Prosperous Bloom: Difference between revisions

From MTG Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
>Hunterofsalvation
(Fix typo)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT [[List of Magic slang#Prosperous Bloom, ProsBloom]]
'''Prosperous Bloom''' a.k.a. '''ProsBloom''' or '''Bloom-Drain''' was a ''[[Mirage]]''-era [[combo deck]] based around <c>Prosperity</c>, <c>Cadaverous Bloom</c>, and <c>Squandered Resources</c>.<ref>''Deck Deconstruction: Prosperous Bloom'' by [[Beth Moursund]], ''[[The Duelist]]'' # 19 (October 1997), P. 48-50</ref><ref>{{DailyRef|card-preview/what-would-you-sacrifice-win-2020-07-28|What Would You Sacrifice To Win?|[[Adam Styborski]]|July 28, 2020}}</ref> The deck would remove most of its [[hand]] to generate large amounts of [[mana]] with Cadaverous Bloom, feed that into a Prosperity, sacrifice its lands to Squandered Resources, and eventually win with a giant <c>Drain Life</c>. Its functionality was partially based on the old rules for life loss, in which players only lost the game at the end of a [[phase]]; frequently the pilot would go to zero life from multiple <c>Infernal Contract</c>s before restoring their life total with Drain Life.  While the deck is no longer played, it was one of the first true combo decks to dominate the [[Pro Tour]].
<d title="Wishing Well - Pro Tour Paris 1997 (Mike Long and David Mills)">
Lands
3 Bad River
4 Undiscovered Paradise
5 Island
6 Swamp
7 Forest
 
Creatures
 
Instants
1 Emerald Charm
1 Power Sink
1 Three Wishes
2 Memory Lapse
4 Impulse
4 Vampiric Tutor
 
Sorceries
1 Drain Life
1 Elven Cache
4 Infernal Contract
4 Natural Balance
4 Prosperity
 
Enchantments
4 Cadaverous Bloom
4 Squandered Resources
 
Sideboard
3 City of Solitude
4 Elephant Grass
1 Elven Cache
3 Emerald Charm
1 Memory Lapse
1 Power Sink
2 Wall of Roots
</d>
==References==
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Deck archetypes]]

Latest revision as of 13:17, 4 June 2024

Prosperous Bloom a.k.a. ProsBloom or Bloom-Drain was a Mirage-era combo deck based around Prosperity, Cadaverous Bloom, and Squandered Resources.[1][2] The deck would remove most of its hand to generate large amounts of mana with Cadaverous Bloom, feed that into a Prosperity, sacrifice its lands to Squandered Resources, and eventually win with a giant Drain Life. Its functionality was partially based on the old rules for life loss, in which players only lost the game at the end of a phase; frequently the pilot would go to zero life from multiple Infernal Contracts before restoring their life total with Drain Life. While the deck is no longer played, it was one of the first true combo decks to dominate the Pro Tour.

Wishing Well - Pro Tour Paris 1997 (Mike Long and David Mills)

References

  1. Deck Deconstruction: Prosperous Bloom by Beth Moursund, The Duelist # 19 (October 1997), P. 48-50
  2. Adam Styborski (July 28, 2020). "What Would You Sacrifice To Win?". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.