
As we play games on the Commander RC stream, I do make notes on cards that I might later replace, knowing that I do this thing several times a year. I’ll obviously be looking at individual cards that aren’t carrying their weight in order to make room for the new ones, but that’s really a secondary angle. Sometimes the new cards are strict upgrades to the cards that are already there (as Stunt Double was to Clone, for example). It’s not a case of seeing where a deck might be underperforming and fixing it. My primary motivation is adding these cards where they go best. When building new decks, I’m free to use these cards (even with the new decks I’ll build from this set’s available commanders), but for now I get only one-which is going to sometimes mean tough choices. For those of you just joining this conversation, I also make the self-limiting promise that I’m going to put only one copy of any new card into the suite. If you like a faster game, that’s great for me, I like one to unfold a little more slowly. There are a few that are spicier, but my target game is the one that’s going to go double-digit turns with no one threatening to win before about Turn 6. Most of them were designed to be decent at the mid-range of Commander power, which is the zone I like to play in. The trouble, of course, is finding room in those decks. The good news is that it’s fun, because you get to comb through a few hundred cards to find both the ones everyone’s talking about and the hidden gems. When it’s a set as amazeballs as Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty, you know you’re going to have plenty to do. This also includes Planechase and Commander format legal cards that are used in their respective format.The best part of a new set is in figuring out which cards go into your existing decks. These are various special releases that feature selected highlights throughout Magic's history.

Modern Horizons 2 Modern Horizons Modern Masters 2017 Modern Masters 2015 Modern Masters Core Set 2021 Core Set 2020 Core Set 2019 Magic Origins Magic 2015 Magic 2014 Magic 2013 Magic 2012 Magic 2011 Magic 2010 Tenth Edition Ninth Edition Eighth Edition.

Modern allows cards from the 8th Edition core set and all expansions printed afterwards. Modern was created by Wizards of the Coast in the Spring of 2011 as a response to the increasing popularity of the Legacy format, which although popular proved difficult to access due to the high price of staple cards.
