World Championship Decks: Difference between revisions

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==Decklists==
==Decklists==
===2001 World Championship Decks, Toronto===
The 2001 World Championship took place on August 8–12, 2001 in Toronto, Canada.
====[[Tom van de Logt]], World Champion====
"Tom van de Logt's aggressive, black-red 'Machine Head' deck used the good ol' 'blow stuff up' method. While creatures like Plague Spitter wiped out his opponents' smaller creatures, more ferocious beasts like Flametongue Kavu aggressively cleared the board of larger threats."
<d title="Machine Head">
Creatures
4 Plague Spitter
3 Phyrexian Scuta
3 Skizzik
2 Flametongue Kavu
2 Crypt Angel
4 Blazing Specter
Sorceries
4 Duress
Instants
4 Dark Ritual
4 Terminate
3 Vendetta
3 Urza's Rage
Lands
6 Swamp
6 Mountain
4 Rishadan Port
4 Urborg Volcano
4 Sulfurous Springs
Sideboard
4 Scoria Cat
3 Addle
2 Persecute
1 Pyroclasm
3 Phyrexian Arena
1 Flametongue Kavu
1 Crypt Angel
</d>
====[[Alex Borteh]], Finalist====
"Alex Borteh's monoblue combo deck contained twelve 1-toughness creatures. These helped hold the board until his Static Orb-Opposition combo could lock down his opponents' permanents--clearing the way for a horde of Merfolk to pour through for the victory."
<d title="Merfolk Opposition">
Artifacts
4 Static Orb
Creatures
2 Darting Merfolk
4 Lord of Atlantis
4 Merfolk Looter
4 Merfolk of the Pearl Trident
4 Vodalian Merchant
2 Waterfront Bouncer
Enchantments
4 Opposition
Instants
4 Counterspell
4 Gush
4 Thwart
Lands
20 Island
Sideboard
3 Hibernation
3 Mana Maze
2 Misdirection
2 Prodigal Sorcerer
1 Rushing River
2 Teferi's Response
2 Wash Out
</d>
====[[Antoine Ruel]], Semifinalist====
"Antoine Ruel's blue-black-red control deck survived the pressure in the early game with its almost overwhelming card-drawing capability. And in the end, Nether Spirit kept rising from his graveyard to take down his opponents."
<d title="Blue-Black-Red Nether-Go">
Artifacts
2 Tsabo's Web
Creatures
3 Nether Spirit
Instants
4 Accumulated Knowledge
4 Counterspell
2 Crosis's Charm
3 Fact or Fiction
4 Fire/Ice
3 Opt
2 Spite/Malice
2 Tsabo's Decree
4 Undermine
2 Urza's Rage
Sorceries
2 Duress
Lands
8 Island
4 Salt Marsh
3 Shivan Reef
1 Sulfurous Springs
4 Underground River
3 Urborg Volcano
Sideboard
2 Duress
2 Engineered Plague
2 Lobotomy
3 Meekstone
2 Pyroclasm
1 Teferi's Response
3 Tsabo's Assassin
</d>
====[[Jan Tomcani]], Quarterfinalist====
"Jan Tomcani's green-red-black 'Fires"' deck used early mana-producing creatures to play a quick Fires of Yavimaya. Shortly thereafter, Tomcani's hasted big creatures pounded opponents' life totals to dust."
<d title="Dark Fires">
Creatures
4 Llanowar Elves
4 Birds of Paradise
4 Blastoderm
4 Thornscape Battlemage
2 Spiritmonger
2 Flametongue Kavu
2 Kavu Chameleon
Enchantments
4 Fires of Yavimaya
4 Saproling Burst
Instants
4 Fire/Ice
2 Urza's Rage
Lands
8 Forest
3 Mountain
2 City of Brass
2 Llanowar Wastes
2 Sulfurous Springs
3 Karplusan Forest
4 Rishadan Port
Sideboard
2 Kavu Chameleon
2 Obliterate
3 Thunderscape Battlemage
3 Blood Oath
3 Boil
2 Tangle
</d>
===2002 World Championship Decks, Sydney===
===2002 World Championship Decks, Sydney===
The 2002 World Championship took place on August 14–18, 2002 in Sydney, Australia.<ref>{{DailyRef|feature/world-championship-standard-decks-2002-11-21|World Championship Standard Decks|[[Mike Flores]]|November 21, 2002}}</ref>
The 2002 World Championship took place on August 14–18, 2002 in Sydney, Australia.<ref>{{DailyRef|feature/world-championship-standard-decks-2002-11-21|World Championship Standard Decks|[[Mike Flores]]|November 21, 2002}}</ref>

Revision as of 15:16, 30 December 2019

World Championship Decks
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
World Championship Decks
[[File:{{#setmainimage:WCDecks.jpg}}|250px]]
Set Information
Set symbol This set has no own expansion symbol.
Release date 1997 - 2004
Set size 8 x 4 x 75 (deck + sideboard)

World Championship Decks were specially packaged versions of four of the top ranked decks used during the World Championships, released by Wizards of the Coast for the years 1997 through 2004.

Description

The cards produced were gold-bordered versions, and thus are not legal for use in DCI-sanctioned tournaments. The cards were also stamped with the player's autograph. Each competitor's release included their 60-card deck and 15-card sideboard, 12 blank proxy cards, and cards with a printed decklist, a biography of the player, and an overview of the four decks release for their respective year. Due to the larger than usual collection of 90 cards per product the deck boxes for World Championship Decks were slightly larger in size than typical Theme deck boxes of the era.

Decklists

2002 World Championship Decks, Sydney

The 2002 World Championship took place on August 14–18, 2002 in Sydney, Australia.[1]

Carlos Romao, World Champion

"Romão's blue-black 'Psychatog' deck was the defining deck of the tournament. A control deck at heart, with lots of card drawing and countermagic, it wants to stall an opponent until it can play a devastating Upheaval and Psychatog on the same turn. While many people at this year's World Championship played this style of deck, Carlos simply played his version better than everyone else played theirs."

Sim Han How, Quarterfinalist

"Han How's blue-green-red 'Squirrel Opposition' deck can be aggressive with cards like Wild Mongrel and Flametongue Kavu, or it can play the stalling game with a Squirrel Nest - Opposition combo. Beware the Roar of the Wurm in the sideboard!"

Squirrel Opposition

Brian Kibler, 11th Place

"Kibler's green-white-red 'Red Zone 2K2' deck loves to put creatures into the 'Red Zone'; that is, attack with them! This aggressive deck can put over thirty creatures on the board. And with Glory in the graveyard, few defenses can prevail against their onslaught."

Raphael Levy, 16th Place

"Levy's blue-green 'Le Wonder Goose' deck features a ton of small green creatures like Nimble Mongoose and Werebear. With Careful Study and Mental Note to get to threshold, however, those small creatures quickly turn into real monsters!"

Le Wonder Goose

2003 World Championship Decks, Berlin

The 2003 World Championship took place on August 6–10, 2003 in Berlin, Germany.

Note: All cards in these decks were printed using the modern card frame, despite many cards included in these decks never having been printed using the modern frame before.

Daniel Zink, World Champion

"Daniel Zink's white-blue-green 'Wake' deck is a control deck at heart. Once the powerful enchantment Mirari's Wake is in play, the deck produces more mana, draws more cards, counters more spells, and makes more Soldiers than opponents can possibly handle."

Dave Humpherys, Semifinalist

"Dave 'The Hump' Humpherys' blue-green deck combines the many madness cards from the Torment set, including Basking Rootwalla, Arrogant Wurm, and Circular Logic, with discard-enablers like Aquamoeba and Wild Mongrel for tremendous effect."

Wolfgang Eder, Quarterfinalist

"Wolfgang Eder introduced the black-red 'Goblin Bidding' deck to the world at the European Championships. The typical Goblin hoard deck gets an incredible midgame play in Patriarch's Bidding, which brings every Goblin in the graveyard back in to play."

Peer Kröger, Quarterfinalist

"Hometown hero Peer Kröger's 'Reanimator' deck was a nightmare for his opponents! This black-red deck excels at putting scary monsters into the graveyard and then bringing them into play."

2004 World Championship Deck, San Francisco

The 2004 World Championship took place on September 1–5, 2004 in San Francisco, California in the United States of America.

Note: All cards in these decks were printed using the modern card frame, despite many cards included in these decks never having been printed using the modern frame before.

Julien Nuijten, World Champion

"The youngest ever Magic World Champion, Dutch wunderkind Julien Nujiten came out of nowhere to stun the field. Just fifteen years old, Nujiten proved that he can play with the best. Playing a green-white Astral Slide deck designed to destroy 'Affinity', he posted a respectable 4-2 record on the Standard day at Worlds and then calmly swept the field on the final day. He says the inspiration for his deck came from an Internet article by Pro Tour veteran Brian Kibler."

Green-White Astral Slide

Aeo Paquette, Finalist

"Professional Magic player Aeo Paquette played the deck that defined the metagame at the 2004 World Championships: 'Affinity.' Against a field full of decks designed to beat Affinity, this nineteen-year-old Canadian piloted his deck to a 5-1 record during the Standard portion of the tournament. Paquette credits his friend Jeff Cunningham for helping him design an Affinity deck that could compete so well against the field."

Affinity

Manuel Bevand, Semifinalist

"Pro Tour veteran Manuel Bevand played an artifact-based combo deck to a perfect 6-0 record on the Standard day at Worlds. His deck uses Krark-Clan Ironworks to quickly get a Myr Incubator into play, which then creates thirty or more 1/1 creatures -- sometimes as early as the third turn! A twenty-seven-year-old freelance game designer from Paris, France, Bevand has been a Magic regular since 1994, playing in over a dozen Pro Tour events. He credits Magic Online for getting him back into championship form."

Gabriel Nassif, Quarterfinalist

"Twenty-year-old Gabriel Nassif is considered to be the best player never to have won a Pro Tour event. Designed to beat the ubiquitous 'Affinity' decks, his blue-white control deck also plays well against anti-Affinity decks. Worlds marked the third time in the season that the Parisian had made it to the final day of a Pro Tour event, and his performance earned Nassif the coveted 2004 Player of the Year award -- a title he will defend vigorously next year."

Blue-White Anti-Affinity Control

Product discontinuation

2004 was the last year for which Wizards of the Coast released a series of World Championship Decks. When asked about 2005 World Championship Decks via an "Ask Wizards", Jake Theis, Assistant Brand Manager for Magic: The Gathering, stated, "We currently have no plans to release the 2005 World Championship decks. We try to have a full product offering for our fans, and the increased popularity of the Fat Pack seems to have gobbled up the demand for a fourth Magic product (after Boosters, Tournament Packs, and Theme Decks)."[2] Simply put: not enough people bought them.[3]

See also

References