| > Now it's just the same set of a few hundred cards, but keep still come up with new metas without spending more money. That's called a "Cube" in Magic the Gathering. https://magic.wizards.com/en/news/feature/building-your-firs... https://mtg.fandom.com/wiki/Cube_Draft We draft Cubes from our old collections all the time, to help recycle our older cards. > That makes sense, especially in MTG where there are like 20,000 cards to choose from. The P2W can definitely come out.
> Now it's just the same set of a few hundred cards, but keep still come up with new metas without spending more money. A typical Draft's card pool is only ~300ish cards or so, whatever is in the newest set. Its actually small enough to memorize. You don't draft booster-cards from all of MtG. A Draft is innately around the ~300ish cards of some set. Lost Caverns of Ixalan only consists of 291 cards. |
It wasn't super clear to me from that article, but does this mean everyone drafts from the same cube (like you combine cards and then everyone draws from them)? Or does everyone make their own cubes?
I think a difference there (vs a limited number of cards in the game, period) is being able to realistically know all the cards that can be played. There's not this surprise of "what, I didn't even know this ridiculous card exists" -- everyone's seen all the cards, dozens if not hundreds of times -- but it's up to them to create new and interesting combinations of those same cards. It's more chess-like in that way and less of an arms race.
> You don't draft booster-cards from all of MtG. A Draft is innately around the ~300ish cards of some set. Lost Caverns of Ixalan only consists of 291 cards.
Right, but that only lasts a few months, right? Or is it weeks now? Getting 291 unique cards would require many cases of cards (and thousands of dollars, probably?)... I tried that for one cycle and then stopped after realizing how expensive it gets, and how quickly too.