I don't play Movie too often, but I'd say it seems to me that the only way to counter LR in Movie, is to devote a significant amount of deck real estate to Sauron culture. Am I wrong? Or else just don't rely on any conditions or possessions lasting out a turn... and that does sound pretty format-warping to me. Are there other ways of countering her, that are not culture-enforced? That don't force you to adapt a certain kind of Shadow Strategy?
I don't consider
LR format-warping because other competitive fellowships exist that do not use her. As I had (attempted to) outline, I really only consider something format-warping if it turns the format into a two-deck format, i.e. the problem deck and its counter deck. I do not think that is where movie block is at all.
As for countering
LR, I think the approach should be something akin to your Ultimate Madril's shadow with Grima and
Saruman's power. In other words, play a splash minion and the counter card (
Terrible as the Dawn). Examples I'd include are the following:
Great Hill Troll (yes, expensive but a great body and can kill off a condition in the later sites)
Tower Assassin (nice body and can be used to eliminate problem allies)
Orc SlaughtererOrc Archer TroopShagrat, Captain of Cirith UngolOrc InsurgentOrc PillagerMorgul HunterObviously there are others, but those are a few that jump out at me. I like the
Tower Assassin, personally. As for ways to address her without having to adjust your strategy or your list... Well, there are options for getting your cards back after she has removed them (
Host of Moria for
![Moria [Moria]](https://lotrtcgdb.com/forums/Smileys/classic/moria.png)
,
Dead Marshes for
![Sauron [Sauron]](https://lotrtcgdb.com/forums/Smileys/classic/sauron.png)
,
Gorgoroth Agitator for besiegers, etc). But really, no. If
LR is a problem card for your deck, you will hafta decide whether to include the appropriate counter measures, or, if your deck real estate cannot be tampered with, go forth without such
preparations. This is basically the though process I go through when building magic decks (I primarily play Modern format). Questions such as "are these countercards that hurt my overall deck consistency worth putting in to shore up my weakness to this matchup? How likely am I to play that matchup (how dominate is the deck that my deck is weak against)?" etc. You hafta do a cost/benefit analysis and determine your best bet, knowing all the while that fortune may not be on your side in that you don't include your counter cards and your first 3 rounds of swiss you are paired with be the deck you are weak to. Or maybe you include the counter cards and you never play a single round against that matchup. This is the meta and it isn't always predictable. All you do is your best to be prepared for it with your limited information.
As powerful as she is,
LR and cards similar to her (
Legolas, DH) exist because some shadow sides can be so absurdly powerful with all of their conditions. Also, to keep things in context, remember the shadow sides that came to be alongside
LR: Corsair, Besieger, Ninja Gollum. These are incredibly powerful shadow sides.
LR was a check on these. Obviously, she was tuned a tad high, but as I have pointed out, not format-warping.
Hobbit Hospital with Scouring might qualify as format warping, since (in my experience) they will roll right over you unless you have MASSIVE condition discarding ability. Playing Minions only seems to Heal them up more, and take off burdens! Perhaps there are other counters to this Strategy besides condition bombs that I'm not aware of?
Here, I think we are disagreeing on what format-warping is. The fact that Madril/Horn Filter/HkotN/Hobbit Hospital/etc all exist as competitive archetypes is evidence (at least from my
perspective) that there is nothing truly format-warping out there in expanded. And we notice the trend of conditions being an issue, from
Legolas, DH and
LR to Hobbit Hospital. Conditions are obviously some of the most powerful cards in the game. Players need to respect them and give them their due consideration when constructing their freeps AND shadow sides.
That is one of the reasons I like the shadow side to your ultimate Madril, Sgt. It is an unconventional swiss-army knife type shadow. Not only does it address the cards the opponent plays, but also how they are played.
I think we've all been there though. You get beat really bad by some kind of Strategy that you haven't exactly seen, and it FELT like there was no counter or way out. That's really when the term broken starts getting thrown around (out of an emotional response, more than an actual analytical response).
Yeah, there is something to this. It makes me think of another M:tg analogy: Timmy, the Mono green stompy player, has an emotional response when he pays 7 mana to drop a beastly green
fatty only to have it met by countered by his opponent Spike's Mana Leak, sending that
fatty straight to the graveyard before it ever resolves. Players with less experience tend to see counter spells in M:tg as broken. However, those of us who have played the game for a while know to watch for how much mana our opponent leaves open (with which to potentially cast a counter, knowing how to play less important spells to goad our opponent into countering a less meaningful card, etc.
Another magic analogy would be commitment/over-commitment to the board. This makes me think of our discussing of
The Number Must Be Few in the other thread about Horn Filter. In magic, aggro players (a player playing a deck designed to use creature attacks to win the game) hafta be careful not to over-commit to the board. The reason for this: sweepers like Wrath of God (2WW, Sorcery, Destroy all creatures, they can't be regenerated). If the aggro player just spits his hand out onto the board and then it gets Wrathed away and he is left handless in topdeck mode, he will be hard pressed to win the game. But if he were to commit to the board only what he needs to win the game, he has backup in his hand should he face a board wipe. This same kind of thing happens in LotR with freeps/shadows that throw down a ton of conditions only to walk into a
Sleep, Caradhras or a
Saruman's power... It is simply the risk you take for trying to eek out the advantage that comes along with playing all those cards.
Sorry if the magic analogies are getting annoying. It is just that as time has gone on, both LotR and magic have made me a better player at the other game.
Btw, if someone disagrees with everything I have said, that is cool. You can downvote my gold or w/e you want. I don't really care about the gold system at all and hafta remind myself to use it when I think someone writes out something really cool because I know others do care. However, if you disagree with me so much, I really would appreciate hearing your take on things if you'd take the time to articulate it. It will make this discussion much more constructive for everyone to have more perspectives represented.
Edit: I'd just like to also say how awesome it is that we are having some substantial conversation on the boards! I am clicking refresh on the forum home page all day, every day on my phone so it is nice to have some new stuff to read!