board and card game stores have tables for play, yes, and most have designated nights / afternoons for tournaments / playing certain games, but drop in, see who's there, and what they want to play is totally a thing. Stores may charge a table fee, or rent you the bored game, or, in the case of my favorite board game tavern, know that the longer you are there, looking at the drink specials menu, the more they will make money off of you.
I still miss the board game tavern from my university city :( The guy running it was super friendly, knew practically every game, took a laughable small fee per person and the drinks were pretty cheap as well. You could bring your own food or order stuff in and he had menues from every restaurant that would deliver. Good times were had in that pace.
the cards in your collector book you can sort them by price and higher priced cards will be on first few pages...as you get new cards do the sort by price again to keep then in order :)
Opening your packs, you were getting cards that were worth significantly more than selling the pack itself. $3 for the pack, but you open it up and get 7 cards worth $5 or $8 or $10 if all sold individually. You're serving the people trying to complete their collection by giving them an easy way to find and buy exactly the card they want... while also making more total money for yourself.
As someone who briefly worked on a farm, I can confirm...you cannot take out a full-grown pig, Dave, and I don't think you could catch a baby one, either. I figure the pig beats the fish because they're on land, and the fish will lose just by existing on the land. Just guessing, though. I don't understand the Pokemons, either. I have played other TCGs, though, many many years ago.
It would require you reading, so I'm not at all surprised that you didn't catch it, but there are the regular cards, Silver Edition cards, and 1st Edition cards in those card packs. You could get 3 Pigs in the same pack and have them all be worth different amounts of money because they are different versions of the card. One's just a square of cardboard, one has a shiny boarder, one has a holographic image on it... they all do the same thing. But people will pay more for the fancier ones.
A pig beats a fish the same way a diamond beats a heart :p That poor girl probably used all her willpower to show up to find someone to interact with, and she barely managed to scarpe up her last piece of willpower the second day - until that mean girl showed up and crushed the little self-esteem she had left :(
And, um, yes, the whole middle school lunchroom politics is common in gaming in shops. RPGs, CCGs/TCGs, etc. All the same. Don't remember anyone ever going without there being friends there or an event, though, and just waiting for a random game to happen to them. That seems a bit weird.
I can't wrap my head around card battle games, either. I can play Rook or gin all night long, but trying Magic had me pulling my hair out in less than an hour.
At least you didn't have to clean the shop before you opened.
#nomorecleaninginsimulatorgames
Maybe we're learning something from Supermarket Simulator
Sooo, it's basically Supermarket Simulator but with playing tables and needlessly stinky people.
Pretty much. Yes.
If you ignore the booster pack economy, then yes.
board and card game stores have tables for play, yes, and most have designated nights / afternoons for tournaments / playing certain games, but drop in, see who's there, and what they want to play is totally a thing. Stores may charge a table fee, or rent you the bored game, or, in the case of my favorite board game tavern, know that the longer you are there, looking at the drink specials menu, the more they will make money off of you.
I still miss the board game tavern from my university city :( The guy running it was super friendly, knew practically every game, took a laughable small fee per person and the drinks were pretty cheap as well. You could bring your own food or order stuff in and he had menues from every restaurant that would deliver. Good times were had in that pace.
the cards in your collector book you can sort them by price and higher priced cards will be on first few pages...as you get new cards do the sort by price again to keep then in order :)
I'm still not sure why I'm stealing my own stock
Opening your packs, you were getting cards that were worth significantly more than selling the pack itself. $3 for the pack, but you open it up and get 7 cards worth $5 or $8 or $10 if all sold individually. You're serving the people trying to complete their collection by giving them an easy way to find and buy exactly the card they want... while also making more total money for yourself.
That girl probably had that unbeatable deck that everyone knows about and avoids.
Makes sense
As someone who briefly worked on a farm, I can confirm...you cannot take out a full-grown pig, Dave, and I don't think you could catch a baby one, either. I figure the pig beats the fish because they're on land, and the fish will lose just by existing on the land. Just guessing, though. I don't understand the Pokemons, either. I have played other TCGs, though, many many years ago.
Even if you have been boxing moose in your free time.
What if I have +2 defense?
It would require you reading, so I'm not at all surprised that you didn't catch it, but there are the regular cards, Silver Edition cards, and 1st Edition cards in those card packs. You could get 3 Pigs in the same pack and have them all be worth different amounts of money because they are different versions of the card. One's just a square of cardboard, one has a shiny boarder, one has a holographic image on it... they all do the same thing. But people will pay more for the fancier ones.
I do actually notice the hologram thing next time ;)
A pig beats a fish the same way a diamond beats a heart :p That poor girl probably used all her willpower to show up to find someone to interact with, and she barely managed to scarpe up her last piece of willpower the second day - until that mean girl showed up and crushed the little self-esteem she had left :(
She was very mean not to play with her
And, um, yes, the whole middle school lunchroom politics is common in gaming in shops. RPGs, CCGs/TCGs, etc. All the same. Don't remember anyone ever going without there being friends there or an event, though, and just waiting for a random game to happen to them. That seems a bit weird.
She was so sad...
I can't wrap my head around card battle games, either. I can play Rook or gin all night long, but trying Magic had me pulling my hair out in less than an hour.
Same
I was hoping that you would play this demo!
...and here it is ;)
This looks a little like SuperMarket Sim, but with cards. Not a bad idea. I only played one card game, Yu Gi Oh. It wasn't that hard to do.
Everybody is doing Supermarket Sim these days.
@@WeeHoursGames Yeah
@@WeeHoursGames rebel Dave doing his own thang
This seems less bulky as SuperMarket sim
Far less cereal.
🤣🤣😂😂
Y donde lo instalo
❤❤😂❤😂😂