by BRIANCHIVIS » Thu Dec 08, 2005 10:38 pm
[quote:0cfb23e3dc="YountFan"]That is one of the advantages of the 80's game..the cards do not get old. The players are familar, but you never know who the cards will be distributed and/or interact with each other. That makes it like not other game and Stratdom
YF[/quote:0cfb23e3dc]
Quite. Well said YF. I have heard the cards are based on the league batting averages. This means that a pitcher from say 80 would perform like his card against other cards from THAT YEAR. Now if you take that same pitcher and put him in a year against cards from say the explosive 90's he may get shelled.
That being said, think of all the possibilities. You ahve all ten years represented, but to what degree. Even a good hitters card will not perform exactly the same from league to league.
I played one season of 2005. I was so bored because I built a team and watched it cruize to the tittle. I think I made two trades all season, and one was a guy taking an injury prone Chavez off my hands and giving me a cheaper guy to drop and save ca$h. How much fund did I have, ZERO. Now compare that to my 80's experience where I have to scrape and claw to make a viable team because the guys I thought were going to perform did not. #%#$^& Jason Thompson.
The mystery card concept is the real winner. That is what can not be simulated in tabletop play. That is what causes the league average batting to float up and down, that is the reason the game is interesting.
We have 69 now, watch it die a slow agaonizing death. How many times can you watch Bob Gibson dominate a leage filled with guys who cant hit?
If SP was smart they would offer a bunch of choices using the mystery card. 50's, 95-05, 80's, 70's, 75-85, and watch the money roll in. Well wait, I cant afford that much money.
I think they could make a mint by taking the hall of famers and running a mystery card format with that.