Card draw simulator
Derived from |
---|
None. Self-made deck here. |
Inspiration for |
---|
None yet |
OhBotherGaming · 210
Psylocke’s Psionic Psuite
The Modular Archetype That’s as Sharp as a Katana
-
Deck Series Video: https://youtu.be/H4sV91DJN08
-
Gameplay Video: Coming Soon
I’m overjoyed with how this one turned out — it hits all the right notes.
I'm proud to present Psylocke’s Psionic Psuite, an interchangeable, modular deck archetype built around Psylocke that:
-
Fully embraces the Psylocke/Professor X/Cerebro synergy to deliver precision plays and consistent tempo.
-
Leverages Danger Room to create super-charged allies that do work — attacking relentlessly while Professor X eats the hits.
-
Provides a 20-card modular core (17 Basic, 3 Training) that can slot into any aspect, allowing you to personalize with 5 of your favorite allies, upgrades, or supports.
-
Easily adapts to include 'Pool and Basic-only builds.
And I know, I know...
"Simpsons Did It."
This concept of the general synergy has floated around the community for a while, and I want to give a huge shoutout to Journeyman2—the real OG. If you’ve been around, odds are you’ve piloted one of their top-tier decks.
Laying the Foundation
| Every great build begins with a rock-solid core. Here’s what makes this deck tick:
1. Cerebro + Professor X = Repeatable Brilliance
Psylocke’s Alter-Ego lets her exhaust a Psi-Energy weapon to shuffle a Psionic card into your deck. Professor X is Psionic. Once he’s in there, Cerebro can fish him out every turn. Since Psylocke herself is Psionic, this loop is not just possible—it’s your engine.
Bonus: With X-Men Instruction, you don’t even need to use your weapon exhaust every time, saving those precious resources for your Hero-form.
2. Core Allies
-
Colossus: Chips away at the villain, deals with minions, and takes punches.
-
Forge: Helps guarantee an early Cerebro, or fetches key X-Men supports.
-
Gambit: Provides attack, utility, and insight into the next villain phase.
-
Professor X: 3 Thwart and Confuse every time you summon him—he is the plan.
3. Events
-
X-Men Instruction: Recycles Professor X and another ally to keep your engine going, saving Psi-Energy weapon exhausts.
-
Psylocke’s Kit: Her events offer solid card draw, efficient damage, and sneaky utility.
4. Build Support
- Find Cerebro early, or pivot to whatever support suits the moment. Consistency is key.
5. Key Supports
-
Children of the Atom: Enables Utopia’s ready effect for Psylocke and expands synergy with X-Force allies.
-
Danger Room: Free ally upgrades that can be accessed every turn.
-
Utopia: Extra ally slot and a ready effect—especially magnificent when used on Psylocke.
-
X-Mansion: Helps keep your best allies (like Colossus or your favorite aspect specific ally) in the fight longer.
-
Helicarrier: A resource classic—still pulls its weight.
-
Training Regimen: Grabs skill upgrades to be used as resources to keep the efficiency engine humming.
How to Play the Psionic Psuite
Turn Order Loop (The Core Flow)
-
Turn 1: Use the Alter-Ego ability to shuffle Professor X into the deck (or recur him via X-Men Instruction). Use Cerebro to fetch X. Use your other AE supports. Flip to Hero, play X, Confuse, block with X.
(On the literal Turn 1 you won't need to shuffle him in, just do what you can to get Cerebro out) -
Turn 2: Activate Psylocke (ATK/THW), use Psi-Energy Resources, flip to AE, use AE supports. Villain is confused—no activation.
Repeat.
This loop ensures you get both Hero and Alter-Ego benefits every turn. And with Professor X blocking, your allies can stay aggressive while you keep tempo.
Mulligan Priorities
-
Design Journey (aka: How the Sausage Was Made)
This deck started with the idea of running Psylocke in Justice without flipping to Hero. It was fine, but flipping every turn revealed the real power of her kit. The biggest breakthrough? Dropping Meditation for X-Men Instruction. Once I stopped treating her Psi-Energy like a recharge mechanic and started leaning into it as a resource engine—everything clicked.
Avengers Mansion also got cut late in testing. I found I rarely played it, and the deck benefited more from including aspect-specific favorites instead.
The core system is rock solid. You can slot in your favorite aspect cards without touching the foundation, and it’ll still sing.
Aspect Feature: Aggression Build
Allies
-
Goldballs: With Attack Training + Boot Camp, you can swing for 6 ATK. Yippee-Ki-Yay.
-
Sunfire: Perfect for removing villain attachments with the energy resources from your events.
-
Wolverine: Piercing + recurring attacks + X-Mansion synergy = pure value.
Considered Magik but with her ability requiring Children of the Atom to be out— her timing can be awkward.
Supports
- Boot Camp: Slaps roof of card “This bad boy can fit so much damage in it.”
Upgrades
-
Attack Training: Free with Danger Room. Boosts +1 ATK +2 health. Bread and butter.
-
Blood Rage: The flex slot. Energy resource and card draw are nice, but feel free to sub this one out for personal flair.
This Aggression build takes the Psionic Psuite into full combat mode. With enemies confused and allies hitting harder, you’ll maintain steady pressure while Psylocke supports the board. It’s all about momentum — wearing down the villain and staying firmly in control.
With Professor X handling the thwarting duties, your allies and Psylocke herself are free to go full offense.
Final Thoughts
This deck is a love letter to efficiency, recursion, and modular design. Once the Cerebro engine is online, it feels like you’re piloting an unstoppable telepathic war machine.
The main Achilles’ heel is Steady/Stalwart, which disables your Confuse loop—but even then, you’ve still got the tools to grind it out with combat tricks and ally spam.
Now go unleash this Psionic Psuite on the villain of your choice. You’ve got the tools. You’ve got the strategy. You’ve got X on speed dial.
Chef’s kiss.