I’ve always been turned off my MtG on the grounds that I should just be able to print up any cards I like and use them as long as they form a valid deck, rather than having to follow WotC’s anti-”counterfeiting” policy. Do any Magic players actually do this?
People create “proxy” decks all the time. It’s one of the dominant ways of testing for big tournaments (when you don’t know what cards you’ll need until you settle on a decklist, but you don’t want to buy every potential card). However, for some reason the casual community doesn’t seem to do this as much. This is somewhat ironic because sanctioned tournaments are the only place you have to use real cards.
I have friends who did so, but they only used them to compose special print decks to play with the few other friends who were also using print decks, and I think they used their “real” decks more even among each other than the print decks.
I’ve always been turned off my MtG on the grounds that I should just be able to print up any cards I like and use them as long as they form a valid deck, rather than having to follow WotC’s anti-”counterfeiting” policy. Do any Magic players actually do this?
People create “proxy” decks all the time. It’s one of the dominant ways of testing for big tournaments (when you don’t know what cards you’ll need until you settle on a decklist, but you don’t want to buy every potential card). However, for some reason the casual community doesn’t seem to do this as much. This is somewhat ironic because sanctioned tournaments are the only place you have to use real cards.
I have friends who did so, but they only used them to compose special print decks to play with the few other friends who were also using print decks, and I think they used their “real” decks more even among each other than the print decks.