Today's session was a difficult one but very useful.
The Beginning of the Learning Process
I tried out a few new ideas for builds in the "Bird Beast Plant" style, except instead of a Beast I have a semi-premium Mech (I say semi because it has mildly scuffed stats).
This is one of those session where you get a taste of the REAL process of learning, at least for me, a lot of it starts with awkward / losing sessions where I realize I have no idea how the team works.
In this case, I realized my plant moveset is really not optimal since watering can doesn't make a lot of sense at my current rank. Also my birds aren't quite the right builds, basically only my Mech seems like it's got a moveset that is viable for high ranks.
This stuff wasn't clear to me before I tried, but now I can see that I need to do more research followed by spending some time in the marketplace to adjust my build.
Every Archetype is Different
One thing I've learned about competitive card games is that usually each archetype has a very distinct play style.
It requires some focused learning to figure out the initial foundation of how to play a new style. Then, hundreds of games and many hours of post-match review will be required to dial in the decision-making for all the different difficult scenarios you are likely to encounter.
When starting to learn a new archetype, it will take more work to achieve similar results to an archetype you already understand how to play.
Still a Good Session
It was still fun and we had some cool games, a few clutch Ws, and stayed well within the top 1%.
That's a very interesting Mech you got there. How much does it cost? The dmg potential is freaking insane with this one.
Got it for 0.06, it has insane damage although Kotaro Bite is a little awkward. Its definitely great in adventure
Surprisingly cheap tbh, It's a keeper.