I've drafted a lot of the intermediate League Ixalan drafts in the last three days it's been available online (well, four drafts, which is a lot for me
). My p1p1 in the very first one was
Huatli, Warrior poet, I ended with a fine RW aggro Dino deck splashing for two
Savage Stomp and a
Regisaur Alpha. But what I want to talk about here is the fourth draft, where I first-picked
Shapers of Nature over
Star of Extinction, which led to this:
UG aggro; and when the colors are this open, it feels invincible. Left panel is the deck, right the sideboard; I played 16 lands, 8 forests, 8 islands. In the deck, first column are non-creature spells, the rest is the creature curve.
I never thought I will draft a Merfolk deck where I will not play all copies of
Jade Guardian, but three
River Sneak and three River Heralds' Boon really make you prioritize two-drops. Even Shapers were a bit out of place here, as I never wanted to draw a card, I just wanted to keep on attacking with my augmented Sneaks. The worst cards in the deck are probably
One with the Wind, which is there primarily to enhance the Guardians,
Deeproot Champion which was too slow for this deck, and
Dreamcaller Siren - maybe that should just be Guardians number four. MVP were the Sneaks, the Boons, and Opt. I ended one game with a 7/7 Sneak attacking for exactly lethal through an army of Pirates.
Air Elemental also seems great in this format. There is so little removal in the set, I fear creature aggro, or big dumb beast will just be the king.
So far, I've seen a few good Merfolk decks, mostly relying on Shapers to gain long-game advantage, and some good Dino decks, using combat tricks and beasts to overpower the opposition. I've seen a few fair Pirates decks, but not a single successful Vampire deck. At first glance, the format seems a lot more shallow and less interesting that Hour. What do you think?