With Un’goro’s release merely hours away at the time of writing, it’s a good time to gain a better understanding of one of its key mechanics: Adapt. Adapt is a new keyword that gives your minions a chance to discover a choice between three of ten potential positive buffs. To refresh your memory, they are:
- +3 Attack
- +3 Health
- +1/+1
- Divine Shield
- Windfury
- Deathrattle: Summon two 1/1s
- Stealth until your next turn
- Can’t be targeted by spells or hero powers
- Taunt
- Poisonous
The scale and variety of options, each with a differing level of board impact, threat, value, and survivability, can make it hard to evaluate. Not to mention the discover mechanic can make it hard to visualize probabilities. To help out, I’ve put together four common strategies you want to fulfill with adapt, and how likely you are to pull it off (note: probabilities are rounded to nearest 5% for ease of remembrance).
Toughness for minion trading
Best outcomes (50% chance):
- +3 Health
- Divine Shield
Decent outcomes (30% chance):
- +1/+1
- Deathrattle: Summon 2 1/1s
All other outcomes (20% chance)
This is probably the most likely situation to occur. You’re playing a larger minion into your opponent’s board, or dropping a minion and want to get pure value out of it, rather than ending the game. It’s not vital to dodge removal, you just want to make it as annoying as possible to kill.
The dream is usually +3 health or Divine Shield; these can add massively to the cards’ overall value, making it generally very tough for the opponent to remove. Combined, these two outcomes have a 50% chance at coming up as one of your three Adapt picks. +1/+1 or Deathrattle: summon 2 1/1s will sometimes be present when the “decent” aren’t (30% of the time to be exact). The remaining 20% of the time, you’ll be stuck with the relatively useless Stealth, Windfury, Poisonous, etc. However, these can still be useful in certain situations.
This is most likely to come up with cards like Ornery Direhorn, Thunder Lizard, and Verdant Longneck.
Power for immediate trading up
Best outcomes (50% Chance):
- +3 attack
- Poisonous
Decent Outcomes (20% chance):
- +1/+1
All other outcomes (30% chance)
Best used for actively adapting a minion already in play, sometimes you want to trade up or threaten to trade up. The best outcomes are usually Poisonous or +3 attack, as each allows you to trade up amazingly efficiently; however +1/+1 can be good enough too. The first two options have a combined probability of 50%, but if you only need one damage, another 20% of the time +1/+1 will show up. The remaining 30% of the time you’ll be stuck with Divine Shield or Deathrattle: summon 2 1/1s as a consolation for the minion you were unable to kill.
This type of adapt is incredibly useful. As a a result, cards like Crackling Razormaw or the Paladin spell Adapt can swing early-game board control massively. For instance, you can turn your Alley Cat into a lethal removal tool, allowing you to gain huge value. It’s worth playing around this by not over-committing to high health Taunts that could be obliterated by a single Poisonous beast or Silver Hand Recruit.
Dodging removal
Best outcomes (50% chance):
- Stealth until your next turn
- Can’t be targeted by spells or hero powers
Decent outcomes (30% chance):
- +3 health
- Divine Shield
All other outcomes (20% chance)
Sometimes you just need to have something stick to end a game, but you know your opponent has that Hex, Execute, or Fireball. The best way to dodge these effects are with Stealth and Can’t be targeted, but these will occur only 50% of the time. In the meantime, you can take +3 health or Divine Shield for the 30% to decrease the odds of spot removal taking out your minion (though it won’t save you from hard removal!).
May be useful for any adapt minion.
Going for lethal
Best outcome (30% chance):
- Windfury
Good outcome* (20% chance):
- +3 attack
*May be better than Windfury on boards of low-attack minions.
Decent outcome (20% chance):
- Â +1/+1
All other outcomes (30% chance)
Sometimes it’s best to just kill your opponent. Giving Windfury to a minion, all minions, or all murlocs, is a dream come true for pushing face damage. This has a 30% chance of occurring. Meanwhile, +3 attack also has a 30% chance (20% when Windfury is not an option). Finally, +1/+1 is less impressive, but still may be enough to end the game. Considering that these effects have a combined likelihood of 70%, it’s well worth playing around.
It is incredibly potent with Gentle Megasaur or Evolving Spores. It can also be useful with the Paladin card Adapt (though make sure you don’t give your Volcanosaur “can’t be targeted by spells or hero powers”).
Preventing lethal
Only relevant outcome (30% chance):
- Taunt
All other outcomes (70% chance)
It’s probably not a good idea to rely on Adapt to gain a taunt. If you adapt once, you have only a 30% chance of being offered it. No other adapts offer immediate board impact to stop your opponent gaining lethal. Even with Volcanosaur’s or Ravenous Pterrodax’s two adapts, you only have a 50% chance to gain it. Still, it may save your skin in a clutch situation.
Just remember that it’s not necessary to double-taunt your Ornery Direhorn, though the BM value is impressive.
All images courtesy of Blizzard Entertainment, via Hearthstone.gamepedia.com
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