At first glance, yellow decks may not seem like much. Compared to other decks that are primarily based around handling or defense against other forms of destruction, yellow decks compensate for their low BP by manipulating their spells for gain. This includes reducing the BP of other cards, which is very handy in multi-colored decks.
Inspired by a dream of light, childish innocence, the Yellow Card plays a very important role in the Battle Spirits Saga, and it is support. Magic cards and Nexus cards exist primarily to support elementals, but the yellow deck’s fairies, critters, and angels do a great job of making them even more powerful on their own. Here are the best yellow cards you can use to win.
10 prince pentane
If you’re playing a yellow deck, it’s a good idea to familiarize yourself with the wo-cost card strategy. With a lot of yellow card buffs, summons, or revives, this playstyle depends on filling the field with 2-cost cards and supporting them in yellow rather than investing cores in high-cost cards that may or may not be powerful on their own. .
Prince Pentan is tricky to play. Because timing is everything. Revealing the top card from the deck and allowing it to be discarded unless it’s a 2-cost card can be good or bad. If you play at the wrong time, you could lose your Blessed Cathedral or Godbeast Behemoth, which could spell disaster for your odds. The card reads: “There is a fine line between stupidity and genius. The Pentan species embodies this.”
9 Airavata
Airavatah is one of the cards that exists to support the 2 cost card strategy and is the closest thing to an undo button, making it a irreplaceable choice in your deck. By allowing you to pick and summon a 2-cost spirit card from the trash, Airavatah instantly expands your hand when you play a card towards the end of the game.
If you have 3-4 Airavatahs in your deck, get the edge with a surprise attack or a tried and tested card from the trash.
8 Prismal
Freezstal is popular because it gives you a second wind. Sometimes you put your cards on the field and prepare for battle, but your lineup is destroyed before the time is up. With Freezstal in the ranks, you can draw a card when one of the souls that cost 2 costs is destroyed in combat, so you can bring back a or two to stop you. That way, your turn won’t disappear completely.
This playstyle is a bouncy form of blocking, allowing you to take a few hits as 2-cost cards are destroyed in flash play. Players are also known to save for 2-cost cards with powerful LV2 effects.
7 Rapier Knight Cat Sith
Rapier Knight Cat Sith has plenty of presents in her bag. In addition to revealing two cards from the top deck, you may take all revealed cards to your hand that cost two, including cards on the field. This is great for several reasons. First of all, it gives you a chance to play your best cards twice, gives you more options and opportunities to play credible attacks again, and helps you reset your 2-cost strategy and refresh it for your next turn .
In addition, you can get rid of bad hands by discarding all remaining cards. So be careful when playing. Otherwise, you may lose more than you gain.
6 Alice in Wonderland
Wonderland Alice offers the best of both worlds. You can support your 2-cost card lineup against suppressed foes by delivering a powerful blow worth 1,000 BP per spirit used that turn. At the low cost of one core in the void.
Alice in Wonderland loves to help. The card reads: “Starhavoc Rains has wreaked havoc on sporting events and the girl from the Land of Cards has taken care of the players to get the game back on track.” Subsequent times are recorded.
5 Caladrius
As good as the Luster keyword is, playing Caladrius feels like a cheat. Many decks rely on three or four of these forgetful chicken doctors, who kindly make sure to return all the Spell Cards you’ve used during your turn from the trash to your hand at the end of combat.
No catch. I mean endless magic.
4 royal potion
You can’t win a 2-cost card strategy without a potion, and there’s no better potion than a royal potion. All 2-cost spirits can be refreshed as part of a turn or as a flash play to interrupt or block an attack during an opponent’s turn.
Stock up on Royal Potions and use them wisely. With the right placement, you can end the game sooner than expected.
three blessed cathedral
Blessed Cathedral understands that your yellow soul is there to be destroyed. They are your loyal soldiers after all, but the gift of faith can bring something back. You can return the Void Core to your reserve in LV1 or take a fresh new card from your deck in LV2.
This is a big deal ahead of a big play right around the time your 2-cost cards are marching onto the field and preparing for battle now. Every cloud has a yellow lining, with the Blessed Cathedral with your brave soul.
2 archangel michaela
Archangel Mikaela is one of the most powerful X-Rare cards you can have and has equally great perks on both LV1 and LV2. At LV1, you can reveal cards from your deck for every yellow spirit and nexus you control, giving you the power to add all revealed magic cards back to your hand and return the rest to the bottom of your deck. With the right lineup, this strategy is pretty much a fail-safe, allowing you to give your heart’s desire an extra hit without wasting anything.
For LV2, it gets even better as you can use any magic card from your hand without paying a cost, as long as you pay for one soul core. This allows you to far exceed your weight and is very convenient when fighting something much larger than you.
One God Beast Behemoth
The Godbeast Behemoth can’t wait to hit the scene and it doesn’t care if you can’t afford it. That’s why the gracious Godbeast allows you to use the symbols of cards that cost 2 on the field or in the trash to reduce the cost. This is very useful because once you get out, your opponent loses the ability to block 2-cost spirit attacks with LV2 or higher for that turn.
Since this card is so powerful, it can be used to maximize the damage of a 2-cost lineup against a similarly expanded lineup or a lineup with more powerful spirits. By suppressing the LV2 effect, the opponent’s spirit can defend itself using only the god-given LV1 powers.