Authenticator/Henry Phillips

Another guest post by our friend Justin! (@jujobell)

Papers

“PAPERS PLEASE!”

The voice was loud and intrusive, the sort of thing you want to turn your back on but you know is a bad idea. This ICE seemed to have a mind of its own, a purpose it believed in beyond simply keeping Noise out.

It thought it was some sort of guard from humanity’s more brusque and brutal past, when borders were more than just lines on a map. They meant something, and that something could be enforced through brutality by clubbed henchmen.

“I SAID, PAPERS!”

How was he supposed to get past this thing? It seemed very insistent, even invested, in making him produce some sort of identification, credentials, or authorization. He didn’t have time to deal with this.

Bypassing it seemed easy enough. The programming was as antiquated as the personality, and writing a simple bypass algorithm didn’t seem like a problem. In fact, there seemed to be a gaping security hold.

“This thing is so old I could almost jump over it,” thought Noise.

And jump he did. Then there was a buzz at this door. “Who could that be?”

Got your money

I have been trying to make an NBN glacier deck work (as many people have) for a very long time. Only recently has the card pool grown enough to really allow this archetype to come to the fore.

Yes, it still requires the runner to accumulate tags in order to work, and this deck might be helped out by a Midseasons Replacement. Having said that, I’m hoping the agenda suite, the upgrades, and the multi-sub ICE will really help keep this deck humming.

The main goal here is to slam a Red Herrings into a scoring remote and blast out agendas. The ID ability helps keep the runner poor, and in turn keeping them tagged or locked out.

The quantum kitties and the NAPD Contracts should hopefully protect themselves, and the GFIs are somewhat self-sufficient. So the only real gem to protect here is the Astroscript.

The Authenticator plays a really nice double role here. As a cheap two-sub ICE, it’s expensive to break. OR, if they chose to bypass, it’s a tag I can exploit. Over top of a Data Ward or an IP Block, it’s a great piece of ice.

Henry Phillips is really an economy card here. I only rez him when I can make some cash. Otherwise he stays face down and is another thing runners have to decide whether they spend the time and money trashing.

The Zero Credits Campaign

Spark Agency: Worldswide Reach

 

Agenda (10)

1x AstroScript Pilot Program

3x Global Food Initiative ●●●

3x NAPD Contract ★★★

3x Quantum Predictive Model

 

Asset (10)

2x Adonis Campaign ●●●●

3x Jackson Howard

3x Launch Campaign

2x PAD Campaign

 

Upgrade (5)

1x Bernice Mai

2x Henry Phillips

2x Red Herrings

 

Operation (8)

2x Closed Accounts

3x Hedge Fund

3x Sweeps Week

 

Barrier (4)

2x Data Ward

2x IP Block

 

Code Gate (7)

3x Authenticator

2x Macrophage

2x Pop-up Window

 

Sentry (4)

3x Data Raven

1x Thoth

 

Other (1)

1x Special Offer

 

10 influence spent (max 15, available 5)

20 agenda points (between 20 and 21)

49 cards (min 45)

Cards up to Earth’s Scion

Deck built on https://netrunnerdb.com.

Week 6 – Follow Up

Good news, everyone! Because FFG is so amazing at sending us new cards to play with, I’ve upped my quota to four decks a week. Starting this week.

After putting it all into a schedule, I realized that if I stuck with three decks a week, I wouldn’t be done writing about Station One until some time in June. With this new rate, I’ll start the first Earth’s Scion card on May 24th.

Anywho, house keeping aside, let’s talk about decks!

Network Exchange

Do you want to be good at Nasir? Then you must do as Yoda said: Unlearn what you have learned.

I did not listen to my Jedi master. In fact, I durdled a whole bunch and stared at the board a lot and made a bunch of mistakes.

But I sent a Heimdall 1.0 back to hand!

Anywho. I played this deck against an Engineering the Future with Jeeves, Bryan Stinson, Ash, and Sandburg. I know what you’re thinking. Shouty Cat was the answer. But did I pack a Rumor Mill? Sure didn’t!

Plus, on top of that, Nasir runs poor. So Bryan was turned on for 98% of the game. When Engineering the Future is on 60 credits, cash is no longer a consideration.

Definitely never trash a Tinkering. Once you’re worried about Destroyers, it’s your only way to safely face check. Crypsis was uninspiring, as expected. Also, it’s probably worth it to run three Sifr.

Running this deck again, I would absolutely include Houdini and Fawkes. Probably an Akamatsu or CyberSolutions Mem Chip. Drop the Sure Gambles for Ghost Runners (what an oversight there) and maybe throw in a Turning Wheel for some spice.

The conclusion I came to? If you want to be good at Nasir, you have to forget everything you know about running, then be willing to suck at Nasir for about six months. Tooling your deck, training new reflexes, and learning the sneaky situations. I think he could be good, but I think it takes commitment.

Sync BRE

I had so much fun with this deck guys. My first game was against a Geist, and I got hard flooded. I got greedy with my Jackson and he killed it early. He joked about a GeistPocalypse, so I was checking for that, but eventually I counted influence and realized I was safe.

It was a SpyCam deck, so unfortunately he sniped a bunch of agendas and got to 5 points. The last one he pulled out of hand on a 1/5 access. He was also sad that the game ended so quickly. We were having a ton of fun: it was real Netrunner!

I really felt like the deck was going to be good and I was just suffering from a bad shuffle, so I made sure to get it on the table again later against another player’s Exile.

Poor Exile, he just didn’t have the cash to Panchatantra through all my ICE. The traces were cripplingly expensive as well. He trashed my Aryabhata’s and Launch Campaigns pretty regularly, but he left my PAD Campaigns alive. I purged away his Clots whenever I could and scored through the SanSan. Again, real Netrunner. I opened scoring windows by baiting with remotes, and I took advantage of dips in his cash to score out Beales that I had been sitting on.

With an early never-advance Astro, two Beales scored, and then a QPM off the SanSan, we took that one home.

The agenda suite is wonky. Scoring Net Quarantine is just so difficult! The ICE suite was amazing though, and I liked how the operations came together.

I think this deck would probably do better in Sync though. Probably also with HHN because why not.

I didn’t think I’d find an NBN deck that I liked, but SYNC BRE really made it happen. Two traces on a strength 6 piece of ICE with Aryabhata and other things backing it up? Super fun. Probably want NAPDs and GFIs though.

Mad Dash

We started off against NBN glacier (Sol), and we just couldn’t get it going. Setup was slow, cards were bunched, it was a mess. But again, I saw potential.

Shuffle up, new opponent, now let’s play some Sunny against Titan Transnational. And this was a game and a half.

Hostile comes out first turn, and that leaves me with an open R&D, and lo and behold, I score an Atlas. Nice start.

Economy starts going, card draw starts going, then I Temujin into archives and find another Atlas. There’s a long, drawn out look between myself and Andrew. I look at my hand and see my Rabbit Holes. I could gain three link at the cost of six credits. I look at his cash. He’s got about 20, 25.

Temujin Archives. Temujin Archives (trash Temujin). Take a credit? Pass turn?

Andrew lets out a sight of disappointment and goes on to score another Hostile. Dodged the Midseasons, thank you very much!

The game continues, and I get the engine running. I’ve got breakers, I’ve got Find the Truth, I’ve got Adjusted Chronotype. It’s amazing.

Find the Truth sees a GFI on top of R&D. I’m at 4 points without Mad Dash in hand, so I let it pass by. He installs something in a remote un-advanced. Pretty sure it’s the GFI.

Well, let’s just keep going. I draw, I money up, I find a Mad Dash. Cool, that’ll be game if it’s the GFI.

He advances it twice on his turn and ices it again.

I still don’t have Nexus though. No problem. Draw, nothing. Draw, Nexus. Install Nexus. Play Mad Dash.

I was overzealous. It was a Mother Goddess with no other rezzed ICE. Without thinking, I force the trace, and he out-money’s me like a boss. I end by taking a meat damage and a tag, with no Citadel Sanctuary in sight to clear it.

Closed Accounts.

It’s all good though, I get my drip economy, drop another Temujin, clear the tag, make another run, score the agenda the next turn.

Another game, later, I play Sunny against RP.

Jak Sinclair does weird things against RP. I hate not using my programs! I had so many missed triggers… but I pulled through and kept the pressure up. It was a slog of a game, but also amazing. Once I had my Nexus, Power Taps, and Temujins up, I was at about 40+ credits no matter what I did. He ran out of ways to win, and had to go for the kill. I didn’t let that happen. I checked the top card of the deck with Find the Truth, then I would Jak Sinclair a central, then hit four remotes. He was playing with Shipment from Mirrormorph, and I eventually won by finding a Fetal AI that had been facedowned.

All in all, this deck was amazing but slow to set up. I played against another Sunny last night, and she was unbelievably fast. Using Off-Campus and Drug Dealers and John Masanori to burn through the deck very quickly. Still, I made much, much more money. I’m sure there’s a way to speed this Sunny deck up, but it’s late game is monstrous as is.

Flex spots are definitely Data Folding. Maybe drop a Hostage to free up some influence for Quality Time or Diesel?

Anywho, the deck is awesome. And Another Day, Another Paycheck makes ridiculous money. Just ridiculous.

SYNC BRE

Tag Me

Bernice watched the Runner’s avatar approach her countermeasures. It was child’s play.

On one screen, Bernice’s rendering of the NBN servers showed a vaguely humanoid shape finally commit to its attack vector. As she monitored that form’s progress, two more screens to Bernice’s sides showed the perspective of dozens of NBN news drones all throughout New Angeles. The districts were colour coded, but Bernice looked through her camera lenses so often, that she knew the city inside and out without the system’s overlay.

The runner seemed to be gaining confidence as he or she passed more and more of her ICE, but Bernice only smiled. The final defensive measure was her only focus—each other countermeasure was simply a drain on the runner’s resources and stamina.

Bernice’s system was calling on computing power from the Aryabhata communications networks, slowly closing in on the identity of the intruder as subroutines sorted through false trails and counter defenses.

With a flourish, Bernice activated her Data Ward and laughed to herself as the Runner’s avatar seemed to hesitate. She could see the calculations going through their mind as they wondered if they should press on. Foolishly, they chose to, leaving themselves open to a counter-assault.

Yes, they had gained access, but her system had found their location. With a key stroke, her drones sped towards the Runner’s physical location.

All too easy.

No Link for You

In this world of Rabbit Holes and Security Nexi, the SYNC BRE is not exactly a winning bet. But hey, with Net Quarantine, it’s maybe doable?

This deck’s idea is to leverage Spark, Aryabhata, and lots of traces to keep the Runner poor, poor, poor. If they’re that poor, they can’t trash your SanSan or get through your frustrating ICE. Plus, if they do trash your Campaigns or your SanSan, just recur them! (What an ongoing theme we have here…)

Surveillance Sweep feels like it would be really, really strong here. Particularly if you have a Net Quarantine scored. And there are a lot of Traces during these runs.

Archangel, SYNC BRE, and Bernice are probably strong candidates to fire, and Gutenbergs are no slouch.

I think this is probably a mid-strength deck, but in the right hands, it could be terrifying.

BRE Despotism (SYNC BRE)

Spark Agency: Worldswide Reach

 

Agenda (10)
1x AstroScript Pilot Program
2x Net Quarantine
3x Project Beale
2x Quantum Predictive Model
2x Restructured Datapool

 

Asset (12)
3x Aryabhata Tech
3x Jackson Howard
3x Launch Campaign
3x PAD Campaign

 

Upgrade (3)
1x Bernice Mai
2x SanSan City Grid ★★

 

Operation (8)
1x Exchange of Information
2x Friends in High Places ●●
3x Hedge Fund
2x Surveillance Sweep

 

Barrier (4)
1x Data Ward
1x IP Block
2x Resistor

 

Code Gate (6)
1x Archangel
3x Pop-up Window
2x Tollbooth

 

Sentry (6)
2x Gutenberg
2x News Hound
2x SYNC BRE

 

2 influence spent (max 15-2★=13, available 11)
20 agenda points (between 20 and 21)
49 cards (min 45)
Cards up to Daedalus Complex

Deck built on https://netrunnerdb.com.

Week 2 – Follow Up

I suffered from HB problems. I got three games in with the Stronger Together deck (two against my Null deck from last week and one against an Omar running Bhagat, Maw, and Temujin.

My very first game saw a Surat combo rez an Adonis on the runner’s turn (before spent clicks) giving me a two-credit discount on the Adonis, and a 10-credit discount on my ice. I got a Wotan and an Eli 1.0 rezzed on my scoring remote and a Heimdall 2.0 rezzed over HQ. It was glorious. Unfortunately for the runner, he didn’t see Sifr out that game, and so had a hell of a time trying to get in.

The second game was a lot, a lot closer. Sifr was out, agendas were being scored and stolen back and forth, and Nulls Nfr got five counters on it. I looked at that, looked at his credit pool, and knew I had to score my fourth 3/2 next turn, or else he could just slice through my scoring remote. (Which at that point included a Heimdall 1.0, some Eli 1.0s, a Ravana, and some type of Fairchild.) If he got his Nfr up to strength to break my Heimdall 1.0, then he could use Null and Sifr to make up the difference with Yog.0.

So I go for it.

He goes to play the Pushing the Envelope and my heart. Just. Sinks.

But he has too many cards in hand!

But if he plays cards, then he won’t have the cash to play PTE and make it through the ice!

Symmetrical Visage draw. Draw. Credit. Run. I rezzed a Howler at the top of the server to drop another big Code Gate in front of him and that was the end.

My third game (against Omar this time) was also exciting. There had been a major hiccup early on when he’d run into Howler and I’d gotten a Fairchild rezzed then derezzed in front of R&D. He knew what it was. I scored an ABT and plopped a Zed 2.0 in front of R&D. Really, it did nothing until I could get some clickable ice in front of it or he dropped his console (which he never did), but you know… free ice. And maybe that was a deterrent for him never installing his Maw? It would’ve turned Zed 2.0 on.

So here, he knew he had pretty much free access to R&D. He runs first click while I’m on three credits after the ABT score. He’s planning to En Passant my Fairchild and hammer me with Medium digs.

No such luck.

I’ve got two Brain Taping Warehouses rezzed that he’d forgotten to take into account. That’s a six-credit discount, and he smacks into a Fairchild as I go to 0. But it lets me stabilize.

He took an ABT, I scored a Vitruvius. He stole a different Vitruvius.

By this point, I know I’m out of options. His rig is assembled. Fairchild is keeping him from repeatedly running R&D, but Omar’s getting in once a turn through Archives. I build my remote as big as I can, and I pad my cash as much as I can. He draws down to the bottom of his deck looking for his third Temujin (it’s the last card). He draws it then passes turn.

I top deck into my GFI. Slam it into remote, advance twice.

He can’t get in. He just doesn’t have the credits. I read the scoring window correctly and had prepared enough in advance.

Final thoughts? With Surat/Brain Taping combo you can make just about as much money (if not more) than Engineering the Future. For high-strength ice like Fairchild and Heimdall 2.0, the +1 strength isn’t really a big deal, but it’s a huge deal with stacked Eli 1.0s. Paperclip spending four credits instead of three really adds up.

I really liked the deck. But, it suffered from HB problems. I got to game point and then… didn’t know how to win. Had to be really tricky and use assets as bluffs then read the scoring windows correctly (or else get really lucky). If I’d have had Biotic Labor, Ash, or Caprice in the deck, it would’ve been a much easier win.

As for Valencia, this deck was amazing. I played it against a Spark deck and felt in near-total control all game. Blackmail made his scoring remote redundant, and Maw was pulling cards from hand after hitting and not trashing PAD Campaigns. I also landed a second bad pub, so I was killing his Sensies for zero credits.

I never ran R&D once because I was always afraid of Hard Hitting News. If I actually made runs that required me to install my Conspiracy breakers, I’d go too low to deal with it. As it was, he hit me with the HHN twice in the game. Also a Macrophage that mostly kept me out of HQ.

In the end, I won because I was Val. With a little bit of support from Maw. I checked every facedown card to make sure it wasn’t a Chronos Project (two of them were), and I mostly ignored his money since I wasn’t running his ICE.

I think the deck absolutely needs to go for three Datasuckers. Otherwise, the Black Orchestra and MKUltra are just too damned expensive against high-strength ICE. Even with Bad Publicity.

Next up The Archivist tomorrow and Defense Construct on Friday!