Killer Joe
New member
I love playing tournament Magic, it’s just too bad that I suck at it. My rating is like 1551 in Limited. I do, however, have a question about Etiquette & Protocol concerning tourney Magic play strategies.
I was drafting several weeks ago and, in our draft, was a former pro tour guy (Disclaimer-Who, btw, is a very nice guy). Anyway we’re drafting OLS and he’s sitting next to me (left side) and I open my first pack and wah-lah! A Lightning Rift is before me. I have full intentions on drafting UW Soldiers but I know that he has had great success with UR when drafting with us. So I pluck the Rift from the pack and made the mistake of announcing, out loud, what I drafted. I KNOW this is wrong, both hate drafting AND opening my big mouth. This is NOT the worst of it.
Every ‘bomb’ that was red I plucked, because Shock was my next pick. By now any normal person would be thinking that red/X ought to be what my colors were for this draft, but Nooooooooooooo, I still have intentions on drafting UW Soldiers. By the last pack (Scourge), I had an okay deck of UW Soldiers but I had some good burn too. I did not play red in the deck and went on to build my UW Soldier deck right there on the main table for everyone to see. And it was evident that I hate drafted against the guy to my left. Yes, I’m a bad player. So what.
Bad decision? YUP! He was all bent and I felt the need to say something to smooth it over. I asked him about how people on the pro-tour know each other’s colors for drafting and if it was true that hate drafting was looked upon badly. He mentioned that ‘yes’ hate drafting is NOT looked upon as being favorable. But I said that we’re not here on the pro tour and little guys like us should not be held to the same standards of Etiquette & Protocol as pro tour players. I don’t remember his reply but it was not in favor of what I did.
Know this, though. There are people at the shop who have been known in the past to yield good cards to the better players in hopes of getting respect from them and perhaps gain favors such as deck building tips and the like. I hate this approach, but I know sometimes you have to play the political game. OINK!
I was wrong for hate drafting, not because it’s the wrong thing to do, but because it’s really not a beneficial tactic in my drafting strategies.
Do you think it’s wrong to “hate draft”?
~Mark
I was drafting several weeks ago and, in our draft, was a former pro tour guy (Disclaimer-Who, btw, is a very nice guy). Anyway we’re drafting OLS and he’s sitting next to me (left side) and I open my first pack and wah-lah! A Lightning Rift is before me. I have full intentions on drafting UW Soldiers but I know that he has had great success with UR when drafting with us. So I pluck the Rift from the pack and made the mistake of announcing, out loud, what I drafted. I KNOW this is wrong, both hate drafting AND opening my big mouth. This is NOT the worst of it.
Every ‘bomb’ that was red I plucked, because Shock was my next pick. By now any normal person would be thinking that red/X ought to be what my colors were for this draft, but Nooooooooooooo, I still have intentions on drafting UW Soldiers. By the last pack (Scourge), I had an okay deck of UW Soldiers but I had some good burn too. I did not play red in the deck and went on to build my UW Soldier deck right there on the main table for everyone to see. And it was evident that I hate drafted against the guy to my left. Yes, I’m a bad player. So what.
Bad decision? YUP! He was all bent and I felt the need to say something to smooth it over. I asked him about how people on the pro-tour know each other’s colors for drafting and if it was true that hate drafting was looked upon badly. He mentioned that ‘yes’ hate drafting is NOT looked upon as being favorable. But I said that we’re not here on the pro tour and little guys like us should not be held to the same standards of Etiquette & Protocol as pro tour players. I don’t remember his reply but it was not in favor of what I did.
Know this, though. There are people at the shop who have been known in the past to yield good cards to the better players in hopes of getting respect from them and perhaps gain favors such as deck building tips and the like. I hate this approach, but I know sometimes you have to play the political game. OINK!
I was wrong for hate drafting, not because it’s the wrong thing to do, but because it’s really not a beneficial tactic in my drafting strategies.
Do you think it’s wrong to “hate draft”?
~Mark