Site icon

Fyreslayer and Skaven Shadespire Review: Neutral Cards

New sets, new models, and new strategies! An initial review of the new Shadespire cards with the Fyreslayers and Skaven release. Check the Tactics Corner for more great articles!

With the release of the Shadespire Fyreslayer and Skaven Warbands comes a whole new set of cards. 120 new cards on top of the new factions and their fighters means even existing decks and strategies will change quite a bit, and new decks will pop up for the current Warbands out there. I’m going to take some time to review the new set and give my initial impressions on the new cards. This article will be a bit text-heavy, but hopefully somebody finds it useful!

You can find all the new cards on the Warhammer Underworlds Card Library, where you can filter based on Warband, what box you get them in, and card type. Reference there alongside my review and give your own impressions! I don’t claim to be the end-all source of truth on power levels, so feel free to disagree, and likely I’ll change my own stance on it within a month, but this is a first impression article to just get some conversations going.

I’ll be rating cards on the following 1 to 5 scale:

  1. Cards with little to no value in a competitive setting. While there might be extreme situations where these cards are ok, they shouldn’t be your first pick.
  2. Low priority or Situational cards. Situations where these cards excel come up more often than a ranking of 1, but should be considered after all the other cards available to you.
  3. Reasonable pick cards. Neither majorly impactful nor terrible, I wouldn’t think twice about putting these in my deck – as long as I have a plan for them.
  4. Very strong cards, should be considered immediately for your decks. Perhaps not “auto-include”, but their power is such that you can easily justify them in any deck.
  5. Top tier card. If not auto-include, you should have a serious reason for not including these in your deck. Meta is built around them and counter cards are often included for them.

Today we’ll be looking at the Universal cards from the new set, which any Warband can take.

Objectives

Ploys

Upgrades

Overall, from these sets, I think the Ploys will be the most impactful, followed by the Upgrades. The Objectives bring some interesting options for your deck, but I don’t know if they are more useful than the Objectives that already exist in the game. Side-grades rather than Upgrades, so to speak. There are at least a few Ploys that will seriously be considered for new and existing decks, though, such as Earthquake or Ready for Battle.

That being said, though, I don’t think there’s “powercreep” in these sets. The Ploys you currently have can make a very powerful deck and I don’t think any of the cards introduced are “include in your deck or lose” level of power, despite the obvious power of some of the cards. If you aren’t planning on buying these sets, you can easily change up some of the cards you currently have and still be quite competitive, though if you want to stay fully on top of the meta it helps to have every card available.

Hope this review was useful for new and existing Shadespire players! Next time I’ll talk about the new cards for Fyreslayers and Skaven, as well as a brief overview of the Warbands themselves.

 

And remember, Frontline Gaming sells gaming products at a discount, every day in their webcart!

Exit mobile version