![]() Additionally, it's less affected by siphon) and a decent AOE attack (very good vs the sentries, and whirlwind for instance helps on the turns you draw too few strikes on a "free attack" turn)Įdit: And don't try to kill him without taking damage. If you plan on doing any elites, try to make sure you get at least a couple of the following: A permanent debuff (super good against Lagavulin and Nob), a power that helps your damage output (elites on floor 1 are damage races where that adds up fast), a big 2-mana hitter (low mana and card draw on floor 1 means you some times can't spend all mana on attacks on a turn where you want to, 2 mana big-hits help on this. Time it so you kill him on his first attack after a siphon, that often means you can use a block or two in the phase before, since his siphon turn in that case is a free round of attacks. Try to gauge how many cycles you will need to kill him (he uses attack, attack, siphon). On the turn you intend to wake him up, deal max possible damage. Use this time to put out powers, play any permanent debuffs, play bash the turn before you indend to wake him, etc. You're not likely to outpace him.He sleeps for 3 rounds or until you deal hp damage. Lavagulin's objectively much weaker than Act 2/3 elites, but more dangerous to fight because you will almost always suffer from him unless you can get strong powers into play while he sleeps. It's a much narrower range of outcomes than elites in later Acts who sometimes destroy you and sometimes you perfect them. And given when you fight them - you've had perhaps 4 or five chances to modify your deck and probably added maybe three cards - you should basically never die to him from full health, but you're also basically never going to crush him or get out without taking significant damage. In conclusion, Lavagulin should, I think, almost but not quite kill a full health character with a Starter Deck who plays well and draws okay. Then 15/25 and oohhhh god he's not quite dead yet. Then you'll take about 15 damage the next round and do about 25 damage next time through. If you want to minimize your damage and spend 2 energy blocking each turn he attacks, you'll take about 10 damage per cycle, but only do ~25-33 damage on his first cycle through, less if you get unlucky on Round 3. You can kind of see here that you need to find about 8 extra damage (not 8 total, 8 points of 'extra' damage better than a strike) to finish killing him before the third cycle and that you'll still take a a ton of damage doing that. 55 health total, including Survivor and Neutralize benefits? (Edit: Okay, on second thought, you probably defend more on Cycle 3 and try to kill him on Round 9 when he doesn't deal damage, so probably more like. So you defend more than this, but by Cycle 3 you're already only doing 35 damage a cycle. 64 health total in the all-out attack fight. The problem here is that you're almost never blocking and so you lose 18/9 (he's weak and you defend once), then 18/10 health, then 18 more health. Then you do 15/12/15 damage the next time through, 42 damage, and lavagulin has 17 health left and you need two more rounds of 12/9 to kill him on Round 8. This is an 18/15/18 pattern, (Neutralize drawn Round 2) for 51 damage before the first siphon soul. ![]() As Silent, you'll do 33 damage each time you go through your starter deck if you always prioritize strike and never draw badly (never >3 strikes/hand). ![]() Lavagulin is pretty interesting because of his interaction with your starter deck. Can conflict with other high cost cards in your deck, however, and is hard to play when running 3 energy (As most higher cost cards are).Ĭlick here to vote on the next topic of discussion! Good damage and self-removes from your deck if you don't want it. Previous Discussion: Carnage Conclusion: It's just a straight out solid card. Siphon Soul (Removes 1 Strength and 1 Dexterity from you) Sleep (Does this for 3 turns before waking up, gains 8 block every turn, alternatively wakes up if it takes HP Damage) ![]() Is it a good drink? A bad drink? Would you only order it when you're in a specific mood? Should the brewers try something different for this drink? Comment below! Some people prefer lighter stuff, but in my opinion a good Lagavulin beats out any competitors.īecome intoxicated. The deep, rich, smoky flavor really brings out the best in whiskey. ![]()
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