The difference between Amazon and this thing is that people assume the reviews are from individuals who bought and used the product. However, those who post hype comments have never used those cards, so why would anyone believe them?
Also, why would anyone trust the opinions of bad or average players about cards? We all know that the majority of people online, myself included, are bad or average players. If I were to trust players’ opinions, it would be from well-known high legend players or deck builders, such as those who stream on Twitch.
But I don’t think people would make purchasing decisions based on random comments online. Are there really people who decide whether to buy new expansion packs because of random comments? They can just read the Vicious Syndicate pre-expansion article to decide if the cards are good or not, or maybe listen to streamers’ opinions. If you told me that Blizzard tells streamers to hype their cards, that would make more sense than relying on random online comments.
Also, why not just print extremely broken cards and let people naturally hype them, instead of printing bad cards and hiring bots to hype those bad cards?
Looks like it could even be an undercover Blizz bot trying to hype up their new cards.
So, you think there are people out there who decide whether to buy new expansion packs based on random comments online? Lol. Also, what’s the point of “hyping up their new cards” instead of just printing extremely broken cards? What’s the point of that extra step?
The difference between Amazon and this thing is that people assume the reviews are from individuals who bought and used the product. However, those who post hype comments have never used those cards, so why would anyone believe them?
Also, why would anyone trust the opinions of bad or average players about cards? We all know that the majority of people online, myself included, are bad or average players. If I were to trust players’ opinions, it would be from well-known high legend players or deck builders, such as those who stream on Twitch.
But I don’t think people would make purchasing decisions based on random comments online. Are there really people who decide whether to buy new expansion packs because of random comments? They can just read the Vicious Syndicate pre-expansion article to decide if the cards are good or not, or maybe listen to streamers’ opinions. If you told me that Blizzard tells streamers to hype their cards, that would make more sense than relying on random online comments.
Also, why not just print extremely broken cards and let people naturally hype them, instead of printing bad cards and hiring bots to hype those bad cards?
So, you think there are people out there who decide whether to buy new expansion packs based on random comments online? Lol. Also, what’s the point of “hyping up their new cards” instead of just printing extremely broken cards? What’s the point of that extra step?