![]() This is something you might need to change shift a bit depending on the matchup and situation, but overall, you want to play reactively. Focus on keeping your key units alive, and play around the spells your opponent could use to remove them. You also have a lot of protection spells, which are completely worthless if you don’t have a good unit to cast them on. Look how ‘snowbally’ your threats are indeed – Soraka provides heals and card advantage over time, Tahm Kench takes out the opponent’s units one-by-one, Star Spring keeps your units in the game. This deck is very snowball-oriented and doesn’t do much if it can’t stick its key units on the board. ![]() Focus on keeping your key units alive.Even if you would technically have 22+ at the Round End on your first landmark’s counter after the healing done by the second landmark, you still won’t win that round. That turn, it doesn’t account for the healing done by the second Star Spring. If you have two Star Springs on board, whenever the first one heals your units, it then checks its counter immediately on whether you have the win at that exact moment or not.Always keep track of the Star Spring counter, as well as the amount of unit healing you have access to, both on-board and in-hand. It is very easy to miss out on a ‘lethal’ with this deck because of how unconventional your win condition is. Keep track of your Star Spring win condition. ![]() Losing a key unit can easily cost you the entire game. You have to always be aware of your opponent’s possible actions and how to play around them. This deck may look straightforward at first glance, but in fact, it is quite complex. One of this archetype’s main strengths is in approaching the game from a different angle than other decks, which gives it an interesting matchup table. Kench/Soraka wins most of games through its alternative win condition in the form of Star Spring landmark, but can also sometimes win by attacking the opponent’s Nexus, often with Star Shepherd. Soraka assists in this snowball as well, providing a massive card advantage while keeping your board healthy and activating healing synergies. The deck can snowball very hard – if Tahm Kench starts growing and the opponent can’t deal with him, it will lock the game pretty fast. You have a lot of units that can sustain damage and a lot of healing and healing payoffs to go along with that. This archetype uses the strong synergy of Soraka and Tahm Kench.
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