![]() ![]() Every card serves to slow down your opponent’s development while leaving something on the field to advance your own. What do they do, then? Faeries are tempo masters. Well, they don’t do a lot of things well. Consider Wing’s Thoughts of the Wind guide for philosophy that can be applied to this deck as well. (6 damage will drop 14 health as quickly as 5 will.) Sometimes, making your opponent THINK you have a Spellstutter Sprite can be all you need to win the game. Don’t play creatures that won’t result in killing your opponents faster. Most of your deck can and should be played as instants, but the exact when and how is a bit tricky. Remember Thoughts of the Wind? It’s basically like that. If only we didn’t already have two other terrible blue/black decks, then we wouldn’t have had to limit ourselves to mono-blue.īack to topic. Maybe it would also have helped if anything in the deck was bigger than 2/1. Tells you something about the state of the game, doesn’t it. There are so many high-tier cards in the deck, yet the connection between good cards and doing stuff just doesn’t happen. It stands a moderate chance to win against non-revenge AI and only gets worse when your opponent actually has some thought behind her actions. To be honest, I would have expected more of this deck. You can expect Mirabelle to be working her magic for lots of books to come.Faeries. They’ll appreciate Mirabelle’s lively first-person narrative style too and the cool black and purple illustrations. There’s lots to like and children are endlessly fascinated by characters who struggle with the rules. ![]() She is genuinely sorry though and both parents forgive her more than that, her father accepts how important it is that she feels she can just be herself, something that will resonate for all sorts of readers. Even so, when the opportunity arises to mix up some spells, she’s there with her cauldron and it’s only with the help of her witch mum that she avoids ruining the ball for everyone there. In this story, she and her family are off to the fairy ball and she’s promised her fairy dad that she’ll keep her witch side under control. Unlike Isadora, Mirabelle just can’t resist getting up to mischief. Meet Mirabelle, half fairy, half witch, totally lovable and likely to be just as appealing to young readers as her very popular little cousin Isadora Moon, also created by Harriet Muncaster. Mirabelle Gets up to Mischief Author: Harriet Muncaster ![]()
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