Guest Post: Getting into the WoW Trading Card Game

Are you someone who plays World of Warcraft and purchases booster boxes of each World of Warcraft Trading Card Game expansion in order to get its loot cards? Do you know how to play the World of Warcraft Trading Card Game? If not, then you are one of many online gamers I've heard of who help make the trading card game a hot property but have not discovered that those cards you are packing up and burying in your apartment or house are actually a lot of fun to play with. For those of you who haven't taken a look at the trading card game at all, I'd highly recommend it.
I have been playing card games since 2003, and the WoW TCG is no exception. I spent over a year writing about the game, as well as playing and working at some of its biggest events (with a short break in 2008 to finish school). It was because of WoW TCG that I ended up getting into the WoW MMO in the first place!
The WoW Trading Card Game has been around since fall 2006 and has continued on through a transition from one company (Upper Deck Entertainment) to another (Cryptozoic). Organized play has had its ups and downs, but the game is starting to get more popular and attendance is once again picking up at events everywhere. However, a recent addition to the weekly tournament at my local comic book store mentioned that he knows plenty of people who buy the cards but never learn how to play.
Why is that?
Learning the basics
Learning the WoW TCG is not difficult. It takes some time, but figuring out what the cards do, especially if you have played the online game, can be simple. People who have played trading card games in the past, especially Magic: The Gathering, will pick up the game quickly.
The basic gameplay for the WoW TCG is as follows: You take on the role of a hero card. This hero comes from a specific faction, Alliance or Horde, and is one of the 10 classes in the game. Your hero also dictates what you can and can't have in your deck of 60 cards. If your hero is an Alliance mage, then you can't have Horde allies or or shaman abilities in your deck. Your deck contains the various abilities that your hero can use, many of which are based on actual class abilities in the online game. Your deck can also contain equipment, which lets your hero gear up to attack and defend, as well as allies, which are characters based on the classes and factions from the online game that support your hero and can attack or defend your hero and other allies. In a standard game, you will pit your hero against the opponent and their hero. The player who takes out the opposing hero first is the winner!
Knowing the basics of the game is one thing, but getting hands-on experience in the rules of the game is another thing entirely. Cryptozoic Entertainment, the company that currently works on the WoW TCG, released the class starter decks in early July, featuring decks (one for the Alliance and one for the Horde) of the nine original classes from the online game. These new decks are great learning tools and come with the instructions you will need to learn the basics, plus some hard-to-get rares from the first sets of the game.
One of the best trading card game engines
But why should you play? Aside from the fact that the game is fun and one of the best trading card game engines to be released since Magic: The Gathering, in my opinion, playing the WoW TCG at major conventions such as BlizzCon and PAX can be a very rewarding experience. There are always a lot of public events that players can participate in, with the prizes commonly being rare loot cards.
My favorite events at these conventions are the loot card or Ipod drafts, where players participate in a booster draft with the latest expansions; the winner of these 8-man tournaments gets the big prize! Last year, at an event in Las Vegas, they were giving away Spectral Kitten loot, but often, an Ipod Nano will be the big prize for these short and quick tournaments.
Loot cards can be given out at some events to random participants, so you don't have to be one of the best to get a shot at loot such as the Spectral Tiger or the Blazing Hippogryph! In fact, the fine folks at Cryptozoic will give away loot cards like they are nothing at their big events. Don't believe me? Just ask Rosalei Castaneda about this. At Gen Con, one of the biggest gaming conventions in the United States and home to the 2010 WoW TCG World Championship, she didn't win any big tournaments but still walked away with a fistful of awesome loot cards! You can read about what she won and how she won them by checking out Cryptozoic's coverage of the World Championships.
Not only is the WoW TCG fun, but it can be one of the cheapest ways for you to get some of the hottest vanity items in the online game. It's a nice break from the MMO world, giving you a chance to hang out with friends outside of the Ventrilo server. I hope to see you some day at one of the big events!
Filed under: WoW TCG, Guest Posts






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Zalvi24 Aug 28th 2010 6:44PM
this type of article has been done already
Molly Aug 28th 2010 7:46PM
God forbid we get more information!
Hih Aug 28th 2010 9:54PM
The article just sounds too much like spam advertisement though.
AltairAntares Aug 29th 2010 1:25PM
I really don't care for card games and the article was still interesting. You people need to grow up.
Amaxe Aug 28th 2010 6:45PM
"However, a recent addition to the weekly tournament at my local comic book store mentioned that he knows plenty of people who buy the cards but never learn how to play.
Why is that?"
I'm guessing they're looking for the in-game loot cards
Mattimus Aug 28th 2010 7:23PM
It's why Vegas casinos can make so much money. People find the chance at winning to be thrilling, and this applies to putting down $60-80 on Booster Boxes for a chance at the super-rare, super-valuable loot cards like mounts (rather than the hundreds of dollars it takes to buy one off of eBay).
The funny thing about it is, if they had just gone straight to buying off of eBay, most of these folk probably would save money in the long run.
Josh Aug 28th 2010 8:26PM
I know that people don't understand why people do this open big amounts of boxes at a time for those big super rare rares. Well I for one am aMagic the Gathering card game player and I open approximately 2-3 boxes worth of the product at the time of release.
Cracking packs just tends to have that giddy child like feeling about it and to me I find very relaxing. I also though do play the game because Magic unlike the WoW TCG doesn't run promotionals such as this one to drive sells to non-TCG players. I have to also say the WoW TCG is no different then the Magic TCG other than some slight rule and priority differences that I played WoW for a while but will never go back.
Cyanea Aug 28th 2010 11:01PM
You can also sell the rares, epics and legendary quality cards that you pull from the packs as well.
John Aug 29th 2010 9:52AM
technically, in magic you can be resource starved when you don't get a land card. in wow tcg you can play useless cards face-down as resources. (+1 wow tcg)
I do think in magic though there's a lot more variety that can be done since you can specialize in one colour or across 2-3 other magic types. (+1 magic)
Furlover Aug 28th 2010 7:16PM
I wonder how successful this tcg would be without the ingame loot items ;p
Ray Aug 28th 2010 7:21PM
I wouldn't call it "one of the best systems," unless you're unfamiliar with non-MTG systems. If anything, the WoW TCG's system is average at best, bumping shoulders with the likes of most anime-based TCGs (Pokemon, Naruto, etc).
mackejn Aug 28th 2010 8:35PM
Well out of curiosity what would you consider better then. My only experiences have been with mtg and I'm curious.
cswong Aug 28th 2010 9:36PM
The author is familiar with many non-mtg related game engines as he is a well known Yu-Gi-Oh player as well.
Cyanea Aug 28th 2010 11:11PM
Oh good god. I've been playing WoW TCG for two years after spending three playing Yugioh, and this game is BY FAR a better system over Yugioh. Yugioh games are fast, which is fine...but in recent years, they've been only getting FASTER. When I quit, it was rare to play a game that lasted longer than five turns. In fact, the day I decided to quit was the day, in my local cardshop weekly tournament, when I had not one but TWO people playing one of those Chimeratech Overdouchebag cookie cutter decks that forfeited when they saw their opening hand.
At least in WoW, even if you get a reasonably terribad hand, you still have a chance at pulling a win out. Not so with Yugioh.
S.O. Aug 28th 2010 11:55PM
I miss Magi-Nation
Best. CCG. Ever
woshiernog Aug 30th 2010 2:11PM
S.O. Magi Nation was cool, but I didnt play till years after it died out.
Now .hack//ENEMY had a great system. The best parts about it is that it was so simple (you could only play one card per turn), you only needed the cards to play (no dice, counters, cardboard/paper cutouts, etc), and there was a different rule each month (since it is based off an anime about an mmo) to keep it fresh.
sqwarlock Aug 28th 2010 7:25PM
I only ever played the TCG when it first came out with my MtG group. I found that it was way too easy to build a deck that is nigh unstoppable. I don't know if they've changed the balancing/rules since then, but hey at least I got some loot out of it.
Sure do wish the loot was BoA though.
J Aug 28th 2010 7:54PM
There's an online version? That sounds like a good way to learn the basics. Where might it be? :o
Eddy Aug 29th 2010 1:22AM
The 'online version' he refers to is World of Warcraft.
Quotes like, "which are characters based on the classes and factions from the online game," do explain that it references a larger thing than the TCG itself (as I'm not sure why a card game would reference an online version of a card game.) I think the article was poorly worded in that this was slightly confusing, but there are enough context clues.
dnnout Aug 29th 2010 6:20PM
I really do wish there was an online version of the card game. I've read up on it and it seems really interesting and fun but finding people to play with and then going out to play will cut in to the little free time i do have. )o: