The Combo That Thrives in Weak Magic and Counterspell Ruleset

in Splinterlands7 days ago (edited)

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Hey Splinterlands Warlocks, Summoners and Hivians,

Hope y'all doing good and this season is ending on a good note? Here once again to take part in one of Splinterlands interesting challenge. Here is the link to it.

Splinterlands Community Engagement Challenge

Every single battle in Splinterlands teaches something new, especially in Frontier Mode, where both old and new cards collide to test team strategies. In this week’s Battlefield Breakthroughs challenge, I took on a 49-mana Frontier match that completely reshaped how I think about speed and magic counterplay.
As a relatively new player building my way up through rented and owned cards, I am always experimenting with lineups to see what really works and what doesn’t. In this particular battle, I faced off against an opponent using Summoner Aurelia (+1 Health to all member units), while I led my team with Summoner Barthalamas, an Archon that grants all member units with +1 Speed.
The ruleset (Weak Magic and Counterspell) forced me to think about monster positioning, monster synergy, and how to outlast the opponent. It was a surprise though seeing my opponent having magic monsters in his team. But all that’s his strategy for the battle, and until the battle unfolds we can not just jump into conclusion.

Battle Conditions

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  • Game Mode: Frontier

  • Mana Cap: 49
  • Rulesets: Weak Magic 🪄 (Magic attacks hit armor first) and Counterspell 🔮 (Magic attackers take damage from Reflect)

  • My Summoner: Archon Barthalamas (+1 Speed)

  • Opponent’s Summoner: Archon Aurelia (+1 Health)

  • All monsters: Level 1

🔥 My Lineup Breakdown

  1. Scales of Justice – my front-line tank, chosen for its balance of armor and health. With Weak Magic in play, armor becomes crucial since magic attacks no longer bypass it.
  2. Chaos Furybringer – a powerful second-position attacker to add sustained damage and absorb hits once the front line falls.
  3. Frankarsgard – provides strong melee offense and benefits greatly from Barthalamas’ speed buff.
  4. Vengeful Monk – a unit monster that works perfectly in mid-position, dealing consistent blows.
  5. Sturdy Axe Warden – a ranged attacker with decent armor, ideal for dealing steady damage from the back.
  6. Ash Archer – my finishing support. Its ranged attack benefits from the overall speed boost and helps clean up enemies.

🧩 Opponent’s Lineup

  1. Dread Tafarian
  2. Mad Gearhead
  3. Great Bear Druid
  4. New Beluroc Aegis
  5. Glimmermancer
  6. Vicious Quilliun

With Aurelia’s +1 Health, my opponent aimed to out-tank me but the Weak Magic ruleset and my faster team would soon shift the balance. And my frontliner Scales of Justice played a key role in the outcome. With his special ability “Dodge – 25% chance of evading physical damage”, he was literally invisible to Melee attacks.

⚔️ How it Unfolded

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The opening rounds showed the true value of speed advantage. With Barthalamas’ +1 Speed advantage, his monsters were constantly attacking first and often eliminating enemy threats before they could say jack! Of course, Aurelia’s +1 Health might have kept the opponents team alive longer yet Barthalamas’ +1 Speed made the difference between taking and avoiding hits.

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The Ruleset (Weak Magic) also favored my lineup, my opponent’s magic users like Glimmermancer and Great Bear Druid couldn’t deal direct damage fast enough and always had a taste of their own poison each time they fired. This favored heavily armored units within my team. Because of the Counterspell rule, I deployed only Melee and Ranged attackers so I dont end up fighting my own self, which also worked in my favor. Great Bear Druid and Glimmermancer suffered from magic reflection, taking self-inflicted damage every turn.

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By round 3, my Frankarsgard and Vengeful Monk were dominating the mid-field. The backline duo Sturdy Axe Warden and Ash Archer wwere also constantly dealing range damage from the back. By round 7 my team ( Frank, Monk and Sturdy Axe Warden) had cleaned up what remained. I eventually claimed victory with most of my monsters still standing tall.

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Battle link here to enjoy

Some few lessons from this battle;

  1. This battle proved how decisive speed can be, with Barthalamas’ +1 Speed, not only did my team strike first but often avoid incoming attacks altogether. IN such rulesets speed helps minimize exposure to damages.
  2. A ruleset like Counterspell can turn a magic-heavy lineup into its own worst enemy. So it’s best to balance Melee and Range in such rulesets.
  3. Armor thrives in Weak Magic rulesets, magic attacks are forced to hit armors before having effects on health.
  4. Positioning matters a lot not only under this ruleset but literally in every rulesets. Putting Frank as a backup tank when Scale and Chaos are kicked out helped a lot. There was a second in command to take over.

In general, this Frontier battle taught me that speed and armor synergy can overcome health buffs and strong lineups when played smartly. That’s it for now!!!

See y’all in the arena!!


Join Splinterlands through my special link


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