
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


www.patreon.com/EternaldurdlesTCGPLAYER AFFILIATE LINK:https://partner.tcgplayer.com/OexAAnhttps://bit.ly/MoxfieldSorceryIn this episode of Sorcery Common Sense, Force of Phil and Zac Clark take a deep dive into one of Sorcery’s strangest and most skill-testing avatars: Impostor.Impostor isn’t about raw power — it’s about timing, pivoting, and knowing what your deck is actually trying to do. The conversation explores how to build Impostor as a midrange value deck, how Common Sense enables flexible game plans, and why some avatars simply don’t work when you lose pre-game effects.Topics covered include:Why Impostor is fundamentally different from other avatarsWhich avatars work (and don’t) with ImpostorCurve philosophy and skipping traditional three-dropsJumping mana with Shrines and coresUsing Common Sense as a value and tutoring engineInformation asymmetry with disruption toolsWhen to pivot — and when not toWhy Impostor rewards experience more than raw deck powerThis episode is less about “the list” and more about how to think when building and piloting flexible Sorcery decks. If you enjoy theory-heavy conversations, midrange problem-solving, and avatar-driven decision trees, this one’s for you.
By Common Sensewww.patreon.com/EternaldurdlesTCGPLAYER AFFILIATE LINK:https://partner.tcgplayer.com/OexAAnhttps://bit.ly/MoxfieldSorceryIn this episode of Sorcery Common Sense, Force of Phil and Zac Clark take a deep dive into one of Sorcery’s strangest and most skill-testing avatars: Impostor.Impostor isn’t about raw power — it’s about timing, pivoting, and knowing what your deck is actually trying to do. The conversation explores how to build Impostor as a midrange value deck, how Common Sense enables flexible game plans, and why some avatars simply don’t work when you lose pre-game effects.Topics covered include:Why Impostor is fundamentally different from other avatarsWhich avatars work (and don’t) with ImpostorCurve philosophy and skipping traditional three-dropsJumping mana with Shrines and coresUsing Common Sense as a value and tutoring engineInformation asymmetry with disruption toolsWhen to pivot — and when not toWhy Impostor rewards experience more than raw deck powerThis episode is less about “the list” and more about how to think when building and piloting flexible Sorcery decks. If you enjoy theory-heavy conversations, midrange problem-solving, and avatar-driven decision trees, this one’s for you.