If you have Bloodline Necro and ], things can get really out of hand. When you copy it with Inalla, you get two creatures back into play, which are also copy-able. ] comes with the deck and is one of your most powerful cards. ] should be in too, it's just as good for drawing but doesn't have the delicious discard aspect. My opponents really groan when I play this one. Wrecks your opponents hands and totally fills your own super fast. No, but if I can remember tonight I'll look through it and post the heavy-hitters. I'll be running loads of Commands, Confluences, Charms, and other odds and ends (Supreme Will, Insidious Will, Abrade, Collective Defiance). My theory is this: you hope to use your spells twice and get real mileage out of them, so fill the deck with spells with multiple modes to really broaden your options. Like you, I want to build Kess as more of a UR-with-B-on-the-side spellslinger deck than a Storm deck - Talrand, Guttersnipe, Jori En, etc. It's still very grindy, but strikes me as being a bit more powerful and capable of defending itself than just the ETB-triggers-focused build most people go for, even taking control of the midgame at times. Plus Grave Pact and Dictate of Erebos for real oomph. I'm playing the likes of Viscera Seer, Thoughtpicker Witch, Ashnod's Altar, Vampiric Rites, Barrin, Master Wizard, Attrition, Ghoulcaller Gisa, and a few other sac outlets. The way I have built and tested it online is to abuse both the ETB triggers of your various Wizards, AND the inevitable one-turn tokens as sac fodder. I got Arcane Wizardry for Xmas, and am splitting it into both an Inalla and a Kess deck.Īlthough you seem quite set on Kess, and I understand why, I will make an argument for Inalla as well.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |