Why Anti-Air is Crucial in Tower Rush

Reacties · 8 Uitzichten

If you play your Musketeer and they kill it with a Fireball, you are 100% defenseless against their incoming Balloon.

However, ignoring the vertical space—the 'Z-axis' of the arena—is a fatal flaw that will immediately stall your progression on the competitive ladder.


This guide breaks down exactly why every single viable deck must feature a dedicated anti-air package and how to construct a flawless aerial defense.


The Danger from Above


The primary threat from the skies comes in two distinct forms: massive, heavy tanks (like the Lava Hound) and fast, high-DPS punishers (like the Balloon).


Because flying units avoid so many standard defensive interactions, they require highly specialized, immediate answers.


  • If you play your Musketeer and they kill it with a Fireball, you are 100% defenseless against their incoming Balloon.
  • Flying anti-air units (like Mega Minion) are safer because they avoid ground melee.
  • If you place a Wizard and a Musketeer right next to each other, a single Poison spell will kill both, leaving the skies wide open.

Building the Anti-Air Package


The 'Air Assassin' role (Mega Minion, Phoenix, Minions) involves playing flying melee units that fly out to directly intercept the enemy threat in the sky.


If you are playing a heavy Beatdown deck, you must also include 'Splash Anti-Air' (Baby Dragon, Electro Dragon, Executioner).


Defense CategoryThe UnitHow to Use It
The Ranged SniperMusketeer / Dart GoblinPlaced centrally to shoot down Balloons from a safe distance; highly vulnerable to spells
The Air AssassinMega Minion / PhoenixPlaced directly on top of the enemy air threat; immune to ground damage, survives medium spells

Look Up


Test your new decks specifically against heavy air combinations before taking them to the ranked ladder.


Control the ground, but dominate the air.



In case you loved this post and you would like to receive more details with regards to tower rush please visit our website.
Reacties