![]() Now that the world is reopening, Magic parent company Wizards of the Coast is reestablishing the Pro Tour, yet it’s coming with some changes. Then the COVID-19 pandemic forced other changes as players found their ability to play paper Magic - offline and in person - curtailed by the health crisis. ![]() “The reason this mattered to me wasn’t that I ever thought I could be a professional - I just wanted to compete against the best, and to learn from getting trounced.”īut Wizards of the Coast abruptly stopped the event in 2018, moving instead to Mythic Tournaments, a hybridization of the physical and online play that added layers of bureaucracy to the game. “It did seem vaguely reasonable for a decent player who put the time in to make it to the Pro Tour once or twice,” Squailia says. That meant Magic’s Pro Tour, the premiere public event for high-level Magic play. And, as a competitive person, she soon wanted to see if she could handle the big leagues. When Gabby Squailia started playing Magic: The Gathering in 2017 after taking two decades off, she was hooked.
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