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<blockquote data-quote="CharlesRyan" data-source="post: 5422762" data-attributes="member: 5265"><p>A lot of people seem really hung up on the word "collectible." Instead of looking at the booster pack as a collectibility mechanism, look at it as a randomization mechanism.</p><p></p><p>Someone said there was no reason for these to be sold in random booster packs (other than crass commercialism). They're wrong: The booster format allows you, for the cost of a few bucks, to dip into a random assortment of hundreds of potential results, without having to buy the whole lot.</p><p></p><p>The truth is, a mechanism that lets a game have hundreds of random elements with a relatively small consumer buy-in, and creates a situation in which players may frequently encounter effects they've never come across before, is a really interest game mechanic. The fact that it's been used before by CCGs doesn't change that.</p><p></p><p>If this doesn't sound like it'll float your boat, don't buy it--just like you might not buy any other D&D supplement that doesn't interest you. But getting all bent out of shape because it resembles the CCG model says more about your hangups than WotC's.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CharlesRyan, post: 5422762, member: 5265"] A lot of people seem really hung up on the word "collectible." Instead of looking at the booster pack as a collectibility mechanism, look at it as a randomization mechanism. Someone said there was no reason for these to be sold in random booster packs (other than crass commercialism). They're wrong: The booster format allows you, for the cost of a few bucks, to dip into a random assortment of hundreds of potential results, without having to buy the whole lot. The truth is, a mechanism that lets a game have hundreds of random elements with a relatively small consumer buy-in, and creates a situation in which players may frequently encounter effects they've never come across before, is a really interest game mechanic. The fact that it's been used before by CCGs doesn't change that. If this doesn't sound like it'll float your boat, don't buy it--just like you might not buy any other D&D supplement that doesn't interest you. But getting all bent out of shape because it resembles the CCG model says more about your hangups than WotC's. [/QUOTE]
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