Of course! I should have been searching for the Magic Cards that weren't "Card"!because Scryfall uses the type "Card" for art cards, gameplay trackers, and other stuff that doesn't have an explicit type on its typeline.
Of course! I should have been searching for the Magic Cards that weren't "Card"!because Scryfall uses the type "Card" for art cards, gameplay trackers, and other stuff that doesn't have an explicit type on its typeline.
He stated I don’t represent all old school fans and I never claimed to do so. But all true old school fans hate UB.
So, you claim to define "true old school fans"? And if someone would be playing for 25+ years, be well versed in old mtg lore, loves playing old school cards from pre modern area etc. but doesn't hate UB in general, they wouldn't be a "true old school fan"?
Let's be real though, even without UB, the game still wouldn't be the one most of us fell in love with when we first started playing. Heck, it stopped being the game that I fell in love with on October 2, 2015 when Battle for Zendikar was printed and Theros block rotated out of Standard. But then, on October 5, 2018, it became a game I loved even more than the one I fell in love with when Guilds of Ravnica was released.But you are appearently, according to yourself, not part of the fans that want the game to stay the way the game was when you fell in love with it.
Talk about "no true Scotsman". Now, I'm relatively new to these forums. Lurked for a while. I don't know y'all as well as you presumably do. But even I can tell you Ravnic is a true "old school" fan of the game. We all are, otherwise we wouldn't be here on an MtG Cube forum. Cube is the ultimate way to express that. People's opinion of UB doesn't change that.But all true old school fans hate UB.
I usually don’t read what you write after you get personal when I make an objective statement about the entire game as a whole.
Can you guys smarten up please?
You're only getting back what you're handing out. You have a strong opinion, and that's fine, laudable even. But ease things up a little.If you do nothing, then you are the problem.
Of course! I should have been searching for the Magic Cards that weren't "Card"!
Interestingly, MaRo recently published an article on exactly this scenario, getting a UB design to resonate with people not familiar with the source material, as apparently he wasn't at all familiar with Avatar before going into playtests for the set. It's a good read and I recommend it if you're at all interested in Magic design, but notably it never actually touches on the issue of characters with multiple cards from this perspective, or potentially missing pieces of the puzzle....the setting feels flat if you don't have existing experience with the source material...
lolOh shiz more people commenting. You love these kinds of topics!
The truth is that you can vote with your words and your wallet. If you don’t fight back then you are part of the problem.
Well, I did read those too, and I'm able to gather that Iroh is some kind of mentor figure to Zuko that cares about him, about tea I guess although I don't see what's especially noteworthy about that, and can seemingly be quite a badass. My issue is that I mostly just get a highlight reel of things that happen, like Zuko seems like a very developed characters who experiences a fairly involved character arc (as seen in the very confusing Fire Lord Zuko card having three different art treatments that I would guess span three seasons of the show), but I don't really know the order in which they happen and why they play out the way they do. I love the "I have changed." That's great buddy, what changed? Why did you disobey in the first place, and how did your mission pan out? What are you conflicted about? Who is brainwashing Jet and why? Why is Aang visiting the Realm of Koh?And of course some of the character stuff that would make the legendary creatures in the main set more resonant got shoved off into TLE (The Art of Tea should've been in the main set with Uncle Iroh!), so now you have even less of a chance to figure out why so-and-so matters.
The truth is that if someone doesn’t fight back, they like different things than you. It might not align with your ideals, but it’s not inherently wrong to like UB. I don’t like that you call people who like UB a problem Velrun. I too wish UB didn’t exist, but that doesn’t give us the right to act morally superior to those who do like it.The truth is that you can vote with your words and your wallet. If you don’t fight back then you are part of the problem.
if this set makes you curious, would it cheapen the watching experience if the set told you all these things that are probably emotional climaxes and sources of intrigue?
One person's problem is another person's pleasure!The truth is that you can vote with your words and your wallet. If you don’t fight back then you are part of the problem.
I have some news for you.If I had to put UB sets in some kind of order from most Magic-y to least Magic-y for me, I'd probably go with something like D&D -> LotR/Baldur's Gate -> the non-directly-character-focused parts of Avatar -> Aetherdrift -> Final Fantasy/40k -> the character-focused parts of Avatar -> Dr. Who/Assassin's Creed -> Spiderman/Turtles.
Give it a rest, man. That's, what, the third time you've spouted this exact line? People are doing this. You just don't like the result.Vote with your words and your wallet.
It might not align with your ideals, but it’s not inherently wrong to like UB.
God forbid people like different things to you. Spiderman and Walking Dead notwithstanding, UB has proven exceptionally popular by all metrics. Sales, player engagement, what-have-you. Sure, it's undoubtably popular with a somewhat different demographic to the people who were cracking boxes of Revised and are still somewhat salty that artifacts don't have a brown frame anymore. Sure, it's what you personally hate about the direction the game has taken. But it is not inherently wrong to have a different opinion to you, or to enjoy a different subset of Magic products to you.Nah it is wrong because they’ve changed the product away from what it was to what it is.
Yes, we're the ones who are getting spitefulIf you don’t understand that they have changed who they want to please then I cannot help you because you get spiteful and have stopped learning from the one who has the knowledge.
Give it a rest, man. That's, what, the third time you've spouted this exact line? People are doing this. You just don't like the result.
God forbid people like different things to you. Spiderman and Walking Dead notwithstanding, UB has proven exceptionally popular by all metrics. Sales, player engagement, what-have-you. Sure, it's undoubtably popular with a somewhat different demographic to the people who were cracking boxes of Revised and are still somewhat salty that artifacts don't have a brown frame anymore. Sure, it's what you personally hate about the direction the game has taken. But it is not inherently wrong to have a different opinion to you, or to enjoy a different subset of Magic products to you.
The target market has changed somewhat ("changed who they want to please", as you put it), but I'd say it's more accurate to say it's expanded. I've seen a huge number of people say that they got into the game because of Doctor Who, or Lord of the Rings, or whatever. Some of them will just stick to that aspect, but others enjoy the core gameplay of Magic, try out Magic IP sets and get hooked that way. Maybe they play Standard on Arena. Maybe they build a Modern deck and start trying to do well at FNM. Go to prereleases. Build a cube. Buy an Unlimited Black Lotus. Who knows? We won't, if they never get introduced to the game in the first place.
Gatekeeping people out of Magic - calling them problematic, their presence and opinions something to fight against - is ultimately far more harmful to the game's long-term health than any UB set.
Yes, we're the ones who are getting spitefuldo you not realise how nuts it sounds, saying we've "stopped learning from the one who has the knowledge"? Like you're some kind of Magic: the Gathering oracle? You're not an oracle, you're the guy with a sandwich board and a megaphone shouting about the end times at anybody passing them in the street.