January 18, 2016 Banned/Restricted Announcement
Modern
Summer Bloom is banned
Spinter Twin is banned
Pauper
Cloud of Faeries is banned
Modern
Summer Bloom is banned
Spinter Twin is banned
Pauper
Cloud of Faeries is banned
The Esper Familiars deck uses Sunscape Familiar and Nightscape Familiar to reduce the cost of blue spells, which include "free spells" such as Cloud of Faeries and Snap. Combined with the bounce lands, this means the "free spells" effectively produce mana. Here is a typical winning position: One casts Ghostly Flicker targeting Cloud of Faeries and a Mnemonic Wall, netting mana and getting back the Ghostly Flicker. Once enough mana is produced, the Ghostly Flicker can target a Sea Gate Oracle instead of the Cloud of Faeries, repeatedly looking for Sage's Row Denizen. From there, the flickering mills the opponent's deck.
Because of all the card-drawers here, it is difficult for non-blue decks to defeat this deck. It pushes the metagame to the imbalanced state where blue is heavily overplayed. Cloud of Faeries is likely the most problematic card in the deck.
You got me there, but I think I have pretty damn good excuse on this one...No one reads the article?
It doesn't actually show that. If previous results were, say, half Amulet Bloom and half Twin Exarch, then that'd be one thing. But that was never the case. Like, I just looked up the last large tournament from before the bannings, and there were eight different decks in the Top 8. Well, that's an SCG tournament and those tend to be weird and not representative of other environments. But looking back, it generally wasn't the case that either Twin Exarch or Amulet Bloom decks were dominating Modern at any point...What do you mean? What does that show other than deck type B became dominant as the next best choice after deck type A became nonviable due to card bans?