Blood-Rite

Because of the many possibilities this card opens up -- and the fact that you have to play a bonded asset to access it -- it often confuses people. They try to calculate whether drawing two cards for an action is worth it, or how often they are going to want to trade a card for a resource. The damage-dealing capacity of the card, which involves both discarding cards and paying resources, only makes things murkier.

Nevertheless, this is an outstanding card. One usage along justifies it -- all the rest simply gives you more flexibility. For simplicity's sake, try reading it this way:

"Spend an action. Discard the top two cards of your deck and deal one damage to an enemy at your location."

That's basically what would happen if you used Blood-rite to draw two cards and discard them both -- using one discard to gain a resource, and the other to spend that resource and deal a damage. The only thing that could derail that plan would be drawing a weakness, and even then, you could probably still pull it off with an additional discard from your hand.

How many level zero cards let you deal guaranteed, almost costless damage like that? Sneak Attack costs 2 and requires that the enemy be exhausted. Beat Cop makes you discard a four-cost asset. Guard Dog costs 3 and requires you to get hit. Dynamite Blast is amazing, but requires you to take out a second mortgage on your house. Zoey's Cross is great, if you're Zoey. And none of those are Seeker cards.

And of course, this is only ONE possible use of Blood-Rite. Want to do two damage? Pay a couple resources, and still keep your hand level. You really like the cards you drew? Discard two other cards instead. Absolutely love everything in your hand? Don't discard anything, and simply revel in your good draw luck. Strapped for resources? Good thing you have this poor man's Emergency Cache.

There is no doubt that this card is a rocking level zero event. The only question is whether you have a hand free to tote around Occult Lexicon as you wait for your two additional copies of it to appear.

An absolute must have in Mandy by the way. She can find all the copies easily and cycle through her deck quickly to get more. — StyxTBeuford · 13028
I'm going to use this to draw 2 cards, and then discard 2 copies of Fortuitous Discovery. Then i can immediately go for three clues, using resourceful to pull back the third copy of Fortuitous Discovery. Use it a 2nd time, then use Eidetic Memory to cast it from my graveyard for the 3rd/4th time depending on if i have used a 2nd copy of resourceful or not. — Abbojm01 · 5
This card is worth it just for it's ability to snipe Wipperwills! — WanderingTook · 1
Ever Vigilant

Pretty mediocre card in the average deck, but certain decks will launch the power of this behemoth into the stratosphere.

The average spends a few actions playing assets, and a good number on taking resources, Ever Vigilant saves you 2 actions and 3 resources when you hit 3 cards, economy cards are varying degrees of good, but this cards is very literally just a conditional Ace in the Hole, a 6 xp finisher for 1 xp!

The trick is finding the assets to play, it's not unusual to have 30-50% of your deck made up of assets, but drawing some of those, 3 of those, as well as a copy of Ever Vigilant, that can be a tricky challenge indeed.

Insert for the combo goodness:

That's it, these are the main combos, and they are VERY, VERY good.

You get bonus points if you:

Tsuruki23 · 2547
You can't play multiple cards from under the Plan in one round, but I agree STTP and Ever Vigilant is a great combo for asset-heavy Guardians. Playing as Carolyn right now and have Emergency Cache (3) under there to load up Painkillers and Fingerprint Kit, with a rotating special like a D-Blast as 3rd. But as far as Ever Vigilant goes, that combination plus 2 copies of Stand Together, along with serious mulliganning to start your game, is a great, great combo. — Krysmopompas · 360
Open Gate

Not terrible, not great. Good for very specific characters, anybody else just doesn't have the deckspace.

Open Gate is fun, whatever else it may be. Opening a gate to create shortcuts is fun, when you pull it off usefully it's a YAY moment!

  • That time where you create a short shortcut to cut through an annoying spot repeatedly (1st Scenario of Carcosa comes to mind).
  • That time when you set up an initial gate and create another gate wherever you happen to wind up at during the scenario to escape back to the startpoint through (2nd Forgotten age for example).
  • Some maps have you running back and forth in general and setting up a major network node speeds your back and forth moves greatly (2nd Core).

The thing about this card though....

You tend to play this card in places where you HAVE been, and it wont help you get places you're actually going to. The only times this is helpful is when you backtrack for some reason or if a map isn't ushering you in just the one general direction (which most maps have a tendency to do), in many maps you're only netting one action saved, sometimes two, depressingly often zero.

In multiplayer it's WAY more helpful, one character can pepper locations like Hanzel & Gretel and the other dudes skip-step in their wake. Going faster than them other characters is needed for this to be possible, it's not unusual for a character to surge forward to get clues or an enemy, you can plan rounds where a vanguard is dropping gates and the others follow suit to catch up. You can easily save your team half a dozen+ actions in this way, even if you never actually used the gates yourself.

Synergies for Open Gates include:

  • and movement cards. Shortcut, Elusive, Pathfinder, Think on Your Feet all help you move faster, covering more ground (and staying ahead of your friends) helps set up good gate spots. There's also Astral Travel and Mists of R'lyeh, the latter in particular will find you spots to place gates in a jiffy. Also Arcane Initiate really helps you set up a network that much faster.
  • Luke Robinson is all but printed for Open Gate, or vice versa, you'll often be in the circumstance where he can pick 2 viable locations to go, place a gate on one, investigate the other, then place another gate to move to the previously gated location, saving 2-3 actions in the process. He might also put a gate at a friends's spot, move a few locations, then gate somewhere around his new spot, allowing the buddy to move 3-4 locations in one action. For Luke Open Gate is a much more reliable staple than for other folks.
  • Norman Withers doesn't have as much flexibility, but he tends to dig DEEP into his deck every map, when he does find Open Gate he can often play it for free, which is great incentive to just drop it in order to save himself or his friends just the one action or so (while also digging even deeper in the deck!).
  • Daisy Walker can run very fast, and she can get the pieces quickly with her Old Book of Lore engine, efficiency wise they are a bit worse for her than Luke and Norman but as for deckbuilding and finding the bits it's smooth sailing for her.

I frankly wouldn't even try Open Gate for other characters than the above, Akachi Onyele and Agnes Baker aren't fast enough and it would wreak havoc on their tight decks and cost curves. Jim Culver doesn't have the deck-space and there's no synergy, he doesn't struggle so much for actions as for consistency, same with Father Mateo. Sefina Rousseau likes to mess with her events and there's already a thousand good options. Diana Stanley has other stuff to do with her time, movement support is something that should be directed AT her, not From her. Patrice Hathaway can certainly find them fast, but they'll drip from her fingers long before you can put them in the right place and actually set up a good network.

Tsuruki23 · 2547
"Not terrible, not great" seems to be a good description of all the myriad cards. The ability to include three of them in a deck an the way they synergize with each other is offset by the fact that they can often be difficult to make full use out of and come at a substantial opportunity cost. I'm sure they were designed that way. — Sassenach · 179
While Open Gate May sometimes be a dud for The Painted World, it is not always a dud. It does not allow you to play a fourth copy of Find Gate, no, but most games you won’t even see the third copy of the card - and Painting a Gate means that you have two gates available now, which, in the scenarios where it is important is, well, important. And even if you do hit the triple gate limit, any extra OGs pitch for Sefina’s two most used stats. (In case I’ve misunderstood your viewing it as a dud: remember that nothing makes it stop acting as a copy of Open Gate until it eventually leaves play, so you can attach it to a location and use it.) — Death by Chocolate · 1473
This is wrong, for the same reason Painted world cannot hit Delve too deep, it cannot usefully copy Open gate. Painted world self removes from the game after play, I.E you play the gate, then it just POOF, gone. — Tsuruki23 · 2547
Nevermind, checked the rules, it holds up. — Tsuruki23 · 2547
I'm currently in 4 player through TCU and this card together with Shortcut 2 is awesome! It helps our fighters so much, to get those cultists down. It also helps that arcane initiate can find these. — Django · 5093
For Marie, Feed the Mind is good to get all 3 portals earlier. — Django · 5093
I can say that I just used it for great effect in Heart of the Elders, which requires a lot of shuttling back and forth clues between increasingly more distant locations. — Eldan · 4
Can we get a doublecheck if this actually works with Shortcut(2)? Open Gate does not actually connect the locations. — Discordia · 21
If i buy Open Gate with versatile on Ursula Downs, will i get 3 copies because of myriad orjust one useless? — Charles Dexter Ward · 562
Shortcut (2) uses the "Move" action designator (to a connecting location is a reminder). If Open Gate works at all, it works with Shortcut (2). — Yenreb · 15
Versatile only lets you have 1 off-faction card. Myriad would let you buy 2 more for free, but it doesn't let you buy more than you can have. — Yenreb · 15
With 3x in Luke and 3x in Patrice (in a party of 4), I can reliably get 3 into play. With the extras in Patrice's deck Luke can even use this trick for escaping Dream Gate (Pointless Reality). Very powerful for my Return to a campaign full of scenarios with huge maps and back-tracking. (Posting as a comment instead of a separate review because my reputation is too low.) — Yenreb · 15
Don’t forget how well it pairs with pendant of the queen — PanicMoon · 2
Physical Training

Pretty great card.

Whichever copy you draw first nets you the skill pump for free, costing 0 means you can play Physical Training and pump a LOT more and faster then usual. Instead of saving up for a Beat Cop you might just pump that much more! The often big issue with Physical Training(0) is the risky moment when you play it, will it be useful right away or is it a cost commitment that just wont pay off, it's a BIG commitment. Physical Training(2)? Not so much.

The second copy is pretty much an Unexpected Courage, the first copy too if you decide you cannot afford to pump.

Tsuruki23 · 2547
no bad for #Well prepared for sure ;) — Bany · 14
Elder Sign Amulet

Hey guys, just a heads up, this is still a fine card.

I have a hard time spending XP on purely defensive cards, but in terms of sheer horror tank value you can get in a single action Elder Sign Amulet is undisputed champion.

Many powerful heals require 2+ actions, First Aid for example which gives Bulletproof stiff competition takes 5 actions to get full use out of (and is limited). Elder Sign Amulet is 1 action for a whopping 4 more sanity to work with, there is no other card in the game that nets you so much sanity in so little time.

The action efficiency is important, lots of characters scramble for actions. In solo, actions are your most precious resource. If you're trying to multitask clues and combat in a team, you definitely don't have actions to spare! In a team where you're the key performer in a particular role (the only killer, the only cluer). Elder Sign Amulet is a go-to card for the characters who have sanity trouble but no actions to spare.

Obviously the exact same is true for Bulletproof Vest and health.

Officer Pawterson costs 2 less resources and prevents 2 less pain, I don't see either card as being better, being free makes the card better in certain decks, worse in other decks.

Key of Ys is nice for horror tanking, but Key of Ys is less a card you use for tanking than it being the side-effect of using Key of Ys for massive buffs. Heck, grab Elder Sign Amulet and use it to cover your Key of Ys.

The only card that completely overwhelms the Elder Sign Amulet is Deny Existence, where preventing any trigger of 2 horror effectively nets you as much tanking as the Amulet would but for 0 actions and no cost while also being there if you have trouble with other stuff.

Tsuruki23 · 2547