# Strategy Specifications ## Deck Name And Archetype Selesnya Gearhulk is registered as a Standard green-white midrange-ramp deck built around early board presence, counter-scaling threats, and artifact-centered top-end pressure. The submitted list validates at 60 main-deck cards and 15 sideboard cards. The stated tags are `midrange`, `ramp`, `artifact`, and `counters`; remove duplicate tag entries in downstream metadata while preserving all four strategic labels. - Count validation: Main deck is exactly 60 cards, with 23 apparent lands and 37 apparent nonlands if Starting Town and Multiversal Passage are confirmed as lands or mana-producing utility cards. Sideboard is exactly 15 cards. Veles should still rely on card database type lines rather than name inference when counting mana sources. - Format validation: The intended format is Standard, but legality should be treated as unresolved until the active rules/card database confirms every exact card name and printing. Card text check required for Starting Town, Seam Rip, Gene Pollinator, Practiced Offense, Brightglass Gearhulk, Shardmage's Rescue, Multiversal Passage, Hushwood Verge, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Meltstrider's Resolve, Abandoned Air Temple, Erode, Restoration Magic, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair before asserting precise role, legality, or timing rules. - Stock status: This is a hybrid or rogue Standard configuration rather than a presumed stock archetype. The shell has recognizable green-white ramp-midrange signals from Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, and Brightglass Gearhulk, but the exact build should not be treated as solved metagame stock by a pilot. - Role validation: The default seat role is proactive midrange with ramp pressure, not pure control. The deck wants to develop mana and bodies early, convert counters or artifact synergies into board advantage, and force the opponent to answer oversized permanents rather than spending the early game holding up interaction without pressure. - Mana concern: The mana base is green-heavy but splash-white, with Forest, Temple Garden, Plains, Hushwood Verge, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage forming the registered sources. Opening hands should be questioned if they cast neither Llanowar Elves nor Pawpatch Recruit early, or if they contain white cards without a confirmed white source. - Curve concern: The deck appears to rely on one-mana acceleration and early creatures to make Brightglass Gearhulk and Surrak, Elusive Hunter arrive before the opponent stabilizes. Hands with only top-end and no early mana development should be downgraded unless the visible matchup is slow and the mana is already functional. - Artifact/counter concern: Brightglass Gearhulk is the named archetype anchor, but Veles must not invent its text. Treat it as a high-priority payoff only after legal actions, revealed text, or local card data show what it finds, modifies, or rewards. - Opponent info status: No opponent deck, metagame target, or matchup label is supplied in this batch. Until public information identifies the opponent, pilot decisions should use format-generic posture: build board, preserve mana efficiency, avoid speculative hate usage, and do not name absent staples or hidden cards. ## Thesis Selesnya Gearhulk assembles early green mana, cheap board presence, and large counter/artifact payoffs so the opponent must answer threats on curve instead of dictating the pace. The deck should prioritize hands and lines that produce a turn-one or turn-two development play, keep green mana functional, and convert that start into Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, or a counter-scaling creature before the opponent can trade one-for-one profitably. The deck wins by making the battlefield too large to contain, then forcing combat through with oversized bodies, counters, and selective protection. Brightglass Gearhulk is the named payoff and should be treated as a major commitment card, but exact tactical use remains conditional until card text is confirmed. Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Badgermole Cub, Pawpatch Recruit, Gene Pollinator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Practiced Offense, and Meltstrider's Resolve form the apparent pressure-and-counters core; Card text check required for all unknown or set-specific text before assuming triggered abilities, counter placement, keywords, or timing. The deck is not trying to play draw-go control, exhaust the opponent with pure removal, or hold speculative tricks while missing creature development. Use Seam Rip, Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, and sideboard interaction to protect or clear the way for board dominance, not as a reason to skip mana-efficient pressure. If Veles sees legal attacks that pressure life totals without losing the core engine, combat should usually matter more than preserving perfect material. The deck should prioritize mana first, board second, payoff timing third, and protection fourth. Llanowar Elves, Forest, Temple Garden, Hushwood Verge, Plains, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage must be evaluated by legal mana output at runtime, not by guessed types. When mana and board are already stable, shift priority toward high-impact permanents over low-impact sequencing. ## Role Package - Threats: Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Badgermole Cub, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Pawpatch Recruit, Brightglass Gearhulk, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair are the bodies most likely to win through combat or force removal. Card text check required for Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Badgermole Cub, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Brightglass Gearhulk, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair before assigning exact attack, block, counter, or trigger rules. - Payoffs: Brightglass Gearhulk is the deck-name payoff and should anchor midgame commitment decisions when the legal action appears and mana is stable. Practiced Offense, Gene Pollinator, Meltstrider's Resolve, and Badgermole Cub appear to support the counter-scaling plan, but Veles should use revealed card text and legal actions before treating them as pump, counter placement, token, or combat-modifier effects. - Engines: Llanowar Elves is the cleanest confirmed acceleration engine, and opening hands that cast it early deserve a higher baseline. Pawpatch Recruit and Badgermole Cub are apparent early permanents that can bridge into the larger threats; keep them when they make the curve coherent rather than waiting for a perfect payoff hand. - Velocity: Nurturing Pixie, Keen-Eyed Curator, Gene Pollinator, Practiced Offense, Starting Town, Multiversal Passage, and Abandoned Air Temple may contribute selection, fixing, recursion, or utility depending on confirmed text. Card text check required; do not spend these cards for assumed value unless the rules engine exposes the exact legal action and target. - Interaction: Seam Rip, Erode, Sheltered by Ghosts, Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, and Restoration Magic are the primary cards to classify as answer or disruption modules only after their legal actions are visible. Use interaction to stop opposing snowball permanents, graveyard reliance, artifact/enchantment pressure, or combat races; avoid firing narrow hate into unknown boards. - Protection: Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, Sheltered by Ghosts, and Restoration Magic are the likely protection or stabilization package, but Card text check required for Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, Sheltered by Ghosts, and Restoration Magic. Protection should defend Brightglass Gearhulk or the most important counter-scaling creature when losing it would collapse pressure. - Recursion: Restoration Magic, Nurturing Pixie, Soul-Guide Lantern, and Keen-Eyed Curator require card text confirmation before being treated as recursion, blink, graveyard control, or card-flow tools. If runtime legal actions show a return, blink, or graveyard-selection mode, choose targets based on visible battlefield impact and matchup role rather than generic card value. - Mana: Llanowar Elves is the proactive accelerator; Forest, Temple Garden, Plains, Hushwood Verge, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage are the registered mana base. Keep green access high, confirm white access before relying on white sideboard cards, and avoid sacrificing or tapping utility lands until Veles confirms the payoff is worth the tempo cost. - Sideboard modules: Erode handles artifact/enchantment-style problems if its text confirms that role; Sheltered by Ghosts and Restoration Magic are anti-interaction or removal/stabilization candidates; Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern are graveyard hate; Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair are threat-plan adjustments. Exact sideboard use must wait for matchup identity and confirmed card text. ## Primary Win Conditions - Brightglass Gearhulk pressure is the default main win path once mana and board are stable. Setup requires early green development from Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, or Keen-Eyed Curator, then enough mana to cast Brightglass Gearhulk without abandoning a necessary protection or interaction window. Execute by committing Brightglass Gearhulk when it is a legal action and its visible impact advances the board immediately; Card text check required before assuming exact counter placement, card selection, or artifact synergy. Prioritize this path against fair creature decks, slow interaction decks, and any opponent whose visible board cannot punish a tap-out payoff. - Counter-scaling creature combat is the primary non-Gearhulk kill. Setup uses Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Practiced Offense, Meltstrider's Resolve, Pawpatch Recruit, and Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker to build a board where one or two bodies become difficult to block profitably; Card text check required before assuming any specific counter trigger or pump timing. Execute by attacking when visible blocks do not trade away the only scaling threat for too little damage, and use Seam Rip or Shardmage's Rescue only when the rules engine exposes a legal action that protects the winning body or removes the blocker that actually changes combat. Prioritize this path when Brightglass Gearhulk is absent, too slow, or already answered. - Surrak, Elusive Hunter is the top-end combat closer when the game is about one large threat surviving. Setup by developing mana and forcing earlier removal onto Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, or Brightglass Gearhulk. Execute by committing Surrak, Elusive Hunter when the opponent is pressured, low on visible resources, or forced to answer multiple bodies; Card text check required before assuming keywords, protection, or attack triggers. Prioritize this path when a single high-impact creature can stabilize combat and end the game faster than spreading counters across smaller creatures. - Wide-to-tall pressure wins by making every removal spell awkward. Setup with Llanowar Elves into multiple low-cost creatures, then choose Practiced Offense, Gene Pollinator, or Meltstrider's Resolve lines only when legal actions show they improve the current board. Execute by attacking in groups when the opponent cannot block all relevant bodies, but keep back a mana creature or small creature if losing it would prevent Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter on the next turn. Prioritize this path against opponents who spend turns setting up engines, graveyards, or mana rather than contesting the battlefield. ## Secondary Win Conditions - Post-board threat replacement can win when the main payoff package is over-targeted. Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair are sideboard threat options that should be treated as matchup-adjusted pressure cards only after their card text and legal actions are visible. Use them to diversify threat size, resilience, or timing when Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker are poor against the opponent's shown answers. - Small-creature chip damage matters when the opponent spends resources answering the wrong axis. Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, Gene Pollinator, and Llanowar Elves can collectively pressure life totals if the opponent stumbles or refuses to trade. Convert chip damage into a real clock by adding Practiced Offense or Meltstrider's Resolve only when the visible combat math improves; do not risk the only mana creature for minor damage if the next payoff depends on it. - Interaction-backed tempo wins when one opposing permanent is holding the race together. Seam Rip should be saved for the blocker, attacker, artifact, enchantment, or other visible object that actually changes the turn cycle, subject to confirmed card text and legal targets. Shardmage's Rescue and Meltstrider's Resolve can support this line if their exposed legal actions protect a lethal or stabilizing attacker. - Utility-card value can become a win condition only when the engine proves the text. Nurturing Pixie, Keen-Eyed Curator, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage may provide selection, recursion, fixing, or board utility, but Card text check required before treating any of them as a value engine. When legal actions reveal a choice, prefer the option that creates immediate board pressure or unlocks a known payoff over speculative long-term value. ## Emergency Lines - When behind on life, stabilize combat before maximizing damage. Preserve the creature that blocks the largest visible attacker, trade Pawpatch Recruit or Badgermole Cub only when the exchange buys a full turn or protects a larger follow-up, and use Seam Rip on the threat that defines the shortest clock. If Sheltered by Ghosts or Restoration Magic is present after sideboarding, use it only according to confirmed legal text and targets. - When behind on board, stop widening into bad attacks and rebuild around one high-impact permanent. Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Goldvein Hydra, or Balustrade Wurm should be prioritized over low-impact chip damage if the opponent already dominates combat. Avoid spending Practiced Offense or Meltstrider's Resolve into open removal unless the legal action prevents lethal damage or creates a clearly necessary block or attack. - When behind on cards, make each spell change the battlefield. Prefer permanents and actions that demand an answer, avoid trading Seam Rip for a marginal target, and do not consume Shardmage's Rescue on a replaceable creature. If Keen-Eyed Curator, Nurturing Pixie, Gene Pollinator, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, or Multiversal Passage exposes card-flow text, choose the line that finds or preserves a real threat. - When behind on mana, protect green access and delay greedy commitments. Keep Llanowar Elves alive when it is the only route to Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter, play legal lands that preserve both green and white access, and avoid utility activations from Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, or Multiversal Passage unless the payoff is visible and immediate. - When facing graveyard recursion or combo pressure, switch from racing by default to disruption plus clock. Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern are sideboard graveyard tools, but use them only when the opponent's public graveyard, visible spell text, or known matchup role makes the effect relevant. Against combo-like pressure, prioritize the fastest legal clock backed by Seam Rip, Erode, Sheltered by Ghosts, or Restoration Magic only when those cards have confirmed relevant targets. - When major win conditions are removed, preserve remaining threat diversity. Do not concede strategic agency after Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter is answered; rebuild with Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Badgermole Cub, Pawpatch Recruit, Gene Pollinator, and post-board threats. Force the opponent to answer multiple card types and creature sizes instead of overcommitting the last premium threat into a visible answer. ## Resource Model - Mana is the deck's most important convertible resource because Brightglass Gearhulk and Surrak, Elusive Hunter reward reaching high-impact turns before the opponent stabilizes. Treat Llanowar Elves as both acceleration and a fragile land-equivalent; preserve it when it is the only route to the next major spell, but trade it in combat only when the rules engine shows that the exchange prevents a shorter clock or unlocks lethal pressure. - Life is a spendable resource only when it buys tempo or prevents falling behind on curve. Temple Garden can justify life payment when untapped green or white lets the deck cast Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, or a curve-critical payoff; decline life payment when the hand already has untapped colors and the opponent's visible pressure makes every point matter. - Hand size converts into board density, not long control inevitability. Prioritize deploying Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, Gene Pollinator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Brightglass Gearhulk, and Surrak, Elusive Hunter in sequences that leave a relevant follow-up after removal. Avoid spending Practiced Offense, Meltstrider's Resolve, Shardmage's Rescue, or Seam Rip just to use mana if the visible board does not make the effect matter. - Board presence is the primary bank for damage, counters, protection, and combat leverage. Small creatures are valuable because they carry later effects and force awkward blocks, but do not expose the only creature needed for a visible Practiced Offense, Gene Pollinator, Meltstrider's Resolve, or Brightglass Gearhulk line unless the legal combat result is worth that risk. - Lands are both color access and future action capacity. Forest and Temple Garden are premium early because they enable Llanowar Elves and green creature development; Plains and white-producing lands matter once Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, Shardmage's Rescue, Nurturing Pixie, Sheltered by Ghosts, Restoration Magic, or Zack Fair are in hand or legal. Starting Town, Hushwood Verge, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage need Card text check required before treating them as fixing, selection, sacrifice, or utility engines. - Graveyard and exile are normally public-information zones rather than primary engines for this deck. Track opposing graveyard size and card types for Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern decisions after sideboarding, and track your own graveyard only when legal actions from Restoration Magic, Balustrade Wurm, Nurturing Pixie, Keen-Eyed Curator, or another exposed card text make it relevant. - Sacrifice fodder is not assumed unless a legal action explicitly asks for it. If a card such as Nurturing Pixie, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, or sideboard material exposes a sacrifice, return, or exchange action, spend the least strategically important visible permanent only when the resulting legal action advances board stability, mana, or lethal pressure. - Sideboard bullets convert narrow matchup information into sharper resource trades. Erode should answer a visible artifact or enchantment only when that object matters; Sheltered by Ghosts and Restoration Magic should be evaluated as protection, removal, or recovery only after card text and targets are confirmed; Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern are high-value only against public graveyard reliance; Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair are threat pivots when the matchup asks for different pressure. ## Mana Guide - Keep hands need early green access, a castable first play, and a path to three or more mana. A hand with Forest, Temple Garden, or confirmed green from Hushwood Verge plus Llanowar Elves is usually structurally functional; a hand relying only on utility lands with Card text check required should be treated cautiously until the rules engine exposes their mana abilities. - Mulligan hands with no reliable green source unless the hand has multiple legal white plays and a clear two-turn plan. Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, and Gene Pollinator all pressure the game only if the first turns produce colored mana on time. Do not keep a hand whose first meaningful action starts too late unless it contains interaction that clearly answers the opponent's visible or known plan. - Sequence lands to preserve untapped green first and white second. Lead Forest or untapped Temple Garden when Llanowar Elves or Pawpatch Recruit is available; lead Temple Garden or another confirmed white source when Seam Rip or Practiced Offense is the early stabilizing play. Delay Multiversal Passage, Starting Town, or Abandoned Air Temple when their text is unconfirmed and an untapped colored source is needed this turn. - Play lands before combat or priority actions when the legal line requires mana for Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, Meltstrider's Resolve, Shardmage's Rescue, Sheltered by Ghosts, Restoration Magic, or a payoff creature. Hold a land until after draw or selection only when a visible legal action from Keen-Eyed Curator, Nurturing Pixie, Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, or Multiversal Passage can change which land should be played. - Use Llanowar Elves mana for acceleration before optional utility. Casting Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter a turn early is usually more important than activating an uncertain land or holding up a marginal trick, unless visible opposing pressure requires Seam Rip or protection this turn. - Preserve color flexibility after sideboarding. Keep white available for Sheltered by Ghosts and Restoration Magic when those cards are in hand, keep green available for Goldvein Hydra and Balustrade Wurm when they are part of the plan, and avoid spending the only white or green source on optional costs unless the current legal action is decisive. ## Mulligan Guide - Strong keep: Keep Forest or untapped Temple Garden, Llanowar Elves, a second land, and at least one of Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Brightglass Gearhulk, or Surrak, Elusive Hunter. This hand has acceleration, a board plan, and a payoff; prefer it unless the opponent's known strategy demands early Seam Rip or another specific answer. - Strong keep: Keep two or three lands with reliable green, Pawpatch Recruit or Badgermole Cub, Practiced Offense, and Brightglass Gearhulk. This hand develops pressure without relying on Llanowar Elves surviving, and it can convert a creature board into a larger midgame. - Medium keep: Keep Temple Garden, Hushwood Verge, Forest, Keen-Eyed Curator, Gene Pollinator, Practiced Offense, and Seam Rip if both colors are functional. This hand is slower but interactive; it improves on the draw or against creature decks where Seam Rip and board sizing matter. - Risky keep: Keep one-land Forest plus Llanowar Elves only when the hand has multiple one- or two-mana plays and the matchup is not full of early removal. Ship it if losing Llanowar Elves leaves no second turn action or no path to cast Brightglass Gearhulk and Surrak, Elusive Hunter. - Automatic ship: Mulligan any seven-card hand with no reliable green source. The deck's early pressure and ramp depend on Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, and Gene Pollinator, so white-only or utility-land-only hands need rules-engine confirmation before they can be trusted. - Automatic ship: Mulligan hands whose first meaningful play is Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter with no Llanowar Elves and no early creature. This deck is not built to skip the first turns and then recover from behind with one exposed threat. - Matchup-dependent keep: Keep Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, two lands, and early creatures more often against visible aggressive or creature-heavy opponents. Against slower decks, prefer hands with Llanowar Elves, Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or layered threats over hands that are mostly reactive. - Play/draw adjustment: On the play, prioritize Llanowar Elves or Pawpatch Recruit plus green land because tempo snowballs. On the draw, accept a slightly slower two-land hand with Seam Rip, Keen-Eyed Curator, Badgermole Cub, or Practiced Offense if it interacts with the opponent's first board. - Trap hand: Do not keep several payoff cards plus Starting Town, Abandoned Air Temple, Multiversal Passage, or Hushwood Verge when their required mana behavior is unconfirmed. Card text check required before treating those lands as untapped fixing, selection, or ramp. - Trap hand: Do not keep a hand full of Practiced Offense, Meltstrider's Resolve, Shardmage's Rescue, and Seam Rip without creatures. These cards need legal targets or board context, and the rules engine may offer no useful action if no creature is present. ## Turn Arc - Turn 1: Lead Forest or untapped Temple Garden into Llanowar Elves whenever available and legal. If Llanowar Elves is absent, play Pawpatch Recruit when green is available; otherwise choose the land sequence that guarantees turn 2 green plus white access for Seam Rip or Practiced Offense. - Turn 1 deviation: Preserve life from Temple Garden when no untapped colored mana is needed this turn. Pay life only when it enables Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, or a confirmed early white action that changes the board or prevents immediate pressure. - Turn 2: Use Llanowar Elves acceleration to deploy Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Keen-Eyed Curator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, or another legal board-building play. If the opponent has a threatening visible creature, hold or cast Seam Rip only when the legal action clearly improves the race or protects the next turn. - Turn 2 deviation: Cast Practiced Offense or Meltstrider's Resolve only when the rules engine exposes a meaningful legal target and the effect advances pressure, stabilizes combat, or preserves a key creature. Card text check required; do not spend these cards merely to use mana. - Turn 3: Prefer the line that creates the strongest board while keeping a follow-up after removal. With Llanowar Elves, this may be Brightglass Gearhulk if legal; without acceleration, curve Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, or Keen-Eyed Curator into a board that makes Practiced Offense live. - Turn 3 deviation: Hold Shardmage's Rescue when it can protect the only important threat from a visible answer or open-mana interaction. Card text check required; if no relevant protection or target action is exposed, continue developing creatures instead. - Turns 4-5: Commit Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter when the board, mana, and visible interaction make tapping out acceptable. Prefer Brightglass Gearhulk when it immediately improves existing permanents or stabilizes combat through legal actions; prefer Surrak, Elusive Hunter when a large standalone threat pressures the opponent better. - Turns 4-5 deviation: Against heavy removal or sweepers shown by public information, stagger threats. Deploy one major card, keep another of Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker in reserve, and use Practiced Offense, Shardmage's Rescue, or Meltstrider's Resolve only when the legal exchange matters. - Late game: Convert every draw into board pressure, protected combat, or a decisive answer. Use Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Goldvein Hydra after sideboarding, or Balustrade Wurm after sideboarding as closing threats, but rely on visible legal actions rather than assumed card text. - Late-game deviation: When behind, prioritize survival lines with Seam Rip, Sheltered by Ghosts after sideboarding, Restoration Magic after sideboarding, and blocks that preserve a path to crack back. When ahead, avoid exposing the last premium threat into known interaction unless the current legal action threatens lethal or prevents the opponent's comeback. ## Card Roles - Llanowar Elves: Treat Llanowar Elves as the deck's cleanest turn-1 accelerator and the card that converts medium hands into fast Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter hands. Cast it early when green is available, protect it only when losing it would strand the hand, and do not attack with it if the mana will matter next turn. Against removal-heavy opponents, assume it may die and keep hands that still function if it does. - Pawpatch Recruit: Use Pawpatch Recruit as early pressure that keeps Practiced Offense, Meltstrider's Resolve, and other creature-dependent actions live. Cast it before slower creatures when the hand needs a board immediately, and value it higher on the play where early damage can force awkward blocks. Card text check required before relying on any late-game mode, counters text, or scaling ability. - Badgermole Cub: Use Badgermole Cub as the preferred early body when the goal is to build a board for counters, combat sizing, or Gearhulk payoff turns. Cast it before holding up situational spells unless the opponent already presents a must-answer threat. Card text check required, so the agent should not assume exact attack, landfall, counter, or trigger behavior without rules-engine actions confirming it. - Keen-Eyed Curator: Use Keen-Eyed Curator as a flexible early creature with matchup-specific value, especially when graveyards, small creatures, or selection-related legal actions appear. Cast it when it develops the board while leaving future mana smooth, but do not choose graveyard or selection actions unless the visible options make the exchange useful. Card text check required before treating it as graveyard hate, card selection, or a counters engine. - Gene Pollinator: Treat Gene Pollinator as a mid-curve synergy creature that should usually enter before Brightglass Gearhulk when the hand wants more permanents to enhance. Cast it into stable boards where its body or possible counters interactions matter; hold it only when a removal-heavy opponent is likely to punish overextension and another threat is already enough. Card text check required before assuming token, counter, or creature-type interactions. - Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker: Use Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker as a resilient midgame threat or stabilizing body rather than as filler. Prioritize it when the opponent's visible board requires toughness, pressure, or a creature that can carry combat-enhancing actions. Card text check required before assuming evasion, graveyard text, swamp-related text, or defensive keywords; rely on visible legal attacks and blocks. - Brightglass Gearhulk: Treat Brightglass Gearhulk as the deck's defining payoff and the main reason to accelerate. Commit it when the current board, mana, and opponent's visible interaction make a large artifact threat or enhancement action valuable now. Prefer casting it with at least one useful creature or permanent already present if legal actions indicate it improves the board, but do not wait indefinitely when the opponent is pressuring life total or the hand lacks other plays. Against control, avoid running the first Brightglass Gearhulk into obvious open interaction unless waiting gives the opponent a better window. - Surrak, Elusive Hunter: Use Surrak, Elusive Hunter as the premium standalone closer and a way to punish opponents who spend resources answering early creatures. Cast it when the opponent is low on visible answers, when the deck needs one large threat rather than several small bodies, or when attacking pressure matters more than incremental synergy. Card text check required before assuming combat keywords, protection, or counter text; choose attacks only from rules-engine legal combat output. - Practiced Offense: Use Practiced Offense as a combat and board-sizing tool, not as a default mana sink. Cast it when the legal target and visible board make damage, survival, or a decisive attack/block better this turn. Avoid using it on an unimportant creature into open mana if the deck has a stronger upcoming Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter turn. Card text check required before assuming whether it places counters, grants keywords, or functions at instant speed. - Seam Rip: Treat Seam Rip as the main-deck answer slot and save it for threats that change the race, block the deck's large attackers, or threaten to snowball. Cast it early against aggressive creatures only when the visible exchange prevents meaningful damage or protects the next board-development turn. Against slower decks, hold Seam Rip until a specific target appears; do not spend it on a low-impact permanent just because a legal action exists. Card text check required before assuming exact permanent types, timing, or exile/destroy behavior. - Meltstrider's Resolve: Use Meltstrider's Resolve as a situational protection, pump, or combat-management card only after rules-engine text exposes a relevant legal action. Hold it when the deck has a key threat that may need help surviving combat or interaction, and avoid spending it on early chip damage unless that action changes the clock or preserves a creature that matters. Card text check required before relying on protection, counters, damage prevention, or keyword grants. - Shardmage's Rescue: Treat Shardmage's Rescue as a single-copy tactical card for protecting a key permanent or winning a stack/combat exchange, not as a routine curve play. Prioritize it for Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or a creature carrying important counters when the opponent presents visible removal or combat pressure. Card text check required before assuming the exact protection mode, attachment behavior, or timing. - Nurturing Pixie: Use Nurturing Pixie as a specialized single-copy utility creature whose best use depends heavily on visible legal actions. Cast it when it develops the board without disrupting the curve, or when rules-engine actions show a beneficial interaction with another permanent. Card text check required before assuming bounce, counters, lifegain, or enter-the-battlefield synergy. - Starting Town: Treat Starting Town as a mana source whose exact fixing, tapped status, and utility text must be verified by legal actions. Play it when it preserves green access for early creatures or white access for Seam Rip and Practiced Offense, but do not keep hands that depend on unconfirmed untapped behavior. - Temple Garden: Use Temple Garden as the most reliable named green-white fixing. Pay life or choose untapped modes only when the immediate action matters: Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, or a curve-critical play. Against aggressive opponents, preserve life when another land already enables the turn. - Forest: Value Forest highly because green starts the deck. Hands with Forest plus Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, or Keen-Eyed Curator are much more functional than hands with white access only. - Plains: Use Plains to support white interaction and combat spells after green development is secure. Avoid Plains-heavy keeps that cannot cast early green creatures. - Hushwood Verge: Treat Hushwood Verge as likely fixing or utility, but require rules-engine confirmation before depending on exact colors or speed. Sequence it to maintain green on turn 1 or turn 2 whenever possible. - Abandoned Air Temple: Treat Abandoned Air Temple as an uncertain utility land until card text is confirmed. Do not let it replace a needed Forest or Temple Garden in mulligan evaluation unless the engine shows it produces the needed mana. - Multiversal Passage: Treat Multiversal Passage as a single-copy utility land with unknown timing and color reliability. Card text check required; keep it as a bonus land, not as the only path to casting early creatures or Brightglass Gearhulk. ## Interaction Priorities - Priority: Save Seam Rip for permanents that block the main plan: large evasive threats, engines producing repeated material, blockers that stonewall Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter, and creatures that make racing impossible. Use it on small attackers only when the damage prevented protects a critical development turn or keeps life above a dangerous threshold. - Priority: Treat Shardmage's Rescue and Meltstrider's Resolve as protection or combat-interaction resources only when the rules engine shows relevant timing and targets. Protect Brightglass Gearhulk first, Surrak, Elusive Hunter second, and a counter-enhanced Badgermole Cub, Pawpatch Recruit, Gene Pollinator, or Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker third; do not spend the single Shardmage's Rescue on a replaceable Llanowar Elves unless losing mana immediately strands a payoff. - Priority: The registered main deck has no confirmed discard spell or counterspell, so never hold mana hoping to counter or strip a card unless Forge exposes that exact legal action. If a temporary target, bounce, exile, or shield action appears from Nurturing Pixie, Practiced Offense, Seam Rip, Shardmage's Rescue, or Meltstrider's Resolve, choose from visible legal text and require card text confirmation before assuming the effect category. - Bait: Lead with Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, or Gene Pollinator when the opponent is representing removal and Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter is the more important follow-up. Do not expose Brightglass Gearhulk as the first premium threat into open interaction unless waiting gives the opponent time to stabilize or the hand has another payoff. - Ignore: Do not spend Seam Rip or protection on low-impact utility bodies, small chip attackers, or expendable blockers when the deck can race with larger creatures. Ignore graveyard, artifact, or enchantment permanents in game one unless visible board state shows they are immediately changing combat, life totals, card flow, or legality of the deck's attacks. - Archetype shift: Against aggressive decks, lower the interaction threshold and use Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, and Meltstrider's Resolve to prevent damage, preserve blockers, and keep life stable before maximizing payoff value. Against control or slow midrange, raise the threshold: force answers with medium threats, protect the first threat that will actually end the game, and avoid trading interaction for temporary tempo unless it opens a lethal or near-lethal attack. ## Combat And Trading Rules - Attack priority: Attack when legal combat output shows the deck can pressure without sacrificing the creature needed for the next Brightglass Gearhulk, Practiced Offense, or counter-based turn. Prefer attacks with Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Brightglass Gearhulk, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, and enlarged Badgermole Cub or Pawpatch Recruit when the opponent's blocks are visibly poor. - Block priority: Block early against aggro to protect life and buy the turn needed for Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter. Trade Llanowar Elves only after its mana is no longer needed, and trade small creatures freely when the exchange preserves a larger threat, enables a clean crack-back, or prevents a snowballing attacker from connecting again. - Preserve engines: Keep Llanowar Elves alive through the first payoff turn when possible, and avoid sending it into combat unless the extra damage is decisive or the mana is redundant. Preserve Gene Pollinator, Badgermole Cub, Pawpatch Recruit, and Keen-Eyed Curator when visible legal actions suggest they grow, carry counters, or improve future board scaling; Card text check required before assuming exact counter or engine text. - Trade rules: Trade up whenever a smaller creature can remove a blocker that stops Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter from dominating later attacks. Decline even trades that shrink the board too much when the hand needs bodies for Practiced Offense, potential Gearhulk enhancement, or pressure after a removal exchange. - Protection timing: Use Shardmage's Rescue or Meltstrider's Resolve in combat only when it saves a creature that matters more than the card, wins a key fight, or prevents lethal or near-lethal damage. Do not use protection for marginal extra damage unless the opponent is already in range and the attack materially shortens the clock. - Life thresholds: Above roughly 12 life against non-burn boards, favor board development and pressure over defensive trades. At 8 to 12 life, start valuing blocks that preserve future turns; below 8 life, prioritize survival, legal lifegain or protection if exposed, and removing attackers over maximizing Brightglass Gearhulk value. - Archetype differences: Against creature swarms, block more often, force trades, and make the game about one large stabilized threat. Against control, attack with resilient or redundant threats, avoid overcommitting all creatures into a likely reset, and make each combat step demand an answer. Against opposing midrange, use Practiced Offense and Meltstrider's Resolve as swing cards for board parity rather than as routine damage boosts. ## Selection And Tutor Rules - Selection baseline: Treat this list as having no confirmed unconditional tutor unless the rules engine exposes an explicit search, look, reveal, scry, surveil, or choose-card action. Do not assume Brightglass Gearhulk, Multiversal Passage, Abandoned Air Temple, Keen-Eyed Curator, Gene Pollinator, or Nurturing Pixie can find cards without visible legal action text; Card text check required. - Brightglass Gearhulk choices: When Brightglass Gearhulk creates a visible selection prompt, choose the card or permanent role that solves the current bottleneck, not the flashiest name. Prioritize a missing mana source when unable to deploy hand, a stabilizing body when under pressure, Surrak, Elusive Hunter or another large threat when the board is stable, and Seam Rip or protection only when the visible opposing permanent or stack situation demands interaction. - Land-drop timing: Delay the land drop until after a visible selection action only when that action can reveal, choose, or search for lands and the current land drop is still available. Otherwise play the land that preserves green first, white second, and future multi-spell turns third, because Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, and Brightglass Gearhulk all punish missed development. - Pseudo-selection: Use mulligans, sequencing, and threat deployment as the main filtering tools. Hands with Llanowar Elves plus green mana can keep slightly heavier cards; hands with Brightglass Gearhulk but no early green should not rely on drawing out of the problem unless the hand already has multiple lands and castable early plays. - Scry or bottom decisions: Bottom redundant expensive cards when behind on mana, especially extra Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter before the deck can cast them. Bottom excess lands only after green and white are both secure and the hand has enough mana to cast the next two turns of spells; keep a land when a Gearhulk-sized turn is one land away. - Small-card choices: Favor Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, or Gene Pollinator from early selection prompts when the hand needs board presence or counter synergies. Favor Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or Brightglass Gearhulk when the game is about closing, going over blockers, or rebuilding after removal. - Graveyard and exile selection: Use Keen-Eyed Curator, Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, or sideboard graveyard effects only when the engine exposes legal timing and visible graveyard contents justify the action. Do not spend graveyard interaction into an empty or low-impact graveyard unless it enables a larger play shown by legal text. - Bounce or recursion choices: If Nurturing Pixie or Restoration Magic exposes a target choice, choose a visible target that produces a concrete rules-engine benefit such as saving a threatened permanent, reusing a confirmed enter-the-battlefield trigger, or resetting a damaged creature. Card text check required; do not bounce Brightglass Gearhulk or another premium permanent for speculative value when tempo loss risks the board. ## Priority And Stack Rules - Priority baseline: Pass priority when the stack is empty, no profitable legal instant-speed action is shown, and spending mana would weaken the next main-phase development. This deck is primarily proactive, so holding mana is correct only for visible Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, Seam Rip, Restoration Magic, Erode, Sheltered by Ghosts, Soul-Guide Lantern, or other engine-confirmed actions. - Protection windows: Use Shardmage's Rescue or Meltstrider's Resolve in response to removal, combat damage, or a targeted effect only when the target is a key threat, a needed mana creature, or a creature whose survival changes the race. Protect Brightglass Gearhulk first, Surrak, Elusive Hunter second, and a scaled Badgermole Cub, Pawpatch Recruit, Gene Pollinator, or Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker third. - Removal windows: Cast Seam Rip or Erode at instant speed only when the visible target is about to generate value, attack for meaningful damage, block a decisive attack, or invalidate a planned turn. Let low-impact spells resolve when answering them would trade down and the deck can instead add a larger threat. - Combat trick timing: Prefer using Practiced Offense, Meltstrider's Resolve, Shardmage's Rescue, or Restoration Magic after blockers are declared when legal text allows it, because the opponent has already committed blocks. Use precombat only when the legal action text requires it or when the effect is needed to make an attack legal or lethal. - Optional payments and triggers: Accept optional counters, protection, growth, or value triggers when they improve the current board or protect a high-priority threat. Decline optional payments when they consume mana needed for Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Seam Rip, or a second spell in the same turn, unless the payment prevents lethal damage or creates lethal pressure. - Activated abilities: Activate Soul-Guide Lantern, Keen-Eyed Curator, Multiversal Passage, Abandoned Air Temple, or any land/permanent ability only from visible legal actions and only for a concrete turn purpose. Card text check required for exact abilities; do not sacrifice or tap utility resources before combat if that mana or object may be needed for protection or postcombat development. - Stack discipline: Let opposing card draw, setup, and non-combat utility resolve when the deck has no exact answer or when the answer is needed for a battlefield threat. Respond to spells that remove Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or the only stabilizing blocker, and respond to effects that would create lethal or near-lethal pressure. - Graveyard timing: Use Rest in Peace or Soul-Guide Lantern before the opponent can legally use the graveyard when their visible graveyard or known public cards make that timing matter. Do not fire Soul-Guide Lantern merely because a graveyard exists; wait for a legal activation window tied to a visible spell, ability, recursion target, or threshold threat when possible. ## Sideboard Map - Sideboard rule: Treat sideboarding as role correction, not as a new deck. Keep the green early-development core intact unless the matchup punishes small creatures so heavily that Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, or Keen-Eyed Curator become unreliable bodies rather than mana, pressure, or utility. - Erode: Bring Erode when visible opposing permanents make artifact, enchantment, or other engine interaction relevant; Card text check required for exact targets and timing. Erode is weak when the opponent presents mostly creatures and planes of pressure that Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, larger bodies, or combat discipline already handle. - Sheltered by Ghosts: Bring Sheltered by Ghosts against creature-heavy, permanent-heavy, or removal-heavy decks when its legal text provides either removal, protection, lifegain, or a stabilizing swing; Card text check required. Sheltered by Ghosts is weak when the opponent can easily punish Aura-style commitments, when there are few legal targets, or when the matchup is about racing with noncreature resources instead of board presence. - Rest in Peace: Bring Rest in Peace against graveyard engines, recursive threats, escape/flashback-style resources, graveyard-count payoffs, or decks where visible public cards show the graveyard is a major axis. Rest in Peace is weak when Keen-Eyed Curator or Soul-Guide Lantern already covers the needed interaction, when the opponent's graveyard is incidental, or when spending a card on graveyard denial slows Brightglass Gearhulk and Surrak, Elusive Hunter too much. - Soul-Guide Lantern: Bring Soul-Guide Lantern when one-shot graveyard interaction is enough, when preserving your own graveyard may matter more than blanket exile, or when the matchup rewards cheap interaction while still developing creatures. Soul-Guide Lantern is weak when the opposing graveyard pressure is continuous enough that Rest in Peace is the cleaner lock, or when the opponent has no visible graveyard reliance. - Goldvein Hydra: Bring Goldvein Hydra when the matchup is attrition-heavy, removal-heavy, or stalls around large ground creatures where one scalable threat can punish late-game flooding. Goldvein Hydra is weak against fast go-wide pressure when the deck needs early blockers and life stabilization more than another late threat; Card text check required for exact death, counter, or token implications. - Restoration Magic: Bring Restoration Magic when saving a key permanent, rebuying a confirmed enter-the-battlefield trigger, or resetting a creature is likely to matter; Card text check required before assuming flicker, protection, or recursion text. Restoration Magic is weak against opponents with little removal, against decks that force mana efficiency every turn, or when holding mana causes missed Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter deployment. - Balustrade Wurm: Bring Balustrade Wurm when the opponent is built to answer small and medium creatures but struggles with additional large bodies, or when the post-board game is expected to become a battlefield stall. Balustrade Wurm is weak when the deck must stay low to the ground, when expensive cards already clog the hand, or when interaction and protection matter more than another top-end threat; Card text check required for exact casting and graveyard interactions. - Zack Fair: Bring Zack Fair when the matchup rewards a resilient, high-impact creature or a unique combat/value role shown by legal text; Card text check required. Zack Fair is weak when the opponent has efficient answers to single creatures, when the board requires immediate removal, or when adding another role-uncertain threat reduces early consistency. Balanced anti-graveyard attrition plan Side in: 1 Rest in Peace; 1 Soul-Guide Lantern; 1 Goldvein Hydra; 2 Restoration Magic Cut: 2 Meltstrider's Resolve; 1 Shardmage's Rescue; 1 Nurturing Pixie; 1 Gene Pollinator - Plan use: Use this plan when the opponent shows graveyard recursion plus removal or attrition, and the game is likely to stretch long enough for Goldvein Hydra or Restoration Magic to matter. The reductions lower narrow protection and singleton utility while preserving Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, and the core pressure engine. Balanced creature-board stabilization plan Side in: 4 Sheltered by Ghosts; 1 Goldvein Hydra Cut: 1 Shardmage's Rescue; 1 Nurturing Pixie; 1 Keen-Eyed Curator; 2 Meltstrider's Resolve - Plan use: Use this plan against creature decks where permanent interaction or life-buffering from Sheltered by Ghosts is confirmed by rules text and where Goldvein Hydra can dominate a stalled board. Keep Practiced Offense when combat size matters, and keep Seam Rip when the opponent has must-answer creatures or permanents. Balanced artifact/enchantment pressure plan Side in: 2 Erode; 2 Sheltered by Ghosts Cut: 1 Nurturing Pixie; 1 Shardmage's Rescue; 1 Gene Pollinator; 1 Keen-Eyed Curator - Plan use: Use this plan when the opponent relies on visible artifacts, enchantments, or permanent engines that must be answered before Brightglass Gearhulk can take over. Maintain the main proactive curve and avoid overloading on reactive cards unless the opponent's public game actions prove that engines, not creatures, are the central threat. Balanced top-end mirror plan Side in: 2 Balustrade Wurm; 1 Goldvein Hydra; 1 Zack Fair; 2 Restoration Magic Cut: 2 Seam Rip; 2 Meltstrider's Resolve; 1 Nurturing Pixie; 1 Keen-Eyed Curator - Plan use: Use this plan against slower midrange or ramp decks where removal is less valuable than threat density, resilience, and winning large-board combat. Keep Seam Rip instead of some protection when the opponent's visible threats must be answered cleanly, and favor Restoration Magic only when it has legal targets that preserve or reuse meaningful battlefield resources. - Archetype rule versus fast aggro: Add role cards: Sheltered by Ghosts and, if life or board impact is confirmed, Goldvein Hydra. Reduce main-deck emphasis: slow singleton utility, narrow protection that does not affect combat, and role-uncertain selection bodies that cannot block profitably. - Archetype rule versus graveyard decks: Add role cards: Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, and sometimes Keen-Eyed Curator remains important if its legal text interacts with graveyards. Reduce main-deck emphasis: expensive redundancy and protection that does not stop the graveyard plan. - Archetype rule versus artifact or enchantment engines: Add role cards: Erode and Sheltered by Ghosts when legal target text is confirmed. Reduce main-deck emphasis: low-impact creatures that do not pressure quickly and tricks that fail to answer the engine. - Archetype rule versus control: Add role cards: Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Zack Fair, and Restoration Magic when they improve resilience against removal or sweepers. Reduce main-deck emphasis: creature-only interaction and combat tricks that do not protect a key threat from visible answers. - Archetype rule versus ramp or big midrange: Add role cards: Balustrade Wurm, Goldvein Hydra, and Erode only when there are visible noncreature engines. Reduce main-deck emphasis: narrow protection and small utility that does not accelerate into Brightglass Gearhulk or pressure before the opponent's larger turns. ## Matchup Guidance - Aggro: Stabilize the first two turns before pursuing maximum Brightglass Gearhulk value. Keep hands with Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, or Keen-Eyed Curator plus enough lands to cast interaction; a hand that only curves into Surrak, Elusive Hunter can be too slow if the opponent is already attacking. Use Seam Rip on the creature or permanent that changes combat math most, not automatically on the first target. Treat Practiced Offense as a combat-swing card only when legal text and visible blocks make the exchange favorable; Card text check required before assuming pump, counters, or protection. Add role cards: Sheltered by Ghosts, Goldvein Hydra when scalable board or life impact is confirmed. Reduce main-deck emphasis: Shardmage's Rescue, Nurturing Pixie, Meltstrider's Resolve, and slow role-uncertain cards when they do not affect the immediate battlefield. - Go-wide decks: Preserve blockers and force the opponent to attack into larger bodies instead of racing early. Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, and Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker should normally trade only when the exchange reduces the next attack or protects life needed to deploy Brightglass Gearhulk. Do not spend all early mana on selection or setup if the legal board asks for a blocker. Add role cards: Sheltered by Ghosts for confirmed creature containment, Restoration Magic only when it can save a blocker or reset a meaningful permanent, and Goldvein Hydra only when the game is likely to reach a stall. Reduce main-deck emphasis: singleton utility and slow protection that does not stop multiple attackers. - Burn: Prioritize life-total preservation over speculative pressure once the opponent has shown direct damage. Mulligan hands that stumble on colored mana or cannot affect combat before turn three. Play Llanowar Elves when it accelerates into a stabilizing body, but do not assume it is safe if the opponent can remove it and leave the hand stranded. Use Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, or Restoration Magic only when legal text actually prevents damage, saves a key creature, or forces the burn deck to spend a card inefficiently; Card text check required. Add role cards: Sheltered by Ghosts if confirmed to remove attackers or buffer life, Goldvein Hydra if it creates immediate pressure or resilience. Reduce main-deck emphasis: expensive threat redundancy when early survival is unproven. - Tempo: Sequence threats so the opponent cannot win by answering one expensive spell and attacking through a stalled hand. Favor early Starting Town, Temple Garden, Hushwood Verge, Forest, Plains, Abandoned Air Temple, or Multiversal Passage decisions that preserve both green and white access for double-spell turns. Cast Pawpatch Recruit and Badgermole Cub before tapping out for a single top-end card unless the legal action text makes Brightglass Gearhulk immediately high-impact. Use Seam Rip on threats that carry evasion, counters, or tempo snowball risk; Card text check required for exact target limits. Add role cards: Restoration Magic for confirmed protection/reset value, Sheltered by Ghosts for must-answer tempo creatures. Reduce main-deck emphasis: slow top-end overload when the opponent is punishing tapped-out turns. - Control: Do not overcommit into visible sweepers or open interaction when one threat already demands an answer. Start pressure with Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, or Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, then hold Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter until the opponent spends removal or until waiting gives them more draw steps than you can afford. Use Llanowar Elves to force early action, but avoid turning every hand into a mana-creature dependency. Add role cards: Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Zack Fair, and Restoration Magic when they increase threat density, resilience, or post-removal recovery; Card text check required for exact roles. Reduce main-deck emphasis: Seam Rip when the opponent has few creature targets, and combat-only tricks when legal text does not protect a key permanent. - Removal-heavy midrange: Make each creature generate pressure, resource tension, or a protected follow-up instead of walking single threats into one-for-one answers. Lead with redundant bodies, then commit Brightglass Gearhulk when it creates enough board presence or counters to punish removal. Keep Practiced Offense when combat decides creature mirrors, but do not hold it forever if advancing mana or board is stronger. Add role cards: Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Zack Fair, and Restoration Magic; include Sheltered by Ghosts if it answers opposing threats while improving race math. Reduce main-deck emphasis: low-impact one-of cards and narrow protection when the opponent can simply answer a different permanent. - Midrange mirrors: Win by sequencing mana, counters, and threat density so the battlefield grows faster than the opponent's removal can reset it. Brightglass Gearhulk is the central pivot; do not expose it into a low-impact board if waiting one turn lets it support multiple bodies or forces the opponent to answer Surrak, Elusive Hunter first. Use Seam Rip on creatures that block your largest attacker, threaten a counter-race, or create an engine. Add role cards: Balustrade Wurm, Goldvein Hydra, Zack Fair, and Restoration Magic. Reduce main-deck emphasis: Meltstrider's Resolve or Shardmage's Rescue when protection is less important than presenting another must-answer permanent. - Big mana and ramp: Pressure early and disrupt visible payoff engines before the opponent reaches inevitability. Keep hands with Llanowar Elves plus a proactive curve, or hands that cast Pawpatch Recruit into Badgermole Cub/Gene Pollinator into Brightglass Gearhulk without missing land drops. Do not spend Seam Rip on small setup creatures if a larger public payoff is likely to be the first threat that matters, but act when the rules engine exposes a legal target that will otherwise dominate the next turn. Add role cards: Balustrade Wurm and Goldvein Hydra for top-end pressure, Erode only against visible artifacts or enchantments, Restoration Magic if it protects the threat that ends the game fastest. Reduce main-deck emphasis: narrow combat tricks when racing top-end is the real axis. - Combo: Identify whether the opponent is using battlefield permanents, graveyard setup, artifacts/enchantments, or hand/stack timing before committing reactive cards. Apply pressure with Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, and Brightglass Gearhulk while holding interaction only when the visible legal action can stop the combo turn. Use Seam Rip, Erode, Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, or Sheltered by Ghosts according to the exposed engine, not by archetype label alone. Add role cards: Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern against graveyard combos, Erode against artifact/enchantment engines, Sheltered by Ghosts against permanent-based combo pieces. Reduce main-deck emphasis: expensive value cards that do not shorten the clock or interact. - Graveyard decks: Deploy graveyard hate when it interrupts a visible dependency, not merely because cards entered a graveyard. Rest in Peace is strongest when the opponent repeatedly uses graveyard resources; Soul-Guide Lantern is stronger when one precise exile window is enough or when preserving your own graveyard may matter. Keep Keen-Eyed Curator relevant if its legal text offers graveyard pressure or selection; Card text check required. Add role cards: Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, and sometimes Sheltered by Ghosts if graveyard creatures are the battlefield threat. Reduce main-deck emphasis: Meltstrider's Resolve, Shardmage's Rescue, or extra top-end when the graveyard engine must be stopped first. - Artifact/enchantment decks: Answer engines before they convert into a battlefield that your creatures cannot attack through. Erode should target the permanent that produces repeated resources, locks combat, or enables a payoff, not a replaceable artifact or enchantment unless tempo demands it. Sheltered by Ghosts can supplement interaction when legal target text applies; Card text check required. Brightglass Gearhulk and Surrak, Elusive Hunter still matter as clocks, so avoid becoming a purely reactive deck. Add role cards: Erode and Sheltered by Ghosts. Reduce main-deck emphasis: low-impact creatures or tricks that neither pressure quickly nor remove the engine. - Single-threat decks: Preserve clean answers and force the opponent to prove the threat matters through the rules engine. Seam Rip is often the main-deck answer if the target is legal; Sheltered by Ghosts, Erode, or Restoration Magic may matter post-board depending on whether the threat is a creature, artifact, enchantment, or removal-protected permanent. Do not chump too early with Llanowar Elves or Pawpatch Recruit if a larger blocker plus Practiced Offense can change the race. Add role cards: Sheltered by Ghosts, Restoration Magic, and Erode only when their legal text lines up. Reduce main-deck emphasis: broad value top-end when one protected opposing permanent is the bottleneck. ## Specific Matchup Notes - Scope: Exact opponents are absent, so these notes are general/archetype-only; revealed cards, legal actions, public zones, and rules-engine prompts override every archetype assumption. Use these notes to rank pressure, interaction, and sideboard roles, not to infer hidden cards. - Fast creature opponents: Stabilize first, then turn counters and large bodies into the race advantage. Prioritize legal Seam Rip or Sheltered by Ghosts targets that raise immediate damage, break up attacks, or remove a creature that makes blocks impossible; Card text check required for Sheltered by Ghosts. Add role cards: Sheltered by Ghosts, Restoration Magic, and sometimes Goldvein Hydra if it changes the race. Reduce main-deck emphasis: slow top-end hands without Llanowar Elves, and protection that does not affect the current combat. - Control opponents: Make them answer staggered threats instead of one large overcommitment. Lead with Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, or Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, then commit Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, or Zack Fair when the opponent is low on visible mana, has spent removal, or waiting gives them too many draw steps. Add role cards: Restoration Magic, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Zack Fair. Reduce main-deck emphasis: Seam Rip when targets are scarce. - Removal-heavy midrange: Force removal onto the wrong threat before committing the strongest payoff. Brightglass Gearhulk should enter when it immediately improves the board or presents a must-answer clock; do not strand Practiced Offense waiting for perfect combat if developing another permanent is stronger. Add role cards: Restoration Magic, Balustrade Wurm, Goldvein Hydra, Zack Fair, and Sheltered by Ghosts when it has legal high-impact targets. Reduce main-deck emphasis: narrow one-of protection when the opponent can answer different permanents. - Graveyard opponents: Use Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern when the graveyard is a visible resource engine, not merely because a graveyard contains cards. If Keen-Eyed Curator has legal graveyard-relevant text, treat it as interaction only after a card text check. Add role cards: Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, and Sheltered by Ghosts for graveyard creatures that become battlefield threats. Reduce main-deck emphasis: expensive threats when an unanswered graveyard engine is the bottleneck. - Artifact or enchantment opponents: Preserve Erode for repeated-resource permanents, lock pieces, or payoff enablers exposed by public information. Brightglass Gearhulk remains the pressure plan, so avoid boarding into a low-clock reactive shell. Add role cards: Erode and Sheltered by Ghosts. Reduce main-deck emphasis: low-impact creatures or combat tricks that do not shorten the clock or answer the engine. - Big mana and slower ramp: Pressure early and make the first decisive payoff awkward. Keep hands that use Llanowar Elves or clean land sequencing to reach Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or another closer quickly. Add role cards: Balustrade Wurm, Goldvein Hydra, Restoration Magic, and Erode only for visible artifacts or enchantments. Reduce main-deck emphasis: reactive cards without current targets. ## Risk Summary - Mana risk: Hands with Starting Town, Hushwood Verge, Temple Garden, Abandoned Air Temple, Forest, Plains, and Multiversal Passage must be judged by actual legal mana output, not color assumptions. Mulligan or sequence cautiously when a hand needs Llanowar Elves to function, cannot cast early green creatures, or cannot produce white for Shardmage's Rescue, Nurturing Pixie, Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, or sideboard cards. - Draw risk: Top-heavy draws can lose before Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, or Zack Fair matter. Treat Llanowar Elves, Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Keen-Eyed Curator, and Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker as the pressure base that buys time for the closers. - Over-sideboarding risk: Do not dilute the creature-plus-counter pressure plan by adding every sideboard card with possible text. Erode, Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, Sheltered by Ghosts, Restoration Magic, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair must answer the visible matchup axis or improve the clock. - Graveyard risk: Rest in Peace may change both players' graveyard access; Soul-Guide Lantern may be better when one timed exile is enough. Card text check required before assuming Keen-Eyed Curator, Restoration Magic, or any main-deck card benefits from the graveyard. - Sweeper and removal risk: Brightglass Gearhulk and Surrak, Elusive Hunter can be stranded if the deck commits too many creatures into visible reset incentives. Keep enough pressure to demand action, but hold a follow-up threat when one battlefield already threatens meaningful damage. - Closer risk: The deck can create board presence without ending the game if large attackers are stalled. Use Practiced Offense, Seam Rip, counters from Brightglass Gearhulk, and the largest legal threat to convert board advantage into damage before control, combo, or big mana stabilizes. - Interaction risk: Seam Rip, Erode, Sheltered by Ghosts, Shardmage's Rescue, and Meltstrider's Resolve should be used only when their legal text and the current prompt support the line. Card text check required for uncertain protection, removal, or rescue timing. - Sequencing risk: Casting Nurturing Pixie, Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, or Practiced Offense at the wrong prompt can lose tempo or protection value. Respect priority windows, visible blockers, open mana, and whether the next legal action advances mana, pressure, or survival more clearly. ## Test Feedback Checklist - Deciding factor: Record whether the game was won or lost by early mana, board snowball, missed interaction, stalled closing power, or a single opposing permanent that the visible legal actions could not answer. - Mulligans: Ask whether the opener had functional green mana, early pressure, and a path to Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or Practiced Offense; flag hands that kept Llanowar Elves as the only bridge to casting spells. - Mana: Track whether Starting Town, Temple Garden, Hushwood Verge, Forest, Plains, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage produced the colors and timing the game required; note every turn where white cards or green development were stranded. - Velocity: Check whether Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, Gene Pollinator, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, and Llanowar Elves entered early enough to force action before the opponent stabilized. - Engine pressure: Evaluate whether Brightglass Gearhulk converted creatures, artifacts, counters, or board presence into a decisive clock; Card text check required before assigning a precise missed trigger or counter line. - Removal: Ask whether Seam Rip and post-board Sheltered by Ghosts answered the visible permanent that mattered most, or whether they were spent on a lower-impact target while a race or engine continued. - Protection: Review Shardmage's Rescue, Meltstrider's Resolve, Restoration Magic, and any protection-like legal action for timing discipline; Card text check required for exact saved-permanent conclusions. - Sideboard: Check whether Erode, Rest in Peace, Soul-Guide Lantern, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Restoration Magic, Sheltered by Ghosts, and Zack Fair matched the opponent's visible axis rather than merely looking castable. - Closing: Identify turns where the deck had a large battlefield but failed to attack, use Practiced Offense, commit Brightglass Gearhulk, or deploy Surrak, Elusive Hunter before the opponent gained time. - Role: Ask whether the pilot correctly stayed proactive against control and big mana, defensive against fast creature pressure, and selective against removal-heavy midrange. - Mistakes: Mark any pass with unused mana where legal actions included pressure, protection, removal, or sideboard interaction; separate true legal-action limits from poor choices. - Stranded cards: Log every card stuck in hand for color, timing, target, or board-state reasons, especially Brightglass Gearhulk, Practiced Offense, Seam Rip, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, and sideboard cards. - Overperformers: Name cards that repeatedly changed combat math, forced removal, stabilized life total, or closed quickly, with the visible state that made them strong. - Underperformers: Name cards that were low-impact, too slow, targetless, redundant, or awkward in multiples, with matchup and mana context attached. ## First Tuning Questions - Main threat balance: Should the deck increase or decrease copies of Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Brightglass Gearhulk, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, or Gene Pollinator based on which threats actually close games after early development? - Early creature density: Does Pawpatch Recruit, Badgermole Cub, Keen-Eyed Curator, Llanowar Elves, and Nurturing Pixie provide enough early board presence, or are losses coming from openers that do not affect combat before turn three? - Mana base: Are Starting Town, Hushwood Verge, Temple Garden, Abandoned Air Temple, Forest, Plains, and Multiversal Passage producing reliable early green plus timely white, or should land quantities change to reduce stranded Seam Rip, Practiced Offense, Shardmage's Rescue, and sideboard cards? - Ramp reliability: Is Llanowar Elves essential to the deck's best starts, or is the deck losing too often when Llanowar Elves dies and Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter remains delayed? - Interaction quantity: Is 2 Seam Rip enough main-deck removal for creature pressure, or are games repeatedly lost to one visible permanent that required more direct answers? - Combat pump and counters: Does 4 Practiced Offense consistently turn boards into wins, or are copies stranded when the deck lacks profitable attacks or enough creatures? - Protection package: Do Shardmage's Rescue and Meltstrider's Resolve protect the right threats often enough, or should their quantities shift toward threats, removal, or Restoration Magic effects after card text verification? - Aggro plan: Against fast creature decks, does the deck need more Sheltered by Ghosts, Goldvein Hydra, or lower-curve stabilization, or are losses mainly from sequencing and blocking mistakes? - Control plan: Against removal and sweepers, are Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Restoration Magic, and Zack Fair the right sideboard pressure package, or does the deck need more resilient threat density in the registered 75? - Artifact and enchantment plan: Are 2 Erode enough when visible opposing engines matter, or are artifact and enchantment permanents deciding too many post-board games? - Graveyard plan: Are Rest in Peace and Soul-Guide Lantern both needed, or does one graveyard tool outperform because timing, symmetry, or card text matters more in actual games? - Role conflict: Does adding too many reactive sideboard cards weaken the core plan of creature pressure into Brightglass Gearhulk and Practiced Offense, especially against decks that punish slow clocks? - Closer quality: Are Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, and Zack Fair ending games fast enough, or is the deck creating presence without lethal pressure? - Card text uncertainty: Which cards produced ambiguous decisions requiring verification, especially Starting Town, Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, Practiced Offense, Brightglass Gearhulk, Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker, Meltstrider's Resolve, Sheltered by Ghosts, Restoration Magic, and Zack Fair? ## Veles Tactical Policy ### Policy: Opening Hand Functional Mana Gate - Priority: High - Decision families: mulligan; mana; pregame - Cards: Forest; Temple Garden; Hushwood Verge; Starting Town; Llanowar Elves; Plains; Abandoned Air Temple; Multiversal Passage - Phase windows: opening hand, mulligan decisions - Runtime cues: prompt:mulligan; visible:opening hand - Use when: choosing keep or mulligan before game actions begin. - Avoid when: rules engine exposes a forced keep/take action with no legal alternative. - Instructions: Keep hands that cast early green development and contain either pressure or a credible path to Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or Practiced Offense. Mulligan hands with no functional green source, hands that rely on Llanowar Elves as the only mana bridge and have no backup land plan, and hands with white-only action but no visible route to cast it. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Early Creature Setup - Priority: Medium - Decision families: mana; priority - Cards: Llanowar Elves; Pawpatch Recruit; Badgermole Cub; Keen-Eyed Curator; Gene Pollinator; Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker - Phase windows: turns 1-3 main phases - Runtime cues: action:cast; phase:precombat main; visible:hand contains early creature - Use when: multiple creature or mana-development plays are legal early. - Avoid when: survival requires immediate Seam Rip or sideboard interaction. - Instructions: Establish the first creature or mana permanent before holding up narrow tricks. Prefer plays that increase next-turn mana or board count, then curve into larger pressure. Card text check required for exact triggered or counter sequencing on Badgermole Cub, Gene Pollinator, and Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker. - Pilot skill floor: basic model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Llanowar Elves Deployment - Priority: Low - Decision families: mana; priority - Cards: Llanowar Elves; Forest; Temple Garden; Hushwood Verge - Phase windows: early main phases - Runtime cues: action:cast Llanowar Elves - Use when: Llanowar Elves is legal to cast and the current turn has an untapped green-producing source. - Avoid when: the only legal nonland action prevents casting a required defensive spell this turn. - Instructions: Cast Llanowar Elves early when it advances Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter timing. Treat it as fragile acceleration, not guaranteed future mana. - Pilot skill floor: no-api - No-API allowed: yes - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Land Sequencing For Green-White Development - Priority: Medium - Decision families: mana; priority - Cards: Starting Town; Temple Garden; Hushwood Verge; Forest; Plains; Abandoned Air Temple; Multiversal Passage - Phase windows: land play decisions, main phases - Runtime cues: action:play; visible:land actions available - Use when: more than one land play is legal. - Avoid when: a legal land is forced by engine output or only one land action exists. - Instructions: Sequence lands to preserve early green, timely white, and future double-spell turns. Do not spend Multiversal Passage or uncertain utility land actions without checking whether the current hand needs color fixing now. Card text check required for Starting Town, Hushwood Verge, Abandoned Air Temple, and Multiversal Passage. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Gearhulk Commitment Gate - Priority: High - Decision families: mana; priority; interaction - Cards: Brightglass Gearhulk; Shardmage's Rescue; Meltstrider's Resolve; Restoration Magic - Phase windows: main phases, post-board main phases - Runtime cues: action:cast Brightglass Gearhulk - Use when: Brightglass Gearhulk is legal and other pressure, protection, or interaction lines are also legal. - Avoid when: exact lethal or survival requires another legal action this turn. - Instructions: Commit Brightglass Gearhulk when it creates the strongest visible clock or stabilizes the board more than spreading threats. Delay when opponent open mana, visible stack context, or known removal makes losing the artifact creature catastrophic and a safer pressure line exists. Card text check required for exact enter, counter, or artifact synergy output. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Surrak Closing Gate - Priority: High - Decision families: mana; priority; combat - Cards: Surrak, Elusive Hunter; Practiced Offense; Brightglass Gearhulk - Phase windows: main phases before combat, late-game main phases - Runtime cues: action:cast Surrak, Elusive Hunter - Use when: Surrak, Elusive Hunter is legal and the visible board can attack or threaten lethal soon. - Avoid when: casting Surrak leaves no answer to a lethal opposing board or stack action. - Instructions: Use Surrak, Elusive Hunter to convert board presence into closing pressure, especially when Practiced Offense or large creatures can shorten the clock. Card text check required for exact combat abilities and targeting. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Practiced Offense Combat Commitment - Priority: High - Decision families: combat; priority - Cards: Practiced Offense; Pawpatch Recruit; Badgermole Cub; Gene Pollinator; Brightglass Gearhulk; Surrak, Elusive Hunter; Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker - Phase windows: combat, precombat main, damage-adjacent priority - Runtime cues: action:cast Practiced Offense - Use when: Practiced Offense is legal and attack, block, or damage math changes are relevant. - Avoid when: no creature combat is occurring and the legal action text does not indicate a persistent board benefit. - Instructions: Spend Practiced Offense when it creates lethal, prevents a lethal crack-back, saves key material in combat, or turns a wide board into a decisive attack. Do not cast it into low-impact boards without checking visible blockers, removal mana, and postcombat exposure. Card text check required for exact counters, pump, or timing. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Attack Discipline - Priority: Medium - Decision families: combat - Cards: Pawpatch Recruit; Badgermole Cub; Keen-Eyed Curator; Gene Pollinator; Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker; Brightglass Gearhulk; Surrak, Elusive Hunter - Phase windows: declare attackers - Runtime cues: prompt:attackers; action:attack - Use when: the engine asks for attackers and at least two attack sets are legal. - Avoid when: exactly one legal attack action exists and it is forced by the engine. - Instructions: Attack when the visible exchange advances damage, counters, or pressure without exposing the only blocker needed for survival. Hold creatures back when the opponent's visible next attack threatens lethal or when a key engine creature is more valuable untapped. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Block And Stabilize - Priority: High - Decision families: combat; interaction - Cards: Pawpatch Recruit; Badgermole Cub; Keen-Eyed Curator; Gene Pollinator; Leatherhead, Swamp Stalker; Brightglass Gearhulk; Surrak, Elusive Hunter - Phase windows: declare blockers, combat damage setup - Runtime cues: prompt:blockers; visible:opponent attacking creatures - Use when: blocking choices affect survival, creature preservation, or counterattack timing. - Avoid when: no legal blocks exist. - Instructions: Preserve life total against fast pressure, but do not trade Brightglass Gearhulk or Surrak, Elusive Hunter for a small attacker unless survival or lethal race math requires it. Favor blocks that keep enough board to use Practiced Offense or close next turn. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Seam Rip Removal Gate - Priority: High - Decision families: interaction; priority - Cards: Seam Rip - Phase windows: main phases, combat, opponent priority windows - Runtime cues: action:cast Seam Rip; action:target - Use when: Seam Rip is legal and one or more visible targets exist. - Avoid when: the target is low impact and the opponent has a more dangerous visible permanent, stack threat, or combat line. - Instructions: Use Seam Rip on the permanent or attacker that most threatens survival, blocks lethal, or enables the opponent's engine. Card text check required for exact target restrictions and timing. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Protection And Rescue Timing - Priority: High - Decision families: interaction; priority; combat - Cards: Shardmage's Rescue; Meltstrider's Resolve; Restoration Magic - Phase windows: stack response, removal response, combat trick windows - Runtime cues: action:cast Shardmage's Rescue; action:cast Meltstrider's Resolve; action:cast Restoration Magic - Use when: a legal protection-like action can preserve a key creature, undo removal pressure, or change combat survival. - Avoid when: the protected object is not central to the current race, engine, or survival line. - Instructions: Protect Brightglass Gearhulk, Surrak, Elusive Hunter, or a creature carrying the current combat plan before protecting replaceable early creatures. Card text check required before assuming hexproof, indestructible, blink, counter, or recursion behavior. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Nurturing Pixie Target Discipline - Priority: Medium - Decision families: selection; priority - Cards: Nurturing Pixie; Brightglass Gearhulk; Gene Pollinator; Badgermole Cub - Phase windows: cast resolution, triggered selection prompts - Runtime cues: action:target; prompt:Nurturing Pixie - Use when: Nurturing Pixie creates a target or object-selection prompt. - Avoid when: the prompt has exactly one legal target and engine output identifies it as mandatory. - Instructions: Route target selection through visible-board reasoning. Reuse an enter-the-battlefield or counter-related permanent only after card text and tempo cost are clear. Card text check required for Nurturing Pixie and all target candidates. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Curator And Graveyard-Aware Choices - Priority: Medium - Decision families: selection; priority; interaction - Cards: Keen-Eyed Curator; Rest in Peace; Soul-Guide Lantern - Phase windows: main phases, graveyard interaction windows, post-board decisions - Runtime cues: action:activate Keen-Eyed Curator; action:cast Rest in Peace; action:cast Soul-Guide Lantern - Use when: graveyard-related actions are legal or the opponent's public graveyard matters. - Avoid when: the opponent has no public graveyard dependency and developing board pressure is clearly available. - Instructions: Use graveyard tools when public zones show recursion, delve, reanimation, or graveyard scaling. Do not fire one-shot graveyard interaction before the relevant card is public unless the sideboard plan and visible context justify timing. Card text check required for Keen-Eyed Curator. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Sideboard Artifact And Enchantment Answers - Priority: Medium - Decision families: sideboard; interaction - Cards: Erode; Sheltered by Ghosts - Phase windows: sideboarding, post-board main phases - Runtime cues: prompt:sideboard; action:cast Erode; action:cast Sheltered by Ghosts - Use when: opponent deck or visible permanents rely on artifacts, enchantments, or a single removable permanent. - Avoid when: adding reactive cards lowers threat density against opponents without targets. - Instructions: Bring Erode for artifact or enchantment engines and Sheltered by Ghosts for creature/permanent pressure only when expected targets exist. During play, spend them on the visible permanent that changes the race or engine most. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Sideboard Threat Reconfiguration - Priority: Medium - Decision families: sideboard; mana; priority - Cards: Goldvein Hydra; Balustrade Wurm; Zack Fair; Restoration Magic - Phase windows: sideboarding, post-board main phases - Runtime cues: prompt:sideboard; action:cast Goldvein Hydra; action:cast Balustrade Wurm; action:cast Zack Fair - Use when: opponent removal, sweepers, or stalled boards require stronger post-board closing power. - Avoid when: the matchup is decided by early survival and the hand already contains too many expensive threats. - Instructions: Add resilient or larger threats for grindy games while keeping enough early creatures to pressure. Card text check required for Goldvein Hydra, Balustrade Wurm, Zack Fair, and Restoration Magic before assuming resilience or exact combat roles. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes ### Policy: Pass With Mana Discipline - Priority: Medium - Decision families: priority; interaction; mana - Cards: Seam Rip; Shardmage's Rescue; Meltstrider's Resolve; Restoration Magic; Practiced Offense - Phase windows: all priority windows - Runtime cues: action:pass; visible:untapped mana; visible:legal non-pass actions - Use when: pass is legal and at least one non-pass action is also legal. - Avoid when: passing skips lethal, survival, or required development. - Instructions: Pass with mana open only when holding interaction, protection, combat leverage, or when committing another card into visible risk is worse. Explain pass choices by naming the held-up card or visible reason, without inventing hidden opponent cards. - Pilot skill floor: light model - No-API allowed: no - Light-model allowed: yes