There's a moment in Diamond Dynasty when your older Bellinger card barrels a righty, then gets exposed by a nasty left-on-left matchup the next inning. That's the frustration this release is built to erase. The All-Star Game itself went to the American League, but National League MVP Cody Bellinger got the card players actually care about. Before burning your
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on a shiny 99, check what this version changes for your roster.Start With the Collection PathThis Bellinger is the featured reward in the All-Star Collection, so don't treat him like a random pack pull and panic-buy on day one. Check the collection screen first, count the cards you already own, then compare that gap with the price of buying him outright. The card has four usable spots-CF first, plus RF, LF, and 1B-which changes the math if he can replace two different players on your bench.
- Open the All-Star Collection before selling duplicate program cards.
- Count only cards you can lock in without breaking another active collection.
- Test Bellinger in Conquest or Play vs. CPU before moving your best outfielder.
- Keep one lineup slot flexible for his first-base secondary position.
The Old Bellinger TrapOn paper, a 99-rated All-Star MVP should be an automatic center fielder. Most players will see the overall, remember Bellinger's smooth swing, and swap him in without another thought. The problem is that previous high-end Bellinger cards already hit well against righties, so a few extra good swings don't justify rebuilding your team. People also keep forcing the older versions through left-handed pitching, then blame PCI placement when the matchup is the real issue. This MVP card matters because its contact and power are balanced against both LHP and RHP. Bat him in the middle of the order for a few games, face both pitcher types, and watch the at-bats rather than just the box score. If he's producing against lefties while covering CF, RF, LF, or 1B, he's earning the slot.Center Field Isn't MandatoryThe cleanest defensive setup puts Bellinger in center with Byron Buxton and Jordan Walker on the corners. That group has the range to chase balls into gaps and the arm strength to make runners think twice about taking an extra base. It's not just highlight-reel stuff. A slow throw from the warning track can turn a routine double into the run that loses a Ranked game. But if your outfield is already loaded, move Bellinger to first base. His boosted reaction and arm play best outside, sure, yet his bat is too complete to park at DH behind a glove-only concern.Buy Him or Build Him?Is he a must-have? For players using an earlier Bellinger, pretty much-this is a real upgrade, not a tiny rating bump. If your center field and first base are already locked, Fair enough, don't gut the club just for the name. First check your collection total, test his lefty splits, and decide which position he replaces; then use
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only if the remaining gap makes more sense than the grind.