Tuesday, October 10, 2006

If you are interested, here is what Magic theory written by the game's best writers can do for you:

Make the game more fun. If you are the type of person who not only likes to see what is happening but also wants to understand why it is happening, then theory has something to offer you. For many players, learning itself is a source of joy.
Make you a better Magic player. By understanding more about the game, you will almost certainly become a better player.
Make you a better problem solver. By understanding more about why the game works like it does, you can start to address the game itself at a different level. Can't get deck X do beat deck Y? Theory can help a lot by giving you new avenues and paths of thought designed to attack different sorts of problems that you might not see without it.
Make you smarter. Shh, don't tell anyone, but Magic is fundamentally a math game. You knew that, right? It's okay if you didn't because it's really fun math, so as long as you keep it on the downlow, no one else has to know. Regardless, just playing Magic will not only make you better at math, but it will likely make you better at a lot of things, including logic, problem solving, cause and effect relationships, and so much more. It will likely increase your vocabulary without you even noticing. Magic theory goes a step beyond the norm and teaches you to figure out why things happen the way they do, and once you know that, you can go about changing how things happen in the first place.


yes people, magic the gathering makes you smarter..

rock on...

love you

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