Is the Card Limit for Silver/Gold Cards Still Relevant?
Gwent has a deck limit of 6 epic (silver) cards and 4 legendary (gold) cards, unlike games like Hearthstone, where you can fill your whole deck with legendary cards. The limit in Gwent made sense when gold cards had their immunity and bronze cards weren't as strong yet (snowball effect). But know, with the gold immunity patch, it does make me wonder:
Do we still need the card limit for silver and gold cards?
The strength of a card doesn't solely come from its ability, but rather from its synergy with other cards. Gold cards enable synergy, but usually don't have synergy themselves. This means that adding too many gold cards would eventually reduce the effectiveness of your deck. At least, I think this would be the case. Thus the first question leads to another question:
Can bronze synergy overpower a semi full gold deck?
With the current game state, I actually do have my doubts. However, with some small tweaks, this might actually be the case.
Gwent has a deck limit of 6 epic (silver) cards and 4 legendary (gold) cards, unlike games like Hearthstone, where you can fill your whole deck with legendary cards. The limit in Gwent made sense when gold cards had their immunity and bronze cards weren't as strong yet (snowball effect). But know, with the gold immunity patch, it does make me wonder:
Do we still need the card limit for silver and gold cards?
The strength of a card doesn't solely come from its ability, but rather from its synergy with other cards. Gold cards enable synergy, but usually don't have synergy themselves. This means that adding too many gold cards would eventually reduce the effectiveness of your deck. At least, I think this would be the case. Thus the first question leads to another question:
Can bronze synergy overpower a semi full gold deck?
With the current game state, I actually do have my doubts. However, with some small tweaks, this might actually be the case.
Last edited: