spartaxoxo wrote: »Personofsecrets wrote: »Crow is therefore the nail that sticks out. And if Crow isn't that powerful, but Rajhin playing at it's maximum couldn't beat Crow, then your statement of Rajhin being overwhelming is negated. In this case it obviously wasn't overwhelming enough.
Rahjiin is the deck that makes opponents discard cards, for the most part.
Rahjiin was not beaten by crow. It was built by a crow setup to do combos using 2 other decks (red eagle and psijic). Needing 3 decks to beat one deck does not indicate that any of 3 decks are the problem.I list all of those out so that we can think of the powerful things that each deck is capable of.
No. Because those statements don't tell what the other decks are capable of. Each deck has it's a own unique thing. No other deck draws as much as crow. But, what sounds more impactful.
No other deck has as many taunts as Pelin?
Or
Crow doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Rahjiin doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Druid doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Almalexia doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Etc. Etc. The repetition makes the unique feature seem more powerful. But every deck is unique and has something they offer that makes them standout compared to the other decks.
What determines whether or not something is too powerful is counterplay and power budget.The major counter play to Crow is to try and be the person that ends up with more Crow cards.
No. The major counterplay against crow is to rush power before the deck gets a chance to burst an opponent down. This can be accomplished in a variety of ways by a variety of decks.
Personofsecrets wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »Personofsecrets wrote: »Crow is therefore the nail that sticks out. And if Crow isn't that powerful, but Rajhin playing at it's maximum couldn't beat Crow, then your statement of Rajhin being overwhelming is negated. In this case it obviously wasn't overwhelming enough.
Rahjiin is the deck that makes opponents discard cards, for the most part.
Rahjiin was not beaten by crow. It was built by a crow setup to do combos using 2 other decks (red eagle and psijic). Needing 3 decks to beat one deck does not indicate that any of 3 decks are the problem.I list all of those out so that we can think of the powerful things that each deck is capable of.
No. Because those statements don't tell what the other decks are capable of. Each deck has it's a own unique thing. No other deck draws as much as crow. But, what sounds more impactful.
No other deck has as many taunts as Pelin?
Or
Crow doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Rahjiin doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Druid doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Almalexia doesn't have as many taunts as Pelin
Etc. Etc. The repetition makes the unique feature seem more powerful. But every deck is unique and has something they offer that makes them standout compared to the other decks.
What determines whether or not something is too powerful is counterplay and power budget.The major counter play to Crow is to try and be the person that ends up with more Crow cards.
No. The major counterplay against crow is to rush power before the deck gets a chance to burst an opponent down. This can be accomplished in a variety of ways by a variety of decks.
Regarding Rajhin you are just privileging your own logic in an arbitrary fashion. I am saying that the game was essentially Rajhin versus Crow. I gave the context that both decks had used Eagle and Psijic which are support cards for a primary strategy. You then go on to say that Crow for some reason counts as 3 decks but Rajhin counts as a single deck. You aren't being consistent with yourself.
Answer what other combination of decks, besides crow, can fight out of the situation. There isn't one = the other unique properties of the classes are simply lesser than the unique properties of Crow.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Hence 3 decks were used to counter 1 deck.
Personofsecrets wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »Hence 3 decks were used to counter 1 deck.
You are still arbitrarily priviliging your own logic. Rajhin used Eagle too as you pointed out. Rajhin also used a Dreaming Cave which was fairly important and I had pointed that out earlier.
Don't you see how any deck can benefit by the addition of cards from other classes? For example, all decks can get a huge boost from Dreaming Cave no matter which deck they are.
bulbousb16_ESO wrote: »Crow doesn't need a nerf because the people playing Crow are often brain-dead. Many times, I have been up against a Crow player that has just pulled off a massive combo and racked up a ton of coin. All they have to do is turn Crow and the game will end in me getting slaughtered. But instead, they blow all the coin on cards (more Crow?) and I end up winning. In stunned silence.
spartaxoxo wrote: »bulbousb16_ESO wrote: »Crow doesn't need a nerf because the people playing Crow are often brain-dead. Many times, I have been up against a Crow player that has just pulled off a massive combo and racked up a ton of coin. All they have to do is turn Crow and the game will end in me getting slaughtered. But instead, they blow all the coin on cards (more Crow?) and I end up winning. In stunned silence.
I've won against so many crow users who have massively squandered big early leads.