Mirrodin Set cube.
Each pack will be seeded with 1 artifact land, 1 rare, 3 uncommons, 10 commons.
Some cards have been cut for being made for constructed, some cards have been replaced for being bad, Icy Manipulator has been replaced because I have a personal hatred for it.
All cards are from Mirrodin except for some replacements that are from other sets taking place on the same plane.
This is the part of every recipe blog post that your supposed to skip. You know, the part written by a mommy blogger where they give you a long backstory about why they love this recipe and proceed to tell you to use only half a teaspoon of chili powder. Again, the part you're supposed to skip over, I just did you the courtesy of putting it at the end.
I was introduced to magic by my uncle, he gave me a few old border cards that I've hung on to since then, but the first set I actually played with was Mirrodin. I was only an egg, so I had a starter deck but nobody to play with. Later bought a second started deck (Champions of Kamigawa) at a flea market. I started playing with cousins when I could, but soon stopped playing for lack of outside interest.
In college I came across my old cards and got right back into it but now with access to a debit card and online card stores. Since then I have built many decks and played many formats, but I am always drawn back to the art and feel of Mirrodin. My two favorite mechanics in the entire game of Magic are affinity for artifacts and infect. Also, no matter how many fancy basic lands are released I think my favorites will always be the original Mirrodin Mark Tedin basics. Anyways, this has been my journal entry about why I built this set cube. Will be updating whenever I change anything but it will likely stay pretty much the same.