Chump Blocking: Difference between revisions

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'''Chump Blocking''', sometimes "'''chumping'''" or "using a '''speed-bump'''", is the act of flinging a weak character that has zero chance of winning into a suicidal skirmish against a much more powerful minion. Using an [[exhausted]] {{Card|Sam, Son of Hamfast}} to skirmish {{Card|The Balrog, Durin's Bane}} is the classic example of chump-blocking.
#REDIRECT [[Other Terms#Chump Blocking]]
 
Chump blocking might be done intentionally to get that character killed, for instance if your Fellowship is too large and you want to avoid being  [[Rule of 6|vulnerable]] to cards like {{Card|Ulaire Enquea, Lieutenant of Morgul}}. Occasionally, it might be because that character [[bear]]s a condition like {{Card|Desperate Defense of the Ring}} or {{Card|Sense of Obligation}} that makes them a liability. Even more rarely, the card might itself have harmful gametext, like {{Card|Aragorn, Strider}} or {{Card|Denethor, On the Edge of Madness}}.
 
Another reason is because the character is useless or used up, and either can't be [[heal]]ed any more or is no longer an attractive target for healing. Oftentimes this includes characters who exert to produce some effect or produce their main effect when they come into play, like {{Card|Legolas, Greenleaf}} or {{Card|Pippin, Hobbit of Some Intelligence}}, characters who are only in the deck to for a situational benefit, like {{Card|Radagast, The Brown}}, or relatively weak characters, like most [[Hobbit]]s. In the case of {{Card|Sam, Son of Hamfast}}, he's all three, and it's rare that he'll survive to site 9.
 
Another common case is that you just don't have any other plan to deal with some horrific [[minion]]. If you're careless and {{Card|Sauron, the Lord of the Rings}} comes down, you may not have a better option than feeding two of your weakest [[companion]]s to him. The characters you throw in front of Sauron to die might be quite important and valuable, but none of them are more valuable than the [[ring-bearer]]!
 
Generally, people only call it chump blocking when the chump in question is a Free Peoples character, because while weak [[companion]]s usually have the option to avoid skirmishing, weak [[minion]]s do not. Playing many [[minion]]s as the [[Shadow Alignment|Shadow]] player to tie up all of the strongest members of the Fellowship is called [[swarm]]ing.
 
The term originates from [https://mtg.fandom.com/wiki/Chump_blocker the Magic: the Gathering community]. In MTG terms, minions are always analogous to attackers and only Free Peoples characters are analogous to blockers.
 
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Latest revision as of 21:36, 25 January 2024