Unpopulated pin headers under each card terminal hint at future expansion capabilities, too. The Plinth, in its current design, hosts a hand of up to four cards, with three tactile buttons next to each card allowing for manual control over status effects, combat, and the like. Stiennon has yet to publish technical details of the hardware behind the project, but imagery and commentary reveal the basics: the compact cards lack their own power or microcontroller, being made up of nothing more than an EEPROM memory chip and the display, and communicate with the Plinth via spring-fingers and contacts hidden on their undersides. When off the central control terminal, dubbed the Plinth, they are static - but when connected, their data can be read, compared to other cards, and updated, with the image displayed on the screen changing accordingly. Autoplay Setting Global Selective None Show Counters Score Time Moves Close OK Appearance Card Set Card Back Background Big Ben Caricatures Large Print Large Print London Large Print Modern Modern Close back Select a Solitaire Baker's Game Eight Off FreeCell FreeCell Two Decks back Scores Close Clear No more moves There are no more moves available. Here’s how it works: You choose two characteristics a class, like a magician, and a special power, like invisibility. But in this case, you’re playing with custom cards made using generative AI. (□: Jonah Stiennon)Įach Wyldcard is an independent device, featuring local storage hidden behind a compact black-and-white ePaper display. I/O FLIP is a spin on a classic card game, where you compete in best-of-three matches for the longest winning streak on the leaderboard. ![]() ![]() ![]() Wyldcard aims to blend technology with classic card gaming, turning the physical cards into dynamic displays.
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