FAQ
This page is meant to answer the practical rollout questions people usually have once the site stops being just a vote page and starts feeling like a wider product. If you want the deeper system explanation, pair this with the Method page.
CardChart.Fun is a fan-made Magic: The Gathering site built around live head-to-head voting, matchup debates, charts, collection tools, and player identity. Instead of only showing card reference data, the site tries to show what its own community actually prefers, argues about, saves, builds around, and keeps coming back to.
In practice, that means the site combines card rankings with reactions, public profile features, wishlists, collection progress, My Commanders deck shelves, boosters, and progression unlocks.
No. You can browse public pages and get a feel for the project without signing in. But an account is what lets the site remember your votes, level progression, profile identity, notifications, wishlist, collection state, and commander projects.
If you plan to spend real time on CardChart.Fun, signing in is what turns the site from a public showcase into a persistent account experience.
Leveling up gradually reveals more of the site. That includes vote-page controls, filters, collection features, wishlist tools, booster rewards, My Commanders, progress views, and notification guidance that helps point out what just changed.
The goal is to pace the experience so new users are not dropped into every system at once. CardChart.Fun is designed to unfold over time rather than front-loading every tool on day one.
Rankings are built from head-to-head card votes. Each vote updates the relevant pool, and CardChart.Fun keeps separate ranking contexts for the full card pool and the commanders-only pool.
The exact rank matters, but the surrounding context matters too. Vote counts, skips, reactions, movement indicators, debates, charts, and matchup history are all there to help you interpret what a placement actually means.
Debates are matchup-specific discussion threads. Instead of only hosting general comment sections, the site lets players talk directly about why one card beat another, why a take felt wrong, or what context changed the outcome.
Replies, upvotes, and notifications make that layer feel more alive and more social. Rankings tell you what happened. Debates help explain why people felt that way.
Those features are the collecting and brewing side of the site. Wishlist helps you save cards you want to chase later. Collection helps you track owned cards and binder-style progress. Booster Packs turn progression into an opening loop with rewards you can claim and crack inside the site.
My Commanders is a dedicated shelf for commanders you want to build around. Together, those systems turn a passing card preference into a longer-lived hobby trail.
No. Prices are informational estimates from third-party sources and can change. Purchase buttons are outbound links to third-party marketplaces. CardChart.Fun is not the seller, does not process the transaction, and cannot guarantee inventory, pricing, or store policies.
Some outbound purchase links may be affiliate links. If you click through and buy something, CardChart.Fun may receive attribution or a commission from that third-party platform.
Some account activity can become public depending on the feature and your settings. Public profiles, usernames, avatars, comments, and selected profile sections are designed to be viewable by other users. Other data is primarily account-side and used to power your own experience.
If you want the fuller explanation of what information may be visible or stored, read the Privacy Policy.
Scryfall is a best-in-class reference and search tool. EDHREC is a best-in-class view of deckbuilding patterns and commander usage. CardChart.Fun adds a different layer: original site-native preference data from live votes, debates, reactions, public profiles, and progression-driven feature use.
In short, CardChart.Fun is trying to show how players feel and behave inside this particular ecosystem, not replace the tools that already excel at search or format-wide aggregation.
CardChart.Fun is run by Ekolimits as a solo-built passion project. The site changes quickly, which means feedback about confusing pages, broken flows, unclear copy, or missing features is genuinely useful.
The best place to send bug reports, rollout feedback, policy questions, or feature ideas is the contact page.
If you want the detailed system explanation, read the Method page.
If you want more project context and long-term intent, visit About.
If something still feels unclear or rollout-ready copy is missing, use the contact page and call it out directly.