Shadow Era Decks

  понедельник 06 апреля
      13
Shadow Era Decks Average ratng: 9,0/10 1607 reviews

Shadow Era Six Steps to Building a Deck Guide by Cruxx. With this guide I would not only like to help newcomers to build competitive decks, but also offer veteran players a way to quickly review their deck’s reliability and structure. Formulate (up to) 6 basic goals for your deck and support these with at least 6 cards each. Shadow Era - Dark Prophecies Gameplay (mix of early footage from test server, and current footage from Live Server).

Shadow Era is the full scale, cross-platform collectible trading card game that you've been looking for, with the most generous free to play system out there!Start your campaign by choosing your Human Hero, and get a free starter deck. Battle with AI opponents or other players in realtime pvp to earn more cards. Your progress and cards will be saved on the server and can be accessed from any device! You must decide which strategy to use as you build your deck, in one of the most balanced card games out there!'

A fantastic representation of what freemium games should be.' - Touch Arcade'Shadow Era is a must-download for fans of CCGs.' - TUAW'Shadow Era is a deep CCG that's easy to pick up, but nearly impossible to put down.'

- Slide To Play (4/4)'Shadow Era proves that digital TCG's can be just as fun as their real world counterparts.' - Gamezebo'If you like MTG or Hearthstone, you'll love Shadow Era!' FEATURES- 67 new cards in the Lost Lands expansion, bringing the total to more than 600 cards- Amazing card art that is sure to wow you, even rivals the top trading card games!- View games in progress or replays to learn new strategies- Free to play Meltdown game mode with great weekly prizes- Cross-platform multiplayer pvp battles- Game Center leaderboards- Full support for Retina and iPad displays- Fantastic 3d graphics and special effects- Amazing custom soundtrack- Completely free to play!

No 'pay to win' here!- One of the most active communities of any TCGPlease visit for the official game rules, full card list, tutorials, and forums. By purchasing this item, you are transacting with Google Payments and agreeing to the Google Payments. AFinitDataCallback(key: 'ds:17', isError: false, hash: '38', data:functionreturn 'gp:AOqpTOG0KX8y0G3kPHcuq5Re8kDYVaST0SAyuJsQNDiJ02HvXZ4-julKOwRgW8C-9Gwb0yVxM3XOnAb6kkv7A','Samuel Dionne',null,2,null,null,null,'game itself is extremely good, and the art is gorgeous. Progress is slow unless you want to pay, but there is enough content that you do not need to pay to enjoy playing.

I do have an issue with the deck builder; there is a filter section, but you can't sort (say high to low cost, high to low attack, etc) and the UI is not friendly to viewing the deck in full. Either a sort function or a better deck view to see all cards at once would help this dramatically. All in all, a solid game',678000000,22,null,null,'0','Samuel Dionne',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Smith',null,2,null,null,null,'think the game play is very well balanced with plenty of deck building strategies and variations.

The only thing is I feel the gold and Crystal rewards are a touch light for the PvE player. I don't enjoy playing other players very much as I only seem to get the jerks. I'm a very casual gamer and the game is fun but the grind to get basic resources for common and uncommon cards is rather heavy.' ,513000000,7,null,null,'1','Jeff Smith',null,null,2,null,null,null,'roman',null,2,null,null,null,'think it's an AMAZING game that is highly enjoyable for anyone who likes planning and strategy. Or just cards in general. I also love the bonuses you get on Shadow Crystals, it just makes everyone playing feel a little bit better.

I enjoy Shadow Era so much and will carry on playing for years to come.' ,533000000,9,null,null,'9','samuel roman',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Rokus',null,2,null,null,null,'game, I just wish there was a better outline of which cards can be played by which heroes, and how to create a integrated deck with cooperation in the cards-and for that matter which cards to buy for said desired affect (kind of like what the forums provide, built into the game as an optional guide). (Maybe even an indepth deck builder that gives you a power level score that corresponds with card/hero combos.and which cards to use to increase that power level??)',346000000,11,null,null,'8','Patrick Rokus',null,null,2,null,null,null,'O',null,2,null,null,null,'good.

I like the fact that you can buy all the cards with gold that can be earned through the campaign. However it can be a little slow to get new cards. Apparently mayhem mode is the best way to earn gold and it's free.

I haven't tried it yet as I'm working through the campaign for now. Still early days for me but I'll likely play more.' ,845000000,4,null,null,'2','Dan O',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Reed',null,2,null,null,null,'far the gameplay is good. I like the idea of discarding for resources. This weeds out unnecessary cards for the specific style of match and gives the option of changing strategy in mid to late game if needed.

It also reduces the dead card draw as the cards that may be sacced in early game become more useful in late game. Good concepts, decent art so far, playability is good as well. I enjoyed playing thus far.' ,618000000,3,null,null,'1','Blue Reed',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Knox',null,2,null,null,null,'itself plays really good, just the motion of the cards is very slow. I have a big screen on my phone and its still really hard to see the cards in my hand and on the board, they should stretch the UI to fit the screen since there is alot of open space on the screen.'

,896000000,1,null,null,'9','Elliott Knox',null,null,2,null,null,null,'high strategy involved here, can take a long time. Relatively high learning curve, very fun if you invest the time it takes to efficiently play.' ,519000000,0,null,null,'6','MrLylebjorn',null,null,2,null,null,null,'uzumaki',null,2,null,null,null,'game it's self is good but getting cards is a bit of a pain sends you can only buy the Avatar cards if I'm saying that right with coins but to get card to use in your deck you need crystal's if which isn't all bad when it comes to buying a deck but if there was other was to get cards that would be good',98000000,0,null,null,'9','naruto uzumaki',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Crites',null,2,null,null,null,'fun game, lots of cards and fun combos.

Exactly what I'm looking for in this type of game. Only con I can think of is it takes a long time to get through a match. But still very cool',432000000,0,null,null,'4','Michael Crites',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Misel',null,2,null,null,null,'it's a well designed game, and it seems balanced. The only complaint I have is that as a free player, it takes alot of grinding to get booster packs.

Each game takes between 10 and 15 minutes typically, and after the first couple of levels it takes dozens of them to get a level, which only amounts to 1/4 of a new booster pack. It's hard to get into multiplayer (which rewards better) when I still don't have a decent collection of cards to experiment with.' ,753000000,26,null,null,'2','James Misel',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Honeycutt',null,2,null,null,null,'Gameplay, easy to understand mechanics, awesome art and graphics.

In terms of card games, this one takes the cake. It's not hard to gain in game currency to buy new cards and heros, and each hero has a different style of play. The ONLY things I can say I dislike is, occasionally the game refuses to load daily chests (which may have been caused by my bad connection) and there aren't enough cards yet!

Can't wait to see new cards get added frequently.' ,672000000,2,null,null,'2','Dallas Honeycutt',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Hollister',null,2,null,null,null,'have been playing this game for years and I am amazed that it still feels balanced despite bringing in so many new mechanics and awesome cards. This is also an example of TRUE freemium gaming. No pay-to-win.'

,833000000,3,null,null,'3','William Hollister',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Bush',null,2,null,null,null,'been looking for a ccg to replace Magic ever since I stopped playing the old windows so version of the game. I hadn't been impressed with any of my options this far until I found this game. For a freemium game, it's not too grabby, the mechanics-while they take some getting used to-are solid, and the variety is enjoyable. My only real wish would be a skirmish mode with random AI decks, and I'd be willing to pay for full offline availability.

That said, this is the best option.' ,179000000,3,null,null,'1','John Bush',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Pain',null,2,null,null,null,'runs a little slowly and hard to progress without spending money. Aside from this its an interesting take on card battle games, interesting graphics. See how we go after a bit more grinding.' ,123000000,0,null,null,'7','Joel Pain',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Eley',null,2,null,null,null,'alright. I can't seem to get the pace of play to stay consistent.

The animations are so slow and when I adjust the slider it doesn't seem to do anything, sometimes if I put it on the slowest setting is when it seems to go the fastest. It needs an automatic stop for using cards as resources because when I'm at 7 I don't really need to sacrifice anymore cards',441000000,1,null,null,'6','Derek Eley',null,null,2,null,null,null,'P',null,2,null,null,null,'who like MTG will probably enjoy this game. It's very similar, with the exception that land is abandoned in favor of resources, which are gained by sacrificing card. This sacrifices one layer of strategy for another. Taking a star off for an occasional bug that causes the attack animation to play on loop, and extra damage to be done.

I've lost a couple games due to this bug making me take more than 10 damage when I should've taken 1.' ,509000000,3,null,null,'5','Brandon P',null,null,2,null,null,null,'B',null,2,null,null,null,'of the better ccg. Rough learning curve. Tons of cards to collect. Currency is ok. 3 star battles are insanely difficult unless youve been playing it since it came out years ago.' ,647000000,0,null,null,'5','jarett B',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Firestone',null,2,null,null,null,'Deaths!!

Just when you have the guy on the ropes, the game lags and he hits you for 2 damage multiple times taking you from 40 hp to 0 with a 2 damage ally. Kinda stupid. Other then that, the game is amazingly simplistic and fun to play',186000000,1,null,null,'3','Zachary Firestone',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Morgan',null,2,null,null,null,'adds are too long for the amount of crystals you get, should be at least 10 instead of 5.people would watch more adds and it would be better all around. Game play is good for the most part. But farming is painful',982000000,0,null,null,'7','Butch Morgan',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Does',null,2,null,null,null,'game.

Fair till now no pxw. Only problem is the option of speed animation (faster or no animation opt would be appreciated) and the overall size of the cards a bit hard to read. But a part that a nice game to play.'

,967000000,0,null,null,'6','John Does',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Miller',null,2,null,null,null,'fun game! It takes a bit to get used to, and it requires a bit of grinding to get new cards, but overall a really cool game with a solid story and mechanics.' ,90000000,0,null,null,'3','Kenneth Miller',null,null,2,null,null,null,'back to a really unbalanced game. Unless im playing cheaters online cuz they have the perfect hand and attachment decks are so stupid makes this game no fun. Don't play this game you will be mad.' ,263000000,29,null,null,'5','Shadowalker',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Raven',null,2,null,null,null,'it's release this game came a long way.

It has a massive single player campaign now. It has real versus play. Booster packs isn't the only way to get cards. I think this is the most important point because most games nowadays make you buy overpriced loot boxes with very bad odds.

Just Cause (1995) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Release Calendar DVD & Blu-ray Releases Top Rated Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Showtimes & Tickets In Theaters Coming Soon Coming Soon Movie News India Movie Spotlight. Just Cause (1995) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Showtimes & Tickets Showtimes & Tickets Top Rated Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office In Theaters Coming Soon Coming Soon DVD & Blu-ray Releases Release Calendar Movie News India Movie Spotlight. Just cause cast sean connery.

In this game you can buy the cards directly as well and I have to say it is very affordable compared to other games I've played in the past. ,81000000,0,null,null,'6','Cagliostro Raven',null,null,2,null,null,null,'Brightwood',.

In order to have a competitive deck – your deck needs to have the minimum number of cards possible and the maximum number of key cards. So, if you want to draw fireball consistently, you should have 4 copies of fireball in a 40 card deck. This is the prevailing wisdom in most trading card games and generally holds true for Shadow Era.

But it’s not always true, and to understand those exceptions (like 80 card Garth decks) you need to first understand the rule.Probability of drawing a single cardThe math behind figuring out the probability of drawing a single card in a deck is complex (you can read about it ). The most important thing to know about it is that it is tied to deck size, number of matching cards within the deck, and number of cards drawn.Smaller Deck = better chance of getting target cardIf I have 1 Jack of Spades shuffled in a deck of 4 cards, and I draw one, then I’ll have a probability of 1/4 to draw that Jack of Spades.

If I increase the deck size to 10, my probability will drop to 1/10. For this reason, if drawing a Jack of Spades will make me win, I want to minimize the size of my deck.More Target cards = better chance of getting target cardSimilarly, if I have 4 Jack of Spades in a deck of 4 cards, my chances of drawing a Jack of Spades now goes up to 100%. If I increase my deck size to 10, I’ll still have a 4/10 chance to draw a Jack of Spades.More cards drawn = better chance of getting target cardNow if I have 1 Jack of Spades in a 4 card deck, the first card I draw has a 1/4 chance of being a Jack of Spades, and if it isn’t the next card I draw will have a 1/3 chance of being a jack of spades.

When you combine them, there is a 50/50 chance that the Jack of Spades will wind up in the 2 cards I drew, or the two cards left in the deck. So drawing 2 gives me a 50% chance of getting the Jack of Spades.There is a nice page that will calculate probabilities of drawing specific cards.4x in 40 card decksSince many effective winning plans can be put together with just a few target cards, it is generally a good idea to maximize your probability of drawing those cards.

If we can make a deck where we will have the maximum probability of drawing Kristoffer, Puwen, Aldon, Fireball and Supernova, we have a good chance of winning. Indeed, you could probably make a winning deck with 3 copies of each of those and nothing else. But the game doesn’t let you do that. The game gives you a minimum number of cards allowed of 40 and a max number of each card of 4. Still players often want to get as close to that ideal opening hand as possible, and so they make sure to have 4 copies of each of those cards and some draw cards to make sure that they increase their chances of getting those cards when they need them. This represents an attempt to min-max to increase specific probabilities.

When you include 4x a card in a 40 card deck, you wind up with a 55% chance of drawing at least one copy of that card in your first 7 cards.Going beyond the Jack of SpadesIn those above examples, we start from the assumption that we need a specific card or combination of cards to win. If you don’t have Kristoffer in your opening hand, Aldon is not as great a card. We really want both of them, and so we need to really maximize our probability of getting both and we need to make a targeted deck. But what if you didn’t need a Jack of Spades to win the game? What if all you needed was a Jack?

Or a face card? The game only allows us to have 4 Sword Thiefs in our deck, but if we don’t care whether it’s Sword Thief or Layarian Seductress, then we can have 8 copies of 3cc ally tie-up equivalents in our deck.

If we can do that sort of thing, then that 4x in 40 rule need not apply.Certain heroes like Garth (credit to BP Shadow Mann for being the first to figure out a competitive 80 card Garth deck – and later a solid 120 card Garth) make this sort of thinking much easier – since Garth can amplify the power of any ally or weapon – allowing you to consider allies as being roughly equivalent along different themes. For example – in my newest Monster Garth deck, I broke down my cards along the themes of “Holding Board” (34 cards), “Taking Board” (21 cards), “Draw/Pseudo Draw” (35 cards) and “Utility/tech” (25 cards).

Most of the cards in the deck fill at least two of those roles, so when I look at the whole 80 card deck, my chance of having at least one card geared towards “holding the board” in my first 7 cards drawn winds up being 98%, with a 90% chance of getting a card geared towards “taking the board” and a 99% chance of getting at least one draw card. If it doesn’t matter which one of those I get, I’m in really good shape.This idea of interchangeable cards along themes wasn’t really possible in the early days of Shadow Era. There were limited cards to choose from, so choosing cards that were roughly equivalent wasn’t possible. A huge deck meant you might not get Ley Line Nexus when you needed it – and that could just make you lose games. There were two things that made it possible in Shattered Fates: General Hero Abilities (already there from the start) and a critical mass of cards. In Lost Lands, the Seek Mechanic has further enhanced our ability to make huge and consistent decks.General Hero AbilitiesThe odds of drawing your hero card are 100% so the more generally useful your hero ability is, the less importantit will be for you to draw any specific cards.

Consider heroes like Garth, Boris, Tala, Zaladar, Aramia, Banebow, Skervox, Victor and Moonstalker. Those abilities will have an impact on the game no matter what cards you’re holding. All you need is enough cards to support the themes where they excel.

If you can manage this, you can probably make a decent oversized deck. I think Garth is the best example, since he makes an ally with 2 attack (or a weapon) able to kill an ally with 5 hp. Contrast those heroes to heroes like Vess or Serena – potentially strong, but they do best when they get their key cards.Critical Mass of cardsAs the game gets older, we get more and more cards that do similar things. There are so many ways to draw cards now: some are slightly better than others – but there are enough decent draw engines that you can give yourself a fairly high probability of getting at least one draw engine in an oversized deck. Indeed – with an oversized deck, you can get sort of silly with draw, increasing your chances of drawing to much higher than they might be in a typically sized deck.Along those lines – you wind up with a lot more options for allies in various roles (early game, mid-game, late-game, utility, taking the board, holding the board, etc.). Having so many options means you can make sure to have your bases covered. If you don’t draw Eternal Troll or Night Owl, you may still draw sword thief or Layarian Seductress, and any of those might help you in one way or another.If we’re in a position where two people might choose two different cards in the same role to make two separate decks that play roughly equivalently – then you might do just as well to combine both of those decks together.

For example, one person might make a deck that uses Layarian seductress and Night Owl and draws cards using Confluence of Fate and Backstab. That’s perfectly respectable and could probably do fine, competitively. Another person might use Eternal Troll and Sword Thief and draw cards with Ill-Gotten Gains and Treasured Heirloom.

That’s another perfectly respectable choice. You could easily combine those two decks and wind up with a deck that has a good chance of drawing one of those 3cc allies and one of those draw engines.

The probabilities wouldn’t change much – it just would be harder to predict which draw engine or 3cc ally you’ll get first.As a general rule, the more cards that are available in the set – the more viable oversized decks will become and the easier it will be to make competitive 60, 80 or even 120 card decks.Which is better? Do you need to choose?Seeking Key cardsThe newest little wrinkle in this rule of 4x in 40 is the new seek mechanic.

In my new Garth deck, I’ve got two cards that can seek other cards: Vigilant Wisp and General of Unaxio. Because of this, it greatly increases my chances of drawing certain key cards. For example, if I’ve got 4 copies of Treasured Heirloom and 4 copies of General of Unaxio in my deck then I have a 49% chance of drawing each of those by turn 6. If I assume that I’ll use General (if I don’t get heirloom) to seek an heirloom, then my odds for having Heirloom by turn 6 is very high (about 75% and this goes up if I draw extra cards or go second).

So seeking lets you greatly improve the chances of getting key cards – assuming you can play the seeker card successfully.Seeking non-key cardsThis other little feature of seek allows you to include cards that might not otherwise make sense – especially in a 40 card deck. The perfect example is Nowhere to Hide or A Legend Rises – both potentially suboptimal or useless cards in many games, but in others they can completely turn things around. Having a single one of these in a 40 card deck can be worthwhile – but what are the odds you’ll get it when you need it? Also, the card will often show up as a dead draw – and that’s going to mess with the deck’s consistency.

If it’s a single tech card in an 80 card deck, your chances of drawing it are very low – however your chances of being able to seek it are still decent. All I need is to either draw it or get one of my 4 generals to seek it for me. That gives me a 56% chance of getting Nowhere to Hide by Turn 6 if I want it and only a 15% chance of drawing it by turn 6 if I don’t want it.The Oversized AdvantageThere are disadvantages in going oversized – if there is a clearly optimal choice for a specific role (for example Ill-Gotten Gains is probably a better draw engine than Confluence of Fate) then mixing and matching lowers your chances of getting the optimal card. You may have to make due with a suboptimal draw engine.

So why would you do this?Oversized decks have other advantages that make this worthwhile – first, they are unpredictable. This can seem like a drawback, but consider it from the opponent’s perspective. They probably know that I will try to draw in some way, and I will try to claim the board in some way – but beyond that, they cannot predict exactly what cards I’ll play. This gives me the advantage of surprise. In a 40 card Garth deck – the opponent would be wise to hold onto item destruction to take out Ill-Gotten Gains or Anklebreaker. Against an 80 card Garth deck, that might pay offbut it might not.

I might go the whole game drawing entirely with attachments, bad santa and ally based draw. They can’t predict my exact strategy, but I’ve got enough of the right general ingredients that there’s a good chance I can put together a winning strategy with the things I draw.Another advantage of oversized decks is that they can carry odd bits of tech that you might not use in a normal deck. I already gave examples of one-ofs that I can seek, like nowhere to hide. I can also just include a few anarchic lootings. They work sort of like stop thief, but they can also help a ton against stall or combo decks.

Since those games tend to go on a long time, I can be sure of drawing at least one if I need it.Another big advantage of oversized decks is they automatically include the stall win-condition. If I can survive until my opponent draws all their cards, I will probably win. Ideally, I’ll win before then, but even if they can keep up with me all game, they run out of steam when they run out of cards.Similar to the whole surprise concept is the idea that if you make a competitive monster deck – it will be very hard for others to copy it.

Most 40 card decks, I can play against once or twice and then immediately go to the deck builder and copy them. I know what cards they carry, I just need to make educated guesses about the amounts of those cards. If I play against someone with a monster deck, they won’t see all the cards in my deck in a single game, or even two or five. I spectated BP Shadow Mann’s games for a week trying to reverse engineer his Monster Garth (before he finally posted it in the shadow era forums). I sat there with a piece of paper writing down precise counts of the different cards I saw played – and still I got it wrong, since he was tweaking the deck the whole time. It was slightly different from one game to the next!

Similarly, I watched tons of Jojiwakabayashi’s Fat Zhanna games and never really got a satisfactory copy of his deck. Kyltz was nice enough to give me his approximation, and I wound up building off of that as I explored those decks.Making a Monster deckMaking a monster deck takes more time than making a 40 card deck – some of the same general rules apply – you want to have a sense for its resource curve and some general plansBut it’s too many cards to easily visualize what an average opening hand will be – in fact it’s impossible to predict what an opening hand will be. For this, I think it helps to break down cards into general themes, like I suggested. Consider the different classes of cards you might want in the deck, then choose cards that fit those classes.The hardest step is then taking those classes of cards you’ve put together and tuning them into a competitive deck. The problem is going to be that every game is so different so the issues with your deck won’t be obvious at first.

Because of this, you have to test these decks a LOT more than a typical deck. As you test it, you can tweak it in minor ways – like a cook adding spices to chili. You might notice that it’s losing a lot to early rush – so you might add some rush counters – perhaps some cheap allies, or perhaps some health gain.

The problem is that there’s no easy formula for this, and so it winds up being a long and intuitive sort of process.One other important tip when building oversized decks is that you need to be cautious when using combos. You can break combos into different categories – some involve cards that are good on their own but better in the combo.

Others involve cards that are only good as part of a combo. You should avoid the later in a monster deck. Unless you are using seek or glass chalice of knowing to put together the pieces of your combo, you cannot rely on consistently getting it together in a timely matter. If that’s important for your deck, you should really be aiming for a 4x in 40 deck.An updated rule of thumbAll of this goes to say that while 4x cards in 40 card decks can help to make optimal decks, it’s not always necessary.

It is still the best way to go when you need specific cards or specific combos (and seek will not help you get those combos/cards). It may not be the best way to go when all you need is a class of cards (like a specific type of ally, or draw, or an ally with a specific cost). In those cases – making a bigger deck may not hurt your odds of getting the cards you need (it may even help) and it may confer extra advantages (like a win condition where the opponent runs out of cards). Making Monster decks can be very difficult, but it can be worth it. Garth is the best hero for this sort of thing IMO, but other heroes are also capable of making good over-sized or monster decks as well. Stay tuned as I’ll be posting my new Garth deck along with a new Trolling it Up episode where we pilot it in a week or so.

About Bob RossBobRoss has been using the pseudonym (based on the television painter, Bob Ross) since he first got AOL in 1993. He's got a Ph.D. In Clinical Psychology and has been an avid video game player and computer user his whole life. He used to love Magic The Gathering, also way back in those AOL days, and has been playing Shadow Era almost since its inception. He has been mostly a casual gamer, but recently took a more active role in the community with several articles on Shadowera.net and by participating in the World Championship tournaments, where he earned the title of Regional Champion for Europe and Africa (although he lives in New York).