←back to thread

Addiction Markets

(www.thebignewsletter.com)
383 points toomuchtodo | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.218s | source
Show context
nekusar ◴[] No.45776057[source]
People are also leaving out stuff like Pokemon, Yu Gi Oh, and Magic The Gathering.

All of them also introduce rarities (arbitrary exclusiveness), hidden cards in a pack, and extreme gambling gamification.

The only non-gambling MtG packs are the preconstructed commander decks. All 100 cards are published. But the packs and boxes? Pure gambling, especially for the chase rare cards.

And before anyone asks, yes, my username is based after this $2 card. https://edhrec.com/commanders/nekusar-the-mindrazer

replies(11): >>45776126 #>>45776140 #>>45777679 #>>45777777 #>>45778008 #>>45778121 #>>45778224 #>>45780707 #>>45780801 #>>45783418 #>>45788150 #
asdff ◴[] No.45777679[source]
I feel like it only became rampant in recent years. As a 90s kid no one cared about the card packs. We all assumed they'd be junk cards and a waste of $7 or whatever. No, the move for card people back then was to wait for the card show and just buy the cards you actually want from a card dealer.

The thing is now people are marketing the pack opening. You have social media accounts of them pulling cards from packs and getting all hyped up about it. Again no one thought that was fun in the 90s, everyone hated that aspect of cards in the 90s but thats because the unboxing as an experience wasn't marketed by anyone at all. People just wanted cards they thought were personally cool in some way.

And likewise expansion of markets in the internet era means people start to have shared values of what is a valuable card based on market price vs just being interested in some certain cards out of your own interest.

replies(5): >>45777891 #>>45778075 #>>45778619 #>>45779090 #>>45779718 #
lurk2 ◴[] No.45777891[source]
> Again no one thought that was fun in the 90s, everyone hated that aspect of cards in the 90s

How old was everyone in the 1990s? Kids loved this kind of thing in the 2000s.

replies(2): >>45778016 #>>45778188 #
hdjdnsnslsj ◴[] No.45778188[source]
The same age as kids in the 2000's?
replies(1): >>45778240 #
1. lurk2 ◴[] No.45778240[source]
I was asking if the “everyone” he was referring to was comprised of children or adults, as it didn’t map to my experience with children who played these games in the 2000s.