Mines of Moria: Difference between revisions

From LOTR-TCG Wiki
No edit summary
m (test)
 
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
{{NavBar|Mines of Moria|[[Main Page]]|[[The Fellowship of the Ring]]|[[Realms of the Elf-lords]]}}
{{NavBar|Mines of Moria|[[Main Page]]|[[The Fellowship of the Ring]]|[[Realms of the Elf-lords]]}}
{{SetTabs}}
{{SetTabs}}
 
{{Set
{{Set
|ID=2
|ID=2
Line 13: Line 13:
|Number=2
|Number=2
}}
}}
=The Mines of Moria=
[[File:LOTR-EN02S051.0_card.jpg|frame|right|Every Fellowship block deck needs a Balrog Contingency Plan]]
 
The first expansion of the Lord of the Rings Trading Card game, set 2, '''Mines of Moria''' (often abbreviated '''MOM''') introduced a few new strategies and several crucial cards.
 
Picking up where [[The Fellowship of the Ring]] left off, Mines of Moria has a greater focus on the {{C|Dwarven}} and {{C|Moria}} cultures, introducing several unique minions such as {{Card|Watcher in the Water, Keeper of Westgate}} and two powerful versions of the [[Balrog]], which was foreshadowed in the first set. Additionally, the game introduced [[Artifact]]s in the form of {{Card|Gandalf's Staff}}, {{Card|Mithril-coat}}, {{Card|The Balrog's Sword}}, and the {{Card|Whip of Many Thongs}}.
 
Mines of Moria introduced a number of cards to counter Nazgul, including: {{Card|Release the Angry Flood}}, {{Card|Flaming Brand}}, {{Card|Not Feared in Sunlight}}, and {{Card|O Elbereth! Gilthoniel!}} being a few examples. At the same time, Mines of Moria introduced a new Nazgul strategy: Twilight Nazgul such as {{Card|The Witch-king, Lord of the Nazgul}}.
 
== Notable Cards ==
 
* {{Card|Secret Sentinels}}
* {{Card|Gandalf's Staff}}
* {{Card|Flaming Brand}}
* {{Card|Uruk Captain}}
* {{Card|The Balrog, Durin's Bane}}
* {{Card|Tower Assassin}}
* {{Card|Bill Ferny, Swarthy Sneering Fellow}}
* {{Card|A Promise}}.
 
== Starter Decks ==
Mines of Moria is heralded as being one of the best entry points to new players of the game, as the two starter decks are quite balanced against each other and between the two feature every something from every [[Phase]]. {{Card|Gimli, Dwarf of the Mountain-race}} and {{Card|Gandalf, the Grey Pilgrim}} were both welcome additions to Fellowship strategies.


The first expansion of the Lord of the Rings Trading Card game, the Mines of Moria introduced a few new strategies and several crucial cards.
* [[Starter_Decks/Fellowship_Block#MoM_Gandalf_Starter_Deck|Gandalf Starter Deck]]: {{C|Gandalf}} / {{C|Moria}}
* [[Starter_Decks/Fellowship_Block#MoM_Gimli_Starter_Deck|Gimli Starter Deck]]: {{C|Dwarven}} / {{C|Sauron}}


Picking up where the ''!Fellowship'' left off, Mines of Moria has a greater focus on the [Dwarven] and [Moria] cultures, introducing several unique minions such as The Watcher in the Water, Keeper of Westgate and two powerful versions of the Balrog, which was foreshadowed in the first set. Additionally, the game introduced artifacts in the form of Gandalf's Staff, Mithril-Coat, The Balrog's Sword, and the Whip of Many Thongs.
== Later Bans==


Mines of Moria offered the first glimpse of cards directly combating Nazgul: Release the Angry Flood, Flaming Brand, Not Feared in Sunlight, and O Elbereth! Gilthoniel! being four examples. At the same time, Mines of Moria introduced a new Nazgul strategy: Twilight Nazgul.
Mines of Moria features a few cards that were X-Listed in future formats:


Other power rares from the format include Secret Sentinels, Uruk Captain, Bill Ferny, Swarthy Sneering Fellow, Tower Assassin, and A Promise.
* {{Card|Flaming Brand}}
* {{Card|Filibert Bolger, Wily Rascal}}
* {{Card|O Elbereth! Gilthoniel!}}


Mines of Moria is heralded as being one of the best entry points to new players of the game, with both starter decks combining to feature every phase of the card game and two strong strategies. Gimli, Dwarf of the Mountain Race and Gandalf, the Grey Pilgrim were both welcome additions to Fellowship strategies.
Both Filibert and O Elbereth were removed from the X-List when a rule change in [[The Return of the King]] prevented all Ring-bearer skirmish cancellations. came out and rules regarding cancelling ring-bearer skirmishes changed.


Mines of Moria features several cards that were X-Listed in future formats:
Mines of Moria was one of the most overproduced sets in Lord of the Rings TCG, and, as a result the cards were cheap and easy to come by long after its release (although this has become less true as of 2023).
Flaming Brand and Filibert Bolger, Wily Rascal were both X-listed in Towers Standard (1-6), although Filibert Bolger, Wily Rascal was removed when ''Return of the King'' came out and rules regarding cancelling ring-bearer skirmishes changed.


Mines of Moria is one of the most overproduced sets in Lord of the Rings TCG, and, as a result the cards are still cheap and easy to come by.


[[File:LOTR-EN02S051.0_card.jpg|frame|Every Fellowship block deck needs a Balrog Contingency Plan]]


{{Set Table}}
{{Set Table}}

Latest revision as of 06:09, 24 January 2024

The Fellowship of the Ring
Back to Main Page
Realms of the Elf-lords


Mines of Moria
ID2
NameMines of Moria
CreatorDecipher
Release Date2002-03-06
Is OfficialYes
PlatformsPaper LotR-O GEMP mLOTRO Tabletop Simulator Lackey gccg
Notes


Every Fellowship block deck needs a Balrog Contingency Plan

The first expansion of the Lord of the Rings Trading Card game, set 2, Mines of Moria (often abbreviated MOM) introduced a few new strategies and several crucial cards.

Picking up where The Fellowship of the Ring left off, Mines of Moria has a greater focus on the Dwarven and Moria cultures, introducing several unique minions such as Watcher in the Water, Keeper of Westgate (2R73) and two powerful versions of the Balrog, which was foreshadowed in the first set. Additionally, the game introduced Artifacts in the form of Gandalf's Staff (2R22) , Mithril-coat (2R105) , The Balrog's Sword (2R50) , and the Whip of Many Thongs (2R74) .

Mines of Moria introduced a number of cards to counter Nazgul, including: Release the Angry Flood (2R19) , Flaming Brand (2R32) , Not Feared in Sunlight (2U107) , and O Elbereth! Gilthoniel! (2R108) being a few examples. At the same time, Mines of Moria introduced a new Nazgul strategy: Twilight Nazgul such as The Witch-king, Lord of the Nazgul (2R85) .

Notable Cards[edit]

Starter Decks[edit]

Mines of Moria is heralded as being one of the best entry points to new players of the game, as the two starter decks are quite balanced against each other and between the two feature every something from every Phase. Gimli, Dwarf of the Mountain-race (2P121) and Gandalf, The Grey Pilgrim (2P122) were both welcome additions to Fellowship strategies.

Later Bans[edit]

Mines of Moria features a few cards that were X-Listed in future formats:

Both Filibert and O Elbereth were removed from the X-List when a rule change in The Return of the King prevented all Ring-bearer skirmish cancellations. came out and rules regarding cancelling ring-bearer skirmishes changed.

Mines of Moria was one of the most overproduced sets in Lord of the Rings TCG, and, as a result the cards were cheap and easy to come by long after its release (although this has become less true as of 2023).


Sets
Official Decipher Sets Promotional Promotional
Fellowship Block The Fellowship of the RingMines of MoriaRealms of the Elf-lords
Towers Block The Two TowersBattle of Helm's DeepEnts of Fangorn
King Block The Return of the KingSiege of GondorMount Doom
War of the Ring Block ShadowsBlack RiderBloodlines
Hunters Block The HuntersRise of SarumanTreachery & Deceit
Non-Block Sets ReflectionsExpanded Middle-earthThe Wraith CollectionAge's End
Unreleased Sets The Great EyeShelob's Lair
Unofficial Fan Sets Player's Council PC Kitchen Sink (V0)Shadow of the Past (V1)
The Hobbit Draft Game Main DeckShadow PacksSupplementary Packs
mLOTRO MLOTRO Promo CardsMLOTRO Reflections II
The Journey Continues The Journey Begins