Star: Difference between revisions

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A color, and the player representing it, [[win]]s when its two [[enemy colors]] have been eliminated regardless of who eliminated them. This means a player may be able to win even after being eliminated from [[play]]! Each player can [[attack]] any other player (even their allies), and each player can [[target]] any player, [[permanent]], [[spell]] or anything else in the game. Decks are usually built following [[Standard]] deck-construction rules, but players can determine for themselves if they'd rather use [[Modern]], [[Legacy]], [[Vintage]] or any other format.
A color, and the player representing it, [[win]]s when its two [[enemy colors]] have been eliminated regardless of who eliminated them. This means a player may be able to win even after being eliminated from [[play]]! Each player can [[attack]] any other player (even their allies), and each player can [[target]] any player, [[permanent]], [[spell]] or anything else in the game. Decks are usually built following [[Standard]] deck-construction rules, but players can determine for themselves if they'd rather use [[Modern]], [[Legacy]], [[Vintage]] or any other format.
== Variants ==
=== Allied-Color Star ===
While one-color Star is the most common form, it's possible to construct a game of Star that uses two-color decks with [[allied color]] pairs: i.e., one deck for each of {{w}}{{u}}, {{u}}{{b}}, {{b}}{{r}}, {{r}}{{g}}, and {{g}}{{w}}. Players are seated similarly to how they are in one-color Star, but placed according to the gaps between adjacent colors rather than at each color dot. As with one-color Star, decks may not contain any cards which refernce colors not in their deck, or lands which produce a different color of mana. Lands or other effects which produce mana of any color are treated as producing either of the deck's colors.
Players win the game when both players using their deck's common [[enemy color]] are eliminated: for instance, the {{U}}{{B}} player wins when both the {{R}}{{G}} and {{G}}{{W}} players have been eliminated, as green is the common enemy of blue and black. As with one-color Star, two players can both win the game, and players can win after they have been eliminated.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 20:57, 26 February 2016

The Pentagram

Star (also known as Pentagram or Five-Point) is a constructed Magic: The Gathering format that is played by five players, each representing one of the five colors of Magic (white, blue, black, red and green). [1] [2] Their deck may not include any cards that reference a different color or a land that produces a different color of mana.

Players sit in a star pattern identical to the one on the back of every Magic card. The player with the white deck takes the first turn and then play continues clockwise around the table.

A color, and the player representing it, wins when its two enemy colors have been eliminated regardless of who eliminated them. This means a player may be able to win even after being eliminated from play! Each player can attack any other player (even their allies), and each player can target any player, permanent, spell or anything else in the game. Decks are usually built following Standard deck-construction rules, but players can determine for themselves if they'd rather use Modern, Legacy, Vintage or any other format.

Variants

Allied-Color Star

While one-color Star is the most common form, it's possible to construct a game of Star that uses two-color decks with allied color pairs: i.e., one deck for each of {W}{U}, {U}{B}, {B}{R}, {R}{G}, and {G}{W}. Players are seated similarly to how they are in one-color Star, but placed according to the gaps between adjacent colors rather than at each color dot. As with one-color Star, decks may not contain any cards which refernce colors not in their deck, or lands which produce a different color of mana. Lands or other effects which produce mana of any color are treated as producing either of the deck's colors.

Players win the game when both players using their deck's common enemy color are eliminated: for instance, the {U}{B} player wins when both the {R}{G} and {G}{W} players have been eliminated, as green is the common enemy of blue and black. As with one-color Star, two players can both win the game, and players can win after they have been eliminated.

References