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I have wildly campaigned against this deck. It's not actually good. The draws are inconsistent and the defense is too spread.
Creating lost soul drought is one of my favorite things to attempt. In particular, I enjoy an Assyrian/Babylonian combination which allows me to use Nebushasban to switch a lost soul, Hormah to underdeck the switched soul to give it back to my opponent, or if I can exchange more than 1 soul, I can use Death of Unrighteous to shuffle all that I can exchange back into their deck. Using the exchanging soul is useful for this as well. So if you exchange once with the exchanging lost soul, once with Nebushasban, shuffle with DoU, and play Burial on a soul, you've got it down to 4 unless they generate more. If they do via captured characters, King Asnappar is useful to transfer them right back over to my opponent's land of bondage, or else using Babylonian Soldiers to remove them from the game. Arioch is also useful to return lost souls to your opponent's draw pile. What I love about this method is that it not only creates soul drought for them, but generates souls for you. I attempted a deck with this type of defense at my first ever tournament at North Central Regionals and placed 4th. My main downfall was slow play as an inexperienced player (and natural play style; trying to work on playing faster) seeing as I timed out in 4 out of my 5 games. I felt the defense worked quite well for this purpose. In many of the games I played, I managed to create lost soul drought. I tend to use a fairly large defense, which allows me to make better use of Hormah and Arioch since I can afford to sacrifice some of my EC's.
Quote from: asrgimli on June 24, 2013, 02:28:49 PMCreating lost soul drought is one of my favorite things to attempt. In particular, I enjoy an Assyrian/Babylonian combination which allows me to use Nebushasban to switch a lost soul, Hormah to underdeck the switched soul to give it back to my opponent, or if I can exchange more than 1 soul, I can use Death of Unrighteous to shuffle all that I can exchange back into their deck. Using the exchanging soul is useful for this as well. So if you exchange once with the exchanging lost soul, once with Nebushasban, shuffle with DoU, and play Burial on a soul, you've got it down to 4 unless they generate more. If they do via captured characters, King Asnappar is useful to transfer them right back over to my opponent's land of bondage, or else using Babylonian Soldiers to remove them from the game. Arioch is also useful to return lost souls to your opponent's draw pile. What I love about this method is that it not only creates soul drought for them, but generates souls for you. I attempted a deck with this type of defense at my first ever tournament at North Central Regionals and placed 4th. My main downfall was slow play as an inexperienced player (and natural play style; trying to work on playing faster) seeing as I timed out in 4 out of my 5 games. I felt the defense worked quite well for this purpose. In many of the games I played, I managed to create lost soul drought. I tend to use a fairly large defense, which allows me to make better use of Hormah and Arioch since I can afford to sacrifice some of my EC's.Babylonian Soldiers would also be a good add. The problems I see with Assyrians and Babylonians is that the defense gets pretty big, which limits your offense. So maybe a Watchful Servant build could be a workable deck.