

You also can see suggestions for other subreddits to check, like MTGO (Magic Online), Pauper, MTGLegacy, LRcast, and more. I found it very, very helpful for NEO draft, and whenever. Magic: the Redditing is very general with lots of discussion about the game, new cards, new decks, championship winning decks, and some players ranting about quitting MTG forever, as all forums have. It's not a perfect app though, as it's currently not doing particularly well on the three-color SNC set, but it's still a helpful guide. If you're playing on a PC/laptop, consider downloading something like the Arena Tutor, which ranks draft picks while you're doing the draft and lets you know which cards are better to pick, then helps you construct a deck. I'm new to MTG, but managed to go 6-3 on my fourth time drafting! Having such a blast Learning more about it, I found this "assistant" and now can't help but wonder if I'm playing against people who are using this tool. I'm looking at drafting and sealed more as a way to build up my card pool. The draftsim arena tutor will help you out while you play, by giving you draft recommendations (I recommend avoiding using the actual "top" card it gives you, but having a way to look at card ratings while you draft is critical for knowing the best and worst cards in a set.) The 17lands tutor helps you.ĭraftism Areana Tutor.

Then you'll want to install the trackers from and. I hate how the most fun format, Draft, is being gatekept behind a huge paywall.

It's not a perfect tool, since it might have problems. Finally it also offers you a decklist once you're finished drafting. It helps you to assess the power level of cards during the draft and it also gives you weighted scores for cards depending on the cards you already picked. If you're looking for a free draft assistant, you might want to try the Arena Tutor by draftsim (). It pulls the logs as they are written and tracks win/loss by deck and by overall matches.
