A different take on The Wandering Minstrel, but more focused on birds and chocbo, which are also birds. ARobin likes birds, so she put birds in a bird deck so she can bird while she birds. Also Yo Ship is there to make elementals.
Papalymo Totolymo constantly sacrifices himself to make your opponents sacrifice their own creatures. Use Vincent’s Limit Break to bring him back and do some tax evasion, and also because it’s funny because Papalymo doesn’t even have his own Limit Break. Because it’s Vincent’s.
I love an equipment deck, and so does Barret Wallace. Luckily for me my Chocobo Bundle had a beautiful Chocobo Track Showcase of Barret, Avalanche Leader. I absolutely had to run with it.
This is my first proper villain deck in my collection. Golbez, Crystal Collector largely does what he says on the tin. Collect as many artifacts as you can, while abusing the graveyard as much as possible.
Vivi Ornitier is probably one of the most controversial cards in the Final Fantasy sets. He decimated standard when combined with Agatha’s Soul Cauldron. Fortunately (or unfortunately) for us, Cauldron isn’t legal in Limit Breaker. Still, we gotta show our boy some support in the format.
Take the Revival Trance Commander deck apart and you end up with a really tight and efficient graveyard manipulation engine. Fill your graveyard as quickly as possible to get the most value out of your first Stitch Together.
This started as a Winston Draft deck. Firion, Wild Rose Warrior would have probably slipped through my notice as a powerful Party Leader if I hadn’t pulled him during the draft. I don’t often play mono color decks, but he ended up being extremely fun with big swings and fun decisions once the copies disappear.
This deck is built around getting towns out as quickly as possible, and letting the man, the myth, the legend, Yoshi-P spawn Elemental after Elemental. Meanwhile you’re casting Travel the Overworld for UU hopefully every turn and putting Vana’diel Adventurer’s into play to protect against decking.