![]() ![]() Rather, the idea is to navigate the course of the game so that players instead take certain actions or play a certain way because that is what the board setup allows - essentially playing right into your hands not because of trickery, but rather because their bad plays just happen to be their best options based upon the situation at hand. A Queen Marchesa decks seeks not to trick or convince an opposing player to take a particular action or play a certain way. While typical political strategies often include deal making (and breaking), manipulation, obfuscation, and so on, Marchesa players tend to go a slightly different way. Ran in roughly 5,130 decks, according to EDHREC, she is a perfect option for those preferring more of a politics-style of gameplay. Perfect for Aikido-style strategies (that is, strategies that focus on a combination of defense, control, and deflection), Queen Marchesa has become one of the most popular commanders. With the help of the database at the awesome EDH deckbuilding website EDHREC, we count down the fourteen most loved commanders in EDH over the past two years (because, you know, Valentine’s Day is on February 14). It wouldn’t be surprising, of course, for some commanders to be more popular than others. One of the most appealing aspects for EDH is that any legendary creature (as well as a handful of planeswalkers) in the history of Magic: The Gathering can be the commander for one’s deck.
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