User:Cease/Moria

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Moria is the abandoned dwarven underground city of Khazad-dûm, now dominated by stunted goblins and a nameless fear. In this game, it is a Shadow culture that focuses on swarming the opponent with many small orc minions, plus the occasional larger minion that dwells in Moria, such as the Cave Troll of Moria, Scourge of the Black Pit (1R165) , Watcher in the Water, Keeper of Westgate (2R73) and its tentacles, and the Balrog. Moria was one of the first cultures introduced to this game, and unlike most of the original cultures, it's always been focused tightly on one strategy: using the faction's hand extension and recursion tools to set up an engine to play many more minions than you'd otherwise be able to play at once.

Part of why Moria is so tightly focused is because the bulk of the culture's cards came out in Fellowship Block. Only a handful of new cards came out for the culture after that, most of them focused on the Balrog. The Shadows set basically retired Moria as part of its culture reorganization, merging most of it into Orc culture. The only Moria cards in the post-Shadows sets are the Balrog and cards to support the Balrog, as well as the Watcher in the Water, Many-tentacled Creature (19P21) and its various tentacles. In those sets, the teeming goblins of Moria are Lurkers, and they and the Cave Troll of Moria, Savage Menace (12R85) are part of the Orc culture.

Moria is one of the premiere Shadow sides of Fellowship Block, particularly because its strong matchup against choke. After that, historically it fell off. Few cards were added to the culture in later sets, limiting its versatility and leaving it vulnerable to power creep. The site path in later formats generates more Twilight, weakening the choke decks it preyed upon. A key card, Relics of Moria (1R195) , was restricted or banned in some formats. Despite all this, on GEMP in 2021, it remains reasonably popular in later formats where Fellowship Block cards are allowed (save possibly Expanded), because of familiarity and strong cycling.

The Moria Engine

Every deck focused on chiefly Moria culture uses a variation of this engine. It even appears in most hybrid decks, like Moria Navy. (The main exception is Stupid Swarm, which is a rainbow strategy with too few Moria minions to make this work.)

The core cards of the Moria engine are multiple copies of both Goblin Scimitar (1C180) and Goblin Armory (1R173) . Each scimitar replaces itself in your hand by drawing an additional card, and generates up to four additional Twilight, allowing you to pay for more minions even against choke decks. Every other key card plugs into this engine.

Goblin Runner (1U178) and Moria Scout (1C191) generate as much or more Twilight than they cost, helping you play every single minion in your hand. Goblin Scavengers (1C179) and Relics of Moria (1R195) allow you to replay your scimitars from the discard pile, drawing even more cards. With enough copies of Goblin Armory out, they even generate more Twilight than they cost. Then, to replay your various goblins, you have Host of Thousands (1C187) and Goblin Swarms (1R183) . If any useless cards are clogging up your hand, they can be turned into useful goblins with They Are Coming (1C196) .

There are a few weaker, less-popular additions to the engine. Threat of the Unknown (1C197) and The Underdeeps of Moria (1R200) can draw more cards. Plundered Armories (1C193) can prevent your weapons from going to waste, as well as draw some extra cards for your next turn. Foul Things (2U59) can be played as a fifth or sixth copy of Host of Thousands, but it is expensive.

The rest of the deck consists of the rest of your minions, as well as occasional utility cards. Besides the minions above, popular minions in the traditional Moria swarm deck include Goblin Backstabber (1C174) , Goblin Sneak (1U181) , Goblin Wallcrawler (1C184) , Goblin Pursuer (2C62) , and Troll’s Keyward (1R199) (even if you aren't playing the Cave Troll). Also fairly common as one- or two-ofs are Ancient Chieftain (1R163) , Goblin Scrabbler (2C64) , Goblin Warrior (1C185) , Guard Commander (1R186) , Goblin Flankers (2C61) , Úlairë Enquëa, Lieutenant of Morgul (1U231) , and Úlairë Nertëa, Messenger of Dol Guldur (1U234) . Somewhat popular utility cards include Such a Little Thing (3R80) , Goblin Domain (1R175) , and Relentless (1U194) , all three of which are chiefly useful exclusively in Fellowship Block.

Some decks also include a few larger minions, to use up any remaining Twilight and put some pressure on higher-strength skirmishers. Be careful about running too many of these, because they can clog up your hand if you can't afford them. The most popular big breakers are the two Moria monsters, The Balrog, Flame of Udun (2R52) (always a one-of, and almost exclusively in Fellowship Block, and occasionally in conjunction with Goblin Spear (1C182) ), Cave Troll of Moria, Scourge of the Black Pit (1R165) (generally in conjunction with Troll’s Keyward (1R199) ), although any of the Moria Beatdown minions can also serve this role.

Some important sites in Fellowship Block for Moria swarm:

This deck was more or less unchanged after Fellowship Block, due to a lack of new cards. The only relevant Moria orc-focused cards introduced after that block are Host of Moria, Legion of the Underdeeps (9R+41) , a reasonably-efficient minion that sees some play in Moria Beatdown variants, and Durin’s Tower (6R77) , a pump that applies to so few minions that it's rarely played, and even then never more than one or two copies. The main new additions after that block involve incorporating new cultures.

Moria swarm is a traditional swarm deck, so it has the traditional swarm weaknesses. Depending on the format, these can include Defender +1 abilities, versions of The One Ring that give the Ring-bearer strength or Hunter bonuses like The One Ring, Such a Weight to Carry (7R2) , cards that protect characters from being overwhelmed like The Tale of the Great Ring (10U116) , alternate Ring-bearers with higher strength scores like Isildur, Bearer of Heirlooms (9R+33) , and enough direct wounding or archery to thin out the swarm. There are also specific anti-swarm cards like Caras Galadhon (3U115) and Power According to His Stature (1R308) . Moria swarm is also reliant on its conditions, so condition removal from cards like Secret Sentinels (2R20) , Bilbo, Well-spoken Gentlehobbit (2U96) , and Sleep, Caradhras (1C84) can wipe out your support area and limit the power of the engine.

Variants

Moria Beatdown uses the core engine but marries it to larger minions, often equipped with a copy or two of Moria Axe (1R190) and/or Goblin Spear (1C182) . This deck is less concerned with swarming and overwhelming the Ring-bearer, and just wants to win skirmishes, although it's generally not going to be as good at that as a pure beatdown deck like Isengard Uruk-hai. A beatdown deck is, of course, going to run the Cave Troll and Balrog, and is more likely to run their weapons, like Cave Troll's Hammer (1R166) and Whip of Many Thongs (2R74) . It's more prone to run Guard Commander (1R186) , Goblin Flankers (2C61) , Troll’s Keyward (1R199) , and Host of Moria, Legion of the Underdeeps (9R+41) , and about the only deck that would ever run Goblin Patrol Troop (1C177) . It benefits more than most Moria decks from Dark Places (2C55) , Plundered Armories (1C193) , and Durin’s Tower (6R77) . It's hard to say whether Moria Beatdown is a separate deck per se: there's nothing stopping you from running a few of these cards in a regular swarm deck to give it a little extra muscle.

Moria Archery is another pure Moria variant. This deck still uses the scimitar/armories engine, but supplements the swarm with Archer minions. This bypasses some of the swarm weaknesses, but leaves you vulnerable to strong archery hate cards like Hosts of the Last Alliance (2U18) or Mithril-coat (2R105) , resulting in a slightly weaker deck overall but with different matchups.

A Gollum splash, sometimes consisting of no more than one copy of Gollum, three or four copies of Captured by the Ring (7C53) , and possibly a few copies of Evil-smelling Fens (5U22) is one variation. Another variation is more extreme: Moria Navy combines the Moria engine above with cheap Corsairs to make a different kind of swarm. Cultural enforcement means this deck is a little less reliable than vanilla Moria, but the stronger and more versatile Corsairs make the deck more potent when it goes off.

The Balrog

Tentacles


Cultures
Free Peoples Dwarven Elven Gandalf Gollum Gondor Rohan Shire
Movie-era Shadow Dunland Gollum Isengard Moria Raider Ringwraith Sauron
Shadows-era Shadow Men Orc Uruk-hai Wraith