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Author Topic: Let's talk about the Druid!  (Read 41274 times)

abyssalstalker

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Let's talk about the Druid!
« on: December 04, 2013, 03:09:07 PM »
Hey guys,

I've been reading around the forums and it seems like everyone is talking about the Necromancer. This is fine and all but I'd love to see some minds come together on developing Druid strategy and tactics!

I've found out the hard way that in a Druid vs. Necro matchup the Druid just doesn't have time to build up too much. The Necromancer comes out with way too many creatures whether he uses one spawnpoint or two. I had lost my first three games vs the necro since his focus was creature offense and mine was late game. This poor strategy has been discussed to death on the forums but I had heard the Druid was all about growth and spreading so I initially thought she may have more of an edge in that regard. Regardless, I found that if I use my vines aggressively and only focus on a basic economy the Druid works well against a Necromancer.

I'd love to have some discussion on Druid-style spells so I'll throw in my thoughts for each:

Vine Tree – My personal favorite tree. Unlike the Samara Tree you can utilize spells that are deployed right away rather than having to wait. I cast this first turn in my starting zone and treebond with it. I generally protect this tree at all costs.

Samara Tree – At first I was amazed at the amount of actions that could be saved but then I analyzed and playtested this card and realized it’s rather weak. Casting only seedling pods means that the investment in this tree is astronomical. It takes three rounds for a seedling pod to be able to deploy, and potentially 2+ to break even with its casting cost. This, coupled along with their vulnerability since your enemy can attack one and waste its mana. The only saving grace this tree has is making seedling pods gain cantrip. However, being zone exclusive and its cost make that rather prohibitive.

Mohktari Tree - I'm personally not a huge fan. Doesn't affect her conjurations. Even if it did almost all her plants have regen 1 or regen 2 already. It's benefit also works for the enemy if they having living creatures in its zone. It not being zone-exclusive is its only saving grace in my opinion and is situational.

Etherian Lifetree – When I first read this I thought it would be extremely powerful for swarm builds and her plans in general. Then I read the recent FAQ and realized the +2 life is for everything on the board, including enemies. Also, because it’s innate life even the undead gain the benefit! This tree quickly became situational in which its main benefit would be if you had far more creatures than your opponent and gained “more” of an advantage. That being said, if I was on the losing end of creatures vs this tree I’d just focus all I could on the mage rather than get tangled up.

Nightshade Lotus – I’ve only played against the necromancer at this point so I haven’t been able to really test this in the field but the spell itself seems decent. It seems that you save 1 mana at all levels over a regular sleep enchantment. Plus, it’s a vine so you could deploy this with the vine tree (or even quick cast it) when you have initiative to almost guarantee a sleep without a proper reaction. Seems good against an opponent that has one or two big creatures. Would be almost useless against a swarm.

Seedling Pod –I see the potential in casting seedling pods all over the board and making your opponent worried but at the same time it’s a pretty steep investment if you only cast it from your mage. They are extremely vulnerable and take a long time to pay off. This section goes hand-in-hand with my gripes of the Samara Tree. I just don’t see these being viable.

Stranglevine – It’s an aggressive tanglevine. Since it initially only has 6 health (2 less than tanglevine) it can be one-shotted if you cast it too early in a round. In order to properly utilize this spell I feel it should be used in the final quick cast phase so it gains at least one round of its upkeep benefits. This is a double edged sword since you can’t play it cheaply through a seedling pod or vine tree. Overall, I think it can be a good card against someone that uses one or two big creatures. I could also see this being very good against an unprepared forcemaster.

Tanglevine – It has 8 health which I find more reasonable than its “big” brother Stranglevine. This card can be used to keep a nasty monster from coming at you or to lock one down so it can’t escape (at least on foot). I’ve been in absolute woe since teleport completely destroys this. I can’t count the number of times I wanted to deploy a tanglevine on an enemy and then teleport them into my vine snappers. Sure, I can use a quick cast teleport then full cast a tanglevine but what if he has a teleport prepared? I’d rather have two ready if I was going for this kind of play.

Mohktari Branch – It’s a nice way to remove burn or taint from your plant objects. I wish she could use it to heal without removing conditions but that was overruled. I’d definitely keep it in her book.

Druids Leaf Ring –I find my vine tree casts more plants than I do due to mana constraints. That being said, I usually try to find some way to use this every round I have it on. I have been currently quick casting it on the first turn and then casting my lifebond tree for one less mana.

Vinewhip Staff – It seems kind of expensive for what it does. The Vine tree allows you to deploy two vines a turn and I can’t imagine many scenarios when you actually need three in one turn. The stuck command is unfortunate since it takes a quick action, four mana and a vine. I’d rather just use a deployed tanglevine. Overall, a pretty weak weapon IMHO.

Bloodspine Wall – Much better than the wall of thorns; I’d go as far as to say it makes it obsolete (for the Druid). Not only does it cost less mana, but the attack affects any monster that passes through. Plus it’s unavoidable. Plus it can bleed living creatures with 66.4% chance. Extremely reasonable to use extendable on since it has a low mana cost and the spell is only level 1. Also, using thornlashers to snatch creatures through the walls is delightful. I’d definitely keep a couple in my book.

Corrosive Orchid – This flower has bite! I love that its attacks can corrode and that it has the conjuration rule of attacking before or after a friendly creatures action. If this is deployed and you have initiative you can attack and dissolve and potentially corrode with just this flower. That’s pretty good. My  only complaint is that it can’t move and can only target 0-0. I had an enemy walk out of its zone which was aggravating since it’s not really worth a teleport or push just into this flower alone.

Togorah – Disappointing without some kind of quick melee attack. This means that even though he is always guarding, its purpose is strictly to be used as a meat shield and nothing more.  The worst part is its armor isn’t even that high. Considering this thing costs 2 mana to move and can’t swing if it does I find it’s 21 mana investment a complete liability. I don’t even feel using cobra reflexes on this is worth the time summoning this guy.

Kralathor – This guy is the man. He can be summoned through the vine tree which is great since he can be deployed. He has good stats and the growth potential is phenomenal. He definitely becomes a high-priority target when he comes out. I feel like he does best against someone with several medium creatures. Lots of creatures can over run him and bigger creatures may be hard to get the final blow on. Situational in my opinion but is very strong when used correctly.

Vine Snapper – Hands down my favorite plant with a huge flaw; it cannot uproot. To be fair, for 7 mana the stats on this plant are unreal. They make the perfect cheap guard that can be summoned through vines, discounted through the druid ring or even pop out of seedling pods. It crushes me that the enemy can walk around these guys, though. I really wish I could put more than four in my spell book. I think they are awesome to pop out of a vine on an enemy spawn point (if he uses one) or channeling buildings.

Spitting Raptor – It’s meant for the beastmaster IMHO. I don’t use it on my druid since it has no plant or vine traits and doesn’t synergize well with her. As such, I have no comment on its use since this thread is about the Druid.

Raptor Vine – A fantastic plant. While it loses a lot of its value against non-living creatures since it has Vampiric, I still think it holds its own weight. Having five dice for 9 mana is pretty impressive, especially since it can be discounted through either her ring, her vine tree, or even a seedling pod. This plant is her bread and butter in my opinion. Since it has such nice stats it needed to be offset by being rooted which is fine. As long as it is able to move then its viable. I keep four in my deck.

Tataree – I love that he can heal the conjurations or give mana. He is the only quick creature in the game so far so that’s pretty neat. I summon this guy relatively early and set him to work on my conjurations right away. I wish he was not Legendary so I could summon more than one. On an even funnier note, against another druid the first person to spawn it is going to have some laughs.

Thornlasher – A really thematic and interesting plant. 7 mana is cheap for its stats and that snatch can be used in very tactical ways. My favorite is pulling things through bloodspine walls. You can also use it to pull things out of position like guards or even a very tasty mage snack into a group of vine snappers or other plants.

Barkskin – Can be abused by summoning for a tough round, using regen during upkeep and then not paying its cost. If you have the druid ring summoning this for 3 mana and utilizing cantrip is pretty awesome. Sure, it takes an action but I find myself wondering what to do with my quick cast at times since the Druids plants generally save her all the actions she needs.

Burst of Thorns – Solid nuke, but I don’t like how I can’t target a vine from any range. It feels out of place when you can generally cast her spells through vines  without worry. Destroying the Vine marker is unfortunate. I would probably only use this nuke against a rather strong creature that has armor and can bleed.

Renewing Rain – I wish there was a cheaper single target version of this spell. Being a full action and 9 mana is prohibitive. With those flaws this card unfortunately becomes situational at best.

Acid ball – Good if you anticipate high-armored targets. Since it only costs her one spell point I’d throw in at least one if not 2.

Veterans Belt - The druid has the potential to have a lot of armor if you desire. Converting critical damage to normal damage is pretty powerful. She's one of the few mages I can really see taking use of this item.

___

Bear Strength – I love how it’s only one point for her. I’d definitely buff myself with it since I feel the Druid can spare the actions to attack. Throwing it on Kralathor, Vine Snappers or Raptor Vines (more vampiric!) is awesome too. I’d include minimum of one in the deck.

Rouse the Beast – a pretty awesome card. This can work in great conjunction with deploying her plants and then activating them that round. Since her plants are fairly strong for their cost (and level) plus her not needing many actions I see this as almost a staple.

Hurl Boulder – An incredible powerful, mana efficient quick cast nuke. I generally include these in any mage book in case I’m in a pinch. I’d throw one her way as well.

Hurl Rock (promo) – 4 mana for 5 dice is incredible. A reasonable nuke to finish off a creature you were close to killing. 66.4% chance to daze is nothing to sneeze at, either.

Surging Wave – Unavoidable and only one point for her spell book. Nice D12 conditions that can potentially  bring enemies into / away from your plants.

Geyser – recently ruled that you can extinguish plants with it. I’d add it in my book if I anticipated going against some heavy fire spells. If just normal fire is anticipated (IE, no warlock) then I think the mohktari branch ring is good enough.

Dissolve – I’d probably include one in my deck since corrosive orchids can do it for me in general. It’s nice to have a cheaper, quick cast version, though.

Dispel / Seeking Dispel – Obviously a must for any mage. Include liberally.

Force Push – I think this is borderline a staple on a mage wand for the Druid. It could save her mana rather than bringing several raptor vines forward through uproot. Also, it can bring someone into her unmovable vine snappers / corrosive orchids so they be of use since mages tend to avoid their zones.

Teleport – Obviously a staple to any mage. I find it even more so for the Druid considering she can teleport the enemy mage or high end creatures into her unmovable vinesnapers / corrosive orchids. This is also the ONLY WAY for her to move a vine snapper that is in a unwanted zone.

Cobra reflexes – Probably the Druids best option for a defense since Reflex Boots are War. I’d include one in my book for sure since it’s in her school.

Heal / group heal / minor heal – good if your plants are in a pinch. Group heal is especially good if you have a lot of plants in a zone and are trying to strong arm the opponent.

Eagle Wings – I’m unsure how Eagle Wings would work on rooted plants. Maybe someone can enlighten me and tell me if it’s useful?

Falcon Precision – Face value unavoidable buff is nice to deal with the forcemaster or creatures with defense (knights, etc). I’d include at least one.

Hawkeye – If you have the spare actions you can throw this on Thornlashers for some extra damge!

Lion Savagery (promo) – I think casting this on Raptor Vines is pretty reasonable since they are most likely going to move. Plus they can gain more vampiric. Pretty solid choice.

Regrowth – Same issue here with the regrowth belt. Barkskin seems to make this not necessary since the trait doesn’t stack.

Rhino Hide – Amazing to cast on yourself or Kralathor. Couple this with a Veterans Belt and Barkskin and you are truly a tank!

Enchanters Ring - It's cheap and a good investment if you plan on buffing yourself. Since the vine tree and seedling pods can take care of most things I can see a scenario where you quick cast enchantments and use your full action to attack.

Bearskin - This was the armor I defaulted to due to it being the nature school. I wish the Frost -2 wasn't so useless, though (at least for now). I would have thrown in a Dragonscale Hauberk since burn is deadly but it costs triple for the Druid.


Regrowth Belt - Doesn't seem necessary since Regeneration doesn't stack and her Barkskin can be "abused" by first regenerating and then not paying the upkeep (or just keeping it on her when she's low HP and/or in danger).

Mana Flower - Seems to be her default channeling building since it's in the Nature School. It has the plant sub-type so her seedling pods can grow up and become plants if you have the time to build your economy.

Altar of the Iron Guard (promo) - While this is war (triple points for Druid) it may be a good idea to have one on the board. Summoning a vine snapper (or other plans) through vines in a strategic location with guard seems extremely useful for offense or defense.

Wall of Thorns - Is not a vine which is a bummer. Since level 1 creatures aren't attacked I find this wall rather weak. It wont help you in most swarms. I feel like the higher creatures that will be affected wont be phased since most have decent armor and it's multiple two-die attacks.

Fellella – I could see her being useful buffing the druid and acting as a source of income if she sticks around for several rounds. The main issue is the druid herself has to full cast her. Situational for sure, but Fellella is a consideration.

My biggest complaint I have about the druid is her creatures / conjurations that can’t be moved and mages simply avoid their zone. The Vine Snapper and Corrosive Orchid are the main two that cause me woes. I feel like I’m wasting their potential if I spread either of them out and don’t make a kill zone. Speaking of a kill zone, I think it’s pretty cool to set up a few vine snappers and orchids together and teleport a mage in. This has the same feeling of the Golem Pit.

I would love to see more treants at varying mana levels. They can be small or medium treants that have various purposes. The plants are great thematically but a real druid has some treants on her side!

I am disappointed at her lack of variety with her plant creatures. I honestly wouldn't even mind if I could put more than four vine snappers,  thornlashers or raptor vines in my book, but I can’t. That means I have very few creatures that synergize with the Druid well. Please release at least four more creatures for her in future expansions!

I wish there was some way to heal her conjurations, especially her bonded tree, besides just renewing rain (only two points is weak) and taratee. It seems the only way to keep them safe is guards and just keeping them away in general. I'd love for a single target conjuration heal, living or not.

I’d love for any recommendations for spells, usage or any general strategy to help make my druid more potent. Thanks for the read and suggestions!
« Last Edit: December 04, 2013, 05:33:59 PM by abyssalstalker »

sdougla2

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #1 on: December 04, 2013, 03:45:52 PM »
I haven't played as a Druid yet, so I'll have to see how things play out. Still, here are my thoughts on your comments so far.

I believe that Mohktari Tree only works on friendly living creatures.

Etherian Lifetree only works on living creatures and conjurations. It does not affect undead, as they are all Nonliving.

Still, I don't know that I would want to bond either of those trees either. Vine Tree seems like the obvious choice, which makes me want to try bonding Samara Tree just to see how it would work.

I agree that Bloodspine Wall is better for the Druid than Wall of Thorns, but I hardly think Wall of Thorns has been replaced. Wall of Thorns has much higher damage potential against an unarmored mage, and it works well with swarms of level 1 animals, as they can move through Wall of Thorns without being attacked. This doesn't matter to Thunderdrift Falcons, but helps Bitterwood Foxes for example.
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ACG

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #2 on: December 04, 2013, 03:49:48 PM »
I like the druid more than the necromancer, but I haven't played her against an especially aggressive opponent yet.

Quote
Samara Tree – At first I was amazed at the amount of actions that could be saved but then I analyzed and playtested this card and realized it’s rather weak. Casting only seedling pods means that the investment in this tree is astronomical. It takes three rounds for a seedling pod to be able to deploy, and potentially 2+ to break even with its casting cost. This, coupled along with their vulnerability since your enemy can attack one and waste its mana. The only saving grace this tree has is making seedling pods gain cantrip. However, being zone exclusive and its cost make that rather prohibitive.

Samara tree is fantastic. The big advantage is in having a spawnpoint that you can use every round cheaply without having to decide immediately what it will cast. This essentially guarantees that you will be gaining the benefit of all the extra actions, whereas with other spawnpoints you often either waste actions if you don't have a good spell to cast that round, or else force yourself to spend mana on spells you don't really need to gain the benefit.

Quote
Etherian Lifetree – When I first read this I thought it would be extremely powerful for swarm builds and her plans in general. Then I read the recent FAQ and realized the +2 life is for everything on the board, including enemies. Also, because it’s innate life even the undead gain the benefit! This tree quickly became extremely situational in which its main benefit would be if you had far more creatures than your opponent and gained “more” of an advantage. That being said, if I was on the losing end of creatures vs this tree I’d just focus all I could on the mage rather than get tangled up.

Does not affect nonliving objects. (edit: already beat me to it).

Quote
Togorah – Disappointing without some kind of quick melee attack. This means that even though he is always guarding, its purpose is strictly to be used as a meat shield and nothing more.  The worst part is its armor isn’t even that high. Considering this thing costs 2 mana to move and can’t swing if it does I find it’s 21 mana investment a complete liability. I don’t even feel using cobra reflexes on this is worth the time summoning this guy.

Quick melee attack would border on being broken. I don't use this, but it seems comparable to Earth Elemental (less life, but more armor and regeneration, as well as the ability to be buffed by nature enchantments). I would not say it is strictly a meatshield, though it does accomplish that nicely on its way to its target.

Quote
Tanglevine – It has 8 health which I find more reasonable than its “big” brother Stranglevine. This card can be used to keep a nasty monster from coming at you or to lock one down so it can’t escape (at least on foot). I’ve been in absolute woe since teleport completely destroys this. I can’t count the number of times I wanted to deploy a tanglevine on an enemy and then teleport them into my vine snappers. Sure, I can use a quick cast teleport then full cast a tanglevine but what if he has a teleport prepared? I’d rather have two ready if I was going for this kind of play.

Possibly the most useful spell in the druid's arsenal, considering her play style.

Quote
Rhino Hide – Amazing to cast on yourself or Kralathor. Couple this with a Veterans Belt and Barkskin and you are truly a tank!

Considering the lack of armor on the druid's plant creatures, this is a must include in any druid deck. Makes a huge difference to her creatures.

Quote
I am disappointed at her lack of variety with her plant creatures. I honestly wouldn't even mind if I could put more than four vine snappers,  thornlashers or raptor vines in my book, but I can’t. That means I have very few creatures that synergize with the Druid well. Please release at least four more creatures for her in future expansions!

I find thornlashers and vine snappers enough, actually. They work well together too - the advantages of polyculture, I suppose. The druid's real strength lies in her conjurations.

Quote
My biggest complaint I have about the druid is her creatures / conjurations that can’t be moved and mages simply avoid their zone. The Vine Snapper and Corrosive Orchid are the main two that cause me woes. I feel like I’m wasting their potential if I spread either of them out and don’t make a kill zone. Speaking of a kill zone, I think it’s pretty cool to set up a few vine snappers and orchids together and teleport a mage in. This has the same feeling of the Golem Pit.

Thornlasher, tanglevine, stranglevine, and vinewhip staff can help a lot with this.

Quote
Bloodspine Wall – Much better than the wall of thorns; I’d go as far as to say it makes it obsolete. Not only does it cost less mana, but the attack affects any monster that passes through. Plus it’s unavoidable. Plus it can bleed living creatures with 66.4% chance. Extremely reasonable to use extendable on since it has a low mana cost and the spell is only level 1. Also, using thornlashers to snatch creatures through the walls is delightful. I’d definitely keep a couple in my book.

What I like most about Bloodspine wall is that it does not block LOS.
« Last Edit: December 04, 2013, 04:03:05 PM by ACG »

Celestia

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #3 on: December 04, 2013, 04:04:32 PM »
I adore the druid. I have built and will be testing later, a spellbook that uses the Vine Tree, the butterfly, and that faerie familiar to kind of build a base on half the map, while the druid runs about outside, messing with stuff. Then if the opponent focuses on the forest, I'll just break all his stuff with the Druid herself, and if they focus on the Druid, I'll just churn out some Voltrons or build a death pit while having a relatively safe place to run to.

In general I've been using either Thornlasher or uproot Creatures, but I'd like to try using the Nightshade Lotus and Corrosive Orchid heavily to see what the can do.

I was actually very happy with the Vinewhip Staff. I think it can be worth the cost to stuck opposing creatures.

My only complaints with the druid are tree selection, and treant selection. I think the only worthwhile choices are Vine Tree and Samara Tree, and the latter is so slow, it's not really even an option. Additionally, there aren't  any vine or many plant cards outside of this set. Understandable, but unfortunate.

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #4 on: December 04, 2013, 04:12:32 PM »
Disagree on the single dissolve. That card is wayyyyyyyy too good in druid to not to have at least four of. You lose an action, a card, and mana, yes, but you recover that in spades when you destroy countless pieces of equipment contingent on the strategy of the mages book! As well, it's only 4 spellpoints for four of them. One thing I absolutely love about the druid are all the cards she is supposed to have are really cheap, so you can afford a lot of sugrings, acid balls, dissolves, and geysers. You are probably going to need them, anyways. Druid functions as a support mage, lacking in any real physical or magical traits, she has the incredible able to throw vines, which will make your animal creatures that much more effective on the battlefield. You have enough ways to get free actions that you feasibly feed Kralathor for a few rounds to buff him beyond belief, and go to town supporting that beat stick. When comparing mages, I liken the Druid much more to the priestess, as seen in the Core Box. None of the winning priestess builds were solo or particularly aggressive (sans DivineNecrop as it was really fringe, often winning the first couple of games against inexperience, but relatively weak for tourny play (didn't stop me)). How she functions best is in support, and she has a wealth of spellbook points to defend her army with. From bloodspine wall + snatch, and various other incredibly interesting combos, she is also incredibly tactical, which is not even mentioning the tactical accuracy it takes to place and cast from vine tokens.

And I know there are those of saying: But the beastmaster can cast deathfangs from the lair and support them with reassemble! The pet cemetery deck isn't quite there yet, but we will see rise to it someday. No, today, we are talking about the Druid. Specifically, a card we know and have tried unsuccessfuly to use along time ago, Fellela. This chick wasn't very good in beastmaster, who is naturally much more aggressive, but the druid, oh man, the druid. An incredible play with her is round one felella, Harmonize. The next round we can cast vine tree and have HER Cast harmonize on it,  and then can cast battle forge+ Meditation. The next round can be spent casting a druid ring from the forge, casting harm on battleforge with Fellela, and finally using amulet to gain three mana, so you are now at 10 mana for the round. Finally, cast vine tree into your start zone, and then treebond that shit. You are set with effectively 5 actions a turn, channeling a million mana. Please note that I am not saying this is greatest against a hyper aggressive opponent.

You could also try something a flying army, Gravikor, and a field of mines waiting to burst tanglvines, Snatchers, and walls at you? Sounds like a good plan to me.  I would also try out the gorilla as a means to guard your sacred Tree of Awesome. and then teleporting him in to do some real damage. Circle of Lightning may be a good addition too, as well as a pacify or two. A circle of fire if you have enough spellpoints, as CoF is your single best protection against the undead.

Also, abuse healing, which you can really do with treebond. You are effectively healing 4 for that exchange. Include a hand and Renewing spring, and you are healing for a million. Worried about corrode? Cantrip chain barkskins.

As you've seen from all these strategies, support is the main aspect of her core, and where she fits best.

In anycase, I would love to see more talk of the Druid!
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baronzaltor

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #5 on: December 04, 2013, 04:20:42 PM »
cast from vine tokens.

And I know there are those of saying: But the beastmaster can cast deathfangs from the lair and support them with reassemble! The pet cemetery deck isn't quite there yet, but we will see rise to it someday.

Deathfangs are Canines, but they lack the Animal subtype.  So they cannot be cast from Lair.
The only synergy they offer the Beastmaster is that Redclaw can buff them.


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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #6 on: December 04, 2013, 04:23:30 PM »
Viva La Pet Cemetery. You can't crush my dream.
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abyssalstalker

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #7 on: December 04, 2013, 05:52:16 PM »
Sdougla2 – Thank you for the corrections on Mohktari and the Etherian Life Tree. I had read innate life for the Etherian and forgot about the “friendly” word, haha. When I said Wall of Thorns becomes obsolete I meant for the Druid specifically. I hadn’t thought about its capabilities vs an unarmored mage (a level 6 creature) so thanks for bringing that to my attention. It seems it would be good against someone who brings their mage forward often like the Warlock or Forcemaster.

ACG – I do agree the Samara Tree has potential but it’s a risky investment. I think the main problem I have is that I invest mana into throwing those seeds around but end up not having enough mana to utilize them all. I’ll have to play test the Samara more but it seems the Vine is more practical.

It is certainly true her plants lack armor but I’m unsure if it’s worth the 4 mana investment to cast Rhino Hide on them. More testing will determine its efficiency.

I do agree that things can be done to get around the Vine Snapper and Corrosive Orchids immovability but its unfortunate they have to be approached at that angle. I’m going to play a lot more Druid and find out the most effective way to keep those suckers munching and spitting!

Celestia – I do feel like being able to place a Stuck condition on someone is pretty useful but it seems costly using a quick action, 4 mana, and a vine token. I’ve avoided the staff but I’ll try implementing it in some future games to see if it really does pay off.

The Dude – I had passing thoughts of adding extra dissolves. I do agree that being face value, she can definitely benefit from more dissolves. Since I have trouble with the Corrosive Orchids and opponents avoiding them maybe I’ll swap one out in favor of two dissolves.

I do agree that her school completely takes care of her. The nature school is just so broad and beneficial, and the 1 point water school is utilized very well.

Can you explain what you mean by spending actions to feed Kralathor? Do you mean through enchantments or simply by having him go around and munching enemies?

The one thing that really stands out from your post is that you consider the Druid to be supportive, like the priestess. I actually do agree with you on that wholeheartedly. It seems her conjurations are capable of their creation but she is the one that makes them fierce, healthy and strong. Most of the games I play are actually 2V2 where we utilize some custom rules (I talk about it in the alternative play section). I can definitely see the Druid being a strong ally to any mage, really. I can’t wait to test her out in this environment.

As I said above, I can definitely see Fellella being a great companion to the Druid. My only concern is utilizing mana efficiently since you will have an incredible amount of actions! I haven’t implemented her yet but I certainly plan to. Thanks for your example play-by-play. It definitely helped me envision her usability.

Thanks for the discussion all! I can see the Druid being one of my mains along with the wizard. I really enjoy her playstyle and see a lot of potential. Let’s keep the conversation going!

baronzaltor

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #8 on: December 04, 2013, 06:08:12 PM »
If you routinely stack a multiple thornlashers/vine snappers in the same zone, it can be worth considering running Fortified Position and give all the plants in the zone 2 armor (despite it being triple cost).

Fortified Position + Shift Enchantment is a good way to keep a mobile protection zone for your rooted creatures/self.

DeckBuilder

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #9 on: December 04, 2013, 08:09:00 PM »
A great read, Abyssal Stalker! I agree with most of it. We don't have DvN in the UK yet so apologies because my post is pure theory craft.


1. You make a reference to multiple Orchids in 1 zone. You can only have 1 Orchid and 1 Lotus in each zone, even in a mirror match-up. This creates "immunity" from another vine range Dissolve when you are in a zone with an Orchid already (even if it's your own in a mirror).

2. Orchid and Lotus get round Nullify (and Transfusion Nullify). This is huge against Wizard. It's also good design as the Druid needs to Dissolve persistent fire sources like a Lash or an Elemental Wand with Fireball, as well as Sleep Lord of Fire or a Hellion Blood Reaper.

3. Spawnpoints are weak because they Deploy at start of round (your mage generally summons last action when off-initiative to minimise inactive time). This is exacerbated if all your creatures have 0 armour with regeneration. Rouse the Beast is key, especially as vine spells can summon right on the enemy mage while you are 2-3 away. Without it, your Deployed vine creature may be weeded before it ever acts.

4. Enchantments are your friend. Your second ring is Enchanter's Ring (as Mokhtari's Branch does not help you!). Eagleclaw Wings cast First QC can grant safety to a creature Deployed midst of the enemy (reveal after luring a move to it, before attack). A flying Thornlasher is lovely board control with hindering vines. Other must-haves are Bear Strength (Vine Raptors, Kralathor) and Rhino Hide (on those without Wings, regeneration good against Few Big, armour against Swarm focused damage). Also a single copy of Falcon Precision for Kralathor taking out Undead Knights or a familiar safe from Surging Wave.

5. I agree about Vinewhip and Togorah but a Druid must beware Flyers, immune to so many tricks (Bloodspine, Tanglevine, Stranglevine, Surging Wave etc). Eagle Wings again helps but Lotus is the key against Lord of Fire or Samandriel (both should be popular in the meta). There's currently no Psychic Immune Flyer (or even Poison Immune Flyer so both Flowers useful against Falcon Swarm).

6. I'd play Teleport Wand, not a Force Push Wand (I appreciate Bloodspine synergy but re-positioning Rooted or moving prey to your Vine Pit is more vital). Stay away from enemy Dissolve range. Only you can Dissolve at vine range. With a Teleport Wand and Rooted, you play Suppression Orb. Teleport Trap works with a suddenly appearing roused Thornlasher (if you want to risk the d12).

7. You really should spend 5 spell points on Dragonscale and Elemental Cloak. If your creatures are vulnerable to a particular persistent fire source (Lash, Fireball Wand/Tower/Spore, Lord of Fire, Hellion etc), you should at least tech yourself to battle the vulnerability source. With Barkskin, Rhino Hide and novice leather defences, you add Bear Strength and Mage Staff (reach, ethereal) to face these fiery threats.

8.  You need to have some answer for Deathlock, Wizard's Tower (Fireball), Obelisk (don't over-commit to too many creatures as you lack Beastmaster's Fast Swarm focus removal) and Akiro's Hammer (eats Trees for breakfast). Elemental Wand is a solution here (if already avoiding Dissolve range) with 1x Force Hammer (also ethereal) and 1x Hurl Boulder (to Slam flyers to the ground to be Tangled/mangled).

9. I feel Lifetree is great. Every one of your many conjurations and creatures will benefit. With no armour regeneration, it's important to give as much life buffer to prevent 1 round removal. Obviously golden against Nonliving, it's also great against the prevalent Few Big strategy. The only match-up where you won't play it is Beastmaster Swarm (like the build I posted in the "Help vs. Necro" S&T thread). You even get 1 off with your ring. A cheap strong option for a mere 2 spell points!


I'm sure there are many other observations but it's late here in the UK (2am) after returning from the pub. Which worries me that I'm talking rubbish. Whilst everything I've written is caveated with "in theory", I hope the above gives you food for thought. And thanks for a great read.
« Last Edit: December 04, 2013, 08:52:44 PM by DeckBuilder »
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ACG

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #10 on: December 04, 2013, 09:48:45 PM »
Quote
4. Enchantments are your friend. Your second ring is Enchanter's Ring (as Mokhtari's Branch does not help you!). Eagleclaw Wings cast First QC can grant safety to a creature Deployed midst of the enemy (reveal after luring a move to it, before attack). A flying Thornlasher is lovely board control with hindering vines. Other must-haves are Bear Strength (Vine Raptors, Kralathor) and Rhino Hide (on those without Wings, regeneration good against Few Big, armour against Swarm focused damage). Also a single copy of Falcon Precision for Kralathor taking out Undead Knights or a familiar safe from Surging Wave.

Regrettably, rooted creatures like Thornlasher cannot gain the flying trait.

Quote
6. I'd play Teleport Wand, not a Force Push Wand (I appreciate Bloodspine synergy but re-positioning Rooted or moving prey to your Vine Pit is more vital). Stay away from enemy Dissolve range. Only you can Dissolve at vine range. With a Teleport Wand and Rooted, you play Suppression Orb. Teleport Trap works with a suddenly appearing roused Thornlasher (if you want to risk the d12).

Thornlashers can fill the same role and are cheaper than Teleport wand. Thornlashers in adjacent zones can even move a creature multiple zones.

Quote
8.  You need to have some answer for Deathlock, Wizard's Tower (Fireball), Obelisk (don't over-commit to too many creatures as you lack Beastmaster's Fast Swarm focus removal) and Akiro's Hammer (eats Trees for breakfast). Elemental Wand is a solution here (if already avoiding Dissolve range) with 1x Force Hammer (also ethereal) and 1x Hurl Boulder (to Slam flyers to the ground to be Tangled/mangled).

Agreed. Regarding the Obelisk, I actually think the Druid should keep a copy in her book - she has plenty of conjurations that can attack, after all (Stranglevine, Orchid, Lotus), so she can swarm without very many creatures (a conjuration swarm). This makes an excellent answer to the Necromancer for the Druid.

baronzaltor

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #11 on: December 05, 2013, 12:11:46 AM »
Another random thought about the Druid, Sunfire Amulet has good synergy with the Lifebond ability from her Treebond.

Since she's gaining 1 health every round, she has more elbow room to shoulder damage for the tree onto herself.  (not to mention both her and the tree can be regenerating too)

sIKE

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #12 on: December 05, 2013, 12:17:53 AM »
Seems to me that Deathlock should be an auto-play against the Druid.
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barriecritzer

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #13 on: December 05, 2013, 07:29:42 AM »
I really like using the thornlashers in combination with the bloodspine walls the only problem is most players will only let you do that once before they kill your blookspine wall, but if you can get a thornlasher on each side of your bloodspine wall then you should be able to kill most creatures or severely hurt a mage before your wall gets destroyed.

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Re: Let's talk about the Druid!
« Reply #14 on: December 05, 2013, 11:11:53 AM »
Seems to me that Deathlock should be an auto-play against the Druid.

Yeah, I haven't had any games with the Druid yet, but she seems to have a lot of hard counters by default.  Fire and Deathlock are rough for her to deal with it would seem.  I guess we'll see how the meta develops.