Wednesday, October 3, 2012

MtG Tournament Report: Return to Ravnica Pre-Release 9/30/12

Last Saturday, I attended both the Midnight and 11am Return to Ravnica Pre-Release Tournaments at my Local Shop, Anime Imports, in Pacifica, CA.  I chose Izzet for the Midnight release and built a pretty sweet Wall & Dragon deck, but due to poor play on my part, I only ended up 3-3.  But it was all good; I loved the pre-release structure and I had a great time.  I got home at 7am, woke up at 10am, showered and was back in the shop for the 11am event.

It was fantastic and ended up being an unforgettable Magic moment :)

The next day, I wrote an e-mail to my friend, Marcel White (of the Brainstorm Brewery Podcast), detailing my experience at the Return to Ravnica Pre-Release.  Here's a transcript of the letter below:
-----------------------------

"Hey Marcel!  Hope your Return to Ravnica pre-releases went well, bro... I wanted to share a story with you that I thought you might appreciate.

I played the 11am tourney at Anime Imports in Pacifica on Saturday.  I chose Selesnya but ended up building, of all things, a Rakdos deck because I pulled a Desecration Demon, a Dreadbore, 2 Annihilating Fire, and 3 Auger Spree (it was pretty fucking awesome :) ).  Anyway, I go 4-0, make Top 8, beat two Izzet decks and make it to the finals.  I was really nervous, but even more excited to try and win the whole thing.

I end up playing this guy named Brian who's running Selesnya; he's really quiet and unassuming, generally nice, and I come to find out that this is the first Magic tournament he's played in 12 years.  I remember thinking to myself, 

"Man, he hasn't played a tourney in a decade, so he probably just got a bunch of great mythics and rares, and his deck is basically just really-really strong ("lucky," like me :p).  I hope I get some good draws because if he drops a Trostani or Armada Wurm, I'm done." 

As we're shuffling, we get to talking and I find out he's a really cool dude, we're both the same age, and strangely, he keeps saying,

"I don't really care if I win or not... I just hope we have some really great games.  Best of luck."

I say "strangely," because there wasn't a hint of sarcasm... Dude was just nice.  As we're playing, it becomes apparent that he doesn't know ANY of my cards, which makes sense since it's his first tournament in 12 years, but I never had to explain anything to him: I'd play something, he'd silently and QUICKLY read it upside down, nod his head, store the info, and go on playing.  I distinctly remember thinking to myself after the first game, 

"Man, this guy is the fastest, most decisive, and solid player I've ever played against... It's like he's always 3 steps ahead of me, knows what I'm going to do before I do it, goes through all the steps with robotic precision, and never seemingly has to 'think' about any attacks or blocks; he makes instant decisions (hence, the "always 3 steps ahead of me.")." 

He beat me while controlling board position the whole game and he didn't do it with Trostanis or Mythic Angels or Wurms.  He did it with extremely efficient creatures, perfect land drops and curve, and excellent use of "toolbox"/tech cards (like Rootbound Defenses, Arrest, and Fog effects).

As we get to talking more, he asks me what I think about the new Ravnica set and the pre-release in general.  I tell him I love the new set and that I really appreciate the attention to detail in the guild boxes and the first time innovations (like being able to play with the promo, the awesome stickers, and the guild-packs).  

He says, "I know the guy that worked on (developing) these."  

I said, "Really?  At Wizards?  Well, when you see him, please tell him he did a great job."

We play Game 2 and I win handily because 1) I'm on the play and 2) I had a pretty sick opening hand (a turn 2 Ash Zealot, a turn 3 Mind Rot, into a second 2 drop with 2 mana up for Dreadbore and another kill spell in my hand).

On to Game 3 and there were at least two different instances where I was confused about the timing of some of my attempted plays.  Each time I asked our store judge (who was standing next to us watching) for a rules clarification, Brian would kindly AND QUICKLY answer the question even before our judge could do his "judge thing" (and if you know Frank, he's usually pretty quick to figure stuff out).  Game 3 ends a lot like game 1 where Brian commands the board with efficient creatures and protects all the relevant pieces with excellently timed tech cards, all in rhythm, everything consistent and correct, a perfect curve... No Mythics or unbeatable bombs like I expected, just super-solid unbeatable play, something you absolutely DON'T expect from a guy who's playing his first tournament in a dozen years.

After the match in the 5-or-so minutes we're waiting for the shop owner to get the prizes ready, we continue talking casually.  I ask him about his friend that works at Wizards and how he knows him.  Brian smiles at me and says, 

"Well, Phil, he used to work for me.  I was the LEAD DEVELOPER on the original Ravnica set."

Holy. Shit. This dude DESIGNED Dark Confidant, the Shocklands... All of it!  I find out that he's Brian Schneider, former Pro-Tour professional and former Wizards R&D lead Developer, responsible for both design and development of Ravnica, Kamigawa Block, and Time Spiral, just to name a few!  He was an original team member of Team CMU with MtG Legends and Hall of Famers Randy Beuhler, Erik Lauer, and half-a-dozen others, all guys that shaped and continue to shape competitive Magic as we know it.

When I asked him if the (Anime Imports) owners or anyone else in the shop knew who he was, he humbly responded, 

"Nah, I'm not anyone special; no one needs to make a fuss or anything... I'm just a Magic fan and I really wanted to see how this new Ravnica set turned out.  I haven't worked for Wizards in years (he now works as a game developer for Zynga) and, as you know, haven't played in a tournament in 12.  This is really nostalgic for me, actually.  I had a good time today.  Please don't tell anyone while I'm still here; I don't want to make a fuss.  I only told you because you're a really nice guy and you asked."  Haha :p

We talked some more about deck building and play and about the potential "power cards" of RtR (he knew NOTHING about the cards in this set before he cracked his first packs today... He really was literally learning every single card today as it was being played).  We also talked about his brother (Justin Schneider, an old school MtG phenom), the early days of competitive Magic (he participated in Pro Tour 1; that's hella fresh), and what it was like to work at Wizards.  I shook his hand, took a picture with him and our stacks of packs, and before he left, told him 

"Thank you for making this game; it's one of the few things in my life that allows me to think about something else other than the b.s. of the daily grind."

After he left, I shared my story with Mike (the shop owner) and the shop regulars.  It was a pretty awesome feeling and a great experience getting to play some Magic with not only a Pro Tour vet (and probably the best overall player I'll ever get to play with), but a Magic maven and a guy who shaped this awesome game :)

Anyway, Marcel, if you got this far, thanks for reading and letting me share.  I just realized that maybe you got to meet Brian Schneider, too (he told me he was going to play at Eudemonia on Sunday... I hope the crowd recognized him and gave him his due props).  If you want to play some Standard and need a playtest partner or something, give me a head's up.  I fucking love this game :p

Alright, Bro, I should try to get some real work done before my wife disowns me, haha.  Talk to you soon,
-Phil"
--------------------------------

Cool story, Bro... Right?!?! :p

It got EVEN COOLER :)

Marcel sent this e-mail to me this afternoon:
-----------------------------------

"Hi Phil,

So I forwarded your letter to Mark Rosewater and Aaron Foresythe.  I received this response. 

Enjoy,
Marcel


Marcel,

Thank you very much for forwarding this. I very much enjoyed it. Brian is a great guy.

I passed it along to the rest of R&D and everyone was very happy to read it.

Sincerely,

Mark Rosewater
(and in a second response, Marcel added:)

Keep in mind that MaRo know the importance of using "very" correctly.
--------------------------

Haha... What a great Magic experience!  Can you believe my story and sentiments got all the way to Wizards R&D?  A very cool experience, indeed, and I'm honored and proud to have been a part of it :)
Fat Ninja vs. MtG Legend, Brian Schneider

Sunday, September 2, 2012

MTG Tournament Report: The TCGPlayer 5K, San Jose, CA

On Saturday, September 1st, I participated in my first "large" tournament (by "large" I mean bigger than a pre-release, so anything +60 I suppose) in 13 years.  The last time I played a in large, competitive tournament was GP Manila in 1999.  I was 22, 50 pounds lighter, and just finished my first season out in the Bering Sea as an Observer for NOAA.  Jesus… I was 50 pounds lighter.

Me, 13 years (and 50 pounds lighter) ago.

Anyway, I was stupid nervous and excited to get back into competitive spell-slinging and D Veloz, one of the Anime Imports regulars, invited me to go to the TCGPlayer 5K in San Jose.  We met up the Thursday before and play-tested at the shop, then went at it again the next day at Anime's regular-weekly 4pm Standard.  D and my other Magic Homie, Mielvin, came by my house Saturday morning and off we went down to San Jose to battle.

Quick Stats: 174 person tournament, 8 rounds, Top 32 cash, Top 8 reset the brackets and go single elim ftw. I played Mono-Green Dungrove.
rd. 1 (vs. Esper Junk) = W, 2-0
rd. 2 (vs. U/W Delver) = W, 2-0
rd. 3 (vs. R/G Aggro) = L, 0-2
rd. 4 (vs. U/W Control) W, 2-0
rd. 5 (vs. U/W Mid-Range) W, 2-1 (really proud of my play during this one)
rd. 6 (vs. U/W Delver) L, 1-2
rd. 7 (vs. Naya Aggro) W, 2-1
rd. 8 (vs. ????????)

My friend (and awesomesauce Magic player), Kyle, met me at the Convention Center to watch games and root me on.  I usually get nervous when Kyle watches me in a tourney, but strangely, I felt like he was my own personal judge/support crew... It was awesome! I knew that if my opponents did something illegal and I missed it, he'd have my back and call it... It allowed me to feel really confident about that aspect of the game and I played some of the best Magic I'd ever played in my life.

My first match loss came in Round 3 and I can't really complain.  I was playing a R/G Aggro deck and, in game two, I had no cards in hand but an edge in board position with a 6/6 Tree, a Rancored 9/7 Ooze, and a 3/2 Strangleroot.  Dude has 2 cards in hand, a Sword of Feast and Famine equipped to his own Strangleroot, 4 mana-up and a Bird.  I was at 11, he was at 2.  I figured even if he cast a Bonfire or Wolfir Silverheart, I was attacking for lethal next turn.  He taps 4 lands and his Bird and drops a Silverheart bonded to his equipped Geist.  Geist attacks for 4, he untaps 4 land and, POW!  Huntmaster… Oh well, at least I lost to an Epic play!

I was most proud of my game-play and composure in Round 5.  I played  a 22-year-old dude from the East Bay.  He seemed like a really nice guy; cordial, talkative, a level 1 judge at his local shop… It was all good.  I win Game 1, he takes Game 2, but as I finish shuffling for Game 3 and start to draw my cards (after he shuffled and cut my deck), he stops in his tracks and yells, "JUDGE!!!"  A bit shocked because I don't know what's going on, I ask him, "Is something wrong?"  The formerly happy-go-lucky opponent turned all Big-Eyed-No-Blink-Serious-Guy.  He refused to talk to me or answer my questions -pretty fucking lame if you asked me- definitely the most awkward 45 seconds of the whole tourney.  I said, "What, do you think, my cards are marked or something?  I didn't mark them, Man.  Well, whatever… I guess we have to wait for the Judge."

The Judge comes by and asks what the problem is.  My opponent explains that he thinks one of my cards is marked.  He finally breaks his communication silence with me, looks at me and says, "I'm not saying you're cheating; I just think one of your cards is marked."  I was totally thinking in my head at that moment, "Yeah, right, Bitch.  You're trying to pull some weak ass gamesmanship move on me.  Well, fuck you, you ass-raping donkey fucker."  The Judge seemed to think exactly what I was thinking because when he looked at my deck, he sorta rolled his eyes like, "Really? You called me over for this?" tapped the cards down and put my library back on the table, then looked at my opponent and said, "Okay, now his deck isn't marked and it's randomly shuffled.  Continue."

I went on to roll his ass with a Rancored Thrun and a pissed off Tree.  GG, Eastbay.  WHASSUPER, NOW?!?!  WESTSIDE, NIGGA!!!  Haha :p

I lost the next round 1-2 to a Delver player who ended up in Top 4 and needed to win Round 7 to have a shot at cashing in the Top 32.  I got paired up with a homeboy from Stockton who was really cool and had a good matchup against me, but his Naya Aggro deck stalled after I killed his mana dorks.  I had won and was going on to Round 8… Little did I know, I was also going on to Magical Drama Land!

So here's the situation: I was going into the final round ranked 22nd with a record of 5-2. Basically, I needed to win my final match to make Top 16, win $75 and, most importantly to me, a really cool ltd. edition playmat. Unfortunately, a loss (and resultant 5-3) record would probably knock me out of top 32 and, hence, no money, no prizes, no playmat.

Pairings went up, I calmed myself down, focused and was ready to go. I win the roll, play a Bird, and pass... My opponent drops Seachrome Coast and Snags my Bird. U/W Delver! Right on... I have a good match-up against Delver and as soon as I resolve a Dungrove, it's pretty much "gg" for my opponent. On 5th turn, LITERALLY as I'm swinging in with a Rancor'ed Tree and 2 Strangleroots for lethal, the head judge gets on the microphone and says,

"We're extremely sorry about this... blah-blah-blah... but we made a mistake in the pairings that directly affects the Top 8 standings. Since only 10 minutes of the round has passed, we can, under our rules, choose to RESTART THE ROUND WITH NEW PAIRINGS. We're sorry about the inconvenience... blah-blah-blah... Your current matches are now null an void. New pairings will be posted soon."
 


Holy yuck.


Anyway, I'm not gonna lie... I sorta went on tilt and was in a frustrated playing daze; I haven't played this much Magic for this long AND this intense for over a decade, and this pretty much unraveled my focus. Then, my will-to-win was further sapped when I discovered what deck my new opponent was playing: INFECT!!! Arrrrgh!!! I went from a favorable matchup that I'm comfortable playing (and had already won a game and have a fully stocked sideboard for) to possibly my WORST matchup and one I've never played (against) before!!!

And as if to rub salt deeper in the wound (although it wasn't his fault, I don't blame him), the Delver player I was beating got newly-paired with... A BYE (his oppo didn't show)! So he went from potentially losing to me and getting knocked out of Top 32 to an auto-win sending him to Top 16.


Wow. That felt like falling out of a roller coaster.

Anyway, I made several playing mistakes in my match against the Infect player (my first really non-solid play of the day) but it was all academic when in the third game, I mulliganed to 6 and he hit me for 9 INFECT on turn 2 (nothing I could do... he earned it with a Titanic Growth and 2x Mutagenic Growths on his Glistener Elf. He won, no contest.

So I lost and ended the day with a 5-3 record, pretty dejected and a bit upset, both at myself for sloppy play against my final opponent and especially at the whole tournament re-pairing situation. But D and Mielvin were good team-mates and helped me see that, overall, I played really well and I did what I came out there to do: have fun (it was a blast), gained great tournament experience, and played solid (which I did for 7 & 1/2 rounds mile). I was also really fortunate to take the advice of my friend Mark, who told me to play a "simpler" deck that finished rounds faster (win or lose) so I could have time to eat, hit the head, and refocus in between rounds.  I was mentally exhausted at the end of the day and I can only imagine how much earlier I would've crapped out if I played one of my control decks and went to "time" in any one of the rounds!  It's great advice deck-choice advice for a dude newer to the Tournament Magic scene.



BUT THE STORY'S NOT OVER...



Out of nowhere, like a strange nerd fairy-tale, I got the dork's happy ending... When the final standings came up, I looked for my name in the 40's, then 50's, then went back up the list. Guess who ended up IN EXACTLY 32ND PLACE!!!!!


WHOOOOOOO!!!! There were 4 other guys beneath me with identical 5-3 records, but I had better tie-breaker, just enough to cash (and Karma came back my way today)!!!

I got $50, 10 TCG Player Points and, most awesomesaucely, my very own Limited Edition TCG Playmat!!! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!


It was the best complete competitive Magic day of my life! It was a lot of fun, 8-of-the-9 people I played were really cool, and hanging out with D, Kyle, and Mielvin was a blast!  Mono-Green Tree For The Win, Baby!  EAT FRESH!!!





 Team EAT FRESH!!!  (Me, Mielvin, & D @ the TCGPlayer 5K in San Jose, 9/1/12)

  

Untap, Upkeep... SHORYUKEN!!!

I mad-pimped out my Tree Deck for the TCG Player 5K with these awesomesauce FOIL Street Fighter sleeves... All day, I was like, "Untap, Upkeep... SHORYUKEN!!!!"

Dude... It was a good day ;)  Tourney Report coming soon!

Thursday, August 23, 2012

DECK TECH: Talrand, Sky Summoner Commander/EDH

I FINALLY put together a new Commander deck!  My first go-round' with Commander didn't go so well... I put together what I thought was a pretty awesomesauce Sisay deck that won with lifegain and that stupid-fresh goat (Felidar Sovereign).  I loved it... Until my friends in my playgroup rained all over my parade and said that for the goat to win, "you need 80 life, cause that's only fair."

Meh.  What a bunch of salty ball sacs!  I broke apart my deck, sold the cards individually on eBay, then found out 3 months later that the playgroup at my local shop (Anime Imports in Pacifica) would've totally been okay with the 40-life limit!  Geez!

So, it's been about 14 months, and I thought and thought and thought about what I like to do when I play a fun game of Magic:  I like to a) play cards and b) draw cards... LOTS OF 'EM!  Playing Talrand in BV has made me develop a soft-spot for creating armies of drakes, so he seemed like the perfect choice.  Check it :)

Talrand, the Sky Summoner
a Commander deck
by
Phil "Fat Ninja" Tacata



Commander
1.    Talrand, Sky Summoner


















1cc Instant Cantrips
2.    Brainstorm
3.    Disrupt
4.    Fleeting Distraction
5.    Leap
6.    Mental Note
7.    Obsessive Search
8.    Opt
9.    Peek
10. Quicken                                   
11. Sapphire Charm
12. Shadow Rift
13. Stream of Unconsciousness           
14. Thought Scour
15. Twisted Image                                   
16. Visions of Beyond
17. Whispers of the Muse

1cc Sorcery Cantrips
18. Cloak of Feathers
19. Gitaxian Probe
20. Ponder
21. Preordain                                               
22. Serum Visions                                   
23. Sleight of Hand
24. Sorcerous Sight

Creature
25. Snapcaster Mage

More Draw
26. Ideas Unbound
27. Frantic Search
28. Windfall
29. Three Wishes
30. Time Spiral

Alternate Win Conditions
31. Runechanter's Pike
32. Altar of Dementia
33. Coat of Arms
34. Rite of Replication
35. Omniscience

Protect Talrand
36. Darksteel Plate
37. Swiftfoot Boots
38. Lighting Greaves

Mana Multipliers
39. Gauntlet of Power
40. Caged Sun
41. Extraplanar Lens
42. Doubling Cube
43. High Tide
44. Drain Power

Creature/Permanent Steal
45. Legacy's Allure
46. Control Magic
47. Treachery
48. Gilded Drake           
49. Desertion
50. Bribery
51. Spelljack
52. Volition Reins
53. Dominate

Permanent Bounce
54. Into the Roil
55. Capsize

Mass Effect
56. Propaganda
57. Nevinyrrals Disk
58. Evacuation
59. Wash Out

Counter (their) Commander
60. Hinder           
61. Spell Crumple

Artifact Tutor
62. Fabricate

Lands
Strip Mine
Reliquary Tower
Cephalid Coliseum
       Island (x35) ---------------------------------------------


OBJECTIVE AND PLAY-STYLE
The goal of this deck is to get Talrand into play, play a brazillion spells, then kick back and send your army of a brazillion drakes smashing into the face of your enemies :)

ENGINE
The deck runs 29 cantrips [cards that, when cast, draw (at least) another card], 23 of which are 1cc cost instants or sorceries.  Get a butt-load of mana, get/have Talrand out, and CAST AWAY!!!

CARDS
-Coat of Arms:  Because eighteen 20/20 flying drakes is fuck you.

-Altar of Dementia:  Because sacrificing eighteen 20/20 flying drakes and milling your opponents for 360 cards is fuck you, too.

-Runechanter's Pike:  You thought Delver decks made this sucker big? :p

-Hinder and Spellcrumple:  Because some dudes deserve to have their Commander countered to the bottom of their deck.

-Snapcaster Mage:  Let's be honest... It's still a creature-less deck :p

-35 White-bordered 5th-Edition Islands:  Because, yes... I'm a BOSS.




OTHER NOTES
Don't take the deck too seriously... As in all Commander games, have fun, talk a lot of shit, eat bad food, and laugh at everything .  Oh, and bring at least 50 drake tokens! ;)


(Drake Token by Svetlin Velinov)

Monday, August 6, 2012

DECK TECH: Mono-Green Tree (Get'er Dungrove)

Played the M13 Gameday tourney at Anime Imports yesterday and made Top-8 (5th place with a 3-1 record) with this Mono-Green Dungrove deck (congrats to my Boy, Kevin Gleason, who took the whole thing -and the wicked Champion Playmat- with his awesome B/W Tokens build, which I hope to do a future "Deck Tech" on :) ).

The deck isn't very different from the Get'er Dungrove net-decks, but I felt I should post up my version because it's the most consistent deck I've ever played.  It may not win every match, but it doesn't "scrub-out" too often and does well against Delver decks (I'd say 5-5 to 5.5-4.5 in Dungrove's favor).  It's also a pretty simple deck for sideboard substitutions, something that really helps me out while in a tourney situation.

Without further adieu,


(Dungrove Elder by Matt Stewart)

TREE!
by
Phil "Fat Ninja" Tacata

2x Ulvenwald Tracker
4x Llanowar Elves
4x Birds of Paradise
4x Strangleroot Geist
4x Dungrove Elder
3x Predator Ooze
1x Viridian Corruptor
1x Phyrexian Metamorph
1x Thragtusk

4x Green Sun's Zenith
4x Rancor
1x Dismember 
3x Revenge of the Hunted

24x Forest :)
---------------------------------------------
Sideboard
3x Surgical Extraction
1x Phyrexian Metamorph
1x Wolfir Silverheart
1x Thragtusk
2x Corrosive Gale
2x Sword of War and Peace
1x Thrun, the Last Troll
1x Dismember
1x Bellowing Tanglewurm
2x Beast Within

OBJECTIVE AND PLAY-STYLE
A ton has already been written about this deck in terms of play-style and objective (see Carrie Oliver's Channel Fireball articles for some great insight on how the deck is played).  Basically, it's a hyper-aggro beatdown deck that looks for a 1st turn mana dork followed by a second turn Tree or Ooze.  From there, it's about finding a Rancor and going to town!

ENGINE
TREE!  gains its consistency from the use of Green Sun's Zenith, the best green tutor in the game. Need a dork?  Get a dork.  Got no lands to make it safe to grab a Tree?  Get an Ooze.  Need life?  Get a Thragtusk... You get the point.

CARDS
-Dungrove Elder:  This guy has to vie for the best creature in Standard.  Yes, you have to play mono-green to use him effectively.  Yes, you probably have to play 23+ lands to make him worth it.  Yes, when he hits the board with 4 Forests and you strap a Rancor on him, you DO win the game.

-Rancor:  Bringing this bad-boy back was a happy day for Green Mages everywhere; thanks Wizards! :p  Rancor is THE card that takes this deck to the next level.  Like Frank's Red Hot Sauce, "You can put that Shit on anything!!!".

-Ulvenwald Tracker:  I love this card in terms of powerlevel, playability, and design!  He is a 1 drop that opponents have to kill (or they'll pay), acts as a repeatable source of creature kill, and has incredible synergies with Strangleroot Geist and Predator Ooze.  Don't be afraid to use him to fight HIMSELF vs. your opponent's mana dorks.  On turn two he's as good as a Doom Blade.

-Viridian Corruptor:  As much as I want Acidic Slime to go in this slot, 6 mana for a GSZ is too much, too late.  The artifact you need to kill -Swords, Trading Post, Metamorph, Birthing Pod- you need to kill them the turn after they get cast.  Turn 5 is often too late, so the Corruptor is the way to go.  Too bad Uktabi Orangutan isn't still around :p

-Revenge of the Hunted:  So good.  And you WILL be able to hard-cast it... Don't worry :)

-1x Phyrexian Metamorph, 1x Wolfir Silverheart, 1x Thragtusk, 1x Dismember:  This is the opening configuration of "tools" spread out for maximum flexibility in game one.  There are mirror copies of each of these guys in the sideboard to maximize effectiveness for game two.

SIDEBOARDING
Rule 1: NEVER CHANGE YOUR FOREST COUNT.
Rule 2: NEVER CHANGE YOUR MANA DORK COUNT.

Now, with that out of the way (haha)...

vs. Delver
-3x Predator Ooze
-1x Wolfir Silverheart
-1x Phyrexian Metamorph
---
+1x Thrun, the Last Troll
+1x Thragtusk
+1x Dismember
+2x Corrosive Gale

vs. Wolf Run
-1x Thragtusk
-1x Viridian Corruptor
-1x Dismember
---
+1x Wolfir Silverheart
+1x Phyrexian Metamorph
+1x Thrun, the Last Troll

vs. Pod
-1x Thragtusk
-2x Predator Ooze
-1x Dismember
---
+1 Wolfir Silverheart
+1 Phyrexian Metamorph (copy their Pod!!!)
+2x Beast Within

vs. Frites
-1x Viridian Corruptor
-1x Dismember
-2x Predator Ooze
---
+3x Surgical Extraction
+1 Phyrexian Metamorph

vs. Tokens
-1x Viridian Corruptor
-1x Wolfir Silverheart
-1x Phyrexian Metamorph
-1x Thragtusk
-1x Predator Ooze
---
+2 Sword of War and Peace
+2 Corrosive Gale
+1 Bellowing Tanglewurm

vs. Zombies
-1x Wolfir Silverheart
-1x Dismember
--
+1x Thragtusk
+1x Phyrexian Metamorph

vs. RDW
-1x Ulvenwald Tracker
-1x Phyrexian Metamorph
-1x Dismember
---
+2x Sword of War and Peace
+1x Thragtusk

OTHER NOTES
The first deck I ever won a tournament with was a Mono-Green Overrun deck with Fyndhorn Elves, Pincher Beetles, and good ol' Stompy himself (Rogue Elephant)... One of the wonderful things I love about Magic is that now matter how many new cards and strategies get pumped out every few months, some things -like attacking your opponent with a 13/13 trampler- NEVER GET OLD. ;)


(Revenge of the Hunted by Christopher Moeller)