DMArmada

I've been doing a lot of brainstorming on video ideas, and I have some fun stuff in the works. Nevertheless, I wanted to hear from all of you!

What is your favorite type of content to consume?

1 month ago | [YT] | 21



@ValariaxSword

I would recommend combing a deck tech video with at least one game. That way people can see how the basic strategy is supposed to work.

1 month ago | 16  

@kyoma8556

I'd like to see more Silver Age / Project Blue decks as it's the upcoming format and there's lack of content on it I feel. Also a tierlist could be cool to do based on your impressions so far on the format.

1 month ago | 4  

@SergeantMolt

I just prefer discussions on the state of the game that arent pure dooming I'm not gonna lie 😂. Or just general reviews of stuff thats going on in the communit

1 month ago | 3  

@MetchkaDeawood-cs2xk

I really enjoy also the off the cuff videos on what ever is on your mind and the hot takes. Funny af. Cheers!

1 month ago | 1  

I prefer listening to any kind of chatting about the game; I know I'm unusual in not liking deck techs or gameplay

1 month ago | 3  

@benwhite8863

Option 4) Baseless predictions

1 month ago | 1  

@Vu1canite

I’ve been playing FaB for about a two years now though very casually. I love any content where I can learn something. So I enjoy deck techs and meta breakdowns, but I came here for starting guides. If I can give a suggestion for a new video idea it would be some advice or a guide on when you start your journey into official play. This past weekend I played my first official event (ProQuest). I had to go read a whole pdf document, that wasn’t easy to find, on what the rules are and how it works. Would be nice to have a video guide. Things I didn’t know before this weekend that would have helped a lot in a guide; the process of uploading your deck, how the pregame phase works (revealing hero and Sideboarding), the process writing down life totals and why it’s so much better than using a phone app, using gem app to see pairings and enter results, the turn structure and when you should give your opponent time to react (I for example did not know that reactions are basically at instant speed, so you can react to them before or after they resolve with another reaction or instant). There are probably a lot more things that I forgot to mention, and even though I did very badly mostly because I was nervous and made a lot of mistakes, I learned a lot. Most people are very friendly and helpful if you say that it’s your first official event, but they wil not go easy on you with the official rules (the amount of times I forgot Tunic…). Wish I had a guide, than I probably would have tried official play earlier and I could have practiced these procedures or rules in my casual play beforehand to reduce the stress of playing officially.

1 month ago | 0

@Nightflux_Hobbies

Other: All the above

1 month ago | 0

@CarlosRoigBCN

Tbh, deck techs are nice, I get it, but they are great when you have someone that knows how to pilot it and explain it with examples and some gameplay. Gameplay alone feels a little bit repetitive and every one makes "meta reviews". I would suggest continuing with other stuff as you (or Snoopdoop, or Commando) do. Product reviews, class reviews, discussions about how to improve the game, predicting new sets... There are plenty of stuff to talk about FaB always 😄

1 month ago | 2  

@NamelessPirateNinja

Short form videos showing pathways for each hero would be cool. Just general info, not full deck tech. IE Ira has Kodachi builds and Edge builds. Her preferred MUs are Gravy... And her weaker MUs are whatever So it's not quite meta discussion, just a core concept discussion for newer players trying to figure the basics of ninja beats board state, board state beats guardian, guardian smashes everyone given a chance to not block.... 😂

1 month ago | 0