Tag: A Game of Thrones: The Card Game (Second Edition)

  • Links of the week: don’t touch your face, online card games, coronavirus painting

    Links of the week: don’t touch your face, online card games, coronavirus painting

    In a week where half the world is taking the advice of their respective governments and staying home a lot more, I have been sat at home coughing, fending off heavy headaches and wheezing my way around the apartment.

    I’ve not been tested, but can’t help but wonder if I have had the newly-famed COVID-19 or not. Either way, things will get better.

    In the meantime, here are some new things to look at with your eyes and minds:


    An animated gif showing coxy touching his face and a website alerting him not to.

    Don’t touch your face

    As this beautifully made Kurzgesagt video explains, touching your face is sending germs and viruses on a highway to the inside of your body. That is why the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommend that you don’t touch your face.

    But not touching your face is hard. I touch my face all the time without knowing it.

    Do Not Touch Your Face (dot com) is a website which checks your webcam and will tell you to not touch your face when you touch your face.

    The geeky rundown is that it uses machine learning based on TensorFlow.js code. You give the algorithm a one-time lesson on when you are touching your face and then it works it out itself from there.

    “No!”


    A photo of a sealed packet of cards from the A Game Of Thrones: A Card Game expansion pack

    Play the Game of Thrones card game online

    Quite a few times throughout the history of this blog, I have mentioned the card game A Game of Thrones. I love it and have spent way too much money on it.

    I recently discovered that there is a free online version of the game and so during the past week have played a few games.

    The design of the site is pretty confusing and the game isn’t the most straight-forward game to play. But once you’ve learned the ropes, it’s very fun.

    If, during these self-isolation times, friends of mine wish to hop on a Skype call and play through a game together – give me a shout.


    A screenshot of Brave web browser for computers

    Blocking ads but still rewarding content creators

    Whilst I’m a big advocate of Firefox web browser, I have been attracted by Brave web browser recently – purely for the integration of digital cash. It’s interesting.

    The app has a wallet for digital cash. You can top it up with money yourself or get paid BAT tokens (10 BAT is worth about $1.20 at the moment) for seeing adverts.

    The great thing about this is that if you have digital cash in your wallet, then each month the browser divvies up a handful of cash between the websites you have visited. Provided your favourite websites are signed up as content creators.

    There are many sites registered as content creators – including the likes of The Guardian, Wikipedia and Archive.org.

    This means that even though I’m blocking all the adverts The Guardian want to show me, I end up throwing The Guardian some BAT tokens out of my Brave wallet each month for the content I viewed.

    It’s clever. Maybe I’ll do a full blog post about it in future. In the meantime, you can check out Brave yourself.


    And finally;

    This painting depicts a coronavirus just entering the lungs, surrounded by mucus secreted by respiratory cells, secreted antibodies, and several small immune systems proteins.

    A painting of coronavirus from a molecular scientist

    The image used at the top of this page has been crafted by molecular scientist and artist David S. Goodsell. The painting depicts a coronavirus just entering the lungs, surrounded by mucus secreted by respiratory cells, secreted antibodies, and several small immune systems proteins.

    Goodsell has declared the image as “free to use” and published a super high-resolution version on a little thing you might have heard of before: the internet.


    Thank you for reading. Subscribe for future updates.

    Be good.

    Bye.

  • A Game of Thrones: The Card Game — Chapter & Expansion Packs

    A Game of Thrones: The Card Game — Chapter & Expansion Packs

    I don’t plan on turning this whole blog into a complete geek-fest, but excuse another post about A Game of Thrones: The Card Game.

    Recently, I wrote about completing the Blood and Gold set of cards after buying three more packs. I had my sights set on completing the next set; the Flight of Crows release.

    One evening, not long after pay-day, I decided to throw a bunch more cash down on A Game of Thrones: The Card Game. After all, it provides hours and hours of entertainment in our house.

    I bought four more Chapter Packs to complete the Flight of Crows release. Then I splashed out on two Expansion Packs – House of Thorns (House Tyrell) and Wolves of the North (House Stark).

    Whilst I’ve owned them for over a week now, I’ve been too busy to play. Looking forward to an evening indoors and playing with all the new cards soon.

    Some card packages from Game of Thrones: The Card Game series packaged in a cardboard box
    An array of cards from the Game of Thrones The Card Game box sets.

    Previously, previously. Related.

  • Blood and Gold

    Blood and Gold

    Excuse me whilst I geek out over the 3 expansion packs for A Game of Thrones: The Card Game (Second Edition) that arrived today. And with the addition of these three Chapter Packs, I now own the complete “Blood and Gold” series.

    At first, I bought Oberyn’s Revenge, The Brotherhood Without Banners, The Fall of Astapor, Kingsmoot, and The Faith Militant. I was unaware that chapter packs group together as releases. Most of these fell within the Blood and Gold series.

    The packs that arrived today were All Men Are Fools, Guarding the Realm, and The Red Wedding. This allows me to complete my collection of the Blood and Gold series.

    I scanned through the cards and sorted them into the relevant houses. Tomorrow, I aim to give the cards a shot in a game.

    A photo of the card All Men Are Fools from the expansion pack of the same name as part of the Game of Thrones Card Game series. The card shows three ladies sat around a table.
    A photo of a hand holding a set of Game of Thrones cards from the second edition game
    A photo of a sealed packet of cards from the A Game Of Thrones: A Card Game expansion pack

    It’s exciting to get new cards and see the possible new ways of playing each unlock. The Blood and Gold series introduce new ways of using their gold. Cards tagged Bestow allow you to store gold on them and use that as part of the game.

    Another exciting aspect is being able to play through moments from the novel / TV series. The Red Wedding chapter pack brings in elements from one of the iconic scenes of the entire series.

    Next on my radar is to complete the Flight of Crows release cycle.

    Previously.

  • A (Card) Game of Thrones

    A (Card) Game of Thrones

    Some time last year, I purchased A Game of Thrones: The Card Game (Second Edition). After wanting a card-based board game for a while, this became an impulse buy.

    With the game being set in the Game of Thrones world, I figured it would be an accessible entry point into a card game. I love the TV series and could find familiarity with some of the characters.

    So far, I love it. My fiancée and I play on a semi-regular basis. We’re casual board-gamers and so A Game of Thrones: The Card Game (Second Edition) fits the bill for us!

    The Core Set was what we first stumbled upon and following the guides in the box was enough to get us hooked! Since then, I’ve purchased 8 extra sets of cards from the Blood and Gold and Flight of Crows release cycles.

    It’s been great to have a game to while the evenings away that doesn’t involve staring at a screen. Any mini digital detox is definitely something I definitely need to make the most of.

    Check it out on Board Game Geek – a great resource for everything to do with your favourite board games.

    What are your favourite board or card games to play when you’re away from the computer?