Edited Jeff Jeakins (Dec. 9, 2013 03:06:06 PM)
Originally posted by Justin Miyashiro:
As a total aside, it feels kind of like Slow Play/Stalling to me since the
player is deliberately engaging in a procedure that is either ensuring his
deck is not sufficiently random or is an utter waste of time, but I
recognize that my position is not supported by anything other than my own
feelings on the matter so I won't argue the point.
Originally posted by Anthony Bucchioni:
ven if the player in question can do it and properly shuffle within the 3 minutes they have to do so?
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:
So, is it wrong for me to mana weave first, to get further away from the “ordered” state, and thus actually improve the chances of a “good” randomization? Arguably, mana weaving actually improves the chances of achieving the real goal - i.e., truly random deck order.
Edited Mart Leuvering (May 9, 2014 11:17:49 AM)
Originally posted by Mart:I think you may have misunderstood. Not mana-weaving, in my post, referred to a deck that's in, or approximates, decklist order - not 1-1-1-2-2-2, as you suggest, but 24-36. Shuffling from any random order to any other is the ideal; shuffling from 24-36 or from 1-2-1-2-etc until random is acceptable. I prefer to “seed” my imperfect shuffling, as I've had trouble achieving good randomization starting from 24-36.
Not to be a jerk, but Mana weaving provides a new state that is just as ordered as the previous state.
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