Trigger Man

This is an interesting card, and some ramifications are not quite apparent at first glance.

First : the Illicit asset does not cost any ressource to put into play from your hand (nor any action either), but once it's attached to the Trigger Man, you have to pay 1 ressource per use. Most Illicit guns have a cost that is either the same or higher than the number of ammo it comes with. So a gun with 3 ammo that normally costs 3 ressources to put into play will cost you 3 ressources to fully use with the Trigger Man. With "more expensive" guns like the .45 Thompson, you can actually save a ressource, and in all cases you have the advantage of paying only for the ammo you actually use.

Of course, you have to factor in the (non-negligible) cost of the Trigger Man himself. But you get what you pay for : "fast" actions with a base value of 4. Interesting for a low-Fight rogue who wants to use weapons. The lower your stat, the better value you get from this, so Kymani, Trish and Sefina seem like good candidates. Alternately, a low-Int rogue could use Damning Testimony or, with less benefit, Lockpicks for this. And for our good mayor Charlie Kane and his horrendous stat line, it's even better, for fighting or investigating ! (It would have been awesome for Preston Fairmont, but you can't get any Illicit cards in his deck, so barring any "card-sharing shenanigans" with teammates, it doesn't work.)

Second : Nothing says you can't use the "activate" action on the asset yourself, even once it's attached to Trigger Man. So you could decide to use the gun (that you put into play for free) yourself, without paying the Trigger Man's 1 ressource. Probably not a good strategy by itself just to save money, but could be useful in a pinch, if you need to attack again.

Third : Nothing says the asset stops using slots, so you have to "share hands" with the guy, both of you holding stuff together. Weird, but OK

Which brings me to : other interesting assets that don't use hand slots.

Burglary : For 1 ressource, Investigate as a "fast" action with a base value of 4 to gain 3 ressources. It becomes a money engine, especially if you can boost your investigation with Magnifying Glass (Finn, Kymani, Trish)

Liquid Courage : Heal without spending you precious actions, at the cost of paying more. For rich rogues.

Disguise : Tony Morgan could reliably evade at 6, if necessary.

DrOGM · 25
Yeah, I'm pretty sure RAI the attached card uses slots. Stops you having 2x2h big guns, for example. Sadly :) It is definitely an interesting card economy wise, but rogues are usually flush with cash? So it's the opportunity cost of using Trigger Man over another ally. Especially since he's XP3 and so locked from any off-class Rogues. I don't doubt he's cool and can do some cool things. — fiatluxia · 66
The asset is never played so it doesn't gain any "Uses" like ammor or lockpicks, so such assets can't be used outside trigger mans ability. Also does this mean lockpicks 1 is immediately discarded? — Django · 5108
Thx for the review. Wow, I was sure the attached asset doesn't take any slot, but you're definitely right, it does! — chrome · 59
@Django From rules: "When a card bearing [uses] keyword enters play, place a number of resource tokens equal to the value (X)..." I would assume that "enters play" is a word combination to cover all ways how the asset may happen to appear in your play area, including being played, being put into play and, most likely, being attached from hand to another asset upon the latter is played, etc. — chrome · 59
Quick fun fact: This card uses the art for Leo Anderson from Arkham Horror 2e. The fact that Leo can't take it is adding insult to injury! Great card though, excited to use it. — MiskatonicFrosh · 344
This card is so cool from a theme perspective, but really falls flat in execution. As noted above, you have to share the hand slot (if any) with the guy, you can still use it, basically holding hands with this dude to use it. And the art features Leo Anderson, who can’t even use the damn thing! And it would be really cool and thematic in Leo, too. So here’s my version of him I’m tempted to proxy: 1 cost, 2 xp. As an additional cost to play Trigger Man, play an Illicit Firearm asset from your hand and attach it to Trigger Man (it doesn’t take any slots and can only be activated with the below ability). Everything else about the card I’d leave unchanged. Cost reduced because now you have to pay for the weapon, and has to be a firearm because hiring a “trigger man”to hold your whiskey and pour it down your throat is too damn silly — rockmaninoff · 3
Hunter's Armor

Edit: Some mistakes. It's hard to review any customizable card because it's actually a multitude of cards all in one, with different interactions with all the folks of arkham, so lets fire my shot and see what I can work out.

So, in a vacuum, the base card is terrible, you probably should not ever include this thing in a deck. dont have 4 resources to spend on 2 health and 2 horror, that's a terrible deal at any level and never worth it beyond some very, VERY extraordinary campaign starts where you've dealt yourself some unusual pain with cards like In the Thick of It or Arcane Research and you NEED some soak to compensate.

This means then that we really are only looking at this card in the context of the upgrades. All of the upgrades are in the afforable 3 XP range or less which makes them available to off-class characters like William Yorick or Diana Stanley. So, lets have some fun!

First off, a baseline upgrade that by itself is invariably good: Hexdrinker.

  • Hexdrinker gets you a card everytime you take treachery damage. This right here is often going to be worth the 3xp investment and 4 resource cost, it'll easily draw you 2 cards, often net 3. 4 Resources to save 3-4 life and draw 3 cards is just extravagantly nice.

  • Hexdrinker + Protective runes = The 4 card draws become almost automatic, especially in a 4 player game.

Obviously the +2 health / Sanity upgrades combine very nicely with Hexdrinker+Protective runes to create almost absurd card draw but I'dd argue that, because of the exhust clause, you need to curb your thirst for cards just a bit and lean more into the tanking aspect.

Second up, the other card defining baseline upgrade: Armor of thorns.

  • Armor of thorns suddently slots Hunter's Armor into the passive damage archetype that rose to some prominence with William Yorick and his trusty doggos. Picture this: a Hunting Nightgaunt spawns on you when you have Guard Dog and Hunter's Armor out, instead of attacking it twice, you attack it once and then just move or investigate, triggering an AoO, killing it with retaliation damage. There's nothing to dislike about that for sure.

  • Armor of thorns + Protective runes is not the wondercombo that it is with Hexdrinker, because without the other "spike" damage triggers, dealing only 1 damage often isnt enough. Even so, every now and then you might be able to ask a friend to engage a Whippoorwill that can then be killed off easily.

Again, like hexdrinker, the +health/sanity upgrades also may not combo as nicely as you'dd like, because frankly, even if you're actively triggering enemy attacks, you're often just not going to be attacked 6-8 times in a game. So again this is less about retaliation damage but a bit more about actual tanking.

Third up, the last card defining upgrade: Protective runes.

  • Protective runes turns Hunter's Armor into a communal health pool, which is awesome. All of a suddent you can act as a living shield that moves around and covers harmed friends from danger, love it, like it.

  • Protective runes + Health/Sanity upgrades = Bigger health pools, love it.

When you add the other upgrades, Hexdrinker, Armor of thorns. Protective runes becomes a routine way to benefit off of the "mister tank" role or to burn down enemies slightly faster sometimes. Perhaps the most major downside to taking Protective runes is that off-class folks cannot afford the level cap to combine it with the other major upgrades.

  • A major point to worry about is that Armor of Thorns and Hexdrinker interfere with each other, both of them "cost" the armor's lifepool, both of them exhaust the card, IF you intend to take both, the upgrade path is then probably:

    • Hexdrinker/Thorns -> Health/Sanity/Protective -> Health/Sanity/Protective/Lightweight -> Hexdrinker/Thorns.

    • That said, I'dd like to argue that once you've spent 5 or 7 xp on it, you can probably just stop and be happy with it like that.

As a note on the unmentioned upgrades, Enchanted and lightweight, the former is primarily a choice of slots, which might seem superfluous but then you realise that it might interact interestingly with Dragon Pole. Lightweight meantime is less a priority upgrade than it is a capstone after you've gone for either Spikes or Cards.

To name some names, here´s some character that can seriously look at Hunter's Armor for nice builds:

Lastly, anbody who can take the Protective runes variant should legtimitately consider taking up the tank role, Carolyn Fern and Vincent Lee are both the kind of character that's trying to protect the team and this is a pre-emptive way to do so without taking any risky skill checks.

Tsuruki23 · 2552
Daniela can’t get much use out of this. Someone would have to give her a version with teamwork, since she can’t take guardian level one cards. — MrGoldbee · 1470
Neither can Vincent, since the card doesn't Heal Damage. — Lailah · 1
It's also worth pointing out that hunter's armor with lily gets ugly, because it'll start out eating level 0 guardian slots, and getting those back takes XP if you lose them. Can be worth of course. — Lailah · 1
Seems like it could be a Tommy card to me. — RichardPlunkett · 12
Vincent absolutely can take this card as he can take Guardian cards level 0-1, he could get 2 boxes worth of XP on it so he could get any of the 2 xp upgrades putting it to a level 1 guardian card essentially. Similarly with Lily, there's no reason starting with it in your deck would be "ugly", you'd just upgrade it with xp at which point it becomes a level x guardian card and you can backfill those empty slots with other level 0 guardian cards or mystic cards as you wish or you could not start with it in your deck and purchase it with the upgrades for XP into the campaign. — Gearmastery · 1
Addendum to my previous comment, of course you wouldn't be able to freely add level 0 cards to a Lily deck just because you upgraded Hunters armour but you're not "losing" anything, it's just slightly suboptimal. — Gearmastery · 1
You're losing the Experience. That's something, which I outright stated. And at 2 experience, you can't use the thing for any of the purposes laid out, hence 'vincent can't take it'. He can have the card in his deck, but since it's a shitty overcosted card without significant upgrades, it's probably just outright a waste on him. — Lailah · 1
Daniela still won't get much use out of it, MrGoldbee, because the customizations are tied to the character and not the card — brkndevil · 19
Enchanted also notably lets you have both copies of Hunter's Armor in play at the same time, so you could split damage or horror from a single treachery or enemy between them to fire Hexdrinker or Thorns twice. — Thatwasademo · 58
For Lily, the biggest problem is it just wouldn't be good lvl 0 for her. But there is nothing stopping you from spending xp to add it to your deck with Enchanted at a later date. For other investigators, only 2 Guardians have more than 6 sanity, so just having a 2 or 4 soak for sanity in an uncontested slot is useful. Add in the ability to turn failed treacheries into card draw (Most guardians big weakness) and this quickly becomes a card that covers for some Guardian failings. (And for Tommy it can be 3 resources now for 8 resources later.) — dkilkay · 4
Addendum to my previous comment: This is an easy add to lily, especially since it kinda sucks at 0 anyway. Spending a single XP on an upgrade box satisifes the requirement to spend experience on a card, so you can spend 2 XP on two seperate boxen and add it to your deck as a level 1 Guardian Card, overwriting a mystic card you were using prior — Lailah · 1
A _playset_ of a level 1 guardian card, I mean. Dammit me. — Lailah · 1
Hidden Pocket

Turns out I shouldnt be posting reviews when Im having a bit of a manic christmas stress episode. Sorry y'all! Apocalypse averted.

So anyway, to properly review this thing.

Hidden Pocket does by itself a relatively weak thing, +1 hand slot. It does not change the board state but enables more flexibility with weapons and tools. Hand slot tools universally take 1 slot, so the point of extra slots is all about enabling greedy strategies with 2-slot weapons. Ornate Bow comes to mind. The illicit requirement is'nt much of a drawback, but "I'll take that!" can help with this issue.

In an older version of the game, or with a limited collection, this would be a very, very bad card. Card draw used to be a premium that only had. Wasting a draw to find Hidden Pocket with a core+Dunwick Jenny Barnes would be like shooting yourself in the foot. The reason it'd be so bad is that a card like this needs a strong, dependable flow of cards to find all the pieces. You need to find the clothing, find the weapons and tools, find the pocket, find money generation to pay for it, find the card draw. For a large swathe of characters this is a ridiculous stretch.

But the support does exist, and the synergy, particularly if you have Underworld Market which single handedly assays the card's downside of dudding a draw and the deckspace issue. Also of note is the synergy, not only can you use Pickpocketing to fund the expensive boardstate, you have good illicit hand assets like Thieves' Kit to put into the extra slot.

I misjudged this card first time around. Even so. It is -very- niche. I wouldnt reccommend it for most decks without careful planning.

Tsuruki23 · 2552
there's a certain "mechanic" who is actually a tailor who might have a few words for you about using armor as a soak without discarding it — Thatwasademo · 58
also, there's Fine Clothes and Stylish Coat which both do plenty for you not-as-soak, and if you're playing Rogue you probably have enough card draw to only include two copies of one of them and still find it in time to get value from the combo — Thatwasademo · 58
or, out of class, Lab Coat, Hiking Boots, or Track Shoes, if you have incidental seeker/survivor access (or incidental rogue access and a reason to use an illicit hand slot item, but that seems less likely) — Thatwasademo · 58
For me, it was a very effective way for Sefina to use the Ornate Bow and a Thieves' Kit simultaneously. And works well on a body slot that you're not planning to cycle - like Stylish Coat. — snacc · 995
There are three new Rogue cards in TSK that synergies super well with this card: Stylish Clothing, I’ll Take That, and Underworld Market. Stylish Clothing is a HUGE boon to big money decks, I’ll take that lets you hid any item you want in your pocket, and Underworld Market gives you a solid guarantee of having the card available when you needs it. — PanicMoon · 2
And it’s one thing to critique a card. It’s really another to use this as evidence that the design team doesn’t give a shit. No one needs your whole “Rome is falling” shtick. — PanicMoon · 2
Really weird to be this negative about a card that, while doing nothing on its own, has really obvious combos and is fast and incredibly cheap besides. Like missing Lonnie's entire existence, the fact that it can go on shoes, and the massive, massive acceleration that I'll Take That can provide, that's one thing, but even missing all that you're left with a decent enough combo card that's at level 0, so can be adaptable'd in or out if you need it, and has reasonable icons. Like, at worst it's still Arcane Enlightenment but it's a 2 card combo. Not great, but like, not worth getting angry about. Like, have you seen Clean Sneak? — SSW · 213
This card is also a great way to thin your deck, it is fast, gives you a slot and stays on the table pairs great with i`ll take that which gives more options to store something in that slot, is also fast and thins your deck even further. — Flatlin3 · 1
"Wasting a draw to find Hidden Pocket with a core/Dunwick Jenny Barnes would be like shooting yourself in the foot." - This is how you get a hidden pocket in your Track Shoes. — HanoverFist · 739
Analysis

OP, now theyre taking over mechanics too. Well, not just , looking at you, wannabe.

This card is awesome, but I feel like the class system structure is breaking down and, as allways, it's cards that allways come out on top.

I would REALLY like to see this thing on the taboo list with a "non-" clause, or maybe they'dd erase the "any number of times" text, because this is an extreemely strong card, the downsides to it are easily made up for with the new mechanics that reward you for dropping clues.

To properly review the card, this is a contender for being one of the best skill cards ever, comparable to Justify the Means with no XP cost and a different downside. If you have any relatively big tests you think you might need to do, you should consider this card, even in a vacuum without the cluedrop teck, especially if you're a with a good secondary stat like Joe Diamond or Ursula Downs who'se spread of important tests goes beyond just tests.

If you do plan to play the cluedrop archetype, this of course is an autotake.

Tsuruki23 · 2552
Justify the Means is an auto success, quite a bit more powerful than this single-icon card that still requires a token pull. I also think dropping a clue is a non-trivial cost, even with recent clue drop tech. I agree the card is potentially strong (and probably shouldn't let you redraw the tentacle) but I don't think it's anywhere near near the best skill card ever. — Pseudo Nymh · 61
Summoned Servitor

Summoned Servitor's niche. While the resource cost isn't bad, its asset discard cost means it's unlikely to be one of the first cards out of the gate, and its dual slot cost is another barrier. In practice, Summoned Servitor is going to cost at least 3 XP. Without at least 1 XP, all Summoned Servitor can do is hover around the map. And while 1 XP is enough to start taking some actions, it's hard to find someone who wouldn't want Dominance to free up a slot, one way or another.

From there, there are a few directions for the summon. The first and most apparent through the test actions. A 4-base test is okay, if not particularly impressive - you'll occasionally stumble onto a success, as long as you're willing to fail along the way. Of course, If someone runs Rabbit's Foot, Drawing Thin, "Look what I found!", or the like, even a failure can be good. And characters with easy boost access, like Charlie Kane or someone with Cornered like Patrice Hathaway, can turn those awkward checks into something that resembles a bonus action. Daemonic Influence can technically give even more 'actions', but it's one of the most expensive customizations around, and quite possibly one of the most difficult to build around.

The second option is to use Wings of Night as the equivalent to Pathfinder or Safeguard. While Summoned Servitor's movement isn't particularly mobile, it can still move one space a turn - and that means that if you don't need to move more than one space a turn, the summon can save that move action for you.

The third option is to use Armored Carapace to treat this as a source of soak. While a few scenarios may make you regret this decision, it's often a cheap plus. Armored Carapace allows you to share the soak, but it's worth remembering that investigators can assign damage to any asset under their control with health, and the Servitor is always under the investigator's control, no matter where its location is. It can tank for others sometimes, but it can always tank for its player.

And, of course, there are always a few incidental benefits to this. As one of the options, it's worth remembering that investigators who access this can boost it using Down the Rabbit Hole. And some people just want to squeeze a bit more XP through Refine.

On the whole, I don't think any of these single options is worth the total card, resource, slot, and XP cost. However, if you're looking at a couple of these, you might be breaking even or earning a bit more. Some classes may have better options, but for some or off-, you might just be looking for the combination of a bit of health, or an extra action, one way or another.

Ruduen · 1004
If you're trying to use Wings of Night, the fact that the Servitor can't move into unrevealed locations starts to become really annoying. — Thatwasademo · 58
Yeah, I didn't notice that part until after I bought it. I had to ask my comrades to constantly go first to open locations for me. I can kinda understand why; imagine if a summoned servitor jumped first to the locomotive in Dunwich Express. But it's an pain and it makes a bad Pathfinder even worse. — olahren · 3458
Do you know how the summoned servitor works with attacks of opportunity ? "You investigate this location with a skill of 4" : the servitor is supposed to take the action, but the text says "you". What if I am engaged with an enemy while the servitor is at another location ? Does the servitor's action ever trigger AOO ? — Chakado · 17
@Chakado it doesnt. The wording of this card indicate that IT take 1 action, and attack of opportunity only work on Investigator — Shalone · 1