![]() ![]() "In terms of playing for free: If you don't mind grinding PvE: Currently playing Arena yields good results, around 1p for every 70-80g. Here's a reddit post I made before about playing arena F2p: (NOTE THERE IS CURRENTLY A 50% GOLD BONUS IN ARENA, SO WHAT I SAY HERE IS EVEN MORE TRUE) Always skip tier 1 (which you can do after you perfect tier 1) since the gold earned isn't worth the time. If you want to play for free, you need to play Arena and make a deck that can beat tier 2-4. There is currently a $10-20 deck that does well in tournaments. Īlso there will be a new patch in 1 week with new game modes, a new tutorial, new cards, new PvE equipment/cards and chest opening that adds value to each pack you open. It will give you a lot of information on the game. But if you just want to draft without playing the decks and see how the picks go, this is very good even with $0 investment. So this won't work until you've already done a lot of drafts. You probably won't have the cards without already buying them/opening them in packs, is the problem. !/draft Try to find more players (or play against their bots) and then build your final deck in game and play each other in the proving ground with those drafted decks. There is however a practice draft feature in the hex deckbuilder site. You can't play draft with only 2 players. But in 1 week it will become JUST Armies of Myth packs. They are not more powerful than each other because they are meant to be played together.ĭraft is currently Shattered Destiny + Shards of Fate packs. Shattered Destiny is the 2nd set and the new "Armies of Myth" coming out is the 3rd set. It's important to stack your deck with removal which is also available at the common and uncommon rarity. No matter how powerful a card is, there are always answers. His effect is powerful but he himself doesn't do much damage. The card you're talking about is Menacing Gralk and he's only a 2/2. Thanks for the tip, Platinum Article taken from is no 9/9 that exhausts all their guys for 5. ![]() It should be noted that currently there’s no auto-patching on Linux so you’ll need to redownload the latest build to update. You can try these unofficial builds for yourself here. I wouldn’t hold my breath expecting them to change their tune anytime soon but perhaps with enough time and interest in their unofficial builds they may reconsider the issue. It’s a shame that they don’t plan on supporting it officially for now, but at least it’s not a hard “never”. Unfortunately, while we are more than happy to release our unofficial build for Linux enthusiasts, we don’t have plans for an official Linux release at this time. I reached out to the developer asking if there were any plans to bring the game officially to Linux in any form and got the following reply: Outside of the fullscreen Unity bug (which is prevented by default because the game launches in windowed mode), I haven’t encountered a single technical issue. These aren’t directly backed by the development team and is pretty much distributed as-is. Since late last year, unofficial Linux builds have been available in the Hex forums. I can't really say if the competitive mode is properly balanced as I've spent most of my time engrossed with the single player content. There’s also an auction house where players can buy and sell cards with the in-game (non-premium) currency, so building the deck you really want isn’t too onerous. Hex is also a free to play game with somewhat familiar mechanics of getting drops from playing against other players as well as levelling up in the campaign mode. ![]() In the little that I've seen of the lore and world, it's been somewhat interesting to learn about and to adapt my deck and strategies to all sorts of different scenarios. Sure, there's still staples like elves and humans but there's also more atypical factions like evil rabbits and nomadic coyotes. It's a colorful world filled with all sorts of creatures and types of cards, with the occasional interesting twist on how their fantasy creatures are represented with the types of mechanics they prefer. I’ve already lost a few hours enjoying the different challenges and discovering the interesting mix of RPG elements that you get to play around with with your avatar. Perhaps more interestingly, at least to people like me who prefer playing on their own, Hex also features a campaign mode for singleplayer exploits. Hex borrows a lot from the very successful Magic: The Gathering card game (so much so they settled a lawsuit with Magic owner Wizards of the Coast) but adds its own little twists and updates that take advantage of the digital-only format of the game. I’ve played a lot of TCGs in my day and have been around a lot of people who are obsessive about them so I always appreciate trying out a different take on the genre. ![]() YouTube videos require cookies, you must accept their cookies to view. ![]()
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