Sample Replay Review

Sample analysis: Royal Giant lane management after a bridge win turned into a counter-loss

A sample review focused on how Bernard explains lane-state mistakes that look invisible in the moment but decide the next sequence.

The key teaching value in this sample is that winning the immediate exchange does not mean the lane is safe. Bernard's job is to surface the lane state that remains afterward.

Updated 2026-03-24Royal Giant

Sample Replay Review

Royal Giant

A sample review focused on how Bernard explains lane-state mistakes that look invisible in the moment but decide the next sequence.

  • This sample shows how Bernard prioritizes the highest-impact clip.
  • The point is to learn the coaching style, not to expose a real player's full history.
  • Use the sample to decide whether the product's review loop fits your own sessions.

Details

Updated 2026-03-24

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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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Turning points in this match

Moment 1: bridge win, lane loss

The Royal Giant exchange looked favorable, but it removed the defender that would have stabilized the lane afterward.

Why it matters

The opponent regained tempo on an open lane.

Moment 2: forced response

The next defense was built from the wrong hand state and became too expensive.

Why it matters

A small lead turned into a full tempo reversal.

Moment 3: profile-level pattern

This player had similar lane-management notes in earlier battles.

Why it matters

Bernard would connect the replay to a broader pattern worth drilling.

What to carry into your next session

  • Judge pressure by the lane state it leaves behind.
  • Treat one defender as reserved for the next exchange.
  • Review whether winning the bridge actually improved your long-term tempo.

Questions before you start

Why is lane management hard to catch in real time?+

Because players often remember the damage trade but not the structure left on the board. Replay review makes that structure visible again.

How does this connect to the player profile?+

If the same lane-state mistake appears across multiple matches, the profile can show it as a recurring weakness rather than a one-off oversight.

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