Game Rules

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Rules for Round Table

Players begin the game with two decks of cards - one, called the Main Deck, contains all of the player’s regular cards – knights, titles, quests, redirects, and equipment. The other is called the Demesne Deck and contains all of the player’s lands (called demesnes, a medieval word meaning “holding”). Players maintain these decks separately. The player is allowed to customize the main and demesne decks - they are not required (or expected) to use all the cards that came in their base pack. A third deck, called the Regions Deck is a shared resource between both players. During their turn, players can draw cards from either their main deck or their demesne deck. Players can then bring cards from their hand into the play area (called “playing a card”), which brings that card under their control. Players can have any number of cards in their hand at the end of their turn - players are not required to discard down to a particular hand size.

There are seven basic types of cards:

  1. Demesnes
    Demesnes are lands that the player controls that give them resources to recruit knights, titles, and equipment as well as activate quests and redirects.
    The basic demesne is a farm, which can be upgraded to a Manor, Large Manor, Keep, and Castle in that order. Only a Manor can be upgraded to a Large Manor, a Keep to a Castle, etc. Each card contains text to remind players.
    Each demesne has a Resource Point value. Resource points for all demesnes under a player’s control are added together to arrive at the total RP the player has to recruit or play knights, titles, equipment, quests, and redirects.
  2. Knights
    Knights constitute the main army for each player. Players recruit knights by using resource points from their demesnes. Knights have two primary attributes – influence and resistance – which are used to either conquer or defend a region from conquest.
    Knights can be brought into play if the player has sufficient resource point capacity. The capacity is the total number of points the player has from their controlled demesnes and the allocated RP are those used by the currently in-play cards. If there is sufficient capacity, the player may bring that card into play. For example, if the player has a total capacity of 20 RP and has 6 RP allocated, then they could play any knight requiring up to 14 RP.
    Knights can be engaged meaning they are flipped over or rotated 90° to indicate that they are unavailable. Knights can be engaged through quests played by your opponent or by having participated in a previous campaign. Engaged knights are unable to participate in conquering or defending regions.
    Some knights are also Monarchs. These are special subclasses of knights but do not affect their classification as knights. Additionally, some knights are male and others are female. Some titles and equipment can only be used by male or female characters. The card text will indicate any special restrictions.
  3. Equipment
    Equipment is used to increase the influence and/or resistance of a knight. It can only be associated with an individual knight. Some equipment adds influence points and some adds resistance. Fey (fairy) equipment is better than its non-magical equivalent. Equipment counts toward the allocated RP.
  4. Quests
    Quests are cards played on your opponent’s knights that cause them to be unavailable to your opponent for one or more turns. To show that a knight is engaged, they are flipped over or rotated 90°.
    Quests require that a player possesses a minimum number of Resource Points. If the player has at least the minimum number of points they may play the quest at the appropriate time. Quests are playable provided that the player has that RP capacity available – it does not require allocating RP to play them.
  5. Redirects
    Redirects allow a player to “counter” a quest card played by an opponent. They reverse the effect and make the knight available again. Redirects are also playable provided that the player has that RP capacity available – it does not require allocating RP to play them.
  6. Titles
    Titles are special benefits that can be bestowed upon an individual knight. These titles add to the knight’s influence and/or resistance. The same title cannot be bestowed multiple times upon the same knight (i.e., you can’t make the same knight a Baron or a Round Table Knight more than once), but different titles can be bestowed and the effects are cumulative (i.e., a knight can be both a Round Table Knight and a Duke). Titles count toward the allocated RP.
  7. Regions
    Regions are the areas of Britain each player tries to control. The number of regions for a game can be varied to change the time required for the game. A minimum of 5 regions are required for a game; there is no predetermined maximum although they must all be unique.
    Each region has a value in Renown points. At the end of the game, the player who has the most renown is crowned Supreme Monarch and wins the game.

Description of Cards

There are 3 main card layouts used in Round Table TCG.

Main Cards

The first is for the cards in the main deck. These cards, whether Knights, Equipment, Quests, or Redirects, are laid out similarly:

Screen Shot 2022-09-10 at 10.33.10 PM.png

Card Title: This is the name of the card.

Card Type: This defines the type. These are the types listed above. Some cards, like the example above, have subtypes. Subtypes are not used in the basic game.

Artwork: A pretty picture of the card.

Card Text: Basic information about the card’s effects in play, if any.

Influence: The “attack strength” or “power” of a card. Not all cards have an influence rating. Influence is used to capture regions. For titles and equipment, this will be a modifier to a knight’s base resistance.

Resource Points: The number of resource points from demesnes a player needs to control to be able to bring the card into play.

Resistance: The “defense” of a card. Resistance is used to resist another player’s attack on a region. For titles and equipment, this will be a modifier to a knight’s base resistance.

Demesne Card

The second card type is the Demesne card. Its layout is as follows:

Screen Shot 2022-09-10 at 10.33.31 PM.png

Card Title: This is the name of the card.

Card Type: This defines the type. These are the types listed above. Some cards, like the example above, have subtypes. Subtypes are not used in the basic game.

Artwork: A pretty picture of the card.

Card Text: Basic information about the card’s effects in play, if any.

Resource Points: This indicates the number of resource points that are available to the player. The Resource Points for all the demesnes a player controls are added together.

Region Card

The third and final type is the Region card. Its layout is as follows:

Screen Shot 2022-09-10 at 10.33.23 PM.png

Region Name: This is the name of the region.

Artwork: A pretty picture of the card.

Resistance Points: The “defense” of a region. Higher resistance points indicate that a region is more difficult for a player to conquer.

Renown: The number of Renown Points earned by the player who conquers the region.

Terms and Terminology

Active indicates a knight that is face-up and available to participate in conquering or defending a region.

Engaged indicates a knight that is face-down and is ineligible for participating in conquering or defending a region. When engaging a knight, flip the card over or rotate it 90°.

Renown is used to measure a player’s success. Regions possess a Renown value. The player controlling the regions with the most total Renown wins the game.

Reset turns a knight face-up or rotates the card back to the original orientation, making them available again. During the Spring Phase of a player’s turn, knights are reset back to a face-up position or original orientation (unless a card dictates otherwise).

Resource Points are used to determine the amount of power a player wields. Resource points are the sum of demesnes currently controlled by a player (i.e., a Castle is worth 7 resource points only, not the accumulated value of previous upgrades). The capacity of RP is the sum of the demesnes under a player’s control. The allocated RP is how much is being used to maintain the cards under the player’s control.

Spent Pile is a face-up pile of cards that were played. This is for knights, quests, redirects, and titles that are used during play.

Game Field

A typical play area will look something like this:

Screen Shot 2022-09-10 at 10.33.18 PM.png

Before Play Begins

Each player should make a deck consisting of no less than 60 cards of which no fewer than 40 are their main deck and the remaining cards are their demesnes (holdings). These decks are tracked separately and are not shuffled together. At the beginning of the game:

  1. Each player separates their main deck from their demesne deck
  2. Players determine who will go first. Players can use whatever method they desire to determine this (high roll, low roll, rock/paper/scissors, etc.). This first player is the “active” player.
  3. Each player pulls a Farm from their demesne deck, puts the Farm into play, and then shuffles the remaining cards.
  4. Each player independently shuffles their demesne and main decks.
  5. Each player draws however many cards they desire from their demesne deck. They may draw any number from one to ten cards.
  6. Each player then draws from their main deck the number of cards needed to reach ten cards in their hand. For example, if a player draws three demesne cards they will draw seven cards from their main deck.
  7. The active player then begins their turn.

Basic Game Play

Play consists of rounds where all players are allowed to take actions. A game round consists of four seasons. Play in each season continues clockwise from the active player.

The seasons of each round are:

  1. Winter Phase
    The Active Player must draw a card from either their demesne deck or their main deck. If one deck is exhausted the player must draw from the other. If no cards are available in either deck, the game ends and a winner is determined. This is repeated for all other players until all players pass.
    Any player who has more than 10 cards in their hand at the end of this season must discard down to 10.
  2. Spring Phase
    The Active Player may bring knights, equipment, and titles cards into play under their control.
    A player may only have cards in play whose Resource Point total are less than or equal to the total number of resource points a player has from their demesnes.
    When the Active Player is done with their desired activities, play moves clockwise. Each player in turn can do any of the above. When all players have passed, the season ends.
    Any player with more than 10 cards in their hand must discard down to 10.
  3. Summer Phase - Campaigning
    Campaigning is described in detail below.
  4. Fall Phase
    The Active Player is allowed to pull as many of their cards in play (other than Demesnes) back into their hand.
    Any player who has more than 10 cards in their hand at the end of this season must discard down to 10.

Rounds continue until the final region is conquered or both a player’s main and demesne decks are exhausted. In either case, the Renown points for all regions conquered by each player are calculated. Whoever has the most Renown is crowned Supreme Monarch and wins the game.

Summer Phase (Campaigning)

<Under development - Feb 2023 - do not use>

Campaigning is broken into several steps that allow each player to take actions and allow their opponent to respond to those actions. In cases where a player can and does respond, each player will alternate turns taking actions until both “pass” or choose to do nothing. Once that happens, all cards are resolved in the order they were played, and play proceeds to the next step.

  1. Declare Campaigns Step
    • a) The active player may take one or more of the following actions:
      • Play Quests and Redirects from their hand provided that the RP cost of the card is equal to or less than the number of RP the player controls. Quested Knights are removed from the attack but can be Redirected back to join the battle.
      • Declare Knights as attacking a region moving the card to that region.
      • Play any other card provided that it explicitly states it can be played in this phase.
    • b) Repeat from step a for all players.
    • c) Once all players have completed their actions (playing quests and redirects, identifying knights attacking regions, etc.), the players resolve the attacks.
  2. Resolving Attacks
    • a) For each region, each player determines which of their knights is meleeing which of their opponent's knights. Each player's attacking Knight's Influence is applied to their opponent's knights' Resistance. If the Influence is equal to or higher than the opponent's Resistance, that Knight is killed.
      • Example 1: Herdis (6 Influence, 4 Resistance) applies 6 points of Influence to their opponent but will die if she takes 4 or more points of Influence. If she engaged with Gareth (5/5), she would kill Gareth (her Influence of 6 is equal to or greater than Gareth's 5 Resistance) but she would also die (as Gareth's 5 Influence is higher than her 4 Influence).
    • b) If multiple Knights are engaged in the same melee, the controller of a Knight determines where Influence is assigned.
      • Example 2: Brastius (2/3) and Gareth (5/5) are in a melee with Agravaine (4/1) and Brighid (1/2), the controller for Brastius and Gareth can choose to have Brastius engage Brighid and Gareth to engage Herdis while their opponent may decide to have both Agravaine and Brighid engage Gareth. Both Agravaine and Brighid will die but their combined Influence means that Gareth will also perish.
    • c) Damage is dealt simultaneously and knights are removed from play simultaneously
    • d) Any Knight killed in the melee is moved to the Discard pile along with any equipment and titles linked to them.
  3. Capturing Regions
    • Players determine the total sum of their remaining Knights' Influence. If it exceeds the Region's resistance, the Region is captured.
      • If the total Influence for both armies exceeds the Region's Resistance, the player with the higher total captures the Region. If both totals are equal, the attack is a draw and the Region stays independent.
    • If either/both surviving army's remaining Influence is less than the Region's Resistance, the region remains independent.
  4. Repeat Resolving Attacks step for each region separately.
  5. If there were any captured regions, a new region is placed into play from the Regions deck to bring the total back to 3 (if possible). When all regions from the region deck are conquered, the game is over and a winner is determined.

Special Rule on Knights

There are two kinds of knights in Round Table – generic knights (Knight Mercenary, Knight Errant, Bachelor Knight, and Vassal Knight) and named knights (such as Gawain, Arthur, and Lancelot).

Only one copy of a named knight can be in play at any time. If a player recruits a knight with the same name as a knight already in play under either player’s control, both knights are removed from play and placed in the Spent Pile. Any titles associated with the removed knights are also removed from play. Any equipment used by those knights becomes unpaired; it can be paired with another knight during that owner’s Summer Phase. Special Rule on Quests and Redirects There is a limitation on quests and redirects. Only one of each named quest or redirect can be played during a player’s turn. If, during the Declare Campaigns Step, the defending player uses The Green Knight quest on an attacking knight, neither the attacking player nor the defending player can use The Green Knight quest for the remainder of the turn.

Similarly, if the attacking player used Royal Command to reset one of their knights, the defending player could not use it to reset one of theirs.

This restriction is reset during the Winter Phase of the of the next player’s turn.

Winning the Game

Play ends when one of two conditions occurs:

  1. The final region is conquered by a player
  2. A player has no more cards to draw from either their main or demesne decks and they must draw a card

Once either condition is met, the players will calculate the total Renown they earned from their captured regions. The player who has the highest Renown is crowned the Supreme Monarch and winner of the game.

If the total Renown is tied, the player who captured the fewest territories is the winner.

If both players have the same total amount of Renown and the same number of Regions, the game is a tie.

Example of Game Play

To be redone.

The Cardinal Rule

There is a cardinal rule for Round Table the CCG: the text on a card may contradict the game rules. In these cases, the card text supersedes the rules in this booklet. If you have any questions about game play or a specific card, there is a Wiki available online that describes game play and card rulings. Please check the main website and click Support.

Constructing Decks

Players may find while playing that they wish they had more of a particular kind of card or fewer (or none) of another. Players are free to use the cards from their collection to build their own decks provided that no more than one of any named knight are used. In other words, a player may not include two or more Arthurs or two Guineveres in their deck. This restriction applies only to named knights - players may include as many duplicate unnamed knights, quests, equipment, titles, and redirect cards as they desire.

The main deck can be of any size provided that it is a minimum of 40 cards. There is no minimum size for the demesne deck. However, the total of the main deck and the demesne deck must be at least 60 cards. There are no maximum sizes imposed for either deck.

Players will decide at the beginning of the game which regions will be used. They may use any number of cards from either player’s region deck provided that the minimum number of 5 regions are used for the game.