![]() Primarily Selfless Spirit, but sometimes Burrenton Forge-Tender can be effective depending on the nature of the cards your opponent has access to. Going wide is usually very effective in game 1, as main-decked sweepers are rare, and 1-for-1 removal often is unable to keep up, particularly if you are leaning on Shaman of the Pack, which enables alpha strikes just to get a last few points of damage through blockers.Īs a result, anti-sweeper tools can be useful to pre-emptively deal with their best tool (and often the only way they can keep up with you). Hopefully, this means as the decks change, my advice can still guide you to target your sideboard effectively.Īgainst fair midrange decks, you are already reasonably well set up. Artifact Decks (Affinity, Hardened Scales, KCI).Graveyard Decks (Dredge, Hollow One, Bridgevine).Big Mana (Tron, Titanshift, Amulet Titan).Creature Combo (Devoted Elves, Abzan Company, Kiki Evolution).Aggro Combo (Affinity, Hardened Scales, Elves, Bogles).Control (UW, Jeskai, Grixis, Blue Moon).Fair Midrange (Jund/Abzan, Mardu Pyromancer, Death’s Shadow).The Modern Format is famously diverse, and ever-changing so I’ll be breaking the popular decks into broad categories to simplify the discussion: As you will see, there is a huge swathe of options available to you, and I endeavour to advise on the choices you can make. The flavour of this article will be somewhat different, however – Whilst the maindeck is relatively consistent between the different styles of the deck (Shaman of the Pack/Devoted Druid), the sideboard is vastly more customisable. Last time, I left you after covering the main-deck of my longest standing Modern deck, Collected Company Elves. ![]() The Comprehensive Guide to Modern Elves Part 2: Matchups and Sideboarding
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