Soutien

Objet. Vêtement. Paire de Chaussures.

Coût: 2. XP: 1.

Chercheur

Limite de 1 Paire de Chaussures par investigateur.

Vous gagnez +1 .

Après que le dernier indice de votre lieu a été découvert, inclinez les Chaussures de Randonnée : déplacez-vous vers un lieu connexe ayant au moins 1 indice ou vers un lieu connexe non-révélé.

Drazenka Kimpel
Aux Confins de la Terre – Extension Investigateurs #35.
Chaussures de Randonnée

FAQs

No faqs yet for this card.

Reviews

Super cool card! Some will complain about the lack of introduction of a Foot Slot, but besides that, let's see how it compares to its most obvious competitor:

Differences with Tabooed Pathfinder:

Pros:

• 2 less XP per copy, so 4 less XP for 2 copies.

• 1 less Resource

• Offers 1 static .

• It can work if you are engaged with an enemy (if using Working a Hunch for example)

Cons:

• Cannot be tapped, someone needs to empty a location (could be another investigator)

• Can only bring you to a location with a clue or unrevealed.

I personally love this card, emptying locations as the main clue-getter is what you do, and any free move is one action that you can dedicate to investigating, therefore gaining tempo.


As good synergies, we can also add:

• Well... Pathfinder for a lot of free moves

• Gené Beauregard and Vantage Point to move clues around to make sure that you are not surrounded by empty location

• All the "As if" investigating shenanigans:

•• If you use cards like the Pocket Telescope, In the Know, Sixth Sense, Seeking Answers, or Luke Robinson, you could potentially move to the location connected to the target, allowing you to cover greater distances.This also works with Pathfinder as you can use the window during the test to move at the location of the test (see the Shortcut FAQ on ArkhamDB).


So, knowing that I love the theme, would I choose the Boots over Pathfinder?

• Yes if:

I have 2-3 Agility already and the boost gives me a chance to pass some agility tests

If I know that I have expensive cards to buy later and I don't have 6xp to spend in 2 Pathfinders

I plan on upgrading to Gené Beauregard at some point (not necessary but good).

I am sure that I will remember that I get a free move and I am not too distracted

• No if:

I have fear of heights

The space in my Deck is too hard to find

I already have too many Assets and I would never find the time to play this lesser priority one.

Valentin1331 · 67657
Thanks for this thoughtful review; I've been planning on playing it, but haven't had Seeker access in my last two campaigns. (I've been meaning to play Harvey soon, so maybe then, although it's thematically kind of silly.) — LivefromBenefitSt · 1051
Nice, well have fun with them! And I've added them to my Harvey Deck Guide, and they work really well. I have nothing against the old man enjoying a little stroll in nature :) — Valentin1331 · 67657
I just thought about Pocket telescope abuse. Of course I'm not the first one who came up with the idea. — Pawley · 26
@Pawley you can check the Amanda Deck that I created that abuses the Pocket Telescope! There is definitely a lot of fun to have there :) — Valentin1331 · 67657
HikingBoots and Gené Beauregard are an anti synergy, mostly because Gene often likes to leave locations when there is one clue left, so she can drag it along after her. — RichardPlunkett · 12

This card's movement ability looks very good at first glance, but it can be surprisingly hard to get value from. Naturally, it depends on the level structure and so on, but some entire campaigns have a lot of levels where it's surprisingly hard to get use out of.

For example, a level like Echoes of the Past has a strip of (mostly) clueless locations across the middle, with clue-filled locations to each side of them. So you can't get rid of the no clues in the middle to move to the unrevealed or clued locations, and once you get rid of the clues on those locations you realise you can't move back to the now-revealed locations without clues either. Barring some shenanigans with Mr. Peabody, this makes it very hard to get even a single move from the shoes across the entire scenario. This is an extreme case, but can expand out to a lot of the campaign. The Last King is similar in its map that needs to be moved through a lot that begins with almost no clues. For The Unspeakable Oath, they're unlikely to help with the necessary back-tracking in that level, unless you leave clues behind, in which case they didn't give you any mobility early - this is their main problem in any level that does require back-tracking, which most of the rest of Carcosa does. In Dim Carcosa the has the unfortunate effect of not leaving a window to flip your location after you drain it of clues, so you either need to leave a friend there, or, in solo, go back there anyway, negating the actual advantage to the move.

Similarly, The Forgotten Age and its explore mechanic mean you will usually move due to the explore, often after getting the clues from the location you're on to begin with - something that's necessitated in a couple of the levels. On those levels, it's very hard to get movement from at all. On the others, it means exploring early and leaving clues scattered is a more viable strategy, and it does open up the board more which can be good. Or bad, sometimes.

Of course, there are plenty of levels where the shoes aren't really hard to get value from at all. I do think they work a lot better on the expansive maps of Innsmouth, for example. But I was very surprised at how limiting the move's requirements could really be, and just wanted to point that out.

So over all, I think the movement ability itself is less consistent than even the test on Track Shoes, and certainly isn't the Pathfinder replacement I initially thought it might be. That said, it has its upsides. Having the item trait means it interacts with a number of abilities, including William Webb, can easily be traded around, or discounted. It also gives a stat upgrade, which is certainly significant, and probably worth a slot for anyone who actually wants to make use of . It's build-depenant of course, but the people who most likely want to use that stat are the people who also like either movement or to leave clues scattered around the map, Ursula Downs, Monterey Jack and Trish Scarborough, who it was the obvious fit for anyway.

SSW · 209
You can make it much easier to exploit by pairing these with Gene Beauregard. — OrionJA · 1

Cheap, persistent stat boost, the occational free move, very likable stuff.

You can set up the free move on purpose, with cards like Gené Beauregard and Vantage Point to manage where clues go, or you can rely on good knowledge of how the scenario works to glide around and get out of trouble by your own strength sometimes.

Note the cool feature that the benefit trigger is not personal, a buddy can finish what you start and give you that speed boost. It's not keyed to being unengaged.

Tsuruki23 · 2522
After they tabooed Pathfinder I did not expect Seeker's to get another permanent asset that gives out lots of free moves so soon. — OrionJA · 1