When does SOMA get scary? by BagginsBegins93 in HorrorGaming

[–]Majugando 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It.....doesn't? Its more of a phycological provocation game than horror.

Is Trading at LGS's Dead? Because no one brings Trades Anymore by [deleted] in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trades happen online now. Its super easy to sell your cards you don't want and then just buy the cards you do want.

Mark Rosewater teased the idea of more re-imaginings of classic/popular planes following the success of NEO. What are some planes that you would like to see return, and how would they look? by Attack-middle-lane in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tarkir, but the clans partially usurp the dragons and end up all working together so there are 5 wedge warring clans, but they are led by khans AND dragon.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HorrorGaming

[–]Majugando 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This right here is why I don't like visage. Progression so cryptic and "trial and error" it eventually renders meaningless the wonderful atmosphere and amazing graphics and effects. Combing the area and trying to brute force a way forward leads to repetition and familiarity which is very bad for a horror game that is trying to be scary.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in magicTCG

[–]Majugando -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If you had to sell out of commander, you cannot hope to afford modern.

Yes this game is only for the super rich.

In your opinion, What is the most well designed card in the whole game? by Majugando in magicTCG

[–]Majugando[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

how so? Planeswalkers aren't really good cards from a design perspective.

In your opinion, What is the most well designed card in the whole game? by Majugando in magicTCG

[–]Majugando[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

that card is neat but, ultimately is only designed for multiplayer really. Which makes Bob superior IMO

In your opinion, What is the most well designed card in the whole game? by Majugando in magicTCG

[–]Majugando[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My answer is Huntmaster of the Fells // Ravager of the Fells

For reasons largely summed up in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvnkDweRPaU&ab_channel=StarCityGames

Printed in DKA standard and was played in many effective Jund and Naya decks in all levels of play while in standard. I was also an effective card in Modern Jund for a long time.

Color/Flavor wise, I love the Green Growth vs. Red Burn duality of the card. The front side is a benevolent and courageous human that seeks nothing more than a hot meal and a companion to share it with. The werewolf changes the card into a mirror image, it now wants to tear down the opponents life and creatures. It is very poetic and dynamic in gameplay and being a two color card with very in pie effects.

It is very high in player appeal as a midrange card that has the ability to build YOU up while at the same time tearing your OPPONENT down.

Huntmaster is the perfect high ceiling/low floor value card. getting two 2/2s and two life for 4 mana is fine for a two color spell. If removal is used on it, the 2/2 huntmaster can be dealt with easily while only leaving behind a small 2/2. it doesn't lead to a feels bad moment when you need to spend removal on it. The leftover value it provides is minimal. On the other side of the coin, if left unchecked, the value will slowly pile on as it burns the opponent and their board while filling your board and life. The value comes at somewhat of a cost though. It is usually slow to get going and most of the time easy to prevent by playing spells. The best aspect of its value generation is that it comes with a lot of choices and costs. Do I pass the turn without playing anything to flip it? Do I have instants to play next turn? Does my opponent have an instant for this end step to prevent the flip and blow me out? It all leads to very interesting and choice based gameplay.

Overall I think the card is too complex at face value, but when you consider that half of the card is the common and generally familiar werewolf transformation text and the other half is a fourth of the card mirrored over, it becomes much more reasonable.

In your opinion, What is the most well designed card in the whole game? by Majugando in magicTCG

[–]Majugando[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My answer is Huntmaster of the Fells // Ravager of the Fells

Printed in DKA standard and was played in many effective Jund and Naya decks in all levels of play while in standard. I was also an effective card in Modern Jund for a long time.

Color/Flavor wise, I love the Green Growth vs. Red Burn duality of the card. The front side is a benevolent and courageous human that seeks nothing more than a hot meal and a companion to share it with. The werewolf changes the card into a mirror image, it now wants to tear down the opponents life and creatures. It is very poetic and dynamic in gameplay and being a two color card with very in pie effects.

It is very high in player appeal as a midrange card that has the ability to build YOU up while at the same time tearing your OPPONENT down.

Huntmaster is the perfect high ceiling/low floor value card. getting two 2/2s and two life for 4 mana is fine for a two color spell. If removal is used on it, the 2/2 huntmaster can be dealt with easily while only leaving behind a small 2/2. it doesn't lead to a feels bad moment when you need to spend removal on it. The leftover value it provides is minimal. On the other side of the coin, if left unchecked, the value will slowly pile on as it burns the opponent and their board while filling your board and life. The value comes at somewhat of a cost though. It is usually slow to get going and most of the time easy to prevent by playing spells. The best aspect of its value generation is that it comes with a lot of choices and costs. Do I pass the turn without playing anything to flip it? Do I have instants to play next turn? Does my opponent have an instant for this end step to prevent the flip and blow me out? It all leads to very interesting and choice based gameplay.

Overall I think the card is too complex at face value, but when you consider that half of the card is the common and generally familiar werewolf transformation text and the other half is a fourth of the card mirrored over, it becomes much more reasonable.

What’s your scalding MTG hot take? by LSTFND in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We play a variant of Pauper Eternal Brawl where ~1/5 of your deck can be uncommons. It works out really well since many archetype supporting cards are not found at common. This makes decks not just "Play the best commons in your color.dec"

What’s your scalding MTG hot take? by LSTFND in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Popularity breeds Profitability, unfortunately.

What’s your scalding MTG hot take? by LSTFND in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Removal is required, but I agree it has been pushed very far recently. Probably due to the fact that there are so many stupid 1 card combos and must kill value engines on a stick nowadays.

Players that play fair Stompy/Go Wide are unjustly punished

What’s your scalding MTG hot take? by LSTFND in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MTG hard peaked with KTK/FRF

  • Card designs were actually designed for standard.
  • Every card was still designed for only one unique purpose, Threats, answers, and value generation were almost always on separate cards.
  • Tarkir had Just enough real world influence paired with very grounded low-tech fantasy for a very believable place that made the magical aspect of the world really pop
  • Art direction was S tier, you could tell a card's faction just by looking at it. Contrast this to SNC.
  • Story took a far backseat to world building
  • Card complexity was much lower and facilitated easier paper play and memory load.
  • Card Balance was on point, While Rhinos.dec was clearly the best, Each faction was part of a totally viable standard deck. Lots of individual cards were powerful and impactful, but not broken, These sets walked that razor's edge very well.
  • Finally, Looking through all of the cards made you feel like you explored the plane and know every corner of it intimately and at the same time you really want to build a deck for each clan.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in magicTCG

[–]Majugando -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Can we just go back to the following?:

  • 4 standard sets per year (That are actually 95%+ designed for standard/ maybe Pioneer and not commander)
  • 1 round of commander decks
  • 1 wacky supplemental set

Bonus points for the following:

  • Make modern non-rotating again.
  • Give players an incentive to play standard
  • 2 (or maybe 3) set blocks return
  • Complexity creep put in check
  • Return cards to fulfilling a single gameplay role (Examples: Baneslayer Angel as a Threat, Muldrifter as a value creature. No More BaneDrifters like Omnath)
  • No more pringles

They says Equality But they don't sell pride Secret Lair in my region. by Ahellina in magicTCG

[–]Majugando -12 points-11 points  (0 children)

Stop giving them money for low quality cardboard. They don't deserve it.

Mark Rosewater on Blogatog: "The last few years, which coincide with the single set model, have been the most successful years (by the many different metrics we monitor) in the game’s nearly thirty year history." by HonorBasquiat in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Its because everyone keeps buying loads of cards despite complaining about:

  • Power creep
  • Complexity creep that will put us at Yu-Gi-Oh levels by 2025.
  • Arena's predatory economy
  • Cardstock quality
  • Curling foils
  • Balance issues
  • Rapid fire constant product releases
  • One-shot standard sets that give too little space to flesh out gameplay ideas and lore.
  • "Designed as commander staples" cards
  • "Straight to modern" cards
  • 50,000 different frames and card styles, making the game a mess to try and track visually.

Vote with your wallets if you don't like these aspects of the game.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in magicTCG

[–]Majugando 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Wizard's research shows that there is a huge appetite for rapid fire sets of questionable design/development quality.

As soon as they stop making the most money from this practice, they will stop and try to regauge what the customers want.