But it wasn’t the last Flash deck left as Austin Bursavich and his UR Flash deck dominated during the first round of matches. Sigrist and his BG Midrange deck were paired against Predi’s Rakdos Sacrifice in the quarterfinals. The MTG Arena event was the largest Twitch Rivals tournament in Magic, featuring 250 top streamers from around the world. The metagame was diverse, with the most-played archetypes being Fires, Sacrifice, and Midrange/Aggro. TwitchRivals streams live on Twitch! Missing Massacre Girl, Siggy top-decked Rankle, Master of Pranks. Game two began differently with Predi having the advantage despite being short on mana early on. Find out what players are playing in the new Standard metagame post-banning. Nass would win game one utilizing Thrashing Brontodon to take out the dreaded Fires enchantment, Fires of Invention.

Here you can find all the top decklists from the Twitch Rivals tournament! Post was not sent - check your email addresses! The competition was intense, causing some Magic players to make a misstep here and there. The Twitch Rivals tournament for MTG Arena has concluded today, which is a tournament 40 Twitch streamers competed. And against Gruul Aggro he earned himself a match victory.

The MTG Arena Twitch Rivals tournament featured 250 of the top Magic streamers around the world, including several pros. Three losses on day one equaled automatic elimination from the tournament. As was his opponent Zvi Mowshowitz on Jesaki Cavalier. But it wasn’t enough when your opponent has an abundance of cards and an Expansion//Explosion in conjunction with Wilderness Reclamation. Image via Wizards of the Coast Magic: The Gathering, PUBG Mobile reveals Blackpink members' character IDs, Riot nerfs Samira in latest League micropatch after she was "clearly too strong on day one", Alleged Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War Zombies leak claims there will be returning maps, new characters, K/DA will debut a new song with Seraphine at Worlds 2020, Dot Esports' official Worlds 2020 Power Rankings, Stanislav Cifka: Esper Dance (Czech Doom). Due to the nature of how these decklists were submitted, there may be some errors. If you see any, please report them in the comments below! After not counting his deck, Luis Scott-Vargas milled himself with Expansion//Explosion. But there’s nothing like going lethal with way more Expansion//Explosion than necessary, taking Nelson to 2-0 after round two.

Only the top 128 players would take home a piece of the $75,000 prize pool. Sjow went 2-0 in the second round, finishing off his opponent with a good old burn spell.

Utilizing Trail of Crumbs, he was able to pull any answer he needed from his library. Sitting at three life after getting pounded early by a Rotting Regesaur, Bloody came back to win the match and earn a spot in the playoffs on day two.