I don't hate randomness per se. Playing to your outs and landing the 1-in-30 topdeck to win the game in Magic is pretty fun, and when it happens to me it's something to laugh about, not cry. Still, games where you get crushed and it doesn't feel like you could've done anything different are disappointing, and it seems to happen quite often in Storybook Brawl. I just spent like 36 gold rerolling a shop looking for any of three T6 units (I had two copies of all three). Never saw them. Meanwhile my last-round opponent had literally
seven upgraded units. What.
Maybe the sweet spot is Pokemon Netbattle. I played that game seriously for a while and I can say a top player beats an average one >90% of the time. Luck (known as hax by the community) can swing a game, but it's often still possible to win in spite of hax. I don't know how much you know about Pokemon Netbattle, but I remember this great article analyzing the role of hax in games:
https://www.smogon.com/smog/issue11/battle Early in the game one player (Earthworm) used Fire Blast, a move with 85% accuracy, and missed. Obvious hax. Yet that player was never at a serious disadvantage till later in the battle. To quote from the article:
Quote:
Although Scofield got quite lucky at various points in the game, no single event allowed him to gain irreversible momentum over Earthworm. There aren't many instances of hax in Pok'emon that appear more unlucky than missing an attack on the turn your Pok'emon is OHKOed, or getting critical hit OHKOed on the fifth-to-last move of a match. But as we can see from the commentary in the match, Earthworm was never at a significant disadvantage until the last few turns of the match, and you could even say that he had an advantage in the mid game after he missed Fire Blast. As you can see, looking merely at the "hax" that happened in a match is not really conclusive if you don't take into account what actually mattered, or how the course of the match might have changed without the hax. It also shows how the very best players are able to adapt and respond to hax and also take steps to minimize hax wherever possible. Instead of jumping the gun and complaining about how unlucky you are next time you are "haxed", take a step back and analyze things fully. Who knows? Maybe you weren't as unlucky as you thought you were!
(Emphasis mine)
The big problem I have with Pokemon Netbattle is I hate the community. Oh well.