That's not even an infinite, all the voids would mess with the unceasing top in the long run. But that just goes to show that an exact infinite isn't always the most important thing when you can still just do a really strong combo, like all for one with all these strong 0 cost cards
You aren't wrong, technically not an infinite. It would definitely need a medical kit to take care of the voids produced by Turbo. The idea was to show how to set up to go infinite in a deck that needs other cards to get past a room with double spikers for instance.
A lot of infinites rely on having just a few cards in your deck, so that you can reliably redraw the low cost/high impact cards that you just played. For example, in the video, it was just lucky that he drew into All For One again after shuffling his draw pile, as it was mixed amongst the 23 other cards. If those 23 other cards didn't exist in the first place, he wouldn't have to rely on luck to keep his turn going. But as is explained in the video, having such a thin deck can also be dangerous when the infinite doesn't produce block, so what he does here is add extra block cards to the deck, and exhaust them in the fight to set up the infinite. I think this also is the way to go infinite on ironclad, because that character has so many exhaust options that it becomes very easy to thin out your deck within a fight.
If youve got 2 flash of steels youre already infinite
That's not even an infinite, all the voids would mess with the unceasing top in the long run.
But that just goes to show that an exact infinite isn't always the most important thing when you can still just do a really strong combo, like all for one with all these strong 0 cost cards
You aren't wrong, technically not an infinite. It would definitely need a medical kit to take care of the voids produced by Turbo.
The idea was to show how to set up to go infinite in a deck that needs other cards to get past a room with double spikers for instance.
When building an infinite deck is it important to have low cards in your deck?
A lot of infinites rely on having just a few cards in your deck, so that you can reliably redraw the low cost/high impact cards that you just played. For example, in the video, it was just lucky that he drew into All For One again after shuffling his draw pile, as it was mixed amongst the 23 other cards. If those 23 other cards didn't exist in the first place, he wouldn't have to rely on luck to keep his turn going.
But as is explained in the video, having such a thin deck can also be dangerous when the infinite doesn't produce block, so what he does here is add extra block cards to the deck, and exhaust them in the fight to set up the infinite.
I think this also is the way to go infinite on ironclad, because that character has so many exhaust options that it becomes very easy to thin out your deck within a fight.
@@kappasphere This is exactly correct. Well written.