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2022 World Championship
World Championship XXVIII
Date October 28-30, 2022
Location Las Vegas, USA
Format Dominaria United draft, Standard Constructed and Explorer Constructed
Prize pool $250,000
Winner Nathan Steuer
Previous Worlds:
2021
Next Worlds:
2023

The Magic: the Gathering 2022 World Championship, or Magic World Championship XXVIII, was the 28th Magic World Championship and was held October 28-30, 2022 in Las Vegas, USA to conclude the 2021–22 Players Tour Season. It featured a prize pool of $250,000.[1]

Description[ | ]

The 2022 World Championship was part of Magic 30, a convention celebrating three decades of Magic: The Gathering.[2]

It was a 32-player event, up from 16 players in previous years, and was played digitally on MTG Arena.[3] Format are Dominaria United draft, Standard Constructed and Explorer Constructed.

The Top 4 finishers received invites to all three Pro Tours in the 2022–23 Pro Tour Season.[4]

Qualification[ | ]

  • The 2021 Magic: The Gathering World Champion
  • Finishing in the Top 6 of any 2021-22 Championship event—the Innistrad Championship, Neon Dynasty Championship, or New Capenna Championship.
  • Becoming one of five (5) MPL or Rivals players with the most World Championship Qualifying Points during the 2021-22 Season.
  • Becoming one of eight (8) non-MPL and non-Rivals players (Challengers) with the most World Championship Qualifying Points during the 2021-22 Season.
  • Receiving an at-large invitation, eligible to all players within and outside of the leagues, through earning the most World Championship Qualifying Points during the 2021-22 Season to ensure a total of thirty-two (32) competitors for Magic World Championship XXVIII.[5][6]

Players that earned invitations through a Top 6 finish in a Championship did not create pass-down invitations by finishing in the Top 6 in multiple events and did not factor into at-large invitations based on WQCPs. Any player with multiple qualifications for the World Championship would create an at-large invitation.

Roster[ | ]

Nationality Player Method of qualification
{JPN} Yuta Takahashi 2021 World Champion
{JPN} Yuuki Ichikawa 1st in the Innistrad Championship
{DEU} Simon Görtzen 2nd in the Innistrad Championship
{JPN} Riku Kumagai 3rd in the Innistrad Championship
{JPN} Toru Saito 4th in the Innistrad Championship
{USA} Zachary Kiihne 5th in the Innistrad Championship
{JPN} Yo Akaike 6th in the Innistrad Championship
{LBN} Eli Kassis 1st in the Neon Dynasty Championship
{USA} Zach Dunn 2nd in the Neon Dynasty Championship
{JPN} Yudai Miyano 3rd in the Neon Dynasty Championship
{CAN} Johny Guttman 4th in the Neon Dynasty Championship
{FRA} Jean-Emmanuel Depraz 5th in the Neon Dynasty Championship
{CHN} Yimin Zhi 6th in the Neon Dynasty Championship
{DEU} Jan-Moritz Merkel 1st in the New Capenna Championship
{DNK} Simon Nielsen 2nd in the New Capenna Championship
{JPN} Hisamichi Yoshigoe 3rd in the New Capenna Championship
{USA} Mike Sigrist 4th in the New Capenna Championship
{USA} David Inglis 5th in the New Capenna Championship
{EST} Karl Sarap 6th in the New Capenna Championship
{JPN} Shota Yasooka 1st League member on the leaderboard
{USA} Reid Duke 2nd League member on the leaderboard
{USA} Logan Nettles 3rd League member on the leaderboard
{FIN} Matti Kuisma 4th League member on the leaderboard
{CZE} Jakub Tóth 5th League member on the leaderboard
{USA} Gregory Orange 1st Challenger on the leaderboard
{JPN} Yuma Koizumi 2nd Challenger on the leaderboard
{USA} Tristan Wylde-LaRue 3rd Challenger on the leaderboard
{USA} Nathan Steuer 4th Challenger on the leaderboard
{USA} Julian Wellman 5th Challenger on the leaderboard
{USA} Jim Davis 6th Challenger on the leaderboard
{USA} Drew Baker 7th Challenger on the leaderboard
{DEU} Lukas Honney 8th Challenger on the leaderboard

Schedule[ | ]

The structure featured Swiss pairings since the 2019 World Championships.

Friday, October 28

Saturday, October 29

After Day Two, four winning players advanced to the Sunday playoffs.

Sunday, October 30

  • Top 4 playoff
    • Upper Finals
    • Lower Finals
    • Grand Finals

Proceedings[ | ]

Day 1[ | ]

The 2022 World Championship was one with quite a few novelties - the first with 32 players, the first back in person since 2019, the first mixed tournament with online and in-person competitors, the debut of Explorer making for the first three-format Worlds since 2016, and the second high-level competitive draft for three years in a deep, multicolored format. Standard was considered acceptably tilted towards various Black midrange decks before the banning of The Meathook Massacre, but afterward, the Worlds metagame coalesced to a striking 70% metagame share of Esper Legends decks. In contrast, Explorer's big archetype of Rakdos Midrange was down to one and a half pilots (the half being Shota Yasooka's green splash Jund deck), with the alternative Rakdos Sacrifice build getting a 22% metagame share. It was the second most popular archetype, one pilot behind the Greasefang, Okiba Boss-Parhelion II combo deck.

At the end of Day 1, the American Challengers Julian Wellman and Nathan Steuer were leading the pack with 7-1, both with 4-1 in Standard with non-Esper decks, the best record for Standard.[8]

Day 2[ | ]

In Explorer on Day 2, the second-level deck of Mono-Blue Tempo ran over the anti-midrange Combo decks of Greasefang and the Titan of Industry-Transmogrify match. Eli Kassis had the first 10-win record in round 13 and went 6-0 for Explorer. In the final round, Jakub Tóth defeated Jim Davis and Karl Sarap defeated reigning World Champion Yuta Takahashi, and Steuer's tiebreakers held up despite his defeat to Kassis, with David Inglis, Takahashi and Davis making up the other 9-5s.[9]

Day 3[ | ]

While the story of Explorer and the cut to Top 4 was the story of Mono-Blue, returning to Standard put at the forefront Steuer's Grixis deck against three Esper decks. Each of the players were of the newer generation of success: despite each player having at least a decade-long record, all of their Pro Tour claims to fame prior to this tournament were from the last three years for a top of 5 Top Finishes amongst them.[10]

Eli Kassis served as Steuer's nemesis for the tournament, having defeated him in Round 14 and the Top 4 opening match; despite this, Steuer knocked out the other two Esper players and made a comeback against a first match deficit to triumph.[11]

Final results[ | ]

The Top 8 was a follows:[12]

Place Player Prize Points Dominaria United draft record Standard record Explorer record
1 {USA} Nathan Steuer $100,000 3-0 4-1 2-4
2 {LBN} Eli Kassis $50,000 2-1 3-2 6-0
3 {CZE} Jakub Tóth $25,000 2-1 4-1 4-2
4 {EST} Karl Sarap $25,000 2-1 4–1 4-2
5 {USA} Jim Davis $20,000 1-2 4–1 4-2
6 {JPN} Yuta Takahashi $20,000 2–1 2–3 5–1
7 {USA} David Inglis $20,000 2-1 2-3 5-1
8 {USA} Julian Wellman $20,000 3-0 4-1 1–5

References[ | ]

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