
There are probably choices that I list which can be labled as debatable, but no platform I know of gives a broad overview over both the archetypes and all the card choices, so I aimed to do just that. Having an open mind in deck building and including creative ideas is always helpful, if only to further understand the playstyle and strategy of the deck you are about to build. It’s name is “Banquet Burn”, and since it uses a card in order to make a unique deck, I might aswell feature it as part of a decktype analysis and this is exactly what I will do in this article.ĭisclaimer: None of the information given by me is set in stone. Now excuse me while I go spend the rest of my day lost in the eyes of this pixelated kitten (Opens in a new tab).Do you hate using your Extra Deck? Do like (semi-)FTKs using gimmicky card options instead? Well, here is something you can tinker with: “Master Duel”, the Yugioh online game that everyone and their mother played at release and that is now criticized for slow updates and a stale meta, brought up a very different sort of flower. Because, and let's be real here, very few people are going to trek their way over to the Windows Store to download this thing when it's ultimately unbundled from some future version of the operating system.īut hey, that's something for future generations to worry about. Namely, the idea of "for now." This clearly suggests that the days of painstakingly creating devastating visual owns of your dumb friends pixel by pixel are numbered. Regardless, there are a couple of important caveats in LeBlanc's statement. Perhaps a lot of people still use it to make screenshots?

We reached out to the company, but received no response as of press time. The question as to why Microsoft decided to do us all this solid remains unresolved. (opens in a new tab) (Opens in a new tab) "It'll remain included in Windows 10 for now." "Yes, MSPaint will be included in 1903," he wrote (Opens in a new tab). Brandon LeBlanc, a senior program manager at Microsoft, confirmed the news via Twitter on April 22. Well, MS Paint will live to ride another day. However, unbundling it from Windows appeared to many like step one in a two-step process of removing it from life support.


The program was added to Microsoft's " deprecated" list back in 2017, and in the summer of that year Microsoft insisted (Opens in a new tab) that MS Paint would always be available for download in the Windows Store. Microsoft Paint, the 33-year old program released with the first version of Windows back in 1985, is not being banished to the oblivion of the Windows Store after all - news that is sure to warm the cockles of many an elderly digital Seurat's heart. One of technology's last truly innocent creations just got an 11th hour reprieve.
