Fantastic video! Really love hearing the concept of CEDH from a newcomer's perspective! As an enfranchised CEDH player, it can be difficult sometimes to look at the format at this level and without bias. You pointed out its upsides and flaws very well! You've gained a new subscriber today. Keep up the great work! Looking forward to more.
@salubrioussnail9 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate the praise, and I also appreciate the high quality cEDH gameplay content :D
@slymcfly1239 ай бұрын
He insulted you, clown. Called you a newcomer and you liked it. 😅
@AlexanderBC429 ай бұрын
@thetrinketmage9 ай бұрын
Thanks for having me it was fun working with you on this vid!
@studmcmillionaire9 ай бұрын
Oh hey, small world. It was cool to hear you talk about your cEDH Jace deck, as my biggest bugbear with cEDH is the homogeneity of decks I was running against. Might give it another try sometime
@laurenhutchinson41949 ай бұрын
Love your collab with Snail too! kzbin.info/www/bejne/lYu9mJtsi56Ch5Ysi=HoblCo7D7nOszNuk
@TheMattmatic9 ай бұрын
One crucial thing about cEDH that makes the format unique is that it's a competitive format with a banlist, but the banlist is not made or curated for the formats meta at all. The Modern banlist is basically created by letting the best players try to "break" the format and then ban the cards that are so dominant that the meta can't adjust to them. If this was the case for cEDH then it's very likely that Dockside, Underworld Breach and Consult/Pact would be banned which could lead to more diverse win conditions, or Mystic Remora banned leading to more diverse draw engines etc.
@BingbongRecto9 ай бұрын
I still think building a competitive format using the commander banlist is kinda derpy
@Nr47479 ай бұрын
CEDH has too many strong engines to ban them all (you would essentially have to ban all of the ultra-fast mana, all of the strong tutors, all of the strong 1 mana draw engines etc.), but Thoracle really is the biggest culprit, imho. The fact that removing Thoracle in response to the trigger is completely useless blanks a lot of options that are open to stop many other combos in their tracks, making the format revolve much more around counters, stax effects and - at times - stifle-effects than it otherwise would. I really think Thoracle should be banned in Commander, it's not a casual card in the slightest (Dockside, at least, sees play in some casual pirate or golbin decks and is much weaker against usually Green-based battlecruiser decks that mostly ramp with lands) and it's also really problematic in CEDH.
@StrongButAwkward9 ай бұрын
Counter point: you can call yourself or a format 'competitive' all you want, but it doesn't make it actually a competitive format. cEDH is still casual players playing a casual format, they are just power gaming within a casual format with an extremely unbalanced and permissive ruleset and banned list that isn't concerned with creating or maintaining a healthy competitive meta, and the severe lack of ecological diversity in cards is a predictable outcome of that. For some reason, cEDH players just really needed to adopt a name for themselves that's full of pretension and sounds like delusions of grandeur coming from a group of people that by in large haven't ever and don't ever plan on stepping foot in *actual* sanctioned high level play of *actual* competitive 1v1 formats. Hell, French/Duel EDH is already a significantly more serious and honest attempt at creating a competitive format version of EDH and cEDH players have had the option to play French for *years* now if they were really serious about their claims of being competitive players that just want a version of EDH with rules and bans made for there specific needs. The fact that they don't is something that all their actions and words are held up to like a mirror IMO, and makes what they say they want, but don't do, end up making them seem exceptionally dishonest about what their real desire is; which seems like a weird thing to do about something with no stakes at all like EDH....but then again people are often so attached to appearances and cultivating a specific persona that feeds their ego and maintains there ideas about themselves that they will do some amazing mental gymnastics over how they want to play a game vs the labels they want to claim about their place in the game. There are certainly cEDH players that more honest about what they really want, that they really just want to play powerful broken stuff, but simply continuing to use the name cEDH means there's always a thin layer of cosplaying as competitive players. Which is really the thing that I think drives most of us nuts about the average cEDH player: it's pretension. The claim to high level play or competitive play from people mucking about casual and bowling strikes with the bumpers up. The often implied and many times outright stated belief of lots of cEDH players that there is an *inherent* skill floor difference between them and other EDH players derived *solely* from the power level they choose to play casual at. They they are smarter and/or better at the game because they choose to play obviously powerful and linear cards and decks in casual, and conversely that other players are bad because they aren't good enough at the game to play those cards and decks. It's not all cEDH players, but it's more than enough, and it's generally those cEDH players that only engage with MtG via cEDH and play no other formats or power levels. tl'dr: cEDH is just multiplayer casual like the rest of multiplayer casual. Casual is still sandlot baseball if you play it with bats, Gundams, Death Stars or 007 miniature lasers; no differences in how you play a casual format will ever make you a competitive or pro player any more than showing up to game of pick-up basketball wearing an Iron Man suit will make you an MLB player.
@laurelkeeper9 ай бұрын
@@StrongButAwkwardsomeone’s very mad that people want different things out of the format than they do :)
@Koalogy9 ай бұрын
This is such a weird take man. CEDH is not a distinct format, it is just a word people use when playing EDH decks that use the best cards in the card pool. EDH is also not competitive, you can play it competitively but to call it a competitive format is to not understand competitive integrity. EDH is a free-for-all format which means there is a lot of good faith that is required to actually play fairly and competitively i.e. no collusion, no kingmaking, no targeting. These things are impossible to curate which means it’s incredibly easy for people to cheat and play dirty with no reasonable mechanism to stop them, unlike 1v1 formats. Not to disparage anyone that likes playing top tier decks but you need to come back to reality and realize that this is a casual format. There are no high level tournaments, nor will there ever be because of the issues I listed above.
@enjaded72229 ай бұрын
i see nothing but facts. coming from a casual and competitive player who thoroughly enjoys commander as a whole
@imgumbaII9 ай бұрын
Soo true
@milkydoesstuff18289 ай бұрын
Same with anything competitive, everyone wants to play the best stuff therefore you get no variety
@kylegonewild9 ай бұрын
@@milkydoesstuff1828 Except as discussed in the video, ban lists are catered to the format to provide variety and structure to the format. Cloudpost decks from 2011 can still beat Rakdos scam today with a decent win percentage despite being way out of date. It's banned in Pauper and Modern because it's one of the strategies that does take over the format. Same with how Fury needed to go to open up more potential for creature decks again, except they printed Bowmasters which had basically the same impact on creature decks but was less likely to 4-for-1 your ass. Top is still an exceptionally strong card and would show up all over the place in Modern, but it creates a miserable play experience of *regularly* going to time in every game of every match you play with or against it. The commander banlist's sole focus was and is currently stated to only be concerned with unfun play experiences or play patterns. There's no consideration for actual balancing. Calling it cEDH is kind of silly and to a lot of people comes off as pretentious. You're fundamentally avoiding the behavioral pillars of the format but still tying yourself to it by name and some people who use this term go even further and imply they should also be catered to in a format that wasn't made for them. A decade ago you just said you had high power decks and everyone knew to expect lots of combo-y horseshit and as much quick mana as was possible. Now the cute little community needs a shibboleth to say the same thing just saying high power decks meant in 2011.
@mcculloughfamily69849 ай бұрын
Play both, love both. But if I'm not playing cEDH I do highly prefer high power because I want to play decks and play vs decks that can close the game out. I hate when games drag on.
@yurplethepurple20649 ай бұрын
@@mcculloughfamily6984same. Unless I’m playing with a group or 1v1 where I’m mostly playing for the conversation, I find the standstill that most people’s decks end up at quite boring. That’s why combos are fun for me
@tobiasarboe57539 ай бұрын
As a cEDH player, this was a very gracious representation of the format; as a fan of yours I didn't expect something bad, but I was a little unsure with the title you presented. Thanks for the video
@damienbrandle48399 ай бұрын
Same. The title was unnecessarily incendiary, but he did a good job presenting all sides of the equation. The only thing I think he didn't touch on was that, even though decks can look homogenous, the playstyle can massively change how it plays in practice. Kenrith decks come in all flavors and often share a lot of core cards, but the 15-20 flex slots dedicated to personal playstyle can make them actually play wildly different, despite the apparent homogeneity.
@dfetzer7079 ай бұрын
@@damienbrandle4839😮ú
@brromo9 ай бұрын
6:48 The rule 0 conversation IS that you're playing cEDH. It's **technically** the same format as commander
@edhdeckbuilding9 ай бұрын
i always find it funny how people talk about cedh like it's a different format.
@lugh.i9 ай бұрын
@@edhdeckbuilding I prefer to treat it as a different format. Yes, it is Commander, but come on, I think we can agree a cEDH Najeela x cEDH Yuriko x Casual Ayula x Casual Wilson/Tavern Brawler would be a really unbalanced and unfun table. Treating cEDH as a different format help me explain people the absolute difference those decks have.
@blakefarber37189 ай бұрын
It's a different meta. At that level, you're playing to deal with the specific threats played at that level which also homogenizes cards.
@Skeeverbros9 ай бұрын
Yep. The "benefits" mentioned in the video aren't ones distinct to cedh becausse it somehow bypassess rule 0, rather they're outcomes that manifest from the use of rule 0, which "cedh" is simply a permutation of
@Jerppa959 ай бұрын
It's literally the same format minus all the whining.
@sebastianoparenti35369 ай бұрын
This channel constantly surprises me. I wouldn't have expected cedh to be a conversation had here. But you covered it excellently and I'm hoping you continue to grow deservedly to the size of a channel benefitting the quality of your arguments and videos. Good luck.
@cedhtv9 ай бұрын
Really good video. I have so many comments but I will just say you are correct with modification. But still your correct. I think it was really good to have someone come and say something short about it.
@vitorluis14609 ай бұрын
It was nice to see you two collab. I found both of you around the same time, and you both have really helped me get better at the game.
@easyyo67849 ай бұрын
this was a very good video. i had no idea from cedh until my friend invited me for an evening to play one of his decks. it was cool. but after 5x win with the same combo, i had seen it all. its a good format for its own. it shud never appear in a normal commander table.
@pauldyson80989 ай бұрын
I really appreciate this video. I am casual 'til I die, but I pay attention to cEDH because I find it super interesting.
@makesquash9 ай бұрын
My pipeline from casual to competitive EDH came from bad experiences playing on TTS and Spelltable. Removing the feelsbads or salt by just sitting down and playing to win is how I like to approach any game of magic.
@RINNECODA9 ай бұрын
It’s how every single other format of Magic is played, so it’s kinda odd when casual heads try to say it’s not fun or it’s weird to play it competitively. Like bro it’s just playing commander with the card pool you have ?
@aR0ttenBANANA9 ай бұрын
@@RINNECODAthe issue is most games in general are played that way but casuals try to warp the expectations to their likes and wants. Imagine going to a football game where people “play for fun” like what?
@thatepicwizardguy9 ай бұрын
@RINNECODA its not even a magic problem its all multiplayer vs games
@simonchi53729 ай бұрын
@@aR0ttenBANANA I mean Sunday leagues and beer leagues exists for people who just wants to enjoy the sport and play because they think its fun, some teams don't even have coaches and they definitely not train optimally to win these games. So if someone like Leo Messi would show and run circles around these people i doubt people would enjoy that if it happened every week, just so he could feed his own ego. Or Connor McGregor would show up at the local dojo tournament and start beating the shit out of the local guys and claim they suck and shouldn't complain because it's a competitive environment. It's being completely tonedeaf and sometimes makes me wonder if people are just not completely dishonest and try to gaslight people into agreeing upon an environment of play they didn't want to play in.
@mulldrifter60409 ай бұрын
Completely agree with you on the "feelsbad" thing. It's what prevents me from playing casual commander in general.
@bretts30469 ай бұрын
Very simple. In EDH there are like 30,000 legal cards, and 15,000 of them are viable. In cEDH, there are 30,000 legal cards, and 500 of them are viable.
@machina58 ай бұрын
Woah what's the difference?
@bretts30468 ай бұрын
@machina188 In cEDH, it's very well documented, which cards are good enough, and what cards aren't good enough. In cEDH, you, for the most part, can't really get away with playing "janky" or "pet" cards that would be fine in casual or even higher-powered EDH. If you want to stay hyper-efficient and compete against other decks that are all doing their best to win.
@matthewbryant29727 ай бұрын
Isn't every game of EDH competitive? I started playing EDH in 2011 with a playgroup who'd been playing since 2006 and like, cEDH just means the most expensive build to us now. But what EDH game isn't a competitive competition with 1 winner in the end? Like if you actually fall in love with this game, your card evaluations and deck building logic does start to dwindle down what cards and commander's you'd even consider as years go by, 99 cards is not a lot... good cards are purposely few and far between in WotC card design. Like, there is a power ceiling that is rarely broken, and most cards are purposely designed to be "bad cards", you can maybe find a Mark Rosewater Drive to Work from 2011-2014 where he explains what "bad cards" are and their goal to make bad cards more fun in the future. Budget magic is better than ever though. I think breaking up EDH into Budget EDH, EDH and then cEDH (just the most expensive builds possible, which should mean the most powerful cards, which are designed to be scarce) should be how the community talks about EDH. I swear this EDH vs cEDH is just weird semantics. Like in 2011-2015, in Nor Cal you could find EDH tournaments with $5 entry fees with the money turning into store credit for the winner. People would bring their "tournament decks" and if they won that week, or the final table decided to split, they would use the store credit to help build another "tournament" deck. People weren't showing up to those with $5,000+ decks... that often... like, it was just the best decks lgs players had, coming together on a Wednesday, playing EDH for a chance at like $10 - $40 store credit. There are real chess similarities with Magic: The Gathering...like there are a finite amount of game pieces, like...mastering a game means learning it... like if you don't understand the concept of Philosophy of Fire in Magic The Gathering, then like, you're probably having fun just doing jank, clueless to how card evaluation works. Isn't understanding a game fun? Or is that not true anymore? Ignorance is the real bliss in games?
@Pandaman647 ай бұрын
@@matthewbryant2972 There's a very real difference in a cEDH tournament with strong prize support and a fun weekly local. The second is competitive on the surface only. Some might enter just to test out some neat new build they've made, or run some jank they're just itching to run. People would like to win, but winning is hardly the overall goal. At something with a 30-50 dollar entry fee though? No pet decks, very little jank except from the brewers that are crazy people. Expect the 5000 deck en masse if there's real prizes on the line. There's definitely something to be said about ignorance is bliss, a lot of the hate cEDH draws is the distain of what magic looks like when the curtain is pulled back. No, it's not balanced, or even particularly varied if you're trying to win. There's a very definitive list for whatever colors you run, and little to no room for deckbuilding expression. And that's okay. But for casuals, especially longtime players, it can be jarring.
@JohnnyYeTaecanUktena7 ай бұрын
@@bretts3046 I mean you technically could it is just highly unlikely that you will win often as sometimes you will win it happens. But for the most part there is usually room for A pet card or two, especially if the card is very useful in general like Karn the Great Creator even if not running a stax deck as he shuts down your opponents artifacts their main mana source and can just simply pop their 0 cost fast mana Now Karn is better than playing a Null Rod simply because he only affects your opponents artifacts not yours meaning you have massive mana advantage and tempo
@enjaded72229 ай бұрын
also, i completely agree and like the idea presented of rule zero. something that ive taken away from my play at competitive to casual tables is the mindset of 'let people play whatever'. i always tell people that they shouldnt complain about what cards are on the other side of the table. you can ask them to change decks, remove yourself from the table yourself, etc. but whining or complaining reduces fun for everyone.
@MrCenturion139 ай бұрын
I usually find another pod. People who knowingly play power decks at casual tables are usually there to feed their egos. They know what's expected, lie about their deck, then scoff when someone objects. They can go to perdition.
@QuicksilverSG9 ай бұрын
That's a cEDH attitude, which is perfectly fine for that format. Just don't complain when casual players ask you to find another table.
@MrCenturion139 ай бұрын
@FallenStarFeatures : yes. This.
@DVS57REBEL9 ай бұрын
@FallenStarFeatures doesn't matter bc you can play casual decks with competitive mind set. It's the players skill level/reach these kids will still whine
@enjaded72229 ай бұрын
@MrCenturion13 if they arent willing to swap after you ask and they understand the situation theyre causing, yeah they just arent worth playing with
@GageTheMage20039 ай бұрын
LOVE THE COLLAB. I watch you and @trinket mage a ton. Love your approaches to commander
@jacobrutowski1379 ай бұрын
I expected to be mad, but am 100% on board and agree with most all of this. I play both and feel like applying lessons learned between the two has made my games more fun overall
@b00psn00t9 ай бұрын
If u genuinely get mad about a video then it is probably time to touch some grass
@bramd44232 ай бұрын
Hoo, boy, what a topical video reccomendation given recent events...
@Sillimant_9 ай бұрын
I've been looking at cEDH on and off for a few months, but never saw more than the surface level. I'll have to look into it more, this is really interesting summary
@Amazementss9 ай бұрын
Great video, and overall a solid presentation of the format's upsides and downsides. As you said, the overarching issue with casual games not being fun is misalignment of expectations. There are several main forms it takes and it doesn't simply boil down to power level differences. You hit on this, and a lot of the discourse tends to gloss over it. For me, the most egregious offender for polarized experiences is the idea that a game of EDH should be an hour or more and build up an epic boardstate. In the majority of cases, it ends up being a slog where people are too afraid to just win and "end the fun." Thankfully, this trend seems to be reversing somewhat. People have become more willing to accept that it's usually more fun to play a few faster games for a more rounded overall experience.
@maxwellcummins20499 ай бұрын
As a cEDH player - this is absolutely accurate. I don't even feel the need for the incendiary title. It all feels very Fair and Balanced(TM) to me.
@BingbongRecto9 ай бұрын
If your idea of balance is most people running samey decks
@maxwellcummins20499 ай бұрын
@@BingbongRecto What an odd thing to say in response to my comment.
@TheDevlain9 ай бұрын
@@BingbongRecto a game of chess or a match of street fighter 2 Ryu vs Ryu are really enjoyable experiences, so similar game pieces doesn't make a game necessarily bland or boring Love cEDH and casual EDH, it is just that they are completely different social experiences, people who like tennis doesn't necessarily likes badminton or vice versa
@BingbongRecto9 ай бұрын
sure but balanced? and u really compared cedh to chess huh
@anannoyedpanda9 ай бұрын
@@BingbongRectoYou're reaching to try and save face. It isn't working. Make proper comments in good faith or please speak on a public forum. Thanks.
@MagnusvonYoshi9 ай бұрын
This all sounds very familiar for some reason. Thank you for playing Yugioh Master Duel.
@SLVYER19 ай бұрын
Everyday I hear a magic the gathering player cope about how many cards there are in their game when there are really only 500.
@lancesmith82989 ай бұрын
@@SLVYER1I was about to say “oh, “”only”” five hundred, you say”, but then I remembered that’s not an unreasonable amount of Pokemon to know when quizzed. And I still have enough memory for Magic. Meanwhile a modern Yugioh card, if it’s readable to begin with, reads like a legal document that can OTK if you read the fine print
@kylegonewild9 ай бұрын
@@lancesmith8298 Terrified of templating and keywords.
@dragoknighte489 ай бұрын
@@lancesmith8298 It's why Yugioh players don't read, if you can't read it, it can't hurt you.
@geek5939 ай бұрын
@@dragoknighte48More like they don't read because most cards say "search other card that searches other card that searches other card that summons other card that goes into generic extra deck wincon". It's an overly consistent soup of combo turns that effectively FTK the opponent if they don't open what is essentially a free cast counterspell (and that's usually not enough), a Wrath if they know they're going second post board, and their own combo for the crack back. There's a reason a lot of players prefer to play a time locked format from 2010 instead of 2024 Yugioh.
@soldancer4 ай бұрын
Excellent video! I've learned some important things from the discussions down here: 1) "Casual" players are all scrubs who whine and get salty about everything they don't like. 2) "cEDH" players are all entitled tryhards who will pub stomp their own mother for a W. 3) Nether of the above is entirely true, but too many players _believe_ that one of then actually _is_. 4) The players who _do_ behave as 1) or 2) will ultimately self-select themselves out of people to play with.
@27777BigRedBarn9 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this video and then you dropped Trinket Mage!!! Two of my favorites in the same video?!? Nice
@scyche15 күн бұрын
One of the only KZbinrs to acknowledge that playing online is the same as proxying- both forms of playtest. Great video!
@casketbase77509 ай бұрын
There is one gameplay advantage cedh has over casual edh: it has a clearly defined meta, so you can confidently run anti-meta techs. Rule of Law and Red Elemental Blast are *guaranteed* to be effective. Possibly against all three opponents. EDIT: yep, Trinket Mage confirmed it.
@brianmattei71349 ай бұрын
I mean sure... but then just play Legacy or something man.
@b00psn00t9 ай бұрын
Maybe watch the video before commenting?
@mcmanus59939 ай бұрын
Holy fuck what a good video. One thing I'd like to add is that sometimes the lack of diversity makes cedh easier to enter. It makes it much easier to learn the meta cards and quickly learn the meta game. For those who have played for very long periods of time they sometimes choose more fringe options for diversity. This works out great because their skill can make up for lack of colors/ raw power in the deck. I can't help but agree with your impression the top decks feel "samey" but when I was entering the format it really helped ease the learning curve.
@soldancer4 ай бұрын
You may have already seen it, but Salubrious has another video about how playing more "predictable" decks is potentially more welcoming to newer players than if everyone is playing random nonsense. (Even if it's very *good* random nonsense). It sounds a lot like what you are saying here.
@robthehood17652 ай бұрын
Thumbnail going hard now post bans lmao.
@maxmustermann11119 ай бұрын
We started playing cEDH in our playgroup and to me the biggest takeaway other than the exact thing you talked about (proxie friendlyness and powerleveldiscussion/salt) was: All the same wincons dont make it boring, as many of us thought. Its not to defend the format from accurate observations like you did, but the thing we noticed is that the wincon is not what this game is about. When somebody has a win, noone cares how the win is "named". Wether its oracle, breach or any other combo. The focus is on the path to get there. Talion dimir control vs for example tymna/malcom share the main wincon. They also share probably like haft the spells at least. But you gameplan and priorities are VASTLY different. And also timing and reading the table are a critical factor for success. And thats really what makes this format. Casual games can sometimes be on the one extreme of "everyone plays their deck like its moxfield, because there is no interaction happening". cEDH is the complete opposite. Every deck can present a win reasonably fast and reliable. Its all about the interaction and the decks are stuffed with that. That will shift the factors for a win vastly. In casual luck at the draw, maybe a "better constructed deck" and maybe randomly having an interaction up can decide games. In cEDH literally 1 mistake on where to point a counterspell or interaction can end the game within the same turncycle. So the focus is much more on the players. We are still a mostly casual playgroup, but this reality did totally beat up on the idea many of us had that "cEDH is boring because its all the same cards". We didnt see the product of that reality because since its "all the same cards" the decisions become so much more relevant. And to me that is the biggest difference and an opportunity to improve as a player (wich will also help you in casual). You will not learn from mistakes you make in how you spend your interaction if they dont get punished. In cEDH they WILL get punished almost certainly. To trinket mages point: We as newbies obviously got our foot in by basically copying decklists of stuff that looked interesting, read primers, watched deck techs and then proxied the deck. But we did avoid picking from the top of the top. And that means there is A LOT of options and staying away from those few decks makes so much more decks stay viable. We are certainly not at a level where people have their "pet deck" that they have piloted for years. But we all did manage to find decks that fit the general themes and playstyles we like and its not a table of 4 oracle decks. Its great fun giving it a go. Printing out some cEDH decks with your friends, local playgroup or whatnot costs basically no money at all. Before hating on sth, giving it a shot first is always worth it and it really expanded our understanding of the game.
@soldancer4 ай бұрын
I recently had my perceptions of cEDH turned on their head because of exactly what you are saying here. I always thought of the cEDH variant in terms of how top tier 1v1 play works, completely missing the fact that you have MORE THAN ONE OPPONENT. I realized just how much strategy that takes to navigate - not just the mechanical considerations, but the social ones as well. Bluffing and reading skill goes through the roof.
@kevanrynning50789 ай бұрын
You should do a video about pauper commander, or PDH. I recently got into it and it has roughly the same arguments for it that cedh does, no rule 0. But it ALSO has a much wider card variety because of how limited you are in power level
@Sillimant_9 ай бұрын
I've had a lot more fun than I expected with a spur of the moment pedh deck than I ever expected. Zoyowa has really forced some players to think, and I loved how the table reacted when I cast Phyresis for the first time
@1animal9 ай бұрын
cool video, im a sweaty modern player and i appreciate the breakdown of cedh
@Varler_9 ай бұрын
Really great video! I play casual EDH too, but my favorite mode is cEDH for all the reasons you listed: High-speed games with lots of interaction, no/little salt, and being allowed to do the strongest/meanest(not mean to people, but mean to their ability to play) things you can think of if it helps you win. But at the same time, it has its flaws as a format, many of which you outlined here. Another flaw is that the ban list isn't catered to a competitive format. I'm of the opinion that the ban list should be even smaller, but I can also see a world where the ban list should be expanded to hit some of the cards that are so ubiquitous because of their power level. (But, if the format were slowed down too much, it would also lose much of its allure.)
@FacetofChaos9 ай бұрын
Masterfuly explained. Keep the theory content.
@besheveledbear45689 ай бұрын
This is why I love playing high power off meta, we are borderline CEDH but playing decks that are built around uncommon commanders. It's a fantastic mix of high power plays with deck diversity
@DVS57REBEL9 ай бұрын
"High power casual" is most fun way to play
@Gentasu9689 ай бұрын
I love high powered casual but I feel like it's the worst middle ground since I'll always get hate for playing "cedh" while not being able to hang in an actual cedh table
@besheveledbear45689 ай бұрын
@@Gentasu968 that's fair, however that's why I play with a dedicated pod regularly
@fizzyheart24862 ай бұрын
Funny thumbnail now
@thelongboardguru_i.t.60969 ай бұрын
I play a ton cedh. Normally casual players have very uninformed takes that paint cedh in poor light. Thank you for this! Legit a good analysis of the formats
@curtisfarley65589 ай бұрын
It's because most commander players were introduced to the game by the format. They never played tournament magic, let the internet build their deck and formulate their opinion on magic as a whole. They have duning-Krueger and are on the mountain of ignorance. Instead of taking an L and learning more about the game, they double down on their bias and say "see I'm losing because your cards are toxic and unfun", instead of trying to get better
@JohnFromAccounting9 ай бұрын
I don't play commander at all and only play competitive formats like standard and legacy. CEDH has a ton of issues because it uses the same banlist and the same rules as every other game of commander, when they should be treated as entirely different things. Super-staples have to be addressed to make the format competitively engaging.
@thelongboardguru_i.t.60969 ай бұрын
@@JohnFromAccounting I def understand ur point, but as a long time legacy (2011-2017) and modern (2017-hogaak winter) player, I think cedh makes for interesting and dynamic games. I would describe modern the way u have described cedh. Too many super staples and etc. Neither opinion is inherently correct but I'm open to enjoying modern so I hope your at least open to idea of enjoying cedh
@PrincetteScarecrow9 ай бұрын
@@curtisfarley6558 This is so weird because I've literally heard modern players complain about bowmasters, TOR, fury, grief, etc. for months and months on end and it only stops when some of these cards get banned. Should all modern players who hate these unbalanced cards also "take the L and learn more about the game and try to get better?". Genuinely, where do you draw the line between "this card is wildly unbalanced and shouldn't be legal in the format" and "simply git gud"? If you think all complaints can be resolved with the latter, then you should also take issue with every mtg format with a banlist ever.
@curtisfarley65589 ай бұрын
@@PrincetteScarecrow not the same situation bud. You are comparing tournament magic players and their opinion on the format and ban worthy cards, to casuals who don't even understand the steps and phases of the game they play. If cedh had a seperate ban list (I agree that it does need one), these kinds of players would still complain about losing without any self reflection. Their expectations aren't tempered to their experience and they will blame anything but themselves. This isn't all casual players, of course, but it is a phenomenon of commander, none the less.
@ninjapumpkin01279 ай бұрын
Very good video! I am relatively new to EDH as a whole as I joined during LotR, and it was cool to see what the upper extreme offers and what benefits and issues it faces. I think as a new player I have trouble gauging the power of my own decks so a turn 0 conversation on power level would be hard for me.
@soldancer4 ай бұрын
Welcome to the game! The problem with "power level" as a rating system is this: some players believe it to be a quantitative scale, when it is actually psychometric. I find that instead, briefly describe what your deck actually does and how. It's still subjective, but it can really clarify for the table what everyone is looking for from that game. Check out deck intros like Commander at Home or Elder Dragon Hijinks to see some good examples of what that might look like.
@Zalsabrav9 ай бұрын
Played a game of CEDH where a Kinnan player had a consecrated sphinx turn . A Rowan scion of war player decided to play a wheel of fortune making the kinnan player draw 51 cards. He won the turn after and we laughed, shuffled up and played again. Now I have an orcish bowmasters!
@drake110119 ай бұрын
funny that this popped up in my feed, after i played against you on cockatrice a few days ago
@Matartar509 ай бұрын
Loved seeing the surprise guest!
@joryvuylsteke69009 ай бұрын
This was so well put together. Great job!
@ammonil12619 ай бұрын
I've never seen your channel before but this video was great!
@Mitch_Feral5 ай бұрын
This is most of the arguments for why I only play cube, and some limited. Cube changes when things get stale, limited changes no matter what - if broad concepts to victory remain the same, the path to achieving it, and the mechanisms seen most often, shift. Sometimes a little, sometimes a lot. Very cool to see my complaints analyzed like this, great video.
@solarupdraft9 ай бұрын
My two favorite new commander creators on one video!
@Thelastpraetor9 ай бұрын
It's actually a ton of fun for me, because I love playing the off-meta ideas, and my playgroup always has their heads spinning when I'm playing Commanders like Queza or Xyris
@BatCaveOz9 ай бұрын
A weird phenomenon of cEDH is that many of the staple cards require opponents using strategies such as: Tutors Graveyard interactions Low toughness/high value creatures Card draw Multiple actions in a single turn etc. Which can result in the cEDH deck having reduced efficacy against strong, but more "basic" decks.
@trollingsoul33862 ай бұрын
people needs to understand its just a game not an stock invesment.
@athenebujard98199 ай бұрын
I’ve had a very similar experience with Tiny Leaders Reborn. However, the advantage of that format is that it’s very young, so the meta is still undecided.
@sethb30909 ай бұрын
I don't know Reborn, but I've had fun with Tiny Leaders in the past. It's just hard to find a pod.
@herrar65959 ай бұрын
Good vid, describing casual vs competetive in every format in every cardgame. My storeowner goes on competetive pokemon events with me and it´s always the same conversation: "Dad I wanna play my hisuian Arcanine deck, all the meta stuff is bland and boring"... "go for it son, just be aware you´re going to lose, a lot." Of course off meta picks are a thing, as neither lists nor players are well adapted to them, but building a good offmeta deck is about as time and skill intensive as cardgames get. What I´d like to see in stores is budget cEDH. Build the most powerful deck you can, on a 50€ budget. Of course, we could impose other deck building restrictions as well, like it has to be monocolured or domain, so long as they are the same for everyone and the premise is to try and win. I´m sure there would be a lot of moments of "Wow, you came up with that?" in that format and no one would mind having a bunch of super cutthroat budget decks at the end of it all.
@herrar65959 ай бұрын
I just generally want to see more deckbuilding challenges at stores though.
@josephrion35149 ай бұрын
My experience with yugioh back in the mid '00s is that if you were not playing the meta and instead playing fun it meant you lost. Then I tried the meta wasn't fun so I left the game forever.
@josephrion35149 ай бұрын
I am also a fan of budgetary restricted formats. Encourages more creative deck building.
@herrar65959 ай бұрын
@@josephrion3514 Makes a lot of sense, If you don´t like the meta you´re better off changing format instead of hanging on to a pet deck that makes you lose...
@sethb30909 ай бұрын
Yeah, I've refused to play a meta deck any of the handful of times I've actually gone to magic events at the store and given myself a $15 or 20 budget, and honestly I perform pretty well! The thing about following the meta is that a very small set of cards get expensive, and a lot of _almost_ tier 1 cards just end up as bulk. I walked into an MTG Standard tournament with a $13 deck and came close to winning, and everyone was running meta lists.
@MomijiTsukuyomi6 ай бұрын
As a longtime cEDH player, I went into this expecting to be rubbed the wrong way, knowing that I've seen most of your content be more casual focused. I have to say I'm very pleased. I feel like most criticism toward cEDH comes from people who don't understand cEDH, play it, or even want to play or understand, and end up coming to conclusions that are way off base at best and abrasive at worst. Your willingness to explore it yourself to find what you like and dislike in it personally, as well as see and understand what we enjoy about it is something I greatly respect.
@Dragon_Fyre5 ай бұрын
I think the most common reason that EDH players would have negative views of CEDH, would stem from their personal experiences with players bringing CEDH decks to play EDH.
@FrankVrep9 ай бұрын
People are a lot more forgiving about getting locked out of games or dying to a combo, when every game takes like 30 minutes instead of 2 hours haha.
@StarTard89 ай бұрын
cEDH is best described by me as “The journey is more fruitful than the destination”. Everyone knows the endgame, everyone knows everyone’s wincons and how they arrive there. But why I play cEDH is because the journey to get to the W is complex and extremely entertaining. You have Stack interactions that you’d never expect, you have lines to a win that you’d never expect to have to execute, and you have a meta that’s constantly evolving and changing. It’s also a much different culture: the only Rule 0 is “Win, at any cost”; there is no real salt; deck optimization is king and proxies are welcome; and play optimally and impersonally (no Spite, no Kingmaking when it can be avoided, and try to make the ‘optimal’ decision). I like knowing the end of the story, but the journey there is why I read the book. That’s why I play cEDH.
@soldancer4 ай бұрын
I have seen this sentiment repeated elsewhere (even in this comment section!) and it has really given me insight and appreciation for what a lot of players are looking for when everyone is playing with those expectations in mind.
@Gorbgorbenson7 ай бұрын
I played with 2 cedh players the other day, and they were some of the friendliest guys Ive met at the store. Their decks were brutal against mine, often winning on turn 3-5, but it was smfun playing against a table that wasn't getting salty about the cards I played that normally would accumulate salt.
@brendans19839 ай бұрын
Collab with TrinketMage, right on 🤘🍻
@wchenful9 ай бұрын
For anyone who's interested in cEDH, I'd highly recommend Comedian mtg's channel. He does a lot of meta breakdowns and tournament reports which can give you a lot of insight into the format.
@Hopeofhell7 ай бұрын
The little line on talking to your fellow commander games spoke true to me. Back when i played Magic i always asked if they where using strong or more friendly and casual EDH decks, Depending on what they answered opt'ed what deck i picked. Something that will try and win, Or something that was goofy and fun.
@DBDpurekiller9 ай бұрын
I think you hit the nail on the head with your rule 0 statement: casual commander is wildly unbalanced if expectations are not put forward. And it’s the reason why I typically don’t like the rating system for commander. “Oh your deck is a 7?” What constitutes a 7? No one rocks up to the table and says “yea I have a power 3 deck”, it’s that clear expectation that I enjoy about cEDH. It’s about playing to win, that’s the mindset. I’ll never forget the guy who played karametra and absolutely destroyed our table because he knew how to play to win. Good pilots can maneuver any deck so long as that deck has a play to win .
@neminem2338 ай бұрын
As someone who's pet card is Counterflux, one day I dream of bringing that to a CEDH table, and seeing everyone's faces when I overload it because the stack is overflowing with cards
@voidartichoke9 ай бұрын
I'm a yugioh player that knows a cEDH player. I've had a hard time getting into commander before. He told me that cEDH specifically is very comparable to yugioh in that there are usually wins by turn 2-3, huge response chains and that there's usually no "turn 0" conversation. After watching this video I think he's probably right. There are even card's in your video that are analogous in use to yugioh cards. I'm glad that even with such different games, we can still have similar ideas of fun. I think I'll give cEDH a try
@quadeflanders79059 ай бұрын
I found this to be quite helpful. I've been looking into CEDH for a while now. I got a few friends willing to jump into it with me. But being me, I made an Esior and Kediss combat tricks deck. I'm glad to hear that off meta stuff can do some work at the right tables.
@jd73919 ай бұрын
The reduced salt level is what drew me to cEDH. I have my personal brew that does great against meta decks even after the players against me understand my deck. If you want to brew yes, you're really limited to the best cards... But and this is a big but, some very casual cards turn into amazing competitive cards when they synergize with your commander. My brew is Francisco/Akiri+Lurrus by the way.
@bartoffer9 ай бұрын
That cEDH has a more limited card pool is an advantage to the subformat's enthusiasts, and is something that the subformat's intent is angled specifically to encourage. The issue is that this attitude then bleeds both into more casual play and into actual card design, whereby increasing power creep homogenizes the format more than ever before paradoxically at the same time as more cards are being printed into it than ever before. Rather than being seen as a parallel to 60-card, which aught to be an eternal format curated into separate intended power-level dimensions, Wizards increasingly behaves as if EDH is somehow self-regulating. What you ultimately get then is a rudderless ship which seems impelled towards salt and frustration, outside of cEDH pods - because cEDH has a defined play philosophy. Rather than emulating this success, and laying out separate play philosophies for different levels of power, "Rule 0" has been tossed around as a byword for "we don't really feel like doing anything to cultivate the game's most-popular, most-fragile format."
@FarNorthMtG9 ай бұрын
Cedh player here - I know it’s discussed in the video but I’d really like to reiterate in the comments how some of the off meta cedh decks can be so fun and incredibly rewarding to play. My pet deck is Tasha the Witch Queen and I dabble with Yennett sometimes. Other decks like Magda, gruul Etali, Ob Nixilis, Malcolm/Kediss etc can all be a ton of fun to play. I’ve been dabbling with an off meta Tymna/Dargo list lately that’s been a good time. A lot of the top decks in the tournament scene do share a lot of cards and can have similar playstyles, 5 color piles are going to have a lot of cards in common after all. However cedh is such a deep format that just looking at top decks isn’t a fully fair view of the format imo. That said, even within the top 10 Kinnan will play INSANELY differently from a blue farm and Dargo/Thrasios plays wildly differently than something like Tivit. For me and a lot of cedh players, the fun of the format isn’t in card variety or whatever else but in piloting your deck to the best of its ability and navigating complex board states to come out with the win Just wanted so say I love the format and thanks for giving it a fair shot :)
@jxhook9 ай бұрын
I've shifted to preferring CEDH, everyone is playing on the same level for the most part. It does feel far more limited with card choices, but for me that is a good thing as I don't have a lot of money to spend on magic.
@user-rl7hm7ix5n9 ай бұрын
I started playing mtg again bc a close group of friends was playing commander. Playing w/ them was fun, but I ended up never getting into the format otherwise bc I get the impression it's just salt everywhere. I know what I'm saying it's an exaggeration, but it just seems like a bunch of people not having fun because they're annoyed by anything anyone does because that makes the game unfun. It's like every time I come close to a group of edh players I overhear they shit talking someone else on those grounds (and it seems like the environment is very toxic). I get the idea of playing for fun as a break from the very competitive mindset, but for me it's some aspect that has been always present in lgs small tournaments anyway. The problem I see w/ edh is that aspect is "enforced", while the idea of "fun" is very subjective. eg: I made a cool (for me) proxy deck, really didn't go overboard w/ power level (for me), but I'm using (a lot of) dual lands. If I don't win, nobody has a problem w/ it. If I win everyone is salty bc I'm using a lot of expensive lands that I don't have. But in my head I'm just removing the literally most unfun aspect of the game, which is getting mana screwed lol Meanwhile, started playing pauper. The community is great (and from what I see it's kinda like that everywhere). Every week there's a small stakes tournament at the lgs, a lot of people show up with crazy brews and have fun. But nobody has a problem w/ losing to an annoying control or being run over by a t1 aggro, because they are supposed to be there. The fact that those tier 1 decks are gonna be there also make the deckbuilding more interesting (for me), cause you have to somehow be prepared for them. And virtually every week there's a very unorthodox build that does well in the tournament. Everybody is having fun, while not forcing anyone else to abide by their own idea of fun. People are also very welcoming/helpful towards new players, which is something I see way less at edh tables (for a supposedly casual format, everybody I see behaves like they're at the finals of a pro tour). This is a long text just to say that everything you said about cEDH reminds me of the pauper community. Even the part where no matter the build you're gonna run some of the staple efficient cards lol. And even though it has "competitive" in the name, the vibes seem more true at heart to what edh is supposed to be. I'll probably try some games online and see if I get into the format. Thanks for the video!
@ThisNameIsBanned9 ай бұрын
The thing is that magic is full of cards for themes and if you get the choice you play the best card. The best decks in a given format look basically the same too, as a format becomes "solved" and you better have a reason to play unoptimal cards, if the goal is to win it makes no sense. Proxy friendly or not depends entirely on the tournament that runs it. Vast majority allow proxies, but not all.
@nachtderginger9 ай бұрын
The goal of edh should be trying to win while having your opponents ask to read your cards as much as possible
@Mpow5182 ай бұрын
I love how the thumb nail of this video have 2 ban cards as of sept 23/9/2024 jajaja
@matthewmoran18665 ай бұрын
as a long time DnD player who's just starting to get into mtg, it's really interesting to see the commonalities between optimization in dnd and mtg. One thing that really stood out to me while watching the video's is just how similar the problem of 'hyper optimization makes everything samey' is in both cases. Obviously proxies and card costs don't have a direct comparison, but other than that, everything you were saying about how the community eventually settles on the 'best'/'optimal' choices could be directly copied into a video about dnd optimization. Both situations eventually create the same choice where each player has to decide whether they're more invested in the most fitting option for their build or the clearly superior, but generic 'optimal' choice.
@Couldnt_Be_Bothered9 ай бұрын
I've always been quite interested in CEDH ever since I joined a game with my casual omnath locus of creation deck and won because no one was prepared for just a casual landfall deck. It showed how there's definitely plenty of room to still be creative in the format.
@exclamation7449 ай бұрын
This is really why I've never thought of switching off the two decks that I play when I get the occasional itch to play Magic again. They get to play a, by cEDH standards, surprisingly large amount of cards that the others at my shop do not play. I am really the only one playing Tatyova turns or Sythis fort, though both of my piles are somewhat dated -- still on the Heliod win for Sythis, after all. I already see many of the same cards in other players' decks, and if I were still playing Kess like I used to, then my deck would more-or-less just look like everyone else's with slight variation for my personal income (my store does not allow proxying of cards you cannot prove you own). Even though I don't win very often, both because I am playing decks that barely qualify as T2 and I am horribly unskilled despite years of playing EDH "to win," I still get to have fun playing decks that I like to play and enjoy the aesthetic of.
@MisterAssasine9 ай бұрын
wdym with "slight variation of your personal income"? Do you not prox?
@exclamation7449 ай бұрын
@@MisterAssasine"my store does not allow proxying of cards you cannot prove you own." I don't own anything with Mox in the name, for example, so my mana bases would always just be worse inherently. I am not shelling out for a Mox Diamond, even though it would be a great addition to both of my decks, even if they are both Couphe decks. That is just one example. Part of my deck choices is the fact that I can't afford the most expensive game pieces because I'd like to keep my savings for something more permanent than trading cards.
@mose96299 ай бұрын
Ngl kinda confused about the title choice, it feels like you didn't really go into any "problems" with the format and more just gave a good overview of it, something akin to a beginners guide almost.
@Adrianovaz20079 ай бұрын
You could say he posed a question and answered it. The problem? There's none actually.
@astrograph78759 ай бұрын
He did go into the the problem of cedh. That being diversity. The section where he compares the top 10 in cedh and the cards all of them share + plus their win cons.
@Adrianovaz20079 ай бұрын
@@astrograph7875 he explained not all pods are combinations of those top 10 decks and that you're not necessarily obliged to play those versions like Trinket Mage mentioned. There's a meta but you can play the meta with anti meta strategies. I don't like the format but I came out of the video with a more positive outlook on it.
@sugar53749 ай бұрын
@@astrograph7875 Even if all decks were only the Top 10, that wouldn't necessarily be a problem. A lack of diversity is also an upside of cedh.
@mose96299 ай бұрын
@@astrograph7875 what these other guys said. But in seriousness, what he did is essentially taking a look at the "top 20 commanders on EDHRec", you know, and I know, that those aren't the only commanders people play, but they are the ones that are most popular, mostly bc they are powerful.
@bobthor96479 ай бұрын
For me Magic isn't made more fun by worrying about if other people have fun- its a new chore that wasn't there when I played in 2015
@deezboyeed67646 ай бұрын
At our table were aware some decks we make are not fun for others at the table. But we generally play those decks once or twice and seeing them pop off is fun at times, i think alot of people take salt to personally or too far rather than having a joke with friends.
@PeteCarroll-12-166 ай бұрын
"Winning" is when you get invited back to play again. Hope you enjoy telling people about all the other losers you beat ten years ago for the rest of your life 😂
@bobthor96476 ай бұрын
@PeteCarroll-12-16 I win every day man - I just don't explain my decks for 10 minutes before each game , we just enjoy playing more than complaining in my hood
@nharviala9 ай бұрын
They're very true about you can make cEDH out of anything. I made Tayam into one (as most Rule of Law effects are 3 CMC or lower, Devoted combo is easy to assemble, and Contamination can be turned on and off freely), and it was amazingly successful.
@davidsidler6069 ай бұрын
This is why I play Magda Land Destruction at my LGS. I pulled a 60% win rate and warped the meta so much that people built mono-coloured decks with basic lands, because I wouldn’t blow up basics.
@Teifling6 ай бұрын
This just hit my recommendations, but this opened my eyes as to why so many people in the commander facebook group I was in made the same suggestions for things like mana, removal, etc. I personally play purely at the casual level, loving budget and niche finds for my decks.
@jameslabbe41199 ай бұрын
Such an amazing analysis! Love seeing when you drop a new video. I like cEDH philosophy and I'm looking for efficiency but not optimal cards in slots whenever I can for the reason of deck blandness. I like Withering Boon for this reason.
@w.s61249 ай бұрын
Best part of Cedh is to take a random deck and try to build it in the strongest way possible. Even mono colored deck can win from time to time.
@coolbarryo18529 ай бұрын
For me, the homogony of the cEDH format is the largest driving factor is why i stay away from it. I did similar things to you, except i simply looked at top 50 cEDH lists and saw how many cards in these lists are considerred "staples" and had no meaningful interaction with the rest of the deck. Generally, over 60% of non-lands fell into this category. This kind of gameplay is uninteresting and samey and you saw that in just a dozen games. casual edh needs a regulated way to grade power level and it will be the best format in the game, bar none.
@agentkhaine22049 ай бұрын
*reads title* *clicks video* Mfw I’m baited by title into a video with an accurate portrayal of a subformat 😂 (Great video!)
@xeper94589 ай бұрын
Another gem from my salt free homey! You highlighted a couple things that I find incredibly alluring- It is the premier format for upper echelon thinking both in deck construction and decision making, and the cohesive no holds barred approach that is largely missing in casual makes for a virtually salt-free environment, which I find to be the most glaring flaw plaguing the casual format. People seem to forget that 75% of the time you are a loser, the objective is to win, and it goes against the spirit of the game to be angry at someone for trying to do the exact same thing as you! If you aren't having fun playing this game no matter what, it's not meant for you. That being said keep it up my man we love you!
@VexylObby9 ай бұрын
OR, you can have a salt-free environment, be knowledgeable about the game, and still have fun playing casual. cEDH doesn't have a patent on these things. And I think there are SOME things that people can not have a fun time with justifiably.
@xeper94589 ай бұрын
I was simply highlighting that casual can be a toxic environment due to differences of ideology@@VexylObby
@VexylObby9 ай бұрын
I also think that differences can be respected, of we just had a set of common formalities of being okay with expectation not matching. Be it leaving for another pod, or trying harder to find a group that makes better sense. The game is too vast to expect any casual pod to just work. But at least we can all work on our social skills of acceptance.@@xeper9458
@skittles17367 ай бұрын
got me subscribing with this video being the reason ☺ good job
@seldomplaystcg9 ай бұрын
the crossover I didnt expect! 😮
@lefloidNemesis9 ай бұрын
One of the allures of cedh is the common knowledge, as stated somewhat by the video. You know what to expect, you know the crucial turns, you can make good assumptions of who's life total matters and which players never too attack. This coupled with the fact that your opponents have the same knowledge, makes it so you always need to way your options accordingly. Yes the cardpool is somewhat samey but it's still a 100 card singleton format and the cards are so flexible that games rarely feel simular, with the exception on how they end. Cedh players aren't usually there for how you close the game though but how you get there, which rarely goes according to plan.
@alpraditiamalik88249 ай бұрын
As a cedh player, sometimes it hurts when new sets are spoiled and only a few or even none of it can fits in your cedh decks because it doesn’t have the qualities. But fortunately I got my casual group to play those cards. I love commander in general and playing both cedh and casual makes me whole
@jeancarlo379 ай бұрын
I stopped playing commander entirely because my goals and the goals of the people who play in my city are very different, they have this weird idea that tribal decks are inherently balanced, like they don't run interactions or board wipes, and I play a midrange reanimator/clones deck( not clones in clones, but in creating copies of my creatures) and I put a lot of interaction to protect my plays, and now I'm at a crossroads, I can take out the interaction and stuff my deck with board wipes and steam roll everyone, or I can continue to have a lot of games were someone just draws their most efficient creatures and kills everyone, or the beautiful games were everyone bricked and I can't hit anyone because I would be a try hard, it's like I just wanna have a fun and interactive game, and I just can't do that
@Sapreme9 ай бұрын
No one is going to be happy in EDH. The cedh group i used to play in get upset if a player doesn't "play optimally" in the interest of the pod. There was a game where I had Glen Elendra out and I could combo out if I got to untap. The player next to me played a High Tide and I declined the opportunity to counter it with Glen because I wanted to save it to protect my wincon. The next player with priority countered it, and got upset because I didn't use my Glen to stop the High Tide. He was saying that it was my responsibility, and that I was griefing/trolling the table by not playing by cedh standards.
@jeancarlo379 ай бұрын
@@Sapreme this is wild, I mean you were playing to win, like you literally made the best decision for you in that situation, and they got mad? Like if you're playing cedh the objective is to win, not help the table, that's a casual mindset, and there's no problem in playing casual, but a table doesn't become competitive just because the cards on it are powerful, I believe that even if everyone is using suboptimal cards that table is still competitive if everyone has the right mentality, it's really cedh in the traditional sense, but anyway what I'm trying to say is that your table appears to hold on to social rules used in casual games, but applying it for competitive decks, which is a weird way to play imo, but you everyone has fun their own way
@deezboyeed67646 ай бұрын
Honestly, that's why I am thankful for my table. Sure theres bitching here and there but were allf riends so its chill and none of it too serious.
@paolomandala029 ай бұрын
This video got me thinking about whether cEDH would benefit from taking a queue from Canadian Highlander, and making some sort of a points list. For the unfamiliar, CanLander is a 100 card singleton format, like commander, but it's 1v1 20 life, no commander, and the card pool is the same as in vintage (ie no ban list). Instead, powerful cards are assigned point values by a council, and each deck gets 10 points to spend on cards. So even though Ancestral Recall and Black Lotus are both legal, you can't play them both in the same deck, because Ancestral is 8 points and Lotus is 7. Implementing a similar system for cEDH might mean that, for example, you could still have Thoracle or Ad Naus be your primary win con, but running those would mean that you don't get to run, say, Sol Ring or Mana Vault. This would bring the power level down, and the card diversity up, without sacrificing the social benefits of "everyone is going all out" that were mentioned in the video.
@MadMage869 ай бұрын
As an 'outsider with some experience' such as yourself, I have a somewhat unique perspective on the whole 'cEDH is a best-case example of rule 0 working' premise. Now, to preface - I abhor rule 0 and feel it is a lazy excuse the RC uses to avoid making rules and a banlist that actually WORKS for the segment of the EDH community that needs it the most: random pick-up games in public. I have long held that the RC's claim that a slim banlist works better for private groups is irrelevant because those private groups both didn't NEED anyone to tell them they could house rule things to their liking and could more easily work down form a more restrictive ruleset than having to build infrastructure for a more restrictive one anyway. That being said, I posit that cEDH is NOT an example of 'rule 0' working. It is an example of the opposite, in fact: that rule 0 DOES NOT work and the only way to get salt-free games is to toss out the premise entirely and use the rules completely as written and accept everything within as fair game. The problem is, as you pointed out, this means that the options available are limited by the fastest decks and if you cannot present a threat or an answer in time, your strategy is not viable - and the more pressing problem if cEDH grade win conditions showing up outside of tables prepared to respond to them.
@DemonBlanka9 ай бұрын
The commander banlist is honestly a joke at this point. So many of the cards are just slightly better versions of legal cards in the format already and there are so many cards it would be better off without.
@LikeGodzzila8 ай бұрын
This is also an issue in EDH... Every EDH deck runs the same homogenized powercrept cards to do the same things, there might be more variety because there are more viable archtypes, but they don't vary by much and every archtype (which there are like maybe a total of 10 archtypes) run exactly the same cards. Token decks all run the same support cards, Tribal decks all run the same support cards, Instant/Sorcery decks all run the same support cards... The only difference is that cEDH has less archtype variety, but the issue is the same on both formats.
@WillowsRoommate9 ай бұрын
As an enfranchised CEDH player I got a little scared clicking on the video. What a wonderful video this was. Did a really great job Looking at the format.
@SeriosSkies929 ай бұрын
As a cedh player, that overlap was so much less than i would have guessed it was lol.
@Luxorcist7 ай бұрын
My original table was fairly casual, my current table is a cEDH table. We have decks of all ranges though because occasionally we get new players come to play with us and we dont want to pubstomp them right off the bat. I run Mana Crypt in 1 of my 11 decks, and that 1 deck also has 5-6 infinite combos. My other decks run combos, but not nearly to the same extent. I think its good to have a wide variety of things you can do at any time for players of all skill levels, and knowing when to play hard or not shows that you can assess and get a good read on any given table.
@lzan4gi9 ай бұрын
I play cEDH but my favourite way of playing is high power, which to me is a very soft and fun mix of high efficiency and combos but with sort of janky cards. At least that's how i play it of course. Other people will say/play high power edh is basically the cedh decks that are not top 20 or something like that. Loved the video
@futuretrunks98395 ай бұрын
I often play with a fairly decent playgroup. People who are competent and skilled enough to play cEDH but chose to play lower power stuff and I love it because it often brings the perks a cEDH table brings, without the brutality and speed of a cEDH game. That being said, we only got this way because we played against other cEDH decks in a new card shop we play at. While I’ll probably never play competitive, I really appreciate the lessons learned. We now have a group that plays whatever, is happy playing whatever, and is glad the game is over in an hour or so because we get to play more games. People took their pet decks and optimized them so they have real win cons and strategies. The salt still may be there on occasion, but hardly lingers past the 5 minutes it takes to grab a new deck and shuffle up and after that it’s forgotten. And hardly anyone complains about card choice. “Rule 0” talks now are basically “play whatever, I’ll learn to deal with it or I won’t”. TLDR; while you might not be the biggest fan of cEDH, the lessons learned from dabbling in the format go an extremely long way especially with casual pods. Makes for a much better experience. So for that merit alone, I’ll defend cEDH because it mostly just does the commander format good.
@LeftistTechSupport9 ай бұрын
9:51 so its like when yoshi was basically never played in smash bros because he was viewed as a bad pick so no one had experience playing against yoshi, so the second someone picked him they were able to wipe the floor
@Pandaman647 ай бұрын
basically yes. The strength of picking off meta in any kind of game is that the opponent is less likely to know the matchup, and is more likely to play into your hands.
@xelaranger38804 ай бұрын
As a brawl era Yoshi player at my locals I approve of this. I miss melee Yoshi though his egg slides were so sick
@peteralmo9 ай бұрын
One thing I really appreciated about this video? It confirmed to me that all the people on mtgo complaining to me that my 5-7 decks are really CEDH are indeed batshit crazy.
@abellia9 ай бұрын
Great vid. Wouldnt have titled it "the problem with cedh" tho lmao
@truegamerking9 ай бұрын
But the clickbait
@joshprice48553 ай бұрын
As someone who only plays causal (and generally tries to better my sportmanship) I have had changing opinions about cEDH. I started with all the common misinformed opinions but I always try to at least /understand/ things I don't like. And now where I am with cEDH is this. I like edh because I can play with and see a variety of cards and strategies. The problem with cEDH for me is that despite the variety of ways those decks do that its still those cards. I watched games and listened to podcasts about cEDH and in the end I just couldn't find a deck or a play style I thought would be fun. The biggest difference is I went from "Why would you play this? Wouldn't it be funner to just play 1v1?" to "Eh, this just isn't for me but I'm glad everyone else is having fun"
@UtopiaTreeАй бұрын
that's the first time I've heard of magic cards referred to as "kinky" and it was perfect
@JimWolfie9 ай бұрын
Having been playjng cedh for basically forever i get it.
@QuantemDeconstructor9 ай бұрын
Oddly enough, as someone that's played Yugioh for a long time, the competitive side of that game also suffers some extremely similar issues, you have to be willing to sacrifice deckbuilding for around half your extra deck and a quarter of your main deck on the low scale for "staples" that are so oppressively powerful and generic you'd be kneecapping yourself in that environment by not running them. It leads to a very unfun game where most decks look extremely similar, only differences being what they do inbetween setting up their boss monsters and which suite of generic boss monsters they try to make.