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Old Friends and New Faces

Well, it’s been a little quiet from me, but I have finalised my draft for the reading beta. If you are interested in helping me out with my next release, code name Cinderborn, please sign up for the beta reading list and get an early draft of the novel. Only you can prevent forest fires!

So, I thought I would write about something that I haven’t discussed on this blog in a long time. You see, I recently was graciously given access to the final second summoners for Summoner Wars! Yes, it’s been over a year but, you see, the cards have been out of print and I never got my grubby hands on most of them. So it was a pleasure to finally give these elusive decks a try.

Now, I would normally like to write an indepth review of the decks. Partly because it would give me far more content to post on the blog but largely because I enjoyed analysing the product. Alas, my time with these releases was too short to get a really good understanding of them. But I was able to get a general impression.

And I have to say, it’s a real shame that Summoner Wars ended. Though it was just several brief games, I found these last six decks to be an absolute blast to play and I think they are some of the best design Plaid Hat Games put out for this system. Now, I say last six decks because I do own two of the final summoners: Farrah Oathbreaker and Saturos. So those I have played on my own time. But the remaining ones (Brath, Scraven, Little Meda, Shiva, Natazga and Melanatar) were all fantastic.

Granted, these are hardly the simplest decks released. But though they can kind of get wordy, I am not certain I found them any more complex than the Alliance decks. I also had the misfortune of playing against Oldin as well, and the stark contrast not just in design but in balance was remarkable. Summoner Wars is a weird little game, and I don’t want to slag its early design too much, but given all its mechanical quirks it is so great to see that it ended on such a high note. Even if some of the later releases pale in performance to the first decks, they are all pretty balanced and – more importantly – enormously fun (barring Hogar)!

I am humbled how you can take a fairly simple system and continually add greater strategical complexity. For example, Shiva gives a player the chance to forego an entire turn phase in order to have unprecedented control of the battlefield. Lessons were certainly learned and, had the game been predominately the releases from the Master Set and on, I think it would have been in a fantastic state. It would possibly be even more loved than it was. These last releases actually renewed my interest and love for the game, which is remarkable because I think after two years of following its product line, I got a bit disillusioned with its glaring flaws.

I won’t rehash its issues here, but seeing Oldin in play and the dreaded “defensive playstyle” I can see where the product line got a bad reputation. And what’s fascinating is the interplay between these final summoners and those early releases. You see, Oldin’s gameplan is to play about eight of its thirty-three card deck. Everything else goes to the magic pile. Playing Oldin looks to be a real drag. Most turns seem to be “draw five cards, kill your starting units, build your five cards for magic, pass.” Repeat until you get a hand of champions and Heroic Feats, throw out Magic Drains to nettle your opponent then summon a beefy champion and kill your enemy with all the extra attack dice your Heroic Feats grant.

But despite how drab that plan is, there was still excitement in the matches against these new summoners who almost all are designed to fight Oldin with this game plan. In fact, some of the summoners just outright destroy Oldin if he does this, forcing the Oldin player to actually play the game the way it was intended. And it was glorious.

Granted, the best games I played were ones between two of these final summoners. All of them have a brawling, fast and active play style and those games were really interesting and engaging.

I’ll give my impressions of the decks. Though, as I said, it have too little experience to really get a grip on their strengths, I’ll roughly organise them by my initial sense of their power from weakest to strongest.

Shiva – Benders

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I think my favourite thing about Shiva is how she really captured the Bender feeling without anywhere near the aggravation of playing against Tacullu. Shiva can skip her movement phase to move three of her enemies one space each. This sounds like an awful trade, except Shiva’s deck revolves around Puppets – units that can’t move during her movement phase in the first place. Between them and Sirens (who can move a unit one space as well), you really get a strong sense of controlling the battlefield.

Unfortunately, because of her immobility, Shiva doesn’t make for a really strong attacking deck. And the one thing I noted about most of these last summoners is that they are very strong on the attack. Her events are far less impactful and I found that she got overwhelmed rather quickly when she tried to apply pressure that she sort of fizzled out. She’s probably the deck I played the least, however. I only got one of her champions on the board (Puppetmaster both games but he does seem really good) and I never had an opportunity to play with the Shifter at all which allows you to steal your enemy’s units! So I certainly missed out on some of her shenanigans and power.

Scraven – Sand Goblins

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I really like Scraven. However, his base commons leave something to be desired. However, his ability to give three commons a free move at the start of his turn plus guaranteed blockers at the end is so great. I certainly found myself constantly thinking about distances and angles. And it is really hard to get your opponent in a tough position with your army ping-ponging back and forth during your turn. You feel crafty but it is difficult to wield. I’d like to try him some more so I could wrap my head around his battle flow, especially after being told that Wraiths make for fantastic vanguards. I personally had trouble getting him to do anything and he folded pretty fast beneath the other summoners’ pressure. I wanted to get Dinky to the board but was always dead before I got a chance to throw nine dice!

Natazga – Swamp Orcs

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Wow, Natazga is crazy. I don’t remember how I ranked her when she was previewed but I know I had a lukewarm impression. I know I thought that she would struggle since she was throwing her attention at walls instead of the enemy’s units. However, most people like to play passive, so there isn’t a big downside to that. Plus, her Skulltakers don’t generate magic on kills so are better for hitting walls. And with Erosion, those walls go fast. My favourite game was between her and Brath, where Brath lost her starting wall and her other two were in the last four cards of her deck! Needless to say, Natazga won though it was a nailbiter game despite this huge advantage!

Generating vine walls immediately at the most valuable locations is a very strong ability. And all of her units hit really hard. It feels like a fast tide of green flowing over your opponents side. Is it fun? You bet. Powerful? Perhaps not. I think she may be the weakest of the swamp orc summoners due to her low vine wall generation (you really take notice of all the unit wall generating powers). On the flip side, she did beat Oldin despite the threat of Besiege the Walls due to the heavy wall pressure she applies plus the small wall generation by her units discouraging the event play to set her back. Also, she totally got lucky on a Gror whiff but that’s neither here nor there.

I like playing her, though, even if she isn’t the most effective. I think she does well against the opponents which are strong against Mugglugg but she certainly struggles with everyone else. Though there’s lots of fun tactical considerations in those struggles. And who knew using Erosion on your own walls would be a good idea!

Brath – Deep Dwarves

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Here’s where we get to the meat of the releases. I think Brath, Little Meda and Malenatar are very competitive out of the box and can only get better with deck building if that is your kind of thing. Brath in particular is rather interesting because she sports the lowest average attack value in likely the entire game! Her deck is built around the zero attack Gem Golems, continuing a recurrent theme that most of the second summers kind of minimize their deck building potential by making them reliant on certain commons for their abilities. This concept isn’t new but the integration of these units feels better designed and more cohesive.

Brath, for example, gets around her low attack options by having several ways to make the Gem Golems better. First, she can take a card off the top of her deck to give them an additional die. Second, whenever her Gem Archers attack near a golem, the archers give the golem a free attack. Third, Brath has two events that increase the golem’s attack and she has two more events that allow her to recycle any card she has (and I generally chose those attack increasing ones).

Now, my feelings towards Brath are a little limited as she’s the second deck I played the least. She stomped Oldin, however, even if she lost to Natazga. I found her very fun and very aggressive as she throws her strong golems and supporting army at the walls of her foes. Even trying to wall yourself in doesn’t help as those tricky golems can even attack diagonally! I love them.

Little Meda – Filth

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If I was hard on Natazga, I know I was lacklustre towards Little Meda. I really wish I bought her now that I got to give her deck a go. I don’t know how, but the second Filth summoner I think is better than the first. And that’s saying something since I think the Demagogue was one of the best. Now, I’m feeling he’s the worst of his faction!

That said, Demagogue is easier to play and far more defensive so there is a certain amount of play style preference at work. I thought Little Meda would be unwieldy because she needs to keep to her Nanny’s side if she wants to survive. But, in the end, I feel that she’s almost more survivable than the Warden! And she hits three times as hard too!

Granted, she has a bit of a learning curve. She has some magic economy but it is reliant on her Amoeba mutant. Though she has two events to pull it out, my first game with Meda I failed to get the Amoeba until the last couple of turns of the game and by then it was too late for it to have any impact. In later games, it kept getting Magic Drained so mileage on that will vary. Her mutations are a mixed bag too. I think her best ones are worse than Demagogue’s best but her worst aren’t as bad as Demagogue’s worst. She’s more levelled the usefulness distribution. Her events are, much like her forebearer, where she shines.

Probably her best event is her most innocuous. Daddy I’m Scared allows her to move at the end of an opponent’s movement or attack phase, either setting her up in a good position for an attack next turn or (more often) getting her our of harm’s way. I dodged a Heroic Feat bomb doing just that and if you snatch Oldin’s Heroic Feat threat, you nearly defang him. Ironically enough, I find that you are spending more time trying to protect Nanny than you are Meda. Also, their immunity to events and abilities is straight up aces.

That said, she does struggle on a traditional offensive front. Since she’s largely the source of consistent damage and you spend so much time manoeuvring her and her nanny, you can’t rush down your opponent like the other decks. In that sense, she’s more of a traditional deck though she has some measure of applying defensive pressure to force a confrontation even if that pressure is somewhat easily countered.

Very fun though and I feel less complex than the Demagogue because she’s not nearly as reliant on her mutations. The ones she uses are generally ones that you have already drawn so you don’t need to memorize your deck either.

Malenatar – Mountain Vargath

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Malenatar has the distinction of having the most hilariously one-sided fight against Oldin. And that’s considering that Brath chased him into a corner and punched him between walls.

Malenatar is a juggernaut. He comes so fast out of the gate and he just does not let up the pressure. He could crowd the walls of all his opponents in the games I played by round two which gives little time for an effective defence. And he hits so hard that the wall is unlikely to stand for very long. Assuming you want to go for that wall. Generally the summoner is waiting just behind it and given a turn, Malenatar has a decent chance to just end the game against a number of summoners.

Funnily enough, his commander common is fantastic yet I find I never used more than the starting one. The guard can keep it alive for so long, is cheaper and also can protect aspirants who were pitching most of my dice.

Malenatar did make clear that the biggest thing holding aggressive decks back was the restriction on moving units. When pushing across the board, you have to choose whether to keep up your attack or replenish your line. But if you weren’t going to commit to the attack, why did you go into it in the first place? So aggressive pushes traditionally were more like assassination attempts. You throw a lot of resources on a single attack and hope it gets you the game.

But Malenatar alone can move five other cards when he moves! Will he? Of course not! But you will likely be moving an additional one for free (with Battle Procurement) and that alone helps maintain a continuous assault. Aspirants, of course, help things shimmy along.

Guards, of course, help things keep going since (with some Unity), they can help protect Malenatar from being in poor positions when the enemy walls start to come down. And talk to a Moyra player about how big keep a well placed unit around for an extra turn or two can be.

I have to say, I was really impressed with Summoner Wars last hurrah. It was such a good note to end on and refreshing to see such variability in design. My favourite games were the ones between these last summoners. They were fast, frenetic affairs that felt like they could go either way. That the game was balanced on the edge of a die roll. And now I’m sad to know that these great decks are out of print and impossible to find.

But at least I got two of them before they went.

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About Kevin McFadyen

Kevin McFadyen is a world traveller, a poor eater, a happy napper and occasional writer. When not typing frivolously on a keyboard, he is forcing Kait to jump endlessly on her bum knees or attempting to sabotage Derek in the latest boardgame. He prefers Earl Gray to English Breakfast but has been considering whether or not he should adopt a crippling addiction to coffee instead. Happy now, Derek?

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