WhiteThunder777 Posted December 27, 2022 Report Share Posted December 27, 2022 Give a brief introduction to the card reviewers about what your archetype is so that the reviewers can have an easier time. For example, submitting an archetype without saying anything may take days, but if you throughly describe what your custom archetype wants to do and its mechanics involved (if any), it will take them like 4-5 minutes instead. For example, saying that "The End" is an archetype that is a control deck is very vague. You'd want to say instead "The End is a control based strategy inspired by the true final boss of Sonic Frontiers. It focuses on keeping a Level 11 Rock monster known as The End with 2000 ATK/DEF on the field for 3 turns, and if it leaves the field after 3 turns, you lose the Duel. There will be Spell/Traps that disrupt any attempt the opponent may try to do to, which is inspired by what The End says as its monologue." Notice how the 1st description is extremely vague as ALL control decks try to control the opponent differently, but the 2nd has a lot of flavour which will entice the reviewers to say because it has an inspiration and not to mention a game plan (which in this case is an Alternate Lose Condition, as opposed to the Alternate Win Condition). If anyone has any questions, feel free to post here and ask. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WhiteThunder777 Posted January 2, 2023 Author Report Share Posted January 2, 2023 Just saying this custom archetype is a control archetype is very vague for two reasons, as control uses whatever methods it can to try to disrupt the opponent. It isn't telling the card reviewers about the mechanic of your archetype and how it works to the very core. A lot of control archetypes try to control what the opponent does by various means, but they do NOT necessarily stop you from playing against them. For example, does your archetype use counters to stop what the opponent does? We don't know this because you submitted to the reviewers "I want to make a control archetype". Also, control archetypes tend to out grind the opponent by card advantage, so saying that your archetype wins by having more card advantage than the opponent is very vague as well. This is due to the fact that control wins by having more card advantage than the opponent. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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