In our previous guide we covered four of the advanced rules for Triple Triad new and veteran Final Fantasy 14 account holders should know. In today’s guide we cover five advanced rules for this attraction in the Manderville Gold Saucer. Take note and it may help you win your next tournament.
Adding numbers on your FFXIV Account
The Plus rule can easily confuse most Final Fantasy XIV account holders. Largely due to the math involved in this rule. What plus does is add the numbers on adjacent sides of cards on the table. If the sum is the same for another pair of cards, then they get flipped. To understand the rule better here is an example.
On the middle right of the board is a blue card with 5 on all sides. On the top middle of the board is a similar card with 5 on all sides, except it is red. Blue then plays a card with 2 on all sides in the middle of the board. Normally, it should not be able to flip the red card. However due to the Plus rule it can. The rule will add the two and five of the adjacent sides blue cards making seven. It will also add the two and five on the red card on the top row. Since the sum will also be seven, the Plus rule will allow the red card to be captured.
Note that the Plus rule also allows for combos. The card flipped through Plus can capture other cards if they have a lower number.
Randomness on your FFXIV Account
The composition of an FFXIV account holders deck is incredibly important in a match. So just imagine if you play with the Random rule. This rule forces both players to play with a deck of five cards chosen randomly from their respective card lists. Another similar chaotic rule is Chaos. While with this rule you can use a deck you designed. The rule will force each player to play a random card from the deck.
Order and Reverse rules on your FFXIV Account
Less chaotic rules for Triple Triad include Reverse and Order. The latter forces each player to play the cards in their deck in the order they appear. Reverse meanwhile simply flips the rule for capturing cards, that is, smaller numbers capture larger numbers.