![]() ![]() Often you achieve that by having a lot of draw and AP in your deck. ![]() ![]() But a good, large deck can and should be consistent. A 5 card combo in a 5 card deck means you'll pull off that combo everytime. So a small deck is more easily built to be consistent. You can preemptively add a card in hope of getting a synergy later, but such strategy is rarely worth the risk. If new cards don't help you perform said combo faster, easier or better, and that they aren't just good cards on their own that help with what you lack, they are generally not worth adding. A good deck usually revolves around a combo, while still having a few cards to patch up weaknesses of said combo. Small decks make achieving this a lot easier, which is why they tend to be suggested a lot as an advice.īut between a deck that has 5 basic cards, and a deck that has 30 powerful, upgraded card, the latter will perform better.Ģ) Consistency. Again, just like StS, you need to understand what truly matters:ġ) How good on average a card you'll draw in your deck is. ![]()
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