Card draw simulator
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None. Self-made deck here. |
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sinkhymn · 501
I don't usually play on "Heroic" difficulty, but when I do, I do it with Quicksilver.
(And if possible, I do it from the first turn.)
I decided to share this deck after listening to a great discussion by Web-Warrior Fanatic and Stretch22 (two players who have helped me a ton when it comes to learning how to face higher difficulties):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OlXma6ocrj8
And while I agree with everything that was said, I do feel like the math for Symbiote Suit is VERY different for Quicksilver than it is for other heroes.
For a normal hero, the suit costs 5 ER up front and then about -2 ER average per turn for the Encounter card. You gain 10 HP up front so that is a push. Then you get +1 defense OR attack OR thwart for a total of +.5 ER per turn along with a card which is still less than the -2 ER from the Encounter card. Meaning the longer the game goes on, the more likely you are to lose.
Bottom line: Symbiote Suit is a bad deal for most heroes. But Quicksilver is NOT most heroes!
Why? Because each turn you get +1 attack/thwart/defense (.5 ER) twice during the player phase and once during the villain phase which is a total of +1.5 ER average per turn (assuming no extra readies). But don't forget that you draw an extra card from your +1 hand size as well! That is a total of 2.5 ER per turn! Meaning the longer the game goes on, the more likely you are to win!
Yes you could get some Encounter cards that might be worse like a 2.5 or 3 ER but you will also have 7 extra readies from Always Be Running and What Doesn't Kill Me. Each of those readies will enjoy +1 stats as well. Plus those 7 readies will also reset Friction Resistance every time!
Black Widow also helps to mitigate some of the downside of Symbiote Suit. Plus you will always have the mental resource you need with Quincarrier. Shadow of the Past? Advance? A Jedi craves not these things.
So should I really play Symbiote Suit on the first turn?
Yes! Before he gets built up, Quicksilver is pretty squishy. The +1 defense keeps you alive along with the 19 starting health. Your player turn activations suddenly aren't pathetic anymore. And the six card hand size is like you plopped down Avengers Mansion on your first turn which always feels good (and helps you find your other stat upgrades).
Speaking of stat upgrades, I have included two copies of Armored Vest since there will be times on your first deck pass that you want to play Friction Resistance, Hyper Perception, or Reinforced Sinew but you will want another shot at your one cost permanent defense boost. If you don't like repeats of Armored Vest, you can replace it with Ops Room but I prefer the lower cost. There are also two copies of Deft Focus since you will want it early to pay for your 13 Superpower targets. But you may be forced to pass on the first one based on your hand.
Ok, so how do I play "Heroic" difficulty?
Let's face it - Quicksilver is not one of the strongest heroes. So to be clear, the "Heroic" I am referencing is only the extra card from Symbiote Suit. But this deck has no problem beating Magneto even with the extra Encounter card from the suit.
Your mulligan/first deck pass priorities are Friction Resistance, Symbiote Suit, Deft Focus, Hyper Perception, Reinforced Sinew, and Armored Vest along with doubles. Avengers Mansion and Quincarrier are next on your list.
The Power in All of Us pays for early supports and upgrades, your allies that help you dig through your deck, and to buff Machine Man. Feel free to exchange any of the basic allies with Professor X, Mockingbird, Gambit, Beak, or Spider-Man Miles based on the Villain and personal tastes.
Maximum Velocity is almost always worth it since even without Always Be Running or What Doesn't Kill Me you will still get 4 attack/thwart AND 2 defense for the villain phase for 3 ER.
The final step is for Nick Fury, Sr. to single-handedly finish Specialized Training for Combat Specialist to give you more card draw and a sweet 3/4/4 stat line. Then play a Maximum Velocity and punch the Villain for 6 a few times to end the game.
This is the only deck where I use Symbiote Suit and for me it feels like a part of his kit. I hope you enjoy it and let me know how it goes!
20 comments |
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Sep 28, 2025 |
Sep 28, 2025I have always heard encounter cards average to 3ER, which seems right to me. I've never done the math myself however. I think quite a few heroes can get a net benefit from Symbiote Suit, even if playing the house rule that you always get the extra encounter card in multiplayer. Drax, She-Hulk, X-23 and even Thor have some decks where you can effectively activate 5 or more times a turn. I usually only play expert though, never heroic, so that's like a totally different beast. |
Sep 29, 2025It's been many months, but I made a quicksilver pool deck that leveraged Symbiote suit. It was the very first deck I made that made me say "Hey, maybe the extra encounter card is worth this!" Quicksilver is a very powerful hero |
Sep 29, 2025I haven't listened to that episode but thought the discussion in the comments and write-up about the cost of encounter cards was an interesting topic. As someone who has genuinely been through every encounter card of every villain and mod set (and standard/expert set) in the game multiple times, assigned values to everything and averaged them, the average "cost" of an encounter card is closer to 2.5 than it is to 3 in my opinion, but 3 is a safer bench mark to use when calculating the value of extra encounter cards gained from player-side effects for multiple reasons. Firstly, you don't want to just break even. 2.5 ER of value for 2.5 ER of cost leaves you with no net value. Secondly, the downside of encounter cards is typically worsened when revealing multiple encounter cards together. Dealing with multiple problems asks for more, and a lot of encounter cards combo. A big minion into Gang-Up is painful. Two extra villain activations back-to-back sinks games immediately. Getting confused AND a crisis side scheme popping up puts the main scheme in major danger. Etc etc. And finally, encounter cards vary significantly - you could get something that costs 2 ER to mitigate OR something that takes 5 ER to mitigate. This depends on the villain, mod set, and luck. So sometimes it pays to treat encounter cards as a little more deadly than they might be. Ultimately you only really lose games of Marvel Champions due to encounter cards - sure an activation with a lot of boost icons or boost effects is bad, but every turn you should be expecting the threat to go up at the start of the villain phase and then a villain activation. You typically build decks and play around that expectation. Encounter cards introduce random new problems that - even if indirectly (by backing you into a corner so the regular threat ticking up/villain activation gets you etc) - are what lead to game losses. So it pays to treat them with respect and caution if we're getting serious about winning at high difficulties. There is a reason that encounter card cancels are so high value. To talk about Quicksilver and Symbiote Suit directly, with his readying he definitely makes better use from Symbiote Suit than most heroes. His low base hp really appreciates the cushion of +10 too, especially as the boosted defense for him (that he tends to use more than most heroes) helps it last longer. And in many ways Quicksilver is a combo character - boost stats with Maximum Velocity, then ready as much as you can, spending Friction Resistance as efficiently as you can among the sequencing of cards and abilities - and what this means is that the +1 hand size from Symbiote Suit helps to enable bigger combos as you may find an extra combo piece or some kind of card draw that finds even more ways to ready etc! There are some other factors that affect its value up and down but I already wrote a book here with this long comment. Very cool to see this deck, really makes me want to play it! One thing I noticed is that you reference Nick Fury, Sr. in the write-up, but have the original Nick Fury in the actual deck. I assume that Nick is supposed to be the other Nick? Or are both supposed to be there? I think both are pretty good for him, so I'd say no major harm either way! |
Sep 29, 2025VT, actually referenced you in the video to back up my same claim that an encounter card is about -2.5 ER. We didn't bring up the compounding nature of encounter cards that you mention - I think that is a good point. Nice deck overall though. As I said in the video, I'm a bit too risk-averse to play the Suit even with Quicksilver, but he's as close as you can get. The rest of this deck seems to support it perfectly! Thanks for the shout out! |
Sep 30, 2025
Starting with 1 extra card in hand = +1 ER Bonus stats = +0.5 ER per activation (up for debate) If we use Endurance as a benchmark, +10HP would be equivalent to 4-6 ER, but as a one time benefit. I consider this to offset the cost of the Symbiote Suit itself. So if an encounter card is -3 ER, you would need to activate 4 times to break even, but Quicksilver hits this pretty easily 1x defense 2 x attack/thwart on hero turn And any one additional activation breaks him even. I really love playing him in 'Pool because Stick-To-Itiveness combos with Friction Resistance for a free additional ready every turn, and you get additional value from the Hazard Icon itself (thanks to Laser Swords and "I Got This") I think the strongest argument against the Hazard Icon is the swinginess of the encounter cards. But for many encounter cards, the -ER that they incur goes DOWN as your stats go up. Side schemes and minions take fewer activations to remove when you attack and thwart is higher. The extra activations, as well, are "mitigated" by your increased ability to withstand/ignore/undo whatever is on those encounter cards. The only thing that is unaffected by the shifting dynamics are attachments. Just one Coach's opinion, though, and I'm open to having my mind changed. |
Sep 30, 2025
On a separate note not aimed at anyone, just some thoughts since about the card, Symbiote Suit and many other cards in general that boost health or block damage are pretty interesting in that their value changes with the scenario but we as a community tend to discuss their values as static a lot of the time. I think that matters. A Tough status card is worth a lot less against a 1 ATK villain than a 3 ATK villain. In that same way, Symbiote Suit's +10 hit points are probably going to block a whole extra attack against 1 ATK villain compared to a 3 ATK. Standard and Expert are relevant too, with the extra encounter card from the Suit being less dangerous when Expert mode's Under Fire (a serious game-ending threat) isn't in the encounter deck rotation. |
Sep 30, 2025
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Oct 01, 2025
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Oct 01, 2025
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Oct 01, 2025
I LOVE your analysis of Quicksilver as a combo character and the significance of an extra card each turn to help you find more combo pieces. I think that this compounding value works for the hero as well as for the villain. The downside of revealing multiple encounter cards can be worse as in the examples you gave but they also often cost you health in some way and Symbiote Suit’s interaction with Quicksilver defending for free every single turn makes it feel like 10 HP immediately and then "keep" 1 extra HP each turn. The other half is that you can now attack/thwart for 4 which is often enough to deal with a second problem. What really makes this deck work are the three What Doesn’t Kill Me since one or two per deck pass is enough to keep you topped off so that a big boost doesn’t end your game. But it is prudent to fear and respect that escalator when it comes to encounter cards which is why cancel cards are so valuable. Speaking of cards that cancel particularly bad cards, Black Widow has fallen out of favor over time but she is twice as likely to be useful in this deck than in others because of the Hazard Icon. That is what I love about this game is that likely game states for a player deck (and villain deck if you customize based on them) alter the card math to where it is not just a “play the most efficient cards” game. There is some joy for me when I finally find a home in a deck for an unused card – not out of pity but because it is somehow worth more here than in most other places. And you are correct about playing the deck with both Nicks! As I said, I rotate the allies based on the villain and I had him in instead of Snowguard. Good catch and thank you! |
Oct 01, 2025One note on the value of encounter cards, looking at IPAC, Star-Lord, Sentry and others, the game developers value encounter cards at roughly 2. But I also agree that this is too low. Which is why Star Lord is considered a weak card and IPAC is basically a last turn push card. Not worth the cost otherwise. There may be something too that, or they undervalued and then stayed with that valuation to prevent power creep. |
Oct 01, 2025
I agree with you about the swinginess of the encounter cards. And great point about how encounter card impacts can be dependent on Hero stats like side schemes/minions, mitigated by your health, or affected by resource generation like attachments. |
Oct 01, 2025
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Oct 01, 2025
So there are pros and cons compared to the Justice event, but seeing as you could also just block with Daredevil if you need to in an emergency or even tickle out 1 damage if it makes the difference between defeating the villain or a nasty minion or not doing so, I'd argue it's better. (Daredevil also doesn't take a mental resource to get maximum value like For Justice. I suppose Daredevil takes an ally slot but reaching the maximum allies is a pretty rare event for low THW heroes and Daredevil is gone in two quick uses anyway!) But overall I'm agreed that supply and demand alters values. Low thwart heroes will happily pay more for threat removal since they really need it, even if it's better to aim for more efficient means. And if the last main scheme is about to go over, it doesn't matter what hero I'm playing - I will pay basically anything to get the threat down and it will be the correct play (unless I could win through damage that same turn). So as you basically say in the write-up, you can definitely argue that Turn 1 Quicksilver is happy to pay more for what Symbiote Suit offers, effectively fixing all his basic ability stats AND his low hp at once! |
Oct 02, 2025was expecting this to be a repurpose deck but love seeing the suit. strongly agree that for some heroes it does a lot of work |
Oct 02, 2025
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Oct 02, 2025
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Oct 04, 2025Also to be noted is that the 'ave cost to deal with an Enc-Card' increases with the player count. This is due to the average threat placed with 'side schemes'. In 1up, it is close to ave 3 threat for 1 SS Enc-card In 4up, it is closer to ave 10 threat for 1 SS enc-card. This is the same reason why One Way or Another is often deemed a poor play in 4up, but perfectly fine in 1up. |
Oct 05, 2025This is a great deck don’t be scared to take it over 40, I have stun gun and energy barrier in the deck and also run repurpose. Repurpose gives it to you for the round so when it comes to the villain phase, you’re free to defend and still have some bonus on it. |
This is great. Symbiote Suit is great in any high activation build. (X-23, Ghost-Spider, Miles with Peter and Joaquim etc...) But Pietro is definitely the best. I can see this shredding anything once set up. The only concern is if the scenario hits too hard early, but that kind of bad luck can undo the best plans.