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== Decipher Era ==
== Decipher Era ==


Decipher eventually issued about 25 errata over the course of the game's run, such as {{Card|The Mirror of Galadriel}}, {{Card|Sting of Shelob}}, and {{Card|Howl of Harad}}. Decipher issued more errata in [[Rise of Saruman]] and [[Treachery & Deceit]] than any other sets, due to the hasty production process as the company imploded. Those final errata issued were the last official gasp of communication from Decipher concerning the game, and they occasionally did not actually repair the card or instead made it worse, such as {{Card|Frenzy of Arrows}} infamously being made literally unplayable (as there were never any {{C|Orc}} archers ever released).
Decipher eventually issued about 25 errata over the course of the game's run, such as {{Card|The Mirror of Galadriel}}, {{Card|Sting of Shelob}}, and {{Card|Howl of Harad}}. Decipher issued more errata in [[Rise of Saruman]] and [[Treachery & Deceit]] than any other sets, due to the hasty production process as the company imploded. The final errata issued were the last official gasp of communication from Decipher concerning the game, and they occasionally did not actually repair the card or instead made it worse, such as {{Card|Frenzy of Arrows}} infamously being made literally unplayable (as there were never any {{C|Orc}} archers ever released).


As a rule, Decipher avoided errata when possible, the logic being that nobody wanted to open a fresh new card only to discover that the words printed on that card were not how the card was to be read.  If a problematic interaction was discovered, a card was much more likely to be banned (added to the [[X-List]]) than to be errata'd, with the only exception being if the problem card was in the most recently released set.  This is most clear in situations where a new card combo'd with an old card caused an infinite loop, where the most frequent result was the old card getting X'd (such as {{Card|Steadfast Champion}} getting banned in the wake of the more recently released {{Card|Keeper of the Watchwood}}).
As a rule, Decipher avoided errata when possible, the logic being that nobody wanted to open a fresh new card only to discover that the words printed on that card were not how the card was to be read.  If a problematic interaction was discovered, a card was much more likely to be banned (added to the [[X-List]]) than to be errata'd, with the only exception being if the problem card was in the most recently released set.  This is most clear in situations where a new card combo'd with an old card caused an infinite loop, where the most frequent result was the old card getting X'd (such as {{Card|Steadfast Champion}} getting banned in the wake of the more recently released {{Card|Keeper of the Watchwood}}).
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