[Official] State of Modern Thread (B&R 07/13/2020)
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I mean, that's how everything works. Most designs have the potential for abuse with poor balance. If Detain worked for the next 50 turns rather than the next turn it would be ridiculous. If Uro said escape required exiling 1 card it would be more ridiculous, but if it required exiling 15 cards it would be a lot weaker.
Most designs are inherently fine, that's true of companions too. It largely comes down to power level which is something design barely bothers with. I have a hard time believing this is a design mistake given the serious development issues we've seen, and the fact that it would be developments responsibility (especially since they have a developer on each design team) to kill an idea if it's fundamentally broken.
That's where I'm at. But at this point, virtually every single set since late 2018 has had serious and deep development issues where they're releasing huge swaths of cards that never should have been printed.
In a way, Eldraine was one of their better sets because they only had one major development issue.
It is a huge problem (though I see 2 at least in Eldraine, Once, and Oko at a minimum) but I just dont see it changing. There appears, based on all the twitter threads, to be a systemic issue in terms of play testing resourcing, and a complete disregard for eternal format health.
Its difficult for me to not jump to the conclusion that they dont care whatsoever about the long term health of formats which are not Standard.
Its difficult for me to not jump to the conclusion that they dont care whatsoever about the long term health of formats which are not Standard.
Oh right, I forgot about Once Upon A Time.idSurge wrote: ↑3 years agoIt is a huge problem (though I see 2 at least in Eldraine, Once, and Oko at a minimum) but I just dont see it changing. There appears, based on all the twitter threads, to be a systemic issue in terms of play testing resourcing, and a complete disregard for eternal format health.
Its difficult for me to not jump to the conclusion that they dont care whatsoever about the long term health of formats which are not Standard.
Wizards has serious issues, and we've seen it going back years as they've gotten more and more willing to ban cards while apparently suffering zero repercussions from it if their financials are accurate. Urza block is less broken than what we've had in 2019 and 2020 and they just don't seem to care. Just the opposite in fact, as it feels like so many of their actions have telegraphed that they were expecting many more sets needing bans, if they've even revised their processes at all to stop that (based on that Sam Black story from earlier this year, I don't think they have).
I actually think that the slice of the player pool that is competitive, and cares about eternal formats, is so dramatically small, that Wizards actually does not even understand the issue's they have introduced.
It also speaks to what must be monumentally negative feedback, that all of this kicked off so much.
It also speaks to what must be monumentally negative feedback, that all of this kicked off so much.
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FoodChainGoblins Level 47
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It sounds like what you guys are saying is that the motivation to make new cards for new sets comes from what is going to get the people who buy packs to buy more and more packs. It could be someone buying boxes and boxes; finally one day he opens up some card worth $500 and about %$#% his pants. That has him hooked and he will be more than willing to spend $100s of thousands to get that feel again.
This actually reminds me of a roommate that I had a long time ago. He had a friend who had won 2 cars at casinos in the last 5 years; yes, 2 brand new cars. While some people may think that it's really lucky to have done so, I thought of the money spent to get those 2 cars (gambling) over the years and wondered, would she have been able to just buy 2 Ferraris all cash if she had saved up? The audience for buying packs is the same audience for gambling. I'm in a FB group that recently sprouted up. This group sells a card or group of cards at tcg Mid, which is unheard of, then sells a certain number of spots, randomly chosen by a computer, and then gives the cards to the winner. I've noticed this group explode during the quarantine. I'm on it just to sell, as gambling doesn't appeal to me in the slightest.
So, if the people playing Magic the most are not going to buy packs and let their money do the talking when there IS a good set that comes out, then WotC will continue catering to those types of buyers. The game will become more of a collector card game and not a playing card game.
This actually reminds me of a roommate that I had a long time ago. He had a friend who had won 2 cars at casinos in the last 5 years; yes, 2 brand new cars. While some people may think that it's really lucky to have done so, I thought of the money spent to get those 2 cars (gambling) over the years and wondered, would she have been able to just buy 2 Ferraris all cash if she had saved up? The audience for buying packs is the same audience for gambling. I'm in a FB group that recently sprouted up. This group sells a card or group of cards at tcg Mid, which is unheard of, then sells a certain number of spots, randomly chosen by a computer, and then gives the cards to the winner. I've noticed this group explode during the quarantine. I'm on it just to sell, as gambling doesn't appeal to me in the slightest.
So, if the people playing Magic the most are not going to buy packs and let their money do the talking when there IS a good set that comes out, then WotC will continue catering to those types of buyers. The game will become more of a collector card game and not a playing card game.
Standard - Will pick up what's good when paper starts
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
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What's that FB group? I might do some selling there. It's different enough to look at anyway.
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Wait people pay for the opportunity to buy cards in that FB group?
As for the collector part. The game is already there with reserve list, expensive draft sets touted as reprint sets, poor ability to sell precons that happen to have demand, and selling secret Lairs through their site and the fetchalnd fumble.
As for the collector part. The game is already there with reserve list, expensive draft sets touted as reprint sets, poor ability to sell precons that happen to have demand, and selling secret Lairs through their site and the fetchalnd fumble.
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FoodChainGoblins Level 47
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No, the tcg mid is posted, then the seller beats that price by 5-10%. Then they take that price and chop it up into pieces. For example, a $100 card goes into 20 slots at $5 each. Anyone can buy any number of slots until it's filled. Then when it's filled and the paypal/venmo has been paid for everybody, it goes off to the queue to determine the winner.blkdemonight wrote: ↑3 years agoWait people pay for the opportunity to buy cards in that FB group?
As for the collector part. The game is already there with reserve list, expensive draft sets touted as reprint sets, poor ability to sell precons that happen to have demand, and selling secret Lairs through their site and the fetchalnd fumble.
And you're definitely right about the collector part already being there, but it may be even more so in the future, to the point where actual playing the game is rare.
Standard - Will pick up what's good when paper starts
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
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This selling practice sounds extremely %$#% up. It is literally gambling. I'd be careful to not get into any sort of unsanctioned, luck-based trade etc.
Sounds like you uncovered the darkest corner of MTG trade. I mean what the hell? I expect the total sum of, say, 5$ slots far exceeds the cards original asking price, which means some %$#% is making dumb money off even dumber sheep.
This is disgusting and despicable, and you should report stuff like that, not take part in it.
Sounds like you uncovered the darkest corner of MTG trade. I mean what the hell? I expect the total sum of, say, 5$ slots far exceeds the cards original asking price, which means some %$#% is making dumb money off even dumber sheep.
This is disgusting and despicable, and you should report stuff like that, not take part in it.
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That's a lottery right there. At least not worse than selling shares of a card over Ebay.
As for the collector aspect overwhelming people playing MTG at all. That's ominous it says either consumers have way more fun collecting cards or that's the intended experience by Wizards. That says alot why Wizards can't gauge why Standard sets tend to overpower these days. Testing these in paper would require their employees to actually hold the cards needed to playtest, especially with Legacy and Modern.
As for the collector aspect overwhelming people playing MTG at all. That's ominous it says either consumers have way more fun collecting cards or that's the intended experience by Wizards. That says alot why Wizards can't gauge why Standard sets tend to overpower these days. Testing these in paper would require their employees to actually hold the cards needed to playtest, especially with Legacy and Modern.
Its not that they cannot, its that they choose to not.
Someone made a great comment the other day.
"Lurrus is a Snapcaster Mage on the turn it comes down, for permanents, and then every single turn after that."
Read that over. Let that marinate a bit.
The greatest Blue Creature (arguably) of all time. Supplanted, not just in terms of impact and power level, but ALWAYS IN YOUR 'HAND' EVERY GAME.
They are not that stupid. They know what they did.
Someone made a great comment the other day.
"Lurrus is a Snapcaster Mage on the turn it comes down, for permanents, and then every single turn after that."
Read that over. Let that marinate a bit.
The greatest Blue Creature (arguably) of all time. Supplanted, not just in terms of impact and power level, but ALWAYS IN YOUR 'HAND' EVERY GAME.
They are not that stupid. They know what they did.
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FoodChainGoblins Level 47
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Bolt-Snap-Bolt replaced by Seal-Lurrus-Seal.
Standard - Will pick up what's good when paper starts
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
At the university I went to, which was in a poverty stricken hellhole where most people had little money, a popular way people would acquire cards is to purchase lots for a lottery with Razz groups. I was the odd person out because I actually bought my cards, rather than purchase lots on a card 20 times at each lot being maybe 10% or 20% of the cards price.FoodChainGoblins wrote: ↑3 years agoI'm in a FB group that recently sprouted up. This group sells a card or group of cards at tcg Mid, which is unheard of, then sells a certain number of spots, randomly chosen by a computer, and then gives the cards to the winner. I've noticed this group explode during the quarantine.
It has always seemed insane to me.
@idSurge
Given the development mistakes made, I honestly believe their viewpoint was that they figured since you only get one copy, getting it consistently, exactly when you want it would be less powerful than a 4 of. Given what MaRo has written lately, I think they're beginning to grasp the extent of the screw up.The greatest Blue Creature (arguably) of all time. Supplanted, not just in terms of impact and power level, but ALWAYS IN YOUR 'HAND' EVERY GAME.
They are not that stupid. They know what they did.
Also, I really have to wonder just WTF is going on with the development side of things. They had a fairly good process for years. They lost Sam Stoddard, who it seems was ridiculously good at power level and ridiculously bad at design. Then they got a new President or CEO (I forget which), and their new direction from one or both of those changes has resulted in a ridiculous amount of overpowered cards, and many many bans.
But, despite those development mistakes Magic sales continue to go up even as most tournament attendance drops outside of the fixed invite ones that Wizards cares to promote for the new pro scene. So at this point I have to wonder... are our assumptions as a community flawed, and were Wizards old assumptions over the impact of banning cards flawed? Because right now they seem to be coming out ahead with the mistakes of the past several sets.
Last edited by Aazadan 3 years ago, edited 2 times in total.
But for most people, the casuals, their Lurrus is a free dude who they pay for by having a bad deck, not a deck that drops a bunch of baubles and goes to value town and outgrinds the opponents with a bunch of baubles, delvers and arcanists etc, nor one that pops out a Lotus or LED etc. it is an 8th card in a 100 card deck, where another card is also always available, and that is at the high end of casual play. In some-to-many cases it will be a 70 card deck "of cards I had" that happen to fit against a mates' 60 cards deck of cards they "just had lying around".
In other words, they knew what they did but didn't care about competitive play because it is a small market. Those casuals and collectors keep buying, and they buy more than us, and yes, they may not be playing in five years, but so what? Borrowing from the future is tempting, and if it goes wrong in future they won't be getting the blame. Same way that the Solo Star wars movie had low takings- it suffered because Ep VIII was poorly received (after everyone had paid to see it), but I bet the internal message was "hold on with these spin offs, the public don't want them" not "we screwed it up with episode 8 and suffered with our spin off." When the time comes and Mtg has been buggered by 5 years of FIRE and players start to leave in numbers as wallet fatigue grows and grows and the game becomes less cool among casuals, they won't blame 5 years of FIRE, they will say "let us not do X, because players are leaving now and not buying our last product X." The tendency will be to look at the immediate, not historic actions.
In other words, they knew what they did but didn't care about competitive play because it is a small market. Those casuals and collectors keep buying, and they buy more than us, and yes, they may not be playing in five years, but so what? Borrowing from the future is tempting, and if it goes wrong in future they won't be getting the blame. Same way that the Solo Star wars movie had low takings- it suffered because Ep VIII was poorly received (after everyone had paid to see it), but I bet the internal message was "hold on with these spin offs, the public don't want them" not "we screwed it up with episode 8 and suffered with our spin off." When the time comes and Mtg has been buggered by 5 years of FIRE and players start to leave in numbers as wallet fatigue grows and grows and the game becomes less cool among casuals, they won't blame 5 years of FIRE, they will say "let us not do X, because players are leaving now and not buying our last product X." The tendency will be to look at the immediate, not historic actions.
You cannot account for both worlds. I have had this argument across any number of games for decades.drmarkb wrote: ↑3 years agoBut for most people, the casuals, their Lurrus is a free dude who they pay for by having a bad deck, not a deck that drops a bunch of baubles and goes to value town and outgrinds the opponents with a bunch of baubles, delvers and arcanists etc, nor one that pops out a Lotus or LED etc. it is an 8th card in a 100 card deck, where another card is also always available, and that is at the high end of casual play. In some-to-many cases it will be a 70 card deck "of cards I had" that happen to fit against a mates' 60 cards deck of cards they "just had lying around".
You cannot design/develop for casuals, disregard your 'casual competitive' or 'pro(motional)' players, and see success. I have watched SO MANY GAMES die to this kind of short sighted mistakes.
You must, 100%, account for the behavior of the 1% which will not only break your game in interesting and unplanned for ways, but will DRAW ATTENTION TO IT.
That casual 70 card 'this is what I owe' player? They can never be the target audience, if one expects their game to be successful over time.
I'm not saying your wrong here btw, I am saying that since this is likely how they are rolling right now, it is the single biggest mistake they could make.
@drmarkb
And I've been sitting here thinking about this, they're measuring growth by growth in players not necessarily growth in spending (though they're related), and I think I understand why they're doing this. When you have that sort of influx of new players or returning players that the business hasn't built any recent equity with, you lose nothing in terms of customer retention by making previous investments into the game worthless. Furthermore, by printing so many new staples, you encourage those new players to invest in a lot of current product. Those players then don't have any bad feelings and more, feel smarter because they picked the game up right at the moment that all sorts of now staples are dirt cheap. We saw the same mentality in new players from Eldrazi, and part of me wonders if that data is what lead to this.
Well, Star Wars has never been afraid of cashing in their equity with fans to publish a bad product. Wizards until recently has.Borrowing from the future is tempting, and if it goes wrong in future they won't be getting the blame.
And I've been sitting here thinking about this, they're measuring growth by growth in players not necessarily growth in spending (though they're related), and I think I understand why they're doing this. When you have that sort of influx of new players or returning players that the business hasn't built any recent equity with, you lose nothing in terms of customer retention by making previous investments into the game worthless. Furthermore, by printing so many new staples, you encourage those new players to invest in a lot of current product. Those players then don't have any bad feelings and more, feel smarter because they picked the game up right at the moment that all sorts of now staples are dirt cheap. We saw the same mentality in new players from Eldrazi, and part of me wonders if that data is what lead to this.
Last edited by Aazadan 3 years ago, edited 1 time in total.
I don't think that's true at all. Those players are also the ones who are most into draft which is the format Wizards tries to sell more than any other.
I do however think that Wizards has decided they can make significantly more money by not keeping long term promises to players. Because that is what I am seeing right now. And maybe I'm seeing something that's not there, but I still feel pretty betrayed by Modern Horizons getting followed by a Pioneer announcement, and now something like 15 straight sets of cards that invalidate huge numbers of old cards. I know new printings always happen, but the rate of change right now is astronomical and seriously impacts faith in any format older than Standard.
There's also a possibility given the timing of everything, that this has all been an attempt to seed a whole bunch of really strong cards for Pioneer.
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FoodChainGoblins Level 47
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Yep, Razzes. It IS indeed insane. I think some people get a good feeling from that "win," even if it came at the cost of many losses (of which stats were not done anyway, so "no way" to calculate).Aazadan wrote: ↑3 years agoAt the university I went to, which was in a poverty stricken hellhole where most people had little money, a popular way people would acquire cards is to purchase lots for a lottery with Razz groups. I was the odd person out because I actually bought my cards, rather than purchase lots on a card 20 times at each lot being maybe 10% or 20% of the cards price.FoodChainGoblins wrote: ↑3 years agoI'm in a FB group that recently sprouted up. This group sells a card or group of cards at tcg Mid, which is unheard of, then sells a certain number of spots, randomly chosen by a computer, and then gives the cards to the winner. I've noticed this group explode during the quarantine.
It has always seemed insane to me.
Maybe even though the vocal majority seems to not enjoy Companions, it is actually the majority of players who do? If it makes more money, that's what the company is going to take it as, even if it has more to do with pulling Godzilla lottery tickets than a busted set.
I have friends who wouldn't mind going back to Eldrazi Winter. They want to play that. I played that and I was completely sick to my stomach every day. I've seen one of the most popular SCG Grinder/Streamer say that the "Oko meta was fine." He said that Oko as a card was too good, but the games and matches were interesting. Lol. Several of his friends also agreed with this. I also played Oko or anything that could beat it and I was disgusted at the card. I would have rather played with 1 generic mana; target player wins the game. I think that's more interesting as a card. Oko is and I disagree with LSV that it shouldn't get banned from Cube as well. I think I should never see that smirking face again unless I look in the banned section of my binder.
*Sometimes you think people are trolling when they say this. I have tested my friends (I should say acquaintances) and I thought it was a meme, but have come to learn that it is only a meme because it will never be allowed to happen. I have to admit though that I don't hear it often about Hogaak. That card was just all bad.
Standard - Will pick up what's good when paper starts
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
Pre Modern - Do not own anymore
Pioneer - DEAD
Modern - Jund Sacrifice, Amulet, Elementals, Trollementals, BR Asmo/Goryo's, Yawmoth Chord
Legacy - No more cards, will rebuy Sneak Show when I can
Limited - Will start when paper starts
Commander - Nope
I question the logic of 'seeding pioneer' with Legacy level staples. Not saying your wrong, but if they are, they are idiots.
Maro consistently states that casuals are the majority of the player base. Casuals crack packs, even if older established players play more Draft.
Other than when I was chasing the dream of a deck that was actually as fun as one I had lost, I did not buy Standard cards, at all. I had what I needed, and other than a few singles per set at most, there was just no need.
Now? If you wanted to keep up you have to reinvent your deck, fairly consistently.
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As to players who would go back to Eldrazi, or Oko, or Urza, or Hogaak...those are a certain demographic, that is a meaningful number of the REMAINING grinders in Modern. If that number is greater than Modern at it's peak? Well who knows.
Maro consistently states that casuals are the majority of the player base. Casuals crack packs, even if older established players play more Draft.
Other than when I was chasing the dream of a deck that was actually as fun as one I had lost, I did not buy Standard cards, at all. I had what I needed, and other than a few singles per set at most, there was just no need.
Now? If you wanted to keep up you have to reinvent your deck, fairly consistently.
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As to players who would go back to Eldrazi, or Oko, or Urza, or Hogaak...those are a certain demographic, that is a meaningful number of the REMAINING grinders in Modern. If that number is greater than Modern at it's peak? Well who knows.