Meta description: Save every combo from every deck. Track your accuracy, see what you keep missing, and never forget a win line again.
The deck you built three months ago has combos you've already forgotten
This is true for almost every active Commander player. You build a deck, learn it for a couple weeks, play it for a month, then it sits in the binder while you focus on a different list. Six months later you pull it out, look at the combos page, and realize you don't remember which pieces go together anymore.
Combo memory decays. Decks accumulate. Most players end up with three or four lists they kind of know and one they actually pilot well.
The save-and-track feature is built for the rest of those decks.
Quick answer
The save-and-track feature at mtgcombotrainer.com/save-and-track-your-commander-combos lets you save every Commander deck you import, track your training accuracy per deck over time, see which combos you keep missing, and run targeted drill sessions on weak spots. Premium feature, $4/month, unlimited deck saves.
What the feature does
Three jobs:
Saves every deck you import. No re-importing every session. Open the trainer, see your full deck list, pick which one to drill today.
Tracks your accuracy per deck, per combo, over time. You'll see which combos you've mastered (95%+ recognition) and which ones you keep missing (under 70%). Weak spots highlighted automatically.
Builds focused drill sessions on your worst-performing combos. Instead of re-drilling combos you've already mastered, the trainer prioritizes the lines you keep getting wrong. Faster improvement, less time wasted.
That's the loop. Built for players running multiple decks who don't want to start from zero every time they switch.
Why tracking matters
Combo recognition is a skill, but it's not a skill you build once and keep forever. It decays. The combos you mastered last month are partially forgotten this month — especially the ones you don't see in your most-played deck.
Tracking lets you stay sharp on combos in decks you only play occasionally. Twenty minutes a week per backup deck is enough to maintain recognition speed. Without tracking, you don't know which decks need attention or which specific combos within those decks have decayed.
This is the difference between a player who's good at one deck and a player who's good across their entire collection.
Features in detail
| Feature | What it does |
|---|---|
| Unlimited deck saves | Save every Commander deck you've built. No cap. |
| Per-deck accuracy history | Track your recognition rate on each deck over time. |
| Per-combo accuracy | See which specific combos you keep missing. |
| Weak-spot drill mode | Auto-builds sessions focused on your lowest-accuracy combos. |
| Session history | Review past sessions, scores, and improvement curves. |
| Deck change detection | When you update a list on Moxfield, the trainer notices the changed cards and re-analyzes. |
| Cross-deck combo overlap | See which combos appear in multiple decks (useful for prioritizing what to drill). |
The free tier of the trainer lets you drill any deck once per session without saving. The paid tier ($4/month) adds the persistence layer — saved decks, accuracy history, weak-spot tracking.
Who this is for
Specifically:
- Players who run multiple cEDH decks. Switching between two or three decks is normal at the high end of the format. Tracking keeps you sharp on all of them.
- Players preparing for tournaments. Two weeks before an event, ramp up drill sessions on your tournament deck. Track accuracy until it's above 95%.
- Players who tune their decks frequently. Every card change shifts the combo set slightly. Tracking shows you which new combos you've added and need to learn.
- Players who play different decks in different pods. A deck for Bracket 4, a deck for cEDH night, a deck for the kitchen table. Track each separately.
If you only play one deck and never tune it, the free tier is enough. The paid feature exists for people running broader collections.
How it works in practice
The intended use pattern, after upgrading:
- Import every active deck once. Paste each Moxfield URL. Trainer parses, saves, builds the combo set.
- Run baseline sessions on each. First pass through every deck establishes your starting accuracy.
- Pick a primary deck for daily drills. Whichever deck you're playing most often this week.
- Maintain backup decks weekly. Once a week, drill 10 minutes on each non-primary deck to prevent decay.
- Pre-event drill the tournament deck. Two weeks out, increase to daily sessions on the deck you're piloting.
- Update on deck changes. Re-import after any tuning pass. Trainer flags the new combos.
Most active cEDH players manage three to five saved decks comfortably. The accuracy data over time becomes its own form of feedback — you can see exactly which combos you're struggling with and target them specifically.
What the data tells you
After a few weeks of tracked sessions, the data reveals patterns most players don't notice on their own:
- Combos you think you know but actually miss often. Common with combos shared across multiple decks — you confuse which deck has which line.
- Combos with similar pieces that you mix up. Splinter Twin + Conscripts vs Kiki + Conscripts is the classic mistake. Both real combos, same partner, different commander color identities.
- Decks where your accuracy is plateauing. Means you've hit your recognition ceiling and need either more drilling time or a different study approach.
- Combos in your decks that you've never gotten right. Cut the combo or commit to learning it. The data forces the decision.
Without tracking, all of this is invisible. You feel like you "kind of know" your decks. With tracking, you see exactly where the gaps are.
How it pairs with the rest of the workflow
Save-and-track is the persistence layer for the broader trainer + analyzer ecosystem.
| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Combo analyzer | Audit a deck's combo coverage, legality, and power level |
| cEDH combo trainer | Drill combos in any imported deck |
| Save and track (this feature) | Persist deck data, track progress, focus on weak spots |
| MTG Proxy Cards | Test physical builds before buying real cards |
The flow: analyze a deck, train on its combos, save it, drill weekly, refine when you find weaknesses. Each step feeds the next.
Frequently asked questions
Three decks. Five decks. As many as you want.
The free tier handles one deck at a time. The save-and-track tier handles your whole collection.
If you only ever play one deck, you don't need this. If you run more than one, you do.
Start tracking your decks now →
$4/month. Unlimited saves. 7-day free trial — cancel anytime before it ends and you're not charged.