Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Great Wave off Kamigawa; or, Let's Get Kraken



Two weeks ago, an article on Joystiq unveiled a deck from Duels of the Planeswalkers 2012 belonging to a brand-new planeswalker character: Kiora Atua. Then just last week, at the end of Doug Beyer's Savor the Flavor article we got our first real peek at her, and this blurb:

"Kiora Atua is a merfolk planeswalker who commands the powers of the depths. Kiora venerates the huge creatures of the sea—krakens, leviathans, and other denizens of the inky depths—because for her they are evidence that even the most persistent forces can be endured: time, water, predation, and darkness. Kiora is a blue- and green-aligned Planeswalker. She seems calm and wise, but her dreams are bizarre beyond imagining."

Now tell me you don't get a little Lovecraftian shiver down your spine from that last line.

So. A new planeswalker? This is the sort of thing that gets Vorthos going anyway, but this one is particularly exciting for me for several reasons:

  1. She's U/G! New planeswalker color-combination ahoy!
  2. GIANT OCTOPUS
  3. She is deep. Really, really, deep. No, deeper than that. She is deep! Even with so little revealed, I feel like I could go on forever talking about her.
  4. KRAKENS-KRAKENS-KRAKENS
  5. Just look at that art! In fact, dive in and look at that art after the jump.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Evening Out an Odd Couple; or, Melvin, Vorthos, Legendary, and YOU

I've been quiet for a while, mainly due to being busy for other reasons, but let's just jump right in the deep end. In his article this week, Mark Rosewater outlines the design issues with the legendary rule, but also asks an open question:

How can the Legend rule be better?

With a question like that, how can I resist attempting a little freelance game design?

Monday, March 7, 2011

Choose a Side!

A few weeks ago, it was "Choose a Side" week on the Mothership. For those who have been under a rock, it refers to the war occurring on Mirrodin during Mirrodin Besieged between the Mirrans who remained on Mirrodin after Memnarch's fall and the Phyrexians who built themselves up from a singe drop of oil brought inadvertently to Mirrodin by Karn.

This war has real consequences, exemplified by the mystery surrounding the third set of the block, codenamed Action. Yes, even still, we know only the codename of the set. But what we do know is that it's either going to be Mirrodin Pure or New Phyrexia, and it all depends on who wins this war.

Who's going to win? What is the ultimate fate of Mirrodin? And what about Karn, held in the core of Mirrodin and being manipulated by the five Phyrexian Praetors to be the new Father of Machines?

No one (at least, no one outside Wizards of the Coast) knows the answers to these questions for sure, but I've certainly heard a lot of smart people making some very confident assertions.

Stay with me, dear readers. I'll tell you everything.

Today on Journey to Nowhere, we'll look at the facts, I'll give you my thoughts and conclusions, and you can decide for yourself if you want to be on the winning side (whichever one you think that may be).

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Well, Durrrr!

I'm excited.

Which is to say, I'm always excited when I get to do any new deckbuilding, and th release of a new set is a prime time to do so. As I've said, one of the best feelings that I get in Magic is that of exploration. That's why I enjoy playing Limited and why I enjoy building decks.

Let's focus on the latter today, as we take a look and a half at a guy I mentioned in my spoiler review...

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Spoiler Alert!

So, back to actually writing about Magic. How's about that?

This week, let's take a look at the cards already spoiled for Mirrodin Besieged. One of the things I love about Magic is the exploration. These spoiler seasons are a great time to be in deckbuilding. Possibilities are basically endless, you get to see all the ways to improve your current ideas, see if any strategies are going to get that little push over the edge into competitiveness, and try to figure out the absolute coolest (if not the smartest) things to do with the new stuff.

So, let's try and see which new Mirrodin Besieged cards I'm excited about so far:

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Games for Gamers Who Like Games Like Magic, Part 2!

Yeah I'm back, what?

So it's been a while. My bad. Things got a bit crazy between work and holidays and such, but here I am talking to you about Spectromancer. Spectromancer is both a card game and not a card game, just as it is a tabletop game without really being a tabletop game. Meaningless drivel, you say? You'd be right. But I stand by that drivel.


Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Games for Gamers Who Like Games Like Magic (Part 1)

 Christmas! Time for a little Christmas break.

Since I won't be playing a lot of Magic until next year, I'd like to take a quick break from writing about Magic to talk about some things that were..... well, sprouted from my love of Magic.

So, less of a break, I guess.

It goes without saying that Magic attracts Gamers, being, well, A GAME. But it does attract a certain type of gamer. The type who optimizes and strategizes and likes THINKING not only about playing the game he or she is in, but about how the game is played, how it works, and why it works. To be brief about it, it attracts a startlingly high proportion of designers, strategists, and game-mechanics junkies.

To use some Magic design vernacular... Melvins.

"Ah," I hear you say. "This is going to be one of THOSE articles."

Well, yes and no. Bear with me here.