Enter: Nidhoggr

By @bjangles12/15/2025hive-169191

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Nidhoggr, One Year Later — Why This Change Matters

Nearly a year ago — December 30th, 2024 — The People’s Guild submitted what became one of the most debated proposals of the Rebellion era: a rework of Nidhoggr, the Dragon airdrop summoner.

For those who want to revisit that original discussion, the full proposal can be found here:
https://peakd.com/hive-13323/@thepeoplesguild/nidhoggr-adjustment-proposal-addressing-airdrop-balance-and-improving-tactics

The core issue was simple:

Nidhoggr wasn’t delivering on the promise of what an airdrop summoner should be.

For a card positioned as the crown jewel of the presale – the one YGG earned the right to design — it quickly fell into obscurity.

Among all the legendary Rebellion summoners, Nidhoggr led the second-fewest teams into battle. That number alone said everything.

Furthermore, despite being the most mana-costly summoner in the game, being handicapped by its Forced Reduction debilitation meant it never led teams into battle in the biggest mana matches, a fact that was thrust further into the spotlight with the recent adjustments to battles' average mana caps.

But the DAO proposal to rework the card failed. And the deciding vote didn’t fail because the voter disliked the idea — they explicitly said they hoped the team, not the DAO, would handle necessary corrections.

And now, months later, the team finally has.

And in my view, they absolutely made the right call.


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Doing Right by YGG — and by the Players Who Bought the Dream

It’s important to remember what Nidhoggr represented.

YGG invested heavily to earn the design slot for the premier Dragon summoner of the set. Players invested heavily in the presale expecting something powerful, flexible, meta-relevant — the kind of card Dragon is historically known for.

Instead, the card landed flat.

The design didn’t match the hype.

And Dragon’s identity eroded further while dual-element summoners took over the high-mana landscape.

Whether intended or not, Nidhoggr’s original design did not honor the expectations around that airdrop.

This change corrects that.

It restores dignity to the design.

It respects the spirit of the presale.

And it acknowledges what many players felt from day one:

Nidhoggr deserved to be more.


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Dragon Needed This Change — Badly

Over the past 2 years, Dragon has lost its traditional place as the premier “big mana, big ceiling” faction.

Dual-element summoners did not just join the conversation — they supplanted Dragon almost entirely.

What made Dragon exciting historically?

  • Its ability to slot into any lineup and amplify it

  • Dominant, high-mana powerhouse builds

  • The creative freedom to draft without elemental constraints

All of that had quietly eroded.

This rework gives Dragon its foundation back.

It makes Dragon matter again.

The new Nidhoggr isn’t just stronger — it’s more interesting, more flexible, more distinctive and more capable of anchoring a top-tier lineup. It creates build opportunities for Dragon that simply haven't existed in our latest iteration of Modern format.

For the first time in many moons, Dragon feels like a deliberate strategic choice again, not just a luxury pick for when nothing else fits.

From a gameplay perspective, this change doesn’t just help Nidhoggr — it strengthens the entire meta.


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On Precedent — Why Adjusting Cards After Minting Is the Right Call

This is the part where the controversy really lives.

With this rework, Splinterlands has clearly signaled that minted does not automatically mean untouchable. And for some players, that crosses a line.

They worry about instability, shifting goalposts or the sanctity of “permanent NFTs.”

I hear that concern.

But here’s the truth:

A TCG that refuses to fix mistakes is a broken TCG.

No competitive game — digital or physical — remains balanced forever. Some designs don’t age well. Some fall flat. Some warp the meta in ways no one expected. Freezing these outcomes in permanently doesn’t protect players; it condemns the game to stagnation.

For me, this change increases trust.

I trust a team that is willing to protect the meta.

I trust a team that prioritizes fairness and fun.

And I trust a team more when they make difficult adjustments because it’s in the best interest of gameplay — not because it’s the easiest path.

Some see this as the team overreaching.

I see it as Splinterlands stepping into the reality of a modern, living TCG.

Balance changes aren’t threats.

They’re maintenance.

They’re care.

They’re stewardship.

They’re how you build a game meant to last.


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The DAO Was Early — The Team Was Right — and the Game Is Better For It

The original TPG proposal wasn’t meant to dictate exact stats. It was meant to start a conversation the community needed:

What should Nidhoggr actually be?

The proposal failing didn’t end that conversation — it simply delayed it. And ironically, the reasoning behind the final “no” vote showed clear support for the change conceptually.

The spirit of the proposal was right.

The timing was wrong.

Now the team has taken the baton and executed the change correctly.

They honored YGG.

They honored the presale.

They honored gameplay.

They honored the future Dragon players will build.

And in the process, they established a precedent that I believe strengthens the long-term health of the game:

Card adjustments are not betrayals — they are proof of stewardship.


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In Closing — Nidhoggr Finally Feels Like Nidhoggr

After more than a year of debate, frustration, stagnation and unmet expectations, Nidhoggr is finally the summoner it was meant to be.

A centerpiece.
A flagship.
A reason to play Dragon again.

This isn’t just a good change — it’s a necessary one.

And from where I stand, the Splinterlands team deserves real credit for making it.

Thank you, team.

Dragon is back.

And the meta is better for it.

Enter: Nidhoggr


Until next time


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