Mines Of Moria Rulebook Pdf To Excel
I only use old edition rules, and I am wanting to know what rules I need to be 'current' enough in a wider community than me and a few mates I have the Mora A5 mini booklet, but I notice there are: Lord of the Rings hardback rulebook Fellowship, TT and ROTK 'supplements' I also know there are heaps of other supplements like 'Shadow in the East, Scouring the Shire etc' which I suspect is simply GW marketing cr@pola: glossy pics and paint guides with the odd scenario thrown in. ---- Now I have a 'Fellowship' rulebook (released when the film was) and the A5 Moria one already – what is the minimum I need?

Middle- earth Role Playing - Wikipedia. Middle- earth Role Playing (MERP) is a 1. Tolkien (specifically The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit) under license.
15 Feb 2011 1:38 a.m. PST. Depends what you want to game. Hypersonic 2 Team Air Win7 64bit Apps there. There was a rulebook release tied to each film, which drip fed characters, but didn't end up by the ROTK set at being a complete rulebook – the siege rules from the TT rulebook weren't carried forward (IIRC). The hardback book is the definitive set. The A5 Moria rule book reproduces the rules portion of the hardback book (i.e. Leaves out the painting, army building, terrain, scenarios bits of the hard back book).
The FOTR, TT and ROTK supplements allow you to game the book, rather than the film! So include the bits like Tom Bombadil, the scouring of the shire, and the whole of the Two Towers ar Toliken thought it should go, rather than the rewrite that the film thought was better. So – if you want to do the films – the A5 book in the moria set is adequate. The hardback book is better.

If you're interested in the book as written then the 3 book supplements have scenarios and additional characters that allow you to follow the book as a series of campaign games. 15 Feb 2011 3:00 a.m. PST. I only have the A5 Moria rulebook too. My understanding is it contains all the current rules for the game, but only has the stats for characters and troops from the films. Whereas the hardback rulebook has stats for all models produced up to the time it was written, and lots more fluff.
It may surprise you to learn (It certainly surprised me) that GW provide free pdf downloads of the the profiles and special rules from all (I think) of their supplements on their website. So these and the A5 rulebook really do seem to be all you need. As links to the GW website never seem to work you should find the pdfs under: The Lord of The Rings Articles >Gaming >The Lord of The Rings – Warrior and Hero Profiles Have fun.
Edit: post written before I saw 20th Maine's response above 15 Feb 2011 8:13 a.m. PST. Goes like this: Each movie came with a rulebook, each sequel rulebook had rules that mended the preceding book. Other supplements came out, many carried new troop types (either additions to the forces covered, or entirely new nations). The Big Blue Book came out, with even more little fixes to the preceding books. It included all race types from all supplements, to that date.
The Mines of Moria rules came out. They are the complete rules from the BBB, but when you get to different troop types the MoM book ONLY had characters and races that appeared in the movies. More supplements came out, offering troop types new since the BBB was written.
15 Feb 2011 8:44 a.m. PST. I would include Legions of Middle Earth if you want to play competitive, point based games. LoME has lists and points for everything released to date and as dayglowill suggests the FAQ for LotR on the GW website has all the profiles/special rules from all the supplements available as PDF. The big book has the full rules for sieges and Mumak in (I'm not sure they are in the Moria mini book) but again most of these are in the PDFs (for Harad, Two Towers and Siege of Gondor/Gondor in Flames). 15 Feb 2011 5:38 p.m. PST.