![]() I would like to see some discussion about decks of the soon finished OCTGN tournament because it is the biggest Netrunner tournament this far. Also some where I want spend influence in some decks are good thinking. CURRENT OCTGN IMAGE PACKS NETRUNNER HOW TOYou could do some strategy thinking also, like how to score agendas in early game, how to be aggressive runner during early game and how the corp should play after runner has all icebreakers up. I also like how you do the card reviews by pack and think cards again after playing them. I enjoyed the tournament interviews you had in one episode and would like to see more of those. Playing too many CCG tournaments have ruined me.īut back to feedback. This may be my fault also because I too easily just play the strong decks and don’t like to experiment so much. Like in here I don’t see those Jinteki decks at all. This also shows that people play very different decks. Like I said I really like the podcasts and you do an amazing job. Sorry, I didn’t mean my post in too critical. And yes, I’ll google more card rulings in the future. That’s 7/10ths of 1%.! □ We still don’t have enough reviews on iTunes to have a star rating! The only comment that’s registered there says “I haven’t listened to your podcast yet, but I like the idea of one”.ĪHein for the win. We had a record 3200+ downloads for our last episode (08), but only 25 comments. It’s why we have Matt on our review “staff”. I’m ok with occasionally being wrong and discussing that later too. I’m ok with being told I’m crazy about my thoughts on a card. CURRENT OCTGN IMAGE PACKS NETRUNNER PROFESSIONALAnd it’s no more professional or official than a posting on the internet in one of the bazillion forums that exist. If it was an official FFG podcast I would expect better – but it’s not. It’s ok to be wrong occasionally in a podcast. Because they discussed it and realized they should be relevant with each other – who knows? The official word on MA and Weyland may actually be different when the next FAQ comes out. Just BGG threads, buried, in a fan forum. But for now there’s no official FAQ for a lot of questions people have on cards. We’ll recind those in the next episode – but they made perfect sense to us. Glen and I talked errantly about False Lead and Matrix Analyzer which were covered on BGG. The whole world doesn’t go to BGG for answers – scouring posts looking for card rulings. Everybody was talking about Jinteki shell and Noise spam decks, but nobody wanted to play them – they wanted to play something different – and good on them. And if I missed one, well, it never made the finals. There were no NOISE/PERSONAL WORKSHOP decks there. I was just at a Regional in Syracuse yesterday where I made the top 8 (out of 22) playing against good players who didn’t give a damn about what the trends were. 95% of the games we play are with our friends in the area (not just Gen and I) and the numbers are growing slowly. Thank god we’re not parroting the same facts you can read everywhere.Īnd of course we play to our local meta. ![]() You mention a good point – our ratings on cards are sometimes different from (majority?) public opinion – that’s our contribution to the conversation. Just like no one should listen to Agenda7 and do exactly as we say. ![]() ![]() Glen and I speak our minds and don’t let BGG and OCTGN decide what we think. These are interesting points, and ones that I want to discuss head-on. Thanks for the feedback aHein – I appreciate it! And I sincerely want you to know that the following has all been typed politely, and is not a rant or angry in ANY way. You can also make things easier on yourself (and your hosting provider) by distributing the podcast as a Mono file instead of Stereo - Mono is pretty standard for podcasts, especially ones that don’t feature a “room presence”. (Equalization is good, but not as important - you can skip to the 7-minute mark to just see the compression part of the tutorial). Here’s a tutorial that will show you how to do this in Audacity: You can fix this by normalizing and compressing your audio. Even just while you’re talking, your volume can be really spiky, which can make it difficult to listen comfortably. While listening to this episode last night in my apartment, I found I had to turn the volume up to hear your voices clearly - but when the music came on, it was much louder and I was scrambling for the volume control so as not to disturb the neighbors. However, I do think you could improve the audio by using normalization/compression. I’m a big fan of your podcast - I love Netrunner, and your analysis of individual cards and use cases is really interesting. ![]()
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