![]() The additional 15 Crafting Parts are worth more than a duplicate Star Card. Now, this may seem counterintuitive, but hear me out. Crates with four items are more valuable than crates with five.Crates with five items are rarer than crates with four.These micro-payouts are less than the value of a duplicate Star Card. Personally, this seems a little insulting, as even a Grey duplicate gives you 200 Credits. Very rarely, you are given a payout of 50 or 100 Credits instead of another item.I still don’t know what the Credit payout is for duplicate Blue (Tier 3) Star Cards, but my guess would be either 600 or 800 Credits.Duplicate Grey (Tier 1) Star Cards give you a 200 Credit payout, while duplicate Green (Tier 2) Star Cards give you a 400 Credit payout.Approximately half my Star Cards were duplicates.Crates with five items give you 35 Crafting Parts, while crates with four items give you 50 Crafting Parts.So here are a few additional things I learned from this data: 13 upgrades from previously earned Star Cards. ![]() Of the 288 Star Cards, the breakdown is as follows: I kept spending until my Credits were too low to purchase another crate. ![]() Yes, the math doesn’t exactly work out on that (100 x 2,200 = 220,000), but keep in mind that many crates feature duplicates and reward you with additional Credits. So I recorded myself opening these Hero Crates, and I took an exhaustive inventory of every single item I received. To me, that seems far more valuable than the chance at a random, likely Tier 1 Star Card, even if it’s in the category you want (Trooper, in this case). Since every crate is guaranteed to drop 35 or 5o Crafting Parts, as I mentioned in the paragraph above, that’s the equivalent to one Tier 1 Star Card of your choice, give or take. With Crafting Parts, you can just craft that card yourself. Simply put, you might open 100 Trooper Crates and still not get the one card you’ve been hoping for. And, since Crafting Parts let you craft whichever Star Cards you want, it’s far more valuable than a randomized shot at the specific Star Card you’re looking for. Because each crate contains between 35 and 50 Crafting Parts, no matter the type, you will ultimately end up with almost double the amount of Crafting Parts by opening Hero Crates than you would opening Trooper Crates. ![]() Hero Crates are the cheapest loot crate in the game, at 2,200 Credits, as opposed to Starfighter Crates at 2,400 Credits and Trooper Crates at 4,000 Credits. Now that the new characters and maps have arrived, I decided to spend all of my Credits at once and see what I got. I managed to save 183,000 Credits in that time. I unlocked all the heroes first, and then started saving my Credits in anticipation for The Last Jedi season of content. My player level was at 35 by December 13. I started with the Deluxe Edition, which granted some Purple (Tier 4) Star Cards right off the bat, and I also purchased the $20 Starter Pack, which granted a few additional Star Cards and 1,500 Crystals (which I spent on crates before running this experiment). I spent just under month (November 14 through December 13) playing Star Wars Battlefront II every night and completing many of the milestones. You then use these Credits to buy randomized loot crates, which contain items you need for progression. In Star Wars Battlefront II (2017), you earn Credits by playing the game and completing milestones. ![]()
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