Originally Posted by
Shawon
You say you've "tried" a heavy discard plan (with Affinity? or still talking about TES?) against Leyline, so if you have that much extensive experience, how come you neglected to mention anything on your deck's capability to go into an aggro plan if they drop Leyline? Have you ever beaten Sneak-Show when they did have Leyline when you tried the discard plan? How did Leyline affect the usefulness of Disciple? Just saying your experience was "awful" doesn't provide any insight at all.
For the record, I have tried both Cabal Therapy and Spell Pierce in the past, even at once, and I wasn't satisfied with that plan. It may have do to with the fact that I only ran a total of 6 cards against S&S - I believe in bringing in more - but I still don't think the diversification matters as much as you think it does, because as long as you're running a card that has conditional use, you will still run into those very conditions that make the card bad in the first place, say if you only draw Flusterstorm and they have drop a turn 3 Sneak Attack. The only conditional card that renders my all-in discard plan useless is Leyline of Sanctity. Force of Will does counter my discard, but I don't care about Spell Pierce, Daze or even Misdirection if I'm using either Therapy or Sculler. I've already explained why I'm okay if I run into Leyline. You still use Therapy, so I know you're aware of how useful the proactive approach of using discard to gain information and disrupt the opponent is, therefore I think you can understand why I want to invest in more of that approach because being proactive is more cohesive to the core strategy of Affinity. I don't think I've ever referenced the sitcom "Parks & Recreation" before, but I will quote the manly Ron Swanson: "Don't half-ass two jobs; whole-ass one."
It's funny that you mention Top, because I notice its inclusion in many Sneak-Show lists that actually run 0 Leyline. Honestly, I'd rather go up against S&S with Leyline any day of the deck than Sensei's Divining Top.