Nope, everyone hates it and only plays it out of spite.
Nope, everyone hates it and only plays it out of spite.
Good video. I don’t play tournament formats but kinda sorta keep up with news and this video was very good.
The model certainly has some obvious flaws like you noticed with Dynamo and Powerstone. I don’t think it “counts” words or symbols on cards and it definitely doesn’t have a notion of the “role” a card might play in a deck other than its key words.
I like using it when I have a card that has a niche intersection of mechanics/words and I want to find all the cards that are as similar as possible without manually searching every possible subset of those mechanics or words.
That’s exactly correct. The similarity model basically ranks the importance of keywords based on how rare they are in the entire body of text. So for Counterspell “target” is pretty much irrelevant because so many things target but “counter” and “spell” are significant because they’re rarer. Then it more or less quantifies the similarity of any two cards by how frequently they use these important keywords.
What a warped view to have. It sounds like you’re projecting a small number of negative experiences onto the whole community who plays by just another set of rules.
I mostly agree with you but have some thoughts.
Hard agree on 2). I don’t think I have ever met anyone who has both the social and gaming acumen to have fun with their first game being EDH. IF you’re social enough that you’re fine being there until the game is over then you probably aren’t also a gaming savant who can pick it up for the first time and also have a chance. I think all EDH players ought to maintain healthy expectations by playing 60 card formats alongside 100 card ones but for new players it’s a requirement.
For 3) it’s undeniable that the board can become a complete mess that takes a minute to resolve whenever anything happens…However I think the solution is to be more engaged with what’s going on rather than checking out of the game. When someone else is muddling through their triggers on a storm turn I think it’s legitimately more fun to help them track triggers, mana, etc and to try to anticipate exactly what cards or kinds of cards are coming up. I enjoy seeing others puzzle things out so maybe that’s what makes watching people play enjoyable for me.
Re: chess clocks. My table has a player who is known for their long turns lost in thought over the best way to drop two mana rocks and pass the turn. I ended up finding and Android app called “Board Game Clock” by SECUSO on F-Droid that supports chess clocks for any arbitrary number of players. I never got to use it because the threat of using it was enough to speed things up a bit.