Tuesday, July 21, 2015

News: Cipher Deckbox Included in July Issue of Nintendo Dream Magazine

As part of a cross-promotion with Fire Emblem Cipher, it's been announced through Nintendo Dream's official twitter that today's issue of Nintendo Dream magazine will include a deckbox themed after B01: Warblade of Heroes. Featuring "Princes of Altea, Marth," "Lodestar, Marth," "Swordsman Known as Marth, Lucina," and "Protector of Ylisse, Chrom" the plastic deckbox comes packaged with every sealed volume of the July 21st issue, and is capable of holding up to 50 single sleeved cards. Whether double or triple layer sleeves will fit the box has not been addressed, but photos from Dream's official account suggest that at least double layers will fit the box.

Nintendo Dream has a history of promotion with Cipher, conducting an unboxing party livestream last month. The magazine's publisher, Tokuma Shouten, will be launching an official Cipher guide on July 24th, which comes with the exclusive "Enigmatic Tactician, Robin" promotional card.

News: Tiki, Marth, Lucina, and Gaius in Second Set of Fire Emblem Cipher Sleeves

The next set of Fire Emblem Cipher sleeves have been announced for a September 10th launch date, just seven days prior to the launch of S02: Godflame of Light and Dark. The sleeves will feature "Hero to His Country, Marth" "Knower of the Future, Lucina" "Princess of the Divine Dragon Tribe, Tiki" and "Sweetest Assassin, Gaius." Tiki and Gaius were both voted for by fans during the game's prerelease livestream as the cards they would most like to see used as a sleeve. Each sleeve measures 67x92 millimeters, and 65 sleeves will come in every sealed package. Packs of sleeves will retail for 760 yen before tax, approximately $6 at the present exchange rate.

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

News: Second Wave of Cipher Packaging Shown on Official Site

Today the Japanese Fire Emblem Cipher portal updated with images of the upcoming starter decks S03: Birthright and S04: Conquest, as well as the second booster set B02: Soulful Flames of Light and Dark. The starter decks will provide full support for the colors white and black, representing the Hoshido and Nohr factions from Fire Emblem Fates, and will retail for 1300 yen each (approximately $10.50 at the present exchange rate). The second booster set, which launches in Japan on September 17th, will likewise include cards designed to enhance each color. Like Warblade of Heroes before it, Soulful Flames of Light and Dark will include ten cards in each booster pack, and sixteen booster packs in each sealed box of the set. MSRP for the booster packs is 350 yen each (~$2.83) and 5600 yen per box (~$45).
The Hoshido and Nohr factions supported by Soulful Flames were originally introduced as promotional cards packaged with Warblade of Heroes boxes. Cipher is handling the split version mechanic of Fire Emblem Fates by representing the protagonist of Birthright as the male incarnation of Corrin, and the protagonist of Conquest as their female incarnation. So far all known Corrin prints can also be treated as having the Hoshidan or Nohrian symbols, allowing white and black decks to be efficiently mixed together, though each of their skills still draw power boosts from their respective black and white colors.

The third booster set, which has no formal title nor announced launch date, will continue to support the factions from Fates while also introducing Tellius cards from Path of Radiance.

Sunday, July 12, 2015

News: A Tribute to Iwata Satoru, Dead at Fifty-five

Today Nintendo announced the death of Iwata Satoru on July 11th 2015, from a cancerous growth in his bile duct. It was this same condition which prevented his presence at E3 last year, for which he had undergone surgery. Born on December 6th 1959 (Shōwa 34), Iwata died at the too-young age of fifty-five, making his thirteen years the shortest reign of any President of Nintendo. Since 2002 his radical vision for the future has repeatedly redefined the company's position in relation to the rest of the market, and set it above and beyond the scope of competing developers. Nintendo has lost its greatest President, and the fans have lost one of their best friends.

Iwata is someone that we cannot write about impersonally. Composing an exhaustive list of all the games he contributed to in life is likely impossible; Iwata was a constant presence working alongside Nintendo's development staff even after ascending to the position of President, and for every game he worked on there lies a story and more uncredited work behind it. Several of his contributions only became known years after the fact, and there's likely still more that will never be public knowledge. While Iwata is famous for reprogramming EarthBound from scratch midway through its development, for this editor Iwata's greatest accomplishments were in the late 90s and early 2000s. We first came to know Iwata through his work on Super Smash Bros. Melee, on which many sleepovers and afternoons were spent. Even now the arguments over whether Marth or Roy was better still come to mind. The handheld Kirby games filled many long car rides across the United States, and in each of his games a small piece of Iwata's soul touched our lives. His revolutionary direction as President fundamentally changed Nintendo into a developer for more than just gamers, achieving a level of proliferation with the Wii that the press could never have anticipated. His policies of openness between developers and fans lead to the creation of Iwata Asks, a column hosted on Nintendo's official site in which he would interview game developers about their upcoming projects. With Iwata gone, the future of the column is uncertain.

Iwata was the first President of Nintendo to cut his teeth on programming video games before ever ascending to the position, but what characterized his career most strongly was how he retained a developer's mindset even after succeeding President Yamauchi. Setting him apart from the distant Yamauchi was that while Yamauchi died having never played a video game, Iwata had hands-on experience with both playing and developing games. To prevent new titles from languishing in obscurity, he gave his seal of approval to games that would have otherwise struggled to find funding. (Of note is that several years prior to his presidency, Iwata was one of the executive producers for Doshin the Giant. Could such a bizarre game have ever existed if Iwata and Miyamoto hadn't done the executive coordination to get it funded?) His constant involvement with a huge variety of Nintendo's titles left Iwata's mark everywhere. The compression tools he created doubled the content of Pokémon Gold & Silver, and the debugging work he did over the course of three weeks on Melee was some of the most important ever done in the field. His code now lives on forever in the screens of the annual Apex and EVO tournaments.

Following his sudden departure, Iwata's place is being filled by representative directors Takeda Genyo and Miyamoto Shigeru. Our prayers are with them during this difficult time. Several insensitive comments have already been made regarding Iwata's death and this year's E3. Please be respectful of the Iwata family's grief in the days ahead, as well as that of his friends' and coworkers'.

Friday, July 10, 2015

Feature: Booster 1: Warblade of Heroes Box Opening

Our Cipher orders arrived earlier this week, so it's high time we get on with our first box opening. In addition to the Warblade of Heroes booster box we also ordered a War of Darkness starter deck and 25th Anniversary sleeves. We made our purchase on AmiAmi prior to the game's availability over Amazon; AmiAmi's base price was the most competitive online at the time, but once shipping is factored in it only becomes worthwhile if you're ordering additional products (or multiple boxes) on top of that.

Whether Amazon is worth your money now that there's several import services getting in on Cipher depends on your order; several Amazon sellers are offering free shipping but charging ~$70 per item, while AmiAmi is doing EMS shipping that will generally work out in the range of $30~36 depending on how many items you order and their combined weight, but only charging ~$40 per box. So if you're ordering multiple boxes, AmiAmi will generally work out as a better deal than buying through Amazon--two boxes on Amazon is ~$140, whereas on AmiAmi that would work out to ~$110. But if you're only ordering one, Amazon is better suited for that.

Our promo for the box is "Princess of Nohr, Corrin (♀)." Each Warblade of Heroes box comes with a print of either Corrin (♀) or Corrin (♂).

Each side of the box contains eight packs, with ten cards in each; depending on which card is the Rare or Super Rare, there are either 5 blue and 5 red cards in each pack, or 4 of one color and 6 of another. Each side contains six Rares and two Super Rare or higher cards.

Our first Super Rare was actually a signed Super Rare+! "Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda."

Our holos broke down as follows: "Eldest Pegasus Sister, Palla" (R), "Middle Pegasus Rider, Catria" (R), "Youngest Pegasus Sister, Est" (R), "Princess, Minerva" (R), "Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda" (SR+), "Gentle Flower of the Shepherds, Sumia" (R), "Pegasus Knight Paragon, Cordelia" (SR), "Wellspring of Youth, Nowi" (R), "Demure Dancer, Olivia" (R), "Man of Flower's Fragrance, Inigo" (R), "Sweetest Assassin, Gaius" (SR), "Guardian of Rosanne, Cherche" (R), "Exalted Strategist, Robin (♀)" (R), "Princess of Ylisse, Lissa" (R), "Chosen Warrior of Hope, Owain" (SR), and "Stoic Swordsman, Lon'qu" (R).

Overall the total value of the box's contents ranges from $70~$92 depending on whether you're looking at averages or peak highs for each card. Caeda and Cordelia together pushed up the cumulative value immensely. The pulls were about as blue as you can get; 11 blue holos and 5 red.

All of our red Normal and High Normal pulls.

All of our blue Normal and High Normal pulls. In total we're 14 cards short of having every nonsigned card in B01.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

News: Marth Decks Dominate Tournament Results, Tops Akihabara Tourney

Chrom didn't make the cut in Super Smash Bros., and he's not making it in Cipher.

Ten new tournaments took place between June 2nd and July 6th. Of the eighteen tournaments that have been reported on since the game's launch last month, twelve of them have been won by Marth decks. Accordingly, red is also the most consistent top in the game. The second most played deck of the Warblade of Heroes format is Inigo Harem, which has easily surpassed Chrom as the primary deck of choice for blue. Marth decks cumulatively account for more than two thirds of tops, while Inigo makes up 17% of the top decks. The rest is spread between rogue decks that have only topped once. An index of the most recent tournaments is provided below.
What should be kept in mind with these results is that more than a hundred shop tournaments took place in June, and a hundred more will have finished by the end of this week. Only about 8% of all tournaments that happen are reported, and so we are generalizing from a very small sample of data that may be skewed by the low number of reporting card shops. Provided that it is accurate, the first two weeks of tournament play should not see this kind of gulf emerge between Sword of Light and Mark of Naga decks. An ideally diverse format would be split 50-50 between the two colors.

Image credit
On July 8th, Card Kingdom Akihabara held a 16-person double elimination tournament, which became the second consecutive top for Lyndis, winner of the previous Akihabara shop tournament. Lyndis' deck underwent several major revisions between tournaments, most notably removing her cost 2 Tikis in favor of running cost 1 Nowi to accelerate her bond zone instead, as well as cutting Sumia to make room for the Tharja line. Tharja has been an unpopular choice in both pure blue and multicolor decks, requiring heavy reversal costs and restrictive handsize conditions in order to force the opponent to discard and gain attack bonuses.

With particular regard to "Mage of Dark Obsessions, Tharja," the costs and difficulty of setup can be worth the investment. If Tharja's cost 3 print was class changed from either her cost 1 or cost 2 variants, her reverse 3 skill forces the opponent to discard 3 cards, which effectively counters most forms of acceleration due to the low availability of true card advantage in the game. Without cards in hand the opponent can't place bonds, deploy units, discard for evasion, or discard for critical hits; at best they must choose two of those options to be available to them, and sacrifice the rest.


King TCG held its second shop tournament over July 2nd, and uploaded the results of the tournament to YouTube on the 4th. While the previous tournament was won by a conventional Marth deck, in this tournament finals Ogma made a surprise appearance as the champion's main character of choice.  The majority of players stick to Marth because of his ability to move an opponent's unit, controllign their field and exposing them to attacks. It's this very quality that has reinforced the use of units with Flying, as their shared support skill allows one to move units without setting them to the actioned state, allowing them to move and attack in the same turn.

By playing Ogma instead, the tournament winner gave up these qualities for a better offensive game. Basic Ogma becomes a 60 attacker as long as there are two other cost 2 or less allies in play. In his promoted state as "Steel Swordsman, Ogma" he both gains +10 attack every time a cost 2 or less ally is deployed and gives +10 attack to the deployed unit, preventing the opponent's defensive checks from blocking their attacks. Steel Swordsman can also become a range 1~2 attacker by reversing one bond, which gives him comparative levels of field control to "Lodestar, Marth" since the opponent can't move their units out of Ogma's range. This also gives him the freedom to move to the rearguard area and attack from there, where the opponent can't reach him.

The Chrom player in the finals ultimately lost the game as a result of mismanaging their bonds, being unable to play the cards they had in hand due to a combination of not having the right colors face-up at key times, and not having enough to pay the costs. They were also unable to ever take the lead in orbs due to their preoccupation with attacking allied units rather than Ogma himself, whose power skill benefited from needing to deploy replacements.

Card Kingdom (Akihabara branch) shop tournament
First place: Lyndis/リンディス
Cost 5: 4
x2 Hero to His Country, Marth
x2 Manakete Princess, Tiki
Cost 4: 10
x4 Lodestar, Marth
x3 Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda
x3 Mage of Dark Obsessions, Tharja
Cost 3: 7
x3 Wellspring of Youth, Nowi
x4 Pegasus Knight Paragon, Cordelia
Cost 2: 7
x3 Princess of Altea, Elice
x2 Bewitching Plegian Shaman, Tharja
x2 New Exalt, Chrom
Cost 1: 22
x1 Crown-prince of Altea, Marth (Main character)
x2 Ascetic Saint, Lena
x4 Crown-princess of Talys, Caeda
x4 Practitioner of Dark Arts, Tharja
x4 Young Prodigy, Cordelia
x4 Tomboyish Manakete, Nowi
x3 Liberation Army Archer, Gordin

News: Nintendo Hosting FE0 Event at "25th Anniversary of Love and Courage"

The official Fire Emblem Cipher portal updated today with new event information for the end of July. On July 25th Nintendo will be hosting a special concert in commemoration of Fire Emblem's anniversary, "The 25th Anniversary of Love and Courage," and Cipher will have its own special gallery at the event space featuring prints of illustrations created for the game. Fans of Cipher will also be provided a space to play the game in, but only individuals aged twenty years and older will be able to attend. The anniversary will be held at the Tokyo Dome Hotel, and it will cost 4000 yen to enter.

The 25th anniversary concert is set to include a variety of merchandise, including a 2000 yen folding fan decorated with the body of the divine dragon Naga, a 12000 yen replica of Azura's pendant from Fire Emblem Fates, and a commemorative "One Hundred Poems of Heroes" (英雄百歌 Eiyuu Moka) box containing illustrations that tell the stories of the Fire Emblem cast across twenty-five years in the form of waka poetry.

Modeled after traditional poetry sets used for karuta matching games, the Hundred Poems will contain two hundred cards with each complete poem split between two cards (and thus two illustrations). The first hundred are intended to be read by a poetry reader, while the remaining hundred are used for two players to try and matching the second half of the poem to its first half before the first half can be read. The Hundred Poems box will also come with a booklet and a CD that can recite the poems in place of an actual reader. It will cost 8424 yen, approximately $70.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

News: Multicolor Tiki Wins Kamata Tournament, Marth Tops Yellow Submarine Tourney

Image credit
July 4th, 2015. The Nanba branch of Hobby Base Yellow Submarine hosted an 8-person bracket Cipher tournament, as a buildup to its 16-person tournament on the 20th. Tournament winner Shibano played a Sword of Light deck, focusing on one of the more visible strategies of the Japanese Warblade of Heroes format; "Marth beatdown," quickly building up a field of low cost attackers and driving the opponent to a critical point in orbs remaining, before finishing them off with the reversal skill of "Hero to His Country, Marth." Marth's skill gives all of his allied cards +30 attack to ensure that the minimum number of attacks needed to deal the final blow will hit. Along with Inigo Harem (sometimes called "Flying Inigo") and Lissa-NoNo drawbeat, Marth beatdown is one of the first deck archetypes to be formally recognized by the Japanese play community.

Image credit
Shibano attributed his win to "Princess of the Divine Dragon Tribe, Tiki" whose support skill allows a card to be placed from the hand to the bond zone when Tiki is support checked. If her support skill activates early enough, it can allow for an abnormal disparity in the number of bonds controlled to arise, allowing for exponentially more units to be deployed each turn. The deck has an enormous advantage when going first, as that also allows for it to regularly maintain more bonds than the opponent already, and Tiki exacerbates this.

Image credit
A Sword of Light deck also topped at Grand Panda Canyon's 16-person Swiss Draw shop tournament on the same day, but this one integrated multicolored support to make use of Tiki's higher-cost forms, and the Pegasus Knight support that has been so overwhelmingly popular since the set's launch. Cordelia and Sumia together give the deck overwhelming offensive options, while leveling up Tiki from her cost 2 Mark of Naga stage to her cost 5 Sword of Light stage. Because the deck makes use of cards that cross color lines, its strategies are impossible for monocolor decks. This deck hues very close to Lyndis' deck from Card Kingdom Akihabara's shop tournament just a three days prior, with one Gordin being swapped out for another copy of Linde. It is unlikely that this is the same player; Lyndis' deck is distinguished by her playset of cost 2 Tiki's alternate artwork.

Image credit
Master's Guild also held an 8-person Swiss Draw shop tournament on the 4th, which accounts for the sole pure-Naga victory that is not an Inigo deck. While the Inigo Harem has flourished as one of the more difficult matchups of the format, Chrom has thus far languished in obscurity due to a combination of slow buildup, a lack of early or midgame options, and very little in terms of true acceleration when compared to the red and multicolor decks. Basic Chrom gains +10 power for every class changed unit in play, even during the opponent's turn, but this skill itself highlights the deck's core weakness--class changing takes too long. The majority of decks run a disproportionate number of cost 1 cards compared to their cost 2, 3, 4, and 5 cards, and getting enough bonds to pay the promotion costs of these high-level cards is exceptionally difficult because unlike Marth, Chrom has no way to do bond acceleration inside his own color. Moreover, in the time taken to set up class changed units it's easier to promote Chrom himself and lose his skill, and promoting contributes more base power than Chrom's ability will under most circumstances. For that very reason, the Chrom deck is an inversion of the Marth deck, running as many copies of promoted Chrom as possible rather than as few as possible.

"Protector of Ylisse, Chrom" still relies on class-changing, but has a more sensible once-per-turn skill rather than a weaker continuous one. When an ally class changes, that unit gets +20 attack and the number of orbs it breaks becomes 2 until the end of the turn, both making it easier to hit the opponent and helping to compensate for the later stage the deck functions at by dealing more damage at the endgame. Where the deck excels defensively is with "Red-eyed Bull, Sully" and "Blue-eyed Panther, Stahl" whose Aegis skills prevent all enemies with Bow, Tome, or Dragonstone from attacking, completely shutting down the opponent's ranged combat options. This punishes the opponent for trying to set up promoted ranged units like Gordin and Merric, and forces them to expose their main character onto the vanguard line to attack, rather than turtling in the rearguard.

Doga will choke this point!
Finally, a multicolored Tiki deck made first at Card Land Kamata's 14-person Swiss Draw tournament on July 5th. Like Chrom above, Tiki is new territory for tournament play. The Manakete build was theorized as early as magazine previews for the game, where the cost 5 "Manakete Princess, Tiki" was repeatedly billed as a strong main character candidate, but until now the deck has been held back by the heavily Falchion-centric metagame.

Both Chrom and Marth have the Falchion skills that give them +20 attack while doing battle with Dragon affinity cards, and in a format where Sword of Light is one of the most played decks this has made things very hard on Tiki. By running a "Altea's Shield, Draug" who can redirect attacks away from Tiki and onto himself, the Kamata player was able to negate the benefits of these abilities. Draug's other ability gives him +20 when attacked by anything other than Tome affinity cards, giving him concrete staying power.


This gives Manakete Princess full reign to add extra bond cards each turn, allowing the free play of high cost units for more powerful fields, and in turn giving way to more balanced deckbuilding. In contrast to Chrom and Marth, because the Manakete strategy rewards the late-game plays more proportionally to the amount of setup those plays require, it cultivates a deck better distributed among different costs rather than being skewed to either low or high cost units.





Yellow Submarine (Nanba branch) shop tournament
First place: Shibano/シバノ
Deck name: Monodark/暗黒単
Cost 5: 2
x2 Hero to His Country, Marth
Cost 4: 16
x4 Sage of Gales, Merric
x4 Lodestar, Marth
x4 Crimson Reaper, Navarre
x4 Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda
Cost 3: 3
x3 Steel Swordsman, Ogma
Cost 2: 8
x4 Winds of Restoration, Caeda
x4 Princess of Altea, Elice
Cost 1: 21
x1 Crown-prince of Altea, Marth (Main character)
x4 Mage of Winds, Merric
x4 Talysian Mercenary, Ogma
x4 Crimson Fencer, Navarre
x4 Liberation Army Archer, Gordin
x4 Princess of the Divine Dragon Tribe, Tiki

Grand Panda Canyon shop tournament
Cost 5: 3
x1 Hero to His Country, Marth
x2 Manakete Princess, Tiki
Cost 4: 7
x4 Lodestar, Marth
x3 Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda
Cost 3: 12
x4 Pegasus Knight Paragon, Cordelia
x2 Archanean League Bowman, Gordin
x4 Gentle Flower of the Shepherds, Sumia
x2 Aura's Heiress, Linde
Cost 2: 9
x4 Sentimental Divine Dragon, Tiki
x2 Princess of Altea, Elice
x3 Wellspring of Youth, Nowi
Cost 1: 19
x1 Crown-Prince of Altea, Marth (Main Character)
x4 Young Prodigy, Cordelia
x4 Maiden of Flower Fortunes, Sumia
x2 Ascetic Saint, Lena
x4 Crown-Princess of Talys, Caeda
x4 Liberation Army Archer, Gordin

Master's Guild shop tournament
Cost 4: 5
x4 Protector of Ylisse, Chrom
x1 Exalted Strategist, Robin
Cost 3: 11
x1 Princess of Ylisse, Lissa
x3 Blue-eyed Panther, Stahl
x1 Stoic Swordsman, Lon'qu
x3 Red-eyed Bull, Sully
x2 Warm-hearted Guard Captain, Frederick
x1 Duke of Rosanne, Virion
Cost 2: 2
x2 Sacred Descendant, Lucina
Cost 1: 32
x2 Crown-prince of Yllise, Chrom (Main character)
x3 Sprightly Cleric, Lissa
x2 Young Prodigy, Cordelia
x2 Maiden of Fortune Flowers, Sumia
x3 Gynophobic Swordsman, Lon'qu
x2 Childish Mage, Ricken
x2 Aristocratic Archer, Virion
x2 Brazen Scarlet Knight, Sully
x3 Podunk Hero, Vaike
x2 Intellectual Inquirer, Miriel
x2 Sharp-tongued Noblewoman, Maribelle
x3 Forgotten Knight, Kellam
x2 Amnesia-stricket Tactician, Robin (Female)
x2 Good-natured Azure Knight, Stahl

Card Land (Kamata branch) shop tournament
Cost 5: 4
x4 Manakete Princess, Tiki
Cost 3: 14
x3 Wellspring of Youth, Nowi
x3 Gentle Flower of the Shepherds, Sumia
x4 Altea's Shield, Draug
x3 Innocent Priestess, Maria
x1 Sweetest Assassin, Gaius
Cost 2: 13
x2 Sentimental Divine Dragon, Tiki
x3 Wyvern Rider in the Iron Mask, Gerome
x4 Fearless Mercenary, Gregor
x4 Wings of Restoration, Caeda
Cost 1: 19
x1 Princess of the Divine Dragon Tribe, Tiki (Main character)
x4 Tomboyish Manakete, Nowi
x4 Maiden of Fortune Flowers, Sumia
x3 Jet Black Ace, Gerome
x4 Protective Knight, Draug
x3 Young Princess of Macedon, Maria

News: Inigo Harem Tops Game Plaza and Nerima Tournaments

On June 28th card shop Game Plaza Genki 302 held a 16-person Swiss Draw tournament for Cipher; the tournament fell far short of capacity at only six participants, with first place going to Kisoda playing an Inigo Harem deck similar to the one played by Haro P a week earlier. The Inigo deck has been a popular choice in the formation of the early tournament scene, as it can quickly turn into a defensive wall outside the reach of standard attackers, and rack up a strong offensive with a swarm of different Pegasus Knights cards. Second place went to Matt, and third to Lihou.

One particular offensive combo has been noted in Japan for taking advantage of a Flying-affinity lineup in a way no other deck can. The CCS of "Gentle Flower of the Shepherds, Sumia" gives +10 Attack to every unit that's supported by card with the Flying affinity, and this combos with "Guardian of Rosanne, Cherche," whose Wyvern Screech skill gives all Flying units +10 Attack. With over 70% of the deck being made up of Flying units, this on average doubles the attack power of every attacker other than Inigo.

Image credit
Game Plaza followed up on the tournament with another 16-person Swiss Draw competition on July 5th, but again had attendance problems with only 5 persons attending. Kisoda placed second in this tournament and Matt in third, with first place going to Higashi playing a Sword of Light deck. This is one of the most streamlined versions of the Sword of Light build seen since its debut, focusing on promoting five core lines of units and supporting them with a lineup of 25 support cards that each either overlap with the promotion lines or can act as reliable low-cost attackers that don't interfere with the deck's overall strategy. "Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda" is the defensive axis of the deck, able to search the deck when her attakc hits for copies of Marth to use for evasion, and "Crimson Reaper, Navarre" is its offensive axis, destroying a second enemy unit every time he destroys one by battle.

Image credit
On July 3rd, the Nerima branch of Card Kingdom hosted a 16-person Swiss Draw tournament. This tournament marked the second top by Taketea, who had also won the previous week's tournament. Although he played an Inigo Harem deck like Kisoda above, as at the previous tournament, Taketea thanked his "working 3" the Pegasus Knight sisters Palla, Catria, and Est, who have quickly become his trademark in local play. The multicolor deck shares a number of characteristics with the monocolor Marth build he played in the previous week, using Minerva's Iote's Shield to protect his units with Flying, and setting up his field with the lower-cost Pegasus sisters prior to promoting.

Game Plaza Genki 302 shop tournament (6/28)
First place: Kisoda/キソダ
Cost 4: 4
x2 Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda
x2 Affectionate Saint, Lena
Cost 3: 20
x4 Man of Flower's Fragrance, Inigo
x4 Gentle Flower of the Shepherds, Sumia
x4 Guardian of Rosanne, Cherche
x2 Pegasus Knight Paragon, Cordelia
x2 Aura's Heiress, Linde
x4 Wings of Restoration, Caeda
Cost 1: 27
x4 Cultivator of Smiles, Inigo (Main Character)
x4 Wyvern Loving Knight, Cherche
x4 Young Prodigy, Cordelia
x4 Maiden of Flower Fortunes, Sumia
x2 Eldest Pegasus Rider, Palla
x3 Young Princess of Macedon, Maria
x2 Crown-Princess of Macedon, Minerva
x2 Middle Pegasus Rider, Catria
x2 Youngest Pegasus Rider, Est

Game Plaza Genki 302 shop tournament (7/5)
First place: Higashi/ヒガシ
Cost 5: 1
x1 Hero to His Country, Marth
Cost 4: 14
x4 Lodestar, Marth
x4 Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda
x4 Sage of Gales, Merric
x2 Crimson Reaper, Navarre
Cost 3: 5
x3 Steel Swordsman, Ogma
x2 Wielder of a Bloody Blade, Navarre
Cost 2: 4
x4 Princess of Altea, Elicei
Cost 1: 26
x2 Crown-prince of Altea, Marth (Main character)
x4 Mage of Winds, Merric
x4 Crimson Fencer, Navarre
x4 Talysian Mercenary, Ogma
x4 Liberation Army Archer, Gordin
x4 Crown-princess of Talys, Caeda
x4 Princess of the Divine Dragon Tribe, Tiki

Card Kingdom (Nerima) shop tournament
First place: Taketea/竹てぃー
Deck name: Triangle △ Formation/トライアングル△フォーメーション
Cost 3: 22
x3 Pegasus Knight Paragon, Cordelia
x2 Eldest Pegasus Sister, Palla
x2 Middle Pegasus Sister, Catria
x2 Youngest Pegasus Sister, Est
x3 Princess, Minerva
x2 Wellspring of Youth, Nowi
x4 Gentle Flower of the Shepherds, Sumia
x4 Man of Flower's Fragrance, Inigo
Cost 2: 2
x2 Princess of Altea, Elice
Cost 1: 26
x2 Cultivator of Smiles, Inigo (Main Character)
x3 Princess of Talys, Caeda
x1 Practitioner of Dark Arts, Tharja
x2 Intellectual Inquirer, Miriel
x3 Young Prodigy, Cordelia
x2 Eldest Pegasus Rider, Palla
x2 Middle Pegasus Rider, Catria
x2 Youngest Pegasus Rider, Est
x3 Crown-princess of Macedon, Minerva
x4 Maiden of Flower Fortunes, Sumia
x2 Young Princess of Macedon, Maria

News: Marth Tops Cardbox, Masters Square, Card Brunch Motomiya Tournaments

Image credit
July 2nd, 2015. Cardbox Japan in Osaka held a 16-person Cipher tournament, with first place going to a multicolor Marth deck. Calling their deck "Top System," the tournament winner used one of the earliest tricks developed in Cipher theory; running "Swordsman Known as Marth, Lucina" as their main character card to take advantage of her special skill, which treats her as a Marth unit at all times. This allows Lucina to promote into the cost 4 and 5 Marths, while also making room in the deck for a greater number of targets for evasion and critical hits. A full transcription of the decklist is provided at the bottom of this article.

Image credit
On the same day, card shop Masters Square (sic) in Hachioji held a 16-person Swiss Draw tournament, with first place going to Nagare playing a Sword of Light deck deck, running the Ogma and Linde lines. Linde is presently seen as an important support engine in Japanese play because her cost 3 print "Aura's Heiress" can reinforce the hand by drawing a card once each turn that a cost 2 or less ally is deployed.

Image credit
It's also recently come to light that the first ever reported Cipher tournament was not held at Card Kingdom as was previously thought, but in fact Cardbox's June 25th shop tournament beat Card Kingdom by a day.

Image credit
Card Brunch Motomiya in Nagoya held an 8-person Swiss Draw tournament on the same day as Cardbox's and Masters Square's tournaments, with tournament winner Tomifumo making use of the rarely-played Sable Knight Camus. According to the tournament host, the finals had a dramatic conclusion: Tomifumo's opponent was able to field all of the Pegasus Knights necessary for a Triangle Formation combo, but Tomifumo countered this by playing Camus and wiping out all of them with his Gradivus ability. Tomifumo's was a complete beginner at trading card games, and their victory came as a surprise to all attending.

Cardbox shop tournament (7/2/2015)
Deck name: Top System/ウエシステム Ueshisutemu
Cost 5: 5
x1 Hero to His Country, Marth
x4 Manakete Princess, Tiki
Cost 4: 10
x4 Lodestar, Marth
x1 Protector of Ylisse, Chrom
x1 Sweetest Assassin Gaius
x4 Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda
Cost 3: 6
x4 Innocent Priestess, Maria
x2 Princess of Ylisse, Lissa
Cost 2: 10
x4 Fearless Mercenary, Gregor
x4 Wellspring of Youth, Nowi
x2 Bewitching Plegian Shaman, Tharja
Cost 1: 19
x1 Swordsman Known as Marth, Lucina (Main Character)
x2 Crown-prince of Altea, Marth
x2 Sharp-tongued Nobelwoman, Maribelle
x2 Sprightly Cleric, Lissa
x2 Young Prodigy, Cordelia
x2 Wyvern Loving Knight, Cherche
x2 Flower Fortune Maiden, Sumia
x2 Young Princess of Macedon, Maria
x4 Aristocratic Archer, Virion

Masters Square shop tournament
First place: Nagare/ナガレ
Cost 4: 15
x4 Lodestar, Marth
x3 Steel Swordsman, Ogma
x3 Aura's Heiress, Linde
x2 Archanean League Bowman, Gordin
x2 Sage of Gales, Merric
x1 Loyal Retainer, Jagen
Cost 3: 6
x2 Archanean League Bowman, Gordin
x2 Affectionate Saint, Lena
x1 Wings of Restoration, Caeda
x1 Innocent Priestess, Maria
Cost 2: 2
x2 Princess of Altea, Elice
Cost 1: 29
x2 Crown Prince of Altea, Marth (Main Character)
x3 Talysian Mercenary, Ogma
x2 Talysian Fighter, Cord
x3 Talysian Fighter, Bord
x1 Scarlet Knight, Cain
x1 Verdant Knight, Abel
x3 Crown Princess of Talys, Caeda
x3 Daughter of Pontifex Miloah, Linde
x3 Liberator Army Archer, Gordin
x3 Mage of Winds, Merric
x3 Ascetic Saint, Lena
x2 Young Princess of Macedon, Maria

Cardbox shop tournament (6/25)
First place: Kurita/クリタ
Cost 5: 3
x3 Hero to His Country, Marth
Cost 4: 8
x4 Crismon Reaper, Navarre
x4 Lodestar, Marth
Cost 3: 10
x4 Loyal Retainer, Jagen
x4 Affectionate Saint, Lena
x2 Aerial Battle Princess, Caeda
Cost 2: 4
x2 Myrmidon from Parts Unknown, Atehna
x2 Princess of Altea, Elice
Cost 1: 25
x1 Swordsman Known as Marth, Lucina (Main character)
x4 Crimson Fencer, Navarre
x4 Liberation Army Archer, Gordin
x4 Affectionate Saint, Lena
x4 Healing Priest, Wrys
x4 Crown-Princess of Talys, Caeda
x4 Crown-prince of Altea, Marth

Card Brunch Motomiya shop tournament
First place: Tomifumo/とみふも
Deck name: ST Custom/ST改
Cost 5: 2
x2 Sable Knight, Camus
Cost 4: 9
x2 War-god of Talys, Ogma
x1 Sage of Gales, Merric
x2 Princess, Minerva
x4 Lodestar, Marth
Cost 3: 10
x2 Loyal Retainer, Jagen
x3 Steel Swordsman, Ogma
x1 Infamous Knight "Prowling Panther," Abel
x1 Infamous Knight "Raging Bull" Cain
x1 Archanean League Bowman, Gordin
x2 Aerial Battle Princess, Caeda
Cost 1: 34
x2 Prince of Altea, Marth (Main character)
x2 Daughter of Pontifex Miloah, Linde
x2 Crimson Fencer, Navarre
x2 Talysian Fighter, Bord
x2 Talysian Fighter, Cord
x2 Talysian Mercenary, Ogma
x3 Verdant Knight, Abel
x3 Crimson Knight, Cain
x3 Mage of Winds, Merric
x3 Young Princess of Macedon, Maria
x2 Liberation Army Archer, Gordin
x2 Protective Knight, Draug
x4 Princess of Macedon, Minerva
x2 Crown-Princess of Talys, Caeda

News: First Images of Fire Emblem Cipher Official Guide

The first images of Tokuma Shoten's Fire Emblem Cipher Official Guide have surfaced through Amazon, giving a look at the guide's exclusive promotional card "Enigmatic Tactician, Robin (Male)." The guide will contain a full catalog of all 125 existing cards, spanning B01: Warblade of Heroes, S01: War of Darkness, S02: Awakening, and all of the promotional cards distributed prior to B02: Soulful Flames of Light and Dark. At this time only 122 cards are known to exist counting Robin, and the guide's tie-in promo appears to have a set number of P01-015PR. Hence the Official Guide will contain information on three other cards that have still not been revealed as of yet.
Enigmatic Tactician, Robin (Male)
AUTO [Reverse 2] When this unit is deployed, if the number of orbs you control is not greater than your opponent's, if you pay the cost, put the top card of your deck into your orb area.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

News: Nintendo to Host Women's Club for Cipher

Image credit
Scheduled for July 23rd, 2015, Nintendo will be hosting Fire Emblem Cipher's first women's club (女子会 joshikai "women's gathering") at Dining Bar Othello in Tokyo. The meeting will have a limited capacity of 20 persons, and only women ages 20 and older may be invited. Entry will be 3000 yen per person, with entrants will receive 4 booster packs of Warblade of Heroes with their entry, and the event is expected to run from 6 PM to 8 PM JST. Preregistration will end on July 15th.

The aim of the event is to promote a safer play environment for female players; such “women’s club” events have become commonplace in Japan since 2011, having been promoted extensively for other trading card games like Cardfight!! Vanguard, and in Nintendo's own Pokémon TCG.

How the event organizers will address transsexual and/or genderfluid individuals has not been addressed. These topics are typically a taboo subject in Japan.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

News: Kozaki Hints at International Release for Fire Emblem Cipher

July 2nd, 2015. At this year's Japan Expo in Paris, Fire Emblem Awakening and Fates character designer Kozaki Yuusuke held both a signing, and a panel to address questions from his fans. When asked as to if Fire Emblem Cipher would be coming to the west, Kozaki speaking through a translator hinted that this option was on the table;
Nous devons voir comment le jeu marche au Japon avant de le sortir en Europe et en Amérique.
We must see how the game does in Japan before releasing it in Europe and in America.
While normally one would expect Kozaki to issue no comment on the question, his statement suggests that Nintendo and Intelligent Systems have already been considering the viability of an international release. Kozaki has been deeply involved with Cipher from the beginning, most recently having introduced the game to the general public alongside Intelligent Systems staff in a pre-launch box opening and game demo streamed in late June. Along with his core artwork for Awakening and Fates, he also illustrates cards for Cipher. He has also been a regular at Japan Expo for several years now.

Today's article was made possible by the donations of our patrons at Patreon. The Lycian League is funded by public contributions from readers like you. 

Price Guide: Week of 6/21 Through 6/28

The following is a price guide for the week of 6/21/2015 through the week of 6/28/2015, comprising the primary high-rarity cards from B01: Warblade of Heroes. Rather than relying on auction sites to determine prices, the prices given below are based on averaging the day to day most expensive cards at Card Kingdom's Akihabara branch, at Grand Panda Canyon in Akiba, and at Cardbox Japan. Future guides will include additional retailers' in the price averages; at this time Card Kingdom and GPC are two of the biggest shops in the secondary market, with Cardbox being secondary to them, and web stores have yet to seriously adopt Cipher. In general GPC's prices are slightly higher than Card Kingdom's. The timeframe for the weeks given below is more limited than it may appear; Cipher launched on the 25th and the first price lists from a shop came out on the 24th, while the week of 6/28 ends on the 1st of July. 7/6/2015: Finalized prices for the week of 6/28 ending on 7/1 are now up.

Although most of the cards that made this list are Super Rare or above, the promotional cards "Prince of Piercing Principles, Chrom" and "Stoic Prince, Marth" are also included; unlike most promotional cards, these are not alternate artwork reprints of existing cards, but have a unique skillset and low availability. Chrom was given out to participants at official demo events of Fire Emblem Cipher, while a holographic print of Marth is packaged with the Japanese special edition of Fire Emblem: Fates. The difficulty of acquiring these cards and the small number distributed is driving up the price more than their skills.

"Knower of the Future, Lucina" is the breakout hit of the set, consistently outdoing other SR-rarity cards and coming out of this week at 1600 yen per card. Her signed SR+ print is currently the most expensive card in the game, averaging at the currency equivalent of over $50.

To convert from yen to US dollars, the quickest and easiest way is to introduce the decimal point two spaces in. So 400 yen becomes $4, and 4500 yen $45. However, this is only a pneumonic device, and should not be substituted for the real exchange rate. The real exchange rate of the yen is not 100 yen to $1 as is often thought, but is closer to 80 yen to $1 and fluctuates frequently. To get a truly accurate conversion, use either Google Finance's currency conversion or another financial exchange service.

Hero to His Country, Marth (SR)
230 yen (previous week) → 525 yen (current week)

Hero to His Country, Marth (SR+, signed)
2200 yen → 4180 yen

Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda (SR)
620 yen → 1200 yen
Angelic Advocate of Affection, Caeda (SR+, signed)
 1950 yen → 2640 yen

War-god of Talys, Ogma (SR)
200 yen → No data

Crimson Reaper, Navarre (SR)
230 yen → 330 yen

Crimson Reaper, Navarre (SR+, signed)
No data → 1500 yen

Manakete Princess, Tiki (SR)
830 yen → 1050 yen

Sable Order, Camus (SR)
150 yen → No data

New Exalt, Chrom (SR)
420 yen → No data

Knower of the Future, Lucina (SR)
 1110 yen → 1480 yen

Knower of the Future, Lucina (SR+, signed)
 5240 yen → 5880 yen

Sweetest Assassin, Gaius (SR)
250 yen → 300 yen

Pegasus Knight Paragon, Cordelia (SR)
970 yen → 1300 yen

Mage of Dark Obsessions, Tharja (SR)
660 yen → 1030 yen

Mage of Dark Obsessions, Tharja (SR+)
No data → 1400 yen

Chosen Warrior of Hope, Owain (SR)
50 yen → No data

Prince of Piercing Principles, Chrom (P01-005PR)
No data → 875 yen

Stoic Prince, Marth (P01-003PR)
No data → 1000 yen