

However, one of the decks that most interests me is a Tempo Deck, so it’s low-cost all around. It may be an attempt to slow down the meta, and time will tell if that works out at all. One thing I’m not crazy about in Crimson Vow though is the high cost of some of these new cards. I’m incredibly excited for the future of MTG Arena decks, thanks to Innistrad: Crimson Vow. We’ll have a few Human decks, assuredly an Izzet Dragons/Spells deck, but there’s more than that. We’ll probably have a few Vampire decks in here since there are several flavors of Vampire deck. You can see all the awesome new stuff coming in that we’re going to talk about. Training, Exploit, we cover all of the new keywords over in our spoiler article. There’s so much exciting tech for decks in MTG Arena for Innistrad: Crimson Vow, that’s for sure. I’m going to run the gamut of new concepts, familiar things that already work, and more. You might be asking yourself (or me) now, what about NON-Red decks?! Will those be featured? Yes! But we will probably start with the things that are most interesting or potentially most powerful. Some decks are just going to get stronger (Izzet), and some decks are going to come out of nowhere to be stronger than ever (Mono-Red). With new expansions, that means potential new decks to try in MTG Arena – this time for Innistrad: Crimson Vow! It’s too early to pick out the best decks, but there are some here that I think could be real contenders. By Jason Parker in Magic: The Gathering Arena | Nov, 12th 2021
