So, I started another thread some days ago about what to do with Scraps – many of us have an overabundance of them, especially if you played since beta. In the discussion we came up with the following idea:
Every player can get a limited amount of "gift cards" (get it?) from another player in their friends-list, paid for by their friends' scraps – as an example, let's say: three gift cards per player. Because they are paid for with Scraps, they are of course non-animated. So I could invite a new player to Gwent and gift him (non-animated) "Geralt: Igni".
Then he makes two new friends and they gift him "Oneiromancy" and a Scenario.
Now you might say: These are powerful cards! But those three are all, no more gift cards. S/He got her/his three gift cards and because of that, maybe s/he is now a regular player. Good for CDPR, good for socialising and maybe there could be a cool animation for this, too: Like, when you log in, you get a "Claim"-notification with the avatar of the gift-making player and open a cool, animated gift card wrapper and there's your new card with personal greetings (and useful tips) by the gift maker.
What do you (and maybe CDPR) think?
Every player can get a limited amount of "gift cards" (get it?) from another player in their friends-list, paid for by their friends' scraps – as an example, let's say: three gift cards per player. Because they are paid for with Scraps, they are of course non-animated. So I could invite a new player to Gwent and gift him (non-animated) "Geralt: Igni".
Then he makes two new friends and they gift him "Oneiromancy" and a Scenario.
Now you might say: These are powerful cards! But those three are all, no more gift cards. S/He got her/his three gift cards and because of that, maybe s/he is now a regular player. Good for CDPR, good for socialising and maybe there could be a cool animation for this, too: Like, when you log in, you get a "Claim"-notification with the avatar of the gift-making player and open a cool, animated gift card wrapper and there's your new card with personal greetings (and useful tips) by the gift maker.
What do you (and maybe CDPR) think?