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Joined: Sep 23, 2013 Posts: 6317 Location: New York
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Signaling is just counting. You count the number of rares, uncommons, and commons in the pack, then count the number of cards that represent each color in the pack. Given set information, you can generally decipher what cards have been picked based on what's missing from the pack... like a Theros pack missing a couple of commons probably denotes a lightning strike and a gray merchant pick. This is information you store that you later confirm with the number of colors that show up in a pack... like a lack of black and/or red in the packs following.
This is all contextualized by card quality. Having five cards in a pack that are the same color could mean the color is open, or just that the cards suck.
Let's look at the community draft packs as an example:
p1p1 - irrelevant; however we took a black card
p1p2: 5 green 3 blue 2 black 1 red 1 white 1 land
It's missing an uncommon, which would mean more if i actually drafted this set. None of the cards are very good, which is why I wanted to stick with black. Green is over-represented, which might be good for us, or might mean multiple people on our left will go green making it miserable for us pack 2. Hard to tell.
p1p3: 1 green 1 blue 1 black 4 red 3 white 1 colorless 1 UB
3 uncommons in the pack, meaning a rare and a common is gone. The green pack previously was over-represented, but now the red is very over-represented. This would make me consider it. White going from 1 to 3 would also be worth noting.
p1p4: 2 green 1 blue 2 black 2 red 1 white 1 land 1 GW
2 uncommons in pack. Should've been mentioned, but all the lands so far have been able to produce white mana. At this point I'd say it's safe to say someone to our right is in blue. The other colors seem fairly open, though the red cards being passed are garbage. I'd say white seems fairly open.
p1p5: 2 green 1 blue 2 black 2 red 2 white 1 UG
2 uncommons in the pack. Past few packs have had multi-colored uncommons passed in them, which might point to weaker/newer drafters unfamiliar with 3+ color mana bases. Important to note that across the even spread of colors, blue has the lowest "pure" blue cards. I would just take the best card for the colors I have at this point.
p1p6: 2 green 1 blue 1 black 3 red 1 white 1 land 1 colorless
2 uncommons in pack. Someone's aggressively into blue, and red is wide open because there's a very good card here.
To put this in another context, here's the sequencing of colors in the packs:
Green: 5, 1, 2, 2, 2 Blue: 3, 1, 1, 1, 1 Black: 2, 1, 2, 2, 1 Red: 1, 4, 2, 2, 3 White: 1, 3, 1, 2, 1
From this I would say, based on our position, Red is the least drafted and Blue is the most drafted by drafters on our right. In order from most-to-least drafted by drafters on our right I would speculate it goes: Blue, White, Black, Green, Red.
That's how I read it anyway.
In the draft I argue for being BW because I think the card quality of the cards we're being passed is overall superior (removal, 3-mana 2/2 flyers). I think the green and the red being passed our way are overall of a lower quality. I don't think the blue cards we're picking up are good enough to stay in blue. I am suspicious about the multi-colored cards because we've only seen 1 fixing card (sylvan scrying). I would move forward with black and be OK with any color that is not blue.
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