Thanks a lot for showing the cards. I guess I still can't decide if this deck can offer something, that my collection can't do. The case is similar for the Citadel Oracle ... (and maybe I don't purchase that one, because it would be the death blow for the Wild Unknown Archetypes). The archetype deck I use ... is an uncommon one, because it's not actually meant to be used as such. It's the D&D: Curse of Stradh - Tarokka Deck. Back then it was a quite inexpensive purchase and it was kind of an experiment. One that went ... a bit too well ... in a way. The deck is strongest, when used as roles or approaches. Some other decks - especially The Celtic Wisdom Tarot - are also able to catch some archetypical energies ... The Wild Unknown ... offers ... some classic gendered archetypes, which is both a blessing and a burden for the deck - we're living in a heavily gendered and sexist world, after all. It may deepen or lead astray a reading. Gendered issues are barely neutral and the deck just includes them. The respective cards are just in the mix. They are neither quite important nor unimportant. The deck however seems particularly strong, when it comes to spaces: the river, the village, the empty room, the faultline, the bridge, the box, the dead end. Some "things cards", the medallion and the venom, are also exceptional cards. Other great cards seem to be: The animal (especially with that picture), the comic and the one. ...
Is the text in the book easily readable? I've seen comments in other reviews saying it's impossible to read, but in your video it looks like it would be manageable to me. Asking because I'd like to get the pocket size instead of the larger one but am concerned about the size of the text. Thanks.
Thanks a lot for showing the cards. I guess I still can't decide if this deck can offer something, that my collection can't do. The case is similar for the Citadel Oracle ... (and maybe I don't purchase that one, because it would be the death blow for the Wild Unknown Archetypes).
The archetype deck I use ... is an uncommon one, because it's not actually meant to be used as such. It's the D&D: Curse of Stradh - Tarokka Deck. Back then it was a quite inexpensive purchase and it was kind of an experiment. One that went ... a bit too well ... in a way. The deck is strongest, when used as roles or approaches.
Some other decks - especially The Celtic Wisdom Tarot - are also able to catch some archetypical energies ...
The Wild Unknown ... offers ... some classic gendered archetypes, which is both a blessing and a burden for the deck - we're living in a heavily gendered and sexist world, after all. It may deepen or lead astray a reading. Gendered issues are barely neutral and the deck just includes them. The respective cards are just in the mix. They are neither quite important nor unimportant.
The deck however seems particularly strong, when it comes to spaces: the river, the village, the empty room, the faultline, the bridge, the box, the dead end. Some "things cards", the medallion and the venom, are also exceptional cards. Other great cards seem to be: The animal (especially with that picture), the comic and the one.
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Thankyou for creating this Video💜
Is there any difference in Guidebook? between the Large and the pocket version?
I also wanna know that
Is the text in the book easily readable? I've seen comments in other reviews saying it's impossible to read, but in your video it looks like it would be manageable to me. Asking because I'd like to get the pocket size instead of the larger one but am concerned about the size of the text. Thanks.