
Stakehouse Den’s Lady Luck Packs are engineered with precision—blending chance, rarity, and engagement to deliver both excitement and value. As a long-time observer of blockchain gaming economics, I believe this model nails a good balance between scarcity and accessibility.
Pack Composition & Rarity Tiers
Each Lady Luck Pack contains 5 cards drawn from the standard 52-card deck: 13 cards per suit (Clubs, Diamonds, Hearts, Spades), plus 2 Jokers. What elevates the opening experience is the rarity structure:
69% of cards are Plebs (Common) — ranks 1-10 in each suit.
25% are Royals (Rare) — Jack, Queen, King of each suit.
4% are Aces (Epic) — one per suit.
2% are Jokers — Legendary status.
Every single card also has a 4% chance of being a Gold Foil, regardless of which rarity category it belongs to. Moreover, holders can spend Flux (both Gold & Legendary) to boost their odds—doubling chances to get either Gold Foils or Legendary items upon opening a pack. This kind of optional enhancement helps drive engagement, letting users invest further if they desire better odds.
Pre-Sale & Availability
Key scarcity moves: the total pre-sale availability is fixed at 25,000 packs, priced at $2 each, payable in either Script tokens or 2,000 Credits. That threshold ensures early purchasers are rewarded with value and keeps supply constrained.
Daily Color Pools
Another layer: there are “color days” or pool sets, tied to card suits. If you stake cards of a specific suit on its day, you become eligible for bonus rewards. The details are still unfolding, but reporting so far suggests this mechanic intends to encourage strategic staking and community participation.