The Tale of Gil-galad (1R66)

From LOTR-TCG Wiki
Revision as of 11:05, 23 August 2020 by imported>IstariBot (IstariBot mass importing articles from the old DokuWiki instance.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


Swan-ship of the Galadhrim (1U65)
Back to Fellowship of the Ring Index
Uruviel, Maid of Lorien (1C67)


Set: Fellowship of the Ring
Kind: Free Peoples
Culture: Elven
Twilight: 1
Card Type: Condition
Vitality: +1
Game Text: Tale. Bearer must be an Elf. Skirmish: Discard this condition to make bearer strength +2.
Lore: “‘Gil-galad was an Elven-king / Of him the harpers sadly sing: / the last whose realm was fair and free / between the Mountains and the Sea.'”
Rarity: R



The information presented above about LoTR TCG, both literal and graphical, is copyrighted by Decipher Inc. This website is not produced, endorsed, supported, or affiliated with Decipher.


General Strategy

The Tale of Gil-Galad, and its brethren card The Saga of Elendil, is a unique, vitality-increasing condition. The first to cards to increase vitality in the trading card game, The Tale of Gil-Galad and The Saga of Elendil also offer a skirmish special action text to discard the condition for a strength +2 bonus. Endurance of Dwarves, the [Dwarven] variant, is non-unique, but only provides a strength +1 boost.

The Tale of Gil-Galad is often played on Legolas, Greenleaf, where the added vitality can result in an extra directed wound during the archery phase. That said, counting on The Tale of Gil-Galad, The Saga of Elendil, or Endurance of Dwarves for exertion based special abilities is a risky strategy. Discarding the condition on an exhausted companion means instant death, making cards like Hate and Orc Patrol potentially devastating.

Strengths and Weaknesses

Strong Versus...

  • Best in concordance with characters with exertion special abilities, such as Legolas, Greenleaf or Aragorn, Ranger of the North
  • Additional vitality helpful against grind or archery Shadow strategies

Weak Versus...

  • Condition discarding, particularly in concert with directed wounding/exhausting
  • Directed wounding