Premodern Metagame

Stiflenought leads the Premodern metagame at 16.8% of 2,201 recent appearances, and Dream Halls's share is up 31x over the last 60 days.

Challenges

Finishes by Strategy

Top strategies by Challenge Top 8s, League 5-0s, or both.

  1. 1. Stiflenought — 93 Top 8s, 68 League 5-0s
  2. 2. Enchantress — 50 Top 8s, 89 League 5-0s
  3. 3. Sligh — 23 Top 8s, 75 League 5-0s
  4. 4. Standstill — 29 Top 8s, 35 League 5-0s
  5. 5. Goblins — 18 Top 8s, 53 League 5-0s
  6. 6. Replenish — 18 Top 8s, 49 League 5-0s
  7. 7. Moneyball Black — 16 Top 8s, 10 League 5-0s
  8. 8. GR Zoo — 12 Top 8s, 11 League 5-0s
  9. 9. Oath Ponza — 8 Top 8s, 37 League 5-0s
  10. 10. Terrageddon — 8 Top 8s, 18 League 5-0s

Metagame Mix Over Time

Share of the field held by the top 10 strategies (~70% of the meta), over the last 90 days.

  1. 1. Stiflenought16.8%
  2. 2. Enchantress11.4%
  3. 3. Sligh8.5%
  4. 4. Standstill6.5%
  5. 5. Goblins6.5%
  6. 6. Replenish5.3%
  7. 7. Moneyball Black4.1%
  8. 8. GR Zoo3.7%
  9. 9. Oath Ponza3.2%
  10. 10. Terrageddon3.1%

Premodern Metagame Movers

Strategies gaining or losing share vs the prior 60-day window.

Gaining Premodern Metagame Share

last 60d vs prior 60d
  • 0.09% → 2.8% share

    +3002% lift (+2.7 pp vs the prior 60 days, challenge share)
  • 0.63% → 3.3% share

    +430% lift (+2.7 pp vs the prior 60 days, challenge share)
  • 0.81% → 2.2% share

    +169% lift (+1.4 pp vs the prior 60 days, challenge share)

Losing Premodern Metagame Share

last 60d vs prior 60d
  • 0.54% → 0.07% share

    −87% lift (−0.5 pp vs the prior 60 days, challenge share)
  • 0.99% → 0.14% share

    −86% lift (−0.9 pp vs the prior 60 days, challenge share)
  • 2.4% → 0.48% share

    −80% lift (−2.0 pp vs the prior 60 days, challenge share)

Newest Premodern Rogue decks

Brews from the last 60 days that didn't match any archetype rule yet.

Rankings are based on 1,466 recent MTGO Challenge appearances in the selected window.

Premodern is a community format using cards from Fourth Edition through Scourge (1995–2003), celebrating the classic era before the Modern card frame.