Hello and welcome back to Metagame Mentor, your weekly guide to the top decks and latest Constructed developments on the path to the Pro Tour. This weekend, the next Regional Championship Qualifier season will start, featuring Pioneer as the Constructed format for in-store events. To get you up to speed on Pioneer, today's article provides a overview of the format. I will walk you through the top 15 archetypes in the current Pioneer metagame, and I'll highlight my picks for new March of the Machine cards that may make an impact.
The Pioneer Metagame
Pioneer is a nonrotating format based on expansion sets and core sets from Return to Ravnica forward, with the most notable cards on the ban list being the fetch lands. With over 10,000 cards to choose from, Pioneer features a variety of powerful strategies—and new additions from March of the Machine may soon increase the competitive diversity further.
The next RCQ season, which will take place from April 22 through August 20, introduces format matching. That is, in-store RCQs are required to be either Pioneer or Limited, and they will qualify for a Pioneer Regional Championship later in the year. If you aspire to win an RCQ, then now is the time to dive into Pioneer.
To grasp the latest Pioneer developments, I analyzed over 600 decklists from competitive events over the past month. Specifically, I used all available Magic Online decklists from scheduled Pioneer events held from March 25 through April 17. In addition, I used all MTG Melee decklists with positive net wins from the same date range, as well as Top 8 decklists from large RCQs in Osaka, Japan and Tokyo, Japan. All of them took place before the March of the Machine release date, so this provides a metagame snapshot right before the new set is added.
To obtain a metric that combines popularity and performance, I assigned an archetype label to each deck and awarded a number of points equal to the deck's net wins, i.e., its number of match wins minus losses. For example, a deck that went 5–1 in the Swiss followed by a loss in the quarterfinals was assigned three points. The sum of these numbers for every archetype yields its record-weighted metagame share, which represents its share of total net wins. It may be interpreted as a winner's metagame that you can expect to see at the top tables.
Archetype | Record-Weighted Metagame Share |
---|---|
1. Rakdos Midrange | 12.2% |
2. Azorius Control | 10.3% ↑↑ |
3. Abzan Greasefang | 9.3% ↑↑ |
4. Mono-Green Devotion | 7.6% ↓↓ |
5. Izzet Creativity | 6.2% |
6. Lotus Field Combo | 5.0% |
7. Neoform Atraxa | 4.6% ↑↑ |
8. Gruul Vehicles | 4.2% ↓↓ |
9. Azorius Spirits | 3.8% ↑↑ |
10. Enigmatic Fires | 3.4% ↑↑ |
11. Mono-Blue Spirits | 2.6% |
12. Mono-White Humans | 2.5% ↓↓ |
13. Izzet Phoenix | 2.3% ↓↓ |
14. Rakdos Sacrifice | 2.3% |
15. Omnath to Light | 2.1% |
16. Mono-Red Aggro | 2.1% |
17. Bant Spirits | 1.7% |
18. Atarka Red | 1.7% |
19. Dimir Control | 1.7% |
20. Dimir Rogues | 1.4% |
21. Niv to Light | 1.3% |
22. Elves | 1.2% |
23. Selesnya Angels | 1.1% ↓↓ |
24. Other | 9.5% |
In this table, each archetype name hyperlinks to a well-performing decklist close to the aggregate of that archetype. The "other" category, continuing the descending order, included such deck archetypes as Esper Legends, Grixis Midrange, Mono-Black Discard, Mono-Black Midrange, Selesnya Auras, Esper Greasefang, Esper Control, Selesnya Company, Golgari Midrange, Gruul Stompy, Transmogrify Fires, Golgari Sacrifice, Izzet Prowess, Jeskai Ensoul, Rakdos Transmogrify, Goblins, Mono-Black Aggro, Jund Citadel, Jund Sacrifice, Boros Heroic, Jeskai Transmogrify, Abzan Sacrifice, Izzet Control, Jund Transmogrify, Rakdos Burn, Mono-Red Ramp, Mono-Red Devotion, Mono-White Devotion, Izzet Lutri, Goblin Rally, Bant Humans, and more.
The most-played cards across all main decks and sideboards were
As indicated by the arrows in the table, the current Pioneer metagame is different from the metagame at last year's Regional Championships or the metagame at Pro Tour Phyrexia. Since then, archetypes like Azorius Control, Abzan Greasefang, Neoform Atraxa, Azorius Spirits, and Enigmatic Fires have waxed, while archetypes like Mono-Green Devotion, Gruul Vehicles, Mono-White Humans, Izzet Phoenix, and Selesnya Angels have waned.
A one-sentence summary of these metagame developments is that combo decks have become more popular. Indeed, at Pro Tour Phyrexia, Izzet Creativity took the trophy, and Abzan Greasefang had the highest overall win rate. These decks have become a big part of the metagame. Moreover, last month, Neoform Atraxa emerged. Given the rise of these combo decks, it would be wise to dedicate more sideboard slots to them. Anti-graveyard cards such as
The Top 15 Pioneer Deck Archetypes
To take a closer look at the 15 archetypes with the highest record-weighted metagame share, I've used a decklist aggregation algorithm that takes into account the popularity and performance of individual card choices.
Rakdos Midrange, with a 12.2% share of the record-weighted metagame, is a powerful archetype that combines efficient discard, powerful removal, resilient threats, and flexible sideboard options. After Phyrexia: All Will Be One added
Based on last year's Regional Championships and the recent Pro Tour, there are several archetypes that had a good matchup against Rakdos Midrange, including Gruul Vehicles, Rakdos Sacrifice, and Enigmatic Fires. However, the card choices in Rakdos Midrange aren't static. For example,
When playing against Rakdos Midrange, It's important to keep in mind that you should mulligan slightly less aggressively than might normally, as you'll need all the resources you can get.
In Explorer, the online true-to-tabletop format featuring all Pioneer-legal cards that appear on MTG Arena, Rakdos Midrange is also one of the most popular choices.
Azorius Control, with a 10.3% share of the winner's metagame, is the premier control deck in Pioneer. It includes a range of standard control elements such as spot removal, countermagic, card draw, sweepers, and planeswalkers. While builds with
When playing against this deck, you always have to be wary of sweepers and countermagic. Try not to overextend your threats into
In Explorer, Azorius Control is fully legal save for the singleton
Abzan Greasefang, with a 9.3% share of the record-weighted metagame, is a combo deck with a decent midrange backup plan. Its goal is to put
The deck's ability to play a midrange game with
When playing against this deck, remember that the best time to kill Greasefang depends on the situation. If the opponent has lots of spare creatures, it's best to kill Greasefang in their main phase before it can trigger. However, if they have no other pilots, then it's best to kill it with the trigger on the stack so that
In Explorer, Abzan Greasefang is viable and one of the most popular decks, even if
Mono-Green Devotion, with a 7.6% share of the winner's metagame, is the premier ramp deck in Pioneer. Following a mediocre performance at Pro Tour Phyrexia, it has been on the downswing, but it remains a strong archetype overall. The deck uses mana elves and
When playing against the deck, it's important to be aware that the deck is capable of complex infinite loops. For example,
From March of the Machine, I have my eye on
In Explorer,
Izzet Creativity, with a 6.2% share of the record-weighted metagame, is the deck that carried Reid Duke to victory at Pro Tour Phyrexia. That build aimed to cast
When playing against the deck, pay attention to differences across the various builds to anticipate your opponent's plans—
From March of the Machine,
In Explorer, the aggregate Atraxa version is fully legal, save for the singleton
Lotus Field Combo, with a 5.0% share of the winner's metagame, is a combo deck that can generate a lot of mana in a single turn. The plan is to find Lotus Field, get another copy via
When playing against this deck, time your
On MTG Arena, this archetype is missing
Neoform Atraxa, with a 4.6% share of the record-weighted metagame, is the newest deck on the block. The plan with this hot new Pioneer deck is to fill your graveyard, delve out a six-cost creature, sacrifice it to
When playing against this deck, remember that sideboard cards like
From March of the Machine, I might look into
In Explorer, Neoform Atraxa misses
Gruul Vehicles, with a 4.2% share of the winner's metagame, is a midrange deck that uses
When facing this deck, keep a close eye on their companion and their lands, as there are various builds going around. If they don't reveal Jegantha, then they may be running a more aggressive build with
From March of the Machine, I would be interested in trying out
In Explorer, apart from
Azorius Spirits, with a 3.8% share of the record-weighted metagame, is a popular home for
When playing against this deck, be cautious of
In Explorer, this deck is fully legal.
Enigmatic Fires, with a 3.4% share of the winner's metagame, is a toolbox deck that aims to cast
From Phyrexia: All Will Be One,
In Explorer,
Mono-Blue Spirits, with a 2.6% share of the record-weighted metagame, has many cards in common with Azorius Spirits, but it doesn't use
When playing against this deck, remember that their most-played piece of interaction is
In Explorer, the entire deck is legal.
Mono-White Humans, with a 2.5% share of the winner's metagame, is an aggro deck that focuses on curving out with powerful Humans on turns one, two, and three, using
From March of the Machine, I have my eye on
When facing this deck, be aware of the possibility of surprise lethal via
In Explorer, the entire deck is legal save for the singleton
Izzet Phoenix, with a 2.3% share of the record-weighted metagame, aims to put multiple
When playing against Izzet Phoenix, try to avoid casting spells that can be countered by
Possible additions from March of the Machine, either main deck or sideboard, include
In Explorer,
Rakdos Sacrifice, with a 2.3% share of the winner's metagame, is centered around
When playing against this deck, be wary of
From March of the Machine, I might be interested to try out
In Explorer, apart from
Omnath to Light, with a 2.1% share of the record-weighted metagame, is a five-color midrange deck that was unveiled at Pro Tour Phyrexia. It uses
When playing against this deck, make a mental note of their prominent tutor targets.
In Explorer,
Looking Ahead
The top 15 decks showcase a wide variety of archetypes, but there are many other competitively viable strategies, and the metagame continues to evolve. In addition, March of the Machine could enable brand new decks or boost fringe options. For example:
Rona, Herald of Invasion enables an infinite-mana combo withRetraction Helix andMox Amber . Perhaps this could slot into Esper Legends?Wrenn and Realmbreaker provides a hexproof creature that taps for mana, which may be interesting for Transmogrify combo decks orJeskai Ascendancy combo decks.Ghalta and Mavren is a Vampire, so it may be particularly sweet to put onto the battlefield on turn three withSorin, Imperious Bloodlord .Dusk Legion Duelist is also a Vampire that synergizes with Sorin, so perhaps an Abzan Vampires deck might emerge. Mono-Black Vampires posted a positive record at the U.S. Regional Championship last year, so there is potential.Faerie Mastermind andHalo Forager have the right creature type to slot into Dimir Rogues. Dimir Rogues had already been on the rise as a fringe competitive deck with several decent finishes in recent weeks, and the new set may give it a substantial boost.Halo Hopper could be good friends withOrnithopter , so it may fit into Jeskai Ensoul.Ozolith, the might enable aShatter ed SpireHardened Scales deck.- Djeru & Hazoret is reminiscent of the banned
Winota, Joiner of Forces . Given its power, I could imagineDjeru and Hazoret in a brew withGenerator Servant andIlharg, the .Raze -Boar Urabrask andKhenra Spellspear might enable a spicy Mono-Red Storm deck.Omen Hawker feeds intoNykthos, Shrine to Nyx for a potential Mono-Blue Devotion brew, although I can't think of many other powerful activated abilities.Saiba Cryptomancer is a hexproof creature or protection spell, which could revitalize blue Auras decks.
The new set is brimming with potential, and I am looking forward to seeing all the innovations. There are plenty of options for deck builders to show their skills as the RCQs for the first cycle of the 2023-24 season are about to kick off.
Remember that this season introduces format matching: in-store RCQs will be either Pioneer or Limited, and they will qualify for a Pioneer Regional Championship later in the year. You can find Regional Championship Qualifiers near you via the Store & Event Locator or your regional organizer's website. The following infographic provides a visual overview of all Regional Championships and their qualifying seasons in 2023.
So if you win an RCQ in the coming months, then you'll qualify for the corresponding Regional Championship in the fall. For example, the one in Europe will be held in Lille, France on September 30, and the one in the U.S. will be held in Atlanta, GA on December 16.
Right in the middle of this RCQ cycle, the Regional Championships for the previous cycle will kick off. On June 3-4, there will be Regional Championships in five regions, including the U.S., whose results will surely shake up the format. The next few months will be an exciting time for Pioneer players!