This deck is a Blue/Green token/counter deck where the end-game is a Doubling Season/Extravagant Replication or Doubling Season with Homunculus Horde combo to produce exponentially more and more tokens/counters. Proft's along with Crawler are there to generate tokens as is Brisly, while Soul Cauldron is there to make the most of all those tokens. Along with Homunculus Horde or Elfsworn Giant, that's game. Problem is, lots of the cards in this deck are geared towards getting mana, which leaves not much room for creatures outside of Llanowar Elves or Lumbering Worldwagon. To counter this, lots of these low-cost cards are there to serve as defense while I gather mana, or counter what the opponent tries to play.
I feel like I'm trying to do too much, but this is what I've come up with with the cards I have unlocked. Can anyone suggest cards to add/remove from this deck to streamline mana production while not leaving myself vulnerable to early game cards?
- Cogwork Wrestler
- Dive Down
- Fleeting Distraction
- Opt
- Sleep-Cursed Faerie
- Ankle Biter
- Bushwhack
- Llanowar Elves
- Malamet Battle Glyph
- Sunshower Druid
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- Deduce
- Don't Make a Sound
- Drake Hatcher
- Essence Scatter
- Fog Bank
- Mischievous Mystic
- Proft's Eidetic Memory
- Stalked Researcher
- Basking Capybara
- Bite Down
- Bristly Bill, Spine Sower
- Druid of the Cowl
- Dwynen's Elite
- Explorer's Cache
- Scavenging Ooze
- Sita Varma, Masked Racer
- Skyserpent Seeker
- Agatha's Soul Cauldron
- Campus Guide
- Swiftfoot Boots
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- Unstoppable Plan
- Worldwalker Helm
- Refute
- Blighted Burgeoning
- Imperious Perfect
- Lumbering Worldwagon
- Return from the Wilds
- They Went This Way
- Wildwood Mentor
- Scrawling Crawler
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- Homunculus Horde
- Out of Air
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- Elfsworn Giant
- Doubling Season
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- Extravagant Replication
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-Various tap G or B lands plus 6 basic Forest and Islands
I actually just looked it up. In certain states, this falls under the "Stand Your Ground" law.
Defense of Others: State law permits the use of force, including deadly force, to defend another person. Non-deadly force is justified when a person reasonably believes it is necessary to protect someone from imminent unlawful force. Deadly force is justified to prevent imminent death, great bodily harm, or a "forcible felony" to the other person. Examples of forcible felonies include murder, robbery, and aggravated assault.
Immunity from Prosecution: A key feature of the Stand Your Ground law is potential immunity from criminal prosecution and civil lawsuits if the use of force is found to be legally justified. A defendant can request a pretrial hearing to determine if their actions were justified, potentially leading to dismissal of the case. The prosecution must provide clear and convincing evidence that the force was not justified.
Important Considerations: The force used must be proportional to the threat. Stand Your Ground does not apply if the person was engaged in unlawful activity or provoked the attack. Immunity also generally does not apply when using force against a law enforcement officer performing their duties.
Meaning if you see a bunch of masked men trying to abduct someone and they aren't identifying themselves as law enforcement, you can legally shoot them to defend the person being assaulted. You would also be immune from criminal prosecution for doing so.
You'd better be a great shot though. And you'd probably get killed. At minimum for sure you're getting arrested (and probably disappeared). But you are legally in the clear. And the news would be ALL over it. I'd like the TACO administration compete against Republican-state laws.