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Mansions of Madness
A board game of occult horror and mystery for two to five players
Moderator: FFGMarkThe Spaniard Topics: 598 | Posts: 3445
The Difference Between Lock and Obstacle Cards?
Published on 16 December 2011 - 10:56:02
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The example in the Rules booklet makes it seem as if Lock and Obstacle cards work differently. I have a question.

Lock cards are revealed when attempting to move into a room; I know that.
But are obstacle cards revealed like Lock cards, or are they revealed when exploring a room?

For instance:

Investigator tries to enter a room, and the Lock card is revealed. He eventually solves a puzzle or something. Then, he moves into the room. He then uses his Action to Explore, revealing the Obstacle.

Is this correct, or do both types of cards work exactly the same?

Thanks in advance

(If you don't understand what I mean, please tell me in a comment. I will happily rephrase)

Without Signature
Page 1 of 1 (4 messages) 1
Reply #1 | Published on 17 December 2011 - 00:35:12

Matt09 said:

The example in the Rules booklet makes it seem as if Lock and Obstacle cards work differently. I have a question.

Lock cards are revealed when attempting to move into a room; I know that.
But are obstacle cards revealed like Lock cards, or are they revealed when exploring a room?

For instance:

Investigator tries to enter a room, and the Lock card is revealed. He eventually solves a puzzle or something. Then, he moves into the room. He then uses his Action to Explore, revealing the Obstacle.

Is this correct, or do both types of cards work exactly the same?

Thanks in advance

(If you don't understand what I mean, please tell me in a comment. I will happily rephrase)

Your example is correct.

Hello... is this thing on? How do you know if it's recording?

Reply #2 | Published on 17 December 2011 - 07:06:18
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Thank you for your reply. That helps a lot :)

Without Signature
Reply #3 | Published on 28 December 2011 - 03:21:19

 Yes, they work the same, but there is a difference.

A lock is a physical lock (example: rune lock).  An obstacle is anything else that prevents you from continuing (example: short circuit causing darkness).  The axe allows you to make a strength check against a lock to smash it.  Smashing the short circuit, an obstacle, wouldn't help you since it's an obstacle.

Without Signature

Reply #4 | Published on 26 February 2012 - 10:56:00
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GrimJester said:

 Yes, they work the same, but there is a difference.

A lock is a physical lock (example: rune lock).  An obstacle is anything else that prevents you from continuing (example: short circuit causing darkness).  The axe allows you to make a strength check against a lock to smash it.  Smashing the short circuit, an obstacle, wouldn't help you since it's an obstacle.

Axe: Test your strength

Pass: Automatically solve a lock puzzle in your room.

I disagree with your interpretation of the Axe Card.

The card says that when you pass the strenght test, you automatically solve a lock puzzle in your room, not a lock card. You reveal a lock card whenever you try to move into a room with a lock card (using a move step). Even if a lock card reveals to be a lock puzzle, you still would not be able to use the axe, because the puzzle is in the room you are trying to move into, not your room.

However, if when exploring an obstacle card you reveal a lock puzzle, you could use the axe in a different turn to solve it. Then, you would need another action to continue exploring past the obstacle.

Without Signature
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