이벤트

통찰.

비용: 1.

탐구자

신속. 당신의 차례 동안에만 플레이할 수 있습니다.

당신의 덱 맨 위 카드를 1장 버립니다. 그 카드가 약점이라면, 그 카드를 당신의 덱에 다시 섞어넣습니다. 그 외의 경우, 당신의 차례가 끝날 때까지, (그 카드가 당신의 버린 카드 더미에 있는 동안) 그 카드를 당신이 수행하는 적합한 능력 테스트마다 소모합니다.

Adam S. Doyle
지구의 끝자락 조사자 확장 #34.
별들 사이에 쓰여 있나니

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Reviews

It's obvious that Written in the Stars is good for Norman, but in this review, I'll talk about other seeker investigators.

This ability is very powerful if you discard good skill card which works during investigation: Deduction, Perception, or Eureka!. Currently, most seekers can perform 4 investigation actions for a turn thanks to Eon Chart & Ariadne's Twine. It means that Deduction gives 4-8 additional clues, Perception gives 4-8 cards, and Eureka! gives approx. 4 cards with searching. The problem is that we don't know the top card of deck. There is some supporting card in , but how about taboo-ed Scroll of Secrets (3)? We have 3 chances to check the top of the deck.

Additionally, Amanda is another investigator who considers this card without any supporting cards. Commonly, she contains lots of skill cards which work during investigation: Deduction, Perception, Eureka, Unrelenting, or Leadership. With her investigator ability, she commits 2 cards at each investigations. Additionally, most cards in her deck has or icon, so that even if we play Written in the Star without checking deck, discarded card could support the investigation; of course, little deck tuning may be needed. In my case, very few cards contains no-: Hiking Boots, Death • XIII, Cryptic Research, Pathfinder, Forewarned, Shortcut(0), Mr. "Rook".... Even if those card is discarded, it's not critical for Amanda; it's because deck tempo of Amanda is fast enough to cycle your deck.

elkeinkrad · 468

This seems like it'd be a powerful card for Norman arkhamdb.com

Also, as it turns out, reviews have to be at least 200 characters long, so that's why this sentence is here, and for really no other reason.

khoshekh · 5
Love your user name. How did you write this while floating in the bathroom? — skanedog · 63
There's a trick to it - you can read about it in the public library... — khoshekh · 5

It has been said by Elkeinkrad already, but I want to point out how this can be good in any investigator that has around 10 skills or more in their Deck.

Digging your deck with the Scroll of Secrets (3) allows you to do the following, without spending a single action:

• Look in your deck for Written in the Stars and place it in your hand

• Place the skill you've chosen on top

• Potentially discard a weakness

• And then immediately use Written in the Stars.

Also, the fact that the Secret is spent during the trigger makes it a perfect synergy with Abigail Foreman who can trigger it twice, and the fact that you use the cards at the bottom of your deck makes sure that you don't take the same cards again (unless you chose to return one card at the bottom of your deck).

Also one quick mention to Eidetic Memory that can give you extra uses at the end of a Scenario though I'm not so sure it's the most effective way to spend your XP.

It is of course better to use this in Astronomical Atlas-Norman or Amanda as pointed out, but also:

• Deck-cycling Harvey Walters can benefit from this, especially as it helps deal with that terrible weakness

• Minh Thi Phan who is the Skill- would love it too (imagine finding Sharp Vision), and can also Scavenge it!

• Mandy Thompson loves digging her Deck and would love to find Eureka! (even though it doesn't use the "search" words so it doesn't trigger her )

• Rex Murphy would love Perception (2) to draw a lot of cards while triggering his

• || Daisy Walker loves a Tome,

• Daisy Walker can also use Parallel Fates, Alyssa Graham and why not use Written in the Stars on Enraptured to fill up the Scroll with even more Secrets

Joe Diamond is happy to have an Insight to recur with his

Ursula Downs to get rid of that crippling Call of the Unknown though she's not the best user of this combo.

• Luke Robinson, Jim Culver could also use the card with Alyssa Graham and Scrying (3) but it seems less worth it.

Valentin1331 · 55083
I wonder why nobody mentioned Alyssa Graham, which is an option for seeker/mystic investigators. — Tharzax · 1
Oh right, I will add her! It's quite an expensive way to look at your top card though, 4 resources and 1 Ally Slot, but she works every turn which is good. — Valentin1331 · 55083
You mention Scroll of Secrets (3) letting you scry your deck without spending an action (which assumes the taboo mutated version) AND then also mention Abigail Foreman who only trigger on activate actions.... which tabooed Scroll no longer has??? — synkout · 1

There's a couple cards that tell you what's on top of your deck, those are all well and good, but really, the only truly dependable combo for this card, is Norman Withers.

Norman and skill cards go together like water and oil, when the skill cards float to the top of his deck, they blot out his ability.

Written in the Stars solves that issue, removing the skill card while making enhanced use of it. The problem? It's random, when there's a Deduction sitting on top, you might not be in a round where you can grab clues, when there's a Guts, you might not be in a round where you can blast things with your Shrivelling. What this thing needs is mechancis that re-order your cards, like Scrying, and it requires some setup, like looking at your deck to see the skill card, maneuvering into place, entering the round where the skill is on top, and then blasting away. A plan like that has several things that can go wrong.

I dont think Written in the Stars currently warrants a deck slot, even for the apparent, "perfect character", but perhaps there's synergies that I just dont see yet.

Tsuruki23 · 2472
Norman's signature allows you to swap the top card for one in your hand, so if you hold Deduction until the right moment, slap it on top, then play this, you're in great shape. — SGPrometheus · 745
I agree with Tsuruki23. I tried this card with Norman and it seems like a "win-more" card. If everything comes together, you have an amazing turn but in that case you were probably already doing pretty well. Save your deck slots for cards that will make a difference when things are not going well. — GeneralXy · 36