tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3058415924232091761.post3051424745099199276..comments2024-03-28T13:11:41.905+00:00Comments on Many-Eyed Hydra's Succubus Bordello: Monster Girl Card Game - Brainstorming IIIM.E. Hydrahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01344522516345219776noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3058415924232091761.post-63640067071651600182015-11-11T22:14:13.747+00:002015-11-11T22:14:13.747+00:00The colour coded thing would get messy in a physic...The colour coded thing would get messy in a physical card game as it would require multiple copies of the same card. If players are playing with card sleeves (most tournament CCGs use them to protect the cards) it could be indicated by the play sticking a note inside the sleeve indicating who "owns" it. A kludge, but it could work.<br /><br />In a computer game it would be trivial. I think a communal deck building could be interesting. I'm not sure what the end goal would be - but I think a mechanic where you constantly turn over fresh cards and see more and more of them under the influence of one player or another might be a cool game. Possibly drifting away from the original monster girl a little too much though.M.E. Hydrahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01344522516345219776noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3058415924232091761.post-61801922066458618002015-11-10T16:34:49.370+00:002015-11-10T16:34:49.370+00:00"I think that could be interesting, but proba..."I think that could be interesting, but probably online only as tagging the characters once they go back into the deck to indicate who had turned them would by tricky to implement in a physical card game."<br /><br />That's pretty solvable: Have multiples of the corruptible cards in different colors: one color is uncorrupted, one is player 1, one player 2, and so on.<br /><br />Additionally use I could imagine for block cards: Once they are seduced, they don't simply vanish/lose effect, but still work like before - but only on the enemies of the player that corrupted them.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com