You choose how to burn down your opponents with this powerful, 60-card, all-foil deck. It contains famous flames, bolts, and beats from across Magic history, including several never before released in foil! Blaze your path to victory and serve your foes well done .. Contents
Cards:
1 Barbarian Ring
1 Ghitu Encampment
21 Mountain
2 Teetering Peaks
1 Ball Lightning
1 Boggart Ram-Gang
1 Cinder Pyromancer
1 Figure of Destiny
1 Fire Servant
1 Grim Lavamancer
1 Hellspark Elemental
2 Jackal Pup
1 Jaya Ballard, Task Mage
1 Keldon Champion
2 Keldon Marauders
2 Mogg Fanatic
2 Mogg Flunkies
2 Spark Elemental
1 Vulshok Sorcerer
1 Browbeat
1 Chain Lightning
1 Fireball
1 Fireblast
1 Flames of the Blood Hand
1 Hammer of Bogardan
4 Lightning Bolt
1 Pillage
1 Price of Progress
1 Reverberate
1 Sudden Impact
1 Thunderbolt
Product Features
- Premium Deck Series: Fire and Lightning
- Two cards featuring new art
- Exclusive Spindown life counter
- Foil deck box
- Strategy insert & Magic learn to play guide
Fy-er! Uh! Uh! First, I think it is neat that wizards are making these premium deck series, and I Hope they continue. I have both this one and the Slivers one, and both of these decks are cool for the fact that that they are simple enough that they are good starting places for beginners, and yet the cards cover quite a bit magic history. This deck combined some of the best modern burn cards with classics that I used to enjoy playing with as a kid. I liked the foldout that came with the deck that briefly discussed the history of burn decks, which really took me back. There is also an foldout rules pamphlet, a spin down life counter (20 sided die with the fire and lighting symbol where one may expect a 20 to be) and a foil box, which I will complain about shortly. I found the deck itself, aside from being very pretty, was very consistent and good at doing what it was designed to do, burn.I found the packaging itself to be a bit annoying, the way the cards are fanned in the display case to show off their foil-ness is nice, but I found that this also makes some of the cards a little bit difficult to take out of the case, without damaging them. There was a foil box included with the deck. The box, which displays the artwork of the popular red card, “flames of the bloodhand,” is very pretty. I’m not sure why they included the box however, because the first thing I wanted to do after getting this deck was put my oh-so easy to scratch foil cards in card protectors, and for these don’t fit in the box. You read that right, the included foil box, which while being cool as heck, doesn’t accommodate cards in protectors. Why Wizards? You could have made the dimensions of the box just a few millimeters longer, couldn’t you have? Who wants a box that they can’t use, or foil cards that they can’t protect? This catch twenty-two bothered me.However, packaging aside, this deck is sheer fun for red mages. And I consider this a good purchase for both newer and older players alike.
a great premade deck I recently got back into magic so I decided to buy a variety of premade decks to see the different strats each deck employs. This deck was the most expensive one out of the 6-7 premade decks I purchased but it was also the one I made the fewest changes to. This deck out of the box is pretty strong, but then again it does cost twice as much as any of the other premade decks I purchased. If you want to get a quick burn deck that would put your beginner to mid range experience friends to shame I suggest buying this. I also recommend buying some sleeves for this deck because every card in this deck is foil, which is probably one of the reasons why it cost the way it does.
everything was perfect, just perfect. I wish to buy more items such as this. I really liked the style. many thanks, again!
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