King's Court
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|type1 = Action | |type1 = Action | ||
|illustrator = Dennis Lohausen | |illustrator = Dennis Lohausen | ||
− | |text = You may | + | |text = You may play an Action card from your hand three times. |
}} | }} | ||
− | '''King's Court''' is an [[Action]] card from [[Prosperity]]. When played, it gives you the opportunity to play another Action card from your hand three times, like a better {{Card|Throne Room}}. A few King's Courts can supercharge any engine and | + | '''King's Court''' is an [[Action]] card from [[Prosperity]]. When played, it gives you the opportunity to play another Action card from your hand three times, like a better {{Card|Throne Room}}. A few King's Courts can supercharge any [[engine]] and often enables [[megaturn|huge game-ending turns]]. It is widely considered to be one of the strongest cards available in the game. |
== FAQ == | == FAQ == | ||
=== Official FAQ === | === Official FAQ === | ||
− | * This is similar to {{Card|Throne Room}} | + | * This is similar to {{Card|Throne Room}}, but plays the Action three times rather than twice. |
− | * | + | * Playing an Action card from your hand is optional. |
− | * | + | * If you do play one, you resolve it completely, then play it a second time, then play it a third time. |
− | * | + | * You cannot play other cards in-between (unless told to by the card, such as with King's Court itself). |
− | * If you King's Court a King's Court, you | + | * Playing Action cards with King's Court is just like playing Action cards normally, except it does not use up Action plays for the turn. |
− | + | * For example if you start a turn by playing King's Court on {{Card|Village}}, you would draw a card, get +2 Actions, draw another card, get +2 Actions again, draw a 3rd card, and get +2 Actions again, leaving you with 6 Actions. | |
− | + | * If you King's Court a King's Court, you may play an Action card three times, then may play another Action card three times, then may play a 3rd Action card three times; you do not play one Action card nine times. | |
− | == | + | == Strategy == |
− | + | King’s Court is one of the strongest cards in the game, for a relatively simple reason: playing powerful cards once is impactful, double-playing as with other [[Throne Room variant]]s is very strong, and triple-playing those same cards is even stronger. Even more so than other Throne Room variants, King’s Court functions as amplification of other cards and a very effective [[village (card category)|village]]. | |
− | + | King’s Court’s first strength is the efficiency of triple-playing: doing so allows you to have fewer copies of the triple-played card in your deck for the same effect, and lessens the need for draw. A notable example is a hand of two King’s Courts and three {{Card|Bridge|Bridges}}, which is effectively able to play {{Card|Bridge}} nine times and thus easily enable you to buy all eight {{Card|Province|Provinces}}. An equivalent turn using {{Card|Throne Room}} would need many draw cards, at least five {{Card|Throne Room|Throne Rooms}}, and two more copies of {{Card|Bridge}} to achieve the same outcome. | |
− | + | ||
− | + | King’s Court's second strength is that it functions as a very strong village. It does this in the same way other Throne Room variants do, by allowing you to get multiple plays of other Action cards while spending only a single Action playing the King's Court itself. King's Court effectively nets you +2 Actions on top of any benefits from the Action card it plays. If you play King’s Court on a [[non-terminal]] Action such as a {{Card|Lurker}}, you end up with net +2 Actions to continue your turn. Similarly, playing King’s Court on a [[terminal]] card such as {{Card|Monument}} effectively allows you to play three terminals. | |
− | + | King’s Court’s third strength is that it can act as draw. This is possible because King's Court takes up less space in your hand than the cards it is replacing. For example, using King's Court on {{Card|Laboratory}} draws six cards total, the same as playing three {{Card|Laboratory|Laboratories}}, but the net effect is +4 to your hand size rather than +3 because it only uses up two cards from your hand rather than three. This draw effect is most notable when King’s Court is used with [[cantrip]]s. Cantrips on their own are draw-neutral—no matter how many you play, your hand size will not increase. However, triple-playing a cantrip card such as {{Card|Harbinger}} with King's Court does function as draw: this combination draws three cards, despite taking up only two spaces in hand, so the result is to increase your hand size by one. This effect clearly distinguishes King's Court from most other Throne Room variants, as using those to double-play a cantrip does not increase your hand size. | |
− | + | King’s Court’s fourth and greatest strength lies in the explosive nature of chains of this card. King’s Courting a King’s Court allows you to triple-play three cards, a dramatic increase compared to Throne Rooming a {{Card|Throne Room}}, which only allows you to double-play two cards. This chaining additionally amplifies the draw and village effects that you would get from an unchained King’s Court play. Furthermore, for every additional King’s Court added to this chain you can triple-play another three cards, whereas for every Throne Room added you can only play another two cards. In this scaling comparison (3<sup>N-1</sup> versus 2<sup>N-1</sup>, where N is the number of King’s Courts/{{Card|Throne Room|Throne Rooms}} respectively in the chain) it’s easy to see how a chain of King’s Courts can easily triple-play every card in your deck. This often leads to situations where you have lots of excess King’s Court plays. In [[Kingdom]]s with [[gainer]]s, it’s often possible to make use of these in powerful [[gain and play]] loops. As an example, with each tripled King’s Court in the chain you might use your three triple-plays to: | |
+ | # play a King’s Court, continuing the chain; | ||
+ | # play a gainer such as {{Card|Develop}} to get another King’s Court, a draw card, another copy of the gainer itself, and/or additional [[payload]] (in this case, likely to serve as fodder for {{Card|Develop}} in the next iteration of the loop); | ||
+ | # play a draw card to draw everything just gained and begin the next loop iteration. | ||
+ | While fully self-perpetuating loops are uncommon and require setup, gainers generally synergize very well with King’s Court as they can provide the raw Actions to be triple-played, and often allow you to threaten a rapid [[three pile ending|pileout]]. | ||
− | [[ | + | Given how expensive King’s Court is and how reliant it is on [[collision]] with desirable [[Action]] cards, it’s usually best to add King’s Court in the midgame, after some [[deck control]] has been established and you have good cards to triple-play. Later, adding King’s Courts is often the most cost-effective way of improving your deck, as adding one King’s Court is somewhat comparable to adding two more copies of another Action card you already have, or four more copies if you’re able to play it as part of a King’s Court chain. |
− | King's Court | + | == Versions == |
+ | ===English versions=== | ||
+ | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" | ||
+ | ! Print !! Digital !! Text !! Release !! Date | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | {{CardLangVersionImage|o=1}} || {{CardLangVersionImage|d=1|o=1||King's Court from Goko/Making Fun}} || style="padding:0px 10px;"| You may choose an Action card in your hand. Play it three times. || Prosperity || October 2010 | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | {{CardLangVersionImage}} || {{CardLangVersionImage|d=1}} || You may play an Action card from your hand three times. || Prosperity [[Second Edition#Formatting_changes|(2016 printing)]] || February 2017 | ||
+ | |} | ||
− | + | ===Other language versions=== | |
− | + | {| class="wikitable mw-collapsible autocollapse" style="text-align:center;" | |
− | + | ! Language !! Name !! Print !! Digital !! Text !! Notes | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !Chinese | |
− | + | | 王宮 || || || 你可以從手中打出一張行動卡,並執行三次效果。|| | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !Czech | |
− | + | | Královský dvůr || || || || | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !Dutch | |
− | + | | Koningshof || {{CardLangVersionImage|Dutch}} || || Je mag een actiekaart uit je hand kiezen. Speel deze driemaal. || | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !Finnish | |
− | + | | Kuninkaan Hovi || || || || | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !French | |
− | + | | Cour du Roi || || || || | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !rowspan=3|German | |
− | + | | Königshof || {{CardVersionImage|King's Court German-HiG|German language King's Court 2010 by HiG}} || || Wähle eine Aktionskarte aus deiner<br>Hand. Spiele diese Aktionskarte<br>dreimal aus. || translation error:<br> omitted "You may..."<br>(2010) | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | | Königshof || {{CardVersionImage|King's CourtGerman2016rulebook|German language King's Court 2016 by ASS}} || || Du darfst eine Aktionskarte aus deiner<br>Hand dreimal ausspielen. || (2016) | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | | Königshof || || {{CardVersionImage|King's CourtGerman2021Digital|German language King's Court 2021 from Shuffle iT}} || Du darfst eine Aktionskarte aus<br>deiner Hand dreimal spielen. || (Nachdruck 2021) | |
− | + | |- | |
− | + | !Italian | |
− | + | | Corte (lit. ''court'') || || || || | |
− | < | + | |- |
− | + | !Japanese | |
− | + | | 宮廷 (pron. ''kyūtei'', lit. ''imperial court'') || || || 手札のアクションカード1枚を3度使用してもよい。|| | |
− | < | + | |- |
+ | !Polish | ||
+ | | Rada królewska<br>(lit. ''royal council'') || {{CardLangVersionImage|Polish}} || || Możesz wybrać kartę Akcji z ręki. Zagraj ją trzy razy. || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | !Russian | ||
+ | | Королевский Суд<br>(pron. ''korolyevskiy sud'') || || || || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | !Spanish | ||
+ | | Corte Real || || || || | ||
+ | |} | ||
== Trivia == | == Trivia == | ||
[[Image:Kings_CourtArt.jpg|thumb|right|354px|Official card art.]] | [[Image:Kings_CourtArt.jpg|thumb|right|354px|Official card art.]] | ||
− | === | + | === Preview === |
− | + | {{Quote | |
− | + | |Text= There are actually cards that aren't ridiculous combos with King's Court. {{Card|Counting House}} for example - you can only get all of the Coppers from your discard pile so many times. Mostly, King's Court something and you're on top of the world. King's Court + {{Card|Mountebank}} means +{{Cost|6}} and everyone else gains six cards they don't want. That's a good one to start with. King's Court + {{Card|Possession}} is good if you've got a 5-hour game coming up after this and want to make sure your opponent will be a good sport and stay in for the duration, no matter how badly things go for them. | |
− | + | |Name=[[Donald X. Vaccarino]] | |
− | + | |Source=[http://forum.dominionstrategy.com/index.php?topic=123.msg1169#msg1169 Dominion: Prosperity Review] | |
− | + | }} | |
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=== Secret History === | === Secret History === | ||
{{Quote | {{Quote | ||
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|Source=[http://forum.dominionstrategy.com/index.php?topic=5230.0 The Other Secret History of the Prosperity Cards] | |Source=[http://forum.dominionstrategy.com/index.php?topic=5230.0 The Other Secret History of the Prosperity Cards] | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | + | === Should this cost debt? === | |
+ | {{Quote | ||
+ | |Text= | ||
+ | No! Probably not. Maybe it would work out; I haven't done any testing there. I guess the one thing you can say is, it's cheating, it lets me retest the card and cost it differently, so it will come out better. But you know if {{Debt}} had been in {{Set|Prosperity}}, I don't imagine it would have made the difference for King's Court. | ||
+ | |Name=[[Donald X. Vaccarino]] | ||
+ | |Source=[http://forum.dominionstrategy.com/index.php?topic=5799.msg884067#msg884067 Interview with Donald X.] | ||
+ | }} | ||
{{Navbox Prosperity}} | {{Navbox Prosperity}} | ||
{{Navbox Cards}} | {{Navbox Cards}} | ||
+ | [[Category:Royalty]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Conditional non-terminals]] | ||
+ | [[category:throne-like]] |
Latest revision as of 11:24, 11 August 2023
King's Court | |
---|---|
Info | |
Cost | |
Type(s) | Action |
Kingdom card? | Yes |
Set | Prosperity |
Illustrator(s) | Dennis Lohausen |
Card text | |
You may play an Action card from your hand three times. |
King's Court is an Action card from Prosperity. When played, it gives you the opportunity to play another Action card from your hand three times, like a better Throne Room. A few King's Courts can supercharge any engine and often enables huge game-ending turns. It is widely considered to be one of the strongest cards available in the game.
Contents |
[edit] FAQ
[edit] Official FAQ
- This is similar to Throne Room, but plays the Action three times rather than twice.
- Playing an Action card from your hand is optional.
- If you do play one, you resolve it completely, then play it a second time, then play it a third time.
- You cannot play other cards in-between (unless told to by the card, such as with King's Court itself).
- Playing Action cards with King's Court is just like playing Action cards normally, except it does not use up Action plays for the turn.
- For example if you start a turn by playing King's Court on Village, you would draw a card, get +2 Actions, draw another card, get +2 Actions again, draw a 3rd card, and get +2 Actions again, leaving you with 6 Actions.
- If you King's Court a King's Court, you may play an Action card three times, then may play another Action card three times, then may play a 3rd Action card three times; you do not play one Action card nine times.
[edit] Strategy
King’s Court is one of the strongest cards in the game, for a relatively simple reason: playing powerful cards once is impactful, double-playing as with other Throne Room variants is very strong, and triple-playing those same cards is even stronger. Even more so than other Throne Room variants, King’s Court functions as amplification of other cards and a very effective village.
King’s Court’s first strength is the efficiency of triple-playing: doing so allows you to have fewer copies of the triple-played card in your deck for the same effect, and lessens the need for draw. A notable example is a hand of two King’s Courts and three Bridges, which is effectively able to play Bridge nine times and thus easily enable you to buy all eight Provinces. An equivalent turn using Throne Room would need many draw cards, at least five Throne Rooms, and two more copies of Bridge to achieve the same outcome.
King’s Court's second strength is that it functions as a very strong village. It does this in the same way other Throne Room variants do, by allowing you to get multiple plays of other Action cards while spending only a single Action playing the King's Court itself. King's Court effectively nets you +2 Actions on top of any benefits from the Action card it plays. If you play King’s Court on a non-terminal Action such as a Lurker, you end up with net +2 Actions to continue your turn. Similarly, playing King’s Court on a terminal card such as Monument effectively allows you to play three terminals.
King’s Court’s third strength is that it can act as draw. This is possible because King's Court takes up less space in your hand than the cards it is replacing. For example, using King's Court on Laboratory draws six cards total, the same as playing three Laboratories, but the net effect is +4 to your hand size rather than +3 because it only uses up two cards from your hand rather than three. This draw effect is most notable when King’s Court is used with cantrips. Cantrips on their own are draw-neutral—no matter how many you play, your hand size will not increase. However, triple-playing a cantrip card such as Harbinger with King's Court does function as draw: this combination draws three cards, despite taking up only two spaces in hand, so the result is to increase your hand size by one. This effect clearly distinguishes King's Court from most other Throne Room variants, as using those to double-play a cantrip does not increase your hand size.
King’s Court’s fourth and greatest strength lies in the explosive nature of chains of this card. King’s Courting a King’s Court allows you to triple-play three cards, a dramatic increase compared to Throne Rooming a Throne Room, which only allows you to double-play two cards. This chaining additionally amplifies the draw and village effects that you would get from an unchained King’s Court play. Furthermore, for every additional King’s Court added to this chain you can triple-play another three cards, whereas for every Throne Room added you can only play another two cards. In this scaling comparison (3N-1 versus 2N-1, where N is the number of King’s Courts/Throne Rooms respectively in the chain) it’s easy to see how a chain of King’s Courts can easily triple-play every card in your deck. This often leads to situations where you have lots of excess King’s Court plays. In Kingdoms with gainers, it’s often possible to make use of these in powerful gain and play loops. As an example, with each tripled King’s Court in the chain you might use your three triple-plays to:
- play a King’s Court, continuing the chain;
- play a gainer such as Develop to get another King’s Court, a draw card, another copy of the gainer itself, and/or additional payload (in this case, likely to serve as fodder for Develop in the next iteration of the loop);
- play a draw card to draw everything just gained and begin the next loop iteration.
While fully self-perpetuating loops are uncommon and require setup, gainers generally synergize very well with King’s Court as they can provide the raw Actions to be triple-played, and often allow you to threaten a rapid pileout.
Given how expensive King’s Court is and how reliant it is on collision with desirable Action cards, it’s usually best to add King’s Court in the midgame, after some deck control has been established and you have good cards to triple-play. Later, adding King’s Courts is often the most cost-effective way of improving your deck, as adding one King’s Court is somewhat comparable to adding two more copies of another Action card you already have, or four more copies if you’re able to play it as part of a King’s Court chain.
[edit] Versions
[edit] English versions
Digital | Text | Release | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
You may choose an Action card in your hand. Play it three times. | Prosperity | October 2010 | ||
You may play an Action card from your hand three times. | Prosperity (2016 printing) | February 2017 |
[edit] Other language versions
[edit] Trivia
[edit] Preview
[edit] Secret History
[edit] Should this cost debt?