March 18, 2022

Give him some room…

Paul

Today’s Arts & Culture Finder is a great pack, and that’s before you factor in a 20% chance to pull The Hermit (IX). Another Tarot addition, The Hermit demands that you leave a space between it and any other card you play - but in return you get a formidable 4/99 - especially valuable in lower energy leagues. 

It’s a Friday (again! they keep happening!) and so you also have:

  • Fusion Friday : Out now for all your fusion ingredient needs.
  • Rainbow Pack : Guaranteed History LimEpic+, Oceans LimRare+, and five more cards (that can also be limited).
  • Feline Cute : Avatar pack with 1000 gems, 2 LimEpics or higher, and a cat in a cup. In a cup! A cat! We’re crazy. 
  • Roar Power : Avatar pack with 3400 gems, 3 LimiLegs, and a majestic Lion avatar to proclaim that you are, indeed, king of the jungle*.


*Oh go on then, let’s get facty. Why do we say ’King of the Jungle’ when lions live in open country? Well, ‘jungle’ derives from Hindi, and means ‘not an inhabited place’ - i.e. it does not have to mean lush tropical forests, that’s just how ‘jungle’ is typically imagined. 

March 18, 2022

Give him some room…

Paul

Today’s Arts & Culture Finder is a great pack, and that’s before you factor in a 20% chance to pull The Hermit (IX). Another Tarot addition, The Hermit demands that you leave a space between it and any other card you play - but in return you get a formidable 4/99 - especially valuable in lower energy leagues. 

It’s a Friday (again! they keep happening!) and so you also have:

  • Fusion Friday : Out now for all your fusion ingredient needs.
  • Rainbow Pack : Guaranteed History LimEpic+, Oceans LimRare+, and five more cards (that can also be limited).
  • Feline Cute : Avatar pack with 1000 gems, 2 LimEpics or higher, and a cat in a cup. In a cup! A cat! We’re crazy. 
  • Roar Power : Avatar pack with 3400 gems, 3 LimiLegs, and a majestic Lion avatar to proclaim that you are, indeed, king of the jungle*.


*Oh go on then, let’s get facty. Why do we say ’King of the Jungle’ when lions live in open country? Well, ‘jungle’ derives from Hindi, and means ‘not an inhabited place’ - i.e. it does not have to mean lush tropical forests, that’s just how ‘jungle’ is typically imagined.