I’m looking to play casually (in person) with some friends and we were wondering what the cheapest format to start buying for would be? And what might be some good pick ups (we have the starter decks but want some more variety) thanks

  • Compgeek@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Pauper is a very cheap way to play Magic, 60 card decks with commons only. Some of the top competitive decks only run about $30, and you can build fun decks up with 10 cent cards from your LGS.

    For casual play, my favourite is still Commander though. You can definitely build commander decks on a budget (one of the ones I made run me $26) and the format is a lot of fun!

  • Researchgrant@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s not the absolute cheapest, but I recommend trying out commander if you have not already done so. The value of the preconstructed decks is very high as they come with a bunch of useful rares. Some of these decks are as low as $20 on Amazon. Additionally, almost every card ever made is allowed to be played, and nothing ever rotates out like in standard format. It’s a casual format so if you don’t have a lot to spend on perfecting a deck, many people have several tiers of decks for more fair matchups. If it’s just you and your friends, most of the preconstructed commander decks are well matched. Also there are 100 unique cards in each deck, so there is a ton of variety even in one deck and it will take many games before you even see all the cards you have.

    • UnPassive@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Budget limits are fun, I super enjoy pauper commander. Tolarian Community College has a good video on it.

    • astanix@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It can be the cheapest though… you can set budget constraints to whatever the playgroup wants and just go from there.

  • ratz30@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    If you’re just playing casually I recommend you get proxies printed. That’s the absolute cheapest way to play any format you want.

    You can print your own at home, or if you want something similar in quality to actual cards I suggest you check out MPC. There’s also a really handy website that makes the whole process of ordering from MPC very easy.

    • thecdc1995@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Seconding proxies. It’s a steep learning curve at the beginning but far cheaper in the long run as long as you aren’t playing in tournaments.

  • Dogtrouble@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Pauper is the obvious answer. It’s unique in that every card in the format is Common rarity, so that mitigates price already. Check out MTGGoldfish’s Metagame page for Pauper, which lists competitively viable decks and their price. Not sure how up to date it is, but it’s a good starting point!

  • saxocat
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    1 year ago

    The cheapest format that is somewhat widely played is Pauper. All cards that have been printed as common once are legal, most competitive decks are sub 100€/$. Casual even cheaper! I like it a lot, the card pool is deep and the meta somewhat balanced, except for affinity maybe.