Master of Trading Star Card GameCh70 - A Slither of Snakes

 

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Translator's Note

A slim apple green snake with a reddish orange eye. Photo by Evan Pickett. Grows up to 30 in/75 cm long, native to South and Southeast Asia, and has bites which cause rapid necrosis.

Translator's Note

A green-brown snake blends stealthily into the dirt and grass Photo by Mark Auliya. Grows up to 59 in/150 cm, native to Borneo, and only mildly venomous. It can change the color of its scales like a chameleon.

Translator's Note

A dark colored snake with white rings all down its body. Photo by Thomas Brown. 3.5-5ft/1-1.5 meters in length, native to central and southern China and Southeast Asia, and extremely toxic with a high fatality rate in untreated bites.

Translator's Note

A solid black snake with a silver-grey belly. Photo by Bill Love. Typically 7-11 ft/2-3m long, native to parts of sub-Saharan Africa, and extremely venomous, with death possible even when antivenom is given.

Translator's Note

A pair of tiny dark brown snakes in the palm of someone's hand. They are not even half a palm's width long. Photo by Jared Bernard. The smallest known snake species, only 2-4 in/5-10 cm long, most likely native to Africa and Asia but introduced worldwide. Nonvenomous and almost completely blind, owing to living underground much like an earthworm.

Translator's Note

A large snake with bright orange spots surrounded by white and golden-yellow rings. Photo by Major League Exotic Pets.  Most likely modeled after an amelanistic or albino Burmese Python. Typically 16 ft/5 m long, native to Southeast Asia, and nonvenomous.  They’re considered a highly unwanted invasive species in Florida, and are common in the exotic pet trade, where almost all golden colored specimens are found.

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3 comments

  1. is he gonna make new cards? id like to see that, it’s been helpful for understanding classic cn stories haha