It came to my attention that the merchant system was changed, limiting the supply of the singles, creating scarcity of the most demanding singles.
There are a few reasons why I think that this is not a move in the right direction.
1. It puts new players at a disadvantage, and gives those who have spent more time on the site and built their constructed decks (multiple decks!) with the help of the 'old' merchant the advantage over the new players who are at a significant disadvantage at building their first competitive deck (see point 2).
2. It is argued that the new players would be encouraged to build their constructed decks by opening the booster packs. What follows is the calculation that estimates the expected value of how many booster packs should be opened by the player to complete a playset of a card from a large edition (such as FOTR), which puts the lower bound on building the deck (lower bound results from the best case scenario when all other necessary cards have been collected in the process of collecting the playset).
Let's say, that a player is building a Moria deck, and wants to buy a playset of
Goblin Armory, that is 4 copies of a
Goblin Armory.
We observe opening of a booster pack as a binomial event, where success is defined as opening a booster pack and finding
Goblin Armory in it.
The probability of getting a non-foil
goblin armory in a booster pack is 1/121, as there is one non-foil rare per booster, and there is a total of 121 rares in FOTR.
The probability of getting a foil
goblin armory in a booster pack is 1/(121*36), as there is one non-foil rare per booster box, and there is a total of 121 rare foils in FOTR, and there are 36 booster packs per box.
Probability of getting a
goblin armory in a booster is the sum of the two probabilities above, i.e. 37/(121*36). I'll call that probability p.
So, p=37/4356. Conversely, q = 1-p = 4319/4356 is the probability of not opening a
Goblin Armory in a booster pack.
Since the events are binomial, if we open n packs, we expect to find the following number of Goblin Armories:
m=n*p*q.
So, in order to obtain 4 copies of
Goblin Armory (m=4), one expects to have to open n=m/(p*q)=4*(4356)^2/(37*4319) = 475 booster packs.
Let me reiterate:
to get a playset of a FOTR rare single, like Goblin Armory, a player would have to open 475 booster packs on the average.How much time does it take for an average player to get 475 booster packs? He gets 50 credits each week, which is sufficient for maybe 15 booster packs per month and one sealed event entry fee. During that month, a player may play a sealed league event and earn, say another 20 booster packs total (I'm not precise with numbers here, but the ballpark estimate is adequate I think, correct me if you have the exact data available) if he regularly plays in that tournament. So, that's 35 booster packs a month.
With that rate, it would take almost 14 months to obtain a playset of a rare card like
Goblin Armory, and at the end of that, if the player is lucky, he would have completed just one constructed deck.
3. It is argued that the change was done to simulate realistic situation. However, the realistic situation differed in the following aspects:
- there was no monopoly; instead of one merchant, there were many available: Cobracards, Sorourke, eBay, etc. and each of them was quite well stocked (almost never missing any rare and frequently being stocked even with playable rare foils). Many people were selling singles locally as well (I used to be one of them).
- trading was available, both locally and over the internet (Mahasamatman). I understand that enabling trading would lead to potential abuse. Associating the accounts with confirmed e-mail addresses could probably alleviate that issue.
So, in a realistic situation, the supply of cards, viewed from a player standpoint, was practically unlimited.
There was also no scarcity of money in the realistic situation, such as there is in the Gemp.
That was the situation that enabled me to collect foils, so I still have my all-foil FOTR set and a few all-foil decks (or I would have if I hadn't lended someone my
Servant of the Secret Fire foil playset to someone and in the meantime forgot who borrowed it and the guy hasn't returned the cards on his own).