Where the conversion goes wrong
Most failed counterpushes come from adding one troop too many or choosing the wrong lane for the remaining structure.
- Supporting a surviving troop that already forced value
- Switching lanes without a clear reason
Guide Library
A guide for players who defend well, survive the hard part, and still fail to cash that stability into pressure or tower damage.
Bernard often finds that strong defenders are losing because they stop the push and then squander the surviving value. Counterpush conversion is where many 'solid' sessions quietly become average ones.
Pressure Conversion
The best conversions preserve the next defense while still forcing a response.
Details
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Read the guide or sample, then use Bernard to compare it against your own recent battles and profile history.
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Keep it to the core steps and product truths.
Most failed counterpushes come from adding one troop too many or choosing the wrong lane for the remaining structure.
Replay review asks whether the player converted the defense into control. If the pressure only created more volatility, the move was probably too expensive.
If the defense already produced tempo, your job is often to spend lightly and protect that tempo rather than chase a highlight push.
Adding support automatically instead of asking whether the surviving defense already forced the needed answer.
No. Some defenses are best converted into tempo and card-cycle advantage rather than a committed push.
Sample analysis: Royal Giant Fisherman timing
See how one surviving structure becomes a better pressure window.
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Deck builder
Decide whether the issue is conversion habits or deck structure.
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AI coach overview
See how Bernard connects one clip to broader habits.
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Sample analysis hub
See anonymized replay reviews that show Bernard's coaching style.
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