Farmland
Farmland | |
---|---|
Info | |
Cost | |
Type(s) | Victory |
Kingdom card? | Yes |
Set | Hinterlands |
Illustrator(s) | Eric J Carter |
Card text | |
2 When you buy this, trash a card from your hand. Gain a card costing exactly more than the trashed card. |
Farmland is a Victory card from Hinterlands. Farmland offers fewer points than a Duchy for a higher cost, but its on-buy effect often lets you squeeze a few extra points out of your turns in the endgame.
Contents |
FAQ
Official FAQ
- This is a Victory card, not an Action card.
- It is worth 2 at the end of the game.
- When you buy it, you trash a card from your hand if able, and if you did, you gain a card from the supply costing exactly more than the trashed card if able.
- If there are no cards left in your hand to trash, you do not trash or gain a card, and if you trashed a card but there are no cards in the supply costing exactly more than the trashed card, you do not gain a card.
- This ability only functions when you buy Farmland, not when you gain it some other way.
- During set-up, put all 12 Farmlands in the Supply for a game with 3 or more players, but only 8 in the Supply for a 2-player game.
Other Rules clarifications
- Revealing Trader to gain a Silver instead of a Farmland when you buy one does not prevent the on-buy effect from happening.
Strategy Article
Original article by Brando Commando, edited by theory, originally posted on the forum
Farmland is the kind of card that is unusual enough that it’s hard to imagine what other card would take its place. This means it can also be hard to strategize around.
Is There a Bigger Strategy with Farmland?
There’s some disagreement whether Farmland is worth thinking about in your overall strategy. It certainly can’t hurt, though. Here are some reasons (2-4 courtesy of HiveMindEmulator):
- Buying a Farmland at on lets you buy what amounts to a Province later on if you trash the first Farmland to remodel it into a Province. More on this later.
- There are more total VPs on the board to buy, so you need more than 44 VPs to clinch a win. So it may make Big Money rushes less effective.
- If there’s no other way to trash an Estate or a juicy Dark Ages trash-benefit card, this might be pretty good, relatively.
- It enables a lot of endgame tactics where you can do stuff like getting 5 VP without draining a Province, or get 8 VP with one buy. (Discussed further below.)
You’ll notice these are not game-busting issues, and I’m not sure they even qualify as “strategy.” To my mind, Farmland works strategically if it happens to do something worthwhile both with its on-buy trash benefit and afterward, when it’s in your deck ready to be trashed for benefit or Remodeled into a Province. So the thesis of this article is that if you are considering a Farmland buy, you probably want to get advantage from it both coming and going. This, in effect, is strategy, since it asks how your Farmland fits into the larger game and not just the hand you happen to have.
Question 1: What are you going to trash by buying Farmland?
Keep in mind, you’re probably forgoing a Gold when you buy a Farmland, which is a big hurdle.
a) You’re not trashing anything, but you can gain a Gold with Farmland through Hoard or Market Square.
This is probably superior to anything that follows.
b) You’re trashing nothing.
Surely you can do better than this with your !
c) You’re remodeling a Gold into a Province.
This could well be a strong move, but it really just invites the question: can you get that many Golds to begin with? This especially might be a good move if you aren’t going to have +buys to convert them into anything else later or in late game when you won’t see the Gold again anyway.
d) You’re remodeling a previously bought Farmland into a Province.
Sounds great: a net 6 VP for . The real trick is only that you need to have bought Farmland in the first place, back when you didn’t have one. This, indeed, is a bit of strategy. If Harem isn’t out, then you might think of it as a Harem that can only buy a Province. (Think about it: You only need to get to in hand and you can Farmland your Farmland into a Province for 6 VP. Special thanks to WheresMyElephant for these observations.)
The other reason to do this, of course, is if you’re not planning to buy any more Provinces and just plan to Remodel the rest of your deck into whatever you can get it to — that is, you’ve given up on improving economy and are, most likely, in the home stretch trying to get as many points as possible.
But remember, using Farmland like this might be more trouble than it’s worth. As ecq put it: “Buying a Farmland and trashing a Farmland for a Province only nets 6 VP. Any time you do that, you could have just bought a Province if you had any other source of instead of a Farmland. Further, other sources of aren’t nearly as bad to have in your hand as Farmland when you only have .”
So that Farmland you have in hand? Maybe it should just have been a Gold, unless you’re so full up with Gold you can pull off both a Farmland and Province in a single buy (by remodeling a Gold into a Province when you buy a Farmland).
Also, another important warning: If you’re cycling Farmlands like this, and especially if your opponent is too, you have to watch the Farmland pile carefully, since (absent Remodel, etc.) you’re only going to be able to pull off this trick with future Farmlands if there are still Farmlands to buy.
e) You’re remodeling Silver for a Duchy.
This might be a good idea. As ftl notes, “The Farmland and the Duchy together are 5 VP — a Province is 6 VP. It’s one dead card more and one VP less, but it seems like a pretty solid PPR play. Especially if the card you’re trashing isn’t a Silver but something that wouldn’t have given you the + that would have let you buy a Province.”
So, in sum, this might work late game when you’re hitting the wall. Think on it.
f) You’re remodeling a < card into something better.
One more bit of strategy: If Farmland is in the kingdom, decide early if you’re going to make use of it later, because a bunch of cards in your deck are not going to be very useful with it.
Trashing Coppers and Shelters into or cards:
Stop. Do not pass Go. Do not collect a card. A general rule of thumb is that remodeling or expanding Coppers or Shelters into cards to improve your economy is too slow in most kingdoms. Even if you use an Expand, the differential between a Copper and Silver is just too little to justify the economy and time that goes into swapping the Copper for a Silver. So this isn’t a strong reason on-buy use of Farmland.
Trashing an Estate into a :
This is more likely, especially if you plan to get to a point where you’re just using Farmland on itself and can generate in order to turn a Farmland into a Province.
“Trashing a Curse into a card, especially a late-game Estate.”
…as ecq put it. “Buying a Duchy gives you 3VP, +1 dead card. Trashing a Curse to, say, a Lighthouse is 3VP, +0 dead cards. Trashing a Curse to an Estate is 4VP, +1 dead card.”
Trashing or cards into better or cards.
This can be a way to set yourself up for the endgame when you aren’t yet hitting but have already developed infrastructure/economy and want to start cashing in by getting VP.
There are any number of cards that work well in the early game but not so well later, and these are your ripest targets for trashing.
- cards that want Coppers or Estates in your hand/deck:
Baron, Moneylender, Remake, Spice Merchant, Rats. (This might include more Dark Ages cards when we figure out which ones are weakest in late game.)
- cards that want Coppers or Estates in your hand/deck:
- Attacks that are less relevant mid to late game:
Sea Hag, Young Witch, Cutpurse, Ambassador.
- Low-grade gainers (better for building mid-game economy than buying Provinces):
Trader, Jack of all Trades, Bureaucrat, Ironworks, Workshop, Talisman, Armory.
- Miscellaneous cards that are better in early or mid-game:
- Cards you shouldn’t have bought in the first place:
Sometimes you have a dud card in your deck that’s not synergizing the way you thought it would, or maybe it’s just not doing much in this hand, maybe a dead Throne Room, dead Conspirator, or dead Nobles.
Question 2: What are you going to do with that Farmland now that you’ve trashed something with it?
Here’s the rub: Now you’ve got this lame green card that isn’t going to do much and is only worth 2 VP. If it’s not interesting to you now that you’ve gotten the trashing benefit out of it... then you probably shouldn’t have bought it. Like Border Village, you probably shouldn’t buy Farmland just because it gives you a fun on-buy effect. So which of these are you going to use it for?
a) Remodel the Farmland itself into a Province
This is more or less covered above. With regards to trashing Farmland itself, however, the big note is that this use of Farmland only gets better when you have actions that can do that so you don’t even have to spend the to get the benefit, like Remodel, Expand, Governor, or Rebuild.
b) Use the Farmland for its greenness.
An unlikely case. You might be using some combination of Crossroads and Scout, which sounds pretty bad to begin with, but Farmland would slow your deck down a little less this way. More plausibly, you’re doing Silk Road, in which case it really comes down to the math.
c) Just use it for the 2 VP, absent any other advantage listed here.
This might be fine if your on-buy advantage was big and you’re really going for the green. Consider its effects on your game position, especially relative to the PPR.
d) Remodel/Expand it into a nice fat or Platinum
Look for this combo mid-game, especially with a Remake, Upgrade, or Develop. First, use the Farmland for one of the answers to Question 1 above, then turn it into a good .
e) Trash it for benefit.
One of its best uses. Asklepios puts it this way: “When a card has some of its benefit on buy/gain (or just on buy in Farmland’s case), then once it’s in your deck it’s less valuable to you than a card of its price ought to be. This makes it a good target for trash-for-benefit like Apprentice or Bishop.” Or Salvager, for that matter.
Sounds great, right? But you need to be able to draw that Farmland and your trasher together, so you’ll be wanting a deck that draws a lot of itself on a given turn to get your Farmland together with something that can trash it.
Thanks to everyone quoted, but also to everybody who participated in my original thread post on Farmland and other threads, which I’ve taken a lot of these ideas from.
Synergies/Combos
- trash for benefit
- Cards with early-game but not late-game use
Antisynergies
Alternate versions
Digital version for Dominion Online
German Version by HiG
Trivia
In other languages
- Czech: Úrodná země (lit. fertile ground)
- Dutch: Landbouwgrond
- Finnish: Viljelysmaat
- French: Terre agricole
- German: Fruchtbares Land (lit. fertile land)
- Italian: Terra Coltivata (lit. cultivated land)
- Japanese: 農地 (pron. nōchi)
- Polish: Pola uprawne (note: as referred to in Polish Empires rulebook)
- Spanish: Tierra de Labranza
Secret History