OVERVIEW
Strengths: Powerful card
advantage engine, superior counter spell effects, highly unpredictable.
Weaknesses: Weak monster
stats, high dependence on gauge, folds to relentless offense.
card images taken from buddyfight.wikia.com
Tactics: Although Wizards and 72 Pillars share the same spell card pool, they use those spells in order to advance their own distinct strategies; Wizards try to grind the game to a halt and win by gradually chipping away at the opponent’s life points, while 72 Pillars try to damage rush the opponent with extended attacks.
Core Cards: Nice One!, MagicalGoodbye, Chillax!
METAGAME HISTORY (PHILIPPINES)
The first Buddy Challenge in
the Philippines in April 2014 was dubbed by the international community as
“magical”, with Magic World taking the top three spots in a field full of Dragon
and Danger World players, all of which were 72 Pillars rush decks. Dragon and
Danger were consistently winning weekly tournaments, while Katana was largely
untested and highly vulnerable to existing strategies.
While Magic World’s 72 Pillars
took first at the Anime Card Game Tournament a mere few weeks before the Buddy
Challenge, commanded by someone considered by many to be one of the best
players in the country, in any TCG, people either considered it a fluke or
found the deck too complicated to play. So Magic World went largely unnoticed,
while Katana was being hyped due to the cool factor of ninjas.
It was just a matter of time
before Magic World burst the game wide open. People realized that Magical
Goodbye’s two-sided bounce effect worked as a null for both direct attacks and
monster destruction; it was the most effective counter to penetrating link
attacks from Armorknight Medusa and Hysteric Spear, as well as the omnipresent
Pile Bunker Dragon and Drum Bunker Dragon, Barrier Breaker.
Card advantage was also
significantly better in Magic World at the time. Kosher charged the gauge and
traded itself for another card. Will Glassart was on-hit pressure, while Mary
Sue fetched any spell from the deck. Devil Advantage was a very efficient
recycler that not only picked up Asmodais for a second round of destruction,
but also one of the most broken attack extenders ever printed in any game.
For a time, everyone thought
that the dominance of Magic World would last into perpetuity. Then the
inevitable happened, just two months later, with the full release of Ancient
World via Extra Booster 1: Immortal Entities. Suddenly, a literally large wall
stood in front of Magic World’s limited defense and paper-thin stats. Damage
rushing was almost impossible in the face of the Dragon Lords’ might.
It was a monumental challenge
for 72 Pillars and Wizards to take down Martial Arts Dragon Emperor Duel Sieger with two cards in the soul,
and did not even need to evolve in order to wreak havoc. Magic World sauntered on and eked out wins,
but was no longer the overwhelming control engine it once was especially with
many players finally learning how to play around bounce and nullifies to
maximize damage output and bait spells.
But the real death knell was the airdropped Thunder Knights squadron from Dragon World via Booster Set 3: Drum’s Adventures, which, ironically, a set that was supposed to buff up Magic World, but only introduced the Dragowizard squadron for the Wizard attribute and a few utility spells. And although Dragowizard, Qinus Axia and Tempest Wing were strong, Wizards still struggled.
Tetusya’s dancing demons saw
some changes in response: first was the gradual phase out of Solomon Shield in
favor of Chillax, but remained at two. Next was the realization that GreatDuke, Astaroth, was a bad card especially with repeated chain attacks and
penetrate. Finally, Demon Realm Computer, Vassago entered lists as a way to
accelerate Fever and allowed Magic World players to dig for answers.
But the danger wasn't over. Dungeon World made its debut and proceeded to destroy every World in existence with its 11-crit turn facilitated by Bladewing Phoenix, Dancing Magician, Tetsuya, and Brave Equipment, Glory Seeker. It was the best offensive deck in the BT01-BT03 format, and would continue to stomp on everything even as it saw no real updates until almost a year after.
Magic World variants just couldn't keep up with hyper offensive metagame. Solomon Shields became useless nulls in the face of multiple link attacks fueled by double attack from Dragoanthem and the aforementioned Phoenix. Magical Goodbye and Chillax became insufficient as the amount of pain dished out by both Thunder Knights and Dungeon Mix was simply too much.
But the danger wasn't over. Dungeon World made its debut and proceeded to destroy every World in existence with its 11-crit turn facilitated by Bladewing Phoenix, Dancing Magician, Tetsuya, and Brave Equipment, Glory Seeker. It was the best offensive deck in the BT01-BT03 format, and would continue to stomp on everything even as it saw no real updates until almost a year after.
Magic World variants just couldn't keep up with hyper offensive metagame. Solomon Shields became useless nulls in the face of multiple link attacks fueled by double attack from Dragoanthem and the aforementioned Phoenix. Magical Goodbye and Chillax became insufficient as the amount of pain dished out by both Thunder Knights and Dungeon Mix was simply too much.
When all hope seemed lost, Booster Set 5: Break to the Future came and gave Magic World some much-needed buffs in the form of a nullify that can stop even the most lethal link attacks, cannot be nullified, and is a 2-crit monster to boot; on top of all that, he can even be revived. It was everything 72 Pillars ever wanted in one convenient package. But the blessings didn’t stop there.
Wizards got Artificial Angel,Viriginie Casta, a double attacking Size 3 monster that can turn itself into a
Size 0 and allow a full 2/1/0/Gunrod formation. The MVP of Wizards, however, is
Magic Artist, Andy; suddenly, Axia could come in and ping for free, Mary Sue
became a broken spell-searcher, while also accelerating the aforementioned
Virginie Casta.
Still, it was only appropriate that the biggest boost to Magic World would come in the form of a spell card—and a very good one. Check it Out combines the versatility of Magical Goodbye, Eligos, and Fever by being four things at once: it can nullify an attack, save a monster, re-use on-call monster abilities, and extend attacks; Asmodai was the prime call target as it can destroy a monster that hasn’t attacked.
Finally, Gunrod, Gel Desu
became the Gunrod of choice because it could push additional damage when
necessary. There were other fun additions that saw some marginal use: GreatSpell, Devil’s Rock and Roll; Solomon’s Great Barrier; Magic School, Sephirot;
Demon Sommelier, Zagan. Break to the Future allowed Magic World to compete
toe-to-toe once again with the top decks of the Philippine meta.
DECKBUILDING
In the advent of Perfect Pack
1, Trial Deck 7: Tomorrow! Asmodai!, and Miracle Impack!, creative Magic World
builds of all shapes and sizes emerged, even utilizing the expensive Sabnac in
draw-go, wall-and-stall decks as well as the fun but unreliable New-Era GreatSpell, The Creation. To suggest a standard list for either 72 Pillars or
Wizards would be difficult, but there are already a few staples to build
around.
It all starts with four each
of Nice One, Magical Goodbye, and Chillax for both attributes. The difficult
choice would be whether to run the Key of Solomon series of cards or The
Creation as your advantage engine. Solomon Shield is seldom seen in the main
deck, but is safe at two copies. Oops! is a good sideboard card in 72 Pillars,
but almost mandatory in Wizards due to lack of Asmodai’s removal ability.
Mary Sue and Andy are
definitely staple four-of monsters in Wizards due to the sheer advantage they
give you, and 2-3 Tempest Wings so you don’t auto-loss to Raging Spirits and
Ancient World in general; Asmodai in 72 Pillars, just because he’s mandatory,
while Eligos should be run at 2-3 copies. Mix and match with the other monsters
according to your deck contents and main win condition.
As far as win conditions are
concerned, Great Spell, Grandfather’s Clock in Wizards is still a great way to
push for those last points of damage, especially with a Gunrod equipped. Clock
should be run at 2-3 copies, but more aggressive builds opt to run just a
single copy to be searched by Mary Sue as a last resort. And as mentioned
before, resolving Fever in 72 Pillars could mean lights out; run at 3-4 copies.
Omni Lords present some fun
deck-building dilemmas for Magic World. While they muddle up the consistency of
attribute-specific Great Spells, as one-of cards they are also most accessible
in a World where drawing extra cards is like breathing air, and allows a lot
more flexibility in terms of winning images. The good news is that all four
Omni Lords currently available are compatible with Magic World.
But by far the most important
Omni Lord in Magic World is the Seventh. None of the other Omni Lords should be
run in Magic World without including him. Count Dawn fixes your field to
accommodate 2/1/0/Gunrod or 3/0/x/Gunrod formations in either 72 Pillars or
Wizards, and provides needed reach. Until Magic World gets its own Size 0, and
perhaps even after, he should always be in your deck.
THE FINAL VERDICT
If you want to slowly grind
your opponent to death with direct damage and stall tactics, Wizards is perfect
for you. On the other hand, 72 Pillars utilizes a similar counter spell lineup
to sway combat in your favor and break the game open for a game-ending rush.
Magic World is difficult to play, but can be a highly rewarding experience for
those who dare to be different.
CONTRIBUTORS
Deric Aldrin Tan - love him or hate him (usually the latter), for as long Japanese TCGs exist, he will continue to be the voice of reason against every injustice in the world of card games. Forever stalwart of Magic World Wizards, lover of Tempest Wing, and occasional troll using Dungeon Mix to deal 11 points of damage before you can finish saying Magical--
Jacint Malonzo - when he's not judging Pokemon VGCs on the other side of the store--and even when he is--he spends his time crushing hopes with the all-powerful Sabnac. Most recently, he was seen sowing salt after a well-placed Knight Counter ruined his day, earning Dragon Knight players everywhere his hatred.
CONTRIBUTORS
Deric Aldrin Tan - love him or hate him (usually the latter), for as long Japanese TCGs exist, he will continue to be the voice of reason against every injustice in the world of card games. Forever stalwart of Magic World Wizards, lover of Tempest Wing, and occasional troll using Dungeon Mix to deal 11 points of damage before you can finish saying Magical--
Jacint Malonzo - when he's not judging Pokemon VGCs on the other side of the store--and even when he is--he spends his time crushing hopes with the all-powerful Sabnac. Most recently, he was seen sowing salt after a well-placed Knight Counter ruined his day, earning Dragon Knight players everywhere his hatred.