![]() Traditional black/green TE decks have an enormous amount of creature tools to fight the evolving metagame. You can fill it with creatures to answer any problem. As TE's graveyard is filled, it becomes a giant toolbox. The real power of the deck is its unmatched flexibility. The only ones that I can think of are the Cloudpost-fueled decks like Izzetpost. Few, if any decks out there can compare to TE's full power. Once you have the enchantment on the board, a graveyard with creatures and a good amount of mana, very little can stop you from achieving victory. So today I'm here to tell you why TE deserves a second glance by breaking the complex archetype down into manageable nuggets of information. I think it's a shame that the TE archetype fell into obscurity when in reality it's so darn powerful. An archetype with so much potential was given up on before given a real shot to prove its worth. This was enough to make Tortured Existence fall off the map before a strong list could even be fully developed. ![]() When it actually had its debut on MTGO, however, the few people to try out the new archetype were met by sideboards packed with playsets of Relic of Progenitus. Tortured Existence was one of the most hyped cards in Pauper history in the months before Tempest block was released online. But now I'm back and ready to kick ass and chew bubble gum. This article has been sitting on the virtual shelf for a month now (created on March 1st), but complications like my computer being unable to access the internet and regulating me to playing MTGO on a crappy Acer netbook that really wasn't meant to handle that program, among other things, delayed this article from being published for way too long.
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