Strictly better

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* {{Card|Noble Brigand}} is better than {{Card|Thief}} except when gaining {{Card|Copper}} is desirable or special Treasure cards abound.
 
* {{Card|Noble Brigand}} is better than {{Card|Thief}} except when gaining {{Card|Copper}} is desirable or special Treasure cards abound.
 
* Buying {{event|Delve}} is strictly better than {{card|Silver}}, except that Delve is an [[Event]] and in a few cases buying cards is preferable to buying Events, and Events cannot have their [[cost reduction|cost reduced]].
 
* Buying {{event|Delve}} is strictly better than {{card|Silver}}, except that Delve is an [[Event]] and in a few cases buying cards is preferable to buying Events, and Events cannot have their [[cost reduction|cost reduced]].
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* {{card|Ducat}} is strictly better than {{card|Candlestick Maker}} in terms of its abilities; but the fact that Ducat is a Treasure and Candlestick Maker is an Action can make Candlestick Maker more beneficial in some circumstances.
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Copper is in general strictly better than {{Card|Abandoned Mine}}. However, there are some edge cases like Festival+Library engines or the unfortunate case of drawing a Throne Room without any other action card, where Abandoned Mine can be better than Copper. Also Copper and all [[Ruins]] are in general strictly better than {{Card|Curse}}; but these are a special case since they cost {{Cost|0}} and are so rarely likely to be bought anyway.
 
Copper is in general strictly better than {{Card|Abandoned Mine}}. However, there are some edge cases like Festival+Library engines or the unfortunate case of drawing a Throne Room without any other action card, where Abandoned Mine can be better than Copper. Also Copper and all [[Ruins]] are in general strictly better than {{Card|Curse}}; but these are a special case since they cost {{Cost|0}} and are so rarely likely to be bought anyway.
  

Revision as of 13:16, 26 September 2018

A card in Dominion is informally referred to as strictly better than another if, in some sense, having or using the former confers all the same advantages as the latter as well as some added benefit, with no potential additional disadvantages. A typical reason this might happen is if one card provides more +$, +Buy, +Action, or VP than another but otherwise has the same effect, since under ordinary circumstances there is no way those additional effects can harm the player. For example, BazaarBazaar.jpg is strictly better than VillageVillage.jpg because the effect of Bazaar is the same as that of Village plus $1. Another way one card might be strictly better than another is if it offers the effect of the other as one of two or more options. For instance, once in your deck, CountCount.jpg is better than MandarinMandarin.jpg since Mandarin's effect is one of the nine choices Count makes available: thus all the benefits of Mandarin are present, but in cases where the effect of Mandarin would be disadvantageous, Count makes other options available and Mandarin doesn't. AlchemistAlchemist.jpg is strictly better than LaboratoryLaboratory.jpg because it has exactly the same effect when played, and also may give you the option of top-decking it instead of discarding it.

There are numerous cases where a card has an additional effect that is usually beneficial, but in some cases may turn out to be harmful; whether such cards are considered "strictly better" may depend on context. For example, although drawing an additional card is usually desirable, it can also cause a terminal collision or a reshuffle at an inopportune time, so a card like VillageVillage.jpg may not be considered "strictly" better than a card like NecropolisNecropolis.jpg for this reason in some analyses. More complicated situations also exist: for example, HaremHarem.jpg has the same effect as SilverSilver.jpg when played and is worth 2VP more, so it might be considered strictly better than Silver; but possessing a Harem in your deck may allow you to be given a CurseCurse.jpg by an opponent's JesterJester.jpg, which Silver would not. Similarly, GoonsGoons.jpg differs from WoodcutterWoodcutter.jpg by providing both +VP and a discard attack and would in most contexts be considered strictly better, but the discard attack could help an opponent by enabling their TunnelTunnel.jpg or MenagerieMenagerie.jpg. Great HallGreat Hall.jpg is usually strictly better than EstateEstate.jpg since Great Hall may be played as a cantrip, but in a deck with BaronBaron.jpg, Estate may be more beneficial.

As the range of effects possible on Dominion cards increases, the ways those effects can fail to be uniformly "strictly" better than each other also increases. StorytellerStoryteller.jpg allows you to convert +$ into +Cards, so if an increase in card draw isn't a strict improvement then in the presence of Storyteller neither is an increase in +$. DiademDiadem.jpg converts +Actions into +$, so in the presence of Diadem and Storyteller, an increase in +Actions isn't a strict improvement either. This emphasizes that the "strictly better" concept is itself an informal rough heuristic for comparing cards to each other, not a well-defined description.

Since there are cards that reward deck diversity, it can be argued that there is no card that is in all cases strictly better than another: for example, even though Bazaar provides all the effects Village does plus extra $, there can still be cases when gaining a Village will increase the value of your FairgroundsFairgrounds.jpg and gaining a Bazaar won't.

Similarly, cards that care about card cost may make cards that are usually worse better in specific cases: for example, VillageVillage.jpg may be more useful than Worker's VillageWorker's Village.jpg if you have ForgeForge.jpg with a disposable $5 card. Therefore, when people say that one card is strictly better than another, they often mean that it has a strictly better effect.

Implications for card design

Donald X. Vaccarino has written that a basic principle of Dominion card design is that no Kingdom card may have a strictly better effect than another with the same or higher cost. This is because, in a game with both such cards in the supply, players will buy only the better card and ignore the worse one, making the worse card's presence in the supply seemingly pointless. However, if a strictly worse card costs less than a better one, you might still buy it on turns when you don't have enough money to buy the better one. This sometimes restricts the possible design space of cards: the fact that Throne RoomThrone Room.jpg costs $4 means that it is not possible to create a card that's strictly better than Throne Room unless it's strong enough to cost $5 or more.

Indeed, even though Silver costs only $3, Donald X. is unwilling to give a card strictly better than Silver a cost of even $4.

There are a few cases of Kingdom cards that are sometimes referred to as almost strictly better at the same price:

  • CountCount.jpg is strictly better than MandarinMandarin.jpg once in your deck; however, Mandarin has an on-gain effect that is sometimes desirable.
  • Hunting PartyHunting Party.jpg is better than LaboratoryLaboratory.jpg in most decks that don't have very many copies of strong Treasures or terminal Actions.
  • Noble BrigandNoble Brigand.jpg is better than ThiefThief.jpg except when gaining CopperCopper.jpg is desirable or special Treasure cards abound.
  • Buying DelveDelve.jpg is strictly better than SilverSilver.jpg, except that Delve is an Event and in a few cases buying cards is preferable to buying Events, and Events cannot have their cost reduced.
  • DucatDucat.jpg is strictly better than Candlestick MakerCandlestick Maker.jpg in terms of its abilities; but the fact that Ducat is a Treasure and Candlestick Maker is an Action can make Candlestick Maker more beneficial in some circumstances.

Copper is in general strictly better than Abandoned MineAbandoned Mine.jpg. However, there are some edge cases like Festival+Library engines or the unfortunate case of drawing a Throne Room without any other action card, where Abandoned Mine can be better than Copper. Also Copper and all Ruins are in general strictly better than CurseCurse.jpg; but these are a special case since they cost $0 and are so rarely likely to be bought anyway.

It is possible, however, for a card to be strictly better than one of the same cost in a particular Kingdom: in games with no non-terminal Action cards, ConspiratorConspirator.jpg is strictly worse than many terminal silvers costing $3 and $4.


Deck archetypes Big MoneyComboEngineRushSlog
Strategic concepts CollisionCounterCyclingDeadDuchy dancingEndgameGreeningMegaturnMirrorOpeningOpportunity costPenultimate Province RulePayloadPinPiledrivingReshuffleSilver testStop cardSplit advantageStrictly betterSynergyTerminalityTerminal spaceThree-pile endingTurn advantageVictory pointVillage idiot
Rules Blue dog ruleCostDeckGameplayMaterialsNo Visiting ruleStop-Moving rule (previously Lose Track rule) • Supply (Kingdom) • Triggered effectsTurn
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