A New Approach for Trading Card Games
We like to play kids games with our children. It can be a bit boring to move those little pieces around the board, but its great being with the kids. Kids games can be a good time and it’s not rotting anybody’s mind. Unlike video games there is also a strong social component to sitting down with family and playing a fun game.
One popular kids game is the collectible card game. Where the fun and collectability of a collectible card game focuses on the characters and a full deck and everyone has access to the same resources they can test their skill rather than their budget. Most parents don’t have a pile of trading cards to select from and even if they did probably wouldn’t know which cards to use.
There are a lot of other options for games for kids. There are the obvious board games that we have all played from the time we were little. There are also role playing games, word games, and for the older kids – war games. Trading cards have become a popular hobby for kids young and not so young.
However, some of the most popular games that involve trading cards can be very hard to learn. One of the downsides of a trading card game created this way is that kids can spend themselves into an unfair advantage – affecting game balance and putting entry level players at a disadvantage; for parents, buying hundreds of bad cards to get a few good ones could be a real burden.
It doesn’t have to be like this. A trading card game can be just as fun when everyone has access to all the cards. What’s more, the waste of paper and dollars is sharply reduced if a collectible card game is based on full access to cards.