Tags / lord-of-the-rings

"lord-of-the-rings"

4 BuzzVerdicts across Board Games (2), PC Games (2)

War of the Ring (2nd Edition)

4.5

2012 · 2-4 Players · ~150-180 min · Asymmetric Strategy / Wargame

War of the Ring is the definitive Lord of the Rings board game and one of the finest two-player strategy experiences ever designed. Its asymmetric systems capture the tension between military might and desperate hope with remarkable fidelity, and no two games unfold the same way. The time investment is real, the rules are dense, and the table space required is no joke. But for two players willing to commit an afternoon to Middle-earth, this is a game that delivers on its epic promise every single time.

The Lord of the Rings: Duel for Middle-earth

4.3

2024 · 2 Players · ~30-45 min · Competitive

The Lord of the Rings: Duel for Middle-earth takes one of the best two-player card games ever designed and makes it better. Every rule change from 7 Wonders: Duel lands as an improvement, the Middle-earth theme adds genuine tension to the military and quest systems, and the three alternate victory conditions create a constant push-pull that makes every card pick feel loaded. A few mechanical elements like the economy feel simplified compared to their predecessor, and the Lord of the Rings license does more heavy lifting than the game strictly needs. But as a standalone two-player strategy game in a small box, this is about as good as it gets.

Middle-earth: Shadow of War

3.5

2017 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

Middle-earth: Shadow of War takes the Nemesis System that made its predecessor special and builds something larger, louder, and more ambitious around it. The expanded orc dynamics and fortress sieges deliver emergent gameplay moments that no other action title has matched, and the sheer variety of combat options keeps the fighting entertaining for a long time. But the game overplays its hand with a bloated world, a weak story that frustrates Tolkien fans and casual players alike, and an endgame that tests patience more than skill. With the microtransactions stripped out and the final act reworked, Shadow of War is a better game now than it was at launch, but the core tension between its best ideas and its worst instincts remains.