Attacks
- Attack immunity
- Curser
- Deck inspection attack
- Deck order attack
- Handsize attack
- Junking attack
- Trashing attack
- Turn-worsening attack
- The “turn-worsening attack” represented by Handes.
- Some of the non-Handesian ones include the “disable one treasure card” of the tailgater. Buy/Money
- +Buy
- Cost-reducer
- Disappearing money
- Overpay
- Peddler variant
- A cantrip that produces coins.
- Terminal silver
- Terminal actions that produce coins, especially those with +2 coins
- For example, militias
- It costs 1 more to purchase than silver coins, consumes action rights, and attacks
- Virtual coin
- Virtual +Buy
- Those that do not increase the right to purchase but increase the acquisition of cards, such as Gainers in the workshop, etc.
Cycling
- Deck discarder
- Deck inspector
- Digging
- In Japan, the image is called “search”. Reveal the deck until something that meets the conditions appears.
-
Reveal cards from your deck until you reveal X.
- Discard for benefit
- Sifter
- Cards that do not increase the number of cards in your hand but rotate your deck
- Something you can look at the top of the deck and choose to discard.
- Something that draws N cards and discards N cards. Terminality
- Cards that do not increase the number of cards in your hand but rotate your deck
- Cantrip
- Non-terminal
- Non-terminal draw
- Soft terminal
- A card that is itself a terminal action, but that can benefit from another action card that collides with it, rather than simply being a dead card.
- carry over, etc.
- Terminal
- Terminal draw
- Throne Room variant
- Village
- Conditional non-terminal
Other
- Alt-VP
- Basic cards
- Duration draw
- Emulator
- Cards that can be executed that are not in the deck
- Inheritance “run the mansion as a card with a cost of up to 4”, etc.
- Gainer
- Luck-based
- Non-Attack interaction
- Capitol that gives +1 card advantage to the opponent.
- A masquerade ball simply to exchange
- That said, it’s a big disadvantage for people with compressed decks.
- One-shot
- In Japan, the image is often called “disposable.
- Cards that, when used, are returned to supply or discarded and are no longer in the deck.
- Split pile
- When determining supplies in a randomizer, a system of placing multiple types of cards in one pile to increase the probability that a synergistic card is in the supply.
- Top decker
- Trasher
- Vanilla
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