Splinterlands Social Media Challenge!

avatar
(Edited)

image.png

Newbie Guide - Card Levels

What you need to know

Hello dear reader. I see you started playing Splinterlands. Nice game, eh? OH, you even bought the spell-book. That is good, that means you can own cards and bring your game to the next level. Since you already know how to play the game, let us talk about improving it by learning about how to level up your cards.

What you will learn today

We will be looking at card levels. What are they good for, how to get them and what the heck does BCX mean? What is the difference between gold foil and regular foil? And why does it matter? Finally we will have a look at the summoner's role and league caps.

image.png

Level 1 - just a card

Nicely, because you tend to be scanning this, there's some thing you may absolutely no understand. Spot the small 1 alongside it's title. Which makes it an amount 1 greeting card. Essentially that's exactly how this arrives from the packages.

At some time on your fights you may have experienced the greeting card searching such as this.

Oh yea absolutely no, for whatever reason, your own adversary's greeting card is able to recover by itself as soon as for each circular.

Just how can which end up being?

Spot the small two alongside the actual title? Which makes it an amount two card.

Level 2 - better card

Every card in the game can be leveled. This is done by combining several versions of the same card type into a new card. In case of the Xenith Monk, someone had five different level 1 cards in their inventory and put them together.

The five level 1 cards are then gone and the one combined card is now in the inventory.

For almost every card a new level brings either better statistics (attack, speed, health) or a new ability (in this case: healing). By the way, the mana costs to bring a card into battle never change.

The kind of improvements are different for every card and level. While some monsters gain better speed with one level, other monsters gain attack or health. The same goes for the abilities.

How many levels are there?

That depends on the scarcity of the card:

  • Common: 10 levels
  • Rare: 8 levels
  • Epic: 6 levels
  • Legendary: 4 levels

Now, just because legendary only has 4 levels, it does not mean it is worse than the others. In fact, while sometimes a new level for a common card improves nothing at all, a legendary card most often not only gains better stats (sometimes more than one) but also one or two new abilities.

And remember: Because legendary cards are printed less often than the other scarcities it is still more expensive to level them up.

BCX - another weird abbreviation?

BCX stands for base card experience. It is the number of cards that are put together to form this new card.

So for the Xenith Monk level 1 you need one single card. No combination required. That means its BCX is 1.

For the level 2 version of that card we had to put 5 cards together. That means it has a BCX of 5.

But why then not simply state the level and be done with it? Because the amount of cards required to get to the next level varies. Depending on the edition, scarcity and previous levels there are different amounts of basic cards or BCX required to put together to create the new level version of that card.

To determine the value of a card it is compared to the total amount of simple level 1 versions needed to get to that card level.

And to make things more interesting: What happens if we combine only three cards of the Xenith Monk into a new card? We still have a level 1 version of that card but its BCX is now 3. That means we can combine it with either two more BCX 1 versions or one BCX 2 version of the Monk to finally get to level 2.

As a rule of thumb: The older the edition, the less BCX required for a level (compared to newer editions). Because earlier editions had less cards printed so less are available. The higher the scarcity of a card, the less BCX are required for a new level. Again because less cards are printed.

Gold vs. regular foil

For every card there not only exists a regular version but also a fancy gold foil version. For game-play it does not matter which version you send into battle. Only the type of card and its level are important.

Why then should you be happy to have a gold foil version (if you have one)?

If you win the battle, you get higher reward scores for using a gold foil version of a card. And for leveling: Gold foil cards come directly as a level 2 version (there is no level 1 version of gold foil cards), except for common cards, they come directly as a level 3.

For leveling up cards that are gold foil you are also lucky, since you need less cards for the next level compared to regular foil. This is thanks to the less printed argument again.

Summoner's cap

The summoners are different to the monsters in that they don't change their stats or abilities when leveling up. Well, sort of, we'll get to that in a minute. Besides that, everything that goes for levels and BCX also applies to summoners.

So why level them up?

Because the summoner you use for your battle determines the maximum level of your monsters in the arena.

Once you got your Xenith Monk up to level 2 it will do you no good if your summoner is still at level 1. You can still play the card but it will be sent into battle as a level 1 card.

Hey you. The wiseguy in the back row. Stop yelling legendary. We'll get to that in a second.

And now it gets tricky. Summoners, just like monsters, have different scarcities. From common to legendary they have different abilities to send monsters with different levels into battle.

We take a look at the rare summoners from Chaos Legion:

image.png

On the left we have the level (LVL) of our rare summoner. As you can see, at level 1, our summoner can only send level 1 monsters into battle. But at level 2 such a summoner can send level 3 common, level 2 rare and epic, and level 1 legendary monsters into battle. And as a side note, you have to combine 5 such summoner cards to get your summoner to level 2.

So if you want to send a legendary monster with level 2 into battle, you need at least a level 3 (rare) summoner and for that you need to combine 14 cards to get it to that level.



0
0
0.000
1 comments