sgtdraino, I love reading your threads. Fellowship Block, Tower Block, and Towers Standard, at the time, allowed for ringbearer skirmishes to be canceled. As mentioned decipher made it a hard rule with Reflections that you can no longer cancel the ringbearer skirmish, but that rule only applied to the current Standard environment.
Citation, please? Where do the rules say that this particular rule only applied to the Standard environment?
Now, I'm the third person to clarify this for you, and I'm sure you'll ignore it and repeat your erroneous position.
I'm quoting chapter and verse from the CR and the CRDs. Cite an official source which supports your position, otherwise it's just another unofficial opinion.
Even if it were a house rule (which its not) that doesn't give us carte blanche for all house rules.
Either Gemp is by-the-book, or it isn't. If it chooses to use house rules, then certainly it has carte blanche to enact all the house rules it wants to. It just can't call itself by-the-book.
The May 4, 2004 CRD was released at the same time as Comprehensive Rules 3.0, and these are the first instances of the "Ring-bearer skirmish may not be cancelled" rule in LotR TCG. The files are too large to attach to this post, but if you want to look at them, they can be viewed here:
5/4/04 CRD
Comprehensive Rules 3.0
I tried opening those links, but they just give me blank windows. If you can tell me how to download those files, I'd certainly like to add them to my collection.
Also, having had the opportunity to know and converse with several high-level DGMA judges over the years, including Enrique Huerta and Dan Bojanowski, I can tell you with 100% certainty that it was always Decipher's intent that Ring-bearer skirmishes could be cancelled in Fellowship Block.
I've met Bojo, good guy. I don't have any experience with Huerta. In any event, unless you can get one of those guys to come on here and tell us, or show us something they wrote which confirms that position, it's still just hearsay. The CR and the CRDs do not just apply to Standard, and they most certainly do apply to formats that predate their release. That's the whole point of a Current Rulings Document: To make new rulings, clarifications and changes to what had come before. The CR is not just the rules document for Standard format, it is the rules document for the entirety of the LOTR TCG. And that document says:
Ring-bearer
One Free Peoples character always begins the
game as your Ring-bearer. (See building your
deck.) He bears The One Ring for you, much as
when Frodo carried the Ring in his pocket or on
a chain around his neck.
If a character other than Frodo is your Ring-
bearer, you cannot play any version of Frodo
with the Ring-bearer keyword during the game.
While wearing The One Ring, your Ring-bearer
can perform all normal actions such as moving
and skirmishing. He may defend against
attacking minions as usual.
The Ring-bearer cannot be discarded or returned
to your hand, and
skirmishes involving the Ring-
bearer cannot be cancelled.
There is no mention anywhere that there are any formats which are exempt to this. Additionally, we have this individual card ruling reflected in both the CR and the CRDs:
O ELBERETH! GITHONIEL! 2 R 108
As
skirmishes involving the Ring-bearer cannot be
cancelled, the skirmish action of this condition can
only be used to take off The One Ring.
Again, no mention of this limitation only applying to certain formats.
Towers Standard, being the closest to a "house rules" format as we currently have in the 1E landscape, is probably your best bet for making this point. Since the baseline understanding of TS format is to include all rulings and X-List entries as of the release of Ents of Fangorn, however, your argument would still be invalid because the Ring-bearer skirmish cancelling rule was not implemented until May 4, 2004 and Ents of Fangorn was released on July 2, 2003.
The argument is valid because there is no such thing as an official scenario called "Towers Standard." Back when Towers was being released, there was Standard Format, which follows the evolving definition of Standard Format. It wasn't "Towers Standard," it was just Standard Format. And once the next block came out, the definition of Standard Format caused the available card pool for that format to change. Once King Block came out, as far as Decipher was concerned, "Towers Standard" was not any kind of official format that continued to exist. Officially, it was never its own entity.
Still this leaves us with Towers Standard, Movie and War of the Ring Standard as unofficial formats which were Standard at some point.
Correct.
And I think the only logical way to play them is according to official rules from relevant day - one day before release of RotK, Shadows and Hunters sets.
That makes sense. The issue is, the various block formats
are official formats, and according to the CR and the CRDs, Ring-bearer skirmishes cannot be cancelled in
any of them.