I figured it out. Thanks though. I had been clicking to play offline and I guess you can't do that, so I clicked play online and the missions popped up. Thanks again this is a cool app.
Thank you, I have so many questions about the gameplay. This is a game I've had for awhile and I love the style of it, but I'm having trouble with the resources concept. I'm a former Hearthstone player, so in Hearthstone you would have one mana the first round, two mana the second round, three mana the third round, and at the 10th round you'd be at 10 mana. So my first question is if I sacrifice a five-cost card on the first round, is that five cost resource something I can use every single round throughout the game, or can I only use it once? Let's say I sacrifice a five-cost card on the first round, a three-cost card on the second round, and a two-cost card on the third round. Does that mean I have a total of 10 cost in my resources pile that I can use every single round during the game? Or is there still something like mana in Hearthstone in play, so that every turn you get one more cost added to your total and can play a slightly higher mana card? I have never played magic the gathering. I don't know the rules or anything about magic the gathering. Anyway, it's 11 years later and this game Shadow Era is still very popular. But unfortunately, they haven't made their tutorial any better!
The game I was referring to is "Magic: The Gathering" If you want to check that game out, it is available on Steam for PC, Xbox, PS3 and in the app store on mobile devices.
When your soldiers (they call them allies) attacks an enemy soldier on your turn. u will have the first strike. but if the enemy is not dead, he will retaliate back. There is a mechanic called "Defender" which some creatures have, and Defender creatures will make the first strike when they are being attacked. And its not that easy to snowball as u think, there are mass destruction cards
Sweet vid, but it's not very helpful for ingame play. Most card RPG apps such as this one, like your Deity Wars, Cerberus Age, Black Summon, etcera. Have at least an ingame avatar tutorial of how the game is played, how to create decks, and so on. Having to tune to TH-cam for a tutorial is not helpful at all, it's a difference between watching you play the game and explain things as you go along and actually PLAYING the game. In the words of Spock, "it's logic".
I figured it out. Thanks though. I had been clicking to play offline and I guess you can't do that, so I clicked play online and the missions popped up. Thanks again this is a cool app.
@5lay3r87 Glad I can help! Have fun playing!
Thanks! This was a great help. I'm thinking of possibly playing the cardboard version.
Thanks man that was really helpful! 🙌🏼👹🔥
Thank you, I have so many questions about the gameplay. This is a game I've had for awhile and I love the style of it, but I'm having trouble with the resources concept. I'm a former Hearthstone player, so in Hearthstone you would have one mana the first round, two mana the second round, three mana the third round, and at the 10th round you'd be at 10 mana. So my first question is if I sacrifice a five-cost card on the first round, is that five cost resource something I can use every single round throughout the game, or can I only use it once? Let's say I sacrifice a five-cost card on the first round, a three-cost card on the second round, and a two-cost card on the third round. Does that mean I have a total of 10 cost in my resources pile that I can use every single round during the game? Or is there still something like mana in Hearthstone in play, so that every turn you get one more cost added to your total and can play a slightly higher mana card? I have never played magic the gathering. I don't know the rules or anything about magic the gathering. Anyway, it's 11 years later and this game Shadow Era is still very popular. But unfortunately, they haven't made their tutorial any better!
@dudemancallum I put that info in the description bar for you!
This is one of my favorite apps.
The game I was referring to is "Magic: The Gathering" If you want to check that game out, it is available on Steam for PC, Xbox, PS3 and in the app store on mobile devices.
nice vid man!!!!!!!!!!
I enjoyed watching the video, looks like a good game where and how can I find it?
I download the app & thanks to your video I more or less know how to play it thanks
Glad you like it!
Glad you figured it out!
What is that "magic" game you were talking about all the time?
Hmmm, sorry but I haven't heard of that problem. Have you made a deck yet? Maybe it is under the jewel icon? Anybody else have this problem?
wait so all creatures in this game have "First-strike"? Doesn't that make the game snowball like crazy for one side?
When your soldiers (they call them allies) attacks an enemy soldier on your turn. u will have the first strike. but if the enemy is not dead, he will retaliate back. There is a mechanic called "Defender" which some creatures have, and Defender creatures will make the first strike when they are being attacked. And its not that easy to snowball as u think, there are mass destruction cards
I just downloaded this app and when I begin to play, there are no mission icons. Can someone help me. There's no damn tutorial for this.
OK thanks.
But it's not available for android :(
BTW do you know any other cool card games like this?
Did you get shadow era on pc
@93absolut Kard Combat is not bad
wow the pc version has quite a lot more cards than the android version(which i have started to record
i just watch this guy play u know am watchin u play him lol
Thanks
You should turn down the music while recording.
Kinda pay to win but still fun
This game is nothing like magic. It is, however, a complete wow tcg clone.
Sweet vid, but it's not very helpful for ingame play. Most card RPG apps such as this one, like your Deity Wars, Cerberus Age, Black Summon, etcera. Have at least an ingame avatar tutorial of how the game is played, how to create decks, and so on. Having to tune to TH-cam for a tutorial is not helpful at all, it's a difference between watching you play the game and explain things as you go along and actually PLAYING the game. In the words of Spock, "it's logic".