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Post by mr1derful7257 on Sept 12, 2016 11:15:23 GMT -5
Greetings from NYC! I used to play COTG a long...long time ago and recently rediscovered the game because my 9 year old son LOVES wrestling and I also do a weekly old school wrestling podcast. We have a mix of several sets including COTG, ROH, Legends, and that new 80's wrestling. We go to a lot of indy shows and would like to make our own cards. I'd like some information like for instance how hard is it to do? What materials do I need? How do you decipher stats for each wrestler? Any help would greatly be appreciated. You can respond on this thread and / or hit me up TurnbuckleThrowbacks1@gmail.com
Thanks in advance for your help Phil Staten Island NYC
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Post by TTX on Sept 12, 2016 11:58:02 GMT -5
Doing stats isn't terribly hard. The main website has some rules but here are some basics Each card should have 3 charts in the 18 moves. Only out of the ring should ever be duplicated (ch) moves go this way. A B C and F after level 2 moves, D E G H after level 3 moves moves should go in a natural progression (1 2 3) if you ask, yes I've seen moves in weird places on various unofficial cards tag moves on defense go with the level of defense. 1 on 1 2 on 2 3 on 3. (so no hurt-2 (tag) on level 1 or 3 defense)
That's a quick overview on it. Balance is the main key.
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Post by mr1derful7257 on Sept 12, 2016 16:00:26 GMT -5
I'm also not seeing the blank cards on the site. Is there another source?
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Post by TTX on Sept 12, 2016 16:32:13 GMT -5
You can I believe buy blank cards for COTGOnline. I'm not sure they sell the blank cards physically anymore but there are people who have a template that can be used with PDF software.
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Post by barnestormer on Sept 29, 2016 9:38:14 GMT -5
I've recently purchased Corel Draw X7 For Home and Student to use on my laptop (which runs Windows 10) because my old MicroGrafx Windows Draw 6.0 program could not be installed due to it being a 16-bit graphics program and needed to upgrade to a 32-bit graphics, which meant that I couldn't install it in order to use the color card templates I'd created). When searching for the MicroGrafx web site, I'd discovered that they'd merged with Corel, but the most recent copy of Corel Draw 8 costs over $500, which is way more than I could afford. Thankfully, the Corel Draw X7 for Home and Student, which was much cheaper at $70 but required Windows 7 to run, runs just fine on Windows 10, and I was able to convert my color card templates to .CDR (or Corel Draw) file format. If you have Corel Draw (either X7 or 8) and would like copies of my color card templates, send me your email address and I'll send them to you. The only thing that would need to be changed is to substitute your name for mine in the disclaimer note on the bottom of each card. (I have a collection of 7 templates: black, blue, green, orange, purple, red and yellow.)
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