Ditto. But for me, it's also encouraging to see Legacy's most underrepresented color used as the primary color in a deck. Blue is, of course, great in Legacy. Red has some good power cards along with Goblins and Sligh (also, burn cards). Green has numerous viable creatures, mana production cards, and things like Survival. White is somewhat underrepresented, I think, but really sees a lot of play (especially considering that most of its bombs are banned) as a secondary color and even has enough presence for WW to be a contender. Black has typically been relegated to the role of a tertiary color. This deck uses a color and cards from that color (Hymn, Hyppie, Nantuko Shade, Vindicate) that have been underused up until now.Spiderman said:I was more impressed that a "new deck" in the whole of Legacy could come out of "nowhere" and almost beat the existing field, whether it was played by a former pro or a newbie.
Question: Is it that Black is represented in Pikula's deck or that it was an original rogue deck; that you liked so much?Oversoul said:Black may finally have become a force in Legacy.
Original? It has the basic skeleton of a black control deck (that hasn't been particularly successful in Legacy) and a few unorthodox tricks that will probably become more common now. It's certainly innovative, but "rogue" doesn't have much significance for me.Killer Joe said:Question: Is it that Black is represented in Pikula's deck or that it was an original rogue deck; that you liked so much?
Spidey and TomB seemed like they liked it for rogue-ness.![]()
I originally heard "rogue" used (in the context of Magic tournaments) to describe decks that are below the radar, so to speak, and ever since then that's how I've thought of it. They might be decent to use in a tournament, but they aren't mainstream enough that anyone would ever metagame against them. Since its inception, Legacy has drawn sundry players. There have been many attempts to rehash old decks from other formats or retool "rogue" decks from the old Type 1.5 and altogether, I'm sure Legacy has hundreds of types of rogue decks that have surfaced in tournaments.Notepad said:My perspective: Rogue means totally original. Nobody expected it could even be built for a tournament setting. Let's see someone come in with tribal kavu or something (yeah yeah, I know, really bad example, but its an example of something rogue). Just dressing up old archetypes from years ago doesn't feel so rogue.
I'd tend to disagree. Sure rogue decks can still be made, but today's tournament environment is so tightly honed that it's hard to win with anything other than the tried and true archetypes. There are certain cards that will always be tournament viable, and through time they've been proven to be. This shows up in Legacy/Extended, where the tried and true deck types just get tweaked a bit and keep on rolling. Block and Standard actually have a bit going for them in this department, since a limited and fresh card pool mean the archtypes look a lot less like themselves, and little comboes spring up here and there that are pretty cool and original for five seconds (until its netdecked, that is).Killer Joe said:What if I've never heard of that deck type before and made it all on my own, am I net-decking even though I didn't research it all?![]()
"Rogue" ia alive and well, in my opinion![]()
Yes, but it's also more than just the color (which is a big part of it for me). Some black cards see use, but black control, in any form, hasn't been too successful in Legacy. In comparison to the success of decks that are essentially similar to this one in other formats, Legacy has seen a paucity of black cards in decklists, and controlling, black-heavy decks have been nearly nonexistent (there have been some attempts at Pox decks, but nothing that has shown impressive results in tournaments). I think this could lead to the format becoming more balanced and healthy (if other players will take after this guy and play decks like his).Killer Joe said:Oversoul, you liked the deck because it was of a color under-represented in Legacy, right?