#509: Magic Evolution, Part 2
59:08
This is part two of my "Magic Evolution" series where I walk through sets and explain what innovations they added to Magic design.
Posted in Making Magic on February 12, 2018
Last week, I walked you all through the first Great Designer Search 3 trial, the essay test. This week it's time to start talking about the second trial, the multiple-choice test. To do that, I want to first give everyone a chance to take the test, so here's how it's going to work. You can reveal the full test by clicking the button below. Take the test, then tally your score using the answer key provided. Then continue reading the rest of this article; I'll explain all the answers. Because this test is so long, the explanations will take multiple weeks. Sound fun?
1. What is the most appropriate color for this card?
Scrappy Survivor
--- [converted mana cost (CMC): 6]
Creature — ---
5/5
Menace, prowess
2. What is the most appropriate rarity for this card?
Scrappy Survivor
--- [CMC: 6]
Creature — ---
5/5
Menace, prowess
3. You are changing one of Scrappy Survivor's keywords to another one. Which of the following combinations would result in a card that couldn't be monocolor?
Scrappy Survivor
--- [CMC: 6]
Creature — ---
5/5
Menace, prowess
4. What is the most appropriate color combination for this multicolor card?
Come Work for Me Temporarily
--- [CMC: 4]
Sorcery
Gain control of target creature until end of turn. Untap it. It gets +1/+1 and gains haste, hexproof, and trample until end of turn.
5. What is the most appropriate rarity for this card?
Come Work for Me Temporarily
--- [CMC: 4]
Sorcery
Gain control of target creature until end of turn. Untap it. It gets +1/+1 and gains haste, hexproof, and trample until end of turn.
6. If we aren't planning to change the color combination, which change are we least likely to make to this card?
Come Work for Me Temporarily
--- [CMC: 4]
Sorcery
Gain control of target creature until end of turn. Untap it. It gets +1/+1 and gains haste, hexproof, and trample until end of turn.
7. Which of these phrases is a follower of white's philosophy least likely to say?
8. Which of these phrases is a follower of blue's philosophy least likely to say?
9. Which of these phrases is a follower of black's philosophy least likely to say?
10. Which of these phrases is a follower of red's philosophy least likely to say?
11. Which of these phrases is a follower of green's philosophy least likely to say?
12. If we were to bring back the battle cry mechanic in a Ravnica set, which guild would be the best match for the mechanic?
13. Which effect is usually seen on more instants than sorceries?
14. What is the biggest problem design-wise with the card below?
Long-Acting Giant Growth
2G
Sorcery
Target creature gets +3/+3 until the end of the turn. At the beginning of your next upkeep, that creature gets +2/+2 until end of turn. At the beginning of your next upkeep after that, that creature gets +1/+1 until end of turn.
15. If the following card were a hybrid creature, what colors would it be?
Mysterio
--- [CMC: 4]
*/*
Flash
CARDNAME's power and toughness are each equal to the number of cards in your hand.
16. What is the most likely rarity for the following card?
Mysterio
--- [CMC: 4]
*/*
Flash
CARDNAME's power and toughness are each equal to the number of cards in your hand.
17. What ability could be added to this creature without changing its colors?
Mysterio
--- [CMC: 4]
*/*
Flash
CARDNAME's power and toughness are each equal to the number of cards in your hand.
18. A player finishes their first game of Magic. Which of the following do we care most about?
19. When designing a card for Spike, which of the following is most important?
20. Design considers a card "too slow for tournament play." What does that mean?
21. You're working on the next Commander decks. Which is the most important goal?
22. Which of the following creatures is the weakest in a typical Standard-legal Draft format?
23. Which of the following creatures is the strongest in a typical Standard-legal Draft format?
24. The lead of a set has removed a black instant removal spell from their set, and asks you to create potential replacement designs. Which of these qualities is most important for your designs?
25. Why do green's common creatures tend to be a bit more efficient than white creatures?
26. Which color gets the second fewest common creatures in a typical set?
27. Which of these green keywords does design have to be the most careful when using?
28. We try to avoid making two-color cards where the card could be done as a monocolor card in one of the two colors. Given that, suppose you have a two-color 4/4 creature with flying and vigilance (and no other abilities). What of the following color combinations would be the best choice for this card?
29. Which of these is the most important quality for a set to have?
30. Which of these creature keywords tends to have the most value in a control deck?
31. When Set Design holds a draft, most of the time there are exactly eight drafters. Why?
32. You've designed a card, and you want the Play Design team to like it. How should you choose your casting cost?
33. Which of these evergreen keyword abilities is most likely to be put on a common white creature?
34. Which of the following best describes how a counterspell-based blue deck should contribute to a Standard environment?
35. Assuming the creature is strong enough to see Standard play, which of the following isn't a good quality for a green creature to have?
36. If we were to bring back the storm mechanic in a Ravnica set, which guild would be the best match for the mechanic?
37. A synergy theme in a set needs you to draw specific cards for it to work. This isn't happening frequently enough. Which of the following mechanics would not help increase the frequency of these interactions?
38. Which of the following designs from Legends would be the most reasonable to re-cost into a competitive Standard card?
39. Which category of player most dislikes high variance in gameplay, with "high variance" defined as larger swings in outcome possibilities for individual cards outside of the player's control?
40. Which of the following cards is typically the strongest in Limited play?
41. Which of the following is not generally aimed at competitive Standard play?
42. Which of the following iconic white cards is most reasonable to reprint in a Standard-legal set?
43. Which of the following iconic black cards is most reasonable to reprint in a Standard-legal set?
44. The card Felidar Guardian was banned last year in Standard because of an unintended interaction with the planeswalker card Saheeli Rai. If this interaction were realized late in design, what would have been the best solution?
45. Assuming all of the following designs are costed at an appropriate power level and win rate in Standard, which would be the least fun to show up in competitive play?
46. Which of the following designs would we be most likely to reprint in a Standard-legal set?
47. From a design standpoint, what is the biggest problem with this card?
Mega Bolt
3R
Instant
CARDNAME deals 8 damage to target creature.
48. Which of these text boxes would most likely be red-flagged as highly complex for a common creature?
49. You're playing a multiplayer game. Which pair of mechanics would cause the most confusion if they frequently appeared together in a play environment?
50. If we printed an enchantment with the same text as Stabilizer ("Players can't cycle cards."), which color should it be?
51. What are the most appropriate colors for this card?
Junkpile Engineer
--- [CMC: 3]
Creature — Human Artificer
3/2
2, Sacrifice an artifact: Look at the top X cards of your library, where X is the converted mana cost of the sacrificed artifact. Put one of them into your hand and the rest on the bottom of your library in a random order.
52. What is the most appropriate rarity for this card?
Junkpile Engineer
--- [CMC: 3]
Creature — Human Artificer
3/2
2, Sacrifice an artifact: Look at the top X cards of your library, where X is the converted mana cost of the sacrificed artifact. Put one of them into your hand and the rest on the bottom of your library in a random order.
53. Which of the following changes is Set Design most likely to make?
Junkpile Engineer
--- [CMC: 3]
Creature — Human Artificer
3/2
2, Sacrifice an artifact: Look at the top X cards of your library, where X is the converted mana cost of the sacrificed artifact. Put one of them into your hand and the rest on the bottom of your library in a random order.
54. What are the most appropriate colors for this card?
Dead Man Walking
--- [CMC: 7]
Creature — Shapeshifter Wizard
1/1
When CARDNAME enters the battlefield, return target creature card from any graveyard to the battlefield under your control. All your creatures then become copies of that creature.
55. What is the most appropriate rarity for this card?
Dead Man Walking
--- [CMC: 7]
Creature — Shapeshifter Wizard
1/1
When CARDNAME enters the battlefield, return target creature card from any graveyard to the battlefield under your control. All your creatures then become copies of that creature.
56. What change wouldn't design make to the following card?
Dead Man Walking
--- [CMC: 7]
Creature — Shapeshifter Wizard
1/1
When CARDNAME enters the battlefield, return target creature card from any graveyard to the battlefield under your control. All your creatures then become copies of that creature.
57. You're designing a set that returns to a plane we've been to before and plan to have Humans, Wolves, and Spirits. Which world would be most appropriate?
58. Which of the following attributes can a card in a Standard-legal set not mechanically care about?
59. Which of the following abilities is R&D least likely to put on a mono-red creature in an upcoming set?
60. According to current design standards, which of the following "enters-the-battlefield" effects is least likely to be on a common creature?
61. Which of the following sets isn't designed around factions?
62. Which of the following mechanics would be the best fit for the Simic Combine from Ravnica?
63. Secondary—This is the color (or colors) that an ability shows up in on a somewhat regular basis, but not as often as the primary and not always in as low of rarity as the primary. If the effect is something we do a lot of, the secondary color will usually get the ability in most sets.
Which color is secondary at trample?
64. Secondary—This is the color (or colors) that an ability shows up in on a somewhat regular basis, but not as often as the primary and not always in as low of rarity as the primary. If the effect is something we do a lot of, the secondary color will usually get the ability in most sets.
Which color is secondary at haste?
65. Secondary—This is the color (or colors) that an ability shows up in on a somewhat regular basis, but not as often as the primary and not always in as low of rarity as the primary. If the effect is something we do a lot of, the secondary color will usually get the ability in most sets.
Which color is secondary at vigilance?
66. What kinds of creatures can green destroy?
67. Which of the following mechanics is not an ability word?
68. Why doesn't common often have seven-mana instants and sorceries?
69. Which world has had the most expansions set on it?
70. A linear mechanic is one that encourages players to build around a specific aspect. Which of the following mechanics is the least linear?
71. In which of the following formats can the card Power Conduit from Mirrodin not be played?
72. Which of the following is the most important reason that some cards' mana costs are higher than others?
73. Which of the following is the most important reason for the color pie to exist?
74. Which of the following effects is design allowed to use on a Standard-legal black-bordered card?
75. You're designing a card with a converted mana cost of 10. Which of these card types is it least likely to be?
Now let's go through the test, one question at a time.
Scrappy Survivor
--- [converted mana cost (CMC): 6]
Creature — ---
5/5
Menace, prowess
1. What is the most appropriate color for this card
Menace is primary in black and red. Prowess is primary in blue and secondary in red. That makes red the only color where the two abilities overlap.
2. What is the most appropriate rarity for this card?
From the first question, we now know this is a red creature. It's a 5/5 with two abilities. This card is unlikely to be a common because 5/5 is a bit big for common in red, especially with two potent keywords. It's unlikely to be rare or mythic rare because the card isn't particularly exciting. Usually cards at higher rarity have a bit more going on. That makes uncommon the most likely rarity for this card.
3. You are changing one of Scrappy Survivor's keywords to another one. Which of the following combinations would result in a card that couldn't be monocolor?
First strike is white and red. Prowess is blue and red. This means answer A could be mono-red. Hexproof is blue and green. Prowess is blue and red. This means answer B could be mono-blue. Lifelink is white and black. Menace is black and red. This means answer C could be mono-black. Menace is black and red. Vigilance is white and green. This means answer D can't be monocolor and is therefore the correct answer.
Come Work for Me Temporarily
--- [CMC: 4]
Sorcery
Gain control of target creature until end of turn. Untap it. It gets +1/+1 and gains haste, hexproof, and trample until end of turn.
4. What is the most appropriate color combination for this multicolor card?
This one is a little tricky. Gaining control of another creature, untapping it, and giving it haste until the end of the turn is a red ability. Hexproof is a blue and green ability. Trample is a red and green ability. That means of the choices provided, blue-red and red-green are the two possible combinations. Red-green is the better choice because of a subtle thing we do in design when granting abilities with a two-color card. We grant three abilities: one primary or secondary in the first color (haste in red), one primary or secondary in the second color (hexproof in green), and one primary or secondary in both (trample in red and green), making this design more red-green than blue-red.
5. What is the most appropriate rarity for this card?
Temporary stealing is something red does at common. However, this spell also pumps the creature and grants two additional abilities beyond the haste: hexproof and trample. Granting three additional abilities beyond the stealing and pumping makes it unlikely we do this effect at common. This effect seems more suited for Limited than Constructed, and like the last card, it lacks a bit of splash that would make it rare or mythic rare. All this means we'd most likely make this card uncommon.
6. If we aren't planning to change the color combination, which change are we least likely to make to this card?
If we take haste away from this spell, you can no longer attack with the creature you’ve stolen. That would make the spell not very useful and quite unintuitive, so B is the correct answer. Answer A isn't something we do often, but it is something we're willing to do infrequently. Answer C could be done to boost the power of the card. Answers D and E are both changing to abilities that correspond to the proper color assignment, and thus would be allowable.
7. Which of these phrases is a follower of white's philosophy least likely to say?
White believes in order and sees "acting from the heart" as a chaotic thing that red would do. This makes C the correct answer. Answer A is okay because white believes in structure. Answer B is okay because white is willing to justify acting preemptively if it feels there's a strong enough moral reason. Answer D is okay because white believes in valuing the group over an individual. Answer E is okay because white accepts violence as a necessary tool in some cases, such as when it might use an army to stop a known threat.
8. Which of these phrases is a follower of blue's philosophy least likely to say?
Blue believes in nurture over nature, making E the correct answer. Answer A is okay because blue believes one should think before acting. Answer B is okay because it taps into blue's belief that people are born a blank slate with the potential to become anything. Answer C is okay because blue actually embraces change and thus doesn't see it as inherently dangerous. Answer D is okay because blue is a big believer in tools (artifacts, in game terms), as they're one of the ways to help someone reach their potential.
9. Which of these phrases is a follower of black's philosophy least likely to say?
Black is selfish and never believes in putting others before its own interests, making D the correct answer. Answer A is okay because black believes that the key to success is the willingness to do things others won't. Answer B is okay because black is very big on taking advantage of systems. Answer C is okay because black is a firm believer in free will. Answer E is okay because black sees the weak as yet another tool to be used.
10. Which of these phrases is a follower of red's philosophy least likely to say?
Red embraces the messiness of life and is okay with making mistakes, making A the correct answer. Answer B is okay because red is all about action and following one's impulses. Answer C is okay because red sees life as chaotic. Answer D is okay because red is driven by its passion. Answer E is okay because red doesn't like things, such as rules, that don't let you do what you want to do.
11. Which of these phrases is a follower of green's philosophy least likely to say?
While green does see killing as a natural part of life, doing it for sport goes against everything green stands for, making C the correct answer. Answer A is okay because green sees adaptation as a natural process—provided it happens naturally over time and is not forced. Answer B is okay because green believes in the web of life and sees nature tying everything together. Answer D is okay because green believes that the key to being happy is learning that things are good as they currently are, that nature gets things right. Answer E is okay because green believes that it is nature and not nurture that defines your role in life.
12. If we were to bring back the battle cry mechanic in a Ravnica set, which guild would be the best match for the mechanic?
Battle cry is a combat mechanic (Whenever this creature attacks, each other attacking creature gets +1/+0 until end of turn.) that encourages attacking with multiple creatures. It also has a military flavor. These two things make Boros the best choice for the mechanic. The mechanic has some synergy mechanically with both the Gruul and Selesnya guilds, but not as much as it does with Boros.
13. Which effect is usually seen on more instants than sorceries?
The key to this question is actually figuring out which effects happen mostly on sorceries. We put discard effects mostly on sorceries because we don't like players locking the opponent out of their draw. We put land destruction effects mostly on sorceries because instant-speed land destruction in response to a spell being cast confuses some players. We put land fetching mostly on sorceries because we prefer lands get played during the main phase. We put reanimation mostly on sorceries because we don't want it used defensively as a surprise. Direct damage, in contrast, is used all the time on instants and thus is the correct answer.
14. What is the biggest problem design-wise with the card below?
Long-Acting Giant Growth
2G
Sorcery
Target creature gets +3/+3 until the end of the turn. At the beginning of your next upkeep, that creature gets +2/+2 until end of turn. At the beginning of your next upkeep after that, that creature gets +1/+1 until end of turn.
R&D is very sensitive to memory issues. If something is going to last beyond your turn, we tend to give you a memory aid to help (add counters, make it an Aura, etc.). Long-Acting Giant Growth lasts over three turns and changes its effect each turn. This makes B the correct answer. Every other answer just isn't as important as the memory issues.
Mysterio
--- [CMC: 4]
*/*
Flash
CARDNAME's power and toughness are each equal to the number of cards in your hand.
15. If the above card were a hybrid creature, what colors would it be?
Flash is primary in blue and secondary in green. (We've just started experimenting with it as secondary in black as well, but I didn't expect anyone who doesn't read my blog to know this.) The "Maro" ability (power and toughness equal to number of cards in hand) is blue and green. This makes E the correct answer.
16. What is the most likely rarity for the above card?
This card has what we call "variable stats," meaning that its size is constantly changing. We typically don't do variable stats at common. The Maro ability is well liked by the players. It also allows the creature to get pretty big. That makes us more likely to push it up in rarity than down. Also, the converted mana cost is more aimed at Constructed than Limited. The flash added to it is the last straw that would make it more likely to be rare than uncommon. It's not quite splashy enough to be mythic rare. The Maro ability would want to be combined with something a little more innovative than flash to make it a mythic rare, making rare the correct answer.
17. What ability could be added to the above creature without changing its colors?
Answer A is a blue ability but not a green one. Green can untap creatures, but on spells and not naturally on the creature. Answers B and C are green abilities but not blue ones. Answer E is a black ability that has shown up infrequently in green. I believe it was done once in blue in Shards of Alara as part of a cycle, but it's not something blue traditionally does. Answer D is what we call "Curiosity," and it's an ability we use all the time in blue and green, making it the correct answer.
18. A player finishes their first game of Magic. Which of the following do we care most about?
Nothing matters if the new player is uninterested in playing again, so the biggest goal of a first game is to capture the player's interest and get them excited to play more. The other answers are important, just not as important.
19. When designing a card for Spike, which of the following is most important?
The key to making Spike happy is giving them the tools to prove their skills. We found the best way to do this is creating cards which are more skillful in the hands of a better player, allowing Spike to feel that they won because of their own decisions. This means D is the correct answer.
20. Design considers a card "too slow for tournament play." What does that mean?
When we talk about something being "too slow for tournament play," we're thinking big picture: Are we making choices that will make tournaments harder to run? Part of design is understanding the impact choices you make will have on other aspects of the game, such as organized play. For this issue, it's length of rounds, and thus answer A.
21. You're working on the next Commander decks. Which is the most important goal?
This question was testing whether you understood our motives behind making Commander decks. Our biggest goal is promoting the Commander format. To do that, we want to create cards (mostly commanders) that will inspire new decks. We roughly balance colors, but being equal is not crucial. We look for new themes, but repeating popular old themes is okay. Early on, we tried to make cards for Legacy and Vintage, and that caused all sorts of problems. Our decks can be original; they don't have to be based on existing themes. That makes B the correct answer.
22. Which of the following creatures is the weakest in a typical Standard-legal Draft format?
The biggest limitation here is how often you're able to play the card. The higher the cost, the less chance you'll have to ever play it, making the 9G 10/10 the weakest.
23. Which of the following creatures is the strongest in a typical Standard-legal Draft format?
A 1G 2/2 is a bit under the curve. Usually green gets more than that for 1G. A 5G 6/6 is good, but it requires you getting to six mana, which usually doesn't happen until later in the game. 7G and 9G are just dead in your hand too much of the time. This makes 3G 4/4 the correct answer.
24. The lead of a set has removed a black instant removal spell from their set, and asks you to create potential replacement designs. Which of these qualities is most important for your designs?
If the set lead asks you to fill a hole in black, there's no more important quality than the card being black. Yes, it's nice if it can have the same functionality, but if it doesn't, the set lead can tweak a different card to solve that problem.
25. Why do green's common creatures tend to be a bit more efficient than white creatures?
While green and white both have a creature focus, white has more answers than green and thus is less reliant on the potency of its creatures for its overall deck strength. Green's major advantage, especially at common, is that it has the most efficient creatures.
26. Which color gets the second fewest common creatures in a typical set?
Here's the default order of colors from the most creatures to the least within a set (along with the target percentage):
This makes red the color with the second fewest.
27. Which of these green keywords does design have to be the most careful when using?
Hexproof is the most problematic of the five listed keywords, and thus is used the most sparingly.
28. We try to avoid making two-color cards where the card could be done as a monocolor card in only one of the two colors. Given that, suppose you have a two-color 4/4 creature with flying and vigilance (and no other abilities). What of the following color combinations would be the best choice for this card?
Flying is primary in white and blue and secondary in black. Vigilance is primary in white and secondary in green. As both abilities can be done in mono-white, we don't want to use white in this card. That means white-blue, white-black, and green-white are out. Blue-black can't use vigilance, meaning E, black-green, is the only possible answer.
29. Which of these is the most important quality for a set to have?
This point was so important we hit on it in a number of questions. The primary goal of Magic is to be fun, to make the audience enjoy playing it. Yes, we want strategic depth and powerful cards and to have it match the story and be conscious of complexity, but none of that matters if a set isn't enjoyable to play.
30. Which of these creature keywords tends to have the most value in a control deck?
Control decks are decks that, given time, will take "control" of the game (aka set up the conditions such that their opponent can't easily win). The challenge of a control deck is it must last through the early part of the game until it can set up the elements it needs to take control. That means a control deck need tools that help it make the game last longer. Of the five keywords listed, lifelink accomplishes this goal the best.
31. When Set Design holds a draft, most of the time there are exactly eight drafters. Why?
The goal of playtesting is to simulate what players actually do in the real world, because we're trying to optimize the gameplay for that experience. Drafting with a number different than eight would lead to results that would skew the data and possibly lead us to make choices that don't optimize eight-player drafts.
32. You've designed a card, and you want the Play Design team to like it. How should you choose your casting cost?
Making Magic is a collaborative process. To best accomplish this, you need to learn to let people play to their strengths. Could I cost a card? Sure, but I won't do it as well as a play designer who was hired specifically for their ability to judge power level. By asking them first, I lessen the chance that playtesting gets affected because of poor costing. Also, if your goal is to get Play Design (or anyone, really) to sign off on something, it helps to involve them in the process.
33. Which of these evergreen keyword abilities is most likely to be put on a common white creature?
Double strike and indestructible are both primary in white, but we don't tend to do them a lot at common. Flash and trample are tertiary in white, and we tend not to use tertiary effects at common. Vigilance is primary in white and used in most sets at common, making E the correct answer.
34. Which of the following best describes how a counterspell-based blue deck should contribute to a Standard environment?
The biggest problem with control decks can be that they take too long and lead to tournament-length issues. As such, in Standard, we like for the control decks to be able to win quickly once they take control, making B the correct answer. Answer A is incorrect because we want back-and-forth in gameplay and like it when players can have answers to control deck strategies. Answer C is incorrect because we like archetypes to have variety, and allowing access to more colors helps accomplish this. Also, control decks aren't just about counterspells. Answers D and E are incorrect because we like the strength of archetypes to ebb and flow.
35. Assuming the creature is strong enough to see Standard play, which of the following isn't a good quality for a green creature to have?
Green is allowed to have card draw provided it's connected to creatures. If the card is a creature that can draw multiple cards, we prefer to have it involve itself in combat to allow the opponent more opportunities to deal with it. The other four responses are all things we're willing to do.
36. If we were to bring back the storm mechanic in a Ravnica set, which guild would be the best match for the mechanic?
Storm (When you cast this spell, copy it for each spell cast before it this turn. You may choose new targets for the copies.) is a mechanic that goes only on instants and sorceries. The Izzet are a guild that mechanically focuses on instants and sorceries, making them the best fit for the mechanic.
37. A synergy theme in a set needs you to draw specific cards for it to work. This isn't happening frequently enough. Which of the following mechanics would not help increase the frequency of these interactions?
The above situation is asking for what we call a "card flow" mechanic, something that increases your ability to draw the card you need. Cycling and investigate allow you to draw extra cards. Scry lets you optimize your draw, increasing your chance to get the card you need. Transmute lets you tutor, going directly into your library and getting the card you need. Kicker, in contrast, allows you to use extra mana but doesn't do anything to help you draw a specific card.
38. Which of the following designs from Legends would be the most reasonable to re-cost into a competitive Standard card?
We've been dialing back color hosers, so destroying all the Forests isn't something we want to do even at a different cost. Arboria is one of the most un-fun cards ever designed and not something we'd ever want to bring back. Land Tax requires constant shuffling and gives white more card advantage than white should get. Presence of the Master is out of white's color pie. That leaves Mana Drain as the one card whose effect we would be most willing to redo at another cost.
This trial had a lot of questions, so we're going to have to get to the second half next week. As always, I'm eager to hear your feedback about the test, the answers, or the Great Designer Search in general. You can email me or contact me through any of my social media accounts (Twitter, Tumblr, Google+, and Instagram).
If this has piqued your interest in the Great Designer Search 3, don't forget to check back in on Friday, March 9, for the first "show."
Join me next week for Part 2.
Until then, may this test lead to many fun discussions.
59:08
This is part two of my "Magic Evolution" series where I walk through sets and explain what innovations they added to Magic design.
58:15
In this podcast, I talk about the lengthy journey to make the third Great Designer Search happen.
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