Soooo, I don't know if I'm slow or what. But I just had a realization today.
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Soooo, I don't know if I'm slow or what. But I just had a realization today.
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I installed this game and played it for the first time today. Tried the different classes and immediately liked Warlock, which feels like kind of a Grixis-y class.
The gameplay is pretty fun, and I like the way it encourages clever sequencing to make resource trades and grind out an advantage. No clue what the constructed play is like, but I found the 'starter' decks to be fairly enjoyable.
Ran some friendly games via the 'play' option and went 7 - 1, losing only to some dude with a deck wayyy better than mine, given away by the fact that he had some custom card sleeve back. I do find it weird that it's mostly your opponent who sees your card backs here.
How experienced do I need to be to enjoy playing Arena?
I did my first run through the arena and went 6 - 3 as a Druid. Seems reasonable. I got some stardust or something that I'm not entirely sure what to do with.
I watched some streams to get an idea about how constructed works in the game, and was kind of pleasantly surprised. In Magic constructed sometimes feels like it has nothing in common with limited, but there they were still playing Hearthstone as I "know" it. Decks even used some cards I already have, which was a nice touch point.
One interesting design note: since there are no sideboards, the designers are forced to make cards that can interact with each other. Since creatures double as removal in this game, I think that happens fairly naturally, but I didn't see anything that looked like the "two combo decks goldfishing against each other" that you see particularly in Modern.
There's a series of articles on icy-veins that offers a pretty good guide how to play around secrets.Thanks. I don't really know what to expect at this point. My play was pretty much tight level 1 play. I have no idea what to play around, and particularly when an opponent plays a secret, I really have no clue how I should react.
For players on their first few Arena runs, matchmaking is intentionally altered to provide an easier transition into the game mode. For matchmaking purposes, the player's win/loss ratio is considered to have one more loss than it actually does, thus matching them against what should on average be easier opponents. The system will also prefer to match such players against each other.
The exact number of games required to be eligible for this adjustment is something that the developers are "still tweaking a little", but as of April 2016 is "in the realm of 2 or 3 runs." Once the player has exceeded this number of runs, they are matched purely on their win/loss ratio, with their number of previous runs no longer affecting their matchmaking.
Also, I just learned your arena games are about to get harder
I just learned that the hard way.