Community Content & FAQ

By scantrell24, in General Discussion

Welcome to the comprehensive Community FAQ thread. In the Game of Thrones LCG players use customized decks to assume leadership of one of the great houses of Westeros vying for control of King's Landing and the Iron Throne. To achieve their goals, players launch military attacks against their opponents, undermine their opponents’ plans with intrigues of their own, and make brazen power plays to win the support of the realm.

The Game of Thrones card game launched as a CCG (collectible card game) in 2002. It was designed by Eric Lang at Fantasy Flight Games and based on the novels written by George R.R. Martin. In 2008 the game rebooted to accommodate a switch to LCG (living card game) format. In August 2015, the game rebooted again, still with the LCG distribution model but with streamlined rules, sleek new designs, and additional factions. Previous cards will not be compatible. However, the new edition does maintain the essential game elements (plot deck, three challenge types, victory condition) of the first edition. For Fantasy Flight's reasons behind the reboot, please read lead designer Nate French's letter to the community .

Players choose to represent one of eight factions vying for control of or influence over the Iron Throne - Targaryen , Lannister , Baratheon , Stark , Martell , Greyjoy , Tyrell , and the Night's Watch . The Thrones LCG can by played head-to-head (called " joust " -- the usual format for competitive tournaments) or with 3-6 players (called " melee " - more like a board game). The 2nd edition Core set hit shelves in October 2015, with small expansions following monthly. For reviews of the Core set, check out Shut up and Sit Down , Paste Magazine , and

Second Edition Resources

The Product Page

First Preview Article

Card Database

The LCG (Living Card Game) Model

The Core box for 2nd Edition contains 211 distinct cards. You get single copies of most cards, but a few neutral ones are duplicated to reach a total of 234 cards in the box. Casual gamers may find one Core sufficient, but tournament players need three Cores to obtain a full play-set of every card.

If you've already enjoyed playing with a single Core set, consider enhancing and customizing your decks with cards from additional Core sets, Chapter packs or Deluxe boxes. Under the LCG model, additional cards are released in monthly chapter packs (approx. $15 MSRP) and bi-annual deluxe expansions (approx. $25-30). Both product types contain a fixed distribution of cards, and each card comes 3x so you have a full play-set immediately. You know exactly what you're getting when you buy a pack -- no chasing rares, and no shelling out big bucks just to play on equal footing in tournaments.

Chapter packs contain 2 different cards per each of the 8 factions factions, plus 4 different neutral cards, all at 3x each for a total of 60 cards. As of January 28th 2016, we have two chapter packs available, Taking the Black and The Road to Winterfell .

The first Deluxe expansion, Wolves of the North , will feature House Stark prominently, but also include a few neutral cards and cards from other factions, with a total of about 55 different cards, at 3 copies each.

To ease the burden of entry for new players and keep the tournament scene fresh, chapter packs rotate out of the tournament-legal card pool after about 4 years (so starting in 2019). The Core set and deluxe expansions will not rotate but rather remain "evergreen". The LCG model makes Thrones a relatively cheap investment compared to collectible card games like Magic. Furthermore, players can easily share a collection with a friend or two by divvying up the 8 factions.

Deckbuilding

In 2nd edition, a player forms his decks by choosing a Faction card (such as House Baratheon ), which allows him to use all loyal AND non-loyal cards from that faction. Additionally, players can optionally use an "Agenda" card. Agendas generally provide an extra benefit at some cost. A "Banner" Agenda (such as Banner of the Kraken ) allows him to add non-loyal cards from his Banner faction. The Banner agendas are currently the only method to include out-of-faction cards. Alternatively, you can choose a non-Banner agenda, such as Fealty or Lord of the Crossing . Finally, neutral cards without a faction crest can be added to any deck.

Thronesdb Deckbuilder

Browse Winning Decklists on White Book

Cardgamedb Deckbuilder

Cardgamedb Submitted Decks

Discussion Groups & Forums

The Worldwide Facebook Group

Discord Chat Group

Reddit

Boardgamegeek

Team Covenant

FFG Forums

Throneshub

Podcasts, Videos & Blogs

Beyond the Wall: Podcasts , Facebook

The White Book: Podcasts , Website , Facebook

Banter Behind the Throne: Podcasts , Facebook

Summer Is Coming: Live on Twitch : Tuesdays at 3 Eastern / 6 Pacific

A Meager Contribution: Youtube

Wardens of the Midwest: Website

Dobbler Talk: Youtube

Insight and Renown: Website

Calling the Banners: Facebook

Taming Dragons: Facebook

Jack's Tournament Reports: Website

Essential Articles, Discussions, & Videos for New Players

Choosing An Agenda

The Relative Importance of Challenges

Building Your Main Deck

Building Your Plot Deck

How Many Copies of Each Card?

Thrones from a Magic: the Gathering Perspective

Watch Games on YouTube

Beyond the White Book

Rob St. John

Throne Runner

Agotnordic's Youtube & Twitch

Joe from Cincinnati

Songs of Bambi the Bard

scantrell24

cooleo1c

mnbroncos

Upcoming Cards

Four the Watch Spoiler Tracker

Google Docs Spoiler Tracker

Official Tournaments

Store championships are the bottom of the organized play pyramid , and the season runs from January to March. Prestigious Regional tournaments run from April to July ( find one near you ). The U.S. National Championship is held at Gen Con in August, the European Championship is held at Castle Stahleck in late November, and the World Championship is held at FFG headquarters in Minnesota in early November. The winners of US Nationals, the European Championship, and World Championship events (draft, joust and melee) each earn the right to design their own card! Additionally, major unofficial tournaments are held throughout the year, and local stores can host tournaments with game night kits including prizes like alternate art promos, deck boxes, and playmats. In addition to player-run online tournaments through OCTGN, there's a new initiative called Tabletop Tourney Grounds to create a tiered system of tournaments following FFG's Regional season.

Play Online

OCTGN is a free program that allows us to play Thrones online. A subscription is not necessary to play on OCTGN, but subscribing supports the developers and unlocks some additional features. FFG and OCTGN are not affiliated, so cards released in the last six months are censored. You can host a game or find a game to join in the lobby. To get started, follow the instructions found here . OCTGN currently only works with PCs, not Macs, unless you use a workaround.

Game Results

The Annals of Castle Black (tournament data)

The Iron Link (individual game results)

Winning Decklists (via White Book podcast)

Rules Questions

When you're stumped, first check the RRG (Rules Reference Guide) that came with your Core set. It's also available on FFG's website under "Support". Next try the Rules Forum FAQ , then search with the string "in:cardgamedb.com" in a google search , and if you still don't have an answer, feel free to ask! There's also an entire column series devoted to rules intricacies and explanations called Quill & Tankard Regulars .

Thrones Timing Rules

If you're joining us from Magic, it's important to note that Thrones doesn't use a "stack". Each time an action or reaction window opens, players alternate turns to play a card or use an ability, and the window closes when all players pass consecutively. Details can be found on pages 24-25 of the Rules Reference Guide.

Don't Forget to D.U.C.K.!

At the end of a challenge, it's important to resolve game and card effects in the proper order.

1. Determine winner - this is where you'd trigger reactions to winning/losing, like Tears of Lys, Lannisport, and Ghaston Grey

2. Unopposed bonus - this is where you'd trigger reactions to claiming the unopposed bonus, like Rise of the Kraken

3. Claim - this is where you'd trigger reactions to claim, for example if a Lord or Lady is killed for military claim, Joffrey can trigger here

4. Keywords - finally, keywords and their reactions happen last, for example, when Robert gains a power for renown, you can trigger Lightbringer

Where Can I Play?

To find a tournament, check the event calendar on whitebookpodcast's page .

To find individual players or groups, check the following spreadsheet and pin-able map, try the player finder on throneshub , or introduce yourself in the worldwide Facebook group .

The Spreadsheet .

Anyone who has the link can edit it. I've created a tab for each country (more countries can be easily added as necessary). There are columns that ask for state/province within the country, name of your local gaming store, the store's address, a link to your meta's website, forum or facebook group, contact info for someone in the meta, and what time your group regularly meets (if any). Holding Ctl + f will let you search within a sheet to find your state.

The Pin-able Map .

Anyone can add a pin for either a store or a player. To add a pin, go to "Additions" in the top right and click "Add Marker - Detailed". To add a PLAYER , make sure the marker color is RED . For the "Entry Name" put your real name, forum handle, or both. For address, you can get as detailed as your exact address if you want, or just put the street name without your house number, or you can just put your city or area code. Then on the "Details" tab you can add an email address or other contact info. To add a STORE , make sure the marker color is GREEN . For the "Entry Name" put the name of the store. Add the exact street address. Then under the "Details" tab you can add contact info for the store. I also recommend adding contact info for your meta in the Description box, such as a Facebook group or forum url. If you make a mistake with your pins, send me a message and I'll correct it.

Vocabulary (under construction)

Player types include Ned, Jaime and Shagga

Deck archetypes include Combo, Aggro, Rush, Tempo, Toolbox, Soft Control and Hard Control

Game terms includes Burn, Mill, Choke, Resets, Voltron and Metagame

Swag & Prizes

2015 Winter GNK

2016 Store Championships

2016 Spring GNK

2016 Summer GNK

Fan-made Power tokens: Broken Egg Games , Draculas Tokens , Team Covenant

Fan-made Gold Coins: Broken Egg Games , Draculas Tokens , Shire Post Mint
Fan-made Deckboxes: Timewalker Deck Boxes

Tournament Etiquette

FFG's Tournament Rules (under "Support" and then "Tournament Resources")

Cheating is defined as any behavior outside the rules of the game performed with the intent to create an unfair advantage for one or more players. Categorical methods of cheating include (but are not limited to): sleight of hand tricks, component manipulation, collusion, misrepresentation, and unsportsmanlike conduct.
All players in a game have a responsibility to maintain the proper board state. If your opponent counts 1 less gold than he should have, you should tell him. If your opponent misses a Forced Reaction card ability that would be detrimental to you, you should tell him.
It is not rude to ask for a takeback. It is not rude to decline such a request.
In a tournament, you should feel free to continue to play at normal speed until time is called even if your board position is hopelessly lost. However, you should not deliberately stall (play slowly) in hopes of getting a modified loss (worth 1 point) instead of a full loss (worth 0 points).

Scouting is generally frowned upon. Ask your TO and discuss with your meta mates to determine exactly where they draw the line. Some groups allow players to spectate and/or share the details of opponent's decks with their friends between rounds. Personally, I think both of those actions make you an ass-hole, but scouting can be a grey area if "everyone does it".

Draft Packs

In November 2013, FFG introduced draft packs which allow players to hold draft tournaments. The LCG distribution model previously made drafting difficult ; players had to create their own draft cubes. But now each player just needs a reusable starter pack ($5) and a randomized draft pack ($15). There were two draft pack sets in First Edition - first Fire and Ice followed by Westeros . FFG added draft tournaments to World Championship weekend starting in 2015, so we can safely assume draft will continue into 2nd edition.

Major Tournament Champions

2015 Stahleck - Martell de Poitiers from France - Baratheon Fealty

2015 Worlds - Sam Braatz from Wisconsin - Martell Banner of the Rose

International Resources

Roca Casterly (Spanish)

El Ășnico juego que importa (Spanish)

Le Trone de Fer (French forum)

The Conclave (Italian Facebook group)

The Conclave (Italian Youtube channel)

Conclusion

Thanks for reading this guide! Feel free to bookmark it, as I make frequent updates with newly relevant links, and share it with other new players. Below you'll find some information from the previous edition of the Thrones LCG, which is not compatible with second edition, and is no longer supported by FFG.

First Edition Resources

FFG's Support Page
Video Tutorial
Basic Rules

FAQ 5.5 and Tournament Rules (updated July 15 2015)

Tournament History

Rules Questions & Answers
Quills & Tankards Articles

Valar Morghulis
Timing Structure

Helpful Sites & Articles
Deckbuilding 101
Card Advantage
Deck Archetypes

Playing With a Limited Card Pool
Setup Analyzer

OCTGN for playing online

Download the files

OCTGN Installation Walkthrough

FFG's Timing:
FAQs were released 3 to 4 times each year to update the resitricted/banned list and to address unclear rules interactions. Previous FAQs were released on 16th July 2015, 12th February 2015, 15th October 2014, 21st July 2014, 15th April 2014, 14th October 2013, 23rd July 2013, 27th February 2013, 11th October 2012 , 3rd August 2012, 20th March 2012, 19th January 2012, 22nd September 2011
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