- 4
- Posts
- 8
- Years
- Seen Apr 22, 2017
Hi all!
Long time fan, but new player.
Irecently picked up a couple starter decks and have been playing with my son. The game is fun but we're stuck on one piece of strategy. Once you've charged up a Pokémon with a few energy cards and they have a strong attack, what is the opponent supposed to do? Every active Pokémon they put out is immediately defeated. When we first started playing, we immediately ran into this confusing scenario, and assumed that you must use up your energy cards on attacks, so we started putting them in the discard pile. That actually worked a lot better. We charged up for powerful attacks, maybe attack, and then discard of the energy cards. So every round you had a choice to either do a simple low energy attack or wait a turn to charge up for something more powerful. But then I checked up the rules and found out that the energy cards stay under the Pokémon until they are defeated.
So what do you do when you have a strong active Pokémon that does more damage than the health points of your opponent?
The only strategy I can think of is to charge up the Pokémon up on your bench, so that when you make them active at least they can get a single attack off and chip away at the hit points of your opponent's strong Pokémon before immediately getting defeated. But you're going to lose two or three Pokémon doing that, and you're basically out of the game at that point. And by spending turns charging up the Pokémon on your bench, you're neglecting your active Pokémon and allowing your opponent to charge upstairs and get a jump on you.
It seems like everything is determined in the first couple draws and whomever gets there active Pokémon charged first is going to win the game.
I figure it can't be this simple, and we must be missing some obvious piece of strategy. Can anybody else help us out here?
Only other thing I can think that we're missing is deck strategy. That we need to build more complex decks. That means buying a bunch of cards though, which I'm ok with, but it seems odd that you can't play a decent game with a starter deck, at least while we learn.
Thanks.
Long time fan, but new player.
Irecently picked up a couple starter decks and have been playing with my son. The game is fun but we're stuck on one piece of strategy. Once you've charged up a Pokémon with a few energy cards and they have a strong attack, what is the opponent supposed to do? Every active Pokémon they put out is immediately defeated. When we first started playing, we immediately ran into this confusing scenario, and assumed that you must use up your energy cards on attacks, so we started putting them in the discard pile. That actually worked a lot better. We charged up for powerful attacks, maybe attack, and then discard of the energy cards. So every round you had a choice to either do a simple low energy attack or wait a turn to charge up for something more powerful. But then I checked up the rules and found out that the energy cards stay under the Pokémon until they are defeated.
So what do you do when you have a strong active Pokémon that does more damage than the health points of your opponent?
The only strategy I can think of is to charge up the Pokémon up on your bench, so that when you make them active at least they can get a single attack off and chip away at the hit points of your opponent's strong Pokémon before immediately getting defeated. But you're going to lose two or three Pokémon doing that, and you're basically out of the game at that point. And by spending turns charging up the Pokémon on your bench, you're neglecting your active Pokémon and allowing your opponent to charge upstairs and get a jump on you.
It seems like everything is determined in the first couple draws and whomever gets there active Pokémon charged first is going to win the game.
I figure it can't be this simple, and we must be missing some obvious piece of strategy. Can anybody else help us out here?
Only other thing I can think that we're missing is deck strategy. That we need to build more complex decks. That means buying a bunch of cards though, which I'm ok with, but it seems odd that you can't play a decent game with a starter deck, at least while we learn.
Thanks.