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Nationals1.type 1, 2 player2.type 2,2 player3.type 1, Multi4.type 2, MultiRNRSThis all depends on what you have for area tournament and what the people in your area pay.
I think it depends on how good a player is. It is almost impossible for a medium-level player to win Nationals in T1-2p because there are so many good players and the event is weighed so much by how people create their own decks. Closed Deck on the other hand severely limits the changes that a person can make to a basic starter deck. This creates more of an opportunity for a medium-level player to have just as good or better of a deck than a great player. It also means that games will be much more predictable for less-experienced players. These things combining together make Closed Deck the most winnable for a medium-level or below player. The same is probably true for RNRS as a whole.
I'm just proud to see TKP all growed up and pwning trollz :tear:
I've always thought that whoever wins T1-2P at Nationals is just a good player who got lucky.
Quote from: MichaelHue on February 06, 2009, 11:57:02 AMI've always thought that whoever wins T1-2P at Nationals is just a good player who got lucky. I think Tim Maly, having won the event so many times, would disagree.
And yet he doesn't win every time. I'm not saying luck is the deciding factor, but it affects the outcome.
Quote from: MichaelHue on February 06, 2009, 01:30:45 PMAnd yet he doesn't win every time. I'm not saying luck is the deciding factor, but it affects the outcome.I kind of agree with MH, after all, I finished higher than Maly this past nationals Actually I don't believe in "luck" at all, but I will say that I think that winning at the top level of Redemption is extremely dependent on the draw. At lower levels deck building and player skill are more of a factor. You could trade decks with a noob and still beat them even if you had a terrible draw. But when you get to the very top, those factors just cancel out.I have extreme respect for Gabe, Arp, Maly, Kirk, Justin, and other 1st name recognizable players. But is any one of them quantifiably a better deck builder than the others? Is any one of them clearly more skilled at playing the game. I don't think so. They are all in the very top tier of players, and I think they all have about an equal chance of winning Nats each year. So which one of them will win? The one who runs into the right opponents (read not the opponent with a terrible deck overall, but which has something weird that kills their deck), and gets the better draws (read opponents don't have all their LSs on the bottom of their deck while TAS, Hopper, and HT are on the bottom of their own).
There are often so many players close to placing, and so close together, that one game makes the difference between first and nothing. No matter how good you are, you can lose to a bad draw.
Well...I would guess that T1, 2P is the hardest to win, since that's what the most people play.
Type one multi. I know a lot of people will disagree cause so many people play booster when it's going on. But there are so many factors that go into it:1. Getting everyone else's hate(fa, aotl, cm)2. Having to beat Daniel Whitten.
Don't worry, I fixed it for you. Kiss