New Redemption Grab Bag now includes an assortment of 500 cards from five (5) different expansion sets. Available at Cactus website.
1. Obviously ROOT would need to be best of 3.2. How many cards are going to be in the side board, a percentage of your deck size, a set number like 15 . . .?3. How long will players have between games to change cards in their side board?4. Do we need to take measures to ensure people aren't cheating, if so what measures?5. Any other thoughts questions or concerns need worked out? If so what?
I like:- lost soul count = dominant cap = site cap = Sideboard cap. Simplicity in deck-building rules makes things simpler on judges and players.- in-game use of sideboard. Best-of-3 just doesn't work in most tournaments. My favorite option ties access to your sideboard to your drawing of lost souls. Whenever you draw a lost soul and put it in play, you may place a card from your hand into your sideboard to shuffle a card from your sideboard into your deck. Then draw 1.Do those work?
Being able to draw an extra card every time you draw a LS for the simple cost of exchanging the worst card in your hand for a better one in your sideboard seems a bit much.
I originally thought to "put the sideboard card directly into hand," but scrapped it since everyone would just sideboard Son of God.
I also have reservations of trading cards in hand only at very specific times for sideboard cards. Your non-optimal cards will not always float to hand when you need to side them, especially only every time you draw a lost soul. It sort of defeats the purpose of siding those unproductive cards out completely and replacing them with cards that serve a better matchup if the stars don't align and you don't even get the chance to do so.
I'd generally sideboard out a card that I can't use now, but know I will need later. For example, I could sideboard out my New Jerusalem or Falling Away or AoCp, and shuffle it back into my deck the next time I draw a lost soul. The cards you sideboard are only the cards you can't use at the moment. You generally can find one of those in your hand.