Archive for June, 2009

Card Master 68 in stores now!

Card Master issue 68 has been released today. It not only features a in-depth look of the latest Yu-Gi-Oh! starter deck, it also contains a review of the all-new set Raging Battles. Learn everything about the Blackwing monsters as well as the Koa’ki Meiru theme deck that will both try to find a place in the most diverse metagame that the Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG has ever seen!

The special gimmick of this issue is a deckbox offering you a nice opportunity to protect some of your most precious cards or your side deck.

Just click on the image of the magazine on the right to find your way to the Card Master-website.

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Suppe für den soul – C-C-C-Combo-Decks

This monday, in Suppe für den soul, I’m talking about Combo decks. The one archetype that hasn’t seen much play in the World of Warcraft TCG so far, but with an ever-emerging card pool, it’s only a matter of time until a playable Combo deck will emerge. To help me with the article, I interviewed the two-times National Champion Jonas Skali so we could gain a better insight.

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Unskilled and Unaware of It

Everyone knows about this phenomenon: You see an absolutely ungifted person that is not capable of doing what he or she is supposed to do, but if you want to make them aware of their shortcomings (in whatever way), they act like they’ve no idea what you’re talking about. If I would now claim that incompetent individuals tend to overestimate their own level of skill, everyone could come up with various examples of such individuals they know.

Interestingly enough, there’s a study that is exploring this phenomenon – I found it on a rather cool “Wikipedia trip” (I started out with the Dilbert Principle, found the article about the Peter Principle, got hooked up on Parkinson’s Law (my own experience confirms this btw) which lead me to the Ig Nobel Prizes and I eventually made my way to the Dunning-Kruger effect as well as the related and already linked study). It confirms some of the “public knowledge”: Unskilled individuals are most likely to overestimate their level of skill. Further, the better someone scored in the various tests, the closer his estimation of his own ability matched his actual scores – although the best participants underestimated themselves (I’ll get back to that later).

In order to make a less skilled individual aware of their own shortcomings in some particular area, you had to teach them how to solve the test that covered this field. This is a paradox: You have to turn someone who’s unskilled at something into an expert or at least advanced player in the particular field to make him aware that he was unskilled before.

The lecture of this study (that is throwing numbers at you from time to time and can’t be recommended as a bedtime reading for exactly this reason) made me think about some things:

  • I guess I’m much less talented as a football player than I always thought – (it’s perfectly fine to laugh at this time. At least this insight acts as yet another proof that it was the right call to turn my back on football and chase a career in the weird field of Trading Card Games)
  • I feel vindicated about teaching other people in many ways – (this doesn’t mean that I’ll smack it in their faces when they’re not the brightest button that ever shone. Quite the contrary, now it should be even easier to understand why they’re slow on the uptake)
  • It’s even more obvious now why so few people try to teach themselves. After all, they are not even aware about how little they know – (or to quote a cynic: It’s a bad world!” – as if we didn’t already know that)
  • I’m asking myself if I’m overly confident of my abilities in various fields or if I’m such a genius that I’m actually still underestimating myself – (naturally, I tend to favor the latter option)

The study compared the unskilled individuals to Anosognosia patients. This condition causes a paralyzation of the left half of the body due to a damage in the right brain hemisphere. If you place a cup in front of such a patient and ask him to pick it up with his left hand, he’ll fail (for obvious reasons). However, the patient will also fail to realize why he failed (pictures of “you fail at failing” demotivational posters come to my mind), he’ll come up with weird explanations for his inability to pick up the cup – that he didn’t hear the person asking him to do so, that he didn’t “feel like it” or that he was too tired, etc. He has an inability to realize that he’s partly paralized.

Once again, I feel like “simply knowing” is not really the key for most people, like I already pointed out in my All it takes is one decision blog posting.

Just a quick note on the best scoring participants in the aforementioned tests: It is most likely that they thought everyone else would do quite as good as they did which lead to them underestimating theirselves. After showing them the test results of less skilled participants, they gained enough confidence to think of their own scores in a better way, pretty much closing the gap between their expectations and the actual results.

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Suppe für den soul – Community-Feature Reutlingen

No news despite lots of information about various releases. I should definitely try to update the page a little more, but at the moment there are other things on my mind (mainly the job search). So well, sorry for that, but I guess that’s still better than no update at all.

This week in Suppe für den soul, I take an in-depth look at the World of Warcraft community in Reutlingen, so in case you ever wondered what the whole buzz around their group is all about, give it a read.

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