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"I have a job and two kids. I cannot spend 300 hours grinding AI matches just to build a single deck. I paid $70 for the game. Let me play the game I want to play. If I want to make a joke deck with 16 PGs, why should the game stop me?"
This camp views the trainer not as cheating, but as a tool to bypass predatory monetization. They argue that if Bushiroad sold a "Unlock All Cards" DLC for $20, nobody would need Tenoke. Since Bushiroad refuses, the modders stepped in.
Many competitive players don't want to "earn" cards. They want to test deck theories against the meta instantly. The official game lacks a proper "Sandbox Mode" where all cards are unlocked for testing against the CPU. Tenoke fills that void forcibly. cardfight vanguard dear days 2tenoke
By [Your Name/Blog Name]
For years, fans of Cardfight!! Vanguard have existed in a strange limbo when it came to video game adaptations. We had the clunky but charming Cardfight!! Online (may it rest in peace), the decent but restrictive mobile game Vanguard Zero, and the original Dear Days, which was a solid foundation but lacked the polish of a triple-A title. "I have a job and two kids
But with the arrival of Cardfight!! Vanguard Dear Days 2 on PC and consoles, the landscape has shifted. This isn't just a roster update; it feels like the developers at Bushiroad and FURYU have finally cracked the code on how to translate the visceral thrill of "Ride!" into a digital format.
Whether you are a lore-purist following the will+Dress anime or a competitive player looking to test decks without spending a fortune on cardboard, Dear Days 2 has something for you. Let’s dive into the timeline, the gameplay mechanics, and the overall state of the game. This camp views the trainer not as cheating,
If you played the first Dear Days, the core gameplay loop will feel familiar, but the devil is in the details. The game adheres strictly to the Standard Format rules.
The Mechanics: The UI is snappy, and the flow of the game—Ride, Main, Battle, End—is intuitive. The game does an excellent job of automating the complex triggers and auto-abilities that plague newer players in the physical card game. You don't have to worry about missing a "When Unit Attacks" timing; the game pauses and prompts you.
However, the real excitement comes from the cards available. Dear Days 2 launches with a massive card pool.