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Hearthstone: Ein neues temporäres Sparpaket für das Wilde Format

Im Verlauf der vergangenen Woche veröffentlichten die für Hearthstone zuständigen Mitarbeiter von Blizzard Entertainment einen neuen Blogeintrag auf ihrer offiziellen Communityseite, der sich hauptsächlich damit beschäftigte, welche Karten aus dem Wilden Format eigentlich die Favoriten der Entwickler darstellen.

Teaser Bild von Hearthstone: Ein neues temporäres Sparpaket für das Wilde Format
Teaser Bild von Hearthstone: Ein neues temporäres Sparpaket für das Wilde Format

Im Verlauf der vergangenen Woche veröffentlichten die für Hearthstone zuständigen Mitarbeiter von Blizzard Entertainment einen neuen Blogeintrag auf ihrer offiziellen Communityseite, der sich hauptsächlich damit beschäftigte, welche Karten aus dem Wilden Format eigentlich die Favoriten der Entwickler darstellen. In diesem Beitrag listen mehrere Mitglieder des Entwicklerteams ihre Lieblingskarten aus dem Wilden Format von Hearthstone auf und erklären dabei dann jeweils in einigen kurzen Sätzen, warum sie ausgerechnet diese Karten mögen. Durch diese unterschiedlichen Aussagen beinhaltet dieser Beitrag eine interessante Übersicht der stärksten, niedlichsten oder kreativsten Karten aus dem Wilden Format und dient somit als gute Werbung für diesen Aspekt von Hearthstone. Um den Eindruck eines zu Werbezwecken veröffentlichten Beitrags noch weiter zu verstärken, wurden dieser Blogeintrag der Entwickler auch noch von der Veröffentlichung eines neuen temporären Sparpakets im Shop von Blizzard Entertainment begleitet. Dieses einfach nur als „Das wilde Paket„ bezeichnete Angebot kostet 14,99 € und überlässt den Spielern insgesamt 24 Kartenpackungen, die sich gleichmäßig auf alle nur im Wilden Format verwendbaren Erweiterungen des Spiels verteilen. Wer den verlangten Preis zahl, der darf sich also über 3 Packungen aus insgesamt acht verschiedenen Sets freuen. Auch wenn 3 Kartenpackungen pro Erweiterungen etwas weit von dem garantierten Legendary in den ersten 10 Packungen eines bisher ungeöffneten Sets entfernt sind, so ist die reine Menge an Kartenpackungen für den Preis von 14,99 € im Grunde aber ein sehr gutes Angebot. Für gewöhnlich erhalten Spieler für diesen Preis nämlich noch nicht einmal 15 Kartenpackungen auf einen Schlag. Somit ist dieses neue Paket im Grunde perfekt für die etwas neueren Spieler, deren Sammlung bisher nur wenig Karten aus dem Wilden Format beinhaltet und durch diese 24 Packs eine Vielzahl von neuen spielbaren Karten hinzugewinnen sollte. Wichtig dabei ist eigentlich nur, dass der Verkauf dieses Pakets bereits am 12. März 2020 um 19:00 Uhr endet und interessierte Käufer nicht ewig mit ihrem Einkauf im Shop warten sollten.   Choose One: Hearthstone devs reveal their favorite Wild card There are some one-of-a-kind minds on the Hearthstone dev team. These are the folks who spent hours arguing about the number of holes in a straw, came up with a Battlecry that reads „wish for the perfect card“, and orchestrated a rambunctious pep rally, complete with banners and gladiatorial chants, for their favorite Rastakhan’s Rumble teams. Over the years the devs have come up with multitudinous ways to shenaniganize the tavern, and many of their concoctions are now only playable in Wild. Just in time for the Wild Bundle, we asked a selection of Hearthstone developers for their favorite card outside Standard—but like the Choose One keyword, sometimes it’s difficult to pick just one.   Dean Ayala, Lead Card Designer Dean Ayala, Lead Card Designer, says his favorite Wild card is Aluneth: a Legendary Mage weapon that yields huge card-draw, but at the risk of burning through your whole deck. “It requires a critical mass of synergy cards that might not exist in a limited card pool,” he says. “But when that card pool is as large as it is in Wild, cards that require a ton of synergy are able to show their full potential.” Fret not, those of you who got to experience Aluneth in Standard—it is still very possible to Fatigue to death with this card in Wild. For nostalgia’s sake, of course!   Melissa Corning, Game Producer Game Producer Melissa Corning says Sylvanas Windrunner, a Legendary 6-Cost 5/5 minion with the Deathrattle “take control of a random enemy minion,” is her multifaceted favorite. “She’s one of my favorite Warcraft characters,” says Corning. She appreciates that the Warchief’s Deathrattle can completely change the game—in Standard, Wild, and even in Solo Adventures. “I especially like including her in Dungeon Run decks, where you can get treasures to synergize with [her Deathrattle] for even greater effect,” says Corning.   Chadd Nervig, Senior Game Designer Senior Game Designer Chadd Nervig’s favorite Wild card is a spell: Astral Communion, an Epic Druid card that gives you maximum Mana resources but discards your hand. “I love that it has a really big ‘dream’ for what you’ll do with it, and it delivers well,” he says after some thought. Nervig explains that another thing he loves about this card is that playing it early doesn’t automatically end the game for the other player. He says you may have a big advantage, but your opponent also knows what you’re going to do for the rest of the game. “They know you will drop one huge bomb every turn, and they can play around it.”   Alec Dawson, Game Designer Unlike some of our interviewees, game designer Alec Dawson makes his mind up immediately. “It’s Ragnaros,“ he says instantly. Ragnaros the Firelord is a beefy 8-Cost 8/8 Legendary minion that can’t attack, but deals 8 damage to a random enemy at the end of each of your turns. When asked why he picked this card, Dawson replies: “DIE, INSECT!” Some things are just that simple.   Stephen Chang, Game Designer Conversely, Stephen Chang, another game designer on the team, takes his time coming to his favorite Wild card. He eventually chooses Emperor Thaurissan, and adds how much fun it was bringing the powerful card-cost-reducing Legendary minion back to Standard during 2019’s “Doom in the Tomb” event. “We wouldn’t want it to be in Standard forever, but in Wild it can inspire new and interesting deckbuilding and theorycrafting,” Chang says. It seems even after a card’s initial design is complete, its place in the game is always evolving. Chang adds that the „easy answer“ would be Reno Jackson, but that he’s sure other people will pick it.   Jeremy Cranford, Senior Art Outsource Manager Jeremy Cranford, Senior Art Outsource Manager, also seems caught between two cards. “I really like Snowflipper Penguin. Super cute [1/1] penguin for zero [Cost]? How could you say no?” Cranford says. But he’s also tempted to pick Annoy-o-Tron, a 2-Cost 1/2 minion with Taunt and Divine Shield. “Mostly for its fun greeting and art,” says Cranford, “but also because it’s a great card to get out early and protect your other minions.”   Gloria Zhang, Senior Game Producer Gloria Zhang, Senior Game Producer, says her favorite is Deathstalker Rexxar, a Death Knight hero card that grants a Hero Power called “Build-A-Beast”—and not just because it was the very first Legendary card she ever crafted. “I really enjoy the diverse gameplay experience this card brings,” Zhang says. “Every time I’m crafting a Zombeast, it feels like I’m creating a miracle.”   Ryan Masterson, Game Designer Game Designer Ryan Masterson also chooses a hero card as his favorite: Shadowreaper Anduin, whose Hero Power is “Deal 2 Damage. After you play a card, refresh this.” He explains that his love for the card is partially rooted in his fond memories playing the Priest class in World of Warcraft during the Legion expansion. “I really enjoyed the class’s theme of growing insanity at the time, culminating in embracing the madness and hulking out in a form of pure void ‘shadow’ energy,” he says. Masterson explains that when the team decided to do Death Knight hero cards for each class, he knew he wanted them to evoke the same feelings he had playing with the dichotomy of light and dark back in Legion.   Liv Breeden, Game Designer Game Designer Liv Breeden, like Ryan, is also a fan of darkness. The Darkness specifically—a hulking 20/20 minion that is only 4-Cost. But this minion comes with a caveat in its card text: it starts dormant, or unusable on the board, until the enemy hero draws all three  Darkness Candle cards that The Darkness shuffles into their deck upon play. “It’s this silly, crazy card that can come out on turn 4,” says Breeden, “and it creates tension every time your opponent draws a card. I loved making extra copies and shuffling extra candles into their deck for more shenanigans. I love it so much.” Breeden elaborates that shuffling cards into her opponent’s deck is one of her favorite things to do in Hearthstone. How fitting that The Darkness is such an extreme version of this devilishly satisfying strategy. „Arfus is another favorite,“ she adds. Arfus is a Legendary doggo—a 4-Cost 2/2 minion with a powerful Deathrattle: “Add a random Death Knight card to your hand.” “He’s a good boy,” Breeden says. Sometimes you can’t just Choose One, after all.   Find your favorite You can find your own favorite cards to play in Wild right now. For a limited time, we have the special Wild Bundle available for purchase, which includes 24 card packs from seven wildly fun expansions that have rotated out of Standard.     (via)