Deck Strategies
Hashaton, Scarab's Fist
Utilizes Split Second to protect its combo lines by leveraging triggered and mana abilities for fast, nearly uncounterable combos that win on the stack.
The Jolly Balloon Man
Focuses on aggressive early plays and incremental value generation, aiming to disrupt opponents while building towards a combo or overwhelming board state.
Aminatou, the Fateshifter
A control-oriented deck that manipulates the top of the library and uses blink effects to generate incremental advantage and combo pieces.
Ardenn, Intrepid Archaeologist / Thrasios, Triton Hero
A value-driven artifact and land-based deck that aims to leverage synergy between Ardenn’s equipment recursion and Thrasios’ card advantage to assemble a winning combo or grind out opponents.
Gameplay Insights
- 1
The use of Split Second on triggered and mana abilities was pivotal, allowing the Hashaton deck to execute combos that opponents could not respond to in time.
- 2
Early aggressive plays, such as Ragavan's damage and card disruption, set the tempo and created openings for follow-up plays.
- 3
Players prioritized tutoring and mana ramp to assemble their combos efficiently, but timing and protection were key to successful execution.
- 4
The interaction between Ardenn and Thrasios provided strong synergy, focusing on artifact and land recursion combined with card advantage to control the midgame.
- 5
The importance of casting Vampiric Tutor during the main phase for maximum flexibility and responsiveness was humorously emphasized but practically significant for competitive play.
Notable Cards
Ragavan, Nimble Pilferer
Green Sun's Zenith
Vampiric Tutor
Flooded Strand
Gemstone Caverns
Summary
The game featured a competitive four-player match between decks led by Hashaton, Scarab's Fist; The Jolly Balloon Man; Aminatou, the Fateshifter; and Ardenn, Intrepid Archaeologist paired with Thrasios, Triton Hero. Early turns focused on ramping mana and developing board presence, with players leveraging powerful mana rocks and key utility lands. A crucial aspect highlighted was the innovative use of the Split Second mechanic to protect combo lines from disruption, particularly showcased by the Hashaton deck leveraging triggered and mana abilities to execute a near-instantaneous combo. This approach created significant tension as opponents scrambled to respond to the sudden threat on the stack. Throughout the midgame, players exchanged pressure through targeted aggression, strategic tutoring, and resource denial, with Ragavan, Nimble Pilferer, playing a notable role in early damage and disruption. The game culminated in a successful Split Second combo that effectively bypassed typical countermeasures, securing a decisive victory and demonstrating a new meta-relevant win condition in cEDH.