meant2live218

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Oops. I did all of mine like 8 hours ago.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Some people sell their code packs online, though I guess it could be risky.

I'm basically in TCG Live to practice the game and to figure out how a deck is working before sleeving up in paper.

TCG Pocket is just a fun diversion. 2 free packs a day is like little dopamine hits, for better or worse. I can let my nieces and nephews "rip" a pack open as a reward without thinking "that's $4 gone."

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (3 children)

TCG Live is for people who actually care about Pokemon TCG and the complexities and depth it offers. It's not that confusing; there are maybe 3 currencies, and one of its features, like it or not, is that you can't just swipe a credit card and get everything you want. The only money-to-game translation is buying IRL boosters and scanning in the codes. Yes, the app can be fairly buggy, but it's what we've got for now, ever since they closed Pokemon TCG Online. It doesn't have trading, which is to prevent people from just having a dozen accounts and amassing all the value into one.

The currencies aren't too bad: Coins are for cosmetics. Crystals are the "premium" currency for unlocking the battle pass or buying the equivalent of IRL sealed products (boosters, display packs, bundles, etc). Credits are like dust from other TCGs. Duplicate cards beyond 4 are "dusted" and you can convert them into the singles you want for deck building.

TCG Pocket is to slowly attract people into collecting actual cards again. After you get into the cadence of opening your 2 free packs a day, people might start to be interested in collecting physical cards, which pulls them into paying for boosters (rather than just buying singles) and trying the actual card game. It's just a small bonus that TCGPocket might also earn them a bit of money, largely off of old art and minimal playtest work.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

Aggression should be part of a game, but shouldn't be the only way to play it. Obviously, when a game is optimized, it may be the best way to play (Monster Hunter and HAME speedruns come to mind), but a lot of great games try to design so that different archetypes can coexist and play off one another.

Street Fighter 6 encourages aggression. The Drive Meter system makes it so that turtling and blocking forever will end with you in blowout, taking chip damage and having worse frame disadvantage, as well as removing your ability to use Drive moves and opening you up for stuns. However, also hidden within the Drive System are some of the tools to deter mindless aggression. Drive Impacts are big moves with armor that lead into a full combo, so if you can read a braindead attack sequence, you can Drive Impact to absorb a hit, smack them, and then combo them for 35% of their life total. There are also parries, which can refill your drive meter.

Magic: The Gathering has tried to balance the various archetypes (Aggro, Midrange, Control, and Combo) so that every format should have at least 1 competitively viable deck in each meta archetype. Typically, Aggro will be too fast for a Control deck to stabilize and kill them before they can get their engine set up. But Midrange will trade just efficiently enough (with good 2-for-1 removal or creatures) to stop the aggression, and then start plopping out creatures that Aggro will have difficulty overcoming. And Combo often has nothing to fear from Aggro, since Aggro oftentimes can't interact with the game-winning combo pieces. And because of this system, Aggro decks have to have sideboard plans ready for whatever meta they expect at an event or tournament. Removal or protection to get over or under Midrange, and faster speed or other types of interaction to take down or disrupt Combo. Magic's systems (Mana/lands, instant speed removal, and even the variance that comes from being a card game) don't punish aggro directly, but they make sure that there are usually answers out there.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 weeks ago

You're right, I guess I wasn't thinking it all the way through. Guess it's up to SE to decide if they want to hire more artists and spend their time polishing bits of older content.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Usually when a dev studio says "budget", it's primarily a time budget, not just money. Yes, money can be used to hire more staff, but everything we know about software development says that output doesn't scale linearly with man-hours.

Fixing hats in the way they would like (which isn't just the modded method of having ears or parts of heads clip through whatever hats/helms exist) would require them to go through every headpiece created so far and rework them for the races' head shape. Is it possible? Yes. Is it the best use of their time and effort? Probably not. It's a live game; they're always pushing on for the next bit of content.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

I can build a new PC or whatnot, but one thing that has helped the Deck along is that it's established a clear standardized set of specs that some developers have chosen to build for. Obviously there have been plenty of games that won't run on the deck, but sites like ProtonDB basically create a sticker for "this runs well on the Deck."

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

I do find myself commenting more on smaller communities, mostly because they're more aligned with my niche interests. And larger communities get toxic really fast; politics and news just get so, so messy.

If I had to guess, half of my posts are just on the MtG instance, which doesn't quite have critical mass for discussion yet.

I should probably tune in for weekly "What are you reading/playing/watching" threads a little more often.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I remember spending a long time (probably 2-3 years) on Reddit as a lurker before starting to comment on things. Posting was an even bigger hurdle to get over.

There is no karma system, so there isn't any "reward" for submitting posts other than getting to inform people and potentially spark discussions. Similarly, comments are basically only good if you actually get responses. When there's such little activity going on, it gets pretty unlikely, unless a group of people just start forcing themselves to respond to others.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 month ago

It's a real shame; Irvine has lots of great food, and it's another large east-Asian population center within the LA-OC metro area, but it's also so staunchly Republican that I can't stand to watch local news down there.

That's nothing against the university, though. I have family who got their degrees there, and I even took summer classes on campus once. I dig the school and it was my fallback when I applied for colleges (back when it was possible to have a fallback).

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

PLEASE revive Inbox!

I've subscribed to Shortwave to help bundle and manage my emails, but it's not quite as clean as Inbox was.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I haven't delved into this game much, and I'm not well-versed in 40K lore, but do you only get to play as the Ultramarines, or do they have other legions/chapters to customize as?

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