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as a Twitch Affiliate and you can find me LIVE on Twitch Wednesday-Friday / planeswalkersstronhold I will be playing Wednesday - Friday at 11am EST You owe yourself the experience of Value of our many Patreon options https://www.patreon.com/user?u=96404140 Don’t miss My Pack A Day Habit / @packadayhabit You can LIKE +400 deck list on Aetherhub https://aetherhub.com/User/Planeswalk... Drafting a "small set" on MTG Arena can feel like trying to run a marathon in a hallway. It’s tight, it’s intense, and honestly? It can get stale a whole lot faster than the massive, sprawling expansions. While the smaller card pool makes for a more focused experience, it creates a specific set of hurdles that can frustrate even seasoned drafters. Why Small Sets Feel Different When you’re dealing with a significantly reduced card count—often seen in remastered sets or "mini-sets"—the variance that usually keeps Limited play exciting takes a backseat to efficiency. 1. The "Solved" Meta In a large set, you have hundreds of cards and dozens of potential interactions, making the draft environment feel fresh for weeks. In a small set, the community often "solves" the draft within days. Once the best archetypes are identified, the draft environment narrows significantly. You stop drafting based on board state and start drafting based on a checklist. 2. High Incentives to Force Because the card pool is shallower, the power gap between the "best" deck and the "average" deck is usually cavernous. When there are only a handful of viable color pairs or strategies, you are incentivized to force the best deck every single time, rather than reading signals or staying open. If you try to experiment, you’ll often find yourself outclassed by the people playing the "optimal" version. 3. Reduced Variance You will see the same common and uncommon cards in almost every pack. This leads to: Draft Fatigue: The repetition of seeing the same cards makes the drafting process feel mechanical. Predictable Games: If you know exactly what your opponent is playing based on their first three lands, the element of surprise vanishes. The "Arena" Factor On MTG Arena, this is compounded by how the bots or human pods (depending on the queue) function. If the algorithm or the meta favors a specific color pair, you will see that color pair in every single draft. It can turn what should be a creative, tactical experience into a race to see who gets the most copies of the "broken" common. It's a bit like eating at a restaurant that only serves one dish; it might be the best dish in the city, but you’re going to get tired of it by the end of the week.