Rarity

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Rarity
NameCommon
SortOrder1
AbbrC
Sets Used In1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 11 12 13 15 17 18
NotesOne third of a set's normal cards, released as 7 of a booster pack's 11 cards.
Rarity
NameUncommon
SortOrder2
AbbrU
Sets Used In1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 11 12 13 15 17 18
NotesOne third of a set's normal cards, released as 3 of a booster pack's 11 cards.
Rarity
NamePremium
SortOrder3
AbbrP
Sets Used In0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 19
NotesSets 1-8 and 10 had two starter decks with 2 copies of a Premium card which were only distributed in those decks. The rarity was also used for promotional cards (set 0) and for every card in the final set 19, which could only be purchased as a collector's box with one copy of each card.
Rarity
NameStarter-only
SortOrder4
AbbrS
Sets Used In11 12 13 15 17 30 31 32
NotesLater sets used S for the rarity of cards that only appeared in starter decks.
Rarity
NameRare
SortOrder5
AbbrR
Sets Used In1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
NotesOne third of a set's normal cards, released as 1 of a booster pack's 11 cards. Special mini-sets (9, 14, and 16) used the R rarity for most/all of the cards in the set.
Rarity
NameRare Plus
SortOrder6
AbbrR+
Sets Used In9
NotesReflections was an all-foil all-Rare set released in 18 card booster packs, which were filled with overstock from previous sets. 2 cards would be Rares, and once every 2.5 packs one card would be randomly replaced with a Rare Plus.
Rarity
NameRare Foil (Legends)
SortOrder7
AbbrRF
Sets Used In11 12 13 15 17 18
NotesLegends cards were inserted randomly into boosters and were foil versions of certain popular rares, and were only produced during a set's initial print run.
Rarity
NameLegends Masterwork
SortOrder8
AbbrO
Sets Used In12 13 15 17 18
NotesActually a ring symbol rather than an O, these indicate a Legends foil that contain an alternate-color template for a more striking visual difference.
Rarity
NamePromotional
SortOrder9
AbbrP
Sets Used In0
NotesEverything from tournament prizes to DVD bonus pack-ins to Decipher store rewards.
Rarity
NameMegasized Promo
SortOrder9
AbbrM
Sets Used In0 1 2 3 4 5 6 10
NotesOversized cards used for promotional purposes.
Rarity
NameDGMA Tournament Prize
SortOrder10
AbbrD
Sets Used In0
NotesCards issued as prizes for DGMA-sanctioned events.
Rarity
NameTournament Foil
SortOrder11
AbbrTF
Sets Used In0
NotesOverseas promos printed by international distributors as tournament prizes.
Rarity
NameWorld's Apart Digital
SortOrder12
AbbrW
Sets Used In0
NotesUsed for cards which originated on the Lord of the Rings Online platform ran by Worlds Apart for Decipher.
Rarity
NameApril Fool's Day
SortOrder13
AbbrAFD
Sets Used In0
NotesUsed for a handful of joke cards.
Rarity
NameSaint Patrick's Day
SortOrder14
AbbrSPD
Sets Used In0
NotesUsed for a handful of joke cards.
Rarity
NameNone
SortOrder15
AbbrN
Sets Used InV0 V1 V2
NotesMany virtual cards lack a rarity, for obvious reasons.
Rarity
NameFree Peoples Pack
SortOrder15
AbbrFP
Sets Used In30
NotesHobbit Draft Game: base mix-in Free Peoples Pack
Rarity
NameBeatdown Pack 1
SortOrder15
AbbrB1
Sets Used In30 31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Shadow beat-down pack 1
Rarity
NameBeatdown Pack 2
SortOrder15
AbbrB2
Sets Used In30 31 32 331
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Shadow beat-down pack 2
Rarity
NameBeatdown Pack 3
SortOrder15
AbbrB3
Sets Used In30 31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Shadow beat-down pack 3
Rarity
NameSwarm Pack 1
SortOrder15
AbbrS1
Sets Used In31
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Shadow swarm pack 1
Rarity
NameSwarm Pack 2
SortOrder15
AbbrS2
Sets Used In30 31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Shadow swarm pack 2
Rarity
NameSwarm Pack 3
SortOrder15
AbbrS3
Sets Used In30 31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Shadow swarm pack 3
Rarity
NamePack A
SortOrder15
AbbrHA
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack A: Bilbo
Rarity
NamePack B
SortOrder15
AbbrHB
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack B: Dain
Rarity
NamePack C
SortOrder15
AbbrHC
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack C: Esgaroth
Rarity
NamePack D
SortOrder15
AbbrHD
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack D: Mirkwood
Rarity
NamePack E
SortOrder15
AbbrHE
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack E: Thorin
Rarity
NamePack F
SortOrder15
AbbrHF
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack F: Bilbo
Rarity
NamePack G
SortOrder15
AbbrHG
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack G: White Council
Rarity
NamePack H
SortOrder15
AbbrHH
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack H: Wizard
Rarity
NamePack I
SortOrder15
AbbrHI
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack I: Balin
Rarity
NamePack J
SortOrder15
AbbrHJ
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack J: Blue Mountains
Rarity
NamePack K
SortOrder15
AbbrHK
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack K: Rivendell
Rarity
NamePack L
SortOrder15
AbbrHL
Sets Used In31 32 33
NotesHobbit Draft Game: Supplementary Pack L: Travellers


Rarity[edit]

The Rarity of a card represents how frequently it was distributed in booster packs and other means. This official rarity is printed in the Collector's Info in the lower-right hand corner, and is usually represented by a single letter, though other combinations are possible. Like in most trading card games, not all cards in the same rarity class are created equal, so determining a card's worth is more difficult than merely looking at the printed rarity.

A summary of each rarity and what it means is given below.

Standard Rarities[edit]

First, a word on how most cards were distributed (as this was the primary means of manipulating a card's rarity). Cards had two primary means of distribution for most of the game's run: booster packs and starter boxes.

Starter packs, 2 per set, were specifically designed for new players and came with a specially-designed deck centered around a particular companion. That companion was marked with a special rarity, premium (P) and always included two copies per box (in Fellowship of the Ring, those two Premiums were Gandalf, The Grey Wizard (1P364) , and Aragorn, King in Exile (1P365) ). This rarity was also used for promotional cards (set 0) and every card in the final set Age's End, which could only be purchased as a box containing one of each card.

Starting in Shadows, many cards in starter decks did not appear in boosters, rather than just the premium starting companion. From this set forward, starter-only cards were given a rarity symbol of S.[1] In Shadows and Black Rider, almost every card in the starter decks had an S rarity symbol, but later sets reduced the number of S rarity cards to only a handful per deck.

Booster packs, on the other hand, were the primary way of getting cards (as it is with most TCG's), and the primary waterline by which rarity was judged. Each booster pack contained 11 cards, made up of 7 common (C), 3 uncommon (U), and 1 rare (R) card. There were the same number of each rarity in each set; base sets like Fellowship had 121 of each, while expansions had 40. This meant that, if you were to collect a complete collection of 121 rares from a base set entirely from booster backs, you would have about 363 uncommon cards, and 847 common cards. This assumes you never got any duplicate rares, and if you wanted a complete playset (4 of each card, which is the maximum you can have in a particular deck), your Common/Uncommon set would quickly approach quintuple-digits--and that's just for one set!

In addition, each booster pack had about a 1 in 6 chance of having one of the cards randomly replaced with a full-foil card of a random rarity. This meant that collecting full foil sets was significantly more unpredictable, and also could result in some interesting booster packs: for instance, this could result in a booster with two rares (one of them foil, replacing one of the common or uncommon cards). Due to the mechanics of inserting foils into early sets, it was possible - though very unusual - to open a pack with more than one foil card plus an ordinary rare.

In the Fellowship of the Ring set (and presumably for all movie-block sets), the odds of which card was inserted as a foil varied based on its rarity, which was as follows [2]:

  • 1 Common foil every 13 packs
  • 1 Uncommon foil every 18 packs
  • 1 Rare foil every 26 packs

Each of these chances was calculated independently, which results in each booster having a ~17% chance of having at least one foil, which is where Decipher's 1 in 6 chance calculation came from.

So, in summary, Common (C), Uncommon (U), Rare (R), and Premium (P) were the "standard" rarities that the vast majority of cards in the game were granted.

Promotional Cards[edit]

Promotional cards were given out to promote up-and-coming sets and were usually alternate-image versions of previously existing cards. For instance, Faramir, Son of Denethor (P), was packaged with Collector's Editions of The Two Towers movie. Promotional cards were almost always exact duplicates of other cards (except for the card image itself), and so were considered the same from a game judgement standard. There are several important exceptions, however, including 0P56 through 0P60 and 0P62 through 0P67. Most promotional cards have a P rarity, but towards the end of the game's lifespan a few promotional cards with D rarity were printed and handed out.

This meant that for players who focused on the game, Promotional cards were not particularly worth the effort getting, whereas for collectors it was practically a whole new set to collect. This was enshrined by the fact that all Promotional cards are part of set 0, and this is the only way to differentiate a Premium card from a Promotional card. The effective rarity of Promotional cards varied wildly; some were tournament prizes, some packaged with other products, some packed into every deluxe DVD set of Lord of the Rings sold. The most hard-to-find cards are generally considered to be 0P62 - 0P67, a set of cards released as a tie-in to the digital Customizable League Cards for Lord of the Rings Online TCG; since few people participated in the promotion (due in part to Decipher/World's Apart delaying the first few by several months), very few of these ever made it out into the wild.

Decipher also printed several oversized cards; these cards were given a rarity of M (and were of course not tournament-legal).

Rare Plus[edit]

Rare Plus (R+) was a rarity unique to the Reflections set, which was released between Siege of Gondor and Mount Doom. Half of the all-foil 52-card set were Rare, while the other half were Rare Plus. These were distributed in 18-card booster packs composed of 2 random rares from Reflections and 16 random cards from all previous sets (this was a way for Decipher to dump some of their overstock). About once every two-and-a-half packs, a card would be replaced with one of the Rare Plus cards, in a manner similar to foil cards, and thus the name: not quite a rare, not quite a foil (though all Reflections cards were foil).

Legends and Legends Masterwork[edit]

Starting with the Shadows set, alternate versions of select cards were reprinted as the "Legends" series meant to represent particularly popular cards or concepts. This increased the total number of cards to collect while at the same time making these additions quite rare, as eventually during the set's lifetime these alternate cards would be discontinued. Legends-series cards were always foil, and marked with the RF rarity to differentiate them from their non-Legends counterpart. RF cards were inserted at an approximate rate of 1 every 7 packs, replacing the random rare [3].

With the release of Black Rider, Legends were joined with the Legends Masterwork series, indicated by a ring O as the rarity. These cards were more than just foil, however; each card used a new card template with a completely redone color scheme and sometimes a card image that "popped" outside its frame. The visual difference is appropriately striking. Some uploaded images on Decipher's website for Black Rider show an * for a rarity symbol, but this was likely a placeholder image and was never printed this way. Legends Masterworks were inserted at an approximate rate of 1 every 35 packs (i.e about one per booster box), which when combined with the chance for a Legends RF meant that post-Black Rider sets had an approximate 1 in 7 chance for a foil of some flavor [4].

Tournament Foil[edit]

Tournament Foil cards were distributed during the Shadows block as rewards for winning official tournaments, or in some cases as a reward for purchasing a certain amount of product (earlier, tournament winners received random foils.) There were 9 in total; all were foiled versions of cards from Black Rider and Bloodlines. These cards are unique in that they were not distributed by Decipher, but by their partners in France, Germany, and Italy, and so were printed and handled entirely overseas. As might be imagined, these are among the rarest of cards due to the separation of markets.

Virtual Cards[edit]

There are a number of cards within the database for set 0 that were never actually printed. Some of these, such as Faramir, Captain of Ithilien (AFD), Goblet of the White City (SPD), Green Dragon Mug (SPD), and Rohirrim Stein (SPD), were jokes released on Decipher's website for April Fool's Day and Saint Patrick's Day, respectively.

There were also a number of cards made exclusively for the LotR-O system that may as well have been joke cards. Versions given as tournament rewards were given rarity D (a letter also used for printed promotional cards in 2005-2007), and cards that were a part of the "Triumph and Menace" mini-set were given a rarity of W (a rarity generally used for other virtual cards as well, but are not represented here in the wiki).

  1. Decipher's Shadows press release: [1]
  2. Information pulled from pre-release FOTR information on the Wayback: [2]
  3. Decipher's Shadows press release: [3]
  4. Decipher's Black Rider foil breakdown: [4]