Nothing earth-shattering here. What I wanted to do was put together a very, very straight-forward criminal deck such that a new player could learn the ropes with it. I personally like Andy more then Gabe, and this deck is weighted more towards her, but you could probably swap the ID and not lose much either way (most Andy and Gabe decks are like that, I've found, since Andy rewards you passively and Gabe rewards you for what you'll be doing anyway.)
This deck is not perfect, by any means. For instance, it includes Crypsis, a card I despise, but begrudgingly accept has a role in this deck for now. My motto remains that any deck which includes Crypsis simply isn't finished yet. So I am very, very open to all suggestions. Also, since this is for beginners, maybe having the dreadful, expensive, click-wasting Crypsis isn't such an awful thing.
It uses the Anarch suite because that's frankly better than anything in-faction and the crim-central-breaker-suite is murder for beginners to learn with. Maker's Eye because if they ICE up HQ, as they must here, you should keep 'em honest in R&D.
Very event-based, because, you know, Crim. Built to be moderately fast. Enough economy to not have to rely on Account Siphon except as primarily a way to cripple the Corp. Inside Job is of course the utility player here, with Same Old Thing expected to be used to bring that back again and again.
As for Logos: I like Logos. I know most people are wondering why not Depserado or Doppelganger, and the answer is that I like Logos. In playing with this deck, I have not felt a lack for econ, nor like I'm not making as many runs as I want. I DO feel like I need to tutor, and like I need some damage protection. I hate hate hate running Pascrete, and by now refuse to do so. Logos lets me protect myself a bit while not losing card slots. It also lets me tutor. So I choose that.
I actually have Lawyer Up in my "hard copy" of this, because I don't have Creation & Control yet, and thus no Same Old Thing, but Same Old Thing is clearly better if you've got the means.
Anyway, if you want to teach a newcomer Crim, I suggest this. If you disagree, I kindly await your criticisms.