@Vangelios Thank you for your apology. There is also no reason for you to quit, and I'm glad to see that you haven't. Let's just leave it here as letting bygones be bygones and just having it so that the best candidate wins.
To everyone:
Design a card that is more or less balanced using typical balance formulae, yet would increase your element's power significantly. In other words, identify where your element is weak and design a card to remedy this.
That's a bit hard to do considering the element of fire. As a "complete" element, it's hard to really introduce something new to it. Also, the "weakness" that fire has, glass cannon creatures, is also hard to remedy in that by changing that, it loses a lot of the thematics behind Fire. Probably something Fire lacks is anti-control.
The idea of a dying glow is that your creatures are so imbued with fire that they go for one last attack before they perish. This helps patch up Fire's weakness to CC and it adds some extra damage to Fire's arsenal. Synergy wise, this could combine with Immolation, Fractal, or expensive cards like Crimson Dragon. Pricing is based on Eclipse.
All contestants: Feel free to be honest. But do you feel that fire and yourself are connected on a different level or just an element you like in a game? Why?
It's a special element for me because it's the first mono deck (at the time) that I upped. Debauchery was an example of a deck that was so simple and elegant with the ways everything synergized together, but it also misfired sometimes. I loved the chance of something like that, something slightly risky, but bringing large rewards.
You are to ask yourself a question you can't answer. What do you ask yourself?
Note, saying "Is this question an acceptable answer to itself?" is not an acceptable answer to this question.
What will I be thinking tomorrow?
To all trialers:
What is the name of the chemical element that used to be considered the source and essence of fire some time ago ?
[hint: according to current scientific view, the element belongs to the world of fantasy, so fitting for EtG ]
Not sure, but in ancient alchemy, fire was associated with Sulphur.