Forum Discussion
/facepalm
People are responding to your threads and giving advice. Advice given is not equal to an automatic win. It's taking that advice and applying it multiple times in game to see what works for you. Secondly, don't make too many threads. Third, what play styles do you like? Sports, Science, Pets, something else (I believe you favour Zombies, but could be wrong)? At the end of the day, it's what's fun for you.
BPRD
- OldSchool92108 years agoNew Vanguard
I tried Sports and it can be risky since it has no Contro cards. Pets are hard to play due to removals. Science are weak to play. I just want a good deck like Boosting and give so much strength for Swimmer so my opponent can rage quit or not.
My priority for making decks is Swimmer with high damage and high health.
- BPRDHB8 years agoHero (Retired)
You're right, Sports doesn't have an overwhelming amount of control, but does have some (Sumo, DE). To me it's more about fast buildup of troops. I personally find Sports decks fun. The following is typically how I start. You may want to push the following play back one round, so you can have a trick (Escape Through Time or others) to play to save a zombie. I think of it as "one in the chamber" back up.
Round 1: Arm Wrestler
Round 2: Sumo. Move plant to Arm Wrestler lane.
Round 3: Mascot
Round 4: Coach
The above is an ideal start, but most variations will work. It's mostly about keeping the Mascot alive early to build up your forces' AP/HP.
BPRD
- 8 years agoIf you want real help, them do 2 things for me immediately:
1. Stop creating so many threads with the same topic. It's against forum rules AND is very rude to other players with different issues as it pushes their threads down or to the next page so you can have six of the same subject on the front page.
2. Tell us what hero you're most interested in playing; then take a screenshot of the available cards you have for that hero. From there we can build and explain the deck to you, answering questions as they come up. On your end, don't dismiss those decks immediately upon losing. Use that loss and figure out which cards worked well, and which didn't; then change the ones that didn't for something you like better. Repeat ad nauseum until you get a deck where you're basically happy every card you draw.
Just start off by telling us your hero and showing us your available cards.
One final note... Be patient. You're never going to win every match. That isn't even a sign that your deck is bad. It could be any number of things. They could have a deck that counters your style. They could be more skilled/experienced. They could have better cards... They could just have luck on their side. Losing doesn't mean broken.