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Magic Pro Tour - Philadelphia 2005

pro tour philadelphia 2005

  • 2 Prize Pool
  • 3 Participants
  • 5 References

Format [ edit ]

Prize pool [ edit ].

pro tour philadelphia 2005

Participants [ edit ]

Results [ edit ], top 8 [ edit ], references [ edit ].

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Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005

From wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour . On 10 September 2004 the season began with Grand Prix Rimini . It ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championship in Yokohama and was thus the longest Pro Tour season ever. The season consisted of 31 Grand Prixs and 7 Pro Tours, held in Columbus , Nagoya , Atlanta , Philadelphia , London, Los Angeles, and Yokohama. At the end of the season Kenji Tsumura was proclaimed Pro Player of the year as the first Japanese player. Also the first class of the Hall of Fame was inducted. The inductees were Jon Finkel , Darwin Kastle , Tommi Hovi , Alan Comer, and Olle Råde .

Pro Tour (Magic: The Gathering)

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The Pro Tour (often abbreviated as PT ), is the highest form of competitive play for the Magic: The Gathering collectible card game. It consists of a series of tournaments held throughout the world, each requiring an invitation to participate. Every Pro Tour awards a total of $250,000 in cash prizes, with $40,000 going to the winner. Pro Tour competitors also receive Pro Points, the amount depending on their results. Pro Points award special benefits to players, including automatic qualification and travel awards for subsequent Pro Tours. Currently, four Pro Tours are held during a twelve-month season.

Ranking within the Top 8 of a Pro Tour is considered to be one of the greatest accomplishment a competitive Magic player can achieve. Professional players are thus often compared by the number of Pro Tour Top 8 finishes they have made throughout their career. The most successful players on the Pro Tour are Kai Budde who won seven Pro Tours out of ten Top 8 finishes and Jon Finkel who won three Pro Tours while making it to the Top 8 fourteen times. Template:TOC right

  • 2 Qualification
  • 5 Tournament structure
  • 7 Pro Points
  • 8 Pro Player of the Year
  • 9 Rookie of the Year
  • 10.1 Most successful countries
  • 11 Making a living
  • 12 Gender gap
  • 13 See also
  • 14 References
  • 15 External links

History [ ]

The first major Magic: The Gathering tournament was the 1994 World Championship held at Gen Con '94. It was a single-elimination 512-person Constructed event run over three days of competition. [1] The winner, Zak Dolan, received a trophy but no money. However, Dolan was also given a large number of booster packs from various expansions, Arabian Nights through Ice Age , along with a deck of poker cards with Magic: The Gathering backs on them and a T-shirt. The secondary market value of those packs today would exceed many tournament payoffs, but is still not quite equal to the cash prizes of the current Pro Tour payouts. Another World Championship was organized in 1995.

In 1995 Brand Manager Skaff Elias suggested that organized play needed to take the step to the next level. The idea was to run several tournaments each year that would gather the best players in the world and reward them with cash for their dedication to the game. Players should have something to aspire to. Elias and Mark Rosewater along with others started to work on the concept. On 16–18 February 1996 the first Pro Tour, very briefly called The Black Lotus Pro Tour , was held in New York. [2] The first Pro Tour season included three more Pro Tour events, culminating in the final Pro Tour, the World Championship, held in Seattle. In the following years a Pro Tour season (one year) always consisted of five and later six Pro Tours. From 2003 to 2005 Wizards of the Coast made an effort to bring the Pro Tour seasons in accordance with the calendar year instead of having the seasons last from August to August the next year. This resulted in two seasons of seven Pro Tours. Afterwards Pro Tour seasons were reduced to five and later four Pro Tours a year. In 2012, the season schedule was again adjusted, now starting and ending in May. Additionally, the World Championship lost its status as a Pro Tour event, resulting in three Pro Tours to be held each season.

Prize payouts have increased slowly over the years from ca. $150,000 per tournament in 1996–97 to $250,000 in 2012. In the first Pro Tour season each Pro Tour awarded more prizes than the previous one, though. Afterwards prize payouts had only minor fluctuations throughout a season with the exception of the World Championships which always award some additional prizes.

Pro Tours started as single-format events in 1996, alternating between Constructed and Limited , with the exception of the World Championships which have been multi-format events since the inception of the Pro Tour. In 2010 Pro Tours were changed to always have several rounds of Constructed and Limited play.

Qualification [ ]

Up until the second season in 1997, qualifying was based on results in high profile tournaments, or by invitation from the sponsoring company. Since 1997 the Pro Tour is a qualification-only tournament with qualifying events held throughout the world.

There are several ways to qualify, the most common being: [3]

  • By finishing in the Top 25 (replaced by 33 match points since 2014–15 season) of the previous Pro Tour.
  • Through a Pro Tour Qualifier (PTQ) tournament, a tournament open to those not already qualified.
  • By reaching the single elimination stage in Grand Prix. (Prior to 2014–15 season, Grand Prix events with 1200 or less participants will require a Top 4 instead of Top 8)

In 2012 it was announced that Sponsor's Exemption invitations would be given regularly to players who "showed excellence in play and positive community activity during the qualifying season". [4] Previously those invitations were given out very rarely (for example to David Williams for Pro Tour Los Angeles 2005 or Kai Budde for the 2006 World Championships).

Location [ ]

The first season featured only Pro Tours in the United States . Beginning in 1996–97 one Pro Tour was held in Europe each season. The first Pro Tour to be held in Asia was the 1999 World Championship in Tokyo . Subsequently the amount of PTs every continent gets has varied, with the United States clearly hosting most Pro Tours, and Asia the least. Of the Asian Pro Tours all but one were held in Japan . The only other continent to ever have a Pro Tour was Australia , hosting the World Championship in 2002.

Previously, all Pro Tours other than World Championships have been held in a single format. However, beginning with the 2009 season, Pro Tours host one constructed and one limited format. Constructed Pro Tours utilized either Block Constructed, Standard, or Extended (succeed by Modern in 2011 season), while Limited Pro Tours were usually the Booster Draft format. Until PT Nagoya in 2005, Booster Draft and Rochester Draft had been used alternatingly, but Rochester Draft was dropped afterwards. Also, for several years beginning in 1999, every season included a team Pro Tour, but since 2007 no Pro Tours in teams has been held.

Beginning with the 2009 season each Pro Tour features a constructed format as well as a booster draft format. Day one and two of each PT will each consist of constructed rounds as well as a Booster Draft rounds. The third day will use one of the previously utilized formats.

World Championships before 2011, are special Pro Tours in that they always feature multiple formats, similar to current Pro Tour, which typically used Standard on the first day, Booster Draft or Rochester Draft on the second, and another constructed format on the third. The final eight have always been played using the Standard decks from the first day. The fourth (third since 2007) day of Worlds also featured national championship as for the national teams to compete in. The schedule of Worlds has been altered accordingly, but no consistent pattern has emerged yet.

Tournament structure [ ]

All Pro Tours are run using a modified Swiss system . Typical Pro Tours were held over three days with 7 rounds (Limited) or 8 rounds (Constructed or Mixed) of Swiss the first day. Players with fewer than 4 victories (Limited or Mixed) or 5 victories (Constructed) after day 1 were eliminated. 8 more rounds of Swiss followed on the second day after which the eight best finishing players constitute what is called the Top 8 . On the third and final day, the Top 8 players play single-elimination until the winner is determined. Starting with the 2009 season this system is modified to accompany the fact, that each PT utilizes constructed and limited formats. Which 3 rounds will held in booster draft format will be played at the beginning of both days, then 5 rounds of constructed format will be played.

Team Limited Pro Tours were run the first day using the Team Sealed format, the second day using the Team Rochester Draft format. The top 4 finishing teams advanced to the last day of competition, which was also run in the Team Rochester format.

World Championships used to be held over four to five days, before the introduction of World Magic Cup replacing the national team competition in 2012. Before 2007, it was held with six rounds of individual play on day one through three. The fourth day featured the national team competition. On the fifth day the Top 8 returned to determine the World Champion in three rounds of single elimination. Worlds were shortened to four days in 2007, though. In 2007 the Worlds featured five rounds of Standard and Legacy on day one and two, respectively. A Booster Draft of three round was also held on both days. The team competition was held on the third day and the Top 8 on the fourth and final day. [5] Worlds 2008 will have the individual formats laid out over three days, while the team competition is added to day one and three. On the fourth and final day the team finals and the individual finals will be played. [6] The current format (dubbed as Worlds Week ) would have the World Magic Cup (team competition) playing on first 2 days, and the World Championships on the following two days. In 2014, a day interval was added between 2 competitions.

Traditionally the payout at the Pro Tour has been based only on the finishing place. Currently the prize pool for Pro Tour events as well as the World Magic Cup amounts to $250,000 each. The Magic: The Gathering World Championship, while technically not a Pro Tour event also features a significant payout, currently amounting to $150,000. The largest prize pool in the history of the game was paid out for the combined 2006 World Championship event, comprising $465,245. The Pro Tour payout extends down to 75th place with the current payout structure being: [7]

In Pro Tour Philadelphia 2005, a different payout system was tested. The tournament was run using triple-elimination (with a draw counting as a loss for both players) and each match was run with money at stake. The amount of money earned by the winner of the match increased from $100 in round one to $1,500 in round twelve. This system had the result of distributing the money more evenly among competitors (out of 311, only 40 failed to make money) but the top finishers earned significantly less money than they would have under the old system. This layout was largely criticized by players and internet writers and has not returned since.

Pro Points [ ]

In the current 2014–15 season, Pro Points for participating are awarded by ranking for the players that make it to the top 8. All other players earn Pro Points based on their total match point in Swiss portion of the event. The points are awarded as follows

For players who finished in Top 8:

For players who finish outside the Top 8:

Additional Pro Points are awarded for participation in the World Magic Cup, the World Championship , and for good finishes at Grand Prix . For Grand Prix, only the best six results in a season will be counted towards their seasonal Pro Points. For players that finish in the top 8 Pro Points are awarded as follows

For players who did not get into the single-elimination stage:

For the World Magic Cup each player earns Pro Points based on the ranking of their respective national team

At World Championships a player is awarded one Pro Point for every win in the Swiss part of the tournament and two Pro Points for every win in the elimination stage.

Accumulated Pro Points can grant players benefits when they exceed certain thresholds. In the past the number of levels and the associated benefits have varied. If a player achieves the level which awards qualifications to all Pro Tours he or she is said "to be on the Gravy Train". Currently this would be equivalent to the Gold Level. The Pro Club consists of the following levels: [8]

  • Silver level (25 Pro Points): The player receives two byes at Grand Prix tournaments; invitation to World Magic Cup qualifiers; invitation to next Pro Tour event in that season (if not already eligible by other means, in that case the right will be inherited to the following event in the same Pro Tour season).
  • Gold level (35): The player receives three byes at Grand Prix tournaments; invitation with one bye to World Magic Cup qualifiers; invitation to all Pro Tours with expenses paid for air travel;
  • Platinum level (48): Three byes at Grand Prix tournaments with free Sleep-In Special; invitation with two byes to World Magic Cup qualifiers; appearance of $3000 fee for attending Pro Tours, $250 for attending Grand Prix, $500 for attending World Magic Cup qualifiers and $1000 for the World Magic Cup itself; expenses paid for air travel to and hotel accommodation at all Pro Tours.

The above-mentioned Pro Club levels are achieved the moment a player earns the required Pro Points in a season, and benefits are granted from that point on. The status and the associated benefits will be kept until the end of the season after the season in which they were earned. Since the 2013 season if a player wins in any Pro Tour or World Championship, they are immediately promoted to Platinum level until the end of next Pro Tour season regardless of their current Pro Points. Similarly the winner of the Magic Online Championship is immediately granted Gold level.

Pro Player of the Year [ ]

The Pro Player of the Year title is awarded to the individual who has accumulated the most pro points over the course of a season. This person receives invitations to several high-level tournaments throughout the following year, as well as travel and other accommodations to each of the following season's Pro Tours, including the World Championship. [9] For the 2012 season, the Player of the Year title was awarded to winner of the Magic Players Championship, a tournament that replaced the Magic: The Gathering World Championship . [10] [11] This change was however reversed in the next season along with a renaming of the Players Championship to World Championship. [12]

Usually if multiple person finished with same number of Pro Points, the person with a better standing in his best Pro Tour in that season will rank higher. However this does not apply in Player of the Year race: In 2010 season, both Brad Nelson and Guillaume Matignon finished with most points 66 points at the end of season. As a result, a single-match playoff was held between the two at the 2011 Pro Tour in Paris, [13] which Nelson won in 4-2 (best of 7 games).

Rookie of the Year [ ]

The Rookie of the Year title is awarded to the player who has accumulated the most pro points over the course of a season and has not participated in a Pro Tour or World Championship before that season. [14]

Best performers [ ]

Players who have reached the final day of the Pro Tour several times are recognized for their skill and dedication to the game. The following table shows all players who either achieved five Pro Tour Top 8s or two wins. 26 players have made the Top 8 of five or more Pro Tours, and only eight have won more than once. [16] The following table is accurate as of Pro Tour Journey Into Nyx 2014:

Most successful countries [ ]

Players from the following countries have won Pro Tours (for a more detailed country breakdown, see the list of Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour events article):

Template:MTG PTs by country

Making a living [ ]

Very few players can claim to earn enough money for a living by playing on the Pro Tour alone. Several players have won more than $100,000 playing Magic, the most successful even more than $250,000, but spread over several years, and the figures do not take into account the cost of travel.

However, some professional players do make a living entirely through Magic by supplementing Pro Tour winnings with Magic-related activities such as:

  • writing (strategy articles for websites or books)
  • selling cards and/or Magic Online tickets (by winning online tournaments, pros receive packs which they trade online for tickets which they then sell via e-commerce websites such as eBay and PayPal )

Other players are professional gamers who supplement their Magic income with income from other games. Some play poker professionally, either live or on the internet; others are game store owners.

Gender gap [ ]

Magic is seen as a game overwhelmingly dominated by men, both on the Pro Tour and off. Only one woman has made the Top 8 of a PT - Melissa DeTora ( PT Gatecrash, 2013 ) and for a long time there were only two women that made the Top 8 of a Grand Prix - Michelle Bush ( second place, New Orleans, 2001 ) and Kate Stavola ( fifth place, Columbus, 2004 ). In 2011, however, this started to change as more women have made the Top 8 of a Grand Prix since then: Melissa DeTora ( fourth place, Santiago, 2011 and second place, Orlando, 2014 ), Mary Jacobson ( fifth place, Lincoln, 2012 ), Jackie Lee ( third place, Baltimore, 2012 ), Lissa Jensen ( seventh place, Nashville, 2012 ), and Jadine Klomparens ( second place, Chicago, 2014 ). Until PT Charleston in 2006 a woman had never even finished in the money at a traditional-payout PT. That changed when Asami Kataoka, as part of the team "Tottori 1 6 1" (led by five-time Top 8er Masashi Oiso ) finished in 18th place at the event, earning the team US$1800 in total. (Kataoka had won money at a PT before, winning $100 at the skins-game PT Philadelphia in 2005.)

The highest-profile first-place finish by a woman in the game's history belongs to Eda Bilsel of Turkey, who, in 2003, became Magic's first (and, as of July 2011, only) female national champion. Although she finished in 307th place in the individual standings at that year's Worlds, with her national team taking 35th in the team standings, she caught the attention of many players and coverage reporters who attended the event during the flag ceremony that year. [17]

The highest finish for a woman at an individual PT before DeTora's Top 8 appearance was that of England's Carrie Oliver, who finished 32nd at PT Nagoya 2011, winning US$1350. Since it was her debut PT after only 18 months of playing the game (having learned to play via Duels of the Planeswalkers ), it also marked the highest finish of a woman in her first PT appearance, earning her several mentions during the coverage of the event, including a feature article. [18] Oliver is also the only woman to have appeared on a national team more than once, in 2012 and 2013 at consecutive World Magic Cup events.

See also [ ]

  • List of Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour events
  • Magic: The Gathering World Championship
  • Magic: The Gathering Hall of Fame
  • Duelists' Convocation International

References [ ]

  • ↑ Rosewater, Mark (1994). "An M:TGer At GENCON" . The Duelist (Wizards of the Coast) (3): 39–42 . http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtgcom/feature/226gencon .  
  • ↑ Rosewater, Mark (2004-07-26). On Tour, Part 1 . Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2008-12-04.
  • ↑ Magic: The Gathering Premier Event Invitation Policy (PDF). Wizards of the Coast . Retrieved on 10 December 2012.
  • ↑ Pro Tour Avacyn Restored Invitation List Finalized . Wizards of the Coast (10 April 2012). Retrieved on 10 December 2012.
  • ↑ 2007 Magic World Championships Tournament Format . Wizards of the Coast (2007). Retrieved on 2008-12-04.
  • ↑ 2008 Magic World Championships Tournament Format . Wizards of the Coast (2008). Retrieved on 2008-12-04.
  • ↑ Pro Tour Gatecrash fact sheet . Wizards of the Coast (11 December 2012). Retrieved on 11 December 2012.
  • ↑ Pro Players Club Guidelines and Procedures . Wizards of the Coast (May 14, 2012). Retrieved on December 14, 2012.
  • ↑ 2006 Pro Player of the Year Race . Retrieved on 2007-05-25.
  • ↑ Changes to 2012 Tournament and Event Structure, Part 3 . Wizards of the Coast (2 November 2011). Retrieved on 2 November 2011.
  • ↑ Revamped Premier Play Coming in 2012 . Wizards of the Coast (23 December 2011). Retrieved on 23 December 2011.
  • ↑ Helene Bergeot (10 December 2012). Completing the Premier Play Picture for 2013 . Wizards of the Coast . Retrieved on 10 December 2012.
  • ↑ 13.0 13.1 2010 Player of the Year Match , Wizards of the Coast 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-12.
  • ↑ 2012-2013 Rookie of the Year Standings . Wizards of the Coast (23 May 2013). Retrieved on 26 August 2013.
  • ↑ 2011-2012 Rookie of the Year Standings . Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 20 May 2012.
  • ↑ Lifetime Pro Tour Top 8s . Retrieved on 2008-05-29.
  • ↑ Wachter, Toby. Round 5: Kamiel Cornelissen vs. Eda Bilsel . Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2 December 2011.
  • ↑ Stark, Bill (11 June 2011). Feature: Planeswalkers to Pro Tours . Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2 December 2011.

External links [ ]

  • Wizards of the Coast official Pro Tour site
  • Pro Players Club description and benefits

Template:Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour seasons

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About: Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005

The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. On 10 September 2004 the season began with Grand Prix Rimini. It ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championship in Yokohama and was thus the longest Pro Tour season ever. The season consisted of 31 Grand Prixs and 7 Pro Tours, held in Columbus, Nagoya, Atlanta, Philadelphia, London, Los Angeles, and Yokohama. At the end of the season Kenji Tsumura was proclaimed Pro Player of the year as the first Japanese player. Also the first class of the Hall of Fame was inducted. The inductees were Jon Finkel, Darwin Kastle, Tommi Hovi, Alan Comer, and Olle Råde.

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Paul Cheon is an American former professional player, streamer, R&D developer, and Pro Tour coverage commentator. He won the US National Championship in 2006, and two years later won the Team World Championship with teammates Michael Jacob and Sam Black . In July 2017, he joined Wizards of the Coast R&D as a member of the newly formed Play Design team, [1] then later moved into Coverage coordinator while continuing commentating. In December 2023, he was laid off alongside many other employees of Hasbro . [2]

  • 1 Accomplishments
  • 2 Pro Tour Results
  • 3.1 Designing
  • 3.2 Developing
  • 4 External links
  • 5 References

Accomplishments [ | ]

→ Source: Wizards.com

Pro Tour Results [ | ]

Wizards r&d [ | ], designing [ | ].

  • Theros Beyond Death

Developing [ | ]

  • Ravnica Allegiance
  • Commander Legends

External links [ | ]

  • Lifetime Top Finishes
  • Lifetime Grand Prix Top 8s
  • Top 200 All-Time Money Leaders
  • Adam Styborski (February 6, 2015). " Paul Paul Paul Paul Paul Paul Paul ". Magicthegatheringc.com.

References [ | ]

  • ↑ Dan Burdick (June 16, 2017). " On the Shoulders of Giants ". magicthegathering.com . Wizards of the Coast.
  • ↑ Paul Cheon (December 13, 2023). " Unfortunately, I will no longer be working for WotC as I was one of the many that were hit by the Hasbro layoffs. ". Twitter.
  • 1 Outlaws of Thunder Junction
  • 2 Outlaws of Thunder Junction/Commander decks
  • 3 Secret Lair Drop Series: Equinox Superdrop 2024

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pro tour philadelphia 2005

Magic: the Gathering | Esports

Pro Tour Phyrexia Fact Sheet for Competitors

Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour Phyrexia will take place in Philadelphia, USA at MagicCon Philadelphia on February 17–19, 2023.

The formats for Pro Tour Phyrexia are Phyrexia: All Will Be One Booster Draft and Pioneer Constructed.

Official hashtag: #PTPhyrexia

MagicCon Philadelphia Pennsylvania Convention Center 1101 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA 19107

The Pro Tour will take place in Ballroom A/B. The ballroom will be open to MagicCon Philadelphia attendees.

Invited Competitors

Pro Tour Phyrexia is an invitation-only tournament. The following competitors are invited to compete in Pro Tour Phyrexia :

  • The Top 4 finishers at Magic World Championship XXVIII.
  • The 32 competitors from Magic World Championship XXVIII.
  • Top finishing competitors from each Pro Tour Phyrexia Regional Championship.
  • New Capenna Championship competitors that finished with 27 or more match points.
  • Competitors from each MTG Arena Qualifier Weekend with 7 wins that awarded invitations to MTG Arena Championship 2.
  • The winner of the 2022 Magic Online Champions Showcase Season 1 tournament.
  • The 8 competitors from the 2022 Magic Online Champions Showcase 2.
  • Members of the Pro Tour Hall of Fame that selected Pro Tour Phyrexia as their once per season Pro Tour invitation benefit.
  • Competitors that are otherwise invited to Pro Tour Phyrexia .

The Pro Tour Phyrexia invitation list is available online. If you believe you are an invited competitor but are not on the invitation list, please email [email protected]

Competitor Information

Ballroom A/B will use the following, estimated hours of operation for Pro Tour Phyrexia :

  • Thursday (Registration Only): Open from 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM.
  • Friday & Saturday: Hall opens at 8:00 AM and closes at the end of the last Swiss round.
  • Sunday: Hall opens at 8:00 AM and closes at 7:00 PM

Note: The times on Thursday and the opening times on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday are for Pro Tour competitors ONLY. The public will be able to enter the ballroom only when the show opens each day (10:00 AM).

Registration

In-person registration takes place from 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM on Thursday, February 16, 2023. If you are unable to attend this registration session on Thursday, late registration will be available Friday morning from 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM. Competitors should email [email protected] if they will not be attending the Thursday registration session.

Even though competitors will have registered for the tournament on MTGMelee prior to Thursday, competitors must still register on-site in order to confirm they are in Philadelphia, to undergo an ID check, and receive their complementary Pro Tour gifts.

For in-person registration, all competitors must present one of the following forms of identification:

  • a driver’s license; or
  • a passport; or
  • a copy of a birth certification and photo ID (school IDs are acceptable)

Tournament Information

The Magic: The Gathering Tournament Rules and Infraction & Penalty Guide are in effect for this tournament unless specifically overruled by information in this section.

Structure (Swiss Rounds)

  • Friday: 3 rounds of Phyrexia: All Will Be One Booster Draft, followed by 5 rounds of Pioneer Constructed.
  • Saturday: 3 rounds of Phyrexia: All Will Be One Booster Draft, followed by 5 rounds of Pioneer Constructed.
  • 16 Swiss Rounds total, 50 minutes per round. Stalling and slow play rules will be strictly enforced.
  • All competitors may participate in all 8 Swiss rounds of Friday’s competition.
  • Competitors with 12 or more match points after Round 8 will advance to Saturday’s portion of the competition.
  • Whenever a competitor reaches 12 match wins, they immediately advance to the Top 8 playoff and are removed from future pairings in Swiss rounds.
  • The round in which a competitor received their 12th win.
  • Their OMW%, GW%, and OGW% as of the round in which they receive their 12th match win.
  • Seeding for the Top 8 playoff is locked after each round in which a competitor reaches their 12th win.
  • The top 8 competitors after Round 16 will advance to Sunday’s single-elimination playoff rounds.

Structure (Playoff Rounds)

  • Playoff rounds will use a traditional, single-elimination bracket.
  • Playoff rounds will run in the Pioneer Constructed format.
  • All playoff matches will be best 3 out of 5. The first two games played in each playoff match are pre-sideboard games. After Game 2 is completed, competitors may exchange cards from their deck for cards in their sideboard.
  • Standings after the Swiss rounds will be used to determine final order in the standings for losing competitors in the quarterfinal and semifinal playoff rounds.
  • While there are no time limits in the playoff rounds, competitors are expected to play at a reasonable pace and finish their matches within 90 minutes.
  • For the first game of each match in the playoff rounds, the competitor that finished higher in the Swiss rounds chooses either to play first or to play second. For subsequent games in each playoff match, the usual Play/Draw rule applies (loser of the previous game decides whether to play first in the next game).
  • 8:55 a.m. - Seating for competitor meeting and Draft 1 posted
  • 9:00 a.m. - Competitor meeting begins
  • 9:05 a.m. - Draft 1 Begins
  • 8:55 a.m. - Seating for competitor meeting and Draft 2 posted
  • 9:05 a.m. - Draft 2 Begins
  • 8:15 a.m. - Top 8 competitor check-in
  • 9:00 a.m. - Quarterfinals begin

Other Items

  • Rules Enforcement Level: Professional
  • Competitors are required to use the same Pioneer deck for Day 1, Day 2, and the Top 8 playoff
  • Competitors are responsible for knowing all tournament rules
  • Competitors are responsible for bringing their own appropriate counters and tokens

All competitors that finish Pro Tour Phyrexia with 27 or more match points will be invited to the next Pro Tour in the 2022-2023 Season.

There is a $500,000 prize pool which will be awarded to competitors based on their final standing in the tournament. All prizes displayed in U.S Dollars. Prizes subject to change.

* Assumes 225 competitors

IMAGES

  1. Pro Tour Philadelphia: Finals

    pro tour philadelphia 2005

  2. Independence Day 2005

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  3. Pro Tour Philadelphia: Top 8 Quarterfinals

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  1. Quick tour through Philadelphia #philadelphiatravel #philadelphia #bucketlist #travel

  2. Pro Tour Journey into Nyx

  3. Pro Tour Theros

  4. [4k] PHILADELPHIA

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  1. Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005

    The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour.On 10 September 2004 the season began with Grand Prix Rimini.It ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championship in Yokohama and was thus the longest Pro Tour season ever. The season consisted of 31 Grand Prixs and 7 Pro Tours, held in Columbus, Nagoya, Atlanta, Philadelphia, London ...

  2. Magic Pro Tour

    Magic Pro Tour - Philadelphia 2005 is an offline American tournament. This S-Tier tournament took place from May 06 to 08 2005 featuring 311 players competing over a total prize pool of $194,898 USD.

  3. 2005 Pro Tour Season

    The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth Pro Tour season. It started on 10 September 2004 with Grand Prix Rimini, and ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championships. It was the longest ever Pro Tour season, as it was a time of transition for the Pro Tour circuit; starting with this season, Pro Tour seasons would take place across a calendar year instead of the ...

  4. List of Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour events

    The first Pro Tour was held in New York City in 1996. Invitations are usually earned by winning a qualifier tournament. ... 2003, Boston 2003, New Orleans 2003, San Diego 2004, Seattle 2004, San Francisco 2004, Columbus 2004, Atlanta 2005, Philadelphia 2005, Los Angeles 2005, Honolulu 2006, Charleston 2006, San Diego 2007, New York 2007 ...

  5. Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005

    The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. On 10 September 2004 the season began with Grand Prix Rimini. It ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championship in Yokohama and was thus the longest Pro Tour season ever. The season consisted of 31 Grand Prixs and 7 Pro Tours, held in Columbus, Nagoya, Atlanta, Philadelphia, London ...

  6. Pro Tour Philadelphia: Finals

    Watch Samuele Estratti and his Splinter Twin deck battle Josh Utter-Leyton and Counter-Cat Zoo in the Finals of Pro Tour Philadelphia, the first Modern forma...

  7. Pro Tour Philadelphia And The Birth Of Modern: An Oral History

    The Top 8 competitors at Pro Tour Philadelphia were an intriguing mix of old and new. Some had already enjoyed Pro Tour glory — for others, this was the start of a long and storied career. One of them was about to be a Pro Tour champion. Max Sjöblom: I remember feeling like I was "in the zone" or in some type of flow state. This lasted ...

  8. Pro Tour: Philadelphia

    This package is therefore worth $6100 and 18 Pro Tour points. Level four adds $500 a tour and airfare to or from Japan. That's what free airfare to one event means. Calling the Japan package $800, you just picked up $3300 extra for $9400 and 18 Pro Tour points.

  9. Pro Tour (Magic: The Gathering)

    In Pro Tour Philadelphia 2005, a different payout system was tested. The tournament was run using triple-elimination (with a draw counting as a loss for both players) and each match was run with money at stake. The amount of money earned by the winner of the match increased from $100 in round one to $1,500 in round twelve.

  10. About: Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour season 2005

    The 2005 Pro Tour season was the tenth season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. On 10 September 2004 the season began with Grand Prix Rimini. It ended on 4 December 2005 with the conclusion of the 2005 World Championship in Yokohama and was thus the longest Pro Tour season ever. The season consisted of 31 Grand Prixs and 7 Pro Tours, held in Columbus, Nagoya, Atlanta, Philadelphia, London ...

  11. 2005

    The year 2005 was the thirteenth year of existence for Magic: The Gathering. Heretic: Betrayers of Kamigawa (January) Guardian: Saviors of Kamigawa (May) Ravnica (September) Scott Norris (art director) John Carter Mark Gottlieb Mons Johnson Paul Sottosanti Jonathan Tweet Justin Webb ... Pro Tour Philadelphia. Won by Gadiel Szleifer. May 17-20 ...

  12. Levelling Up

    Pro Tour: Philadelphia 2005 - Champions and Betrayers I do believe this was the first Pro Tour where we could test on Magic Online. The program existed long before this, but maybe the date of the Pro Tour was before the online release of the second set in years before. By the time Philadelphia rolled into view, I was already on the gravy ...

  13. Paul Cheon

    Paul Cheon is an American former professional player, streamer, R&D developer, and Pro Tour coverage commentator. He won the US National Championship in 2006, and two years later won the Team World Championship with teammates Michael Jacob and Sam Black. In July 2017, he joined Wizards of the Coast R&D as a member of the newly formed Play Design team, then later moved into Coverage coordinator ...

  14. Pro Tour Phyrexia

    Lotus Field Combo. Madson and Duke Face Off in Round 4. Shota's Thoughtful Play. The Feature Match, Home of the Champion. LSV vs. Edel. Hall of Famers Clash. The Pro Tour is Back. So is Draft. Reid Duke's Hall of Fame career adds its Pro Tour trophy, taking Indomitable Creativity through Benton Madsen in the finals of Pro Tour Phyrexia.

  15. Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour

    From your local game store all the way to a Magic World Championship, Regional Championships and the Pro Tour offer competition and prizes every step of the way.. How to Qualify. Top finishers at each region's Regional Championships.; Players that earn 30 or more match points at the previous Pro Tour. The 8 players who compete in the Magic: The Gathering Online Champions Showcase which ...

  16. Pro Tour Phyrexia Viewers Guide

    All competitors that finish Pro Tour Phyrexia with 27 or more match points will be invited to the next Pro Tour in the 2022-2023 Season. There is a $500,000 prize pool which will be awarded to competitors based on their final standing in the tournament. All prizes displayed in U.S Dollars. Prizes subject to change.

  17. MTG Pro Tour Results

    Team Sealed / Team Draft September 29-October 1, 2000 New York, New York, United States

  18. Pro Tour Phyrexia Pioneer Metagame Breakdown

    The Pro Tour is back! At Pro Tour Phyrexia, taking place February 17-19 at MagicCon: Philadelphia, 218 of the world's best Magic: The Gathering players will compete for $500,000 in prizes, several World Championship invites, and a prestigious trophy. While most competitors earned their invitation via Regional Championship performance, the field also includes Magic Hall of Famers, top online ...

  19. Magic: The Gathering on Twitter

    The doors to MagicCon: Philadelphia open TOMORROW! We can't wait to see you all at the show, and hope you're ready for a weekend full of Magic: The Gathering fun!

  20. DMBQ Concert Setlist at The Khyber, Philadelphia on November 2, 2005

    Get the DMBQ Setlist of the concert at The Khyber, Philadelphia, PA, USA on November 2, 2005 and other DMBQ Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  21. Pro Tour Phyrexia Round 9 Standings

    Standings for Pro Tour Phyrexia. Rank Player Points OMW% 1: Madsen, Benton: 24: 0.6831: 2: Wylde-LaRue, Tristan: 24: 0.6420

  22. DMBQ Concert Setlist at The Khyber, Philadelphia on April 5, 2005

    Get the DMBQ Setlist of the concert at The Khyber, Philadelphia, PA, USA on April 5, 2005 from the US Tour 2005 Tour and other DMBQ Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  23. Pro Tour Phyrexia Fact Sheet for Competitors

    Overview. Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour Phyrexia will take place in Philadelphia, USA at MagicCon Philadelphia on February 17-19, 2023.. The formats for Pro Tour Phyrexia are Phyrexia: All Will Be One Booster Draft and Pioneer Constructed.. Official hashtag: #PTPhyrexia Location. MagicCon Philadelphia Pennsylvania Convention Center 1101 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA 19107