Welcome to Week Two of my Repack Walk Through Project. Each week I'm going to crack a repack, and do a walk through of the contents. I've seen these sort of draft walk through done a lot of different ways, but in my mind, there is one critical question to ask about every card. Should this wheel and why? I use a three point system to analyze a pack In a "normal" pack, there should be 5 cards of each grade in them.
1) Shouldn't Wheel- these are the best cards in the pack, and should be scooped up before the pack comes back around. Your first pick should almost always come from this group, since odds are you shouldn't see any of them again. If one of these does come back around, and it still fits your developing plan, it's almost a sure thing to pick up on the wheel. One of these coming around may also indicate an open color, or deck strategy, and always worth giving a little thought to.
2) May Wheel-I put these at a 50/50 to wheel. your second pick in the pack will usually come from this group, since the #1 in the pack should already be gone. This group will tell you more about the other decks forming at the table then any other source of information. When the pack wheels around to you in pick nine, there should only be two cards from his group left, picks 9 and 10. The three that are already gone tell you a lot about the "best decks" being built by players 6, 7, and 8. Like wise the card you don't pick, will give you a clue to the "best deck" to be built by the player in position 2. This for all intensive purposes gives you a peek at 4 other decks being constructed. Counting your own deck, this gives you some degree of contrived knowledge about 5 out of 8 decks. If you do this type of thinking for all three packs int he draft, in addition to having perfect knowledge of your deck, you have had 3 peeks at 2 decks (positions 2, and 8), 2 peeks at 2 decks (positions 6, and 7), and one peek at 2 additional decks (positions 3, and 4). It's not a perfect world, and certainly as much art as science, but that is a lot of potential information. Since Repack is main deck mod, you should have a good idea of what you may face against nearly any other player at the table.
3) Should Wheel- This is the crap of the crap. If it wheels, it's exactly what I expected, and increases the likeliness of the predictions made from group 2. If it doesn't it makes things a bit more interesting. In essence it tells me that one or more persons isn't building their "best deck" instead making sub-optimal picks. In this case you are much more likely to have four "bester" decks, those that benefited from better then expected late picks, and then four "worster" decks, those making bad picks, or getting the shaft as others jump on cards expected for their "best" deck.
Kei Takahashi- 2
Blaze- 1
Ragamuffin- 2
Whispersilk Cloa-1
Wild Growth- 3
Pearled Unicorn- 2
Mons's Goblin Raiders- 3
Moor Fiend- 1
Fire Juggler- 1
Detainment Spell- 2
Luminescent Rain- 3
Stream of Unconsciousness- 3
Elvish Visionary- 2
Soul Bleed- 3
Snapping Drake-1
Wow, now this is exactly the kind of pack a Repack organizer likes to see. Temporal, Prismatic, and Power distribution is nearly perfect. There are three solid first pick cards here; Blaze, Snapping Drake, and Whispersilk Cloak.. Each of these is a bomb in their own right, and you really could make an argument for any pick order here, but I would choose them in the order given. blaze is removal, splash, and a potential win condition through a clogged board. Snapping Drake is a splash, has a relevant power, and evasive. Some one should be playing blue in the either position 2 or 3. Whispersilk cloak can literally go in any deck that uses creatures and make it better, breaking through any board position. If you aren't using creatures in repack, you are simply doing it wrong. Moor fiend is also really a story waiting to happen. His size combined with Swampwalk, creates a real incentive not to play black in this event. It should go to the player in seat 4, and only you 2, and 3 got the message that swamps may be a hazard to your health. Fire Juggler is really what pushes Blaze to first pick in my mind. The fact that it has legs, and potential on board removal, makes it worthy of note. Sending it and Blaze, would simply send a stronger signal then I'd be comfortable with. it's also a margianl card, which could be viewed as a 2 by many players, so it could come back to you shoring up your red first pick.
1) Shouldn't Wheel- these are the best cards in the pack, and should be scooped up before the pack comes back around. Your first pick should almost always come from this group, since odds are you shouldn't see any of them again. If one of these does come back around, and it still fits your developing plan, it's almost a sure thing to pick up on the wheel. One of these coming around may also indicate an open color, or deck strategy, and always worth giving a little thought to.
2) May Wheel-I put these at a 50/50 to wheel. your second pick in the pack will usually come from this group, since the #1 in the pack should already be gone. This group will tell you more about the other decks forming at the table then any other source of information. When the pack wheels around to you in pick nine, there should only be two cards from his group left, picks 9 and 10. The three that are already gone tell you a lot about the "best decks" being built by players 6, 7, and 8. Like wise the card you don't pick, will give you a clue to the "best deck" to be built by the player in position 2. This for all intensive purposes gives you a peek at 4 other decks being constructed. Counting your own deck, this gives you some degree of contrived knowledge about 5 out of 8 decks. If you do this type of thinking for all three packs int he draft, in addition to having perfect knowledge of your deck, you have had 3 peeks at 2 decks (positions 2, and 8), 2 peeks at 2 decks (positions 6, and 7), and one peek at 2 additional decks (positions 3, and 4). It's not a perfect world, and certainly as much art as science, but that is a lot of potential information. Since Repack is main deck mod, you should have a good idea of what you may face against nearly any other player at the table.
3) Should Wheel- This is the crap of the crap. If it wheels, it's exactly what I expected, and increases the likeliness of the predictions made from group 2. If it doesn't it makes things a bit more interesting. In essence it tells me that one or more persons isn't building their "best deck" instead making sub-optimal picks. In this case you are much more likely to have four "bester" decks, those that benefited from better then expected late picks, and then four "worster" decks, those making bad picks, or getting the shaft as others jump on cards expected for their "best" deck.
Kei Takahashi- 2
Blaze- 1
Ragamuffin- 2
Whispersilk Cloa-1
Wild Growth- 3
Pearled Unicorn- 2
Mons's Goblin Raiders- 3
Moor Fiend- 1
Fire Juggler- 1
Detainment Spell- 2
Luminescent Rain- 3
Stream of Unconsciousness- 3
Elvish Visionary- 2
Soul Bleed- 3
Snapping Drake-1
Wow, now this is exactly the kind of pack a Repack organizer likes to see. Temporal, Prismatic, and Power distribution is nearly perfect. There are three solid first pick cards here; Blaze, Snapping Drake, and Whispersilk Cloak.. Each of these is a bomb in their own right, and you really could make an argument for any pick order here, but I would choose them in the order given. blaze is removal, splash, and a potential win condition through a clogged board. Snapping Drake is a splash, has a relevant power, and evasive. Some one should be playing blue in the either position 2 or 3. Whispersilk cloak can literally go in any deck that uses creatures and make it better, breaking through any board position. If you aren't using creatures in repack, you are simply doing it wrong. Moor fiend is also really a story waiting to happen. His size combined with Swampwalk, creates a real incentive not to play black in this event. It should go to the player in seat 4, and only you 2, and 3 got the message that swamps may be a hazard to your health. Fire Juggler is really what pushes Blaze to first pick in my mind. The fact that it has legs, and potential on board removal, makes it worthy of note. Sending it and Blaze, would simply send a stronger signal then I'd be comfortable with. it's also a margianl card, which could be viewed as a 2 by many players, so it could come back to you shoring up your red first pick.
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