To “deal” yourself cards, hover over your finished deck and press the numerical value you need on your keyboard. You can do this by selecting your name in the top right corner of the screen with “change color.” In this mod, each color matches with a certain player mat. To initiate a game, assign yourself a “player color,” which allows you to have a hand that you can manipulate at the bottom of the screen. If there is an error message, re-load the mod, check your ArkhamDB account permissions, then try again. Viola! Add a random weakness to your deck and follow the instructions above to save it as an object. Press “load cards” inside of the TTS mod deckbuilder tool, then type in that ArkhamDB ID (just the ID, in this case 711850). You will automatically be taken to a new page with a URL like this. Find a deck you like ( example) and copy it (the little disc icon below the title on the upper right-hand corner). Go to your settings, then check the “share your decks” box. OR, you could use the automated deckbuilder in tandem with ArkhamDB. Congratulations, you’ve saved your first deck! To instantly spawn it into an online game, have the lobby owner give you permissions and then select “objects,” at the top of the screen and click on “saved objects.” Then click the deck you want and it will appear in the game. Mash all of the cards together into one stack and right click on it: select “save object” and give it a name. You can also create a deck on the upper left-hand corner of the screen to more easily locate cards. Simply click and drag the cards you want onto the table to create your deck. To choose individual cards in a stack, right-click on a stack, and select “search.” This will show each card available in each stack on the right side of the screen. You can “place” two different aspects at once inside of “layout 01” and “layout 02.” Press “place” to “flick out” all of the relevant cards in each section. To locate player cards, head to the top left-hand corner of the screen and locate each class type (such as Guardian). Investigator cards are double-sided and can be flipped with “F” at will when highlighting it. Make sure you do this before placing each deluxe in succession. Once you’re done, press “recall” to put that deluxe back into its box, then you can “place” another deluxe. To “flick” out an entire deluxe set, press “place” and the entire set will fly in front of the play area. All of the investigators are located on the right-hand side of the board inside of each deluxe box (remember, investigators are not in Mythos packs). Making a deck is tricky at first, but once you get the hang of it, it’s as simple as making one in real life.įirst, pick which investigator you want to start with. This is how you’ll grab investigators, player and encounter cards to build those decks.Įvery card in the game is in those bags: if you take the time to learn where everything is, it’ll be a cinch to start a game. You can click and drag everything to suit your needs, or grab items out of the pouches by clicking on them and flicking the contents out of the bag. Take a look at the image above ( here’s a higher resolution version) to see where everything is located. If the mod is not available publicly, you can ask anyone on any of the major Discord servers and they can point you in the right direction. Custom content can be found above the main table (for the Crimson mod). A giant digital table will load, as will every deck and encounter set in the game. It will automatically incorporate with the Tabletop Simulator program.Īfter loading up Tabletop Simulator, press “Create” and look for the Super Complete mod in the main menu. There are several Arkham Horror LCG mods, but the “Super Complete Edition” is usually the most-updated one.Īll you need to do is log into your Steam account and hit “subscribe” on the Super Complete mod page. You could also sift through a deals aggregate site like Slickdeals. Whether that sale is directly on the Steam storefront or elsewhere, make sure you do some due diligence by Googling “Tabletop Simulator sale” before buying it. Tabletop Simulator’s MSRP is $20, but it is constantly on sale for $10. This is an easy one! Well, maybe not for your wallet. You can find the Lord of the Rings LCG tutorial here. Editor’s Note: After the overwhelmingly positive reactions to the Marvel Champions Tabletop Simulator tutorial, we decided to create how-tos for the other co-op LCGs as well.
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