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Netrunner is a collectible card game with a very long history. in short:

  • its first edition was designed by the Magic: The Gathering guy (with about as many greed and scarcity mechanics as Magic) and took place in the same universe as Cyberpunk 2077
  • the second edition was published by Fantasy Flight Games, replaced the scarcity mechanics with Living Card Game expansion packs (you get all the cards in the set with one purchase) and a sliding window for tournament play card validity, and switched universes and names to Android: Netrunner
  • the game went entirely out of print once Fantasy Flight dropped it
  • the current “edition” of the game and its rules are maintained by a non-profit cooperative named Nullsignal (formerly NISEI), who also continued the story started in Android: Netrunner.

because the game is maintained by a non-profit (and actually appropriately fairly anti-corporate) cooperative, playing Netrunner ranges from free to relatively cheap:

  • any recognizable proxy is valid even in tournament play with the right (opaque-backed) sleeves. this means that you can print out Nullsignal’s cards at home and sleeve them with a little bit of card stock for rigidity and be ready for tournament play. this also means you can sleeve a post-it note for the same effect, so long as both players can recognize which card you’re supposed to be playing
  • you can buy a boxed set from Nullsignal if you’d like high quality cards, and they’ve also got on-demand manufacturing set up through DriveThruCards and MakePlayingCards
  • or you can forget physical cards entirely and play on jinteki.net, a free service that lets you play an online game of Netrunner using every card ever published by Fantasy Flight and Nullsignal. the designers at Nullsignal also use Jinteki to beta test and pre-release sets, so you may also get access to cards that don’t physically exist yet

the gameplay of Netrunner is fucking great: it’s an asymmetric card game where one player is a corporation (or their sysadmin at least) and the other is a runner trying to hack and bring down that corporation. the gameplay feels a lot like a mix between a shell game, the bluffing parts of poker, the better bits of Magic (most of the rules you need are on the cards), and an aggressive cat and mouse struggle, all at once. it’s actually one of my favorite ways that decking and ICE have been translated into gameplay mechanics.

Nullsignal also does a great job on the story, art, and aesthetic of their new cards. modern Netrunner has a distinctive feel to it, but it’s clear that the folks behind it understand how to make good cyberpunk.

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[-] self@awful.systems 1 points 1 year ago

Jinteki is pretty much purpose-built for online play in the browser — it predates tabletop simulator by a fair bit and has a janky UI, but it works so well that a bunch of tournaments use it, and it has a gigantic card database with special rule implementations that’d be hard to implement elsewhere. it’s also open source which is very cool — you can monitor their progress adding the rules for new cards, or dig into the source to see the exact game logic that’s executing for a given game state. of course you can also host your own, which I haven’t seen anyone do but could have value for in-person tournaments that need to do visualizations or quick rule checks

the Green Level Clearance discord is generally considered the best place to start — tagging @Mentor in #find-online-games will usually net you someone willing to run a tutorial game or two in Jinteki, and you can also tag your own account with which sets and tournaments you’d like to participate in once you’re more comfortable playing

[-] self@awful.systems 1 points 1 year ago

though if you prefer tabletop simulator, it looks like there’s a module that implements all of Nullsignal’s cards. there’s also a couple of modules that try to pull everything from netrunnerDB (where Jinteki gets its card art and metadata) but from the comments it looks like they broke a while ago due to API changes

this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2023
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