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For me, my team's victory the other day in Arkham Horror made me realize how insane this game can truly be.
Long story short, we followed all rules for setup, and I randomly drew Michael for my investigator, something I can say I was pretty excited about. Our AO sadly was not Shub but rather good old Yog. All expansions except Miskatonic were in play, including all boards. In total we had 6 investigators, a pretty solid group and enough people to handle all situations that may arise. My random Unique Item was a bust however, as I was dealt a Crystal of the Elder Things. Not my best.
Game starts, nothing too exciting happening. I as Michael took care of monsters promptly as my ally traded me a Gladius of Carcosa early on, my Tommy Gun dealing with the rest. Most of the gate openings occurred on the main board, and we gathered clues and did what we needed to do. I entered a few gates to close some gates in case he did wake up, grabbing 2 total in the process. And then the fun happened…
Mythos comes up as the Rumor: The Terrible Experiment. I of course as Michael ended up dealing with that quite promptly as my PS gave me some extra Sanity, and I ended up at the end of the experiment collecting a total of 11 monster trophies (this of course including early game ones). And then it happened. I had an encounter coming near the end of the game and drew the spell "Call Ancient One." And then I started to think to myself…
With the way we were standing, there was very little chance we could survive the final fight. 4 seals on the board was nice, but with the end coming close and not many gate trophies (let alone very low average for Will values), I decided to cast the spell.
I spent my 2 gates, and 11 monsters, used my Crystal of the Elder Things to avoid losing 13 Sanity, and used my 3 clues to cast the spell. On the 2nd clue, I rolled a 6. Ding dong, 13 doom tokens gone on Yog and game over. Glorious.
Anyways, to spur more of the conversation, what is one of your guys' most epic wins?
"Anyone can roll a ball along the living room floor, but only I can do it through a minefield during a tornado..a flaming tornado..that shoots flaming sharks..which shoot lasers."
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As far as I know, you can't remove all doom tokens from the AO when using dis spell. If you awaken him, he must be with atleast one left.
With Signature
As written, you did nothing wrong. And though I've whined and howled about Crystal/CAO before, there has been something submitted to the FAQ about it.
In the (indeterminate) meantime, the best protection we all have for this is to either head off this combo indirectly (by disallowing the spell to be in the same game as Crystal and/or Ancient Language/Mystic Gift), or by coming up with some unwritten ancillary rule (CAO can't remove more than 7 doom tokens when cast).
"Ashcan" Pete will take that off your hands when you're done with it.
Charlie Kane would befriend a strangled cat if given the chance.
Finn Edwards has very deep pockets.
Hank Samson does not care that you've mastered time travel.
Lily Chen can punch a hue.
Lola Hayes is the world's best Egyptologist.
Mark Harrigan is very good at hedge mazes.
Michael McGlen has never experienced an earthquake.
Minh Thi Phan makes group hugs empowering.
Patrice Hathaway plays songs you can't get out of your head.
Tommy Muldoon is most qualified to be deputy, yet for some reason nobody want him to be.
Tony Morgan sells meat out of the back of his van.
Ursula Downs can shop at an empty store.
Wendy Adams always wins at hide and seek.
William Yorick has a Bachelor's in Cryptozoology—no wonder he can't find work.
Wilson Richards will paint over anything for a dollar.
Zoey Samaras can torch a fire vampire.
Might as well submit mine though:
I got a guy on my campus REALLY into this game. Like, he ran out and bought it and all the expansions within a month. Anyway.
He graduated and was leaving for Boston, and probably wouldn't see him again. So we played one last game at the end of the semester, against Rhan-Tegoth (no!!!!!!!!) and Ghroth (blurgh!). Predictably, things weren't going so well.
Rhan awoke, but Dexter had passed his personal story and was swinging away with two Shrivellings. The bell tower collapse took care of a lot of the extra doom tokens and with one survivor left (it was either Kate or one of my custom characters), we blasted away my worst AO nemesis. It was a grand spectacle and I wish him well in his life.
"Ashcan" Pete will take that off your hands when you're done with it.
Charlie Kane would befriend a strangled cat if given the chance.
Finn Edwards has very deep pockets.
Hank Samson does not care that you've mastered time travel.
Lily Chen can punch a hue.
Lola Hayes is the world's best Egyptologist.
Mark Harrigan is very good at hedge mazes.
Michael McGlen has never experienced an earthquake.
Minh Thi Phan makes group hugs empowering.
Patrice Hathaway plays songs you can't get out of your head.
Tommy Muldoon is most qualified to be deputy, yet for some reason nobody want him to be.
Tony Morgan sells meat out of the back of his van.
Ursula Downs can shop at an empty store.
Wendy Adams always wins at hide and seek.
William Yorick has a Bachelor's in Cryptozoology—no wonder he can't find work.
Wilson Richards will paint over anything for a dollar.
Zoey Samaras can torch a fire vampire.
I'm surprised that you can pay (even if prevented by the Crystal) more Sanity for casting the spell than your current sanity total.
Oh yeah, I think that's something that I used to argue: you can't cast a spell with a higher sanity cost than the sanity you have, even if you can somehow prevent it all.
The first clause is universally true. The second clause (about preventing it) is something I had to invent to address this specific abuse.
"Ashcan" Pete will take that off your hands when you're done with it.
Charlie Kane would befriend a strangled cat if given the chance.
Finn Edwards has very deep pockets.
Hank Samson does not care that you've mastered time travel.
Lily Chen can punch a hue.
Lola Hayes is the world's best Egyptologist.
Mark Harrigan is very good at hedge mazes.
Michael McGlen has never experienced an earthquake.
Minh Thi Phan makes group hugs empowering.
Patrice Hathaway plays songs you can't get out of your head.
Tommy Muldoon is most qualified to be deputy, yet for some reason nobody want him to be.
Tony Morgan sells meat out of the back of his van.
Ursula Downs can shop at an empty store.
Wendy Adams always wins at hide and seek.
William Yorick has a Bachelor's in Cryptozoology—no wonder he can't find work.
Wilson Richards will paint over anything for a dollar.
Zoey Samaras can torch a fire vampire.
Without wishing to seem derogatory, I find it amusingly characteristic of this forum that a post on a person's best victory immediately becomes a refutation of the validity of the method used to accomplish said victory. I would refer to one of jgt's posts on how people need to stop worrying about potentially broken corner cases, but then, he despises Call Ancient One in general. The masochistic madness of Arkham infects all…. (For the record, I agree with Tibs that such combos should be prevented, and I still find it annoying that no reasonable interpretation of the rules can lead to Charlie Kane + Granny Orne v. Glaaki being anything other than an automatic victory [Epic Battle aside]. I was merely struck by the situation's success at capturing the spirit of the forums.)
Sadly, I can't really remember any truly spectacular or even very interesting victories. Of course, there are a number that would qualify for this thread had I actually won them….
What remains, it would seem, has no artistic significance.
Heh. Here's the thing: though I may grumble about your method (as Walk suggested), I'm actually much more impressed that someone who has obviously never seen how us Where's-the-FAQ Vets have debated endlessly on this particular combo-breaker, came up with that same combo-breaker all by themselves. I would love to have been a fly on the wall (of your brain) as you put the puzzle pieces together: "If I…and then use this…could I…hey, guys! I have an idea!" ("We could cross the streams!")
Just be wary. Yog…holds a grudge. BADLY. 
Actress – Archaeologist – Astronomer – Athlete – Author – Bootlegger – Bounty Hunter – Chef – Dilettante – Doctor – Dreamer – Drifter – Entertainer – Ex-Convict – Expedition Leader – Explorer – Farmhand – Fed – Gangster – Gravedigger – Handyman – Lawyer – Librarian – Magician – Martial Artist – Musician – Nun – Photographer – Politician – Private Eye – Professor – Psychic – Psychologist – Redeemed Cultist – Reporter – Researcher – Rookie Cop – Sailor – Salesman – Scientist – Secretary – Shaman – Soldier – Spy – Student – Urchin – Violinist – Waitress
Speaking of grudges, we had Nyarlathotep make a harsh appearance one day. We'd been playing against him a few times in a row after his miniatures came out and had won our first game. During setup the next time we played he appeared in person as The Skinless Man and moved out into the street. Then he proceded to devour the first player as she tried to move past him on her first turn. We won in the end but that was just mean.
Without Signature
jgt7771 said:
Heh. Here's the thing: though I may grumble about your method (as Walk suggested), I'm actually much more impressed that someone who has obviously never seen how us Where's-the-FAQ Vets have debated endlessly on this particular combo-breaker, came up with that same combo-breaker all by themselves. I would love to have been a fly on the wall (of your brain) as you put the puzzle pieces together: "If I…and then use this…could I…hey, guys! I have an idea!" ("We could cross the streams!")
Just be wary. Yog…holds a grudge. BADLY. 
Ha, shall keep that tidbit about the grudge in mind..probably get destroyed next time around, what fun!
I suppose how I saw this ending was trying to find any way that this combo could I suppose "break" the game in its essence, yet I guess I feel that even having 13 of any combination of gates/monsters is a little more on the challenging side unless you are truly dealt the right combination of items; Michael's Horror Checks were no easy feet, trust me on that…and the fact that I didn't help anyone by spending those on clues, blessings, or any combination of the sort seems sort of risky.
But I don't know, I feel even getting dealt that combination perfectly is so rare (much like Join the Winning Team and even passing it, which Tibs' Arkham Stat reports last time I checked only showed 7 games of anyone actually passing of like what…6000+ games?) that it should be allowed. It's a once in every blue moon moment I guess for me, so I let it be justified, and in the end I felt epic heh.
Anyways, thanks for commenting about it!
"Anyone can roll a ball along the living room floor, but only I can do it through a minefield during a tornado..a flaming tornado..that shoots flaming sharks..which shoot lasers."
Tomoka: Ah, I find myself drifting towards the side I abjured….I agree with you that getting that combination by accident is unlikely, but the problem is that savvy players can go hunting it out. Daisy Walker starts with Livre D'Ivon, which lets her take a spell of her choice from the deck. One variant of the rules allows you to choose your own starting characters, so that essentially means that, if you want to, you always have a very good shot at getting Call Ancient One (the modifier for Livre D'Ivon's Lore check is -2, but Daisy's max Lore is 5, so really, only very severe bad luck would stop you getting it in the first few turns). Plus, there's an encounter at the Curiositie Shoppe that lets you buy a Unique Item of your choice. If you're playing with just the base game and Kingsport, you have a 9(.0909090909…)% chance of getting that encounter; with Darrell, that chance doubles. If you have a number of people converge on the Curiositie Shoppe to get the Crystal while others kill some monsters (and Daisy reads Livre D'Ivon). It's not a terribly difficult victory.
What remains, it would seem, has no artistic significance.
Isn't Livre d'Ivon a "discard" after use? So if you fail, you don't get anything? Unless there's an errata I'm unaware of on the card…
In your note, I still feel it is a hard encounter because 1 sole person needs to get a combination of at least 10-14 gates/monsters since one person is casting the spell and you can't share those to pay the cost. With people camping for the Crystal, and even with Daisy you still need to wait plenty of turns to grab those monsters/gates, and since in your description people are "camping" for the item, you are wasting valuable time around the board and failing to manage it as well as you hope. By that time, I feel the AO would already be very close to waking. But still..that's just how I feel. Also, even with monster surges that one person needs to manage all his stats and be dealt the right combination of cards to battle things, manage Sanity, and/or whatever else. 10-13 monsters is a lot to collect..
Whatever the variant you play with, I felt pretty good about it haha.
"Anyone can roll a ball along the living room floor, but only I can do it through a minefield during a tornado..a flaming tornado..that shoots flaming sharks..which shoot lasers."
Yes, there's been an erratum to Livre D'Ivon saying that it's only discarded if you pass the check. And, yes, it will take a decent amount of time to pull off, but here's the thing: this combo won't just get you a very powerful bonus, it will win the game for you. That means that you don't need to gather Clues, you don't need to seal gates, you don't need to do anything except make the strategy work. You're not wasting time, since you are working directly towards your goal of waking up the AO with 0 Doom tokens, and you only have a time limit in the sense that you always do.
What remains, it would seem, has no artistic significance.
I gues my question is: how hard is it to pull it off?
If it is rather easy and almost always works (wich I suspect might be the case), I would say that one should perhaps houserule to prevent it.
If it takes a long time (getting the trophies and the two items) and there is a fair chance the AO awakens, I have no problem with it. I mean then it's just another way to win the game.
Note that I was talking about hunting for the items.
If one gets them as starting equipment or as a random draw later I have no problem with it since the chances of getting them are really small. I would just consider myself lucky, win the game and maybe start another. Otherwise where are we to draw the line for what is ok? If you are given four elder signs as starting equipment you will probably have a rather easy victory but I don't think the elder signs are game breaking because of that.
Btw, Tomoka: Great victory! I really like that sort of game, where you use somewhat unusual methods and a bit of brain activity to turn a bad situation into victory.
Plans are what people make instead of thinking
Walk said:
Since Walk already put a lampshade on it, I will now clarify my devilishly intricate method for avoiding this deadly combo-breaker. Ready?
REMOVE "CALL ANCIENT ONE" FROM PLAY. Remove it from the box, from the game, from your HOUSE.
Look, WHY would Investigators that are doing their damnedest to seal away the Ancient One want to CALL IT FORTH? Because they think they can "take it"? With sticks and rocks and guns and blades? "Well, shoot, this ain't workin'. Maybe we should try bangin' on it with a wrench." I suppose there isn't anything more American than that…
Okay, forget thematic. There is only one reason to play Call Ancient One: you are closer to losing the game of seals, and you think you have a better shot at the Ancient One directly if you hobble it first. Or worse, you just give up on the seal game, and start shopping for clubs and Blessings, gearing up to win by attrition. I'm in the camp that believes that once the Ancient One awakens, the best you can achieve is a draw. (My cult disagrees, but then my Cult also doesn't believe in shortening the game for ANY reason.) So ending the game prematurely by zipping to the Final Battle is just giving the win up for a tie. That's not Arkham Horror, that's…pro sports. 
You probably deserve to lose anyway, whether you played badly or the game seriously had it in for you, so just take the loss like the tragic Lovecraft heroes you are, and start a new game. "Losing" just doesn't carry the same weight in Arkham as it does in most other games: in the [paraphrased] words of Mageith's young daughter, "Daddy, I don't think we're supposed to win." So it's less of a big deal to lose than it is to shoot for a cheapish win.
No offense, Tomoka, of course. Like I said, you found it by yourself, and I'm impressed and amused. You have the chops to survive Arkham Horror! But you only get one pass, true believer.
No one around here would ever let one of us grognards get away with that, knowing what we know. So take the win with our collective blessing, and then do the right thing: never do it again. Really, you're better than that.
We all are.
Actress – Archaeologist – Astronomer – Athlete – Author – Bootlegger – Bounty Hunter – Chef – Dilettante – Doctor – Dreamer – Drifter – Entertainer – Ex-Convict – Expedition Leader – Explorer – Farmhand – Fed – Gangster – Gravedigger – Handyman – Lawyer – Librarian – Magician – Martial Artist – Musician – Nun – Photographer – Politician – Private Eye – Professor – Psychic – Psychologist – Redeemed Cultist – Reporter – Researcher – Rookie Cop – Sailor – Salesman – Scientist – Secretary – Shaman – Soldier – Spy – Student – Urchin – Violinist – Waitress
I appreciate that Lovecraftian stories are supposed to feel extremely hopeless for the humans, but the idea that Ancient Ones are nearly impossible to take down by physical means has always irked me slightly.
SPOILERS FOR "THE CALL OF CTHULHU" FOLLOW
I mean, Cthulhu, the premier Great Old One and most famous of Lovecraft's creations, was taken down by getting hit with a ship. And it wasn't just like it knocked him out of commission for a bit, it stopped him from claiming control over the world. So, you know, an Arkham defeat, in other words. If one guy with a boat can bring him down, a number of people with guns aren't that much of a stretch. The Ancient Ones might be all-powerful, but there are few instances in the stories where their plans can't be thwarted with extreme firepower.
What remains, it would seem, has no artistic significance.
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