Since the rest of the cards you mentioned seem to be standard-based, it's important to point out that Oblivion Ring is not actually standard legal right now.ForumSafari said:Oblivion Ring
For that card, I'd recommend going full Grixis (Black, Red, Blue) and putting in four Aqueous Forms and 2-3 Thassas. Being able to give it unblockable makes it impossible to stop. And putting it in the colors of Doom Blade and Magma Jet will help.Kyr Knightbane said:Aye, but only if it's not blocked. Its a decent card, but you wouldn't get through unless you had a board wipe, in which case, you'd probably lose yours as well.
It wouldn't do much good against a deck that has hexproof or indestructible creatures, which his Eldrazi deck has.
For 1), if you like opening up packs like I do, look into Draft and Limited. Sir Connery mentioned it, but I personally love limited formats. Limited formats are formats where you get packs, open them in different ways depending on format, and use the cards to build a 40 card deck normally. This gets rid of the 'spending problem' that many have with Magic. You can't just drop $500 on cards and expect to whip everyone. There's a lot of luck involved. And drafting takes quite a bit of skill.Sir Thomas Sean Connery said:1) Buy singles. I know it has been said, but I can't stress this enough. Boosters are overly expensive. They're fun, but places like CardKingdom and MTGFanatic are the way to go.
6) Speaking of game modes, by far the best advise I can give is this: Find a group that doesn't care about formats. Seriously. Standard and Extended are creations of the devil made to hurt puppies and steal money from disabled children and housewives. Magic is FAR more fun when you have a group of people that don't force you to go out and completely rebuild everything you worked on every time a new set comes out.
For 6), it'll largely depend on how you want to play. If you have friends you can play casual with, then that's fine. If you're the only one who you really know who plays, then you're going to want to pay attention to formats. I'm personally a fan of Standard. It's rotating nature makes it shift quite often, so you're not just going to see the same deck repeated forever. We're also at a point where jumping into Standard is the perfect, since rotation just hit. No having to worry about an old set with a bunch of good cards you don't want to invest in killing you every time.
But no matter what you play, I'd say it's worth learning what all the formats are. That way you can know what you need to play if someone mentions they'd like to play a certain format.
A small note: I personally like to use mtgdeckbuilder for building decks online to test them out. They have some pretty solid tools to play around with the deck a bit, and the deck construction is actually visual rather than just the card names like many others.