Are you talking about Arena? Because in constructed, card power only goes up. That's why formats like Vintage and Legacy are so ridiculous in Magic.The pool gets larger and hence there are morestrongcards. Only an idiot would say that card power only goes up each expansion.
Our discussion was about Arena, but also about what makes card power go up. My point is expansions create new interactions that counter old metas and that's largely what creates a "power creep". It's not because every expansions cards are strictly better. It's not like some expansion will come along and introduce a new 4 Mana chillwind yeti with better stats. That's not how card expansions work.Are you talking about Arena? Because in constructed, card power only goes up. That's why formats like Vintage and Legacy are so ridiculous in Magic.
The irony that you use a format based on degenerate cards released mostly during the first few sets to claim that card power 'goes up' over time should not be lost on anyone.Are you talking about Arena? Because in constructed, card power only goes up. That's why formats like Vintage and Legacy are so ridiculous in Magic.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. If you look at the overall quality of creatures in Magic and you do so from early in the game to more recent times you can see they just started making better creatures. The best dudes at each mana cost of recent sets craps all over the most efficient dudes of yesteryear and what you can get for a big pile of mana is just absurd compared to how things were for years. Creatures with 7+ mana costs actually had drawbacks (Leviathan, Lord of the Pit) or were otherwise horribly overcosted and in that game getting to spend seven mana isn't something you get to do for free on turn seven.It's not like some expansion will come along and introduce a new 4 Mana chillwind yeti with better stats. That's not how card expansions work.
Vintage decks aren't mostly built with cards from the first few sets.The irony that you use a format based on degenerate cards released mostly during the first few sets to claim that card power 'goes up' over time should not be lost on anyone.
After the clusterfuck of the first release day, they started staggering all the releases. NA opens at 11:59PM PST.The irony that you use a format based on degenerate cards released mostly during the first few sets to claim that card power 'goes up' over time should not be lost on anyone.
Also, where the fuck is the next quarter? Isn't it Tuesday?
But you are also cherry picking. Which expansion did Black Lotus come from?![]()
What a decade and an extra colored mana will get you these days
Great, now that try to apply that logic toConcentrateandAncestral Recall. Funny how it leads to the opposite conclusion now. Or if you dont want to get into the obviously overpowered cards from the first set look at Wrath of God compared to the generally weaker variants, Lightning bolt vs Shock, etc. Power level in established CCGs has highs and lows that both work in their respective environments (Mercadian Masques or Kamigawa, anyone?). The question is do the Hearthstone folks have a good enough understanding of CCGs balance or do they approach this like an MMO?Sometimes yes, sometimes no. If you look at the overall quality of creatures in Magic and you do so from early in the game to more recent times you can see they just started making better creatures. The best dudes at each mana cost of recent sets craps all over the most efficient dudes of yesteryear and what you can get for a big pile of mana is just absurd compared to how things were for years. Creatures with 7+ mana costs actually had drawbacks (Leviathan, Lord of the Pit) or were otherwise horribly overcosted and in that game getting to spend seven mana isn't something you get to do for free on turn seven.
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What a decade and an extra colored mana will get you these days
Vintage decks aren't mostly built with cards from the first few sets.
I don't think they'll add enough cards fast enough to turn this into a meaningful card pool compared to actual CCGs. That makes this argument about power creep a bit pointless. It is likely that instead of new sets they will treat it like an MMO and just use card changes to control the ebb and flow of the meta and only inject a few dozen cards per year, simply because that's in line with how Blizzard does things in general. Just look at what prompted meta changes during the last 10 months - entire new sets with cards that either adress overpowered strategies or open up entirely new deck types certainly didnt happen, and this first, small batch of cards seems to actually offer good support for the meta-dominating decks instead of challenging them (assuming from the comments in this thread).you aren't necessarily right or wrong and neither is he. It has yet to be seen.
When it comes to creatures I'm really not. In the modern era the better creatures in Magic put their elder counterparts to shame.But you are also cherry picking.
It's almost like the discussion began around Arena. That's not what I meant by cherry picking anyway. What I meant was picking a card that was weak in one expansion and pointing out an upgrade later is not the same as all cards get better in expansions. That isn't what happens, some cards definitely do, but not usually the already strong cards.When discussing the warlock hero power, cherrypicking examples makes sense. No one puts random cards into their warlock deck, they pick the best ones.