XCOM 2 Alien Analysis: ADVENT Priest


Basic
HP: 5/6/8/8
Armor: 0
Defense: 0
Dodge: 0/0/10/15
Aim: 75
Mobility: 12 (8/16)
Damage: 3 (+1)
Shred: 0
Crit Chance: 0/0/10%/10%
Will: 60
Psi: 40 (Not that it does anything)
Tech: 125

Stasis
Stuns a target enemy, but also makes it immune to all effects until the user's team's next turn. 2 turn cooldown, always ends the turn.

This isn't literally Psi Operative Stasis, as Priests can't Stasis and then do something else with a remaining action point like a Psi Operative, but otherwise it works exactly like Stasis on a Psi Operative. A Psi Operative who doesn't have Stasis Shield: Priests can't protect allies with Stasis.

On Basic Priests, Stasis is a bit of a mixed blessing. On the one hand, it always works, can't be fixed in any way, and takes the victim completely out of the fight, ensuring they can't contribute no matter what, nor even maneuver. On the other hand, in the very early game your soldiers die alarmingly easily; being out of action for one turn, completely safe, is a far sight better than being dead forever. A Priest taking a shot and missing is better for you than them going for the Stasis, but them going for Stasis is probably better than them hitting, potentially critting.

Notably, Priests aren't particularly intelligent in how they use Stasis. They're willing to Stasis targets they actively are flanking, as probably the most blatant example: they don't have any rubrics for trying to Stasis the most Stasis-worthy target that I've been able to determine. Sometimes they'll happen to Stasis the one soldier carrying a Medikit when you desperately want to use said Medikit right now, but most of the time it'll be an okay target or an actively terrible target -among other points, it's worth noting that Stasis does not freeze timers on other negative effects, but does block or functionally overrule their effects. A soldier who's been Poisoned will have one turn of Poison tick down without actually taking damage from it, same for Burn, Acid, and similarly a soldier who got Stunned by a Stun Lancer beforehand will recover from that Stun inside the Stasis. So a Priest can not only waste Stasis on a sub-optimal target, but actually save one of your soldier's lives!

As such, even though Stasis in player hands is practically a gamebreaker, Basic Priests using Stasis is usually somewhere from 'heartfelt thanks to this random Priest' to 'meh, whatever'.

Holy Warrior
The Priest links theirself to a single ally they have a clear line of fire to using one action point; this does not necessarily end their turn. The ally gains +1 Mobility, +10 Aim, +25 crit chance, and 4 ablative HP, but if the Priest dies the beneficiary also dies. The Priest can only maintain one Holy Warrior boost at a time, and the link is non-lethally broken if either individual is put into Stasis for any reason. 1 turn cooldown.

Note that Priests aren't able to use Holy Warrior on everything. The Chosen are all invalid targets, as are Spectres, Shadowbinding-produced units, Gatekeepers, and the Warlock's Spectral Zombies and Spectral Stun Lancers. They also can't target anything a Specialist can hack, such as Sectopods. Lastly, if you somehow end up with a Priest putting Holy Warrior on an Avatar -a situation that's technically possible but highly unlikely to actually occur- and then kill the Priest, the Avatar won't (necessarily) be killed, instead taking damage. (I am unsure of the mechanics of this: the one example I have would be consistent with 'the damage to the Priest is cloned on the Avatar', but of course it could be a coincidence both the Priest and the Avatar took 18 damage)

Holy Warrior is the return of Mind Merge, but made more widely applicable and as a result able to have a bigger payoff than when it was Sectoids using it on each other. And also given more sensible mechanics: no more acting as a slow heal, for one. I'm a little weirded out by this particular ability making a return, honestly, and suspect it has to do with Long War 1 and Long War 2 incorporating Mind Merge in player abilities, like Firaxis thought Mind Merge was popular or something.

Anyway, it's worth drawing a comparison to Mark Target, as initially Priests are restricted to leading pods, and indeed pretty directly replace cases that in the base game would be an ADVENT Officer leading the pod. When talking an early-game pod of just two enemies, pulled by itself, a Priest using Holy Warrior on its ally is failing to give itself an Aim bonus and risking getting you a two-for-one deal on killing them, but in exchange the beneficiary has significantly greater crit chance, more mobility, and an HP boost equivalent to having another Trooper running around. Unlike Mark Target, though, Holy Warrior doesn't auto-scale when more enemies are active at a time: one of the stranger things about Mark Target's mechanics is that it makes an Officer's threat level scale directly to how many active enemies are about. An Officer on their lonesome using Mark Target is kind of whatever. An Officer included with two full pods is alarming, much more so than if you replaced them with an enemy that had higher Aim but no Mark Target.

A Priest, meanwhile, is adding just as much backing two enemies vs backing ten; it's only 'lone Priest' vs 'Priest with Holy Warrior-able buddy' that is substantially different in this regard. This strikes me as deliberate, as stuff like Mark Target is part of why it's so important to manage pod pulling: pulling two pods of three enemies apiece isn't roughly twice as dangerous as pulling one pod of three enemies. It's several times more dangerous, the enemies compounding together... and it's clear that with War of the Chosen the devs were trying to make the pod activation management aspect of play much less dominating of the experience, with new mission types that reduce or eliminate it as a concern, Reapers making it much easier to do reliably even if you're not intimately familiar with the game's assorted routines, and so on. Priests partially replacing Officers and having a Mark Target-like ability for supporting allies but minus the 'this is far more concerning when you pull multiple pods at once' aspect is completely consistent with this agenda. Kudos to the team, if that was even slightly intentional: Officers being everywhere in the early game is one of the subtle things that makes XCOM 2's early game as painful as it is.

In any event, Priests are... surprisingly reluctant to use Holy Warrior, which is particularly surprising given they can absolutely toss it out and immediately do something else. When they do use it, it's usually after a move, wasting some of its potential. However, once used, the Priest will actually try to flee from your squad, often spending both action points on fleeing to protect their beneficiary. As such, if you can't kill the Priest on the very next turn, you may be better off focusing on killing the unit they're boosting.

Their reluctance to actually use Holy Warrior is actually overall inconvenient when looking at Basic ADVENT Priests. A minor one, since good play will minimize opportunities for it to be relevant, but if you do end up pulling a pod with most of your squad out of action points, or pulling two pods at once, it's usually going to be a good thing if one of the pods is led by a Priest and the Priest goes for the Holy Warrior, making it easier to get the situation under control by simply killing the Priest to get the two-for-one deal.

Only usually, admittedly, because Priests can have...


Sustain
The first time the soldier should have died in a mission, they instead enter Stasis with 1 HP remaining. This Stasis ends at the start of their team's next turn. Each individual Priest has only a 20% chance of actually having Sustain.

Yes, this is Sustain as per a Psi Operative.

Note that Sustain triggering means that whatever attack hit the Priest is not considered a kill-shot. This means it will interrupt Serial and Reaper chains, fail to trigger Implacable and Untouchable, etc. As such, don't make plans that hinge on killing a Priest to activate such an effect. Also note that Sustain will ensure survival in the face of a Repeater kill, though this isn't communicated clearly; if a Repeater triggers on a Sustaining Priest, instead of getting the Executed! popup, they will be listed as having taken damage equal to the HP they had when they were hit, minus 1. (ie if they had 8 HP, a Repeater kill will cause 7 damage to be listed) As such, you can only be confident a Repeater triggered simultaneously with Sustain triggering if the Priest had more HP than the attack could possibly have done.

Also note that the way the game actually handles Sustain is that when a Priest is generated, the game rolls to determine whether that particular Priest has it or not. In general play this doesn't really matter, but if you were thinking you could reload and re-kill a Priest until the RNG decided Sustain wouldn't trigger this time... nope. It's not savescummable like that.

The best way to deal with Sustain triggering is to take advantage of Overwatch or Bladestorm. A Priest's first action after Sustain ends is usually to move somewhere, inevitably triggering reaction fire if there's any ready to go. Stocks are your friend if Sustain frustrates you.

Every once in a while they'll stay where they are and eg Stasis someone. This is one of a handful of cases where Covering Fire can actually be useful, since in that case they won't trigger regular Overwatch. I don't consider that much of an argument in Covering Fire's favor, personally, as Bladestorm (Including Retribution) is already Covering Fire behavior so I'd sooner recommend obsessively bringing Bladestormers, and Priests are uncommon and only rarely stay still after a Sustain. As in, if you purchase Covering Fire to account for this scenario, it's unlikely to help over the course of an entire run.

Still, if you get a Psionic Storm Sitrep that's just Priests and Sectoids, it might be worth purchasing Covering Fire on someone just before you start the mission, just in case.

Incidentally, Priest Sustain is the final War of the Chosen early-game addition that reduces the dominance of Rangers and particularly Blademasters Slashing through everything. Anytime you Slash a Priest or go for a point-blank Shotgun blast, there's a chance that what was a guaranteed kill will instead result in Sustain triggering, at which point your Ranger is exposed, instead of using Implacable to flee to better Cover and/or Untouchable to laugh off an attack. It's not a huge threat -a Basic Priest's Rifle is only as strong as a Basic Trooper's rifle, and Stasis doesn't benefit from the target being in the open- but it's an extra bit discouraging you from just mindlessly Slashing everything to death.

Mind, it ends up encouraging Bladestorm Ranger use in practice, so it's iffy whether it really reduces Ranger dominance, but in the very early game, before Bladestorm is a thing on your Rangers? Absolutely hurts Slash-abuse strategies.


Priests, as noted earlier, tend to lead pods like Officers. Unlike Officers they're allowed to follow around others, seen pretty readily if you get a Psionic Storm... pretty much ever, but especially in the early game. In the very early game they're restricted to leading pods unless a Psionic Storm Sitrep rolls, but past that you'll semi-regularly see them accompanying Officers, following about a Purifier instead of leading one, etc. This makes them a little bit more common overall than Officers, over the course of a run, so you'll need to regularly account for their presence.

Overall, Basic Priests are basically a softpedaling of the early game difficulty, for basically the reasons I outlined under Holy Warrior: they replace Officers you'd have fought in the early game, and then tend to be less dangerous than an Officer, particularly in the context of pulling multiple pods. Normally I might complain, but base XCOM 2's early game is genuinely a touch too harsh, and crucially Priests mostly serve to throttle back how egregious pulling multiple pods is. This means its impact is felt most with inexperienced players -as an experienced player will be better at avoiding multiple pods activating at once- who most need the help, and furthermore XCOM 2 clearly doesn't intend for pod activation management to be a primary mastery mechanic. This latter point is significant because it's clear War of the Chosen is trying to reduce how central management of pod activation is to the experience, while not being in a position to make a more fundamental overhaul to enemy mechanics, quite understandably. Having Priests not 'scale' in danger with enemy count, while replacing a decent portion of Officers, isn't a perfect solution to this problem, but a perfect solution would require a much bigger, more fundamental overhaul, and War of the Chosen is already hugely ambitious and ended up unable to fully realize its ambitions.

It does make me wonder if XCOM 3 will make more of an effort to resolve the problem, like how Chimera Squad overhauls the entire experience to remove pod activation while still achieving much of what pod activation is clearly intended to achieve... or if XCOM 3 will instead stick to pod activation but build enemies with more of an eye toward avoiding them scaling with overall activated enemy count. I'd potentially be okay with either, personally, but I do wonder what's liable to be chosen.


Advanced
HP: 10/12/12/13
Armor: 0
Defense: 0
Dodge: 10/15/20/20
Aim: 75
Mobility: 12 (8/16)
Damage: 5 (+2)
Shred: 0
Crit Chance: 0/0/10%/10%
Will: 70
Psi: 40
Tech: 125

Stasis
Stuns a target enemy, but also makes it immune to all effects until the user's team's next turn. 2 turn cooldown, always ends the turn.

Unchanged from Basic Priests, but by the time Advanced Priests are around the context on your end is different. It's a bit of a mixed bag; your own squad size may well be up, so that being down a single soldier is less dramatic an impact, but you're liable to have Predator Armor, where soldiers keeling over dead just doesn't happen as readily, and you're more likely to have a meaningful experience and/or tech-based quality difference between squad members. So going for the Stasis is more likely to be genuinely, clearly more problematic than taking a shot, and it's also more likely that it's possible for them to Stasis a particularly high-impact soldier -say you've got Magnetic Weapons but not Gauss Weapons, and they Stasis the squad's Ranger, who was thus your most lethal soldier. If they were also the squad's most experienced soldier, that can be a pretty serious problem, especially if they actually remembered to use Holy Warrior first!

They're still perfectly happy to target Stasis in counterproductive ways, mind, so you shouldn't be terrified of it, but it's overall more likely to be a real problem than when Basic Priests were tossing it out.

Holy Warrior
The Priest links theirself to a single ally they have a clear line of fire to using one action point; this does not necessarily end their turn. The ally gains +2 Mobility, +10 Aim, +25 crit chance, and 6 ablative HP, but if the Priest dies the beneficiary also dies. The Priest can only maintain one Holy Warrior boost at a time, and the link is non-lethally broken if either individual is put into Stasis for any reason. 1 turn cooldown.

Slightly more Mobility and slightly more ablative HP, but otherwise the same as with basic Priests. The primary difference with Advanced Priests is actually...


Sustain
The first time the soldier should have died in a mission, they instead enter Stasis with 1 HP remaining. This Stasis ends at the start of their team's next turn. Each individual Priest has only a 50% chance of actually having Sustain.

... that Sustain is vastly more common on Advanced Priests. With Basic Priests, Holy Warrior is usually to your benefit. With Advanced Priests, you should basically assume Holy Warrior won't result in a double-kill, because a coin-flip isn't anything to plan around. Sustain triggering will still wipe the boosts, so if you're going to go for a kill on the Priest you should ideally do that before delivering damage to their beneficiary, but still.

Also, I mentioned in the Faceless post that beginning-of-turn resolution is handled inconsistently by the game. This same issue applies to the Stasis from Sustain ending, and in this case it's a much more frustrating, janky issue, in that usually an ADVENT Priest who triggers Sustain is guaranteed to get a chance to act, with the only surefire ways of preventing them from doing something being Templar with Bladestorm standing next to them, a Bladestorm Ranger carrying the Katana standing next to them, or, assuming no other enemies are in the area or stumble into the area first, a Covering Fire soldier on Overwatch and equipped with a Stock so even a miss will do damage and thus finish them...

... but sometimes the game will decide that the Sustain-derived Stasis should end and then Poison, Acid, or Burn should do damage, and voila! The Priest is dead with no chance to act!

As such, afflicting Priests of any tier with Poison or Acid is a surprisingly good idea, even if the absolute best-case scenario is fairly rare. (You generally don't want to Burn a Priest: they'll be stuck with no choice but to take a shot at your soldiers, and the vast majority of the time you'd rather they use one of their special abilities)

Mostly, though, once Advanced Priests are a thing you should plan around assuming you can't kill them in one turn without Overwatch or Bladestorm support.

Additionally, Advanced Priests have picked up a new trick...

Mind Control
Attempts to take control of a single biological enemy for 2 turns: this takes the Priest's Psi stat+50 and subtracts the target's Will to determine the chance to succeed. The Priest cannot initiate Mind Control if they have a Holy Warrior link and vice-versa, and the Mind Control is lost if either unit is put into Stasis for any reason. 2 turn cooldown.

...Mind Control.

Weirdly enough, gaining Mind Control doesn't actually do a lot to make Advanced Priests more threatening. Their Psi score is low enough that it doesn't actually succeed very often (It will generally be about a coin flip chance to succeed), and indeed you should worry about Mind Control from Sectoids if you're going to worry about it at all. It does at least mean they're less prone to giving you a free double-kill -they much prefer wasted attempts at Mind Control to using Holy Warrior- but overall they're... actually a bit easier than basic Priests, relative to other enemies in their respective tiers. You fight them basically the same, as well. Indeed, since Mind Control is so prone to failure, any temptation you might have to slap Mind Shields onto people in response to Priests being on the field is dubious to give into: that Item slot would probably be better served being filled by something more relevantly helpful.

... even considering Priests are utterly oblivious to Mind Shields and will happily waste a turn trying to Mind Control an immune individual.

That said, Advanced Priests picking up Mind Control is one of the more reliably relevant reasons to pursue Bond Level 2, so you can use Stand By Me to neuter it. The Warlock is unreliable in showing up early (Though of course if your run rolled him as your first Chosen you should prioritize anti-Mind Control tools heavily), and while Sectoids going for the Mindspin are a lot more likely to get a successful Mind Control than Advanced Priests, Sectoids tend to get distracted by Psi Zombie potential and if you've got Rangers or Templar about are much easier to kill than an Advanced Priest. Advanced Priests, meanwhile, rate Mind Control as their preferred action by a wide margin: they're willing to do other things first, but usually their first turn will be spent on a Mind Control attempt. They prioritize this enough they'll often ignore the option to shoot people in the open! (Where Sectoids will almost always take a shot if they start a turn with a clear shot from their current position) As such, while an Advanced Priest will succeed in Mind Control less often than a Sectoid, they'll try more often, generally putting them ahead in successful Mind Controls in practice.

Overall, Advanced Priests popping in are still generally a relief compared to Advanced Officers doing so, though. They far prefer to use their abilities over shooting, and none of their abilities will cause your troops long-term problems the way being shot does. Mind Control is easily canceled by attacking them, even if Sustain triggers, and Holy Warrior potentially giving you a double-kill can easily take a tough situation and make it far easier to untangle, as opposed to Mark Target on Officers very possibly leading to a bunch of extra-accurate shots taken at your squad before you get a chance to do anything.

Also worth noting is that pod leaders always going before their podmates opens up the potential for completely wasted Holy Warriors once Priests are allowed to follow around other pod leaders, where the Priest goes last, puts up Holy Warrior, and then you just shoot the Priest until they die or Sustain triggers. Whoops!


Elite
HP: 13/16/18/18
Armor: 0
Defense: 0/10/15/15
Dodge: 15/20/20/25
Aim: 75/75/80/80
Mobility: 12 (8/16)
Damage: 5-6 (+2)
Shred: 0
Crit Chance: 0/0/10%/10%
Will: 75
Psi: 40
Tech: 125

Yes, even the Elite Priest has a measly 40 Psi. Unless you're playing on Rookie, Sectoids are always going to be the more reliably relevant psionic threat, all the way into the endgame.

Stasis
Stuns a target enemy, but also makes it immune to all effects until the user's team's next turn. 2 turn cooldown, always ends the turn.

Strictly speaking Elite Priests could be compared to Advanced Priests in terms of Stasis having not improved while Holy Warrior and Sustain have gotten improved, but by the time Elite Priests are around it's generally too easy to punish/cancel out Mind Control and Holy Warrior before they can really threaten you, whereas Stasis can end up taking out of action a key squad member with absolutely nothing you can do about it. Maybe you were planning on your Darkclaw-equipped Sharpshooter spamming Bluescreen Rounds-backed shots at a Sectopod to trivialize it, and whoops that soldier got Stasised and the rest of your squad happens to be ill-equipped to take out a Sectopod and you're thus in actual trouble!

That specific example is a bit of a rarity, but the point is that Elite Priests tossing out a Stasis can irrevocably ruin your plans with no way to respond, just suck it up and cope with being down a soldier for a turn, where their other possible actions can be undone/made to backfire, or are just straight damage attempts that are only going to kill someone if they're already injured or other enemies get in damage. (ie the Priest shooting someone) This applied to every tier of Priest, but it's overall most relevant to Elite Priests in practice, given how progression works: among other points, if you don't have tools for dealing with Mind Control by the time Elite Priests show up, it more or less has to be a deliberate choice to neglect Bonds, Mind Shields, Psi Operatives, Flashbangs... where for Advanced Priests you might genuinely spend a bit unable to arrange anti-Mind Control tools beyond 'kill the Priest'.

The example I used also touches on unique gear, and that's very relevant: if you bring two Rangers into a fight in the midgame, very possibly they can both carry out the same duties, where one being Stasised is a minor thing. In the late game, only one of them is going to be carrying the Katana, and if that one ends up Stasised the other Ranger can't take up the slack if you needed perfectly accurate Slashes and/or Armor-piercing Slashes.

They're still willing to use Stasis in incredibly bad ways, of course, but with Elite Priests I genuinely dread the possibility of them using Stasis on the exact right soldier, where for earlier Priests it's usually a mild relief to see Stasis starting, because the worst-case scenarios can be really bad, and are overall a lot more likely to occur, since squad members are so powerful, the game is balanced around their power, and they're not interchangeable in their power. That is, a Katana-equipped Bladestorm Ranger is a terror, and a Darkclaw-equipped Sharpshooter with maximum Pistol skills is also a terror, but they solve different kinds of problems, and if I need them both to disentangle the current situation, then having either be hit by Stasis is a serious problem!

Whereas early in the game there's a large extent to which most problems are solved about as well by any class, with exact gear differences being minimal and not very important to boot.

Holy Warrior
The Priest links theirself to a single ally they have a clear line of fire to using one action point; this does not necessarily end their turn. The ally gains +3 Mobility, +15 Aim, +25 crit chance, and 8 ablative HP, but if the Priest dies the beneficiary also dies. The Priest can only maintain one Holy Warrior boost at a time, and the link is non-lethally broken if either individual is put into Stasis for any reason. 1 turn cooldown.

Another point of Mobility, another couple points of ablative HP, and 5 more points of Aim.

+15 Aim is still low enough the vast majority of enemies can't hit 100% accuracy without flanking a target from high ground, which is more of that frustrating "the RNG can always choose to save you from yourself even when you screwed up" design I've touched on before. Admittedly, there's at least the potential for it to end up combined with an Officer's Mark Target? 

Ah well. I do at least appreciate an attempt to have a special ability tier with unit quality. I haven't complained about how eg Officers Marking a Target never gets any better, but this is a bit of an issue with some of the units that tier up, where an ability doesn't scale at all, or scales very mildly. Holy Warrior doesn't scale enough, I feel, but it certainly scales more than some of these.


Sustain
The first time the soldier should have died in a mission, they instead enter Stasis with 1 HP remaining. This Stasis ends at the start of their team's next turn. Each individual Priest has only a 66% chance of actually having Sustain.

By the time Elite Priests are running around, you may well have the Katana, making it much less of a pain to deal with Sustaining Priests. Just drop your Bladestorm Ranger carrying a Katana next to them if they trigger Sustain, and it's more or less guaranteed they'll die without acting.

I'm not sure how I feel about Elite Priests having high enough odds on rolling Sustain the expected result of any given Priest kill is Sustain triggering, but not actually bumping them up to 100%. On the one hand, Elite Priests being guaranteed to trigger Sustain would be incredibly frustrating. On the other hand, you still basically have to play as if every Elite Priest has Sustain, and will just be pleasantly surprised roughly 1/3rd of the time, which feels a bit too much like the 'enemies can virtually always miss even when you screwed up and 100% deserve to be shot' design I flatly do not like.

To be fair, Advanced Priests being coin-flip odds had a rather similar outcome...

... but if Elite Priests were 100% Sustain, I'd just read the prior tiers as operating on chance mechanics so Sustain is scaling in some sense with tier. Can't start from Sustain always triggering and go up from there, except in a few pretty obviously dumb ways like letting it trigger multiple times.

And I've never been able to think of a design benefit to Sustain always being a chance, never a guarantee.

It's possible there's a subtle benefit I haven't explicitly thought up, though. War of the Chosen is good enough about that I hate to discount the possibility.

Mind Control
Attempts to take control of a single biological enemy for two turns: this takes the Priest's Psi stat+50 and subtracts the target's Will to determine the chance to succeed. The Priest cannot initiate Mind Control if they have a Holy Warrior link and vice-versa, and the Mind Control is lost if either unit is put into Stasis for any reason. 2 turn cooldown.

As Elite Priests still have the same Psi score as Advanced Priests, their Mind Control is only better inasmuch as they are tougher targets, making it more likely that shooting them to cancel it will be a risky option. Indeed, while War of the Chosen eliminates guaranteed Will boosts from progressing, you'll on average be less likely to be hit successfully by a Mind Control from an Elite Priest than an Advanced Priest in practice due to Will boosts from Covert Ops and the increasing probability of Focus PCSes ending up passed out to some of your soldiers. 

I'm not sure why they didn't get a 10 or 20 point boost to their Psi score, honestly. It's a strange decision in the context of how the game constructs itself. Their durability increase genuinely does help, but it's not really enough.


Indeed, Elite Priests are a sufficiently small boost in threat level you could be forgiven for failing to realize that there are three tiers of Priest.

On a different topic, Priests make for fairly iffy Domination targets, more so than you might expect.

Holy Warrior's double-kill effect still triggers even when you are using it on an X-COM soldier, and one of the big utilities of Domination is to have a disposable distraction to absorb fire for your long-term troops. This use is rather defeated if the Dominated target dying is risking instantly losing one of your soldiers, making Dominating them for Holy Warrior bonuses a risky plan.

Mind Control can actually be used even while Dominated, surprisingly, but Priests always have a sad enough Psi score there's basically no enemies they're actually reliable at taking over. A lot of enemies are immune to Mind Control, too, so it's pretty easy to end up never having a good opportunity to use it. Even when you have a decent target, temporary Mind Control is an awkward affair all-around anyway; you'd often rather just shoot a potential Mind Control victim, honestly.

That leaves Stasis as a strongly desirable ability to take advantage of. It's a very good ability, but it's hampered a little by the fact that Dominating a Priest means you probably already have access to Stasis through the Psi Operative. Not necessarily, mind, but usually. Stasis is not an ability you're liable to spam; even a second Stasis tends to be redundant unless you're pretty specifically dealing with an Alien Ruler. If you pull three or more pods it can be a lifesaver, so that's also something to keep in mind, but overall the odds are tilted away from it actually being all that great to have, especially since Psi Operative Stasis can be used in a turn alongside other abilities, so there's not even an action economy advantage being gained.

In practice the primary draw to Dominating a Priest is sidestepping Sustain. If you clear the mission without the Priest dying or exiting Domination, great! You didn't have to deal with it at all! Whereas if the Priest does end up taking lethal damage, it most likely happened during the enemy turn. In that case, what happens is the Priest enters Stasis, exits your control, and then your turn rolls around and they exit Stasis, leaving them an easy target to finish off with their 1 HP and Sustain used up. If you habitually ignore Psi Operatives and also hate planning around Priest Sustain, consider giving Psi Operatives a second chance, and Dominate Priests whenever you can to minimize the annoyance factor.

If you don't care about sidestepping Sustain that way, though, they're a pretty underwhelming choice for Domination.


The Priest Autopsy is, unfortunately, pretty junk-y. It allows you to build an Item that is effectively Sustain in Item form... but if it's triggered the Item is lost forever... and it requires Priest corpses to produce each copy. I'm sure there's people who swear by it, but it's frustratingly niche and you're generally better off giving people Items that reduce the likelihood of them hitting 0 HP, rather than giving them an Item that lets them survive it one time. Resistance classes -your most difficult soldiers to replace- particularly keenly feel Item slot pressure, since only Skirmishers can ever hit 2 slots at all and Reapers don't even necessarily get an Item slot in the first place, so even though they're the obvious choices for passing Sustain out to... it's difficult to justify doing so, outside maybe Tactical Rigging Skirmishers.

I never bother to burn actual lab time on their Autopsy, and even once it's hit Instant I rarely bother to build Sustaining Spheres. There's few situations where they're clearly a worthwhile way of burning the Item slot, and when I've given into the temptation I've always been a bit too aware that a different Item would've helped prevent things from reaching the point of needing the Sustaining Sphere's protection.

I'm a little surprised this Autopsy wasn't used as an excuse to force soldiers to always start bleeding out the first time they'd have died, honestly. It would've made a kind of conceptual sense, and base XCOM 2 is designed so in the long haul your soldiers being guaranteed to not instantly die is the expected result. I'm okay with War of the Chosen making death more a realistic consequence into the late game, personally, but still surprised.

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Narratively, Priests are confusing, ambiguous, and a bit frustrating.

Their name, by itself, is a little weird, out of line with how base-game ADVENT forces tend to get named, but not jarringly so. But then Tygan's intro when you first encounter a Priest refers to them as 'so-called Priests', and their pod activation animations actually do seem to be shooting for a vaguely religious undertone, with Priests reaching to the sky or crouching with their head bowed down in possible prayer. So... the game is maybe signaling they're actually priests in the sense of being persons of importance in an actual religious context? Are they purveyors of an Ethereal-focused religion the game never actually unambiguously refers to as existing? Notably, Tygan talks about ADVENT sending them 'into battle', which is not actually a direct statement that Priests normally perform non-combat duties, but seems likely to be intended to imply such.

But then we don't get info on what such a religion might be, and the only strong secondary support for the notion of there being an official ADVENT religion is a portion of Chosen dialogue. (Lots of Warlock dialogue, and a notable fraction of the Assassin's dialogue, specifically; the Hunter never, to my awareness, refers to the Ethereals as gods or anything of the sort) You won't find centers of worship in ADVENT city center maps, for example, and the new post-mission dialogue from the Speaker and newswoman never touch on religious topics at all. (They never label X-COM as 'heretics' or anything else with religious connotations) Particularly confusing is that you can find what appears to be a church with the ADVENT icon fallen from a position you might normally see a cross at...

... but this is specifically a blown-apart church on a Retaliation map, seeming to imply worship of an ADVENT-specific religion in... a resistance camp that ADVENT is currently trying to murder every resident of?

Chimera Squad seems to firm up the notion of there being an official ADVENT religion, as Sacred Coil is ADVENT loyalists clinging to the cause with zeal while doing things like calling themselves Sacred Coil, but it still doesn't touch on the nature of this religion, and it also doesn't explain why an ADVENT Priest would be... psychic.

Further confusing the issue is that it's actually a semi-widespread cliche for sci-fi to shove religious imagery and terminology together with psychic powers. I... don't really get why it's a cliche... but it is, so it's possible War of the Chosen is calling the psychic ADVENT soldiers Priests purely because of a weird genre convention, rather than intending it to signal anything of substance in-universe. At which point Tygan calling them 'so-called Priests' may be leaning on the fourth wall, poking fun at genre conventions, rather than meant as an indication they're actual religious figures.

Overall, I'm inclined to think they're meant to be actually religious figures, but that itself raises questions about what kind of religion they might be preaching, as well as who they're supposed to be preaching to. ADVENT Priests could be just intended to be preaching to their fellow hybrids, after all, which would be consistent with Skirmishers referring to the Ethereals as false gods while no such religious terminology gets used by the Speaker or anyone else talking to ADVENT civilians. But the game never actually clarifies whether there's a broader ADVENT state religion or not, or even strongly hints in any particular direction.

The fact that Priests are psychic per se also raises a bunch of other problematic questions. The goal of the Avatar project is to take the most psychically sensitive members of the human population and use them as a foundation to make humanoid bodies with strong psychic abilities. So... where do Priests fit into this? Are they prototypes, disseminated into the field as disposable soldiers when the Ethereals rejected them as inadequate? Shouldn't producing psychically capable line troops be eating into the Ethereal's stocks of psychically sensitive human flesh, given the game seems to be treating 'harvesting DNA from psychically sensitive humans' not as a gathering of information (They wouldn't need to kill anyone if they just wanted to study DNA samples, and in fact killing people would be a counterproductive action to a ludicrous extent if that was how this worked, as one of the more blatant examples), but instead as wringing out some limited quantity of psionic potential to then be concentrated in the bodies they're trying to build?

Then there's Tygan's introduction containing another extremely confusing line, where he refers to Priests as having implants that 'enhance whatever latent psionic potential they once possessed'. They have psychic potential. They use it to fight you. So why does Tygan refer to their psionic potential in the past tense? Are we supposed to think Priests are converted humans who had the majority of their psionic ability drained, and then given implants to somehow enhance whatever remains into battlefield-relevant abilities? Or did someone mean for a radically different sentence to go there, and War of the Chosen was rushed enough that nobody stopped the process and went back to double-check with the writer prior to recording the line?

As the final bit of murky confusion, Priests are presented as a psychic command-and-control unit... which is how Officers are explained, too. So, uh, what's the difference supposed to be? I can come up with workable theories, such as guessing that Officers rely on the psionic network to issue orders psychically while Priests can do so even if the psionic network is down or jammed or whatever, but the game itself doesn't clarify the distinction at all.

To be fair, most enemies aren't explained much. But most units aren't closely tied into a lot of important elements of the setting and story the way Priests are. It's a little frustrating that the narrative of XCOM 2 never addresses how your average ADVENT citizen views Sectoids walking the streets naked, but it's very much off to the side of the story and setting. Priests obviously connect directly to the Avatar Project and myriad elements that flow from it, as well as potentially hooking pretty directly into the nature of ADVENT society, so it's a lot more problematic how little coverage they get.

Probably a side effect of War of the Chosen being rushed, admittedly. A detail that's easy to overlook is that when you complete an Autopsy, your support staff will have some additional dialogue about the Autopsied subject... unless its content new to War of the Chosen, in which case they're silent. I suspect if they'd had more time, this kind of thing would've gotten filled in, and we might've gotten eg Shen asking Tygan about what Priests actually do in random Avenger conversations, like how regular animals largely being missing is referred to in random Avenger conversations.

But it still means players are left with an extremely confusing unit and inadequate info on it, narratively.

Aesthetically, I actually like Priests. They're difficult to confuse for another unit, for one: their white color scheme is seen on only one other ADVENT human-type enemy, and then there's enough other differences -like the Psi Amp- that it's unlikely you'll confuse the two. Particularly notable is their firearm, which is the same base shape as the rifle used by literally every base-game ADVENT human-type soldier, but is painted more white than black. I can contrast this with Stun Lancers, where their rifle is exactly the same as a Trooper's, color included; if Stun Lancers had gotten red paint on their rifle, or something, it would be a lot easier to avoid mixing them up with Troopers, same as Priests having a white rifle makes it hard to confuse them for Shieldbearers.

For another, Priests are one of the clearer examples of War of the Chosen showing more recognition of the fact that ADVENT forces ought to look cool, likable, and so on, if ADVENT is to be perceived by in-universe citizens in the way the narrative wants us to think they're perceived. Instead of being blatantly a stock sinister bad guy soldier visual, Priests actually look more like what one might expect to see generic good guy soldiers dressed like. The only significant obstacle in that regard is the manner in which the helmet conceals their face, and War of the Chosen is somewhat hamstrung in that regard by the base game insisting ADVENT soldiers are obviously not fully human if you aren't hiding eg their eyes under a helmet. It'd be better if the base game hadn't mishandled that whole thing in the first place, but War of the Chosen isn't in a good position to back up and course-correct on that topic, especially given it was already struggling to achieve its myriad ambitions. So the helmet point is understandable, in this case.

Especially since fiction wanting to so reliably use no helmet or face-revealing helmets for 'good guy' characters is something I find frustrating. I'd be perfectly happy with a game depicting shiny, cool, helmeted soldiers, because helmets are there to, you know, try to prevent people from getting killed. I have severe issues with how normalized it is that only bad people try to protect their soldiers' lives with helmets and full armor and so on.

Anyway, there's another reason I appreciate the Priest aesthetic, but I'm... not going to be touching on that for a while. Just keep in mind they have Psi Amps, just like your Psi Operatives.

---------------------------------------------------

Next time, we cover Vipers.

See you them.

Comments

  1. I was convinced that the Priest Sustain did not break mind control. At least it felt that way, everything about the Priest appears to be tuned around being as annoying for the player as possible.

    I found them to be particularly dangerous when they arrive as pre-activated reinforcements, such as in that mission in which you need to save a VIP from an ambush, and in the very final mission (4 priests showed up at once for me while fighting the avatars). They're good about staying as far away from you as possible behind high cover, from where they throw mind control and stasis on you, which is fine when it's your 6 vs a 3-enemy pod, but less so when it's your 6 vs their 6 (or more). But maybe this is less of an issue without Beta Strike.

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    1. Stasis always breaks Mind Control. It's important to the Warlock's design that this is so: you can cope with him grabbing someone early in the game, before you have Level 2 Bonds/Mindshields/Solace/possibly the Frost Bomb by dishing out enough damage he decides to summon Spectral Lancers, as he goes into Stasis as part of that and it breaks his Mind Control before the victim gets a chance to act.

      Beta Strike does a surprising amount to make Priests a pain. More opportunities for Dodge to trigger, a greater probability you've already burned non-lethal tools on other enemies (eg I semi-regularly use the Frost Bomb in Beta Strike to get regular fights under control, where normally I reserve it exclusively for a small list of emergencies like the Warlock Mind Controlling someone) and thus can't use them on a Priest, Stocks are way less useful so you're less likely to have them equipped to deal with post-Sustain Priests... and of course Stasis and Mind Control impress a lot more as threats when taking a shot isn't a 1-to-2-hit-kill.

      I personally don't find Priests terribly annoying overall. Main thing is that Sustain being randomly assigned isn't communicated at all, is completely unique behavior, and so has learning curve issues where a player potentially has no specific reason to think they're making a major mistake when eg going for the Slash to trigger Untouchable. Once you know how they work, they're a LOT less annoying than eg Officers, Stun Lancers.

      ... this is one case where the removal of F1 for info-checking is a real loss....

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  2. Priests definitely have a "religious" aesthetic; besides the white color scheme, you can easily distinguish them from the shieldbearers by their taller helmets. The helmets, from a head-on angle, are shaped kind of like a bishop's mitre.

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    1. I mean, yes, but my wall o' words is about whether they're meant to be actual speakers of some ADVENT faith (And if so, what might that entail) or if this is more like how a lot of military planes are named after birds of prey -that being called a 'priest' might be symbolically meaningful or pure Cool Factor, rather than being about spreading some gospel.

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    2. They are preaching the ADVENTist religion, obviously. ;)

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  3. This doesn't come up often in actual play, but I've had two times when I encountered pods of multiple Priests and had several units get Stasis Chained. One was during a Psionic Storm + sabotage relay mission. It was annoying, but a) I didn't have 3-Priest pods trying to permanently put one soldier on ice, and I had other guys running around. b) They didn't seem to try to get a permanent Stasis going on someone anyway. And c) not enough really lethal other units were around, so it was survivable.

    The second time was on Leviathan, when one of the reinforcement pods was 3 Priests, and 1-2 other Priests from different pods were on that side of the room. This is on Legendary, and I'm not sure if it happens below that. My Commander playthrough didn't have a 3-Priest pod in Leviathan. They were able to lock up my Templar, his ghost, and my Sharpshooter as well. I had only one other person on that side of the room because I was spreading out to hit the Avatars. There, it could have been very bad, because there were enough other enemies that half the squad could have taken some serious damage and I was down maybe half the squad. However, that was resolved when I killed the last Avatar with the other half of the squad. They teleported to on top of the center dais. Elena had been creeping up to there anyway, figuring she could reach most of the room from there and have a decent chance at Banish. It was glorious. And I guess the rest of the enemies ... drop dead? Sit down and cry?

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    1. The final fight in the mission is very fond of monotype-pods on any difficulty, in both the base game and War of the Chosen. I almost always get a pod of pure Priests (Well, aside the Avatar) in my Commander WotC runs, though occasionally it's instead half Priests and half Spectres.

      I've personally never been chain-Stasised, but I took it as a given it was possible, and the AI isn't organized enough to abuse it the way a player can and will, so I didn't feel it was worth discussing in the post, especially since the situations it's most prone to cropping up (Psionic Storm, Prelate Chosen) tend to result in it being annoying, not threatening, outside the possibility of timing out the objective... which usually isn't a concern with Prelate Chose, since they stop the clock.

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    2. FYI, A streamer I was watching had a Priest use Holy Warrior on Avatar. While killing the Priest didn't kill the Avatar, it did do a large chunk of damage and I don't think that's noted in that section.

      https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1637826468?t=02h34m52s

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    3. I actually didn't know that, as I've just happened to never have a Priest use Holy Warrior on an Avatar, and just knew from digging in the files that Avatars and Chosen share config file exemptions for 'do not kill'. (Even though Priests are also coded to not use Holy Warrior on Chosen in the first place) Really curious what the details there are -in that stream, the damage the Avatar took is the same as the damage popup on the Priest being killed, and now I'm curious if that's a coincidence or if the 'kill recipient when Priest dies' is being replaced with 'clone damage on recipient when Priest dies'. Might see if I can finagle getting the AI to let me test this at some point.

      In any event, I've adjusted the commentary on the Priest/Avatar interaction point appropriately, thank you.

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  4. I'm surprised the section on autopsy -> Sustaining Sphere doesn't mention Templars. Finding any use for the otherwise-useless Templar item slot is good, and the gap between Templars that roll Bladestorm/Reaper and the ones that don't is large enough that a good Templar is simultaneously hard to replace and often in particularly dangerous situations.

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    1. I prefer giving Templar a Mind Shield, a grenade to help in a pinch against threats that are a bad idea to melee (most particularly Mutons, but also all the exploding enemies), a Hazmat Vest if they didn't roll Fortress, or a Medikit when going into the Psi Gate mission to deal with the probable cases of Chryssalid Poisoning. I've done something like two dozen War of the Chosen runs and had a Templar go down, like... twice? Ever? They're really easy to keep alive, between Parry being absurd, Momentum letting them outright break line of fire at times, Deflect+Reflect being extra-absurd, and that's all assuming they didn't roll Sustain as a bonus skill. I also don't actually feel like there's that much of a power difference between a Reaper Templar and a Templar lacking it, though I'll admit I pretty consistently miss Bladestorm when my Templar don't roll it. So... I just don't find that a compelling use of the Sustaining Sphere? Like I said in the post, I'm sure there are people who swear by Sustaining Sphere, but I don't care for it and don't feel there's any context in which it's clearly a strong choice.

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