Borgrumm
Borgrumm
Borgrumm

Seriously, I would love to go up against this. There's so many ways to deal with this; cheap taunt with 2+ health to stall, cheap taunt with 1 attack + equality, humility, peacekeeper, taunt + something that gives divine shield, etc. It just takes the right deck and a lot less luck than the druid had getting it in the

Humility. Aldor Peacekeeper. Any of the cheap taunts or a Noble Sacrifice, to buy time. Paladins have plenty of ways to deal with this; it just takes some luck. A lot less luck than it took the druid to draw this. And then the druid's left with severe card disadvantage and no extra mana.

Humility would deal with it pretty handily.

It's been a long while since that's been true. Hell, Hunters are sitting at 8th place in the hearthstats overall win rates.

It's been proven many times. Swearing is very healthy in certain situations. On the other hand, if you do it constantly it'll have less benefit when it would actually be helpful, because you get desensitized. It just takes moderation.

If you are genuinely upset over something that happened in a game, or you're serious about any of your trash talk, then yeah, that isn't healthy. If it's just playful banter, then it's entirely healthy. I don't get much enjoyment out of online, because playing with other real people where nobody is screaming "WHO

I'd be glad if it was an option, rather than a rule. I'm fine with not hearing randoms, but it's sorely missed when playing online with friends.

Well done! I always make up the price difference between the arena ticket and a pack, but I'm nowhere near good enough at draft picking to average 7+ wins per run. But if you do, wouldn't that get rid of the problem? You'd never have to spend real money on anything because Arena is paying for itself, and it's

If this is like the other stuff he's done, he asks for permission, but makes it clear that he is not going to do whatever he's doing right away. Then he waits until they least expect it.

...Where exactly are you getting your information on the playstation-exclusive content? Everything I've read indicates it is quite literally a non-story mission, a map, and some cosmetics and gear at launch. The season pass, again, has a bit of extra content for each expansion; both systems still get the full

First month, and forever after so long as you log on once during that first month.

Of course it's an expansion. It's an expansion in the Fantasy Flight Games style, which is pretty much the best business model in CCGs. Except it improves on that model, because it comes with a whole new game mode to play and get your new cards in. It's the most consumer-friendly business model I've ever seen in a CCG

People who disagree, and back it up with a valid argument, are perfectly fine. People who disagree because "who cares" or "people start acting too much like people" and start trying to argue against the very existence of the debate itself aren't just offering nothing; they are actively trying to distract from

Slaughtercake: the Cooking Mama sequel nobody saw coming.

Let me see if I'm reading this right. There's a game mode that exists, and is somewhat different from the base game. You have no problem paying microtransactions to use it when you don't have the gold.

I remember loathing decks that seemed all-epic or all-legendary in my first few weeks. But eventually, I looked up some budget decks for my favorite classes, and got those built pretty quick through arena. A dirt cheap deck with good synergy and strategy beats a rare card-loaded deck 9 times out of 10, especially

I'd be annoyed upon getting hit, then very happy upon seeing who and what hit me. But hey, fun and laughter aren't for everybody.

It could be considerably worse. For example, the whole game could come over a year, à la Bioshock. Complaints over that were mild, but then again, Microsoft had been scoring exclusives and timed exclusives constantly; now the shoe is on the other foot.

I'm guessing fans of Bungie pre-Halo would find this pretty funny.

Apple fans actually were their primary fanbase. They were Mac exclusive until 1996. And, when they announced that they were going to start porting some of their games to Windows, many entitled Apple fans pitched a fit.