From Misplays to Mindset: How I Learned to Enjoy Magic: The Gathering Despite Losing

I remember showing up with a deck that, honestly, just didn’t click. It had decent cards on its own, but when I started playing, I realized there was no real synergy holding everything together. My win condition felt unclear, like I was just hoping something would stick rather than executing an actual plan.

Every match felt like an uphill battle, and it didn’t take long before I started losing—often. It was frustrating, especially seeing other players pilot smooth, well-built decks while mine stumbled through each turn.

At first, those losses hit harder than I expected. I started questioning whether I was just bad at the game or if I didn’t belong in that space yet. It’s easy to tie your confidence to your win-loss record, especially in a competitive setting. But over time, I realized that focusing only on winning was the fastest way to burn out. Instead, I began shifting my mindset—treating each match as a learning opportunity rather than a judgment of my skill.

What helped me stay grounded was paying attention to the small improvements. Maybe I sequenced my plays better in one game, or I remembered a trigger I would’ve missed before. Sometimes, I still lost—but I could clearly see that I played tighter than in previous matches.

Those small wins started to matter more. They gave me a sense of progress, even when the results didn’t immediately reflect it.

I also learned to appreciate the social side of the game. Talking to opponents after matches, asking for feedback, and even laughing about misplays made the experience a lot more enjoyable. Most players were surprisingly open to sharing tips or pointing out better lines I could’ve taken. That sense of community made it easier to accept losses—they stopped feeling like failures and started feeling like part of the process.

In the end, staying confident wasn’t about suddenly winning more: it was about redefining what success looked like. Enjoying the game meant allowing myself to grow at my own pace, even with a flawed deck and plenty of losses along the way. Looking back, those early struggles didn’t push me away from Magic—they actually grounded my appreciation for it. Because once things started to click, I knew I had earned every bit of that progress.

Thanks for reading, and until the next blog post.