Well, it was the same at the card shop I use to go to before it closed down, where there were people that played both, but Magic definitely had a larger following and actually had tournaments and events at the shop and huge deals on Magic cards.JDB15 said:Just because it's been longer doesn't mean you'll find more people into Magic. In the card shop that I used to go to before it closed down, it has Magic and Yu-Gi-Oh players (some were playing both) and that was years ago, even before Yu-Gi-Oh GX.Sonic Doctor said:So, if you can only play one, play Magic. It is a better structured game that flows much better than any card game I have ever played. Plus it has been round for a decade longer than Yugioh and has a larger fan base, meaning it is much easier to go to a card shop and find a Magic game group going than a Yugioh one. Also, Magic has a much larger library of cards to choose from with so many combinations of decks that could be made that it seriously makes Yugioh look like child's play.
But overall I'll say this: These two card games are way better than much other card games, like the Pokemon Trading Card Game
Well that is kind of the reason I use rares, they are usually the ones that look awesome and I like awesome looking cards coming out onto the field under my control.Generic Gamer said:Snip
Yup, definitely a fun little diversion of a series.Generic Gamer said:That card exists but it's part of two sets that were printed as kind of a joke. They're called 'unglued' and 'unhinged' and they're there purely as joke cards, I occasionally shuffle a few into my decks to wind people up, there's nothing to break someone's concentration like telling them they've got to take a shoe off.
http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Discussion.aspx?recentpage=0&multiverseid=5712
There are way more combinations and strategies in Magic than in Yugioh.JDB15 said:Agreed. I've seen people play Magic and it seems that everyone have a type of deck, ie Earth, Fire, etc (I don't know if those are types of magic cards, I'm not that into Magic.) And I know, people have similar tactics in Yugioh, ie dragon, warrior, water deck, but in Yu-Gi-Oh, I see more people have more structured decks with different types of monsters/magic/traps, including me, with different combinations and strategies. Plus, it seems that Yu-Gi-Oh is more fun (can be for fun or competitive), where Magic is more of a serious tone and more difficult to get into.
One of my friends actually uses the Platinum Angel combo in his Angel deck.Ironsouled said:snip
To your protip... Add inGeneric Gamer said:The biggest disadvantage I can see as a blue/black player and lifelong dickhead is that anyone with decent spell capacity can lock it down almost indefinitely. Personally I'd unsummon it as many times as I could to keep your mana tied up bringing it back and then hit it with something that prevents it attacking. My other favourite is 'taking toys away', where you mind control a creature with an enchantment and then do absolutely nothing with it! The goal of that is to keep it out of play and out of the graveyard, my other favourite option is a spell in my Myr heavy white deck, it's a one mana exile spell. The problem with green is that it's light on counterspells so I can pretty much have my wicked way with them. My girlfriend is a red/green player and I traded her some of her 'best' cards, from one perspective they're dangerous but from another each creature, no matter how big, is but one creature and can be dealt with.Sonic Doctor said:Yeah, the only drawback that can be seen for this card is the mana cost, but with such an effect, I don't see the mana cost as a drawback. I could care less about how much power the thing has, with my Elf deck, I would hope my opponent kills it because then I can bring it six 1/1 elves that all have some awesome abilities of their own. Such a card effect in Yugioh would be banned, even if it could be countered.
OT: Magic is by far the better game to play because an entire deck of commons and uncommons can thoroughly dick all over another deck with more expensive cards if you built the deck well. My favourite rage-inducing deck is either a blue/black discard or a white artefact deck built around token summoning. Each of those can tie up a deck of almost any value nearly indefinitely. Play either heavy enchantment or a token generation deck and then be all:
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(protip: War Report in a Myr tribal deck. What's that? Add one hp for each creature AND each artefact? What? Myr are both? Well if you insist...)
I'm aware, but its always fun to have a laugh at the expense of the color I do not use... much >.>.Sonic Doctor said:One of my friends actually uses the Platinum Angel combo in his Angel deck.Ironsouled said:snip
Also I would point out that white isn't the only color that life gains. As I explained in an earlier comment, the same friend has an Elf deck with an infinite life gain and infinite creature producing combo. It uses elf powers and Intruder Alarm.
Nah, I'll just say in a few words of how I agree with you. lolCustard_Angel said:YuGiOh has a bitching abridged video series whereas Money the Wasting has sweaty nerds.
Reply and tell me in 1000 words or more why I am wrong.
Like I said, I'm not into Magic The Gathering and I've only based my knowledge from what I've seen years ago at the card shop I mentioned, so I'm not really saying my information about it is 100% correct. Thanks anyway for the links and the information nonetheless. (Huh... actually read some of the stuff in the basics link and it seems that the two games are the same; and people, stop saying that Yu-Gi-Oh is a ripoff since most if not all trading card games are, more or less, ripoffs of Magic, so what's the point of just calling out one of the many?)Sonic Doctor said:There are way more combinations and strategies in Magic than in Yugioh.JDB15 said:Agreed. I've seen people play Magic and it seems that everyone have a type of deck, ie Earth, Fire, etc (I don't know if those are types of magic cards, I'm not that into Magic.) And I know, people have similar tactics in Yugioh, ie dragon, warrior, water deck, but in Yu-Gi-Oh, I see more people have more structured decks with different types of monsters/magic/traps, including me, with different combinations and strategies. Plus, it seems that Yu-Gi-Oh is more fun (can be for fun or competitive), where Magic is more of a serious tone and more difficult to get into.
First off the basics:
http://www.wizards.com/Magic/TCG/NewtoMagic.aspx?x=mtg/tcg/newtomagic/gamebasics
That is highly watered down though so:
Here is a list of all creature species:
There are 54, with many having subsections.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_species_in_Magic:_The_Gathering
Here is a listing of all subtypes of creatures and other types of for other cards, I don't know why but some of the listed subtypes are ones that are listed in the Species types.:
But still there are over 225 card types just in the creature list.(Though it is missing Changelings, which are all creature types at once.)
http://wiki.mtgsalvation.com/article/Subtype
Here is all the abilities and powers that creatures and non-creature cards can have:
I didn't count but there is at least 50 different things.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Magic:_The_Gathering_keywords
I have a Magic card collection that is well over 2500 cards, probably 3000 and I know I don't have all the types of cards.
Fiber Jar. That's right, start the whole game over. *****. It's like a Karn, except all you have to do is flip it. Also, not as useful.RedEyesBlackGamer said:Since when? I challenge you to find cards more broken than Raigeki, Cyber Stein, Cyber Jar, Magical Scientist, etc.
You're completely right. But it doesn't stop Magic from being any less fun =P And for all the sweaty nerds that play Magic, there are actual cool people who play it too.Custard_Angel said:YuGiOh has a bitching abridged video series whereas Money the Wasting has sweaty nerds.
Reply and tell me in 1000 words or more why I am wrong.