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Give Me That Olde-Time Tempo

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Hello, folks! Have you ever had a problem with tempo?

Armageddon
Clearly, tempo is not what it used to be, and that’s by design. A card like Armageddon was powerful in that it dominated tournaments. If you were in a slightly strong position at the table, just drop Armageddon to lock you in, and you could probably pull off the victory a few turns later. Pairing creatures like mana Elves, Erhnam Djinn, and Maro with Armageddon was a powerful entry into tournament fare.

I can still remember my first run-in with a Stasis deck. You had a variety of Stasis combos, such as Chronatog Stasis or Turbo Stasis that won by keeping Stasis long enough to win. Cards like Howling Mine and bounce effects could keep Stasis going (with your own land drops), and you’d use Island Sanctuary, Moat, or Kismet to keep people locked down or unable to attack you.

And Stasis and Armageddon were hardly the only entries into serious tempo fun times. One of the earliest strong decks was called Prison. It ran a bunch of artifacts—Winter Orb and Howling Mine—to tap down with Relic Barrier and Icy Manipulator. You turned them off at the end of someone’s turn so you could untap under the Orb and then tap the Mine after you drew your card. After blowing out the table, you’d win with Titania's Song.

Tempo lasted. People might have really disliked the Combo Winter era of Urza’s block, with a lot of cards banned back then, but the slow, tempo-fueled Masques block, with cards like Rising Waters and Rishadan Port, might not have been as hard to crack, but was slower and less fun.

Meanwhile, don’t ever forget the epic struggle of a game against land removal. Stone Rain? Sinkhole? Ice Storm? Strip Mine? All check! Then combine that with powerful beaters like Juzam Djinn or stuff like Dingus Egg and Ankh of Mishra. Did you know that land destruction used to be so ubiquitous that Dingus Egg was restricted? That is not a typo.

Boomerang
And losing lands to destruction was hardly the only path. Bouncing cards, particularly lands, used to be so easy that winning decks in tournaments would run Boomerang effects as a kind of Time Walk for tempo. It doesn’t matter if I’m losing cards—by turn five or six, I have five or six lands and a ton of threats, and you still have two lands out and seven cards in hand because you had to discard them.

There was a popular combo deck around Masques block in Standard that used Ankh of Mishra.

Today, we don’t play around with cards like this. We want people to play the game. So a card like blue’s Fade Away doesn’t work. Take a look at just how strong of a card it is. If you had Fade Away in today’s Standard, and if that’s the only change you make, what would happen? How would the format be different? If someone taps out to play a nasty beater, right now, all he or she is risking is some removal, and at the worst, some mass removal. But you can drop multiple creatures or force the player to choose to swap a land for that Siege Rhino. It’s a virtual 3-mana blue Wrath of God in the right situation. And you can plan it since you know it’s coming.

How could Rishadan Cutpurse be printed today? What about its Pirate friends Rishadan Brigand and Rishadan Footpad? With all of the love blinking out a creature has today, do you really want to deal with someone who uses Ghostly Flicker on those?

Siege Rhino
I think Kamigawa block was the last time real tempo was pushed a lot. You have the cheap bounce seeing play (Eye of Nowhere) teamed with one of the last true taxing effects like Ghostly Prison. Wizards of the Coast has clearly moved against tempo. They don’t want someone to win by forcing you to keep your stuff tapped. They want you to win by hitting the red zone with your creatures and dropping someone’s life—and with the interaction that brings. Siege Rhino, Baneslayer Angel, and Thundermaw Hellkite are more fun to play with than Winter Orb and Armageddon. Shoot, most of the stuff that they print that pushes the line a little ends up seeing serious play—cards like Cyclonic Rift and Vapor Snag.

And since tempo in that old-school sense has gone the way of the (INSERT EXTINCT ANIMAL HERE), people aren’t expecting it any more at the kitchen table—except for the occasional Cyclonic Rift. So let’s use some cards both new and old to bring back some of that tempo, but without going all Armageddon-crazy. No one wants to see that thang again! But tempo should not be a bad word. Yes, there have been decks throughout Magic’s history that have used elements of tempo. Tradewind Rider was combined with Awakening to make Tradewake decks that slowly bounced all of your stuff. You also had a certain deck win with Psychatog and Upheaval. So we can embrace some good tempo that works without pushing into tempo that’s annoying.

Imagine if someone in your playgroup always ran into a ton of counters every time he or she played. That player would quickly grow sick of counters. There’s still a place for them, but too much of anything is too much—too much ramp, too much tutoring, too much counters, or whatever. Tempo elements are the same thing. You can destroy lands with stuff without feeling bad, as long as you aren’t recurring Strip Mine with Crucible of Worlds every turn and going sick about it. It’s the same here. I’ll show you:

Quest for Ula's Temple
This deck is ultimately based on a simple concept. I want to run a bunch of creatures of the deep and then make sure I have enough of them so that when I cast Whelming Wave, I can keep enough beaters out that I can ensure myself of a few hits. The only other trick this deck has is Quest for Ula's Temple, which can build to play something more expensive for free. The Quest and Wave are both extremely synergetic to this deck.

In addition to the Wave, it has some other tempo aspects. Our good Jellyfish and one of our Krakens will bounce creatures on arrival. Other tempo aspects including playing, and then paying for, the monstrosity of the Shipbreaker Kraken and paying that 8 mana when you swing with Lorthos, the Tidemaker. There’s a strong tempo angle to this deck.

But you know what? Nobody cares about this. If you bring this hugely flavorful deck to play at most kitchen tables, no one is going to be cross with you. They are easy to manage. Wave just bounces. Shipbreaker Kraken just taps and keeps them tapped—all you have to do is kill the Kraken (and someone spent a lot of mana for that trick, too), Lorthos just taps, but you can untap later, and this deck has no card-draw, no card-advantage engines, no counters, and nothing that’s a real issue. This is a tempo deck that’s fully in the tempo realm of Magic but that isn’t going to get heat. If you bounce my team with Whelming Wave and then swing and kill me with Lorthos and Colossal Whale, I’m going to congratulate you, not get all huffy.

Here’s another:

G/U Madness is a great example of a Tempo deck because it used madness to pay a bunch of creatures for a lot cheaper than normal, particularly when twinned off pumping your Wild Mongrel for more damage. So I felt it would be fun to build a Rakdos Madness deck instead. Without the Mongrel, Circular Logic, and Basking Rootwalla, the deck feels a lot more fair.

Lightning Axe
Sure, you have a time-shifted Arrogant Wurm into Reckless Wurm, but today, a 4/4 trampler for 3 mana is not that far out of alignment with modern creatures. You have Fiery Temper, but that’s just a 1-mana Lightning Bolt, and so forth.

What black and red have always been good at is blowing up creatures, and this deck focuses on that, too—Dark Withering, Fiery Temper, and Violent Eruption are here to destroy things. That’s what Rakdos does. Shoot, I even tossed in two each of Big Game Hunter and Lightning Axe for more removal. This plays into the color’s strengths.

But then your creature base weakens. Are you going to run something like Gorgon Recluse or Brain Gorgers? So I stuck with Muck Drubb because you can have it protect better creatures by redirecting removal to itself. It knows it sucks, and it will die for its master. Anyway, from there, I tossed in Grave Scrabbler for more madness fun.

And then we needed some discard stuff. Faithless Looting is super-hot here, and the flashback really suits the deck. Then I lobbed in Hammer Mage, Putrid Imp, and Mad Prophet. This is a very aggressive deck that wants to generate a discard trigger for one effect and then play a cheap card for another, thus building up tempo quickly. And again, no one is going to mind if you sleeve up Rakdos Madness at the next Magic night.

A deck that accelerates its mana quickly gives you tempo because you can play beaters faster. Speed matters. Dropping Sol Ring into Solemn Simulacrum into a huge 6-drop on turn three is a time-tested fun part about Commander. Even the classic Timmy Standard deck Fires used Llanowar Elves and Birds of Paradise to drop Fires of Yavimaya on the second turn in order out begin swinging with your beaters the next turn. Tempo cares about things like haste and acceleration.

So grab some tempo, and play! It shouldn’t be a bad word at kitchen tables and Magic nights!

Get your tempo on!


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