Epic Card Game is my favorite game, and you can find the most recent Epic articles on this page. For an organized list of all of the previous Epic content (with brief descriptions) click here.
I plan on running through the campaign for one of them, currently thinking Sunday March 22. Aside from that, let me know what you want to see.
Which format(s)? If constructed,
Any deck requests?
Any cards you would like to see me build around? (my most comfortable archetype is mid-range but I’ve been experimenting with aggro)
Against which players (top level players, direct challenges, queue/arena, etc.) [If anyone actively wants to play some games during any of these times, let me know and we’ll make that happen]
I went a bit overboard in explaining my dark draft picks. For comparison, this is a video from the February Dark Draft monthly tournament with a timed Dark Draft:
I’m guessing most people would prefer somewhere in between these two extremes for untimed Dark Drafts (possibly similar to the remaining three games from the showmatch), but I would appreciate any feedback about this or anything else from the streams. If anyone has any lingering questions or anything they would like me to go over in a future stream, let me know in the comments. Always happy to have an excuse and direct motivation to explain something in detail.
This Sunday, March 15th at 8pm CET (2pm CDT), I am going to stream a best of 5 Dark Draft Showmatch against Christian Kudahl (IGN: Kudahlissimo) at https://www.twitch.tv/tomsepicgaming/
He is Danish, an excellent game designer (I’m looking forward to talking more about this in the future), and a blog reader who’s potentially surpassed me at Dark Draft. I think he has above a 50% win rate against me in Dark Draft right now, and there aren’t many other people who can boast that (Hampus Eriksson and Bill Anderson). We’ll see if I can hold him off or if he will demonstrate his superiority.
In the meantime, I’ve edited out the individual games from the February Dark Draft Monthly tournament. If you only watch one, I highly recommend this one against Atlanta: Best Game
Below are all of the games in order (including the one above):
Ben Sullivan wrote up an Epic digital meta analysis in preparation for the launch: https://teamrankstar.com/article/epic-launch-meta/. I recommend checking it out, and as the page says, if you want to see more Epic content, make sure to let them know.
This is the best control deck in constructed Epic, currently. It consists of some of the most overwhelming individual swing/win cards cards in the game, a Scara’s Gift card draw engine that bridges you to them, and your “Or”s that are either. The deck is vulnerable in the early game while it draws up to seven and gathers its key cards.
I’m going to start by going over the cards individually, then I’m going to preview the “Absorb then Unleash” playstyle (as opposed to Get Ahead, Stay Ahead) and how it relates to this deck. (Eventually, I plan on writing a full article on the “Absorb then Unleash” playstyle where I fully describe it and break it down by looking at multiple historical decks that have utilized it: Derek Arnold’s 4 Color Control, Tom Dixon’s Soul Hunter Control, Gabe Costa-Giomi’s/Nashville’s Combo Kark, and this deck pioneered by John Tatian with “The Flock” and successfully tweaked by Nathan Overbay with “The Lads.” The Lad’s Gift Horse Postmortem link)
Scara’s Gift
Scara’s Gift is the defining card of this deck. It warps the deck’s construction around itself in order to provide both survival and an unremitting win condition. Once you draw this 0-cost card, you’re effectively guaranteed a Flame Strike-equivalent-health-swing (-4 health for your opponent/+4 health for you, assuming one recall). More importantly though, as long as you can keep recalling it, Scara’s Gift upgrades every 1-cost Evil card in your deck. Most importantly, it turns all of your 1-cost Evil “Draw 2″s into “Draw 2 And”s. This is the edge that makes this control deck better than the others.
In Epic, control decks have typically been a combination of the best cards (Sea Titan/Angel of Death, Drain Essence, Wave of Transformation/Zombie Apocalypse, etc.) and “Draw 2″s to bridge you between them (Ancient Chant, Lesson Learned, etc.). Control’s weakness has historically been decks that could punish them for using a gold just to draw 2 cards. Usually this was Midrange decks that could keep a constant stream of threats coming without taking a gold break just to draw cards, but an aggro deck could also take games if the control deck drew too many “Draw 2″s early and not enough strong cards (namely Drain Essence).
With Scara’s Gift, Midrange loses its ability to grind the control deck out of the game…which is a very weird and counter-intuitive sentence. If Gift is drawn, the control deck is able to chip away at the Midrange deck/bolster its own health, while deflecting the Midrange deck as it hammers away looking for big damage openings. Without Gift, control decks generally fumble at some point, allowing Midrange to run them over. With Gift, this control deck has a health buffer to survive that fumble, and the inevitability to kill the Midrange deck before too many more happen. Against Aggro, Gift can get you just out of range of that last Flame Strike, but if the aggro deck is fast enough, Gift won’t have much time to matter (your other control cards are much more important for those matchups).
In exchange for these strengths, you want minimal effects that interact with your discard pile (recycle, Necromancer Lord/Lesson Learned, etc.), you want a lot of cards to enter your discard pile, you want a lot of card draw to find/fuel Gift, and you need 1-cost Evil cards to trigger its recall (0-cost Evil cards like Heinous Feast don’t trigger recall).
Card Draw Engine
These are the cards that find/fuel your Scara’s Gifts. Ancient Chant and Erase are just solid “Draw 2 And”s, great for the early game before you find Gift. Dirge of Scara and The Gudgeon are similar “Draw 2 And”s, but their ability to trigger Gift turns them into “Draw 2 And And”s. (Chant/Dirge’s “When this card leaves your discard pile” effects can also be triggered when banishing cards with Gift.) The rest of Dark One’s Fury, Scara’s Will, Demonic Rising, and Zombie Apocalypse are all solid Gift-recalling “Or Draw 2″s that double as overwhelming swing/win cards. All the leftovers are filler that can draw if needed.
Swing/Win Cards
Even considering all of the limitations/requirements we’ve forced onto ourselves to gain access to the power of Gift, it is arguably not even the best card in the deck (feel free to argue with me in the comments). These are all of the cards that actively win you the game and/or keep you from losing.
Zannos Corpse Lord, this is the strongest card in the deck. It does almost everything better than every other slow 1-cost card. Assuming Loyalty 4 (although it is certainly possible to get twice that in a game):
It has more stats (17/17) than every other playable card in the game, and it comes as a strong distribution of bodies for both defense and offense.
For defense, you get 4 chump blockers that can halt big, non-breakthrough champions for 2+ attack cycles, and a final 9/9 bulwark that can’t be incidentally removed along with the tokens. This buys you time to draw cards to find your Gift and/or other critical cards for the matchup. Further, it can force your opponent to commit more resources to the board to get past your defenses and kill you/punish your card draw. However, their extra commitment makes you board clears oh so much better.
For offense, you get 4 chump attackers that can chip away at your opponent’s health, and a 9/9 that threatens to take a bigger chunk if they use all of their blockers on your tokens. The flexibility to push forward or hold back blockers is both powerful and skill-testing.
It comes with it’s own Flame Strike-equivalent-health-swing which, along with its stats distribution, means no single card can 1-for-1 with it and come out ahead (except for a 9 loyalty Scarros).
The only single card that can reliably 1-sided clear your Zannos board is Hurricane and that doesn’t negate the Flame Strike swing. Zannos, at 9 defense, survives all other AoE damage-based board clears (namely Flames of Furios, Draka’s Fire, and most Scarros reveals). Further, since it is a mix of 0-cost tokens and a 1-cost body, Quell/Inheritance of the Meek effects don’t work, nor does the one alignment based board clear, Dark One’s Fury. Worst of all, however, are the bounce-based clears.
Usually an incredible option against tokens, an opponent bouncing your Zannos-based board is horrendous, for them. Not only can you just completely rebuild your overwhelming board on your next turn, but you also regain some of the health you might have lost in the interim, you directly push your opponent ever closer to death, and you might have drawn another Evil card for an even bigger loyalty reveal.
The biggest drawback of running Scara’s Gift is that it makes Zannos-specific discard pile recursion effects significantly less reliable (Necromancer Lord, Final Task, etc.).
Rift Summoner is Zannos’ off-turn bash brother. At 13/13, it has even more stats than the vanilla ambush champion Lurking Giant, and all other ambush champions too. Rift Summoner along with Zannos demonstrates how even though you are a control deck, you can still beat the crap out of your opponent in combat.
Aside from being one of the best off-turn punishers in the game, on the same level as Thought Plucker (if not higher), it can continue to snowball on its own. Similar to Zannos, it comes with chump blockers/attackers. However, after one of your demons blocks or is blocked by a bigger champion, Rift Summoner can expend to break the doomed token to give you two new ones. It is a must answer threat, but at least it is significantly easier to wipe off the board at only 5 defense and it has no unpreventable, immediate value.
Dark One’s Fury is the third major piece of the offensive side of this deck. Outside of the Evil mirror match (where it’s just a 1-cost Evil draw 2), this is always a one-sided board clear. While clearly strong as a defensive tool, where it really shines is to clear out blockers for your Rift Summoner and/or Zannos fueled army, particularly if your opponent spends their gold first on your turn. For example, if you ambush Rift Summoner into play on your opponent’s turn when their gold is down, you can then turn around on your turn, remove all of their threats, and immediately threaten 13 damage. Just the presence of this card in your deck makes it more likely that your opponent will be forced to hold their gold on your turn, allowing your chip damage to go through uncontested. It’s also a 1-cost Evil “Or Draw 2.”
Demonic Rising is another powerful way to close out games. If you have more champions in play than your opponent and they spend their gold first, you can make any reasonable attacks and then follow up with this to get a bunch more blitzing demons to finish the job. It functions as a strong off-turn board clear too, downgrading your opponent’s champions while likely upgrading yours. It’s a 1-cost Evil “Or Draw 2” as well.
Steed of Zaltessa is the final aggressive card to beat down your opponent. While it can only be used on-turn, it deals the same amount of damage as Strafing Dragon while also getting over the 6 defense, Smash and Burn, breakpoint (in addition to the common 6-offense airborne champion breakpoint). Further, it’s strong against two of the most common off-turn answers for blitzing champions: Drain Essence and Erase/Hasty Retreat. It prevents health gain which means playing it into a waiting Drain Essence net gains 5 damage to your opponent while neutralizing their gold for that turn, and playing it into Erase trades a net gain of 5 damage to your opponent (while maintaning a Steed in hand to do 5 more later) for them getting +1 card in hand.
When you get Gift going, your opponent will frequently be forced to spend their gold before you, and this can speed up your clock on them significantly. Personally, I think it is incredibly greedy to be running two of these in this deck though, since drawing them both early seems terrible. That being said, seeing as the name of the “The Lads” version of this deck is called “Gift Horse,” I’m guessing it performed very well for them in testing.
Angel of Death is the start of the overwhelming defensive cards. First off, it is a board clear, which is a strong 1-gold way to neutralize multiple golds spent by your opponent. The more you can force your opponent to commit to the board before you pull the trigger (such as with chump blocking), the more value you get. This is an amazing answer to Brachiosaurus(es).
Post board clear it is an evasive 6 attack threat with more than 3 defense to dodge most of the played 0-cost removal. Therefore, it will generally require a gold, or at least a gold-triggered Smash and Burn to remove. While strong as a threat that creates its own open board, it is easy to underestimate just how powerful that body is as an airborne chump blocker.
In my testing, there were countless times where in response to an Angel of Death, I would play an off-turn gold punisher. Then on my turn, having no 0-cost way to remove Angel of Death as a chump blocker for all but unblockable champions, I’d attack into it, get blocked, and then either have my champion finished off with a 0-cost Wither effect or have to debate between potentially overextending or passing (effectively forfeiting my turn). If I chose to pass, it’d cost me a chance to do combat damage to my opponent, draw them a card, and give them a relatively safe turn to either draw more cards or develop their own board. This card stonewalled me on so many occasions with so many decks, and it is the main reason to consider running Lightning Strike, possibly another reason to run Spike Trap. It is a deceptively powerful card, which is another weird statement seeing as it is seen as clearly quite powerful.
Raxxa’s Curse pushes out almost all 0-cost champions from the meta, particularly ones without an immediate impact (similar to what Smash and Burn does to most 6 or less defense champions). It’s a 0-cost card that removes an opponent’s slight board advantage and gives you one, absurdly powerful. It can also draw 2 if needed, but it does not trigger Gift recall.
Scara’s Will is a way to break an opponent’s single big champion without committing your gold for the turn. You can then either follow up by passing with your second Evil gold up, playing a threat like Zannos, or drawing cards. Early game, drawing cards is generally best, although passing to prevent your opponent from establishing off-turn has merits as well. Late game, drop that Zannos.
This is also nice because it can trigger Gift twice, and it gets an extra card in your discard pile to feed Gift’s recall. It’s another 1-cost Evil “Or Draw 2” too.
Wither, not only is it a great way to break Muse and most other 0-cost champions, but it’s ability to clear off all opposing tokens of a single type for 0, is devastating. It can answer Zombie tokens in the mirror, and it can even neutralize Insurgency combo kills. Wither can also be used preemptively as a combat trick or as a follow up to guaranteed finish off damaged champions. Overall it is just a versatile 0-cost answer and another card to fuel Gift’s banishing.
Drain Essence is one of Epic’s most played constructed cards. Gain 9 health is a lot, buying you time to get rolling, and 9 damage importantly breaks almost all champions in the air that you can’t easily chump block.
Zombie Apocalypse is another 1-cost Evil “Or Draw 2” or a desperation off-turn board clear. Unfortunately, since you will be burning through your discard pile, you generally won’t end up ahead on board after playing it, but you can Wither/Angel of Death away the tokens if needed.
I had always thought Medusa was the must-include Loyalty 2 card of Evil, similar to Raging T-Rex for Wild. However, it actually seems to be the weakest card in the deck (which is certainly in large part due to the power level of the rest of the cards). For example, in the mirror match up, what are you trying to hit with it? Maybe Angel of Death or their Medusa, but that is about it. Then, it is a non-evasive mid-size body that loses to Zannos, ties to another Medusa, and can get chump blocked for days, kinda worthless.
Against Midrange Wild, it dies in combat to everything it can actually block and even just ties some of the ambush airborne champions. In talking with John Tatian (or one of the other members of “The Flock” or “The Lads”), he talked about how Medusa in response to a turn one Raging T-Rex was too weak a play. Essentially, if the Evil deck tries just to keep up with the Wild deck, it can’t, so it will run out of cards sooner and die. A draw 2 is almost always better in that situation because it moves you closer to your Gifts and Zannos, and it can also set up an on-turn Scara’s Will or even just The Gudgeon/Owl Familiar chump block. It can’t even break Brak, Fist of Lashnok the turn it is played, and Medusa is an even weaker play when your opponent’s gold is still up. Pretty terrible against Human tokens too.
At this point in the meta, Medusa seems like it is only reasonable at maintaining an established lead against Wild, which admittedly still has some value. An extra 6/8 attacker on a board overrun by your tokens can speed up your clock against your opponent, and/or help get an extra token attack through unblocked though. But, even as a response to an evasive blitz champion, it is generally worse than Erase (except against Strafing Dragon), and it isn’t that much better than Wave of Transformation, Zombie Apocalypse, Demonic Uprising, or a chump blocking Guilt Demon. If you are specifically trying to improve your chances against the mirror and/or Human tokens, you might consider cutting them.
Wave of Transformation, non-Evil, 1-cost answer for literally anything your opponent can do, or a draw 2. It can be punished by Demonic Rising, Rise of the Many, or Wolf’s call though.
Erase, excellent “Draw 2 And” that deals with all but untargetable-blitz champions while you draw into your critical cards.
Hasty Retreat is the 0-cost oh-crap version of Erase. Also a non-Evil “Or Draw 2.” It is particularly strong against decks with buffs/breakthrough that can get a lot of essentially unblockable damage through otherwise, namely the Wild Combat Tricks list Pluck U, including myself, ran at Worlds 2018.
Draka’s Fire is “The Lads” tech spice specifically included to break the Evil Scara’s Gift mirror. In their testing, they came to the conclusion that this was the clear best deck (I’m still not 100% sold), and that Rift Summoner was one of the strongest cards in the matchup. This card answers Rift Summoner quite well, and since at least half the field was playing various forms of Scara’s Gift, they absolutely made the right call to include it (although, to be fair, about half of that half was all but one of “The Lads” running this deck). Draka’s Fire also unexpectedly broke my back in my final Royal Escort protected Justice Prevails wolf token assault against Hampus in the quarter finals.
Flash Fire fills the 0-cost slot created by the double Draka’s Fire. Great against specifically token decks, but also great at neutralizing an opponent who gets out too far ahead in zombies. In addition to breaking Muse/Plucker.
Remaining 0-Costs
Guilt Demon is strong for targeted removal of discard pile cards like Smash and Burn. It is a decent threat, and it is strong as an ambush airborne chump blocker when needed. Finally, it’s the best way to slow down Gift if unanswered, since it provides repeatable discard pile banishment that can prevent the two card banish requirement on Gift’s recall.
Plentiful Dead is a permanently recallable chump blocker, downgrading big, unexpected, non-evasive attacks into a 1-health tax. It can get you incrementally further ahead on the board, but this deck doesn’t want to trade too much health to do that, hence why it is a one-of.
Heinous Feast, another “Or Draw 2” although it does not trigger Gift. It can gain significant health against champion based decks that don’t do much with their discard pile, and/or it can turn off recycle for you opponent at a devastating moment. Nice to suppress potential Army of the Apocalypse decks too.
Amnesia, a 4th Heinous Feast trading the more desirable Health gain and loyalty alignment for the less desirable recycle.
Owl Familiar is “The Lads” other major spice. It’s an extra copy of your situationally best, unbanished, 1-cost event that you played this game (and can immediately play again), attached to a slow airborne chump blocker with no immediate loss in handsize. Airborne chump blockers are incredibly valuable; I cannot overstate that. They can prevent a lot of damage from airborne gold punishers (except Draka), and an extra turn’s respite is huge.
Further, in most matchups there’s an event or two which is great at stonewalling your opponent. Against a hyper-aggressive Wild deck, extra Drain Essence. Big slow guys like Brak or Brach, Scara’s Will. Single major unbreakable threats (Force Lance), Erase. Distributed unbreakable threats (Insurgency), Wave of Transformation. Rift Summoners, Draka’s Fire. Or, if you just need to draw more cards with a slight upside, Ancient Chant/Dirge of Scara (to trigger their “When this leaves your discard pile” trigger). Although, if you can’t get an Event back with it, and you’re pressured so much you have to play it just as a chump blocker, particularly in the early game, *wince*.
Absorb then Unleash (Playstyle)
This deck does not follow Get Ahead, Stay Ahead exactly. I learned this watching John Tatian’s matches with “The Flock’s” original list in the 2017 Worlds finals. (My first exposure to this playstyle was Derek Arnold’s 5 color control deck.) Instead, a more apt way to describe the playstyle needed to play this deck optimally is “Absorb then Unleash.”
The biggest differences between “Absorb then Unleash” and “Get Ahead/Stay Ahead” is that as “Absorb then Unleash” you are neither trying to Get Ahead on the board early, nor is it always necessary to Stay Ahead later. Instead, your goal is to Absorb the loss of early game board presence and small amounts of health, in order to gather your strength (by drawing up to 7 and to your critical cards), and then unleash it either as one big game winning burst or an overwhelming stream of pressure.
To achieve this, you almost always want to start by spending your first gold to draw cards. From there, you’ll focus on Absorbing your opponent’s early turns by playing 0s and individual 1-cost cards that can blunt more than just a single 1-cost card played by your opponent (since you have to deal with their early board advantage, in addition to what they are throwing at your now) in order to find any opportunities to safely fit in additional card draw (even if that means letting them get further ahead on the board, as long as this doesn’t directly translate into you taking large amounts of damage). Frequently this means drawing on your turn, while you can’t be attacked, and/or drawing after your opponent spent their gold on a not-immediately-threatening card. This continues until either A) your opponent runs out of cards and you can just walk over them, or B) you find and Unleash your win condition(s).
Draw Cards Early and Often
Any time you want to draw cards, such as with your first gold of the game or after you incidentally Absorb an opponent’s gold for a turn, you need to choose which card to use. If you have one of your “Draw 2 And”s that can only ever draw cards (The Gudgeon, Dirge of Scara, or Ancient Chant), use that. If not, and you only have one card in your hand that can draw 2, use that. If neither or those are true, deciding which card to use as a draw 2 requires a bit more thought and depends on the current state of the game and what your opponent’s deck is doing.
Early game, the best “Or Draw 2″s to use are your mid/late-game and/or win-condition cards, namely Heinous Feast, Amnesia, Demonic Rising. You’re a long way from being able to use these for their alternate effect, so pitch them to get more immediately relevant cards. You’ll eventually find replacements for them when you can actually make use of them.
If you don’t know what your opponent’s deck is doing, Dark One’s Fury is the next card I recommend pitching; against other Evil decks, it will never be anything more than a draw 2 anyway, and you generally don’t actually want to use a board clear until a few turns into the game. Duplicates are next. We want options so we can deal with the variety of things our opponent might throw at us; therefore, if you’re sitting on two of the same card, pitch one to preserve a single copy of your others.
Finally, we arrive at the cards I’m loathe to pitch early: Scara’s Will, Erase, Wave of Transformation, Raxxa’s Curse, Flash Fire, Hasty Retreat (going in order with Hasty Retreat being the card I least want to use). Scarra’s Will is strong in the early game because an opponent opening with a single strong establishing champion (like Raging T-Rex) is fairly common. Being able to answer that, then draw cards with a different Evil card is great. Erase is similar, except you also get to draw cards when you play it; however, it is much better to save for answering non-establishing, aggressive/blitz champions. Wave of Transformation being able to answer literally anything your opponent can throw at you makes it a strong safety net to keep. The rest are all 0-cost cards that can be played in conjunction with other card draw.
Once you know the deck archetype of your opponent, you can have a better idea of what you need to keep. Against
Wild Midrange: Amnesia and Heinous Feast aren’t necessary, but Scara’s Will is particularly strong. One of Wave of Transformation, Zombie Apocalypse, or Demonic Rising can be held just in case the board gets out of control, but you’re generally aiming to clear with Dark One’s Fury if you have a board or Angel of Death if you don’t. If vs the Force Lance version, preserve your Erases and Waves.
Mirror (Another Scara’s Gift deck): Keep Heinous Feast and Amnesia until you can hit a big discard pile or immediately after your opponent’s first gift recall. Flash Fire is strong. The rest aren’t great.
Human Tokens: Keep your Flash Fire, Wave of Transformations, Zombie Apocalypse, and Raxxa’s Curses (Paros Rebel Leader) everything else is expendable draw fodder.
Against any non-token deck, Demonic Uprising is a strong card to hold onto from mid-game onwards. It can be an immediate surprise lethal if your opponent spends their gold first on your turn.
Absorb
The best way to Absorb your opponent’s pressure is to deflect non-evasive champions with 0-cost/incidental, chump blocking champions, in order to force your opponent to commit more gold to the board, for you to wipe them all away with a single 1-cost board clear. Owl Familiar, Plentiful Dead, Raxxa’s Curse, Dirge of Scara, and The Gudgeon are all great at that. They buy you time until you can find Zannos Corpse Lord/Rift Summoner to do it better. (For 1 gold, either of those cards are able to generate plenty of expendable 0-cost champions to block multiple big champions over multiple turns.) Drawing these two is generally what shifts us into the Unleash stage.
If you’re able to use 0s or 1-gold from two turns ago to prevent your opponent’s next gold (or more) from dealing any damage, that is one (or more) free opportunities to draw cards. Once your opponent has finally built up a strong enough board to bypass your defenses, and you’ve had multiple opportunities to draw cards, you can use one of your board clears (ideally Angel of Death) to clear out all of their progress and start the cycle again.
Another way to absorb your opponent’s attacks is to let some through. You start with 30 health, and as long as you don’t hit 0, you’re fine. So, for example, if your opponent spends their gold just to attack for 9 or less damage and your only off-turn play is Zombie Apocalypse, it will almost always be better just to take the hit and then follow up with Zombie Apoc to draw 2. This will generally increase your available off-turn plays for next turn, preventing you from just folding to your opponent, and it will draw you closer to both better answers (Drain Essence) and your critical cards (Zannos/Gift). Further, when you do play that Drain Essence, not only will it remove a threatening champion, but it will also remove that damage you took while drawing to it. The only caveat to this is that as you approach 10 health, you start to become vulnerable to potentially losing to a 1-cost Burn spell (Flame Strike) + a 0-cost Burn Spell (Fireball). Until then, your health is a resource, utilize it.
Unleash
Unlike more combo-centric decks, this one frequently doesn’t Unleash dramatically. Instead, after it finds its key cards and gets up to 7 in hand, it shifts into a more focused form of Get Ahead, Stay Ahead centered around Zannos/Rift Summoner and Gift.
Mid to late game, Zannos (now with a 6+ reveal) and Rift Summoner are your threats (while also being your best absorption tools). Ideally, you always want at least one of those (with their army) on board to attack with and a back up in hand in case your board gets cleared. All of your other cards support this goal now, while Gift simultaneously does its thing; although, you’ll almost always want to save your gold until after your opponent spends theirs. The main difference in this Unleash state is that you no longer need to use almost all of your safe golds, that you continue to generate through Absorption, to draw cards. That being said, if you don’t have a backup Zannos/Rift Summoner in hand, you’ll generally still want to spend those safe golds to draw cards to find one.
Otherwise, this is when Medusa, Steed of Zaltessa, Dark One’s Fury/Draka’s Fire, and Demonic Rising shine. (Angel of Death, Zombie Apocalypse, and to a lesser extent Wave of Transformation fall off a bit since you have a valuable board.) With 7 cards in hand and an already threatening board, spending one card on Medusa to clear off a threat while meaningfully increasing your own threat is pretty reasonable. Steed of Zaltessa is a solid on-turn gold-punisher; it significantly speeds up your clock on your opponent as they scramble to spend their gold first to stay alive against your board. Dark One’s Fury and Draka’s Fire are similarly on-turn gold-punishers but instead take advantage of your existing board to get damage through your opponent’s now empty board. (Great at clearing out ambush blockers.) Demonic Uprising your 7-reveal Zannos board and you get 32/32 worth of blitzing demons. <- That’s the explosive part of your unleash.
**Important to remember though, unless you are killing your opponent or doing something necessary to survive, the best thing you can do in response to your board getting cleared is to play a new Zannos on-turn or Rift Summoner off-turn as your gold-punish.**
Other Card Considerations
The Flock’s original list was: (Evil) -1 Zannos, -1 Rift Summoner, -1 Dark One’s Fury, -1 Steed of Zaltessa | +2 Reaper, +1 Zombie Apocalypse, +1 Apocalypse (Sage) -2 Owl Familiar | +2 Hasty Retreat (Wild) -2 Draka’s Fire | +2 Surprise Attack
I believe I saw someone running at least 1 Necromancer Lord at Origins.
After testing, The Lads were also considering Raxxa, Demon Tyrant, in addition to trading out some cards for some of the other options above. See their article for explanation.
If I were to run it, I’d probably -1 Draka’s Fire +1 Surprise Attack and -1 Steed of Zaltessa -1 Medusa for some jank. (Although I’d be much more likely to run the more aggressive Zannos-focused non-Gift midrange combo deck with Kriegs, Murderous Necromancers, and Mist Guide Heralds I was messing around with a bit on stream.)
Weaknesses
The second biggest weakness for this deck is its lack of early game consistency. While it is built to absorb early game pressure, it can only take so much before dying. It relies on drawing Scara’s Gift to offset the inevitable damage that gets through and to close out games, and it basically needs a Zannos or a Rift Summoner to get damage through. Adding in Angel of Death as another incredibly strong card to draw early, that is literally only 12 cards of your 60 card deck. If you don’t draw these cards early, Midrange will crush you before you can stablize. Further, if you don’t draw enough of them, or your Gift is severly delayed, or you don’t draw any Draw 2s you’ll still probably lose to midrange. In my testing, the Wild midrange deck was favored over this.
Draw too many generic draw 2’s and aggro can occasionally beat you, although I think you’re favored pretty highly. (I didn’t test Wild aggro specifically against this.) Against human tokens, if you don’t draw at least one Wither/Flash Fire and/or some off-turn board clears, you’re probably dead (although a turn one 4-reveal Zannos is pretty hard for human tokens to beat). In my testing, I thought the matchup against human tokens was fairly even, but I didn’t test it nearly enough out of mental fatigue.
And, that brings us to the biggest weakness of this deck. It is a draining deck to play. You need to carefully assess just how much damage you can take in order to draw cards. You need to carefully choose which cards you can use to draw with and when. Determining when you can attack and when you have to defend is challenging as well. As is determining when you can spend your gold first in the early game. All of this is then ramped up to insane levels in the mirror match when both players draw Gift. According to Nathan in The Lad’s article, the Gift-draw mirror is “a two hour slog full of micro-decisions that becomes very taxing over the course of a tournament.”
This is not a deck I would recommend to new players (that would be the Wild Midrange deck which I believe is favored against this). However, it is imperative to understand how this deck plays; it is very difficult to both build a deck that can beat this and to correctly play that deck in order to actually win. I highly recommend watching John Tatian’s finals match where he outplays Sam Black on the Wild Midrange deck. The other matches with this deck all also probably quite valuable to watch. (I just haven’t gotten around to it yet myself.)
Conclusion
Overall, this is a deck that wants to Absorb the early game pressure in order to draw into their key cards of Gift of Scara, Zannos Corpse Lord, and Rift Summoner. From there, they want to Unleash their chip damage by maintaining a reasonable board for both launching attacks and deflecting attacks, with the threat of big swings all while Gift steadily drains away.
This is the best midrange deck in constructed Epic, currently. It has the biggest champions, utilizes the highest tempo removal, and sees/draws the most cards. It’s weak to ultra-aggressive aggro-combo and vulnerable to getting run out of threats. (I lost so many games against this in my testing for Origins.)
Brief Gameplay Overview
I’ve previously gone over the general playstyle of Get Ahead, Stay Ahead that this deck uses, and I’ve gone over how it specifically applies to Wild Midrange in the past as well. Therefore, I’m just going to give a quick explanation here. (The original decklist run by Sam Black/Mike Sigrist at Worlds 2017 ran 3 copies of Thought Plucker and 2 copies of Lightning Strike; I prefer at least swapping out those for 3 Ethereal Dragon and 2 Spore Beast.)
Start the game by playing a strong (card-drawing), “establishing” champion. Raging T-Rex, Brak Fist of Lashnok, and/or Brachiosaurus/Mist Guide Herald (Draka’s Enforcer/Surprise Attack to establish off-turn)
If your opponent can’t remove that champion on that turn or with a 0-cost card, spend the rest of the game spending your gold second on each turn to maintain at least one 1-cost champion in play.
If they did remove it on the same turn/with a 0, return to step 1
Supplement with card draw, your 0-cost removal, and Draka Dragon Tyrant/Scarros Hound of Draka to deal damage and prevent your opponent from developing a threatening board
Brief Deck Strengths Overview
There are three primary aspects that make this deck a monster.
The Biggest Champions
If you aren’t also playing Wild, this deck’s champions will be bigger than yours. So, if you both spend a gold on a 1-cost champion, their’s will win combat, unless you spend additional cards (like Brave Squire). If you decide not to block and race instead, their champions will deal more damage and kill you first, unless you spend additional cards. Therefore, if you try to “fairly” fight this deck for the board, you are already committed to spending more cards then them.
The Highest Tempo Removal
If you do manage to get ahead on board or in a race, this deck packs some of the best high tempo removal to halt your forward momentum while maintaining its own. All of these are one-sided effects that only benefit your opponent, at your expense. Erase and Kong are hard removal with an upside. Draka and Scarros are board clears for small minions in addition to mostly reliable damage and big bodies. Further, they combine with Feeding Frenzy for big champion removal. Finally, Smash and Burn enables any 1-cost Wild card to also actively disrupt your opponent’s board (effectively pushing out most 6-or-less-defense 1-cost champions from the meta).
The Most CardsSeen/Drawn
Tying these two elements into a terrifyingly consistent deck is the amount of cards it can see/draw in a game. The most important card for this is Mist Guide Herald.
MGH early, essentially acts as three more of some of the best establishing champions in the game: Raging T-Rex/Brachiosaurus/Brak Fist of Lashnok + a 3/2 airborne body (Draka’s Enforcer and Thought Plucker being weaker yet acceptable outcomes).
MGH mid/late, is a filter to find either more of the above or finisher/utility champions, primarily Scarros Hound of Draka and Draka Dragon Tyrant (occasionally Strafing Dragon). Even if your opponent doesn’t flip over one of those champions with MGH’s tribute, they’re still 5 cards closer to drawing into them. Combined with all of this deck’s establishing card draw champions and incidental draw effects (Muse, Surprise Attack, Ancient Chant, and the recyclers Amnesia/Flame Spike/Wolf’s Bite), it can reliably find whatever it needs to finish you in the mid game.
Scarros with a hand of 6+ Wild cards is also nasty.
Card By Card Breakdown
Now that we’ve established high level what this deck is doing that makes it so powerful, I’m going to delve into why each card is selected and which ones are essential/flexible depending on meta and playstyle.
Wild Core Four
All decks that run at least 33 Wild cards want 3 copies of each of these cards. Raging T-Rex is a 10+ defense champion that draws 2 cards, insane. Brachiosaurus is a 10+ defense champion that is essentially free while also being immune to Raxxa’s Curse, can stack ally triggers such as from Fire Shaman, and has breakthrough. Strafing Dragon is an incredible gold punisher, on-turn or off-turn, and it is direct damage that effectively can’t be bounced. Smash and Burn is a draw 2 that breaks a 6 defense champion incidentally; it can even be combined with other effects like Scarros to take down bigger champions (sometimes the +5+5 is even relevant).
Essential Seven
Surprise Attack and Draka, Dragon Tyrant are two more Wild cards that are almost essential to all Wild decks; they can be excluded in some, but only with incredibly strong reasons. This is not a deck that can exclude them. We have more than enough 1-cost champions that can be put into play with it, plenty of them are disgusting when played off-turn, and we want to draw through our deck quickly. Draka is brutal against all decks that rely on non-demon tokens or 3 or less defense champions, and it is both a strong on-turn gold-punisher and Feeding Frenzy enabler.
Mist Guide Herald, as a 5 card filter that comes with a free 3/2 airborne body is overpowered, explained above. This along with our other card draw enables us to run only 2 each of Draka and Scarros, preventing us from getting 3 copies of either stuck in our hand at inopportune times.
Scarros, Hound of Draka is the main game-ender. With the amount of cards we draw, Scarros will frequently hit for 6+, clearing boards and being essentially unbouncable.
Feeding Frenzy is a 0-cost card that breaks 1-cost champions. It enables us to come back from behind and otherwise break the 1-gold a turn stalemate.
Wolf’s Bite and Flame Spike are both solid enablers for Feeding Frenzy, can clear out Muse/Thought Plucker/other lone chump blockers, and recycle helping us to churn through our deck.
Additional Threats
One of the most important parts about this deck is its ability to play a continuous stream of threats. Any turn where you do not end ahead on the board and threatening to damage your opponent is a reprieve you can’t afford to give. None of these individual cards are critical to the working of the deck, but the roles they play are.
Brak, Fist of Lashnok is an on-turn establishing champion that is big and essentially unblockable. It is great for getting damage through, outside of bounce effects, and it is even immune to Medusa the turn it comes into play. Another possible card in this slot is Herald of Lashnok which trades the size for blitz/breakthrough and greater card selection (although the ability to whiff). Without buffs and due to the slightly grinding nature of the deck, I like Brak better here.
Draka’s Enforcer is a solid off-turn, evasive gold punisher that gets above the 6 defense threshold and draws a card. A solid midrange champion.
Kong is a brutal swing card that can stomp on other midrange, board centered decks. Strong against other Wild decks but weak against control and the burgeoning combo decks. Sam Black ran one, Mike Sigrist ran two.
Thought Plucker v Ethereal Dragon: Thought Plucker is even more card draw and it can shut down decks that don’t immediately have either an answer or mitigation for it. While running the more aggressive Wild deck with Force Lance, Thought Plucker played an enormous role in beating me in one game against Sam Black and one game against Calvin Keeney. It is a powerful card. I don’t think it is right in this deck because it is too bad against Evil Scara’s Gift control though.
Scara’s Gift decks are generally more than happy to spend a turn drawing in response to Thought Plucker to help get through their deck, and they have both mitigation and 0-cost removal for it. Further, the 1 damage a turn can’t actually threaten to kill the Scara’s Gift player quick enough. Ethereal Dragon, on the other hand, is an evasive off-turn punisher that is immune to almost all off-turn removal the Scara’s Gift deck runs (aside from off-turn board clears), and six damage a turn is enough to actually force the Gift player to spend gold to deal with it.
Flex Cards
Ancient Chant and Erase are theoretically flex cards, but they are both incredibly powerful. In a world where Thought Plucker is still over-included in decks, Ancient Chant is practically indispensable. All it does is draw cards, but it draws more than any other. If you just play it and recycle it, you net gain two cards in hand. If you recall it from your discard pile, that alone net gains you two cards in hand. It can also be discarded and used to fuel even bigger Scarros Loyalty X reveals. If the meta ever moves beyond Thought Plucker, then maybe we can replace this slot with another threat.
Erase is particularly powerful in this deck because our champions are so big. Bouncing a high value card like Raging T-Rex is less of an issue because your opponent will have less time to replay it before dying. It is also amazing against unbreakable/unbanishable/unblockable blitz champions. Card draw is always great too. However, there are plenty of instances where it is pretty bad.
Muse, like Thought Plucker, is absolutely insane if unanswered. Having more ways to draw into our critical cards is solid, in addition to the fact that it can ambush, airborne chump block. Further, it draws removal away from our Thought Pluckers, Fire Shamans, Spore Beasts, Mist Guide Heralds, and vice versa. Not absolutely necessary, but feels powerful when it works.
Amnesia is strong primarily as a way to shut off potential outs for our opponent. It can hit any discard pile specific cards like Ancient Chant, Smash and Burn, Soul Hunter, Army of the Apocalypse setups, etc, but it can also be pretty backbreaking after a Scarros board clear to effectively nullify any recycle cards in our opponent’s hand for a few turns.
Hurricane is a one-of-out for an opponent that is able to develop too much. Won games in my testing but was also frequently rotting in my hand.
Fiery Demise is another draw effect with a slight upside as either direct damage, small champion removal, or Feeding Frenzy enabler. It’s fine. A one-of Fires of Rebellion is potentially better in large part due to the pressure it puts on your opponent when they know it’s in your deck.
Fire Shaman is another way to deal that final damage to finish off an opponent, particularly with Brachiosaurus bonus triggers. It is much better while we are running other small champions like Muse/Thought Plucker to draw removal away from it. Maybe should be Flash Fire if scared of human tokens, which is a strong deck that crushes this one.
Lightning Strike is another solid removal option, importantly breaking Angel of Deaths that can block our airborne champions. That being said, I like the Spore Beasts better for dealing with attacking based decks, like the one Pluck U ran at Worlds. It can also clear the way for Brachiosaurus to deal full breakthrough damage.
Weaknesses
In my testing, Scara’s Gift control won the games in which they were able to run this deck out of threats. This was particularly the case when this deck included Thought Plucker over Ethereal Dragon. Essentially, if the control deck can kill all of the threats you have in your hand and you are forced to spend a gold just to draw cards, they can also spend a gold just to draw cards; since that is exactly what they want to do anyway, this scenario is much better for them. Once they find their Gift, they can slam the door shut on you by gaining health and dealing damage with every gold spent. If, however, you never have a turn where you aren’t ahead on board, which isn’t unreasonable for this deck, they can crumble before they can grind you out. I’d say this deck is favored against Gift when both are played at top skill levels (but I also might just not be a skilled enough Gift player). (Planning on going over the Scara’s Gift control deck at a later point.)
Aggro human tokens, on the other hand, is a horrible matchup for this deck, especially with no Flash Fires. Essentially, if you don’t draw Draka, Dragon Tyrant, you’ll get comboed out/out-raced in the first couple turns and there won’t be much you can do to stop it, especially since you won’t have enough time to fill your discard pile for your recycle cards. (Planning on going over the human token aggro combo deck at a later point.)
Conclusion
This was the deck I beat my head against the most in my testing. I threw a bunch of different midrange ideas at it, and it crushed them all. Frequently, I was able to get off to a promising start and get this deck down to around half health, and then the Scarros or Draka turn would hit and blow me out with Feeding Frenzy assistance.
If your brew can’t beat this deck, keep brewing. That’s what I did. It was quite painful. I’d also highly recommend playing this deck yourself, specifically against other top tier decks such as Gift so you can understand how they work. When I eventually “gave in” and did this myself, I learned so much and now actually feel pretty comfortable with constructed when I never had before.
Anyways, I kind of forced myself through my acculated rust from waiting to have a computer again to write this, so if I didn’t go over something as much as you would have liked, I missed something entirely, you think I’m wrong, etc., let me know, and I will happily elaborate.
I will be competing in and streaming this Dark Draft tournament (finally Dark Draft!). This is my favorite and best format (not including Open Draft). It starts at 10am CDT, and I will be streaming it live at twitch.tv/tomsepicgaming I am also streaming my full constructed experimentation games and analysis Monday nights starting somewhere between 7pm CDT and 9pm CDT. It goes until I run out of games and stuff to talk about.
I’ve written a lot on Dark Draft in the past, in large part because my Dark Draft strategy has continued to evolve. However, in this article I just want to write up a concise explanation of my current style without going overly in depth as I usually do.
Three Pillars of Dark Draft
There are three types of cards I actively want to draft:
0’s
Re-establishing cards
Draw 2s
All other cards are secondary and are picked only if I can’t get one of these (with a few exceptions that I may go over in a different article).
Essentially, these three types of cards let us minimize the number of times we have to spend our gold before our opponent on a turn.
0’s: Specifically 0-cost Champions or Removal
0’s are the backbone of Dark Draft. Unlike in constructed, there is no limit to the number you can include in your deck, and you generally want as many as you can possibly draft.
0’s are strong because they let you impact the board, without spending your gold before your opponent. 0-cost blitz champions, like Little Devil, are one of the best ways to start a game. Without spending a gold, you put a threat into play that will eventually win you the game if unanswered. If your opponent spends a gold to deal with it (which is not an unreasonable thing to do), you get a chance to spend an uncontested gold, which is an incredibly powerful position. On the other hand, 0-cost removal can deal with those and other threats, without putting you into that vulnerable position.
Whileother0-costcards can be strong, they aren’t as reliable for initiating and maintaining this gold advantage. They are therefore not on the same level as 0-cost champions and/or removal.
Most importantly though, just because you can play all of these 0-cost cards on the same turn, you generally shouldn’t. The best position is to have the only champion in play with a handful of cards. It is much harder for your opponent to efficiently answer one 0-cost champion than it is to answer a bunch, and this gives you the most options to react to what they do.
Re-Establishing Cards: Champions + Removal
These are the most worthwhile 1-cost cards. There are only two limits to the number of these you should draft: your entire deck shouldn’t have many more than roughly five 1-cost champions without ambush and at least half of your cards should draw in some way.
Re-establishing cards are strong because they frequently remove an opponent’s 1-cost card, AND they leave you with a threat that requires your opponent to spend another 1-cost card to remove. If you ever get behind on the board and are forced to spend a gold before your opponent, these cards pressure your opponent to answer your new champion(s) instead of just playing their own champion(s) to pressure you.
Draw 2s: Literally ANY Draw 2s (“Ands” = Best)
Draw 2s get you to the strong 0’s and Re-establishing cards in your deck. You want at least half of your cards (15+) to draw in some way, whether a Draw 2, Tribute/Loyalty effect, or recycle.
Draw 2s are strong because they let you keep relying on the 0-cost cards you drafted to win the game, otherwise you risk running out of cards. Therefore, since we are valuing the draw 2 effect so highly, the OR option on these cards becomes nearly irrelevant. Further, the “Draw 2 and” cards become even better, since gaining extra value for doing something we already want to do is awesome.
Conclusion
This is my basic strategy (originating from the Nashville team’s 0-focus at worlds 2016) that I use against all opponents. It worked pretty well in the last Arena (7/1/19 week) where I went 21-2. However, I did have those two losses where this by itself wasn’t enough. Thankfully, by drawing on my experience of a ridiculous amount of losses in the past, I was able to adapt my strategy and win the next 4 straight games against the first person who beat me, and 3 straight games against the second.
Other things I’ve learned to consider, through my losses, are the dynamics between burn and heal, on-turn and off-turngold punishers (to exploit your gold advantage), anti–deckoutcards, anti-controlcards, and my own inclination towards Evil (bestaggressive0’s) and Sage (excellentre-establishingcards) which lets me draft loyalty effects in those alignments more readily. There is a lot of nuance and subtlety in Dark Draft that I’m not going to attempt to capture in this article, but I believe this to be a strong starting point from which to learn. (The best way to learn from here is to just play enough to develop a style that works for you. Once you’ve done that, it becomes easier to see your opponents’ styles, and then figure out ways to adapt to beat them.)
My roommate Paul2520 and I have reestablished a weekly Epic time, Monday evenings. We’ll be focusing on testing the aggro/aggro-combo constructed decks I’ve been experimenting with recently. Afterwards, around 9pm CDT or so (updates through twitter), I plan on regularly doing a stream discussing the results of those sessions as well as potentially playing the app a bit (if there are challenges or an interesting Arena [like Dark Draft this week]).
Finally, I have been working on some more blog content, but I’ve decided to rework my 3 article series from [depicting my failure-filled progression to my “Escorting the Insurgency” human tokens aggro-combo deck] to [3 individual deck techs discussing the 3 pillars of Epic constructed as it stands today focusing on Sam Black’s Midrange Wild deck, The Flocks/The Lad’s Scara’s Gift deck, and my Escorting the Insurgency deck]. Below is the start of the previous progression that I have decided to scrap if curious. (I couldn’t figure out how to/remember enough to effectively make that format work.)
After over a year and a half of no physical Epic tournaments I could compete in, no new cards, departure of two of the most visible employees in the community (Ian Taylor and Andrea Davis), minimal Epic playing in general, and even less official communication from WWG, my enthusiasm for the game was almost completely depleted. So much so that the eventual announcement of the upcoming Kickstarter with a lot of new content and the $10,000 tournaments (to replace the 50K digital tournament which was broken off of the $100k tournament) had little effect on me, which showed in my lack of blog content. I was considering dropping Epic, depending on how Origins went.
All of that helps to inform my prep for Origins, which I began one month out. However, as I prepped, I gradually rediscovered my love of the game, and Origins was absolutely amazing. Playing in person is infinitely better than playing in an alpha app with long queue times to find a game. I’ve even begun streaming again (with plans to edit highlights and put them on Youtube), I’m blogging currently, and I ordered have received my second full constructed set.
“Screw it, I’m playing Priest of Gold Dragon”
While, in the moment, I was (and still am) incredibly proud of myself for making top 8 at Worlds 2017 with Pluck U’s Wild Combat Tricks deck, especially since it created one of my favorite Epic moments which I want to write about at some point, the fact that I played a deck that I didn’t create and ultimately lost anyway, slowly ate at me. I had/have this vision of myself as a clever, innovative jank player that I wanted/want to honor, but at the same time I thought of myself as a weaker constructed player, largely “because I held myself back with that mindset.” So, when my desire to win surpassed my desire to be seen as the clever jank player, and my team (led by Tom Dixon) helped move me past my mental hurdle of not playing the “best deck” and I lost anyway, I couldn’t hide behind that excuse any more.
For Origins, I initially regressed behind that hurdle because my motivation to put the work in, was not there, and I semi-consciously wanted an excuse to explain potential poor performance away. I stubbornly decided just to play the deck that I was going to play at Worlds, my Priest of Gold Dragon [PoGD] deck (despite the fact that I thought it would be even more disadvantaged in a Best of 1 format). To be fair, the matchup against Evil in our testing for Worlds 2017 did seem slightly favored for me. But, the Wild matchup was not. I figured I would test against Sam Black/Mike Sigrist’s list, and if it was anywhere near close, I’d call it good enough.
It was not close.
That’s about as far as I was able to get.
Next article will be explaining how/why Sam Black’s Midrange deck pushes out all other midrange decks (that I’ve tested so far). For a taste of what that will look like, you can check out my deck tech for my 2016 Worlds Pyrosaur Deck.