Bluetracker

Tracks Blizzard employees across various accounts.


Refunds for nerfed cards only applying to recent crafts might not be the best policy.

I remember hearing that nerfed cards only dust for max value if you crafted them in a 7 day window. This seems pretty painful for mythics and I worry about the high cost of nerfing them potentially preventing some much needed balance changes if some mythics end up being too strong.

The economy feels really fair in general and I personally love games taking advantage of their digital nature and patching stuff so the gameplay becomes better. Being able to lose so much from changes to mythics feels like a thing that is working against that potential flexibility.

Lower rarities are so easy to collect that I don't mind them not dusting for full value when changed.


  • paxton

    Posted 4 years, 7 months ago (Source)

    So in your last round of adjustments, you needed 1 card, and clarified 1 card, nerfed two pathes buffed one. Hardly precedent to think buffs are more likely than nerfs.

    Yeah, you could extrapolate from the last patch. That seems like a better way to figure out what's going to be in the next patch, instead of listening to what one of the developers are telling you. /s

  • paxton

    Posted 4 years, 7 months ago (Source)

    Do you have the numbers for cards that were buffed vs. cards that were nerfed in the last balance patch?

    You can find all past balance changes in the release notes on our website: https://www.mythgardgame.com/News

  • paxton

    Posted 4 years, 7 months ago (Source)

    I understand your concern about making your expensive mythic worthless, but it's not going to happen. We want all mythics in this game to be valuable. There might be a few minor nerfs in the patch, but they are unlikely to make you want to pull your mythics from a deck. You'll probably see more buffs to mythics that are unplayed in the patch than nerfs to mythics that are overplayed.




Tweet