The Mind is so profoundly uninteresting to me. I had an enjoyable experience when I tried it, but it's a parlor trick. I don't understand how it would bring anyone back to try again. And it's simple, not in a "how did I think of that" way, but in a "thousands of other people must have thought of this but realized there was no point in publishing it" way. I just don't get it.
Of course I'm happy that people are finding fun there, but I really hope it does not win SdJ. The emperor has no clothes.
It's basically a type of party game, even in the way you describe it. Many are super fun but are barely games (EDIT: ... and I mean nothing negative by that. Many times I would rather engage in a social activity than a proper board game).
I would be pretty surprised to see it win the SdJ. It's a bit too close to Hanabi.
My copy of 878 Vikings arrived. I'm impressed with their insert system. Each faction has their own separate box with a transparent lid that keeps all the components inside. They fit the cards, miniatures, and dice. There should be enough room in there to sleeve the cards, too, at least if I use thin ones.
Xbox Live, PSN & Origin: Vacorsis 3DS: 2638-0037-166
My copy of 878 Vikings arrived. I'm impressed with their insert system. Each faction has their own separate box with a transparent lid that keeps all the components inside. They fit the cards, miniatures, and dice. There should be enough room in there to sleeve the cards, too, at least if I use thin ones.
I got mine before leaving for a trip, it's still wrapped up. Now I'm more excited to open it up!
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WearingglassesOf the friendly neighborhood varietyRegistered Userregular
My copy of 878 Vikings arrived. I'm impressed with their insert system. Each faction has their own separate box with a transparent lid that keeps all the components inside. They fit the cards, miniatures, and dice. There should be enough room in there to sleeve the cards, too, at least if I use thin ones.
Thank the gods the publishers are finally accounting for sleeves in their inserts.
Anyone know if the expansions for Blood Rage add anything to the game? Besides the obvious 5th player?
I briefly glanced over the gods one. It seemed like it just added more fiddliness rather than adding something significant or needed to the base game.
In other news, a playthrough of the Bloodborne: Hunter's Nightmare expansion confirmed my first impression. The new stuff makes for a MUCH better experience. I enjoyed the base game, but it felt like it didn't quite capture the press your luck feel they were going for. All the new expansion cards positively nail this. In fact almost every single new card has an element of that. I didn't like the Final Bosses in the base game but the new ones all seem great; I don't think I would even use the base Final Bosses again.
I'd call it a mandatory expansion if you were into the original.
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Powerpuppiesdrinking coffee in themountain cabinRegistered Userregular
Anyone know if the expansions for Blood Rage add anything to the game? Besides the obvious 5th player?
I briefly glanced over the gods one. It seemed like it just added more fiddliness rather than adding something significant or needed to the base game.
In other news, a playthrough of the Bloodborne: Hunter's Nightmare expansion confirmed my first impression. The new stuff makes for a MUCH better experience. I enjoyed the base game, but it felt like it didn't quite capture the press your luck feel they were going for. All the new expansion cards positively nail this. In fact almost every single new card has an element of that. I didn't like the Final Bosses in the base game but the new ones all seem great; I don't think I would even use the base Final Bosses again.
I'd call it a mandatory expansion if you were into the original.
Gods is interesting but doesn't have enough staying power to make it worth buying. 5th player is good but situational. Mystics is fine, I'd always play with it if I had it, but it doesn't add that much. The kickstarter extras were actually excellent :sad:
I guess, like ...
- I find it way too dry for how straightforward it is.
- It generally feels like fucking people over is frequently ideal, but that doesn't feel fun to do.
- You spend the least time looking at your own board.
- You're all making exactly the same thing.
You know, thinking about it, there's a lot of overlap with Sagrada, which I also don't enjoy. They both make a pool of resources you take turns drafting from, and are mostly looking at what you can do now that lets you still play later while minimizing the same options to everyone else playing. Hmmm ...
I guess I just recommended Sagrada to everyone that likes Azul?
Honestly, try the opposite side of the board. Everyone has to make their own pattern, restricted by the same rules as before (1 type of tile per column / row).
Diagnosed with AML on 6/1/12. Read about it: www.effleukemia.com
I found Azul way more enjoyable and tactically richer than Sagrada. Sagrada was basically hope the stuff you need comes up and if not take stuff other people need. Manipulating the center pile and the available tiles in Azul is more fun and more interesting.
Also speaking of dice drafting, my traded for copies of Roll Player and the expansion came today. I'm pretty excited for this one. Plus I ditched Sidereal Confluence for a game I might ever have a hope in hell of getting to the table, which is nice
I found Azul way more enjoyable and tactically richer than Sagrada. Sagrada was basically hope the stuff you need comes up and if not take stuff other people need. Manipulating the center pile and the available tiles in Azul is more fun and more interesting.
That makes sense. There's definitely an absence of manipulation.
No one in my game group liked it aside from me, so for me yes. It also shines at high player counts while having very niche appeal, so I think also generally yes. I bought it knowing I would likely get rid of it, but if it had hit with my group I would have loved to have kept it around.
The Mind sounds a lot like a theater warmup we used to do, where we all close our eyes, and as a group count up as high as we can, if people say the same number, you start over. Sometimes you can get really high up, it's more an exercise in reading the mood and knowing how to take turns.
The Mind also sounds like the exact kind of game that SUSD loves that I think sounds incredibly stupid, like Witness. (THE witness?)
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jergarmarhollow man crewgoes pew pew pewRegistered Userregular
Aaaalllrighty, BGG Spring is upon us. I already have arranged to pick up Legends of Andor, The Grizzled, and Time Stories (+ Marcy) at the convention. Bringing the boy (he's six) and see how long he lasts. I'm also hoping to get a lot of my OWN games played, and really see which ones are worth keeping. The SdJ games will also be there, which I'm looking forward to. Still need to figure out what newer games to take a look at. Much excite!
Aw yeah, my copy of Bargain Quest has arrived. I'm glad I ordered it after watching that SUSD review. The game sold out practically in a day after the video was posted.
The game's box is pretty small and tight, so I'm going to have to set aside my sleeving obsession for this one. There's no spare room inside. That hurts me.
Dashui on
Xbox Live, PSN & Origin: Vacorsis 3DS: 2638-0037-166
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38thDoelets never be stupid againwait lets always be stupid foreverRegistered Userregular
My reccettear addiction tells me I need to buy bargain quest. Let me know how you like it.
ChaosHatHop, hop, hop, HA!Trick of the lightRegistered Userregular
Toys R Us is of course going out of business, so day one I ran in there, gathered all the dropmix little mini booster packs I didn't already have but they were only 10% off and while I want more cards, I really already had all the bangers I wanted, so this would just be bonus. So of course I went and hid them in the store. I hid them in the signage at the top of each shelves. They kind of hang down and on the inside there's this little lip that just perfectly fits the dropmix booster. I did it as surreptitiously as possible but it was semi busy so somebody might have seen me slide them in there. I bided my time for as long as I could, because again, I don't really NEED them so I might as well let the price drop. There's no real point in checking on them until I was ready to make the purchase since that just increases the odds of being found out.
My craftiness paid off today. I went in there and all six packs were still there although slightly dusty from their secret hiding place. I also saw they had a million bajillion copies of Magic: Arena of the Planeswalkers and I heard that was kind of fun so I was like fuck it, let's do that too. So my total price was $19 and some change. Feel pretty good about that.
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ArcticLancerBest served chilled.Registered Userregular
Game two of Labyrinth has concluded. I'm sorry to tell you all the US has suffered numerous WMD attacks and some of you are probably dead.
Highlights include the US very boldly regime changing Afghanistan and Central Asia at the same time (though unfortunately just after I claimed two WMDs from the region), and then Afghanistan being turned back to Islamic Rule while still occupied by the US. Additionally, while Pakistan seemed likely to become an early ally, the region stalled out for most of the game before quite spontaneously also flipping to Islamist rule. Ooops, right, they have a nuclear arsenal ...
These games are the best. It's somewhat frustrating, somewhat funny having me play the jihadists because man oh man am I good at rolling 5s on those dice. I just make the US so many friends and then relentlessly fail to hurt them. :P Just gotta roll with those punches~
Bargain Quest update: the box will fit sleeved cards if you remove the insert. The insert wasn't large, but removing it let me place the store mats a different way and open up a bunch of space. However, this only really works if you use thin sleeves. Maydays fit perfectly.
Xbox Live, PSN & Origin: Vacorsis 3DS: 2638-0037-166
The Mind also sounds like the exact kind of game that SUSD loves that I think sounds incredibly stupid, like Witness. (THE witness?)
I think SU&SD stayed too long undercover, and now they base their reviews entirely on "which game's concept would would let us write an esoteric rambling prose video about?" and then work their way backwards to an opinion from there.
Toys R Us is of course going out of business, so day one I ran in there, gathered all the dropmix little mini booster packs I didn't already have but they were only 10% off and while I want more cards, I really already had all the bangers I wanted, so this would just be bonus. So of course I went and hid them in the store. I hid them in the signage at the top of each shelves. They kind of hang down and on the inside there's this little lip that just perfectly fits the dropmix booster. I did it as surreptitiously as possible but it was semi busy so somebody might have seen me slide them in there. I bided my time for as long as I could, because again, I don't really NEED them so I might as well let the price drop. There's no real point in checking on them until I was ready to make the purchase since that just increases the odds of being found out.
My craftiness paid off today. I went in there and all six packs were still there although slightly dusty from their secret hiding place. I also saw they had a million bajillion copies of Magic: Arena of the Planeswalkers and I heard that was kind of fun so I was like fuck it, let's do that too. So my total price was $19 and some change. Feel pretty good about that.
This is stealing. You're saying it like a good thing, but it's a bad thing.
Completely unrelated aside, but hell was working at Toys R Us for a summer job during the height of Pokemon card craze in '99. Huge ass mob (not a line) pressing against the glass door an hour before opening. Kids trying to return opened packs because they didn't have the card they wanted. And my personal favorite, grown adults getting into a shouting match with you when you told them there was a 2 pack limit per customer.
I did ring up Tim Allen twice during that summer though. Dude always looked completely miserable. Each time was for the most absurdly expensive item in the store, like a $400 (in 1999 dollars) doll.
Toys R Us is of course going out of business, so day one I ran in there, gathered all the dropmix little mini booster packs I didn't already have but they were only 10% off and while I want more cards, I really already had all the bangers I wanted, so this would just be bonus. So of course I went and hid them in the store. I hid them in the signage at the top of each shelves. They kind of hang down and on the inside there's this little lip that just perfectly fits the dropmix booster. I did it as surreptitiously as possible but it was semi busy so somebody might have seen me slide them in there. I bided my time for as long as I could, because again, I don't really NEED them so I might as well let the price drop. There's no real point in checking on them until I was ready to make the purchase since that just increases the odds of being found out.
My craftiness paid off today. I went in there and all six packs were still there although slightly dusty from their secret hiding place. I also saw they had a million bajillion copies of Magic: Arena of the Planeswalkers and I heard that was kind of fun so I was like fuck it, let's do that too. So my total price was $19 and some change. Feel pretty good about that.
This is stealing. You're saying it like a good thing, but it's a bad thing.
If you're stealing from the banks, is it morally wrong?
Toys R Us is of course going out of business, so day one I ran in there, gathered all the dropmix little mini booster packs I didn't already have but they were only 10% off and while I want more cards, I really already had all the bangers I wanted, so this would just be bonus. So of course I went and hid them in the store. I hid them in the signage at the top of each shelves. They kind of hang down and on the inside there's this little lip that just perfectly fits the dropmix booster. I did it as surreptitiously as possible but it was semi busy so somebody might have seen me slide them in there. I bided my time for as long as I could, because again, I don't really NEED them so I might as well let the price drop. There's no real point in checking on them until I was ready to make the purchase since that just increases the odds of being found out.
My craftiness paid off today. I went in there and all six packs were still there although slightly dusty from their secret hiding place. I also saw they had a million bajillion copies of Magic: Arena of the Planeswalkers and I heard that was kind of fun so I was like fuck it, let's do that too. So my total price was $19 and some change. Feel pretty good about that.
This is stealing. You're saying it like a good thing, but it's a bad thing.
If you're stealing from the banks, is it morally wrong?
What? It’s ok to do bad things to bad people, assuming for the sake of argument that banks are bad? Interesting.
Any, you’re also taking the opportunity away from people who would have been to prepared to pay the non “hidden for weeks” price.
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WearingglassesOf the friendly neighborhood varietyRegistered Userregular
I think discrider was being sarcastic, or was "taking the piss".
Although, I'm not 100% clear on it being stealing. Is it because it would have theoretically been sold for a higher price, and so the store would have had more earnings?
It's not even stealing from banks, depending on the supplier stock at Toys R Us 30 or 60 day invoices - the suppliers are unsecured creditors so the less money that the stock sells for the less money they will get.
I had assumed that the liquidation would just be used to pay the Toys'R'Us debt that was originally used to buy out the place and then gut it.
If that's the case, I'm okay with not paying the liquidators fair prices.
Toys R Us is of course going out of business, so day one I ran in there, gathered all the dropmix little mini booster packs I didn't already have but they were only 10% off and while I want more cards, I really already had all the bangers I wanted, so this would just be bonus. So of course I went and hid them in the store. I hid them in the signage at the top of each shelves. They kind of hang down and on the inside there's this little lip that just perfectly fits the dropmix booster. I did it as surreptitiously as possible but it was semi busy so somebody might have seen me slide them in there. I bided my time for as long as I could, because again, I don't really NEED them so I might as well let the price drop. There's no real point in checking on them until I was ready to make the purchase since that just increases the odds of being found out.
My craftiness paid off today. I went in there and all six packs were still there although slightly dusty from their secret hiding place. I also saw they had a million bajillion copies of Magic: Arena of the Planeswalkers and I heard that was kind of fun so I was like fuck it, let's do that too. So my total price was $19 and some change. Feel pretty good about that.
This is stealing. You're saying it like a good thing, but it's a bad thing.
If you're stealing from the banks, is it morally wrong?
What? It’s ok to do bad things to bad people, assuming for the sake of argument that banks are bad? Interesting.
That's an over-broad generalisation.
But yes, it's ok to take money from people who have too much money, assuming for the sake of argument that you do not have too much money.
Any, you’re also taking the opportunity away from people who would have been to prepared to pay the non “hidden for weeks” price.
And this opportunity cost is irrelevant; clearly some selection of people end up with the goods, and I don't believe any one person has any moral reason to receive the goods, so I don't think the number or arrangement of people who will receive the goods matters.
That is, I see no moral difference between one person hoarding them, or having them distributed more evenly, so long as the goods are used.
I feel less sorry for the store than I do for any other poor guy coming in looking for dropmix stuff and walking away disappointed because it was there but someone had actively hidden it.
I feel less sorry for the store than I do for any other poor guy coming in looking for dropmix stuff and walking away disappointed because it was there but someone had actively hidden it.
Do they..
Do the booster cards for Dropmix have rarities?
Because limiting the addiction to a single person might also be a good thing.
I feel less sorry for the store than I do for any other poor guy coming in looking for dropmix stuff and walking away disappointed because it was there but someone had actively hidden it.
Do they..
Do the booster cards for Dropmix have rarities?
Because limiting the addiction to a single person might also be a good thing.
Ah, well then.
The hypothetical person would be just as disappointed if they were all sold out.
No matter who buys the pack, everyone else misses out.
So hiding the pack doesn't really change anything there, so long as the recipient still uses the cards.
Stealing may not be the exact correct term but it was a shitty, mean spirited thing to do that should not be celebrated.
I'm sorry, who was I mean to?
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ArcticLancerBest served chilled.Registered Userregular
I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess from how far you're reaching with the "Maybe it's good if only one person gets addicted to booster packs?" remark, that you really aren't sure you're in the right here.
Ah, well then.
The hypothetical person would be just as disappointed if they were all sold out.
No matter who buys the pack, everyone else misses out.
So hiding the pack doesn't really change anything there, so long as the recipient still uses the cards.
Even if the person them-self does not know why they cannot have the thing they want, that doesn't remove any moral consequence from the original action. Disappointing someone who was willing to spend $10 on something because you were only willing to spend $5, so you literally took and hid the something before they could buy it is not good. There is a social contract as to why you might miss out on something - you waited too long or weren't willing to spend enough or the thing is never available in your region, but someone intentionally displacing inventory to return to at their leisure is not one of them.
You are arguing this from so far out in left field I cannot fathom you believe any of it, or would be okay with the exact situation in question happening to you yourself. :S
Stealing may not be the exact correct term but it was a shitty, mean spirited thing to do that should not be celebrated.
I'm sorry, who was I mean to?
Mean-spirited does not mean you have to specifically target anyone. It's mean-spirited because you took away the potential for other people to benefit from the sale so that you could benefit from it more at a later date. This is unambiguously wrong morally, regardless of whether or not anyone else would have actually bought the thing in the meantime.
From the way you told your story, you make it sound like all the other product was sold by the time you returned for it. If that's true, you're presenting some pretty damning evidence as to exactly why it's mean-spirited.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess from how far you're reaching with the "Maybe it's good if only one person gets addicted to booster packs?" remark, that you really aren't sure you're in the right here.
Ah, well then.
The hypothetical person would be just as disappointed if they were all sold out.
No matter who buys the pack, everyone else misses out.
So hiding the pack doesn't really change anything there, so long as the recipient still uses the cards.
Even if the person them-self does not know why they cannot have the thing they want, that doesn't remove any moral consequence from the original action. Disappointing someone who was willing to spend $10 on something because you were only willing to spend $5, so you literally took and hid the something before they could buy it is not good. There is a social contract as to why you might miss out on something - you waited too long or weren't willing to spend enough or the thing is never available in your region, but someone intentionally displacing inventory to return to at their leisure is not one of them.
You are arguing this from so far out in left field I cannot fathom you believe any of it, or would be okay with the exact situation in question happening to you yourself. :S
The 'moral contract' in question is just capitalism determining the allocation of scarce resources.
There is no moral judgement inherent in the system as to why the person with enough money should buy something whereas the one without should not.
For instance, there is no difference between hiding the packs and buying them all aside the amount of money given to the liquidators, so would Chaoshat then still be in the wrong if he bought them all originally and disappointed later buyers that way?
Personally, I feel that giving more money to the liquidators is instead a net harm, as it just lets the banks recoup their costs without financial penalty, allowing them to engage in more risky investments that cost more employees their jobs.
Perhaps more people get some packs? But I don't see that as being anything but morally equivalent to one person having all the packs.
Stealing may not be the exact correct term but it was a shitty, mean spirited thing to do that should not be celebrated.
I'm sorry, who was I mean to?
Mean-spirited does not mean you have to specifically target anyone. It's mean-spirited because you took away the potential for other people to benefit from the sale so that you could benefit from it more at a later date. This is unambiguously wrong morally, regardless of whether or not anyone else would have actually bought the thing in the meantime.
From the way you told your story, you make it sound like all the other product was sold by the time you returned for it. If that's true, you're presenting some pretty damning evidence as to exactly why it's mean-spirited.
Mean spirited DOES imply that I did it out of a desire to be mean to someone. It's doing out of a desire to harm someone or cause pain. Which, I would argue I did not do at all. You could say it was inconsiderate and I would probably agree with that. I guess I just disagree that anyone has more of a right to it than I do regardless of how much they're willing to spend on it.
It seems like the complaint is that I bought something at a lower price when someone was willing to pay a higher price for it and I robbed them of that opportunity. So I guess I should feel sorry for having preordered my Nintendo Wii on launch year instead of giving someone the opportunity to buy it for more on ebay? Like I just don't really get who is hurt by this.
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It's basically a type of party game, even in the way you describe it. Many are super fun but are barely games (EDIT: ... and I mean nothing negative by that. Many times I would rather engage in a social activity than a proper board game).
I would be pretty surprised to see it win the SdJ. It's a bit too close to Hanabi.
My BoardGameGeek profile
Battle.net: TheGerm#1430 (Hearthstone, Destiny 2)
I got mine before leaving for a trip, it's still wrapped up. Now I'm more excited to open it up!
Thank the gods the publishers are finally accounting for sleeves in their inserts.
Legends of Runeterra: MNCdover #moc
Switch ID: MNC Dover SW-1154-3107-1051
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I briefly glanced over the gods one. It seemed like it just added more fiddliness rather than adding something significant or needed to the base game.
In other news, a playthrough of the Bloodborne: Hunter's Nightmare expansion confirmed my first impression. The new stuff makes for a MUCH better experience. I enjoyed the base game, but it felt like it didn't quite capture the press your luck feel they were going for. All the new expansion cards positively nail this. In fact almost every single new card has an element of that. I didn't like the Final Bosses in the base game but the new ones all seem great; I don't think I would even use the base Final Bosses again.
I'd call it a mandatory expansion if you were into the original.
Gods is interesting but doesn't have enough staying power to make it worth buying. 5th player is good but situational. Mystics is fine, I'd always play with it if I had it, but it doesn't add that much. The kickstarter extras were actually excellent :sad:
Honestly, try the opposite side of the board. Everyone has to make their own pattern, restricted by the same rules as before (1 type of tile per column / row).
Also speaking of dice drafting, my traded for copies of Roll Player and the expansion came today. I'm pretty excited for this one. Plus I ditched Sidereal Confluence for a game I might ever have a hope in hell of getting to the table, which is nice
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
The Mind also sounds like the exact kind of game that SUSD loves that I think sounds incredibly stupid, like Witness. (THE witness?)
My BoardGameGeek profile
Battle.net: TheGerm#1430 (Hearthstone, Destiny 2)
The game's box is pretty small and tight, so I'm going to have to set aside my sleeving obsession for this one. There's no spare room inside. That hurts me.
My craftiness paid off today. I went in there and all six packs were still there although slightly dusty from their secret hiding place. I also saw they had a million bajillion copies of Magic: Arena of the Planeswalkers and I heard that was kind of fun so I was like fuck it, let's do that too. So my total price was $19 and some change. Feel pretty good about that.
Highlights include the US very boldly regime changing Afghanistan and Central Asia at the same time (though unfortunately just after I claimed two WMDs from the region), and then Afghanistan being turned back to Islamic Rule while still occupied by the US. Additionally, while Pakistan seemed likely to become an early ally, the region stalled out for most of the game before quite spontaneously also flipping to Islamist rule. Ooops, right, they have a nuclear arsenal ...
These games are the best. It's somewhat frustrating, somewhat funny having me play the jihadists because man oh man am I good at rolling 5s on those dice. I just make the US so many friends and then relentlessly fail to hurt them. :P Just gotta roll with those punches~
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
I think SU&SD stayed too long undercover, and now they base their reviews entirely on "which game's concept would would let us write an esoteric rambling prose video about?" and then work their way backwards to an opinion from there.
This is stealing. You're saying it like a good thing, but it's a bad thing.
I did ring up Tim Allen twice during that summer though. Dude always looked completely miserable. Each time was for the most absurdly expensive item in the store, like a $400 (in 1999 dollars) doll.
If you're stealing from the banks, is it morally wrong?
Any, you’re also taking the opportunity away from people who would have been to prepared to pay the non “hidden for weeks” price.
Although, I'm not 100% clear on it being stealing. Is it because it would have theoretically been sold for a higher price, and so the store would have had more earnings?
I made a game, it has penguins in it. It's pay what you like on Gumroad.
Currently Ebaying Nothing at all but I might do in the future.
If that's the case, I'm okay with not paying the liquidators fair prices.
So to answer the question: That's an over-broad generalisation.
But yes, it's ok to take money from people who have too much money, assuming for the sake of argument that you do not have too much money.
And this opportunity cost is irrelevant; clearly some selection of people end up with the goods, and I don't believe any one person has any moral reason to receive the goods, so I don't think the number or arrangement of people who will receive the goods matters.
That is, I see no moral difference between one person hoarding them, or having them distributed more evenly, so long as the goods are used.
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
Do they..
Do the booster cards for Dropmix have rarities?
Because limiting the addiction to a single person might also be a good thing.
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
The hypothetical person would be just as disappointed if they were all sold out.
No matter who buys the pack, everyone else misses out.
So hiding the pack doesn't really change anything there, so long as the recipient still uses the cards.
I'm sorry, who was I mean to?
Even if the person them-self does not know why they cannot have the thing they want, that doesn't remove any moral consequence from the original action. Disappointing someone who was willing to spend $10 on something because you were only willing to spend $5, so you literally took and hid the something before they could buy it is not good. There is a social contract as to why you might miss out on something - you waited too long or weren't willing to spend enough or the thing is never available in your region, but someone intentionally displacing inventory to return to at their leisure is not one of them.
You are arguing this from so far out in left field I cannot fathom you believe any of it, or would be okay with the exact situation in question happening to you yourself. :S
Mean-spirited does not mean you have to specifically target anyone. It's mean-spirited because you took away the potential for other people to benefit from the sale so that you could benefit from it more at a later date. This is unambiguously wrong morally, regardless of whether or not anyone else would have actually bought the thing in the meantime.
From the way you told your story, you make it sound like all the other product was sold by the time you returned for it. If that's true, you're presenting some pretty damning evidence as to exactly why it's mean-spirited.
Perhaps I can interest you in my meager selection of pins?
The 'moral contract' in question is just capitalism determining the allocation of scarce resources.
There is no moral judgement inherent in the system as to why the person with enough money should buy something whereas the one without should not.
For instance, there is no difference between hiding the packs and buying them all aside the amount of money given to the liquidators, so would Chaoshat then still be in the wrong if he bought them all originally and disappointed later buyers that way?
Personally, I feel that giving more money to the liquidators is instead a net harm, as it just lets the banks recoup their costs without financial penalty, allowing them to engage in more risky investments that cost more employees their jobs.
Perhaps more people get some packs? But I don't see that as being anything but morally equivalent to one person having all the packs.
Mean spirited DOES imply that I did it out of a desire to be mean to someone. It's doing out of a desire to harm someone or cause pain. Which, I would argue I did not do at all. You could say it was inconsiderate and I would probably agree with that. I guess I just disagree that anyone has more of a right to it than I do regardless of how much they're willing to spend on it.
It seems like the complaint is that I bought something at a lower price when someone was willing to pay a higher price for it and I robbed them of that opportunity. So I guess I should feel sorry for having preordered my Nintendo Wii on launch year instead of giving someone the opportunity to buy it for more on ebay? Like I just don't really get who is hurt by this.