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Great Magic Writing of the Week, August 2

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A staggering amount of Magic content is published each day each day on a plethora of content sites, blogs, podcasts, and discussion forums. No matter how honest an effort you make, it's easy to fall behind and miss incredible articles because there just isn't enough time to read everything.

To that end, we've collected some of the best articles of the week covering a broad range of topics. If you're looking for articles, these are the ones you don't want to miss!


On Coming Back

There are many Magic players who wonder what it would be like to work at Wizards of the Coast. There are many fewer who get the chance to find out. This week, Tifa Robles shares the story of how she got to Wizards, what it was like to be there, and why she eventually left.

GatheringMagic.com: Tifa Robles (@TifaRobles)- There and Back Again: A Wizard's Tale

My story with Magic began at the Magic 2011 prerelease. I was going through a difficult time in my personal life. I was two weeks into my summer vacation after my junior year in college and one week into a job I loved. I needed something new and healthy to focus my time and energy on. I worked as a Game Specialist at Uncle’s Games teaching and selling games to families and gamers. This was a perfect fit for me, an avid board gamer.Freshly out of a relationship and couch-surfing, I was looking for any overtime hours I could pick up, and I managed to work on the Saturday of the prerelease. The atmosphere in the store was so exciting, and there were plenty of friendly faces. People were enthusiastic for the game they all came together to play. It reminded me of the energy conventions seem to spread across communities—how everyone feels connected to everyone else because we all know that we can relate on some level. It’s when we can finally fit in with a large number of people and not be considered weird for loving something, be it games, cosplay, fantasy, comics, or whatever! My attention was instantly grabbed by the Magic community.


On Becoming Tamiyo

Tamiyo, the Moon Sage looks like such a serious character. But what does Tamiyo look like on her days off? This is the question that MJ Scott set out to answer with her fun, thoughtful cosplay of Pajama-Party Tamiyo. What kind of trinkets has Tamiyo collected on her travels? What does she do when she's not planeswalking around to study different moons? There's only one way to find out.

GatheringMagic.com: MJ Scott (@moxymtg) - Cosplay: Pajama-Party Tamiyo

My concept for this cosplay was, "What's Tamiyo look like at bedtime?" In her card art, Tamiyo wears a complex updo and very businesslike attire. I wanted people to see an intimate side of her while still being respectful of her understated aesthetic and demure personality. I built the set for the photo shoot out of stuff from my basement, including items from my Japanese grandmother who passed away last year. I wanted to depict Tamiyo in her own space in a room that reflects her curiosity and elegance. A muted palette seemed right, and I included items that could be mementos she might have collected on her many journeys.


On The New PTQ

This week significant changes to competitive organized play were announced. The PTQ as we know it is no more. This week Jim Davis shares his thoughts on the new PreTQ and Regional PTQ system. What do the changes mean for average players? For PTQ grinders? What about for professional Magic as a whole? These are Jim's first impressions:

StarCityGames.com: Jim Davis - PTQs are dead -- Long Live PTQs

Magic has grown by leaps and bounds in the last few years, and while it is awesome the game is getting bigger and more popular than ever, it certainly is creating a unique set of (admittedly good to have) problems: older cards are becoming increasingly more expensive due to increased demand, and tournament attendance has gotten to a point that is difficult to manage properly.

To solve the first problem, Wizards has been trying to use promo cards and sets like Modern Masters to help bring relief to the marketplace. This has worked to an extent, but card prices are still very high.

For tournaments, Wizards has just announced a major change to the Pro Tour Qualifier system that has remained largely the same for what seems like forever.

PTQs as we know them, large tournaments that offer an invite and flight to the winner, now no longer exist.


On 75 Card Decks

Most players tend to think of their 60 card maindeck as the cards that they want to play and their 15 card sideboard as a separate tool to shore up particular matchups. By and large, this is true, but it's not necessarily the most useful way to think about deckbuilding. In his article this week, Glenn Jones revisits Zvi Mowshowitz's conceptualization of the 75 card deck as a mechanism for improving the functionality and efficacy of your sideboard.

StarCityGames.com: Glenn Jones (@SecludedGlenn) - Seventy-Five Card Decks

I always build my seventy-five the same way: with the Elephant Method. I have no idea how it wound up with that name, and I can’t even remember where I first heard about the strategy--it was certainly before I had a name for it. However, it was most clearly demonstrated by Zvi Mowshowitz for this very site following Pro Tour Dragon’s Maze last year. Essentially, you build idealized sixty-card decks for each of your major matchups, and your goal is to emerge from the practice with seventy-five cards that get you as close to perfect in each as you can get.

How? In plain terms, you examine two things: points of commonality and cards with overlapping effects.


On #PTM15

As he has for the last several Pro Tours, Florian Koch has put together an incredible series of interviews with prominent players and personalities of the Pro Tour. Who are the big names coming into the event? Who are the players who have the most to gain and lose over the weekend? Who are the people behind the scenes making coverage better and better at each event? These questions and more are answered in Florian's two-part Pro Tour Magic 2015 special.

ChannelFireball.com: Florian Koch - Pro Tour Magic 2015 Special Part 1 and Part 2

Pro Tour Magic 2015 is upon us, and this one will be interesting. I mean, every Pro Tour is sweet and the high point of a competitive Magic season, but the last Pro Tour of the year is special. While some players have clinched Platinum already, everybody else still has work to do. For some, this is a last chance to turn a poor season around with a great finish. For others, the primary goal is not to do too badly, because a 100th place secures Gold and thus another year of Pro Tour invites. And yet a few other players will compete for the remaining slots at the World Championship later this year.I don't think I have to stoke your enthusiam any further, and if it needs stoking, Rich does that better than I do anyway. For the Magic 2015 Pro Tour Special I have talked to one player from each of the four big Magic continents. I am very grateful to Fabrizio Anteri, Kuo Tzu-Ching, Guillaume Wafo-Tapa, and Conley Woods for taking the time and the effort to answer my questions!


On Simulations and Mana Curves

Can Magic be boiled down to nothing but math? Frank Karsten has written an incredibly interesting series of articles where he has reduced some incredibly complex questions about the nature of Magic decks to simplistic math problems. People may not be able to play enough games to notice the difference between 10% and 15%, but computers certainly can. Frank Karsten continues this experiment by exploring the concept of an "ideal" mana curve. For a given fundamental turn, what is mana curve allows you to maximize your mana on the most turns? The results may surprise you.

ChannelFireball.com: Frank Karsten (@karsten_frank) - Finding the Optimal Mana Curve via Computer Simulation

The concept of mana curve is a fundamental part of Magic theory. The essence is that your deck should contain a balanced mix of converted mana costs so that you can use all of your mana efficiently on every turn. The concept has become so ingrained in Magic theory that laying out decks according to piles per converted mana cost has become customary.

But what is the optimal mana curve? Is there even such a thing?

The answer to this question will depend on many factors. An important one is how many turns you expect a game to last, i.e., the overall speed of the format. Let’s take Standard for example. Based on my experience, most games will have effectively ended by turn five. Maybe it takes a few more turns for the game to truly end, but usually one player will have an insurmountable board presence at that point. So, the thing that matters most is curving out in the first five turns. The ideal is curving out perfectly with a one-drop on turn one, a two-drop on turn two, and so on (which amounts to spending 1+2+3+4+5=15 mana over the course of the first five turns). Such a perfect curve would typically beat an opponent who only manages to cast, say, 10 mana worth of cards in the first five turns.

Accordingly, I am going to determine the 60-card deck that maximizes the total expected amount of mana spent over the course of the first five of turns. I will also do that for faster formats (where only the mana spent till turn 3 or 4 matters), for slower formats (where you want to curve out till turn 6), and for various 40-card formats.

To do so, I wrote a computer program to enumerate all possible decks and to simulate tons of games with each of them to estimate each deck’s expected total mana spent. The full code can be found here. It’s an adaption of the program that I used to determine the optimal aggro deck about a year ago.


On #PTHOF

The Pro Tour Hall of Fame is a big deal. It means lifetime invitations to the Pro Tour. It means joining the ranks of such players as Jon Finkel, Kai Budde, and many more - the very best the play the game. It means that your peers have recognized the time, dedication, and success put into a ten year professional career. In this article, Pro Tour Historian Brian David-Marshall reveals the 2014 class of the Pro Tour Hall of Fame and takes the time to interview these three incredible players.

DailyMTG.com: Brian David-Marshall (@top8games) - The 2014 Class of the Pro Tour Hall of Fame

If you are reading this then it means the 2014 class of the Pro Tour Hall of Fame has been announced during the live coverage of Pro Tour Magic 2015. These players were extended invitations after a committee of voters drawn from Wizards staff, tournament officials, and commentators along with members of the Hall of Fame and all players with 150 or more lifetime Pro Points had the opportunity to cast up to five votes from the following pool of candidates. Any players who appeared on at least 40% of the ballots get to take part in an induction ceremony at Pro Tour Khans of Tarkir this October.

Congratulations to five-time Pro Tour Top 8 competitor, World Champion, and Team Worlds Champion Makihito Mihara; four-time Pro Tour Top 8 competitor and Pro Tour Amsterdam Champion Paul Rietzl; and five-time Pro Tour Top 8 competitor and Pro Tour Yokohama champion Guillaume Wafo-Tapa.


If you have suggestions for next week's recap you can mention us on Twitter, or share throughout the week in the comments below.


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