Further to Dan D's comment.. try putting this on the line in front of your open() call:
from os.path import abspath
print(abspath('warcards_directions.txt'))
You'll see that python looks in different places depending on where you run it from .. because it looks for files relative to the current working directory, which changes depending on how you run python.
This is a common problem for new comers. See here How to import files in python using sys.path.append? for some solutions (note the underlying problem in that post is the same as this one.. the fact that they're trying to import a file, and here we're trying to open one is not too important).
Also I'll add that I often reference things relative to the script itself... like this:
from os.path import abspath, join, dirname
script_dir = dirname(__file__)
txt_path = abspath(join(script_dir, "..", "path", "to", "warcards_directions.txt"))
This works if your txt file and your python script stay in the same place relative to each other (but might be installed in different places).
E.g. above assumes your script lives in C:\Foo\scripts\script.py and your text file lives in C:\Foo\path\to\warcards_directions.txt. The method above will work fine where ever you run the script from and it'll work if you move or rename the C:\Foo dir (e.g. to C:\Program Files\Bar). But it'll break if you decide to move scripts.py down a directory into C:\Foo (at which point you change the way txt_path is initialized to fix).