Continuous construction vs pairings
It is also entirely legal (and karmicly satisfying) for the opponent to
change decks or colors entirely, thereby sticking the player with a dead
card in their deck. I do this quite frequently in Continuous Construction
tournaments, particularly Sealed deck, particularly pre-releases. Granted,
it's unlikely they'll know this plan will have the benefit of messing with
the opponent's pre-boarding, but it could still come up.
The serious question, with no joke side at all, that this brings to me is,
where do we draw the line? As I said, I quite frequently try two or three
different decks at events like Prereleases. Sometimes, the difference
isn't so much “is this color better?” but rather “This deck looks like it's
better vs. a slower deck” or something similar. Is that pre-boarding?
What if I choose my deck without knowing what my opponent is playing? What
if you just kept an eye on the top tables and concluded there was an 80%
chance that X's Defeat would be useful and you decided that was good
enough? What if you just forgot to board it out? To me, this change
complicates a relatively straightforward policy for little gain.
Prereleases aren't supposed to have very high stakes anyway, so if someone
is eking out a slight edge this way, are we really worried about that?