Scrying Pool
(→Alternate versions: added Czech image) |
Werothegreat (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 115: | Line 115: | ||
* No +Buy/ +Actions<Br> | * No +Buy/ +Actions<Br> | ||
* Cursers, especially {{Card|Mountebank}}<Br> | * Cursers, especially {{Card|Mountebank}}<Br> | ||
+ | == Versions == | ||
+ | ===English versions=== | ||
+ | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" | ||
+ | ! Print !! Digital !! Text !! Release !! Date | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | {{CardVersionImage|Scrying Pool|Scrying Pool}} || {{CardVersionImage|ScryingPoolDigitalOld|Scrying Pool from Goko/Making Fun}} || '''+1 Action'''. Each player (including you) reveals the top card of his deck and either discards it or puts it back, your choice. Then reveal cards from the top of your deck until you reveal one that is not an Action. Put all of your revealed cards into your hand. || Alchemy 1st Edition || May 2010 | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || {{CardVersionImage|ScryingPoolDigital|Scrying Pool from Shuffle iT}} || '''+1 Action'''. Each player (including you) reveals the top card of their deck and either discards it or puts it back, your choice. Then reveal cards from your deck until revealing one that isn't an Action. Put all of the revealed cards into your hand. || Alchemy 2nd Edition || ''physical set unreleased'' | ||
+ | |} | ||
− | == | + | ===Other language versions=== |
− | + | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" | |
− | + | ! Print !! Digital !! Language !! Name !! Text | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | | || || Chinese || 占卜 (pron. ''zhānbǔ'', lit. ''divination'') || | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | | {{CardLangVersionImage|Czech}} || || Czech || Vidění (lit. ''vision'') || | |
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || Dutch || Visioen (lit. ''vision'') || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || Finnish || Ennemalja (lit. ''omen bowl'') || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || French || Bassin divinatoire || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | {{CardLangVersionImage|German}} || || German || Vision (lit. ''vision'') || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || Italian || Divinazione (lit. ''divination'') || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || Japanese || 念視の泉 (pron. ''nen-shi no izumi'', lit. ''fountain of thought-inspection'') || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || Russian || Гадательная Чаша (pron. ''gadatyel'naya chasha'', lit. ''oracle bowl'') || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | || || Spanish || Hidromancia (lit. ''hydromancy'') || | ||
+ | |} | ||
== Trivia == | == Trivia == | ||
[[Image:Scrying_PoolArt.jpg|thumb|right|354px|Official card art.]] | [[Image:Scrying_PoolArt.jpg|thumb|right|354px|Official card art.]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
=== Card Art === | === Card Art === | ||
{{Quote | {{Quote |
Revision as of 10:53, 6 August 2017
Scrying Pool | |
---|---|
Info | |
Cost | |
Type(s) | Action - Attack |
Kingdom card? | Yes |
Set | Alchemy |
Illustrator(s) | Klemens Franz |
Card text | |
+1 Action Each player (including you) reveals the top card of his deck and either discards it or puts it back, your choice. Then reveal cards from the top of your deck until you reveal one that is not an Action. Put all of your revealed cards into your hand. |
Scrying Pool is an Action–Attack card from Alchemy. When you play Scrying Pool, you first do a Spy-like attack on your opponents and on your own deck, and then draw all the Action cards off the top of your deck. If all you have is Action cards, a single Scrying Pool will draw your whole deck!
Contents |
FAQ
Official FAQ
- First you reveal the top card of each player's deck, and either have them discard it or have them put it back.
- If people care about the order, go clockwise, starting with yourself.
- You make a separate decision for each player.
- After you finish making those decisions, reveal cards from the top of your deck until you reveal a card that isn't an Action card.
- If you run out of cards without revealing a non-Action card, shuffle your discard pile and keep going. If you have no discard pile left either, stop there.
- Put all of the revealed Action cards into your hand, plus that first non-Action you revealed. If the very first card you revealed was not an Action, that card goes into your hand.
- Cards with multiple types, one of which is Action, are Actions.
- The only cards that go into your hand are the ones revealed as part of revealing cards until finding a non-Action; you do not get discarded cards from the first part of what Scrying Pool did, or cards from other players' decks.
Other Rules clarifications
Strategy Article
Article by Powerman, originally posted on the forum
Scrying Pool’s strength is not immediately obvious. It is not until the first time you see someone chain together some Scrying Pools that you realize, hey, this card is pretty strong. (Also, his turns are really taking a while …) And then you start experimenting with it, and realize that in an engine deck consisting mostly of Actions, Scrying Pool essentially reads “+1 Action, draw as much as you please.” The fact that it is always guaranteed to draw one card is nice, and the Spy effect is just a bonus.
But there are some traps to look out for.
When NOT to buy Scrying Pool
Case 1: Lack of plus actions or many cantrips
Basically without a village (or King's Court!), Scrying Pool can be useless. Why? Because it really doesn’t matter how many Witches, Militias, or Goons you can get in your hand if you can only play one. If the board calls for lots of actions to be played, SP will be able to get those actions in to your hand, but that does not mean they can all get played. Thus, you need a deck consisting either of many non-terminal Actions, or enough villages to support the terminals you want to play. Also, having many spammable Actions helps to increase your Action density quickly.
Case 2: Lack of (some) trashing
Your deck starts out with 10 non-actions, plus the potion you have to pick up, so at a minimum you will have at least 11 cards that SP doesn’t like (and usually more!). Without trashing any of them, that means for 1 of your top 2 cards to have a 75% chance of being an action (therefore drawing 2 cards), you need to have 11 actions in addition to the SP already in your hand. For a 50% chance, you need roughly 6 action cards in your deck. That means to have a 50% chance of this card being a Laboratory, you need 11 actions in your deck. That is a slow build up!
Now, maybe you can get by with a little lack of trashing, but Scrying Pool definitely gets swamped when it sees...
Case 3: Cursers
This is an obvious counter to SP because more junk means less action density. Basically for every Curse added to your deck, you need to add that many extra actions to compensate. Needless to say, Mountebank is especially bad because those Coppers might as well be an extra Curse!
Case 4: Lack of virtual coin
Obviously if you want your deck to be mostly Actions, you want to keep your Treasure count to a minimum. But you still need to buy cards, so having a way to generate from action cards is HUGE for Scrying Pool. Without any way to generate from Actions, you have to add treasures which just further dilutes your action density.
Case 5: Lack of +Buy
This alone is not enough to avoid SP, but it should make you think twice. Why? First off, without an extra Buy (or gain) you can only add one Action to your deck per turn, which means building up to a good density of Actions will be slow, especially when you want to get numerous SP’s, so your Potion turns pretty much are dedicated to that early. Secondly, a SP engine is often slower than the fastest other options, so you are likely to fall behind to a good opponent. With a +Buy, this isn’t a problem because it is easy to get to or . But without? It can be awfully difficult to make up the lost time.
Case 6: Very quick games
I’m looking at you Jack of all Trades (or Wharf)! The idea behind this being if your opponent is hitting their 4th Province by turn 12, SP is just going to be too slow. So Jack of all Trades, Wharf, Masquerade, or other cards which lead to very fast games do not bode very well for the SP player.
With all of these out of the way, what should you look for? When should you buy a Scrying Pool?
When to buy Scrying Pool
Case 1: Cheap Cantrips
Scrying Pool basically adds +1 card to all actions, because you draw the actions up until the Victory/Treasure card, so it adds 1 to your hand size. This means that your Pearl Divers, Great Halls, and Spies all become Laboratories. The best ones here are Village (gives +action), Pawn (can give +Buy OR +), Conspirator (gives + and is trivial to activate) and Haven (can save extra SP’s if you draw your whole deck) because they are cheap (easy to mass) and give a fringe benefit.
Case 2: Light Trashing
I say light trashing, because if you have really good trashing then you don’t really need the Scrying Pool to draw your deck. However, with slower/lighter trashing, SP should be enhanced more than other strategies. Good options here are Moneylender and Spice Merchant (getting rid of your starting coppers should be enough to quickly get through your whole deck), Salvager (although getting rid of your Estates might not be enough, the +Buy is a good addition), Forager (gives +Buy and some +), and Trading Post (Turning your 10 starting cards into 5 Silvers helps eliminate enough junk to cycle through your deck, but also gives you enough economy to buy things).
Case 3: Hand Size Reducers
SP is a great counter to Militia, Goons, etc. because discarding the 2 cards will rarely hurt you if you have a SP in hand, as you will quickly be drawing through your whole deck. Additionally, because you will be cycling extremely quickly, you can play YOUR Militia every turn and make your opponent play 3 card hands. Good trade off!
Case 4: Vault, Secret Chamber, Storeroom
Vault (or Secret Chamber, or Storeroom) and SP are a great combination. Why? Assuming you have some +Actions/+Buy, the general strategies is to draw all of your Actions with a Scrying Pool, discard them for , and then play another SP to redraw them all. This can be repeated a few times, and then your other actions can be played out like normal, leading to huge turns.
Case 5: Vineyards (and Fairgrounds)
The things that make SP bad are it is often slow, it needs to avoid many Treasure cards, and you have to buy a Potion. If only a card existed that combined these to give VP to allow for comebacks…
Vineyards are Donald X.’s gifts to Scrying Pool players. The idea being you can fall behind, but because you will have so many actions, buying Vineyards can easily be worth as much or more than Provinces. If you can avoid Provinces altogether, it will be very difficult for most strategies to buy all 8 of them. Fairgrounds deserve an honorable mention, because any time you have a Potion cost card it is not too difficult to get them worth 6 VP, and they will almost always be worth 4 VP.
Case 6: Colonies
Colonies mean two things good for SP players: more victory points available, and a longer game. This means that it will take longer for your opponent to get their strategy together, but it will only take a SP player maybe 1 or 2 turns longer for Colonies than Provinces.
Playing with Scrying Pool
Case 1: Spying your deck
It’s one thing to know when to buy SP, but it’s another to know how to use it. For your deck, always keep an action on top, even if you don’t plan to use it. Out of coppers but have a Moneylender on top? Don’t discard it, just draw it instead! Assuming you show a Victory card, discard it. Those are the easy ones. Treasures are a little more difficult. Coppers should almost always be discarded, as your next card should be better. Silvers/Golds… you probably shouldn’t have many of these in your deck, but if you think you ABSOLUTELY need the cash, keep it and buy the card you need. Potions, if it’s early and you need more SP’s keep it on top, otherwise discard it as it won’t do you any good.
Case 2: Spying your opponent’s deck
Obviously, your goal is to both skip a good card from your opponent’s deck, and leave a bad one on top. But what is a bad card? Well, it depends what strategy they’re doing. If they are doing a SP deck too, ask yourself if you would discard it from your own deck, and you should probably do the opposite. If they are going more of a Big Money deck, try and guess what their average money density, and then get rid of it if is higher. A good synergy with Scrying Pool is cards (namely other attacks) that benefit from knowing what is on your opponent’s deck. Have a Saboteur in hand? Keep flipping your opponents cards until a Province is on top. Have a Jester? Wait for a card that helps you (i.e., a good Action) and leave that on top OR put a Victory card and give them a curse. This works better than say, Spy/Jester because Scrying Pools are much, much better than Spies.
Case 3: How many Scrying Pools to buy?
The easy answer to say would be “as many as possible” and you can’t go wrong with getting more. However, there is an opportunity cost. With the help of Scheme, or other cards to make sure you start with a SP in hand, you probably are fine with only 2-3 of them. However, as you start greening, every additional SP limits the chance of your engine stalling. Plus because it has a relatively low cost of 2P, it is easy on Province turns (assuming you have +Buy) to pick one up even late in the game.
Case 4: When to buy Victory Cards
With Scrying Pool, you are almost certain to fall behind a more traditional strategy early. Hopefully you will be able to set up your engine quickly so that this lead will only be ~2 provinces, but with +Buy, falling behind is not necessarily a big deal. But when should you jump into the greens? Well, with alternate Victory cards you can wait a little longer as that gives you a bigger pool of points to choose from. The exceptions being Nobles, Great Hall, and Island, as they still count as actions so buying them early actively helps your deck as well as giving you a VP boost. But what if there are no alternate VP cards? The simple answer is there is no perfect time to green — it depends on the board. But a rule of thumb can be wait as long as you can. In general waiting to make your first green turn a double (or triple) province, is a good idea, but obviously if your opponent is going too quickly you might need to simply settle for a 1 province turn.
Case 5: Other Potion Cards
Obviously buying a Scrying Pool requires you having a Potion in your deck, so other Potion cards that are either too weak or slow to buy a potion on their own now become an option. Possession can easily be played every turn, and the opportunity cost is much lower if you already have a Potion in your deck. Vineyards (as mentioned above) don’t require the potion buy – you already have it for the SP! Even Transmute isn’t bad; it can turn Coppers into Actions and Estates into Golds; both of which are great ways to juice a SP deck. Eventually, SP decks tend to have a hand or two where either they have 1P or they want to use all their on something big (like a KC) and have a and a +buy left over.
Apothecary can be good in lieu of good copper trashing, as it can clear off your non-Action cards while building your economy. Another Alchemy card that can be good with SP is Herbalist — it provides a +Buy, and it lets you return your Potion to your hand early to quickly get SP’s. The Alchemy cards that don’t work well with SP are Philosopher's Stone (no deck left!) and Familiar (Curses!). Alchemist and Golem don’t hurt SP, but might not be worth the buy if you can already draw your deck.
Case 6: Manipulating your Draw Deck
Vault/Secret Chamber/Storeroom, as mentioned above, is one example of this. When your whole deck is drawn, and you Vault away all your Actions except one Scrying Pool, it is guaranteed to draw all those Actions right back into your hand. Warehouse and other sifters play a critical role in helping you separate the Actions from the junk in your deck.
Synergies/Combos
- Hand Size Reducers, like Militia and Goons
- Colony
- Cards that like big hands, like Vault, Secret Chamber and Storeroom
- Cheap non-terminal cards that produce money, especially Conspirator and Peddler
- Light trashing, such as Moneylender, Trading Post, and Spice Merchant
- Vineyard
- Other Deck-Inspection Attacks, like Jester and Saboteur
- Outpost
- Other Potion Cards
- Island lets you set aside unwanted dead VP cards
- More dual-type VP cards, such as Harem, Nobles, and Great Hall
- Magpie
Antisynergies
- Fast games, so cards such as Jack of all Trades, Masquerade, and Ironworks
- Few cheap actions to pick up
- No +Buy/ +Actions
- Cursers, especially Mountebank
Versions
English versions
Other language versions
Trivia
Card Art
Secret History
Retrospective