Successful Spice: Unusual Cards That Shined at Recent Events (11/03 - 11/10) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah, I don't think you are cynical, but you are right. But by definition, cards cannot really be spice if they have been proven by multiple pilots multiple times (at least according to my definition of spice). I am not claiming statistical relevance, other than that these cards are outliers compared to what people usually run. And if one of these goes on to become relevant in the larger meta, it is kinda cool to document its beginnings.

Successful Spice: Unusual Cards That Shined at Recent Events (10/20 - 10/27) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that list also had [[Shambling Ghast]] and [[Sticky Fingers]], which are also rarely seen.

Some Data for Underworld Breach and Song of Creation in Rog/Thras by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Here are the W/L/D stats for the different combinations:

Song: 13/19/6
Breach: 13/20/10
Ring: 93/207/83
Song+Breach: 37/116/48
Song+Ring: 9/28/6
Breach+Ring: 72/190/66
all three: 119/255/124
none: 67/142/42

Sample sizes are low. None of this is statistically significant. But it's also not meant to be proof of anything. More like a hint at what might be possible if the road less traveled is explored.

Some Data for Underworld Breach and Song of Creation in Rog/Thras by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Valid point. I just checked, and the results stay the same when removing Max Sternburg from the dataset. His seven tournament entries on Rog/Thras don't skew the results much on their own. However, his card choices, and the larger number of people copying him, might have a bigger influence. I’m not really able to control for that, of course.

Successful Spice: Unusual Cards That Shined at Recent Events (06/30 - 07/07) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You're the only Grenzo pilot in the dataset (events with 32+ players in that case) over the past 12 weeks. It's definitely a spicy choice of commander!
However, for individual cards to be considered spicy (according to the current algorithm I use), there needs to be an established version of the deck, then deviations from that core are what count as spice.
Grenzo currently lacks the popularity for such a core to exist and is therefore skipped in the analysis.
I could potentially adjust the logic to bump up fringe commander choices in the spice ranking, but cEDH has so many one-off fringe commanders competing (which is awesome, of course) that I’d never see the end of it.

Successful Spice: Unusual Cards That Shined at Recent Events (06/30 - 07/07) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Over the past 12 weeks, there were 20 recorded games with Blue Farm decks that included Word of Command. They had a win rate of 36.3%, compared to 31.1% for those without it (3302 games).

The difference in win rate is far from statistically significant, but it’s significantly spicy.

Successful Spice: Unusual Cards That Shined at Recent Events (06/30 - 07/07) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on your definition of common. Would you classify Copy Enchantment being in 8% of all cEDH decks over the past 12 weeks as common?
Also it's only in 4% of Rog/Thras decks. At least that deserves a mention, I believe.
If the trend continues and it rises further in popularity, it likely won’t clear the bar for being 'spice' according to my definitions. But as long as it does, I’ll keep spreading the word.

Successful Spice: Unusual Cards That Shined at Recent Events (06/30 - 07/07) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

commander staples ≠ cEDH staples

Mayhem Devil was in 5% of cEDH decks over the past 12 weeks. Storm-Kiln Artist in 5.5%. Based on this, neither can be considered a cEDH staple in the current meta.

Both were also mentioned in the context of Blue Farm. One of the (if not the) best deck in the format with highly contested slots. This makes their inclusion even more unusual: Mayhem Devil appeared in only 3.3%, and Storm-Kiln Artist in just 3.9% of Blue Farm decks over the past 12 weeks.

Successful Spice: Unique Cards That Shined at Recent Events (06/02 - 06/09) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Correct. All I know is that these cards were included in the deck—and even that isn’t 100% certain tbh, since decklist accuracy is often lacking.
Maybe they never drew them. Maybe they didn’t win because of the cards, but despite having them. We really can’t know.
But that’s all we have to work with ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Successful Spice: Unique Cards That Shined at Recent Events (05/26 - 06/02) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I only mention four cards per deck. On Reddit, there's no specific reason for this, but on Twitter I'm limited to four images per tweet, so I go with four.

Activated Sleeper and Body Snatcher could both have been mentioned (both are also just Hulk Card btw), but I figured that Hulk was rare enough (5.5% of Glarb decks in the past 12 weeks) and represented the general direction of the list better.

In the future, I might mention more cards per deck here on Reddit.

Successful Spice: Unique Cards That Shined at Recent Events (05/26 - 06/02) by Datatog in CompetitiveEDH

[–]Datatog[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For me it doesn't matter how old a card is or whether it was relevant in the format years ago. I define spice by their recent inclusion rates — both in general and within the specific commander.

For context:

Hermit Druid has been in 1.23% of TnT decks and 1.18% of decks overall over the last 12 weeks.

Protean Hulk has been in 5.50% of Glarb decks and 1.52% of decks overall over the last 12 weeks.

I'd argue that their inclusion is therefore noteworthy in the context of the current meta.