https://subium.com/profile/mauratwit.bsky.social/post/3ksueuts7ia2h
A reply
Well. TIL about this flag. For context, this is in a diverse neighborhood of Minneapolis, across the street from a rather hippie art building.
Here’s google street view from 4 years ago. Someone has been radicalized and started hoarding lawn decoration.
MTG Deck: red for burn, green for growth, and blue which I still don’t know how to play.
It’s the flag of Temur supremacy.
Pick one:
You’re forgetting tempo decks and the many blue artifice decks (idk if you count blue and colorless as still just blue, but mechanically it is*)
*mostly
Blue could represent playing around your opponent, or tempo.
Most of blues toolkit is about reading theory (draw and filter effects), direct action (counter spells and bounce effects), opsec (evasive creature effects), and Lenin busts (artifact synergy).
At least in terms of the blue stuff that makes it into core sets more often than not (core sets used to be a thing and were meant to represent the a beginner friendly jumping-in point, closer to magic as Garfield intended than the rest).