Hi everyone, I’m trying to build decks for a custom format using this card pool (f:standard tix<=0.1 usd<=1
). I have a deck here: deck link.
I know legality is ultimately whatever rules you define for a custom format, but I’m looking for a practical way to check a deck automatically against a specific pool, rather than checking each card one by one. For reference, Penny Dreadful has a deck legality checker. I’m wondering if there’s something similar for generic card pools, or if manual checking is the only option.
Is there an easy way to check if the deck is legal for this pool and identify any cards that aren’t allowed? Also, I’d love tips or strategies for making deckbuilding simple in a custom format like this. Thanks!
I built a simple validator for custom formats to use with Premodern/Prefire, it uses a JSON file with the list of valid cards as data source and runs as a static website. If you know how to code it should not be too hard to generate a new format based on MTGJSON:
https://github.com/Badaro/validator
https://github.com/Badaro/validatortools
Disclaimer that my design skills are close to zero.
When I try to validate a deck, I only see the message “Loading data, please wait…” and nothing happens. So I’m not sure if it’s a problem with my JSON export, the file path, or the validator itself.
I exported the Standard Penny collection from Moxfield to JSON using a Python script:
import csv import json input_csv = 'moxfield_haves_2025-10-21-1123Z.csv' output_json = 'standard_penny.json' sets = set() cards = [] with open(input_csv, newline='', encoding='utf-8') as csvfile: reader = csv.DictReader(csvfile) for row in reader: name = row.get('Name') edition = row.get('Edition') if name: cards.append(name) if edition: sets.add(edition.upper()) sets = sorted(list(sets)) output_data = { "sets": sets, "cards": cards } with open(output_json, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as jsonfile: json.dump(output_data, jsonfile, indent=2) print(f"JSON saved to {output_json}")
I saved the JSON file as
validator/formats/standardpenny.json
and added it to the validator’s config:{ "name": "Standard Penny", "key": "standardpenny", "datafile":"formats/standardpenny.json" },
Then I tried to validate this deck exported as Plain Text from Moxfield and got the error.
I’ve managed to write another script that seems to work:
import json import re def load_legal_cards(json_file): """ Load legal cards from a JSON file with structure: { "sets": [], "cards": [], "banned": [] } """ with open(json_file, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as f: data = json.load(f) legal_cards = [card.lower() for card in data.get('cards', [])] banned_cards = [card.lower() for card in data.get('banned', [])] if 'banned' in data else [] return legal_cards, banned_cards def clean_line(line): """ Remove quantities, set info, markers, and whitespace Skip lines that are section headers like 'Deck', 'Sideboard' """ line = re.sub(r'^\d+\s*x?\s*', '', line) # "2 " or "2x " line = re.sub(r'\(.*?\)', '', line) # "(SET)" line = re.sub(r'\*\w+\*', '', line) # "*F*" line = line.strip() if re.match(r'^(deck|sideboard)\s*:?\s*$', line, re.IGNORECASE): return None return line if line else None def validate_deck(deck_file, legal_cards, banned_cards): """ Returns a list of illegal cards """ illegal_cards = [] with open(deck_file, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as f: lines = f.readlines() for line in lines: card_name = clean_line(line) if not card_name or card_name.startswith("#"): continue # skip empty or comment lines card_lower = card_name.lower() if card_lower in banned_cards or card_lower not in legal_cards: illegal_cards.append(card_name) return illegal_cards def main(): legal_cards_file = 'legal_cards.json' # JSON with "cards" and optional "banned" decklist_file = 'decklist.txt' # Your decklist input legal_cards, banned_cards = load_legal_cards(legal_cards_file) illegal_cards = validate_deck(decklist_file, legal_cards, banned_cards) if illegal_cards: print("Illegal cards:") for card in illegal_cards: print(card) if __name__ == "__main__": main()
Check the console for errors? Or send me a link of where you got it published and I’ll take a look.
Seems simple enought, so I’m going to try and make one myself. Here’s the idea I have so far: