The core deck contains 500 cards. 160 characters (white cards), and 340 powers and weaknesses (black cards). Players use a hand of three white cards and three black cards, and choose one of each to beat the player next to them. Then they get a random black card before fighting. Players then argue their case for why they should win, and the table votes.
Note: Superfight went through a major reprint in late 2014. The rules and about 30% of the cards were refined to improve the game after it sold out of its original print runs. The Cards Against Humanity/Apples to Apples mechanism has been replaced by a table vote and one-one one battles, but the battle royale and villain rulesets keep the old single-judge mechanism if the table prefers it.
Superfight is a party card game in which players have to make a combination of cards that represent their own superpowers and face off against a villain in the same fashion, and the players must then argue about how their created superhero can defeat other heroes, or a villain character depending on the game mode being played.[1][2] After its initial release, many expansion packs have been created to add onto the base game, some taking more adult themes while others take on group qualities, locations, or more heroes.
Superfight first appeared as a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter in 2013 by Jack Dire[3] and quickly became funded. However in 2014, it went through a major rewrite,[4] recreating over 30% of the content that was provided after the original release. Even after its development, the game has continued to develop with multiple expansion packs, currently with 19 available to the public. After its successful Kickstarter campaign, Superfight came to the attention of Skybound Entertainment who later became its publisher.[5]
Now, the duo will meet in the Japanese capital for a special rules super-fight, and each competitor will don the 4-ounce gloves. The first round will be contested under boxing rules, the second frame will be contested under Muay Thai rules, and the third and final stanza will be contested under MMA rules.
Another writing update coming at ya! There is not a whole lot to report. This week, I am about half way finished with the Halloween short story and should be done by Sunday. I have been writing a few other ideas this week on other short stories in a variety of genres, but I won't start those until I have a couple more done. I also read Roald Dahl's short horror story, "Royal Jelly," which I highly recommend if you want to get in to the Halloween mood.
What spurred on a lot of those recent ideas was the game, Superfight. Superfight is a card game where two players pit a random creature or person against each other in a battle to the death, determined by a jury of your peers. The game requires players to argue their case for why their character would win the fight. Each player gets three cards, one character card and two modifier cards.
The game gets hilarious when you are playing with good friends and you draw ridiculous characters with equally crazy modifiers. For example, our latest game involved one of the players to face off against Cthulhu (character card), wearing diamond armor (modifier card), carrying way too many grocery bags (another crazy modifier card).
This pack of 20 blank Superfight cards is the ultimate in customizable card game technology. So grab a marker and write your best friend's mom, Ernest Hemingway, and all the other weird inside jokes that we would never print in an official deck.
Superfight is a hilarious card game based on fights between characters with superpowers and super problems. Players create fighters from these cards, then argue with one another over who would win in a fight! The base game has 500 cards spread between two decks.
The party card game has players use cards to generate ridiculous combatant combinations (a t-rex with laser eyes VS. Bruce Lee made of steel) from cards and then debate on who would win the fight. The 500-card core game contains two decks, a 160-card character deck, and a 340-card powers and problems deck. MSRP is $35.00. The game releases on October 28.
The game also has nine expansions in print, which add different characters and situations to the game. The 100-card expansion decks can be used alone or combined with the base game for more arbitrary match-ups. Kirkham told ICv2 that Skybound plans to add the expansions to distribution at a later date. MSRP is $15.00 each.
The most recent expansions include Superfight: The Walking Dead Deck, Superfight: The Anime Deck, and Superfight: The Challenge Deck. The Walking Dead Deck adds Walking Dead survivors and villains, as well as iconic locations and scenarios. The Anime Deck adds Coku, Sailor Moon, Ash Ketchum, the Colossal Titan, and many more cards inspired by new and classic anime shows. The Challenge Deck is a modifier deck which adds new victory conditions to the fights. Instead of combatants fighting to the death, they may now compete in a Quidditch match, a football game, or try to survive The Game of Thrones.
There are also Update Decks that contain the new cards added to each set after Skybound Games took over production in November 2014. MSRP is $5 - $10.00 each, depending on the number of cards included.
The IBJJF has announced the full card for the IBJJF No-Gi Absolute Grand Prix, happening February 29th in Costa Mesa, CA. The action will be featuring black belt world champions Tainan Dalpra and Jamil Hill-Taylor, as well as star colored belts Sarah Galvao, Mia Funegra, Nata Tenca, and more.
The absolute grand prix will bring together some of the biggest names in grappling to compete for the grand prize, including two reigning ADCC Champions and IBJJF multiple IBJJF black belt World No-Gi Champions. The 8-man bracket will feature;
The super fights will feature a mix of world class black belts and some of the best colored belts in the competition scene. This event will also feature the return of Jamil Hill-Taylor who has been out for nearly a year. The main event of Tainan Dalpra vs Mauricio Oliveira will be the first time the two have ever faced off, and Oliveira is fresh off of a gold medal run at the IBJJF European Championships at medium-heavyweight.
There's no offseason when it comes to boxing, but as the calendar turns to 2021, and without any big fights scheduled just yet, it is time to indeed follow that catchphrase, be bold and offer up our biggest prognostications for the year.
Shakur Stevenson will win multiple junior lightweight titles and become the No. 1 fighter in the division: Fresh off moving up to 130, Stevenson will be title hunting in 2021. He has plans to face the winner of the Jamel Herring-Carl Frampton WBO title bout in the spring, then set his eyes on WBC champion Miguel Berchelt and IBF champion JoJo Diaz. That's an ambitious plan for the 23-year-old Stevenson, but he will be successful in winning two or three of those titles in 2021.
Tyson Fury knocks out Anthony Joshua to become undisputed heavyweight champion: Ultimately neither Joshua nor Fury decide to vacate their belts, so this fight doesn't happen in the first half of 2021. Instead, Joshua beats his WBO mandatory challenger Oleskandr Usyk in the spring while Fury goes through with his trilogy with Deontay Wilder... or fights someone else in a stay-busy bout.
But before the end of the year, Fury-Joshua does happen in front of a full arena of fans with Fury scoring a memorable knockout to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Lennox Lewis in 1999. -- Cameron Wolfe
The lightweight division will be boxing's best as we see Gervonta "Tank" Davis vs. Ryan Garcia AND Teofimo Lopez vs. Devin Haney: Comparing this lightweight division to the "Four Kings" (Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Tommy Hearns, Roberto Duran) is ambitious at best at this point, but what made that era special is the "kings" all fought one another. The lightweight division of 2021 begins to separate itself from the rest as its young fighters aren't afraid of losing their "0". They want to make the megafights happen now instead of letting them marinate. The round-robin tournament begins in 2021.
Garcia and Davis have been yapping at each other for years, but it has escalated in recent weeks and the two look headed for a collision course this year. Two power punchers with questionable defense is a recipe for a fight of the year candidate, and they each have the fan base and social media followings to make this fight as big as it can get in the sport.
That leaves Lopez and Haney in a battle for the disputed true WBC title. Both say they want to fight the other before moving up to the junior welterweight division, and since it appears Garcia and Davis only desire to fight each other right now, Lopez and Haney become perfect dance partners. -- Cameron Wolfe
Jermell Charlo becomes undisputed champion, Jermall Charlo becomes unified champion: 2021 will be a huge year for the Charlo brothers. Jermell, who currently holds the WBC, IBF and WBA junior middleweight titles will face the winner of the February's Patrick Teixera-Brian Castano WBO title bout, probably in the summer, and he will win to become undisputed champion at 154.
In a mission not to let his brother have all the fun, Jermall Charlo will beat either WBO champion Demetrius Andrade, IBF champion Gennadiy Golovokin or WBA champion Ryota Murata adding to his WBC belt becoming an unified middleweight champion. -- Cameron Wolfe
Terence Crawford will fight Errol Spence Jr. for the undisputed welterweight title: This prediction gets a bit tricky because, at the moment, Crawford and Spence only hold three of the four major welterweight belts. One of them would have to defeat Manny Pacquiao would have to vacate the belt at some point before July.
For the sake of this prediction, Pacquiao returns in June to unify the titles against Spence and loses a narrow decision. In the meantime, Crawford defends his title against Shawn Porter, which not only eliminates his number one challenger but Spence's as well. With mandatory challengers a non-issue, Crawford takes the dreaded 40-60 deal to fight Spence on pay-per-view and prove he's the best welterweight in the world. -- Kel Dansby
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