This Battle Box was discussed on Episode 59 and Episode 82 of Lucky Paper Radio where we cover all things Battle Box.
Both players begin with a set of 10 lands in the command zone — 5 basics and 5 allied, tapped, duals — which they can play.
Players draw from the Battle Box, a shared library including the whole list.
Starting hand size is 4 and there are no mulligans.
No other rules are altered. Players have separate graveyards and can play one land per turn. Cards are considered 'owned' by the last player who drew them. In practice, effects that interact with the library or cause confusion with the rules changes are excluded from this particular list, so if you prefer, you can split the box into separate decks for each player without affecting gameplay.
For more about the format check out my article explaining the format and how the rules influence different types of effects.
Gameplay and DesignThis Battle Box is designed for quick games to fill downtime between and around your other favorite ways to play Magic. It focuses on quick, combat focused gameplay where players have to work to get the most value out of their cards.
As is typical of the format, the list excludes mana acceleration, deck searching, and land destruction. I've also excluded top-deck manipulation to focus on an otherwise 'normal' Magic interactions rather than a novel experience, and imposed a hard restriction on the number of unique tokens.
This is the evolution to my original Battle Box from years ago. When returning to it after a long hiatus, with time and some specifically shifted goals, it made more sense to 'start from scratch' and keep the original list as an artifact.
There are a few changes in goals. The biggest is, the previous iteration was just too big, physically. I want it to be something I can throw in my bag before and between draft rounds so portability is key. I also want to remove the top-deck-matters cards. This is fun space to explore, but I'm less interested in the unique experience and more interested in some quick, quality gameplay. I still like drawing from the same deck though as slapping the deck in the middle and drawing four cards has a nice zero setup feel. Tokens are going to be minimized, hopefully to four or less types. Beyond that, it's just a pile of cleanly designed, combat focused, cards with lots of opportunity for players to line them up in novel ways.