Levia's Combat Mathematics: Damage Per Card Analysis
Master the Numbers Behind Shadow's Fury
Man Sant
Levia Mathematical Combat Analysis
Advanced damage calculations and mathematical frameworks by ManSant
>Credit: Man SantAs one of Classic Constructed's most versatile heroes, Levia, Redeemed transforms into Blasmophet, Levia Consumed to create a unique dual-phase gameplay experience. This midrange approach balances aggressive blood debt pressure with powerful consumed recursion. She has all the tools handle all the relevant matchups of the meta like Kayo, Florian, Verdance, and even Gravy.
The Midrange Philosophy: Shadow as Control Engine
Levia succeeds through careful resource management and strategic transformation timing. The blood debt mechanic creates natural tension between immediate pressure and long-term advantage.
Why Blood Debt Cards Matter
Blood debt spells excel because they provide above-rate effects, scale with graveyard, and remain playable post-consumed. Most importantly, the blood debt restriction forces strategic decision-making that separates skilled pilots from casual players.
Levia, Redeemed vs Blasmophet, Levia Consumed: The transformation timing determines game outcomes. Transform too early and lose aggressive potential. Transform too late and miss crucial recursion windows.
Combat Mathematics: The 4.0 Damage Threshold
Levia's competitive viability hinges on exceeding the 4.0 damage per card baseline. This mathematical framework determines whether combinations provide sufficient pressure to maintain tempo against top-tier opponents.
The Efficiency Scale
- Elite Tier (4.5+ DPC): Game-changing combinations that demand immediate answers
- Premium Tier (4.0-4.4 DPC): Strong baseline combinations for consistent pressure
- Acceptable Tier (3.5-3.9 DPC): Situational plays with specific timing requirements
- Below Rate (less than 3.5 DPC): Generally avoid unless providing critical utility
Legendary Equipment Core
Equipment Mathematical Framework:
Mandible Claw enables our dual-attack strategy with built-in "go again" synergy during blood rush turns. Carrion Husk and Scowling Flesh Bag provide legendary threats that demand immediate answers. Hooves of the Shadowbeast creates consistent pressure while providing the crucial generic support that enables our curve-breaking combinations.
Key Equipment Synergy: Hooves activation becomes premium value when curving Boneyard Marauder into Swing Big.
Elite Tier Combinations (4.5+ DPC)
These combinations represent Levia's peak mathematical efficiency, providing overwhelming damage output that few heroes can match.
Four-Card 19 Damage (4.75 DPC)
Mandible Claw + Show of Strength + Tear Limb from Limb
Mathematical Breakdown:
- Mandible Claw base attack: 3 damage
- Show of Strength base power: 8 damage
- Tear Limb from Limb doubling effect: 8 → 16 damage
- Total Output: 3 + 16 = 19 damage across 4 cards
- Efficiency Rating: 4.75 damage per card
Resource Cost Analysis:
- Total cost: 4 resources + 2 resource weapon activation
- Pitch requirement: Specific color sequencing needed
- Graveyard setup: Show of Strength must be discarded first
This combination exemplifies peak Levia math, converting modest resource investment into devastating damage output through synergistic interactions.
Two-Card 9 Damage (4.5 DPC)
Endless Maw Efficiency
Standard Blood Debt Performance:
- Base damage: 6 power
- Blood debt bonus scaling with graveyard
- Average mid-game output: 9 damage
- Efficiency Rating: 4.5 damage per card
Scaling Analysis:
- Early game (5 cards in graveyard): ~7 damage
- Mid game (10 cards): ~9 damage
- Late game (15+ cards): ~11+ damage
Endless Maw represents consistent mathematical excellence, scaling naturally with game progression while maintaining premium efficiency.
Rest of the Blood Debt Package
Premium Tier Combinations (4.0-4.4 DPC)
These combinations form the backbone of competitive Levia strategy, providing reliable damage output that maintains board pressure.
Three-Card 14-15 Damage (4.67-5.0 DPC)
Dread Screamer + Swing Big + Vigor Synergy
Optimal Resource Sequencing:
- Generate Vigor token through previous turn setup
- Pitch blue card for 1 resource
- Use Vigor token for additional resource
- Play Dread Screamer (2-cost) for 4 base damage
- Chain into Swing Big (2-cost) for 8+ base damage
- Apply any blood debt bonuses
Mathematical Advantages:
- Resource efficiency: 4 total resources for 12+ base damage
- Vigor token breaks normal resource limitations
- "Two-cost into another two-cost" sequencing
- Peak Efficiency: Up to 5.0 DPC with optimal setup
Three-Card 12 Damage (4.0 DPC)
Unworldly Bellow (Red) + Swing Big Combination
Red Version Analysis:
- Unworldly Bellow (1-cost red): 4 base damage
- Swing Big: 8 base damage
- Combined output: 12 damage for 3 cards
- Efficiency Rating: 4.0 DPC (baseline premium)
Color Choice Impact:
- Red Unworldly Bellow: Higher base damage, meets 4.0 threshold
- Blue Unworldly Bellow: Lower damage but better pitch utility
- Strategic decision based on hand composition and game state
Blood Rush Mathematics: Multi-Attack Amplification
Bloodrush Bellow transforms Levia's mathematical framework by enabling multiple attacks per turn with enhanced damage output.
Call to the Grave RF, ROS218
Core Function and Power:
- Effectively a Blue Six: For mid-range Levia decks, he considers "Call to the Grave" to be equivalent to, and even slightly better than, an extra blue six-power card because it can be placed in the arsenal.
- Tutorability: The card allows you to search your deck for a specific card and put it into your graveyard, getting you exactly what you need."
Synergy with Beast Within:
- Guaranteed Blood Debt Removal: A key combo highlighted is using "Call to the Grave" to put "Beast Within" into the graveyard. This guarantees that your blood debt will be turned off for the turn.
- Card Advantage: This combo also results in drawing another card, effectively replacing "Call to the Grave" with a new six-power card in your arsenal.
Strategic Advantages:
- Mid-game Flexibility: If you have "Call to the Grave" in your arsenal and draw a hand that doesn't turn off blood debt, you can use it to search for "Beast Within" and salvage the turn.
- Enabling Other Cards: By turning off blood debt, it enables other powerful cards in the deck.
- Combo with Visit the Boneyard RF, SUP139 : Also opportunity for the specific combo where you can respond to the "Beast Within" trigger (after using "Call to the Grave") with "Visit the Boneyard" to essentially choose the card you draw.
Important Yellows
Blood Rush Effect Breakdown
Universal Brute Attack Enhancement:
- +2 Power to all brute attacks
- Mandible Claw gains "go again"
- Enables "going four wide" (4 attacks per turn)
Four-Wide Mathematical Framework:
- Mandible Claw: 3 base + 2 blood rush = 5 damage
- Brute Attack #1: Base + 2 blood rush bonus
- Brute Attack #2: Base + 2 blood rush bonus
- Brute Attack #3: Base + 2 blood rush bonus
Total Enhancement: +8 damage minimum across four attacks Resource Efficiency: Single card enables massive damage amplification
Tear Limb from Limb: Doubling Mathematics
The Premier Damage Multiplier
Tear Limb from Limb fundamentally alters damage calculations by doubling the base power of discarded brute cards, creating explosive mathematical opportunities.
Doubling Effect Analysis
Premium Targets for Doubling:
Swing Big Transformation:
- Base power: 8 damage
- Post-doubling: 16 damage
- Efficiency Gain: 100% damage increase
Show of Strength Enhancement:
- Base power: 8 damage
- Post-doubling: 16 damage
- Combined with weapon: 19+ total damage
Endless Maw Scaling:
- Mid-game base: ~6 damage
- Post-doubling: ~12 damage
- Scaling Factor: Doubles with graveyard size
Strategic Doubling Priority
- Swing Big: Highest raw damage output
- Show of Strength: Weapon synergy bonus
- Endless Maw: Scaling potential
- Other brute attacks: Situational value
Vigor Token Economics
Breaking Resource Limitations
Vigor tokens provide mathematical advantages by enabling resource expenditure beyond normal pitch limitations.
Vigor Mathematical Framework
Standard Resource Math:
- Hand size: 4 cards
- Maximum pitch: 3 resources (keeping 1 card to play)
- Two-cost limitation: Can play one 2-cost card per turn
Vigor-Enhanced Math:
- Vigor token: +1 resource beyond pitch
- Total available: 4 resources from 3 pitch + vigor
- New Possibility: "Two-cost into another two-cost"
Practical Application:
- Pitch blue card: 1 resource
- Use Vigor token: +1 resource
- Total available: 2 resources
- Play first 2-cost card
- Generate additional resources through card effects
- Play second 2-cost card
Mathematical Advantage: Access to 4+ resources worth of effects in single turn
Acceptable Tier Analysis (3.5-3.9 DPC)
These combinations fall below premium efficiency but provide strategic value in specific situations.
Three-Card 10 Damage (3.33 DPC)
Unworldly Bellow (Blue) + Swing Big
Mathematical Breakdown:
- Unworldly Bellow (blue, 1-cost): 2 base damage
- Swing Big: 8 base damage
- Total Output: 10 damage for 3 cards
- Efficiency Rating: 3.33 DPC
Strategic Justification:
- Pitch Value: Blue Unworldly Bellow provides superior pitch utility
- Hand Development: Maintains card advantage through cycling
- Situational Play: Acceptable when premium combinations unavailable
Author Assessment: "Not fantastic" but acceptable for maintaining pressure when optimal combinations aren't available.
Advanced Mathematical Interactions
Combining Multiple Enhancement Effects
Levia's peak mathematical potential emerges when stacking multiple damage enhancement effects simultaneously.
Ultimate Mathematical Combination
Blood Rush + Tear Limb from Limb + Vigor Synergy
Theoretical Maximum Setup:
- Blood Rush active: All brute attacks gain +2 power
- Tear Limb from Limb ready: Double a discarded brute's base power
- Vigor tokens available: Enable multiple 2-cost cards
- Mandible Claw gains go again: Enable four-wide attacks
Peak Damage Calculation:
- Mandible Claw: 3 base + 2 blood rush = 5 damage
- Swing Big (doubled): 8 base → 16, +2 blood rush = 18 damage
- Additional brute attacks: Base + 2 blood rush each
- Potential Total: 35+ damage in single turn
Resource Requirements:
- Multiple turns of setup
- Specific card sequencing
- Graveyard management
- Risk Assessment: High setup cost but game-ending potential
Mathematical Decision Framework
Optimizing Damage Per Card in Real Games
Competitive Levia play requires constant mathematical evaluation of available combinations against game state requirements.
Game State Mathematical Assessment
Against Aggro (Survival Priority):
- Accept 3.5+ DPC combinations for immediate pressure
- Prioritize efficient blockers over peak damage
- Calculate life total preservation vs. tempo development
Against Control (Efficiency Priority):
- Demand 4.0+ DPC for meaningful pressure
- Calculate long-term resource advantage
- Evaluate card advantage vs. immediate damage
Against Midrange (Power Priority):
- Target 4.5+ DPC combinations to maintain advantage
- Calculate transformation timing for maximum impact
- Evaluate consumed recursion vs. immediate pressure
Transformation Mathematics
Blood Debt vs. Consumed Analysis:
Pre-Transformation Efficiency:
- Blood debt cards: Enhanced power levels
- Resource limitations: Standard hand/pitch constraints
- Average DPC: 3.8-4.2 range
Post-Transformation Efficiency:
- Consumed recursion: Repeated value generation
- Enhanced card quality: Premium spell effects
- Average DPC: 4.5+ range with proper setup
Transformation Timing Formula: Transform when: (Consumed DPC × Remaining Cards) > (Blood Debt DPC × Remaining Life Total Turns)
Mathematical Mastery Conclusion
Levia's competitive edge derives from mathematical precision in damage calculation and resource management. The 4.0 damage per card threshold serves as the fundamental benchmark for evaluating all combinations.
Key Mathematical Principles:
- Efficiency Scaling: Prioritize 4.5+ DPC combinations when available
- Resource Mathematics: Leverage Vigor tokens to break normal limitations
- Doubling Effects: Maximize Tear Limb from Limb value on high-power targets
- Multi-Attack Math: Use Blood Rush to amplify multiple attacks simultaneously
- Transformation Timing: Calculate optimal switch points for maximum value
Competitive Application: Mastering these mathematical frameworks enables precise decision-making under pressure, transforming Levia from a complex hero into a mathematically elegant damage engine.
The difference between casual and competitive Levia play lies not in card knowledge, but in mathematical understanding of damage efficiency and resource optimization across all game states.
Guardian of the Shadowrealm: The Silver Bullet
While not a card for every matchup, Guardian of the Shadowrealm is one of the most powerful and essential strategic tools in my sideboard. It’s a surgical instrument designed to win specific, high-stakes games that would otherwise be incredibly difficult.
My Definitive Plan into Kayo
Let me be clear: this card is my entire plan into Kayo, Armed and Dangerous. In a matchup that can feel terrifyingly fast and overwhelming, finding and resolving an early Guardian is often the single most important factor in securing a victory. It’s not just a piece of the strategy; it is the strategy.
The Power of a Blood Debt Defense Reaction
Its strength comes from a unique and critical interaction: as a blood debt defense reaction, I can play it from the banish zone even after I've flipped to Blasmophet, Levia Consumed. This opens up a defensive line of play that is otherwise completely shut off once I've transformed, allowing me to defend at a moment when my opponent believes I am most vulnerable.
The "Drown in Value" Strategy
The game-winning play against Kayo revolves around turning his own aggression against him. Here’s how I execute it:
- Anticipate the All-In Attack: After I flip to Blasmophet, Levia Consumed, I know my Kayo opponent is likely setting up a massive, five-card Bloodrush Bellow turn to try and close out the game. This is the moment I am waiting for.
- Deploy the Guardian: As they present lethal, I play Guardian of the Shadowrealm from my banish zone.
- Create a Fortress: This play instantly turns one card in my hand into a 6-block. Suddenly, my four-card hand isn't just blocking for a standard 12; it's blocking for 18, maybe even 21 damage.
- Seize a Winning Tempo: By completely absorbing their kill turn, I effectively "drown them in value." They've expended their entire hand for minimal damage, while I have survived and am now in a position to take over the game.
The Ultimate Counter to Dominate
Beyond the Kayo matchup, Guardian provides a brilliant answer to one of the game's most difficult mechanics: dominate.
Cards like Pulping force an opponent to block with at least two cards from their hand. Because Guardian of the Shadowrealm is played from the banish zone, it elegantly bypasses this restriction. I can block with a single card from my hand, play Guardian as my second block, and completely neutralize the dominate effect while preserving the rest of my hand. It’s a surgical tool that dismantles a key part of an opponent's strategy.