Just over a year ago, Altered TCG
took kickstarter by storm. It raised millions and millions of
dollars, setting a TCG record at the time. And why not? It looked
brilliant, offered a unique and interesting racing mechanism, and
seemed to be taking an informed shot at evolving collectibility and
trading. More than a year later, however, the game's popularity is
fading. In what appears an attempt at rescuing Altered,
Equinox has announced it will be moving away from standard
distribution to Gamefound, a place some TCGs have gone to eek out
another year or two of existence. For fans of the game, including
myself, it's not a good sign. They then issued a statement to
players, indirectly threatening them that if a certain pledge goal
was not hit, the game would fail. Not a good look. In this post I
want to take a semi-informed look at why Altered started
strong but has not risen to meet the hype.
The following will be covered:
Themeless-ness-ness-ness
It wasn't recognizable at first, but
with several games under our belts it became clear Altered has
a theme issue. It isn't controversial, or overdone, or annoyingly
cutesy, or silly animals, or anime teens—I mean, women—with giant
boobs. The issue is that theme is spread thin, at best. Where games
like Dixit can thrive in an infinite dreamscape, a TCG cannot.
It needs a confined concept which synergizes the game's win
condition, phases, and mechanisms, and can then be complemented by
art, keywords, symbolism, and card effects. For example, Ashes:
Rise of the Phoenixborn, which
presents itself as a duel of wizards, features two players who cast
spells and summon creatures in magical combat. Makes sense. There
are futuristic hackers versus shady corporations in Android:
Netrunner, which means
installing programs and anti-virus software, making cyberruns,
taking meat damage, and cleverly using PR to sneak an agenda. Makes
sense. Altered's
theme of... generic fantasy
dreamland where players cast spells to influence a race won by
counting terrain symbols carried by allies with names like Haven
Warrior, because when you're racing you need a warri—wait, what?