Chalk?
Oh yeah, the stuff you write on sidewalks with.
Light blue and red were always OP and chalk makers never did anything to change it.
Chalk?
Chalk?
CHALK is an acronym for Cresselia, Heatran, Amoonguss, Landorus-T, and (Mega) Kangaskhan. It comes from 2015 VCG, where literally every top team was using at least four of those Pokémon, and has since become a meme referring to how stale metagames can get and how complacent gaming syndrome affects them. And it's far from a Pokémon thing: it leads to things like
One thing I've tended to notice is that, somewhat paradoxically, the more choices you give players, the less creative they get with their strategies because they will always gravitate towards the "strongest" choices. Compare the top players from the aforementioned "CHALK" season, which allowed basically every non-Uber or Mythical Pokémon to be used, to the year before, which was Kalos-Dex only. See the difference in variety? I feel something similar happens in the TCG, especially as a given year progresses and more sets come out, and it can happen at a scarily fast rate, invalidating top decks before. Seriously, who would have thought at the beginning of the 2017 tournament cycle that the top two decks (Golisodor and Gardevoir-GX) were based around cards that didn't even exist in English until mere weeks before worlds?
- Ken Fighter 4: Sagat Strike
- No Items, Fox Only, Final Destination in Smash Melee
- Every Spy in Team Fortress 2 using the Dead Ringer
- Everybody fortifies Australia in Risk
- Nobody declines to buy the deed when they land on an unowned property in Monopoly
- This sort of thing is why RSTLNE is given out by default on Wheel of Fortune, since before that everyone that made it to the Bonus Round always put out those letters. Even afterwards, most people go for CDMA.
Reasonable logic. Do you not buy any TCG products anymore then?
We definitely aren’t in CHALK. The meta has got a bit tighter, but there’s still a good chunk of options.
Now, Yugioh. That’s a CHALK game.
I think we've been in such a format at certain times. For example, I still wonder if Feraligatr w/Riptide was truly as great as it seemed in the Rocket-On and Neon Standard Formats, or if it was just the deck everyone knew plus we had to deal with the mess that was Slowking (Neo Genesis).
Correct. I currently only play via the PTCGO. Granted, I also have next-to-no discretionary income, so it is much easier to resist for me than for others. Of course, if I didn't enjoy writing about and discussing the TCG so much, I'd have probably ditched it like I have the video games. I don't classify Gen II as the best out of nostalgia (that would lead me to pick Gen I), but because Gen II was still on limited enough hardware that various design decisions still made sense, as well as keeping the core game almost identical and just grafting on a few new bits and pieces here and there.
You're forgetting about the tyrant king that was CurseLax.