everything, and then whomped me on the second turn.

    I never played again and still don’t know how

  • davidgro@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    There are of course also Magic: The Gathering decks that can do that on a lucky first hand.

    My favorite is this one, which in the abstract can do literally anything a computer can do. Yes, You can in theory run Crysis on a Magic deck. During your opponent’s turn.

    • Klear@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I never really played MtG, but I love reading about degenerate combos. My favourite uses an unglued (or un- something) card that can remove any card with a silver border you can see from your seat from play. Doesn’t have to be a card in the game you’re playing, other people nearby as valid targets.

      The silver border part makes sure it can only be played on other silly un- cards, but there’s a combo with a card allowing to change a colour in an effect to something else, meaning with a bit of support from a few other cards you could technically use this to nuke all cards in all unrelated games around you.

      • davidgro@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        That’s a fun one.

        I have an Illusions of Grandeur/Donate deck that can’t do first turn, but can take someone out all at once (if I’m super lucky, like all my decks it very rarely wins)

        • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 month ago

          Hahaha that sounds fun too!

          My favorites that I made were an actually good legacy elf deck that could win on turn 2-3 with Staff of Domination or Emrikul (my favorites, some other good wincons too) and my very casual but mean Memory Jar/Megrim deck that I used when I was playing people who didn’t have proper legacy decks. The megrim deck was like 15 years ago, before I got into competitive Magic hahaha

  • ILikeTraaaains@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Me, a noob playing MTG with a seasoned player with a red deck.

    I don’t understand what happened but at the end of his first turn I had less than 10 points remaining.

    • NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Oh, come on, euchre isn’t that bad. At the very least, you’re playing with a partner that has a vested interest in helping you. Plus, if you’re playing turn-up, it takes at least three hands to win if you’re playing to 11 (and that’s with the other team going alone and making it all three times).

      Unless you’re playing bid euchre, in which case you can score…I don’t know… up to 12 points per hand if you go alone? I’m a bit fuzzy on the scoring for bid euchre as it’s been years since I played and I didn’t grow up with it, but IIRC you usually play to a much higher point value, so it still takes a couple rounds to get to a win. But if you’re just learning, you probably shouldn’t be playing bid euchre, anyway.

      Of course, if the other team gets lucky you can wind up with each if those hands bring decided in one trick each, so it can feel like the posted comic, but at least the rules aren’t as complicated as M:tG.

      You know, rereading what I just wrote, maybe it is nearly as bad as Magic.

      • meowMix2525@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        Theres just too many rules that completely blow the game if you break them. People tell me there’s room for strategy but everything feels predetermined by the cards you get and of course there’s that guy over your shoulder telling you “can’t do that” every time you try something and oh great the other team knows my cards now, game over. Like yeah lol fuck this you guys can play without me.

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          There’s really just one rule in the basic euchre ruleset I know that you can’t break: failing to follow suit. Doing that ends the hand and results in points for your opponent.

          You are kinda right about your cards predetermining play though - once you get really good and are playing with other people who are really good, whole rounds can be played in minutes, because everyone just knows what to play.

        • NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          It helped that I learned it with my wife from our two best friends that had no one else to play with in our city, and we mostly just hung out and cooked and drank and played cards our whole way through grad school

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I learned it in high school because my girlfriend and a bunch of her friends played it at lunch, but I couldn’t tell you the first thing about playing it now.

  • Nednarb44@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I honestly loved playing yugioh back in like 2004 ish. A buddy of mine told me he played online and offered to show me how to do it. It was almost exactly this. It might be fun for someone who’s played the whole time, but I liked the clever decks with card combos that would take time to build up.

    • NotNotMike@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      Yeah, for me part of the fun of Yu-Gi-Oh was having really cool cards in your deck that was a big moment when you summoned them (I was a kid, times were simple)

      But now newer decks summon and tribute like 8 monsters in a single turn, it’s outrageous, and if you don’t know every card by heart you’ll just be stun locked trying to figure out why you got destroyed

      That’s why I prefer to play legacy decks if at all

      • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It’s why I’ve found board games designed as deck builders a lot more fun. Everyone is vying for the same cards so it’s more about how you make your deck and involves strategy during play rather than lucky draws.

        Star realms is a pretty fun example of this. Dominion is another, although doesn’t really feel quite the same as a deck builder.

      • Nednarb44@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Yeah that’s exactly it, or even a combination of just a handful of cards to combo a cool effect, but it was like 6 cards total, and it took like 10 turns to maybe pull out

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    This is exactly what happened the day many years ago when my grandparents, who were bridge fanatics, tried to teach the game to my mother and I. The whole thing was like they were speaking another language.

    • perishthethought@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Soooo funny.

      Once though, someone was beating me at MTG and they did enough damage to kill me / win the game, but then just kept playing cards 'cause they could, to do more damage.

      Kyle, if you’re out there… I get it, you hate me. Just stop.

  • atro_city@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    This is often what it feels like when learning a new card game with people who know the game. You lose every round for the first week and it’s supposed to be “fun”.

    • Ms. ArmoredThirteen@lemmy.ml
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      For mtg I made a commander deck specifically for teaching new players. Put a lot of work into making it approachable, lots of options with clear cause/effect, and a few lucky cards that can pull a win out of nowhere against better decks. It doesn’t have consistency but especially when people aren’t paying attention to the new player it can give some satisfying wins to help keep the newbie excited. People forget that you need someone to be excited or they’re not going to want to play again and you’ve just burnt a future shared interest

  • atocci@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    And that’s why I only play Pokemon TCG. That, and the fact it’s far more affordable than other card games.