Review: The Lord of the Rings: Adventure Card Game – Definitive Edition (Steam)

The Lord of the Rings: Adventure Card Game - Definitive Edition review

Build a deck of iconic heroes and challenge the forces of Sauron in this thrilling tactical card game. Travel through famous locations, complete story-driven quests, and forge a new legend of Middle-earth on your own or with a friend in cooperative mode. But beware: the Eye of Sauron is searching for you.

Pros:

  • Beautiful graphics.
  • 5029mb Download size.
  • Steam achievements.
  • Graphics-quality preset, resolution, fullscreen, and AA.
  • Two modes-Single player and multiplayer.
  • Tow additional campaigns- The shadows Fall and The Witch Kings grasp.
  • Decks-for creating and editing decks.
  • Vault-customization options like avatars, frames, and card backs.
  • Opening tutorial fights.
  • Fully voiced.
  • Card battler gameplay.
  • Resources- This goes up each round and any unused resources are kept. You use resources to play cards so saving up will allow stronger better cards to be played.
  • World map level select with campaign missions and optional side quests and encounters.
  • Can be played with just a mouse.
  • Can Mulligan at the start of a game.
  • Game is split into phases-upkeep and action. This has an effect on what cards can be played.
  • Rounds-the match is split into these but the actual playing of actions/cards is a take turns affair so you go then they go then you and so on.
  • Travel-once you do your quest in a match (usually killing a certain card) you can then travel to the next part of the quest. The kicker is you can travel whenever you want but the enemy can still play their cards as you travel.
  • You can only play a card once per combat phase.
  • Play how you want.
  • Quest challenges-complete the bonus quests for extra rewards.
  • Excellent animations and overall presentation.
  • Multiplayer–find a game or host public/private game.
  • Multiplayer is Co-op against the campaign story.
  • Fellowship-in game currency to buy new avatars/borders/emotes.
  • Villans and Heroes are stronger cards and the ones you usually need to take out.
  • The core gameplay is easy to grasp.
  • 3 difficulties-narrative/adventure/challenge.
  • Mirror of Galadriel is a quest on the map that gives you a random match every time.
  • Strong story and lore at play.
  • The full cast of characters is in it.
  • Battles always take place with you against Sauron in the campaign.
  • Event cards can be played which mix it up.
  • Cards all have different activation requirements like only activates in the upkeep phase or only activates in retaliation.

The Lord of the Rings: Adventure Card Game - Definitive Edition review

Cons:

  • The tutorial is very basic and misses out a few important bits like how to read cards efficiently.
  • No help with deck building.
  • Initially, the game is slow as you take it all in.
  • AI can feel a bit cheap at times.
  • Basic graphic settings.
  • The story is forced onto you and you can only skip loading screen musings.
  • No online battle modes.
  • The act of playing and reacting to cards is very low level and basic.
  • Level selection is just a cold open map with icons.
  • Little variety in the actual quest line objectives.
  • A lot to take on in regards to learning the cards.
  • Little options to spend your fellowship credits on and eventually, you will exhaust all purchasable items.

The Lord of the Rings: Adventure Card Game - Definitive Edition review

  • 7/10
    Graphics - 7/10
  • 7/10
    Sound - 7/10
  • 7/10
    Accessibility - 7/10
  • 7/10
    Length - 7/10
  • 7/10
    Fun Factor - 7/10
7/10

Summary

Card games are all the rage at the moment and it feels like every major franchise has a card game of sorts. Today I’m looking at The Lord of the Rings adventure card game. We’ll first off it looks very pretty, some fantastic card art and locations coupled up with great voice acting performances. I jumped into the tutorial and was very surprised at how easy it was to learn and within minutes I could feel confident with what I could and couldn’t do. Of course, after many more hours I found out the reason it’s so easy to learn, it’s really basic! For card games nowadays they have flashy map traveling like in Throne breaker or they have flashy combo laden card battling. Here we have it where you play one card or draw a card each turn until all playable cards are exhausted and then a new round begins where cards are back in play. You get quests to do and for the majority of the time you are just killing one specific card or taking out X amount of cards. The travel mechanic OS one of the only stand out additions. Travelling is available to use whenever you want after you do the quest, travelling as you would expect takes you to the next fight but it also requires skill and timing for any unexhausted enemy cards that can be played without any consequences. Its a fun little thing but it’s a fairly small thing in the grand scale of the game. Campaigns, has 3 of em and they all tell a good story but it doesn’t matter when the combat stays so safe and basic. I kept hoping I would push through into an explosion of strategies and deck builds but no its not that kind of game and its a huge bummer. The presentation is spot on, the stories are good and Co-op multiplayer is an excellent little thing but overall its just a safe card game that never dares to mix it up or push its self too far.

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!