This post is a continuation from another thread in which a veteran player referred to Death Ray as a 'taboo' card for non-tournament play, a statement I disagree with very strongly.
No card should be considered taboo for non-tournament play. The use of certain cards WITHOUT NOTICE leads to very short, very crappy, very "foregone conclusion" type matches. The answer is to have two metas, or 'levels of play', which I believe can only be termed "A-DECK" and "B-DECK". Any other terminology leads to instant, massive, impenetrable confusion.
I don't know why there aren't more A-Deck matches. They are not taboo. They are fun, fun, fun. Omior Gilded Sage vs. Clave Gone Rogue is a great matchup. But either deck vs. my Violent Spaghetti (Thrass Violent Demonstrations/Spaghettification combo) is a terrible matchup and a waste of both players time. Does that mean I should throw out my Violent Spaghetti and never play it again? NO!
The wonderful, simple, easy to understand solution lies in that little title bar that appears when you set up a match. It should contain the letter A or the letter B.
The obvious next question is, what makes an A or a B deck? The answer is a little vague, BUT THAT'S OK! The idea here is not to set hard and fast rules but to make sure we all get more good, close matches and less matches that are decided by deck-strength rather than good play. Following is a list of cards that do not appear in any deck in my B-deck file. Your list may difer. You may tell me I'm completely out of step on the use of certain cards. I may move a deck from my B to my A file or vice versa as a result. That's all fine. The important thing is that we try to level our matches to observe two rich and varied metas.
Why? Because it's more fun that way.
Here are my A deck cards: Gone Rogue, Sabotage, Death Ray, Shrieker, Underground Resistance, Remote Informant, Gilded Sage, Isolation