I am just sick of hearing the same six talking points every time some UB thing is spoiled.
I’m sorry you feel this way.
I am just sick of hearing the same six talking points every time some UB thing is spoiled.
To be fair, this is the same thing people have said for decades, and the game still exists! I know that doesn't really help you with enjoying the current burst of Universes Beyond cards, but there's still good Magic being made these days. Wilds of Eldraine was incredible, and to be fair, so were a lot of recent "in-universe" sets. I don't know that the long term health of this game is at risk atm, to be honest.I think it's naïve to assume that there won't be format shifting staples coming down the pipeline through these sets given their track record in recent years. Almost every major move has been for short term profits to the detriment of the long term health of this game. They're going to keep pushing designs because they need to sell sets, these designs will affect formats in a big way, and it's just slowly going to kill the game over time because people don't want to keep up with a money sink.
I get that Cube is the main focus here, but I don't think it makes sense to ignore the happenings around the game making it a shell of itself. The long term prospects for this game look fucking terrible in 2023.
I mentioned it in another thread, but I suspect that new UB products will attract fans of that IP to the game. Nerd IPs will lead to new MTG nerds. Seems logical. The issue is that it seems to run the risk of alienating people who have been used to the old release schedule, traditional designs, etc.With all due respect, I think you're ignoring a fair bit of context. I'm not going oh the sky is falling just because of some short term fallout ala bad Standard or broken mechanics, the issue here is more that I don't believe upper management understands what sustained the game for 30 years to this point with how they've been making moves the past few years.
Yep! Changed it over for the transition to the Eldrazi cube. I've always thought this art was awesome and I get to keep it as a black card, too.
I mentioned it in another thread, but I suspect that new UB products will attract fans of that IP to the game. Nerd IPs will lead to new MTG nerds. Seems logical.
I think this is pretty different because the Barbie demographic and the MtG demographic likely have very little overlap. Getting a LOTR fan interested in a fantasy card game seems like a much larger overlap of demographics and interests.I question that logic, though. Or, at least, I think it's making a bunch of unwarranted assumptions about conversion rates and the demographic buying these products.
To put it differently: imagine that Mattel made a deal with Hasbro and put out a line of Barbies where she was cosplaying various Magic characters. Would that make you interested in collecting Barbie dolls if you weren't already?
I think this is also very different because it's starting a brand new game with 0 players. If MtG does a failed HP UB, they still have MtG players. If HP TCG doesn't go well? It's dead.If the "I like the IP that this game is pulling from → hey, the game is kinda fun → lifetime [INSERT GAME HERE] nerd" pipeline was that simple, the Harry Potter trading card game wouldn't have been cancelled after two years during a period where Harry Potter was massively culturally relevant (the early 2000s).
I don't think the pipeline would only need to end in lifetime fan to be relevant.If the "I like the IP that this game is pulling from → hey, the game is kinda fun → lifetime [INSERT GAME HERE] nerd" pipeline was that simple, the Harry Potter trading card game wouldn't have been cancelled after two years during a period where Harry Potter was massively culturally relevant (the early 2000s).
Game's super fun. And the best tournament card in every set is like the fifth most expensive super rare variant at most because the waifu tax is absolutely off the charts from all the collectors.Its similar to the popularity of the Pokemon TCG. I know multiple people who collect (specific) cards but none who actually play.
-fo:/([^\s]+\s+){20,}/ -o:/([^\s]+\s+){10,}/Is their a way to search for (non-) wordiness on scryfall? I was looking for tdfcs that could be interrsting enough to proxy flip cards of them, but half of them are really wordy, so that they wouldn't fit well.
-fo:/([^\s]+\s+){20,}/ -o:/([^\s]+\s+){10,}/
That does 20 words total text, 10 words non-reminder text. Adjust as your heart desires.
This is beautiful.-fo:/([^\s]+\s+){20,}/ -o:/([^\s]+\s+){10,}/
That does 20 words total text, 10 words non-reminder text. Adjust as your heart desires.
-fo:/([^\s]+\s+){20,}/ -o:/([^\s]+\s+){10,}/
That does 20 words total text, 10 words non-reminder text. Adjust as your heart desires.
I can help "\s" matches a whitespace character, and "\s+" means you're looking for one or more of those. As you can probably imagine by now, "[^\s]+" searches for one or more non-whitespace characters. The pattern "([^\s]+\s+)" thus searches for a piece of text that's one or more non-whitespace characters followed by one or more whitespace characters. Most of the time that'll be a word followed by a space. The "{20,}" means you are looking for a minimum of 20 of those repetitions and no maximum. "fo:" means you are searching in the full Oracle text, and the minus sign before that means you are excluding all cards that match the search pattern.I gotta come clean. I just found that on Reddit a long time ago. I have no idea what the hell that regex bullshit says.
This is the wayI gotta come clean. I just found that on Reddit a long time ago. I have no idea what the hell that regex bullshit says.