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=== Keep It Simple ===
 
=== Keep It Simple ===
Simplicity is a good thing. You don't want your cards to be any more complicated than they have to be. If you have an idea for a card, try to boil it down as simply as possible without losing the essence of the idea. Note, by the way, that by "simplicity," I'm talking about the concepts you use, not necessarily how complex and careful the card text has to be to convey those concepts. {{Card|Native Village}} for example, has a wall of text on it, but that's okay since the concept itself is a simple one. Once players learn what it does, they don't have to reread the card text every time just to make sure each use conforms to every nuance.
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Simplicity is a good thing. You don't want your cards to be any more complicated than they have to be. If you have an idea for a card, try to boil it down as simply as possible without losing the essence of the idea. Note, by the way, that by "simplicity," I'm talking about the concepts you use, not necessarily how complex and careful the the card text has to be to convey those concepts. {{Card|Native Village}} for example, has a wall of text on it, but that's okay since the concept itself is a simple one. Once players learn what it does, they don't have to reread the card text every time just to make sure each use conforms to every nuance.
  
 
=== Swing is a Miss ===
 
=== Swing is a Miss ===
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How exciting does it feel when it's in its element? It may not necessarily excite you, but can you imagine it exciting your audience? Can you identify ways it could safely be more fun? Also, how easily are you playing it out? If it's complicated or slow, how can you speed it up or simplify it without deviating from the brief?  
 
How exciting does it feel when it's in its element? It may not necessarily excite you, but can you imagine it exciting your audience? Can you identify ways it could safely be more fun? Also, how easily are you playing it out? If it's complicated or slow, how can you speed it up or simplify it without deviating from the brief?  
  
Next, check how exciting it is in a couple of random games: is it nice to analyse at the start of each one? Ignore the novelty of it being your own idea, that's not the excitement you're identifying. If it isn't an interesting process, that suggests your idea is either too open or too narrow in functionality, missing the sweet middle ground, or it's niche but too weak or dull when it's good. You can use DomBot (DomBot#0234), in the discord, to generate random kingdoms using the command '''!kingdom -r -n #''', replacing # with the number of cards to generate (so, 9 in a standard "let's test one card, would we buy it" situation).
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Next, check how exciting it is in a couple of random games: is it nice to analyse at the start of each one? Ignore the novelty of it being your own idea, that's not the excitement you're identifying. If it isn't an interesting process, that suggests your idea is either too open or too narrow in functionality, missing the sweet middle ground, or it's niche but too weak or dull when it's good.  
  
 
For expansions. once you have 10 or more individual card ideas for your expansion, put them all together in a game and get the feel of the interactions going on. This will be better if you tested them all individually first. Try to have a fresh mind for it, and play them as best you can; now sure, it's giving you an advantage over your friends, so by all means save this for when you're with them if you wish. But the point is, see if you're thinking along the lines of the playstyle themes of your expansion. You could easily come across some strong combos in the process; note these for the later speed test.
 
For expansions. once you have 10 or more individual card ideas for your expansion, put them all together in a game and get the feel of the interactions going on. This will be better if you tested them all individually first. Try to have a fresh mind for it, and play them as best you can; now sure, it's giving you an advantage over your friends, so by all means save this for when you're with them if you wish. But the point is, see if you're thinking along the lines of the playstyle themes of your expansion. You could easily come across some strong combos in the process; note these for the later speed test.
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How quickly can your idea make a deck that gets to a win condition? Too fast and it's imbalanced. Take the same combo cards you had for the feel test, take your method of counting turns, and flip the deck over to avoid shuffle randomness if you can. Think which game end method is best for your combo's strategy, and simulate an opponent if player interaction is needed. Run the game with the best possible card drawing, adding 1 to the count after every round of turns is finished.  
 
How quickly can your idea make a deck that gets to a win condition? Too fast and it's imbalanced. Take the same combo cards you had for the feel test, take your method of counting turns, and flip the deck over to avoid shuffle randomness if you can. Think which game end method is best for your combo's strategy, and simulate an opponent if player interaction is needed. Run the game with the best possible card drawing, adding 1 to the count after every round of turns is finished.  
  
If you're going for Provinces, the turn threshold that indicates balance will vary depending on how many different cards are in the combo, not including the base cards. If you have 2 kingdom cards, getting 4 Provinces after turn 12 is safe; if 3, 4 provinces after turn 10. You might justify quicker rates as balanced if the cards in the combo are very niche and weak overall (an example is {{card|Beggar}} with {{Project|Guildhall}}), since it will rarely come up and very few different cards could replicate it. If you can find a combo that gets them faster using 4 or more cards, that's fine; it shows the potential your idea has, and the chances of all those cards appearing in the same game is slim. If you start the game with a $5/$2 split of money on the first 2 turns, that has about 11% chance normally; you might justify a stronger combo because of this, or disqualify it if you want to avoid that narrow chance deciding games.  
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If you're going for Provinces, the turn threshold that indicates balance will vary depending on how many different cards are in the combo, not including the base cards. If you have 2 kingdom cards, getting 4 Provinces after turn 12 is safe; if 3, 4 provinces after turn 10. You might justify quicker rates as balanced if the cards in the combo are very niche and weak overall (an example is Beggar with Guildhall), since it will rarely come up and very few different cards could replicate it. If you can find a combo that gets them faster using 4 or more cards, that's fine; it shows the potential your idea has, and the chances of all those cards appearing in the same game is slim. If you start the game with a $5/$2 split of money on the first 2 turns, that has about 11% chance normally; you might justify a stronger combo because of this, or disqualify it if you want to avoid that narrow chance deciding games.  
  
 
If, though, your idea aims to get VP in its own way to win, make a kingdom that helps make it strong enough, and run it against a deck gaining just Provinces. Can it win? In how many different kingdoms could it win? You need it to win only some of the time, and you're aiming to figure out how often and get to a satisfactory rate.  
 
If, though, your idea aims to get VP in its own way to win, make a kingdom that helps make it strong enough, and run it against a deck gaining just Provinces. Can it win? In how many different kingdoms could it win? You need it to win only some of the time, and you're aiming to figure out how often and get to a satisfactory rate.  
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==== Draw ====
 
==== Draw ====
Having more cards in hand lets you do more, while letting you cycle through the deck; the latter means the card itself can be played more often (unless you trigger a re-shuffle). These reasons make drawing one of the more powerful mechanics; +cards are better than any of the other +vanilla bonuses. Making a draw card non-terminal lets drawn Actions be playable, so it's a lot more powerful (compare {{card|Smithy}} and {{card|Laboratory}}). Similarly, the presence of a {{card|Village}} in the kingdom makes a terminal draw card much more relevant.
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Having more cards in hand lets you do more, while letting you cycle through the deck; the latter means the card itself can be played more often (unless you trigger a re-shuffle). These reasons make drawing one of the more powerful mechanics; +cards are better than any of the other +vanilla bonuses. Making a draw card non-terminal lets drawn Actions be playable, so it's a lot more powerful (compare {{card|Smithy}} and {{card|Lab}}). Similarly, the presence of a {{card|Village}} in the kingdom makes a terminal draw card much more relevant.
  
 
==== Draw-to-X ====
 
==== Draw-to-X ====
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Remember that even these card templates constitute proprietary artwork and are protected by copyright. Before using these images for any purpose, you may wish to research what constitutes fair use. Similarly, fair use issues may arise out of any additional artwork you add to these card templates.
 
Remember that even these card templates constitute proprietary artwork and are protected by copyright. Before using these images for any purpose, you may wish to research what constitutes fair use. Similarly, fair use issues may arise out of any additional artwork you add to these card templates.
  
==== Card Stock ====
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==== Blank Cards ====
Need more cards to use put into sleeve protectors with your newly printed cards? You can buy individual sets of blank cards (10 + 1 blue-back randomizer). Searching Google Shopping will probably turn up a few different places to buy them. Buying at [https://boardgamegeekstore.com/products/dominion-blank-cards the board game geek store] is about ~$0.27/card. Getting a base set of 250 cards for ~$15 is ~$0.06/card.
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Need more blank cards? You can buy individual sets of blank cards. Searching Google Shopping will probably turn up a few different places to buy them. I buy mine at [https://boardgamegeekstore.com/products/dominion-blank-cards the board game geek store].
  
 
=== Printing ===
 
=== Printing ===
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If you don't sleeve your cards, the alternatives aren't quite as clean. You can try using any of several online card printing services that will let you customize the fronts and backs of a set of playing cards. However, this poses two problems:  
 
If you don't sleeve your cards, the alternatives aren't quite as clean. You can try using any of several online card printing services that will let you customize the fronts and backs of a set of playing cards. However, this poses two problems:  
 
#the thickness (320gsm), texture (flat + UV finish), and possibly color tinting of cards made this way is unlikely to match the look and feel of the official Dominion cards, so they may not feel quite right when shuffling;  
 
#the thickness (320gsm), texture (flat + UV finish), and possibly color tinting of cards made this way is unlikely to match the look and feel of the official Dominion cards, so they may not feel quite right when shuffling;  
#Dominion uses a SKAT standard card size, 59mm by 91mm. This is not available from most print-on-demand services like TheGameCrafter.com or DriveThruCards; it is, however, available from [https://www.meinspiel.de/skat-mit-fotos-gestalten-drucken Meinspiel]
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#Dominion uses a SKAT standard card size, 59mm by 91mm. This is not available from most print-on-demand services like TheGameCrafter.com or DriveThruCards; it is, however, available from [https://www.meinspiel.de/skat-mit-fotos-gestalten-drucken Mienspiel]
  
 
I've had satisfactory results printing the cards out on Avery Clear Full-Sheet Labels, which are quite thin. You can buy them directly at avery.com, through a reseller like amazon, or in any number of office supply stores like Staples. Make sure you get the right product for your printer: if you have an Inkjet printer, only use the labels made for Inkjet printers; if you have a Laser printer, only use the labels made for Laser printers. Your local Kinkos/Fedex/Staples printer probably uses Laser printers for their 8.5x11/A4 paper and inkjet for their banners; they can probably also help you with finding suitable sticker paper
 
I've had satisfactory results printing the cards out on Avery Clear Full-Sheet Labels, which are quite thin. You can buy them directly at avery.com, through a reseller like amazon, or in any number of office supply stores like Staples. Make sure you get the right product for your printer: if you have an Inkjet printer, only use the labels made for Inkjet printers; if you have a Laser printer, only use the labels made for Laser printers. Your local Kinkos/Fedex/Staples printer probably uses Laser printers for their 8.5x11/A4 paper and inkjet for their banners; they can probably also help you with finding suitable sticker paper

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