The Player Taxonomy (Errata Text)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 ต.ค. 2024
  • A video about common game design terminology in reference to the different sorts of players games tend to attract...and how these players benefit your game. In this video, I also propose a fourth type whose engagement with the game doesn't match up with these three, but still plays a vital role.
    Check me out on Teespring!: my-store-be3c9...
    "Timmy, Johnny, and Spike" article: magic.wizards....
    "Retro Video Scam Gets Worse": • The Retro Video Game S...

ความคิดเห็น • 259

  • @Cimoooooooo
    @Cimoooooooo 2 ปีที่แล้ว +168

    Damn, that “Bimo” guy should start a TH-cam channel! 😂😂😂

    • @Melphisto_
      @Melphisto_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      🅱️imoooooooo

    • @clayxros576
      @clayxros576 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Oh. Oh I didn't even realize that. 😂🤣☠️

  • @matheusaragao7640
    @matheusaragao7640 2 ปีที่แล้ว +197

    The flamethrower bit was GENIUS! A really good way to explain these archetypes of players.

    • @alext.1244
      @alext.1244 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      i came here to second this! If this was your original meme kohdok then it makes it even better!

    • @codyjacobs6899
      @codyjacobs6899 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Watching this a year later and I died at this part xD

    • @SuperfieldCrUn
      @SuperfieldCrUn 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      A designer, an engineer, and a pilot. One to dream, one to build, and one to use.

  • @pyredynasty
    @pyredynasty 2 ปีที่แล้ว +97

    Solid timmy here. I once pissed off a spike at a Pokémon prerelease by not conceding because I wanted to see how much damage they could dish out.

    • @bitsamui5104
      @bitsamui5104 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      Solid Johnny here, I pissed off a Spike by playing a super super jank deck. I was trying something pretty weird that would either work out REALLY well or absolutely horribly. It was the latter and my Spike didn't even like winning so easily, probably cause there was no prestige/value in such an easy win lol.

    • @rolvirata9003
      @rolvirata9003 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@bitsamui5104 Or you may have cost the Spike tournament placement by not contributing to their strength of schedule.

    • @WorldofTomorrowInc
      @WorldofTomorrowInc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      i pissed off a yugioh spike by playing older cards that were still legal but not used much, every attack he made or effect he activated i had a mirror force or a negate attack for. it took him like 3 more turns to beat me than it normally would have. and my deck sucked.

    • @bitsamui5104
      @bitsamui5104 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@rolvirata9003 Nope, our tournament didn't work like that. It wasn't even a tournament, it was "league" play, basically a handful of structured matches that had no real bearing or weight or importance. I save super jank for unimportant games and a more serious deck for actual tournaments with prizes or stuff.

    • @afish2281
      @afish2281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I pissed off some Yugioh players by subverting expectations and playing cards another strategy would play while not playing that strategy.

  • @woomod2445
    @woomod2445 2 ปีที่แล้ว +118

    One thing you ignored about spikes, something very important, spike will play what wins, but there are card types they find most fun. Caw blade is a very spikey deck as it has a huge skill ceiling, and fact or fiction and brain storm(pre-fetch lands) are very spikey cards with all the decisions you have to make. Spikes don't just want to win, they want to PROVE they DESERVED that win.

    • @Jerry4281
      @Jerry4281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      My friends think I am a spike, but honestly I say I am not I've been in and out of metas because I didn't like certain decks in YGO. I love the synchro mechanic in YGO and I say, I like a more equal fair game, in my opinion when someone has a chance. Even in Weiss Schwartz I play a deck because I love the cute girls and don't buy meta ever for that game. In Pokemon I picked up a deck because the art had a spider man cover on it, which to me was like fuck yeah. I don't care about winning, and my friends says you care too much I don't want a fair game is all. If I lose that's fine.

    • @afish2281
      @afish2281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Jerry4281
      Yeah my friends think I'm a Spike when I'm more of a Jimmy. Yeah I occasionally play meta, but I always have some weird twist that actually trips people up; using the meta as a budget engine that gets out cheap cards people don't see value in.
      It might also be that I'm in a weird in between where I'm the weakest Yugioh player at my locals where I'm obliterated turn 1 every game, but will reduce a casual player to dust at a touch. That might be why people think I'm a Spike.

    • @ich3730
      @ich3730 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@afish2281 "It might also be that I'm in a weird in between where I'm the weakest Yugioh player at my locals where I'm obliterated turn 1 every game, but will reduce a casual player to dust at a touch. That might be why people think I'm a Spike." That just means you are bad at the game xD Not good enough to compete but ready to grind little timmy xD

    • @afish2281
      @afish2281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ich3730
      If everyone at locals plays actual world championship level strategies and decks while casual players around still play tons of meta in very effective ways, even playing full on Dragon Rulers and Brave Engine, then I wouldn't consider myself a bad player. I would consider locals meta to be absurdly overkill with $1000 decks.

  • @AirRideMaster
    @AirRideMaster 2 ปีที่แล้ว +173

    I feel like a better description for Spike would be "competition" - the Spikes I've observed a lot, at least the healthy ones, tend to like helping people understand the meta, and enjoy having a fair competition, rather than just riding on easy wins to victory. Plus, a lot of people I know, such as myself, will do stuff like use resources and try and build a more "optimized" version of a deck, even if it isn't necessarily the best - it's just more optimal among our group, so we can have a slight edge, or to make things more fair if the rest of the group is tending higher. Heck, I know some very Spikey players that intentionally power their decks down against newbies to have a more even competition.

    • @bitsamui5104
      @bitsamui5104 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      I agree, competitive would be more apt. But some Spikes should also know that Johnny's, like me, avoid the meta on purpose so the advice isn't really useful with us. Although I can sometimes appreciate the insight.

    • @Zanji1234
      @Zanji1234 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      sorry but that Spikes do help newer players ... really depens on the game. It's more the Johnnys which doing this

    • @arachnofiend2859
      @arachnofiend2859 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Something to think about is that Spikes tend to like mirror matches more than Johnnies. Obviously there is a volume of mirror match where you have a stale meta and nobody's having fun, but if two Spikes show up with the same deck then they get to pit their skills against each other on a perfectly even playing field, if two Johnnies show up with the same deck they both feel like they weren't as creative as they thought they were.

    • @zachall1573
      @zachall1573 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@bitsamui5104 Ah but think of it like this, a knowlegde of the game's Meta might be very useful in crafting strategies to go against those established metas. If most people are using the same kind of strategies, a non-meta deck that perfectly counters those popular strategies might be just what you need to proove your creativity.
      The more everyone uses one thing, the more valuable it becomes to use anything else, as the meta players won't be prepared for your rogue strategy.

    • @SeedSnatcher
      @SeedSnatcher 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      An important thing about designing cards/games for Spikes, it's not just about making an efficient card/piece, it's about giving Spike a chance to outsmart their opponent. It's about giving Spikes the chance to make meaningful choices that allow them to demonstrate their abilities. You can make a brutally efficient card but if it's too straightforward or too high variance, it's kind of a turn off for Spike. It's gotta be something that takes at least a little thought.
      What Kohdok didn't cover here, and it's fair because this is aimed more towards people getting started in game design, but each psychographic has archetypes that have been defined by MaRo and others.
      The players you describe as optimizing for your group, they're metagaming too, just to your group as opposed to some major tournament.
      I won't power down my Constructed decks (and I don't really play Commander) but I love Limited because it puts everyone on equal footing. I've become something of a nuts and bolts Spike as MaRo puts it because I'm not one to worry about metagames but I love sharpening my own play skills, especially when it comes to piloting decks. Limited comes more naturally to us because everyone gets a similar pool of cards to build and play with, so in theory your mechanical skill shines through.

  • @TheoJay615
    @TheoJay615 2 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    I do agree on the Stand Stats. We all start off as Timmys but as we progress into the hobby we grow "different stats" and become different players.

  • @Kuronosa
    @Kuronosa 2 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    ...I love how you brought the Finance people into the taxonomy.

  • @kabalan20
    @kabalan20 2 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    "The Rudy" LMAO

    • @SuperiorFanBase
      @SuperiorFanBase 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I don't think the taxonomy includes the Rudy because I don't know if they really can officially acknowledge the secondary market without breaking the wizard of oz illusion they have going.

    • @ShadowReaver573
      @ShadowReaver573 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I choked on my drink when I saw it

  • @Kuronosa
    @Kuronosa 2 ปีที่แล้ว +48

    "Look into Teledad and Zoodiacs" as you sneakily move Caw-blade up from Below, I saw that Jace the Mind Scuptor.... My friends and I worked together, and though we found a deck that could MATCH Caw-blade...is was...65 cards, felt like a hodge-podge, and only tied with the two Caw decks in the tournament our one friend showed it in, going to Turns each time.

  • @leftygurl
    @leftygurl 2 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    tfw u end up as a timmy instead of a johnny bc there’s nobody to actually test decks with

    • @nathanl8622
      @nathanl8622 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I mean the profiles are more about how you like to play, not your circumstances. If you're assembling jank combos or building around quirky bulk rares that's Johnny behavior, regardless of how optimized those brews end up being.

  • @Zetact_
    @Zetact_ 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I like the idea of spectacle/mechanic/victory dynamic since the original "Timmy/Johnny/Spike" does seem like it only really fits across the board for the Spike.
    As a Yugioh player:
    Timmies: "I play Sky Striker because Raye is cute and mecha musume is cool." "I play Stardust even though it isn't good because the combos it does when it doesn't get hand trapped are sick and super fun." "I play 60 card Ojama because it's hilarious."
    Johnnies: "I once made a deck of only Monsters with a 0/0 statline just for fun." "One day I dream of figuring out a way to make Cold Feet work in a practical way." "I play Sky Striker because it's neat to experiment with what sort of engines you can fit in with a deck that requires clearing out the Main Monster Zone"
    Spikes: "I will always make room for hand traps." "I play Sky Striker because it's strong." "I'll look up builds online, doesn't matter."
    that's me, all of those statements are me

  • @liberty2087
    @liberty2087 2 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    Sadly, MetaZoo is about 99% Jimothies, which has led to a lot of stall in terms of the game getting off the ground competitively.

    • @theendofmyropemydude
      @theendofmyropemydude 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Also the art is objectively bad and the mechanics amount to a game of Calvinball.

    • @mariodude89
      @mariodude89 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I mean the creator of that game is fully aware and complicit with the state of the secondary market whether for better or for worse. there's at least a good 2 hours of conversation between Mike (the creator of Metazoo) and Rudy about how Mike intends to go forward on the secondary market into the future, which is probably something you should watch if you actually intend to spend money on that TCG.
      As far as "getting the game off the ground competitively" that really seems to just be an issue of the game taking forever to print its Unlimited sets (or I guess...2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. edition sets) which either stems from the fact that it's an extremely new TCG made during a time where printer capacity is an actual issue or something else.

    • @liberty2087
      @liberty2087 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@theendofmyropemydude nice bait

  • @redhatpieman
    @redhatpieman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Great video! Mark Rosewater also followed up the 3 player archetypes with 2 more: Mel (or Melvin) and Vorthos. They're not exactly more types of players to add to the original 3 but more of an additional layer to add to them (e.g. someone can be a Timmy Vorthos player). I recommend them as further reading for anyone interested in Player Archetypes!

  • @jakesapir
    @jakesapir ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The whole "Googoo Gaga" thing was not only hilarious, it also sounds kind of like playing Unfinity. One of the more powerful cards in Unfinity is called "Ambassador Blorpityblorpboop".

  • @ajbXYZcool
    @ajbXYZcool 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I love all the references you made in this video, especially regarding MTG and YGO! Especially as I've learned the History of the latter, seeing certain cards come up and I KNOW why you reference it!

  • @victort.2583
    @victort.2583 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Maro has also discussed Vorthos and Melvin, other player archetypes that engage with the game differently from Timmy/Johnny/Spike (for flavorful or mechanical resonance rather than gameplay), and I think those are pretty compelling, too.
    FWIW, I honestly think Rudy/Alpha Investments does care about the games he collects, even if he doesn't really play them. That's not to say that he isn't a dedicated finance guy, but he seems to have legitimate respect for (at least some of) the games as well - he had some words of praise for Future Card Buddyfight back when it was around.

    • @TouchStoneGaming
      @TouchStoneGaming 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Vorthos and Mel aren't psychographics. They're aesthetic profiles, and they're used in conjunction with the psychographics, not as additional categories. You have Spikes who are also Vorthos, and Timmys that are also Mel.

    • @victort.2583
      @victort.2583 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TouchStoneGaming Ah, that makes sense. Thank you for the explanation!

    • @ashtongaskill3980
      @ashtongaskill3980 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TouchStoneGaming while that was the official line from Maro, I always found it kind of dumb. The point of all of them is "why do you play magic?" and "because I like the lore so I built this Chandra themed deck" and "because I appreciate the design of this mechanic so I drafted the set it's in a lot" are just as valid and distinct as "to make big flashy plays" or "to feel clever" or "to challenge my abilities"

    • @ashtongaskill3980
      @ashtongaskill3980 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You can be a Timmy-Spike just as easily as a Vorthos-Spike so why put them into different categories

    • @TouchStoneGaming
      @TouchStoneGaming 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@victort.2583 No problem! It's a consistent misunderstanding. (As you can probably tell from the rest of the comments.)

  • @tipulsar85
    @tipulsar85 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I could have sworn the "Timmy, Johnny, Spike" article was pre Zendikar, but It could be I was thinking of the original articles about each individual type. Yikes, Making Magic turns 20 this year.

    • @MogFlintlock
      @MogFlintlock 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      It definitely is. It was re-released later, but the original article is from all the way back in 2002.

  • @littlemisspipebomb4723
    @littlemisspipebomb4723 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Thank you so much for making the player archetypes so much more digestible than Maro did

  • @brysonlambes7175
    @brysonlambes7175 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Maro added two more, vorthos and mel, which I find extremely helpful.

  • @genericname3516
    @genericname3516 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    6:15 Madolche fits this pretty well, and I hope Melffy gets to be good enough to count for this too in the future, lol

    • @DroppedMyMarbles
      @DroppedMyMarbles 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      dolche has never been more than a Johnny deck tbh

  • @cblazerc
    @cblazerc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I can say that I am definitely a Johnny. I mean when you showed Painful Choice and said it had a down side I immediately thought, "What has he been smoking". Also including Magical Scientist FTK for the alchemist bit was hilarious to me.
    edit also while the Goo-goo archetype seems powerful, the fact that its main negation is on a trap card and that it is only targeting negation makes the deck unplayable (plus weeing yourself only draws 2 after set-up so it would only be useful if you already have starters in your opener). however since they don't lock you into anything and can easily get 2 monsters, using them as a dragoon or DPE engine wouldn't be the worst idea, but since you would have to dedicate a spot in the extra to link spider to send the normal into, it wouldn't even be the best for that.

    • @shawnjavery
      @shawnjavery 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The big problem would be playing a deck that already is running bricks and putting more on top of that.

    • @ich3730
      @ich3730 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      1. You dont need to be a johnny to see PC is broken. Everybody knows. 2. You cant try to rate a fictional archetype with 3 whole cards xD

    • @cblazerc
      @cblazerc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ich3730 1. I know that, I was just using an example from the video. 2. I can and I will.

  • @ceresgc
    @ceresgc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    There is an argument for Se Jung Park (the Pachirisu player) being actually a Spike. Not only the rest of his team was 100% meta, but he used Pachirisu exclusively because he found out it was the perfect fit in said meta. He even admitted that he only started liking Pachirisu AFTER winning worlds with it. Even though he was inventive, he didn't do it as a form of expression, he did it to win.

    • @Kirbita22
      @Kirbita22 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      yeah but the point is he realized this specific pokemon was the thing to slot into his team for this specific meta enviroment. i think you could argue he was a bit of both going purely off of how the player archetypes are described in this video

    • @davidv2002
      @davidv2002 ปีที่แล้ว

      he did it for both, it was unexpected mechanic like a johnny, but it was also to win like a spike. but like kohdok said at the beginning there’s overlap between them

  • @rustycox7741
    @rustycox7741 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    That flamethrower bit is perfect.

  • @lawrencetyrpa
    @lawrencetyrpa 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I love how your videos are highly informational and still entertaining at the same time. :)

  • @SwampKryakwa
    @SwampKryakwa 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Oh god, Kohdok, you are The God of making videos about card games

  • @darkangelsmarine
    @darkangelsmarine 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    5:00 that clip about flamethrowers was perfect!

  • @felipehurtadomurcia9194
    @felipehurtadomurcia9194 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    9:45 the truth has been spoken

  • @nathanl8622
    @nathanl8622 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I think Jimothy makes sense as a category in the way you're talking about (viewing how each player contributes to the game), but I think it makes sense that it isn't a profile.
    The profiles help guide game design, so each one can get cards geared toward them. Jimothy doesn't really care what the card says, just what it's worth, so there's not much point designing for them beyond, like, making sure your set has a couple chase mythics in it.

    • @weebcraft6829
      @weebcraft6829 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      At the same time, Jimothies are bringing huge success to Pokemon and some indie card games, plus the whole fiasco in YGO of "why does this uncommon card cost $400" so its still a thing to keep in mind when designing cards

    • @marvelsandals4228
      @marvelsandals4228 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, you could build product with Jimothys in mind. For example, perhaps you introduce extremely rare card (not important to the competitive scene) featuring a fan favorite character, cool artwork, & it is shiny as hell. There is a small segment of your fanbase that will hype up this card, buy lots of boxes just to pull one, make pack opening videos about it, etc. That kind of hype will generate more buzz around your game, spreading more awareness of it to people who have never even heard of it before. When a player buys a booster pack at their local card shop, onlookers will gather round wondering "will he pull it?" and he will be the town hero if he does. If handled well, this sort of thing can be a net positive for all parties involved...as long as the card isn't important to the competitive scene lol

  • @argo3364
    @argo3364 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    6:15
    Konami "sounds like a brilliant idea" *proceeds to make prankids*
    Me *proceeds to chuckle everytime someone commentating a duel says doodle doo*

  • @wesleyruff4997
    @wesleyruff4997 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    i think discussions about these types of players often ignore the very obvious fact that most players begin their TCG career as timmies, become johnnies later and then if they stick with the game, eventually become spikes, its more of a "life cycle" than a "taxonomy"

  • @trickyplays240
    @trickyplays240 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Almost to 50k!!! Gratz dude, I’ve been watching you for a while and love to see you finally getting subscribers

  • @bitsamui5104
    @bitsamui5104 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Definitely more of a Johnny person. I don't mind people who want to be hyper-competitive, but I find playing "the meta deck" flavor of the week to win tournaments boring. I'd rather play jank or weird strategies and try to alchemize something new/fun/interesting. Sadly, most TCGs seem to appeal more to the competitive person more. Something Kohdok should think about, IMO, is why Duel Masters is soooooo good and successful - it appeals to all three types in a very balanced and complete way.

    • @ich3730
      @ich3730 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Duel masters is not even close to the same ballpark as YGO, pokemon or MTG. If its so good, why is it dead outside of japan?

  • @MrShinyObject
    @MrShinyObject 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You joke about Googoo Gaga, but Shark Typhoon is a genuinely playable card in MtG right now and is a literal sharknado.

  • @terydtl4184
    @terydtl4184 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    That bit to describe a Johnny was something I found more funny then I should have. "They look at a card with an upside and a down side, then ask why dose it have 2 upsides."

  • @chaosof99
    @chaosof99 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    While I like that you brought in the "speculator" player type, there is also one player type that is commonly known and discussed dubbed "Vorthos". Those are players who are less interested in the games themselves than the story, worldbuilding and artwork of the cards. There is also the inverse though less often used "Mel", who enjoys the mechanical design of cards and doesn't care much about the flavor. Not to be presumptious, but I think you are a particularly good example of that taxonomical group.
    If I were to sum the archetypes up in a sentence:
    * Timmies enjoy what is awesome
    * Johnnys enjoy what is clever
    * Spikes enjoy what is efficient
    * Vorthos' enjoy what is flavorful
    * Mels enjoy what is designed well

    • @ashtongaskill3980
      @ashtongaskill3980 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      That line between Vorthos and Mel where ludonarrative harmony / verisimilitude lives is just *chefs kiss*

    • @AlteredNova04
      @AlteredNova04 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I feel like there's a massive amount of overlap between Johnny and Mel, to the point that it's probably not worth separating the archetypes. After all, why would you want to explore the complexities of the mechanics of a poorly designed game, and how would you figure out if it's well designed without deeply examining the mechanics?

    • @ashtongaskill3980
      @ashtongaskill3980 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@AlteredNova04 There's a distinction. Johnny types like to do big impressive plays and pull off crazy synergies in game, whereas Mel types appreciate the design of the cards themselves and tend to be thr type who make custom card designs or want to enter the industry professionally. A Johnny looks at a new set and scans for combo pieces, a Mel reviews the set and appreciates the elegance of a vanilla creature who's subtype and power support two different draft archetypes at the same time and how this card combines two mechanics in a novel manner.

  • @AxelWedstar411
    @AxelWedstar411 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Jimothys! Jimothys! Barely even human!

  • @jamjar1726
    @jamjar1726 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    what if you had a game were the attributes were based on the 4 player types

    • @ashtongaskill3980
      @ashtongaskill3980 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The expanded list from Maro almost maps onto the MtG colors
      Timmy/Tammy - green
      Johnny/Jenny -
      Spike - black
      Vorthos - red
      Mel - blue

    • @nathanl8622
      @nathanl8622 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ashtongaskill3980 I'd put Johnny in blue and Mel in white.
      And I guess Jimothy would be colorless.

  • @carro179
    @carro179 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    7:00 Why I play Performapal/Magician/Odd-Eyes:
    3._ I like Pendulums
    2._ They make me feel like I can still do something even when I'm on the verge of losing
    1._ haha funny hippo

  • @rmt3589
    @rmt3589 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Devil: Do you have a way to sell this game to people who aren't interested Jim?
    Jimothy: I'm an empath. I would never implement manip-
    Devil: Hypothetically.
    Jimothy: Hypothetically, we first want to make the game flow under the radar, and get a few people to secretly buy it up.
    Devil: How would that make it sell Jim?
    Jimothy: JIMOTHY! And we make it sell by hyping up a tournament. When people try to get the cards, the shelves will be empty. As demand spikes, those few can now dump all those cards at inflated prices, getting profiteers excited for a chance to have a huge ROI. But every penny returns to you.
    Devil: I'm writing this down.

  • @Jolfgard
    @Jolfgard 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Danny Phantump is a good example for a beneficial Jimothy.

  • @PanthalassaRo
    @PanthalassaRo 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Man that BIMO segment had me in tears

  • @horrorsage1346
    @horrorsage1346 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There was a card game called Raw Deal based on WWF/WWE. There was a card in a started deck called crimson goddess. It was a very photogenic picture of Lita. It was in a starter deck and I heard stories of stores basically opening the starter and selling that one card on E-bay because it would go for more than the starter sold for. An example of a store Jimothy?

  • @EdBurke37
    @EdBurke37 2 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    I enjoy how MaRo updated the names for the archetypes: Timmy/Tammy, Johnny/Jenny and Spike.
    Because Spike doesn't care about your gender binary. Spike only cares about winning!

    • @bepisthescienceman4202
      @bepisthescienceman4202 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Who needs a gender when I have a FTK

    • @afish2281
      @afish2281 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Gender is irrelevant. You are in the path of my massacre.

  • @codecatx5
    @codecatx5 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I am very glad my game doesn’t fall into the 7 deadly sins and I’m glad I now have these things to definitely point to that succinctly explains the things I’ve known and been talking about for forever. Also I’m mostly a Johnny and a lot of Timmy with all the abilities of Spike’s.

  • @henrygomez7142
    @henrygomez7142 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In Johnny's defense Painful Choice is all upside. It is up there for the most egregious card balance failure in any card game. Also Teledad was one of the best most skill intensive game formats of all time. It's universally well regarded among players from the time.

  • @Animefan8050
    @Animefan8050 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is my new favourite video of yours, you really explained the concepts clearly and why they are important, plus you argued your point with the Jimothy type very well. Showing the concept with that comedian clip with the flamethrower was cleverly done.
    Great pacing and editing for the video, loved it.

  • @HighSchoolRamiel
    @HighSchoolRamiel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    6:05
    Perfection

  • @NovaSaber
    @NovaSaber 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm watching this right after seeing someone who talks about the meta describe "Dodododwarf Gogogoglove"...

  • @liloldman5998
    @liloldman5998 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The gagagigo bit is funnier in context considering cards like "Prank-kids Meow-Meow-Mu", "Dodo-Doodle-Doo" and "Bow-Wow-Bark" used to be part of a meta deck in Yugioh.

  • @krymsonkyng5573
    @krymsonkyng5573 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Was waiting for Vorthos to make an appearance, but you activated your trap card. GG

  • @off-the-grounder568
    @off-the-grounder568 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    6:23 7:01 This what I think was the idea behind Gholdengo in the Pokémon main series.

  • @JomasterTheSecond
    @JomasterTheSecond 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have a feeling you used the dude from Pocahontas just to use the "See how I glitter" screencap.

  • @SofaKingDead
    @SofaKingDead 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I feel a lot of contempt for spike players in this video, and I am a Johnny. Also the Jimmothy character already had a name Larry. Also you should not design for Larry, designing for Larry will kill your game long term.

    • @kylenguyen7371
      @kylenguyen7371 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      ... I must now find whether MaRo put out an article for Larry.

  • @lupin-x2
    @lupin-x2 ปีที่แล้ว

    My man really playing "Timothy" in the background of this 💀

  • @mdudegamer
    @mdudegamer 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I definitely fall into a hybrid of Timmy and Johnny. Not really any room for me to be a Spike since I live in a small town and don't have anybody else to play against. I'm technically always "winning" in my games since I'm playing against myself, so naturally in gameplay spectacle becomes the most important thing to me, but I've recently been working on deckbuilding, too, and have found that to be a ton of fun.

    • @marvelsandals4228
      @marvelsandals4228 ปีที่แล้ว

      I highly recommend you make a pilgrimage to a local card shop & participate in an official event of some kind. A good number of TCG players tend to be on the shy/introverted side, but trust me you'll be glad you tried it. Remember, chances are you'll meet other players who you share a lot in common with. You probably won't win many games, but the real goal should be playing a game you like with like-minded folks.

  • @Zanji1234
    @Zanji1234 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    myself always was / is a Timmy + kinda Johnny though i know a TRUE Johnny who build ygo decks with such strange card usages that you really didn't know what the heck and only he could pilot it. He build a kind of "omega handless loop" which could potentially special summon to infinite and win by deck out should the opponement use MAXX C (discard it and you draw a card each time you special summon).... and / or discard your entire hand one by one through a complicated combo.
    The fact of "the Jimmothy" was also made in YGO a LONG while back when rumors about a rule change came up (way before link i think) and somebody was like "yeah they increase the LP total to 10k" and suddenly some "famous" youtuber said this also and was like "so guys better buy our playset of Ancient Leaf (if you have 9k life, pay 2k to draw two cards) and suddenly a old COMMON card from an out of print set rose to i think 20 EUR and was sold out. It came afterwards that the one hyped this madness (the youtubers and "famous" players") just profited the most of it since they sold their cards to highest prices

  • @imperiallegionnaire8344
    @imperiallegionnaire8344 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'd like to think I'm a Johnny, but in actuality I'm a Timmy

  • @owencmyk
    @owencmyk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I dog generally agree with this summary, though... the idea that everyone plays for fun is surprisingly untrue. Players who care about winning will absolutely optimize all fun out of the game if they're given the option to. There are players who would build a deck of 20 mountains and 40 bolts if they could, regardless of whether or not they actually find that playstyle fun or interesting. Still, great video !

  • @fybso3057
    @fybso3057 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I felt called out when you talked about Johnnys

  • @marcoasturias8520
    @marcoasturias8520 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Jimmothy sounds like what happens when little Timmy thinks he has "shark mentality"

  • @hamsandwich6685
    @hamsandwich6685 ปีที่แล้ว

    Rudy is like a hyper evolved jimothy in a caliber of his own

  • @ProactiveYellow
    @ProactiveYellow 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Apparently I am a clear "Jimmy" (not jimothy)
    I become attached to archetypes and mechanics and build decks around them as a puzzle to make them work. I have no care for the meta, and want to make things work as well as I can on my own. I want my Timmy cards to work, so I Johny a deck around them.

  • @kagemushashien8394
    @kagemushashien8394 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great explanation of the people who play card games, I'll use this to help make my own TCG. Any other tips?

  • @IceBot360G
    @IceBot360G 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Just have to mention this there is already a 4th player type though usually restricted to mtg I have seen these in games like ygo
    And that is the vorthos aka the lore freaks

  • @Liliana_the_ghost_cat
    @Liliana_the_ghost_cat 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    6:26 this whole segment is hilarious muahahahaha! Also... is this a cimoooooooooo reference?

  • @endymallorn
    @endymallorn 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think there needs to be a split between the healthy marketeer and the predatory speculators. The market is half of what determines the meta, after all - if you can’t get access to a card, you can’t play that card. So for those that want to produce something and keep the game going healthily, they deserve a lot more respect than the speculation crowd and the over-rating auction crowd.
    There’s also people who are fans of your game for the fiction you create (and who might be good resources for plots and stories later on - if you have a magazine or newsletter, you might see their name in the contribution list several times over). I’ve been told that Magic calls these people Vorthos. They usually play like Timmy, but they primarily buy the novels, comics, and other media. In Pokemon these are the guys who engage with it either video game first or anime first. The YGO community sometimes calls them “anime duelists”, because they want to act like they’re in that fictional world while the game is on. It’s spectacle at the table, but not just in the way Timmy wants spectacle. These are the people who build decks to support their favorite card, or their favorite plot line. So, to make them happy? Make cards that match the plot, that’s all. You have a really awesome character? Give them a card, or have them use real strategies.
    I think there’s also space for another archetype, which I might call The Squiggy - the alternate format player. They may be a dork who got caught up in that format, or they might be a hipster, or a contrarian. But the point is, this is the kind of guy who was playing Elemental Dragon Hero before “Commander” was around; the guy who played Pokemon Baseball; or the guy who plays Goat Format, Dungeon Dice Monsters, or Perfect Rule. You need to consider him, because if he’s not a contrarian, aiming to subvert you, he’ll respect the support. And if he is that sort of hipster contrarian, you’ll push him away from people who might also enjoy that format. They overlap with the Johnny & the Melvin, but they’re a different breed,

  • @ropetoper
    @ropetoper 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    MetaZoo Reserve List video soon?

    • @AztecCroc
      @AztecCroc 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wait, did MetaZoo seriously fall into that same goddamn trap that MTG did and has openly stated regretting ever since?

    • @thegis5911
      @thegis5911 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@AztecCroc Yep.

  • @seanfulldark
    @seanfulldark 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have my version called the five-man ban!
    First off like the Timmy's have been described, I call them the Timmy's(a.k.a. the hero archetype but let's be honest here where all heroes of our own story that's not really the thing) the Timmy's getting to the game they play it they enjoy it there interested into sitting there in studying the lore and history of the game. You can tell the level of the Timmy because a starting Timmy, is sitting there looking at watching the game and decide I'm going to be the protagonist, when it comes on an anime or it's being shown in a series to advertise it. But a higher-level one sits there and looks at one the background characters decks and goes icon want to play their deck a little bit more. You know the ones not the one to watch Valentine time and say"I want to play a harpy deck." No they turned to Tea and say." I'm going to play a fairy deck." And smile when they beaten what I'm going to refer to as the strongman, with that deck and the strongman explode.
    Then comes the Lancers, there are the rivals the best friends the person who sat there next to Timmy saw the card game and said yeah I'm totally playing it just so that we can spend more time with you. And then after a few minutes got super good Lord, and also got the taste of victory and turns to slaughtering a couple friends along the way but, also at the same time not being afraid to pull up the Phoenix downs and resurrect them and their decks. These I call the Chester's, they look at Timmy analyze what he has and then becomes better at, instead of copying and mimicking decks from their favorite show they start making their own decks but they're not studying really the effects of the cards. That's the job of the smart guy.
    (Okay now I'm breaking the fairy odd parents joke!): While some people say they're the johnnies, I feel the smartest person in the room has never been Johnny but instead the Dexter. He walks into the room staring at the card studying them, he has entire lab devoted to building varieties of different decks, sometimes he looks at one card and sees 14 different combinations and strategies, and it's up to him to the side of which one of these should I go with. Should I go with the lower tier design that has more risk may be a little bit of reward, or should I go with the obvious victorious one. The one that shows up with the shut pay box of card decks and you go like man this guy is rich, pulls out out and says. "What are you playing." And immediately pulled out the deck that absolutely socks in the meta-against this type of archetype, and turns and says. "Yeah I expect this card to go on the bandwidth next week but I gotta keep playing it once in a while." When he sees the band lessee goes my work is done and smiles believably.
    Then comes the strongman type Madarks, sometimes known as the Susan. He watches the Dexter study some of his decks and immediately steals them for his own, and then proudly displays his victory poses and trophies. Growing attached to the deck only after getting couple wins, start putting in promo versions of the cards. Determined to have a all Golden card or diamond foil deck filled with these unique cards the flashier the better. And then they sit down smile as they win and kill and win some more, but one day the Turner shows up and destroys your deck, or worst it gets put on the banned list, maybe one of your key cards that activate your strategies. You cry at the amount of destruction of your entire game play list, you may have one or two backup decks but if they revolve around the same card you explode this was so good that it and it deleted your entire collection of deck, you have several broken guns and you turn and you start watching the Dexter through your binoculars trying to find a new deck to steal, and if you're even desperate to watch Chester.
    And finally the fifth archetype, the ones I like to call the lovers, a.k.a. the DDs. The DD is good friends with the Dexter, always bugging them about certain details but I the normal sense. Sometimes the Dexter will reply get out of my laboratory. But the DD are really interested in the value of these cards, but they know sometimes the value of the card is based on how well it's played, the great decks the great archetypes. Or they sit there and look at their collections and smile. They noticed the Timmy's and they say "yeah I know what goes in this deck perfectly." Pulls out the shiniest card in the room and says the price tag 100% of the time. Overhears the Madark say which cards that they need to make this new deck flow shows them and goes examining which cards need to be hyped up and which ones need to be hyped down. Once a while studying the meta-but not really that's why they have friends like Dexter's, maybe once a while they spend time with the Chester or two. But they have the real money, and they make more money off of it analyzing the market. But they sit down and try their damnedest to make even the worst cards the best ones sometimes prodding a Dexter to come up with amazing strategies. Just so that way they can unload them there low to your cards. For when the worst cards exist for the worst reasons you know what DD is going to change a Dexter into playing that card, and talking him into internment and saying "Win!"

    • @ich3730
      @ich3730 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Take the time to check up on the writing, this shit was unreadable

  • @tiozuradasexatas6754
    @tiozuradasexatas6754 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    8:55 this puts Chazz's character arc in GX season 1 under a new light. The objective of his family was to reign over politics and economy. Obviously overpriced cardboard rectangles would be on their target.

  • @Kreiser_VII
    @Kreiser_VII 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm definitely a Timmy-hearted Johnny, I'll pick with my heart and jank my way to the top, win or lose I'll go by my pretty looking schemes

  • @clayxros576
    @clayxros576 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    5:35
    Kodak, you can't just drop this kind of idea into the open. Us designers WILL abuse it to no end. ...oh I'm 200% a Johnny huh?

  • @Majoraspersona
    @Majoraspersona 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    "One card extra deck play" is my favorite thing to say in Yugioh

  • @simonpetrikov3992
    @simonpetrikov3992 ปีที่แล้ว

    If I were to classify myself using this taxonomy I would be more of a Johnny spike hybrid

  • @borby4584
    @borby4584 ปีที่แล้ว

    The $1000 MTG proxy set is what happens when a company makes a product solely with a Jimmothy in mind

  • @terydtl4184
    @terydtl4184 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    As a spike one thing I think everyone overlooks is that we Don't just care about winning, we care about winning our way. To us, our decks aren't just the swords in our hand but the flags we fly. We don't just pick up a deck because we think it's the best, but because we want to show everyone why it IS the best. It's that spark of self expression and passion that really makes a spike. It's why you sometimes see a spike with an off-meta or rouge deck, it's because they believe that deck deserves to be treated as one of the big boys and should be considered among the other top tier decks.

    • @marvelsandals4228
      @marvelsandals4228 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think there's a good point of overlap where you pick a given archetype/theme, because it appeals to you, THEN you get to work trying to brew up a list that might stand a chance against the meta, for the allure of being "that one dude" topping an event with your favorite rogue deck

  • @ClampEEGEE
    @ClampEEGEE 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    "The panic buying of 2020 and 2021"
    HAH he can find Pokemon cards in person ;_;

  • @OrdemDoGraveto
    @OrdemDoGraveto ปีที่แล้ว

    You forgot about Vorthos. Those players that care more about the lore, art, worldbuilding then they Care about the game mechanics. Those that read the books, comis and short stories and sometimes dont even play the game.

  • @Flashofblades
    @Flashofblades 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Something to note, Vorthos is another kind of player talked about by maro.

  • @ich3730
    @ich3730 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    6:25 actual footage of me trying to explain dragonmaids while avoiding the disappointed look of my dad

  • @Elitekross
    @Elitekross 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Not quite a jimothy, but I knew a guy named Nico, who found a coupon barcode online that let him buy mtg big boxes for dirt cheap at Walmart. He went to all the Walmarts in the area and bought them out for months then would sell the packs to the people at the local community college for like, 5 bucks a pop.

  • @ProfessorWaifu
    @ProfessorWaifu ปีที่แล้ว

    Oh no, definitely called a Rudy

  • @rewrose2838
    @rewrose2838 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This must be the first time someone called me a Johnny

  • @Anime12345freak
    @Anime12345freak 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I am definitely a Timmy. I love just making decks based on a theme I love rather then what is meta. And I love games that cater to this. Digimon does it well. My plesiomon deck definitely isn't meta but plesiomon is one of my fave megas so he'll yeah I'm making that deck :3

  • @elijahdavila3684
    @elijahdavila3684 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Timmys buy into the game, Johnnys bring it to life, Spikes bring it prestige, and Jimothys make it so that no one can afford to play

  • @kleedrac
    @kleedrac 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    As an FYI Mark did update his list to add a fourth player called "Vorthos" who's interested in the lore/setting/world of the game and purchases cards less to play than to be an art book they can look at. They also purchase more non-game things like novels and such.

    • @TouchStoneGaming
      @TouchStoneGaming 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      TL;DR: Vorthos and Mel aren't psychographics; they're aesthetic profiles that describe what the player engages with on the spectrum of mechanics to flavor. They're not unique "types" of players, instead an additional dimensions added onto the base three. There are Jenny-Mels and Spike-Vorthos, for example, and they all buy cards to play the game. Mark consistently mentions this whenever someone accidentally uses Vorthos/Mel as a psychographic.
      Vorthos (and their counterpoint, Mel) aren't a player psychographic, though. They're not describing how a player engages with the game (spectacle/gameplay/skill). Instead, they're "aesthetic profiles", describing what the player enjoys when it comes to flavor/world building and gameplay.
      A Vorthos could be an incredibly Spike-y player, but they like it when a game leans into its flavor and story. In the case of Magic, these are players that want each unique type of creature to have a unique creature type. A Mel player, however, cares about the mechanical interactions between cards and throughout the game in general. These players, again to use Magic as an example, want creature types to be as consolidated as possible, because it makes creature type interactions simpler and more consistent.
      While psychographics lean towards Vorthos or Mel, they aren't the same, and they certainly don't describe how likely someone is to buy cards. You are right that a Vorthos would be more likely to engage with the setting and lore of a game, and that normally translates to a willingness to buy non-gameplay material. But a Vorthos primarily cares about how the game's world and story is told _through_ cards, not external media. If they sit down with a deck based around a faction, they want it to feel like the faction.
      A Vorthos looks at a card and says, "Does this work within its flavor and the flavor of the set?" A Mel looks at a card and says, "Does this work mechanically with itself and other cards of the set?"

  • @stillbuyvhs
    @stillbuyvhs 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I remember, in 1998 & 1999, everyone was buying Pokémon cards, but no one really knew how to play the game. (Timmy) Then in 2000, kids were still buying the cards, but only because they could make money reselling them. (Jimothy.) This, of course, wasn't sustainable, so the market crashed, & soon Pokémon cards weren't worth much.
    I didn't have many Pokémon cards, just one booster pack I got as a Christmas present, plus the Mewtwo card which came with the movie, & some of those lenticular tile things. Later, when the market crashed, I was able to buy boxes of the things for pennies a piece. Wonder if we still have them...

  • @TheOnlyPonyAnonyous
    @TheOnlyPonyAnonyous ปีที่แล้ว

    Why I feel like Timmy, Johnny and Spike are in me?

  • @remyscreepycorner5135
    @remyscreepycorner5135 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Life long Johnny here

  • @mobmaniac
    @mobmaniac 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'd say "Richard" is a more fitting name for "Jimothy" for pun-related reasons

  • @martindouge1947
    @martindouge1947 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I want to see a 4-player Commander table with these guys.

  • @dpacula63
    @dpacula63 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I consider myself a mix of Johnny and Spike. I place winning above everything else, but a deck with interesting gameplay and mechanics interest me more.

    • @shawnjavery
      @shawnjavery 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Those are the decks that tend to win in my experience. Yugioh in particular does a good job of making the strong decks fun to play as well.

  • @andypandaman1607
    @andypandaman1607 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    man i will never forget pulling a 80 doller card from a promo pack i won at my card shop and while it was a good card whats more important a shiny card or grocery money

  • @pompagarissanimation2592
    @pompagarissanimation2592 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    5:23 Im not sure about anyone else, but I do that alot, mainly because it's some what therapeutic but also because I know that whatever abomination I end up creating will lose against alot of decks and I'll end up looking at it less favourably which bogs me down abit

  • @shiftomnimega
    @shiftomnimega 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Pretty solid 4th archetype.

  • @kinilas
    @kinilas 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Me- idk if I fall into any of these...
    Also me- (won 3 Pokemon tournaments with a deck based around a card that was considered "useless")

  • @Petrico94
    @Petrico94 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Each is valuable but I feel Spike is more an inevitability of competitive play and needs to be worked around. Timmy likes big stuff so be sure to add large high mana spells or easier combos (maybe some holographic stuff in the same group). Johnny always likes to break the game or use those niche win conditions so long as they have some tools to work with, either just playing a usual combo deck or some strange cards that only work if you're trying to set both your healths to 7 for something fun. More complex rare cards are great and can either make a new deck so yeah Spike will keep an eye on Johnny's deck more than how fast they can ramp to a green behemoth.
    You can find a bit of each in all players, everyone wants to win, have fun, and understand the game on a deeper more complex level. Jimothy are not a player just a collector, they're free to enjoy the game on their spare time but we all know when they get a super rare card it's going in a sealed case rather than a sleeve for a deck like Timmy would attempt.

    • @Stroggoii
      @Stroggoii 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Games without competitive scenes and secondary markets just die. Anyone with a box of V:TES or LotR laying at the bottom of their games storage space look at the Spikes and Jimothies of their game and think "God bless these chumps for keeping the game alive".

  • @UnrealMisterD
    @UnrealMisterD 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    1) The Carlin but was perfect.
    2) I think you could have called Jimothys "Gordon Gekkos" and no one would have been upset. XD

  • @VPalamedes25
    @VPalamedes25 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Spikes aka the people who make the final duel of a YGO tourney a mirror match, Blue-eyes anyone
    Also nah, I think Performapals were originally made to show the power of pendulum summoning but after finding certain cards & combos to be far too consistent & powerful they became a good example of a mechanic outclassing a flagship deck, I mean there's a reason why PEPE decks were so common during a good part of the Arc-V meta (though take this w/ a grain of salt, I'm not a person who pays too much attention to the meta of any card game I play, if we're using the terminology of this video, I'm a Timmy w/ a small bit of a Johnny personality)

  • @Kafaldsbylur
    @Kafaldsbylur 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think you misunderstand the psychographics and made the exact same as Matt Cavotta did when he coined the Vorthos profile: Jimothy isn't a player psychographic.
    When picking cards for a deck, Timmy will pick cards that make him experience something, Jenny will pick cards that let her express herself and Spike cards that let him prove himself. So logically, if Jimothy is a player psychographic, he'll make a deck out of valuable cards, which is obviously not what we see. When the supposed Jimothy sits down and pulls out a deck, it's not as a Jimothy, it's as a Tammy, Johnny or Spike.
    The player psychographics are a design tool. You can design cards and mechanics that will appeal to Timmies, Johnnies and Spike. But you can't do that with Jimothy. You could make the argument that he supplements the Vorthos/Mel aesthetic profiles, but a player psychographic he ain't

    • @cruzerion
      @cruzerion 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This was my thoughts as well. The only way I see you can 'design' for Jimothy is in supply of sought after cards through rarity, frequency of reprints, promos and so on.
      Jimothy is not a player category, but rather a buyer category. And while that is definitely something for game designers to keep in mind (along with other buyer categories such as clueless parent, newbie, casual veteran, invested player, competitive player and all manner of other categories) it doesn't belong with on the same axis as Timmy/Tammy, Johnny/Jenny and Spike

  • @guyclegg
    @guyclegg 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Oh yeah oh yes oh yeah yes.