Moon Mtg
Moon Mtg
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Magic: the Gathering – Full Moon’s Rise – Innistrad $0.04 Magic: the Gathering is a collectible card game created by Richard Garfield. In Magic, you play the role of a planeswalker who fights other planeswalkers for glory, knowledge, and conquest. Your deck of cards represents all the weapons in your arsenal. It contains the spells you know and the creatures you can summon to fight for you. Card Name: Full Moon’s Rise Cost: 1G Color: Green Card Type: Enc… |
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Magic: the Gathering – Wheel of Sun and Moon – Shadowmoor $3.29 Magic: the Gathering is a collectible card game created by Richard Garfield. In Magic, you play the role of a planeswalker who fights other planeswalkers for glory, knowledge, and conquest. Your deck of cards represents all the weapons in your arsenal. It contains the spells you know and the creatures you can summon to fight for you. Card Name: Wheel of Sun and Moon Cost: (G/W)(G/W) Color: Multi-C… |
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Magic: the Gathering – Bad Moon – Revised Edition $2.07 Magic: the Gathering is a collectible card game created by Richard Garfield. In Magic, you play the role of a planeswalker who fights other planeswalkers for glory, knowledge, and conquest. Your deck of cards represents all the weapons in your arsenal. It contains the spells you know and the creatures you can summon to fight for you. Card Name: Bad Moon Cost: 1B Color: Black Card Type: Enchantment… |
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The Moons of Mirrodin: A Magic The Gathering Novel (Mirrodin Cycle) $7.99 A World Beyond ImaginationWhere forests of metal claw the sky.Where razor-sharp metallic grasses stretch across the plains.Where vast oceans of quicksilver conceal predators awaiting the unwary.Across this harsh landscape, an orphaned elf must make her way, seeking the secrets of her past, daring the perils of her present. And she must tear aside the veil that hides the face of a hidden enemy whos… |
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The Darksteel Eye (Magic the Gathering: Mirrodin Cycle, Book 2) $6.99 The next title in a series that opens up a strange new area of the Magic: The Gathering world. The Darksteel Eye continues a series that explores a new and mysterious world in the Magic: The Gathering setting…. |
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The Fifth Dawn: Mirrodin Cycle, Book III $3.77 The final title in a series that opens up a strange new area of the Magic: The Gathering world.The Fifth Dawn concludes a series that explores a new and mysterious world in the Magic: The Gathering setting. This novel previews the newest card set to be released in June, giving fans a sneak peek at the newest elements of the game…. |
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Casio Men’s GW9100-1 G-Shock Gulfman Solar Atomic Watch $220.00 This Casio men’s watch has a titanium case and bezel that reduces weight while maintaining the shock resistance that G-Shock watches are known for. The watch is solar powered that allows the watch to run for nine months on a full charge without further exposure to light. The watch calibrates itself via radio signals to the US atomic clock for unsurpassed accuracy. It features five daily alarms, a … |
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Moon in the Full House $9.98 … |

Rate my MTG control deck?
Lands
4 City of Brass
4 Island
1 Library of Alexandria
3 Plains
3 Strip Mine
4 Tundra
2 Volcanic Island
Artifacts
1 Black Lotus
2 Disrupting Scepter
1 Jayemdae Tome
1 Mirror Universe
1 Mox Emerald
1 Mox Jet
1 Mox Pearl
1 Mox Ruby
1 Mox Sapphire
1 Sol Ring
Creatures
2 Serra Angel
Enchantments
2 Moat
Instants
1 Ancestral Recall
2 Counterspell
4 Mana Drain
2 Red Elemental Blast
4 Disenchant
4 Swords to Plowshares
Sorceries
1 Demonic Tutor
1 Amnesia
1 Braingeyser
1 Timetwister
1 Time Walk
1 Recall
1 Regrowth
Sideboard
2 Red Elemental Blast
2 Circle of Protection: Red
2 Dust to Dust
1 Zuran Orb
1 Balance
2 Blood Moon
1 Tormod’s Crypt
2 Mana Short
1 Amnesia
1 Feldon’s Cane
So, let’s see if I understand this correctly. You copied Brian Weismann’s “The Deck” from 1994, and want us to critique it?
I remember a couple of years ago when StarCity did a tournament that pit all of the best decks of each era against each other (The Deck, Necro, Academy, etc), and this deck finished dead last. If you are versed in Magic history, you would understand why:
Back in 1994, Magic deck construction absolutely sucked by today’s standards. Control decks were just a hodgepodge of cards that could be randomly useful (see also Amnesia, REB, Mirror Universe) but usually wound up being completely dead. They could get away with this because nobody to this point had built an aggro deck that was capable of operating on a mana curve, and dealing damage very quickly. This all changed after the introduction of the first Sligh decks.
After Sligh came out, you saw the control decks become much more tuned (for example, look up CMU blue as played by Randy Beuhler).
Magic the gathering: FNM deck build #1