- Jul 24, 2017
- 40
- 116
Seeing that we've pivoted to deck-building, I'll throw in a couple tips that I follow for every deck I've made in the game so far in case someone needs it.
1) Make sure that Squeezers only take up 11-13 slots per deck. It's a good ratio for consistent minimum-2 squeezer hands so that you don't choke after your first turn. Any more and you risk drawing too many squeezers in your hand and not enough cards to actually play, and any less risks only having the single partnered squeezer in hand.
2) Keep the fighter-spells (or traps, or all the other jazz) to a maximum of a 2:1 ratio (20 fighters, 10 spells). Fighters good. Spells also good, but you'd rather have more chumps to block the squeezers than spells that won't block anything (most of the time).
3) Keep your mana curve in check based on your squeezer. Some squeezers can afford to have more 3-4 mana cards in their deck than others, but usually it's best that your 1+2+3 mana cards take up a majority of your decktotally not because those costs have the most cards in the game. My preferred mana spike (the mana cost with the most cards in the deck) is 3, but again based on your squeezer it might be better to focus on 1 or 2.
4) Make sure to include some form of endgame or wincon for the board. You can easily find yourself watching solitaire otherwise.
1) Make sure that Squeezers only take up 11-13 slots per deck. It's a good ratio for consistent minimum-2 squeezer hands so that you don't choke after your first turn. Any more and you risk drawing too many squeezers in your hand and not enough cards to actually play, and any less risks only having the single partnered squeezer in hand.
2) Keep the fighter-spells (or traps, or all the other jazz) to a maximum of a 2:1 ratio (20 fighters, 10 spells). Fighters good. Spells also good, but you'd rather have more chumps to block the squeezers than spells that won't block anything (most of the time).
3) Keep your mana curve in check based on your squeezer. Some squeezers can afford to have more 3-4 mana cards in their deck than others, but usually it's best that your 1+2+3 mana cards take up a majority of your deck
4) Make sure to include some form of endgame or wincon for the board. You can easily find yourself watching solitaire otherwise.