On the contrary, he didn’t plan to decompose.
Next, Ree Shil decided to spend so more ti observing and researching on his own.
So he looked through his card deck and finally found three identical cards.
[Wind Chaser]
Chasing Wind, 20 points, D
Attack 20, 100/100, 0/2
[Wind Chasing - 2 points]: Wind Chaser stirs up a strong wind, putting 1 target into [Exile]for 1 round.
([Exile]: Excludes regular card targets from the card ga.)
This card was obtained back at the Zero Checkpoint of the Way of Chasing Wind.
The original intention was to get a few more to fuse with his main card group.
But he found that the compatibility wasn’t very good and couldn’t get a perfect effect, so he had been putting it off.
Now it was perfect for experintation.
He put in the first [Wind Chaser] and previewed it.
The material card obtained was a small brown feather.
[Wind Chaser Feather]: Has a small chance of giving a card the [Exile] skill.
"Just like the [Three-eyed Zombie Beast], it is also a D-grade material."
"Let’s decompose one first."
So he clicked the button, and the light flickered slightly.
The [Wind Chaser] in the decomposition panel turned into the material card [Wind Chaser Feather].
"Hmm..."
Afterward, Ree Shil took out another [Wind Chaser] for a preview.
But this ti, the preview wasn’t for the decomposition panel, but for the card-making panel.
He used both the [Wind Chaser] and [Wind Chaser Feather] as material cards, and then used so of his card deck as main cards for separate fusion previews.
After about ten minutes, he got the results.
"As you can see, although the [Wind Chaser Feather] cos from the [Wind Chaser], the results of their fusion with the sa card group are still quite different."
"The [Wind Chaser], as a regular card, will have more results when fused with other cards."
"These include both getting and not getting [Exile]."
"There are also so that change the card face."
"And the results of the [Wind Chaser Feather] are much less, with many explosion cards and swallow cards."
"However, once it is successfully fused, it always grants the main card [Exile]."
"For the sa main card that has obtained [Exile], there are also slight differences."
"For cards that acquire [Exile] through the [Wind Chaser], so of their card faces will change as well."
"In addition, speaking solely in terms of the number of successful [[Exile]] acquisitions, the number of successful [Wind Chaser] is more than that of [Exile Feather]."
"If the [Exile Feather] can succeed, the [Wind Chaser] will definitely succeed."
"If the [Wind Chaser] can succeed, the [[Exile Feather]] might not necessarily succeed."
Ree Shil speculated that this might be because the [Exile] of the [Wind Chaser] had a regular card as a carrier, so it was relatively easier to succeed.
After all, after so many fusions, he found that factors such as whether the two cards belonged to the sa major category, whether their scores were the sa, and whether their races were the sa all influenced whether they could fuse to so extent.
And these factors were not present in the material cards.
"So it’s better to fuse cards directly than to first decompose them into materials and then use the materials for fusion."
"Therefore, the appearance of this decomposition function will not greatly change my fusion ideas in the future."
However, Ree Shil still understood that the decomposition function would co in handy.
Because his experint involved only D-level cards.
After all, the only duplicate cards he had were D-level.
But if he encountered CB or even A-level cards, decomposition might provide another answer.
Decomposing has a chance to extract the relevant material card for the attribute he needs from multiple attribute options.
It’s like purification, and it’s a one-step process.
In addition, he also experienced the instability ntioned by Curator Phoenix.
The remaining two [Wind Chasers] were used for decomposition previews.
As a result, one card exploded directly, leaving no materials behind.
The other one could decompose into [Winged People’s Nail].
Although these three cards were the sa, with the sa card face and appearance, Ree Shil couldn’t tell any difference between them.
The decomposition results, however, were three completely different answers.
He then marked these two [Wind Chasers] and perford various out-of-ga factor permutations and combinations.
In the end, it still didn’t affect the decomposition results.
The one that decomposed into [Winged People’s Nail] always decomposed into [Winged People’s Nail].
The one that exploded always exploded.
Afterward, he conducted a fusion preview with these two [Wind Chasers] for his entire card deck.
The fusion results of the two cards were exactly the sa.
That is to say, in every aspect, these two cards were identical.
The only difference was in the decomposition, where they showed different results.
Ree Shil had no explanation for this situation.
He went to the Office Room and asked Curator Phoenix, who admitted that this was indeed the instability she had ntioned but could not offer an answer.
So, for now, Ree Shil could only regard this situation as fate.
After studying the decomposition panel for a long ti, Ree Shil felt that he hadn’t fully grasped this function yet.
Moreover, since this was a trial version of sothing, even if it wasn’t there, it wouldn’t affect his usual card-making much.
So, apart from the previous few experints, he didn’t decompose any more cards.
However, out of curiosity, he previewed the decomposition results of his entire card deck.
Especially his main cards.
From the results, there were indeed many top A-grade materials that looked quite good.
But there were also so that exploded when decomposed.
Researching new functions took quite a bit of ti. By the ti Ree Shil was almost done, it was already dark outside.
At this ti, Curator Phoenix, who had just finished work, took him to eat sothing casually near the Card Club.
Then she drove him personally to the place where he would buy the recipe scroll.
Lan-Lan Social Club.
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Monthly Ticket
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