Lord Hurin wrote:
Thanks all for the advice. Sorry if it seems that I'm stuck in my ways, I just prefer a more themed army over one that will win but "feels" off from Tolkien's books.
It will be nice when these two are not so mutually exclusive. I think in anything less than maxed out tournament-level competitive play many players will in fact have "fun and themed" armies rather than some of the things we see complained about here or something you may be building to take to a GT event.
Considering you're starting with the models you already have ready and are trying to stay true to Middle Earth, I think it will be a fun list for a while. There are some excellent suggestions above for modifying the army over time as money allows. Crossbow and Berserker Formations have each proven very effective in our local games and stay themed. Each can be built up one Company at a time and still be effective.
Sadly, I find Trolls pretty fragile in WotR. I rarely see any H2K models survive the first turn of combat, almost never still standing after a second. If you really use them to just support the action of other Formations then it helps a lot, and if you can Flank or Rear charge then even better. Troll Captains are great because you get Might, Heroic Actions and can At the Double, but at a big point cost jump. If you can only add one or two, definitely start with Troll Captains.
I agree about the Goblins and WYSIWYG though. If normal Goblins are "useless" for you and you won't be using any of them, then just tell your opponent that your entire army of Goblins are Black Shields. You now have 10+ Companies of Black Shields and a solid base to start from. I had heard that historically GW's LotR tournaments are move critical of "if a model exists you have to use it instead of a proxy" but in reality no friends should care for local play (as long as any confusion risk is eliminated) and even in tournaments I've seen Use-As without any issues (again, it must be done in such a way as to eliminate confusion). If you have a few Companies of regular Goblins with bows and then tell your opponent all Goblins with hand weapons / spears are Black Shields, there is no risk of confusion there and should be no issue in play.
If you or anyone you play with REALLY care, then just mold some very basic cloaks on the back of your goblins using green stuff, paint it up black with some basic highlights, re-dull-coat the mini and you're done. $10 in green stuff + a couple hours of time = 100 Black Shields.