As you may have heard, there are two ways to receive in-game rewards from World of Warcraft's trading card game: special "loot" cards giving specific prizes and by collecting UDE points, which come with each pack of cards. You get 100 points per booster pack (which gives 200 points per starter deck, as it contains two boosters) via codes you enter on Upper Deck's website. And there are some fun rewards here, too! Beyond special wallpapers with unique artwork, there's a funky blue tabard, a trinket that sets off a unique fireworks display, and a trinket that turns you into an Ogre. The problem, however, is cost. The tabard costs 2,000 points, the fireworks trinket costs 10,000 points, and the Ogre trinket 25,000 points. So 20 booster packs, 100 booster packs, and 250 booster packs, respectively. Paying about $4.50 per booster, that's $90 for the tabard, $450 for the fireworks trinket, and $1,125 for the Ogre trinket. Yikes -- that's a heck of a financial investment for a pretty bauble.WoW TCG: Prizes, fabulous prizes!
As you may have heard, there are two ways to receive in-game rewards from World of Warcraft's trading card game: special "loot" cards giving specific prizes and by collecting UDE points, which come with each pack of cards. You get 100 points per booster pack (which gives 200 points per starter deck, as it contains two boosters) via codes you enter on Upper Deck's website. And there are some fun rewards here, too! Beyond special wallpapers with unique artwork, there's a funky blue tabard, a trinket that sets off a unique fireworks display, and a trinket that turns you into an Ogre. The problem, however, is cost. The tabard costs 2,000 points, the fireworks trinket costs 10,000 points, and the Ogre trinket 25,000 points. So 20 booster packs, 100 booster packs, and 250 booster packs, respectively. Paying about $4.50 per booster, that's $90 for the tabard, $450 for the fireworks trinket, and $1,125 for the Ogre trinket. Yikes -- that's a heck of a financial investment for a pretty bauble.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-01-2006 @ 12:24PM
phatbhuda said...
These prices are reduced. They were originally about twice that. Enough people complained though.
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 12:45PM
Hailwood said...
I'm pretty sure there was a Penny Arcade comic about this whole thing...
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 1:13PM
Mar said...
I hate it when they use a game to market another.
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 1:20PM
Mike Schramm said...
Booster packs for the TCG are $4.50? Are they made of gold or something?
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 1:37PM
EvilCheese said...
Boosters are only $3.89, anything else is mark-up. All GameStops and EB Games around NW Ohio and online are selling boosters at $3.99 a pop, which isn't too bad since it's only 10 cent mark-up.
These rewards aren't really designed to be used in the first week of the game's release! It's more of a reward for playing the game over the course of time. So after months of playing the trading card game, and expanding your card library and whatnot, you'll acquire points to unlock stuff like this.
I think it's a nice system since it basically rewards you for something you would've already bought anyways.
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 1:51PM
DÖT said...
they are only $3.99 in the mid-west! I bought a few packs just to see if i'd get a loot card...I didn't so I won't be buying anymore.
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 2:02PM
Diance said...
Also booster packs aren't the only way to get points. UDE sponsored tournaments will award you points as well. They haven't clarified how many but they have hinted that top prize will be a substantial number of UDEpoints.
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 2:19PM
Elizabeth Harper said...
The "lifetime points" requirement for the tabard has been removed -- or at least it's mysteriously vanished from Upper Deck's page.
As to booster cost, they run $3.99 or so if you buy them in a box of 24 packs (that's the cost from Upper Deck's web site, which doesn't sell boosters individually), but individual packs are marked up various amounts. Though I suppose if you were just really after these rewards, you would just buy the full boxes...
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 2:24PM
Tryst said...
No one in frigging Los Angeles is selling this fricking game. I went to FIVE places on Saturday. :-(
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 3:30PM
Buruko said...
They've only done one run of the cards. Meaning what they have is out there, and what is sold out will be sold out for a bit as they have to print a new batch.
I'd imagine that value of the cards in the beginning will be substainal and fall off as production increase for demand. Much like the WoW launch the TCG has had under estimated popularity.
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 3:34PM
Tigraine said...
Maybe some ppl here forget that ppl buying the trading card game aren't neccarily bying it for ingame Rewards..
I guess if you are really into that trading card game they will invest a whole more than those 250 booster packs (ever asked those Magic geeks how mutch their cards costed?) .. and those will get that Ogre Trinket..
Others.. simply won't..
And .. as said.. Those points are also a reward from tournaments so the whole thing really pushes the Trading card game up .. Tournaments are good for a community, and besides getting nice Prices at the tournament you also get some nice Rewards ingame.. nothing wrong with that I guess
greetings Tigraine
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 4:37PM
drypulse said...
"that's a heck of a financial investment for a pretty bauble."
it is an actual game itself....
Reply
11-01-2006 @ 7:14PM
AareDub said...
Its also worth noting that the tabard, while seemingly cheap, also requires 25,000 lifetime points.
Reply
11-02-2006 @ 12:22AM
Savok said...
Y'know, a couple of rare loot cards and you'd make a large chunk of that money back on Ebay.
Reply
11-02-2006 @ 4:25AM
uncaringbear said...
Imagine if you were able to cash in card points for useful epic items? Do I smell another revenue stream for Blizzard? Wouldn't that turn upside down???
Reply