Dear All
I'm a recent convert to the game, and have now got my Gondor army painted up and ready to go. After becoming somewhat jaded with 40k, LotR has provided a most refreshing alternative. My 4th, and most recent, game lasted for 8 hours and my opponent and I enoyed every moment of it, and it remained tense and close until its final conclusion.
Over the course of games though and wider reading, I have got a couple of questions that I hope that the community can help me with.
1. The Command Spell and 'Enemies'The Hobbit rulebooks state that when moving enemies under the command spell, that you can "even make it charge an enemy". Does this refer to an enemy to the model (ie someone on your own side) or one of your enemies (ie someone on his side). My question can be illustrated in 2 scenarios below:
A. Gandalf casts command on an uruk hai banner waver, and forces him to charge Boromir (where he will hopefully be killed easily).
B. Gandalf casts command on an uruk hai beserker, and forces him to charge Saruman, in the hopes of killing his master.
Which of these scenarios are correct? If scenario 2 is allowed, is there a way for Saruman to avoid striking the Uruk Hai if he wins the fight?
2. Siege Weapons in regular gamesIs there a common code of conduct for siege weaponry only being restricted to siege scenarios, or are these freely available for use in regular games? Whilst it is hard to justify the presence of a battlecry trebuchet outside of a major city, the avenger bolt thrower looks portable and I can see these being set up in an advantageous position during any campaign (in fact I'm surprised just how small the models are that arrived in the post today!).
Do people often take siege weaponry in any of the scenarios featured at the back of the Goblin Town rulebook? It looks to my mind a slightly risky tactic due to the placement of warbands being random; I can foresee situations where your siege weaponry is forced to deploy closer to the enemy than you would like. All of the games of LotR I've played thus far have used a pitched battle deployment; are there other scenarios where this is the norm, or do all use random deployment?
Thanks
Chivs