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10th company metagaming


greatcrusade08

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Metagaming is a broad term usually used to define any strategy, action or method used in a game which transcends a prescribed ruleset, uses external factors to affect the game, or goes beyond the supposed limits or environment set by the game

As most will know by now, my name has become synonymous with all scout themed armies. My aims over the last 18 months has been to create a fluffy themed list that can stand up in competitive games.
In this article im going to try to challenge pre-conceived notions about scouts and show how a little ‘outside the box’ thinking can quite literally win you games.

First I want to explain what I consider to be the 3 most important things that win games, I call it ‘the holy trinity’.
*Army list
*Tactics
*Luck

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Aswell as 40k I also play many other wargames from WAB, to great war and beyond. Many of my fellow wargamers often remark how difficult it is to use ‘normal’ tactics at 28mm scale on such a small board. And to a degree they are correct, from turn 2 onwards most units are in range with their most basic weapons, in the case of scouts and space marines its 24” range. Its also very difficult to outmaneuver your opponent in the early stages of the game, due to bikes/cavalry/jump troops and vehicles/transports all having a great reach and all commonly being used.
However that being said 40k is very unique and has many other tactics that can be employed. Usually experience is the key for winning games, not only must you know what your own units are capable of but knowing the enemy is just as important. All wargaming is in effect a complex game of rock/scissors and paper. Everything has a strength and a weakness the idea is to make best use of this.
There are some great tactical articles out there from silent requiems way of the water warrior and Brother tuals reaction and control tactica to captain Idaho and his great work on using uber units. All are fantastic articles and deserving of a read, however scout armies are unique in the tactical department.

With most 'balanced' scout forces (ignoring all bike lists) the army can generally be divided into two distinct groups, the hammer and the anvil.

Hammer: These are the fast moving elements of your army, whos playstyle is very agressive. Usually these units operate as outflankers or for alpha strikes. units such as:
close combat scouts.
HQ unit
LSS teams and
Scout bikes.

Anvil: are the complete opposite of the hammer units, these are slow moving units that play more defensively:
Bolter scouts
Snipers

Alpha Strikes: Scout armies are very deadly with the first turn, apart from land speeder storms the whole army sets up after your opponent which means you can react to thier deployment to maximise the damage you can inflict with first turn charges.
Generally all AV14 and dangerous vehicles are a priority for your dedicated squads as with the first turn they are considered stationary and all close combat hits with grenades and meltabombs are automatic. Predators and vindicators have rear armour 10 so close combat is a far more effective way of bringing them down.
to get the most from your alpha strikes requires alot of knowledge and experience with the 'rock/scissors and paper' aspect of the game, you want to hit hard on the first turn and then draw attention so that your anvil units can continue to fire for most of the game unmolested.
Units such as devestators and non-assault marines such as tactical squads and enemy scout squads that have very few return attacks also make good targets.

Reaction playstyles: Scouts dont perform as well when they react, its always best to take the fight to the enemy than to let them come to you, however if you lose the first turn dice off then you have little choice but to outflank those units that would otherwise be involved with alpha strikes.
Your anvil units can be placed in cover and the use of cloaks and/or bolstered ruins can keep them safe from enemy shooting, on turns two or three some of your units will be coming on and you can effectively trap the enemy between the hammer and anvil.
this style is not without risks as it requires a little luck with the reserves rolls and it can leave you a little stuck with target priority as you have less units on the board.

Refused flanks: best used with the reaction playstyle, you can potentially ignore a portion of the enemy army as you will always deploy last, this can also bring risks as outflankers hava 1 in 3 chance of coming in on the wrong flank. something which has happened to me on previous occasions.

Proactive playstyles


Offensive: Some armies such as Tau or certain IG and even space marine builds can set up as gunline armies, which means they will have the ability to outshoot your units. In these cirumstances it can often be beneficial to support your alpha strike units with the elements of your anvil. Basically by realising that close combat is the best way to pull a victory you infiltrate ALL units to within rapid fire range on first turn, this combined with pinpoint alpha strikes should make a dent, but it also only leaves your opponent a single turn of shooting before he has to face a charge from every unit in your army.

Defensive: Against hordes you want to keep a big gap between your units and your opponents. Scouts ability to set up last is one of thier best strengths and never moreso when facing hordes, refusing a flank means some enemy units will take an extra turn or two to reach you which may be just the help you need, its also not a great idea to alpha strike or outflank as your units can quite easily be outnumbered and overwhelmed by your opponent. Instead treat you Hammer units as firebases or reactionary units in your 'gunline'. Scout bikes and LSS have the range and movement to work as part of a gunline and can also get the charge if necessary.
Of course scouts have another strength which most space marine players dont think of, and thats thier expendability, by placing speed bump units you can ensure more turns of shooting for little loss (5 scouts is 75 points)


I have discussed a few of the main scout tactics, but to really do well you need a firm grasp on basic wargames tactics.
Tips that work for all armies and knowing how to prioritise targets are important, often players will forget thier own rules or miss shooting or assaulting with a unit in the excitement. Keeping a level head is of great importance, i myself often forget to force pinning checks, to the point where i now have a checklist of things to remember. Of course considering the number of special rules scouts can have its probably a good idea to note them down before the game starts, it doesnt hurt to stop and have a good look around the table before going onto the next part of your turn or before handing over to your opponent for his.

There are specific examples of basic tactics i could cover, things like redundancy and giving yourself extra options incase you get a little luck.
If i had two units of snipers and an assault unit all facing down a tactical squad, i would move the assault squad into charge range, but also within charge range of another unit, that way if the snipers got lucky and killed or pinned the squad the assault scouts could charge thier secondary targets.
This also works for shooting, the LSS team i mentioned earlier carries a triple redundancy of MM on the LSS, combi-melta on the sergeant and meltabombs. If you were to fire the sergeants weapon first and get a little lucky the LSS could fire its longer range multi-melta at another vehicle which could potentially double that units effectiveness that turn.

Target priority: There is no easy way i can think of to describe this in detail, its something that comes with experience of the game, it can also rely on a little luck if you dont have a redundancy plan. Units that provide greater threats become a higher priority for shooting, it can often be necessary to leave reduced enemy squads on the board in order to target more prominent threats.
As an example I once allowed my opponent to charge a unit of my snipers with a lone TH/SS terminator so that i could kill some more dangerous thunderwolf cavalry with my shooting. It was a calculated risk as i was hoping my ten attacks at I4 would kill him before he struck, i did kill him in the second round of combat which meant i did lose a couple of scouts, but they were available to fire again in my next turn so the gamble paid off.

Luck


Most people see luck as an uncontrollable factor, often I see guys trying to mathhammer possibilities and whatnot but ultimately once you start rolling those dice you just have to cross your fingers and hope the bad luck troll isn’t standing to close. Those of you who have been playing for some time will know that there are occasions when terminators will roll a 1 for every save they are forced to make, there will be occasions where two grots will kill a space marine captain in close combat and a lucky multi-melta shot will bring down a monolith. Despite these things being very unlikely and mathhammer telling us as much, they do happen and only a fool ignores this fact.
In order to balance my terrible dice rolling ive tried to concentrate on removing luck as a factor in 40k, and you do this by removing dice rolls all together, or to a lesser extent making the ‘odds’ more favourable.

Auto hits: Ive discussed in depth the ease at which alpha strike scouts can take out vehicles, and thats becuase stationary vehicles offer automatic hits in close combat, no dice rolling required. Infact by equipping my dedicated anti tank scouts with meltabombs taking down AV10 rear armour vehicles like predators, vindicators, whirwinds and rhinos is almost gauranteed since you get auto hits and the meltabombs get S8 + 2D6 pen which means unless you roll snake eyes its a pen hit (even snake eyes is a glance).
You just hope you get a little luck with the damage table roll.

Template weapons: Dont need to roll to hit, flamer templates go one step further and remove any deviation caused by bad dice rolls.
By picking your targets carefully you can almost remove the need for rolling dice at all and just skip to removing enemy models. for example shooting tau firewarriors with a heavy flamer:
Automatic hits on all covered or partiually covered by template, wounds on a 2+ (very good odds) and no save due to the AP value of the heavy flamer.
So a process that normally needs three dice rolls, is dealt with by one dice roll needing a 2+

AP values: Right weapon for the right job, on occasion at close range id choose to shoot bolt pistols from my scouts instead of thier sniper rifles, against orks or IG the better AP of the pistol means they wont get a save. It also has the advantage of allowing the unit to assault, but more importantly the AP removes a dice roll and doesnt allow for your opponent to get lucky.


Ive covered in depth the three main aspects of winning games:
Army list
Tactics
Luck
Both tactics and reducing the need for luck must be factored into your army list in order to improve your odds of winning.


Writing a good all-rounder list


Talioring lists: I have written many articles about how to take on particular armies, simple things like using more anti-tank for marine armies and more bolters and template weapons against hordes. Whilst this is a form of metagaming its generally only helpful in friendly environments when you know in advance who your opponent will be. I suppose if your carry case was large enough you could have a list for each opponent when you visit gaming stores but realistically we need to find that ever elusive 'all rounder list' in order to take on every opponent with some degree of success.

Close combat and anti-tank: Many of those involved in discussions about scout themed armies will know there exists two main issues preventing them from being a truelly competative force.
First is lack of serious close combat ability, whilst ccw scouts are excellent value they are no better than a basic space marine assault squad, neither of which really falls into the category of dedicated assault squads such as assault terminators, vanguard or a command squad
Since HQ choices are usually better set up for close combat, its always the best place to look to beef up this area of the scout force. If you take my advice from above a Khan or possibly shrike can really make a difference in assault and they both work really well with the scout tactics.
It is almost tempting to run them both in one army, of course it would work best with khan on bike, but if you got first turn you could attach the two Ics and use Shrikes combat tactics, if not you could outflank them using Khans abilities.
Generally though as mentioned above i use Khan and a chappy, but at 1750 points or more i also take a command squad. This fits known fluff as every captain has a command squad (10th has no banner though) and it enables you to take another squad that doesnt affect the FOC.
With some amount of close combat prowess available its time to look at the second flaw to scout armies, which is the lack of anti tank.
Despite having a touch of truth this is probably the biggest misconception about scouts.
Despite not wanting to make comparisons to tactical marines its good to know scouts are the only troops choice that can take heavy weapons with only 5 strong squads, yes scouts are only BS3 but Telion can use VOE to grant his BS6 to a heavy weapon scout. Its my opinion that he should always be run with a ML to ensure hits on those troublesome tanks and dreadnoughts.
There are vast options available to scout armies to use to tackle transports, things like grenade launchers on scout bikes, combi-weapons and even snipers can bring down rhinos and thier ilk especially if you consider the advantages we have in manuverability and deployment can be used to get rear armour shots.
The only real problem we have is dealing with AV14, things like land raiders. To this end we need to employ melta weapons for the increased penetraton rolls. As youve heard already my favourite unit for this job is the LSS with MM and melta scout squad. With a triple redundancy they increase the odds of destroying the vehicle dramatically, id even put the odds higher than shooting with 3 MM attack bikes at close range

Flexibility: Is a very important factor, especially with scouts. although i run a LSS as anit-infantry/objective grabber i put a power fist on the unit, which means they can also take out vehicles should it be required. The ability of a unit to perform several roles makes creating all rounder armies alot easier. However units shouldnt be made flexible to the detriment of thier main usage which is why i dont add a combi-melta to the above unit, its main job is to take out infantry and/or contest objectives so the sergeant gets a combi-flamer instead.

The big picture: An army should never be built one unit at a time, you need to consider the whole which should always be greater than the sum of its parts. When i build a scout list im considering everything from where my anti-tank is coming from, to my 'hammer' and 'anvil' units.. how my HQ fits into the whole army and so on.
You often find yourself having to shave points somewhere and if you understand what the 'job' of each unit is it can often be easy to see where savings can be made. If your ccw squad is meant for infantry then you can switch the power fist and combi-weapon to a power weapon and pistol, as a back up meltabombs are only 5 points and can bridge that gap of needing anti-armour in your squads.
Do you need cloaks on your snipers if you have a techmarine to bolster ruins, sure 2+ saves is good, but 3+ isnt bad either and thirty points can go a long way.
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One thing to add to shrike is that if you don't get first turn you can still outflank with the unit Shrike is with. The infiltrate rule grants outflank.

 

Excellent guide as always, clear and relatively concise B)

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One thing to add to shrike is that if you don't get first turn you can still outflank with the unit Shrike is with. The infiltrate rule grants outflank.

 

yup after our convo on this subject ill be adding that into this article.. this gives him the same advantages as Khan aswell as granting fleet to all scout units.

This makes alpha strikes more deadly and also removes the need for any outflanking if we get first turn.

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Nice article (as always).

 

I don't really have a great deal to add to what you've already said but I would make a quick point about anti-tank on LSS squads.

As you have pointed out at the bottom of you first post, flexibility is key with these units.

Because of this I always take a powerfist rather than meltabombs on these squads as I feel that 3 S8 attacks against the rear armour of most tanks is more than enough to do damage (I'll avoid mathhammer as I get the impression you're not a fan and I can't be bothered ;) ).

 

Auto-hitting you're likely to end up with 2 penetrating hits compared to a maximum of 1 from the bombs.

When rolling 4's (most tanks you want to kill won't be moving far) you still end up with 1-2 hits with a strong chance of getting at least 1 penetrate.

That bomb has only a 50% shot of 1 hit.

In both cases you're more likely to end up with more penetrating hits.

The potential for getting 3 pens compared to the bomb's 1 penetrating hit gives a greater chance of a decent result on the damage table.

I know that bombs give you the +1 on the damage table and that it's a basic auto-glance vs AV10 but fists also give you something against infantry and we all know where the kills come from in a scout squad!.

As for AV14, well, as you suggest setting up second gives a massive chance of avoiding it and if you can't do that then there's still a slim chance with a fist.

 

20 points get you a greater chance of killing all but AV13+14 (rear armour) and some damage potential against infantry.

 

 

I run my 2 storms as follows (remember: flexibility is key!)

 

5 scouts, powerfist, combi-melta, 2x BP+CCW, 2x shotgun (although I'm tempted to swap these for BP+CCW dudes)

LSStorm, heavy flamer

170pts.

 

These little units haven't dissappointed yet, giving me a great chance of first turn kills on vehicles or burny death followed by a good fisting on infantry.

It also makes the squads a little less one dimensional and gives utility against a range of units/armies.

With these units my opponent needs to be worried about his vehicles and his infantry!

Two run together give redundancy (DIE HAMMERHEADS DIE!!!) and when I kill a tank with one unit, the other can get into cc and provide a screen for the first preventing reprisals and getting me another turn out of them.

 

Now if I can just get the rest of my army sorted...

 

This quick post has turned into a long one - sorry!

 

tango.

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Yo GC,

 

Good article you have there (I am forming the best defence against the Scout alpha strike now). Just want to draw you to a few hiccups in your guide. You refer to stunning vehicles when I think the context should be glancing.

 

I am still absorbing this. However let none be under the impression that this is flights of fancy, a well ordered scout strike ruins your game from turn 1 and can be really demorilising to face off against (or so I've heard, never having suffered it from GC yet).

 

Wan

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ill look over any punctuation and spelling mistakes asap.

 

Auto-hitting you're likely to end up with 2 penetrating hits compared to a maximum of 1 from the bombs.

When rolling 4's (most tanks you want to kill won't be moving far) you still end up with 1-2 hits with a strong chance of getting at least 1 penetrate.

That bomb has only a 50% shot of 1 hit.

In both cases you're more likely to end up with more penetrating hits.

The potential for getting 3 pens compared to the bomb's 1 penetrating hit gives a greater chance of a decent result on the damage table.

I know that bombs give you the +1 on the damage table and that it's a basic auto-glance vs AV10 but fists also give you something against infantry and we all know where the kills come from in a scout squad!.

As for AV14, well, as you suggest setting up second gives a massive chance of avoiding it and if you can't do that then there's still a slim chance with a fist.

 

20 points get you a greater chance of killing all but AV13+14 (rear armour) and some damage potential against infantry.

 

I cant agree more strongly, however i always factor cost into these things.. this unit was developed for AV14 specifically, so i considered a powerfist to be an unneccesary cost, however my second unit has a powerfist for that reason alone.

Dont forget you alsohave the squads grenades for anything AV10 rear, so if i were to target the melta storm at something liek this, id have 4 auto hit grenades also.

 

@Wan, the best defence is to reserve most units.. but this has the disadvantage of negating 2 turns ingame.. which when facing a scout army means youve alot of scoring units to kill in a shorter time (two thirds of games are objective based).

I suppose having your own infiltrators for a 'skirmish' line works well too

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Ahh I was thinking of using combat squads and Rhinos as sort of a flood defence barrier. Essentially placing the combat squads and Rhinos in a (( shape with all the goodies behind.

 

You shouldnt be able to get a charge in on the vehicles and if you place the rest of it sensibly you shouldnt be able to get behind and unload. Still it would need to be tested, if only I had someone close enough who runs an all scout force to test it against.

 

The thing is I suppose, to deploy close enough to protect the core of your force whilst allowing for mobility. Still I doubt many people run a list like mine anyway so I doubt it would work for all.

 

Nice guide, its nice to see the culmination of your work presented in a nice easy to consume guide. Aside from HQ swapping there isnt really much more you can do with scouts in our codex. Any plans on seeing if they can work in other power armoured codexes?

 

Wan

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I am still absorbing this. However let none be under the impression that this is flights of fancy, a well ordered scout strike ruins your game from turn 1 and can be really demorilising to face off against (or so I've heard, never having suffered it from GC yet).

 

 

Oh I have, it was nice though, getting a taste of my own medicine, and I think everyone at bury wargammers was happy to see me on the receving end lol.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Just wanted to say fantastic article (just like all the rest from the links in your sig). Ok, fanboy mode off ;)

 

I was going to ask about the combi melta/power fist thing as well, as I run a sarge, CM, fist in a storm with heavy flamer, as I mis trust BS3 melta guns and much prefer the template. With the idea that the LSS can enage likley retaliation troops.

 

I do get the metla bombs idea now tho, expecially against land raiders.

 

I guess my main questions is how have you found the survivability of these units? Is it worth going in with the idea it is a suicidal unit, and keeping it cheap, or utilising the storm to supress retaliation and kit the sarge out to crack some heads?

 

I guess your list already answers this, but just wondering about the survivability of those alpha strikers. as if you can take that transport down in shooting, you could assualt the contents, but then, thye are usually CC specialists so perhaps it just isn't that great an idea anyway.

 

And also what sort of success do you get from the MM on the LSS? Is it that useful in the long run, as the heavy flamers just seem like a better option, but I'm not running an all scout list, so have dreadnaughts with MM in pods to get the job done from a MM perspective.

 

Loved the article tho (read it twice).

 

The only point I would make is teh ap - on the shot guns. will certainly stop things from shooting, but dramatically decrease the odds of getting anything better on the damage chart.

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I was going to ask about the combi melta/power fist thing as well, as I run a sarge, CM, fist in a storm with heavy flamer, as I mis trust BS3 melta guns and much prefer the template. With the idea that the LSS can enage likley retaliation troops.

This is true enough, i generally like to 'maximise' potential of all my units, therefore i run one storm with heavy flamer and combi-flamer and another with multi-melta and combi-melta.. infact my latest list has a second MM storm as ive had great success with my first.

 

I undestand the problem with a BS3 MM, but its a 50/50 chance of getting another melta hit which against AV14 can make all the difference, between that the BS4 combi-melta and meltabombs the chances of taking out a vehicle with an alpha strike are really high, take away the multi-melta and your relying on a single combi weapon and single meltabombs attack.

So whilst 50/50 isnt great combined with the others it makes a difference.

 

I guess my main questions is how have you found the survivability of these units? Is it worth going in with the idea it is a suicidal unit, and keeping it cheap, or utilising the storm to supress retaliation and kit the sarge out to crack some heads?

Generally they dont survive, storms are made of glass and the 5 man unit normally gets assaulted... of course if you dont get first turn they may outflank which increases thier survivability.

Ultimately your sacrificing two KPs per storm, HOWEVER you do so to mess up thier game plan before thier first turn, something which can never be undervalued.

A good alpha strike can win you the game before your opponent has his first turn, by taking out raiders with uber units or wrecking/immobilising certain vehicles you can funnel surviving tanks and have more turns for snipers to take down the now footslogging termies and ICs.

The flame storms can take out the scout and tac marines holding obs in cover.. whatever your aim just make sure these alpha strike units are used in the right way, it doesnt matter if they die if they take out all troops choices meaning you win by objectives.. it doesnt matter if they die to destroy a land raider with ccw termies or battlewagon containing lootas, as these units can affect games in a big way

 

I guess your list already answers this, but just wondering about the survivability of those alpha strikers. as if you can take that transport down in shooting, you could assualt the contents, but then, thye are usually CC specialists so perhaps it just isn't that great an idea anyway.

Its upto the players at the time and the nature of the lists, you have to make a judgement call on how much of your hammer to send ion the alpha strike, an late turn outlfanking ccw unit can make alot of difference.. i cant really teach this though as thier are alot of factors to manage.

ultimately you should shoot the choppy stuff and chop the shooty stuff, by taking down raiders, preds and vindies first turn, you take less damage which means more shots at the enemies footslogging elements.. its all basic maths really.

 

And also what sort of success do you get from the MM on the LSS? Is it that useful in the long run, as the heavy flamers just seem like a better option, but I'm not running an all scout list, so have dreadnaughts with MM in pods to get the job done from a MM perspective.

Other options maye be better, as you said fast melta with a higher BS is usually better, but i have a soft spot for this unit as it has doen so well for me in the past.. ive taken out dizens of rhino based tanks, rhinos, razors, preds and vindies, the odd whirlwind too.. at least half a dozen land raiders and as many battlewagons, ive even downed a monolith in one of my first game with the unit.

Ive only failed to kill two raiders with the unit knocking off weapons instead of wrecking or immobilising it.. you cant get around the damage table even with the +1s.. luck can never be truely removed.

 

The only point I would make is teh ap - on the shot guns. will certainly stop things from shooting, but dramatically decrease the odds of getting anything better on the damage chart.

i agree, they are next to useless but as they can be used on the charge it opens up the possibility of getting lucky, you have to take every chance you can.

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  • 8 months later...

First off, I hope I'm not being Necromantic here, I'd hate for the Inquisition to aim a flamer at me >.>

 

I wanted to point out an option for the Chaplain that you run with Khan. You state that Chaplains are the best, cheapest force-multiplier for your Khan squad, but I have another idea.

 

It makes for somewhat strange bed fellows, pairing Khan with Cassius, but Cassius is, in my opinion, the best point value HQ in the entire codex. Compare with the standard Chaplain... remove everything he has in common with Cassius and here's what you have left: master crafted combi-flamer with Hellfire shells, Toughness 6, and I don't have my codex handy but I believe he also has Feel No Pain on top of all that... for 25 points more than your standard Chaplain. By far a better choice unless you simply -must- put a Chaplain on a bike or in a jump pack harness, since Cassius does not get those options.

 

Everything else you've written has been an eye opener for me. Since the new codex came out, I've frequently used the LSS alpha strike as described, but otherwise I take Scouts as my primary Troop choices simply as fodder. Compared to a Tactical Squad's expense (and near uselessness), a 75-100 point Troop choice leaves plenty of points free to enhance the rest of the list. However, I'm now considering putting together the 10th Company because it really sounds like a fun list to play. Well done!

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10th company metagaming, thinking outside the box
the irony is that all scouts come in boxes......

 

I am not sure that melta bombs give +1 on the dam table because they have no AP value...

 

Nice one mate. Good read. I like how you highlight strong AT without the need for melta or lasconnons etc which soooo many people go on about as being important

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thanks mate, there are alot of misconceptions about 40k that should be questioned..

i have never used meltabombs as +1 on damage table, i cant find the section in the article, but if you can point it out i will change it.

 

 

Same, all it says in the BRB is that it's Strength 8 +2D6 for penetration. Doesn't say it has the melta rule or counts as AP1 anywhere.

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A great read. Tempted to try out an all scout force now.

 

Hello!

 

I was reading some of your other posts on the BA forum and just so you know, I've run an all scout force with the BA dex. Basically, I used 50 Scouts, a Reclusiarch as an HQ, a Sang. Priest to run with my Close Combat units, 1 Typhoon, 1 HF/MM Speeder and a Stormraven. It was very successful, the 'Raven was incredible with this army. Also, BA have the nice Baal Predators with the 'Scouts' rule. When I finish building mine it will deliver flamey goodness to the foe!

 

Scouts are in my opinion one of the most fun 'armies' to build, paint and play. They surprise a lot of people how tough/resilient they really are. I'm not a great general by any means, but each game is teaching me something new.

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A great read. Tempted to try out an all scout force now.

 

Hello!

 

I was reading some of your other posts on the BA forum and just so you know, I've run an all scout force with the BA dex. Basically, I used 50 Scouts, a Reclusiarch as an HQ, a Sang. Priest to run with my Close Combat units, 1 Typhoon, 1 HF/MM Speeder and a Stormraven. It was very successful, the 'Raven was incredible with this army. Also, BA have the nice Baal Predators with the 'Scouts' rule. When I finish building mine it will deliver flamey goodness to the foe!

 

Scouts are in my opinion one of the most fun 'armies' to build, paint and play. They surprise a lot of people how tough/resilient they really are. I'm not a great general by any means, but each game is teaching me something new.

 

 

Interesting. how do you find the loss of land speeder storms for your list?

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Interesting. how do you find the loss of land speeder storms for your list?

 

It kind of sucks, but I can use other fast attack choices, and up my squads to 10 men (rather than the usual 2 x 5 man Storm Crews). I also gave up Shirke, which in turn removes Fleet from my list, which is bad... even with Infiltrate and Scouts, I have to use cover more, and approach my battle plan from a different angle.

 

The Land Speeder Storm is a great vehicle, and an excellent model to build... I'm hoping down the road to be able to field both the Stormraven and LSS's together. I'm working on a new list, adding Scout Bikes to the mix. (40 infantry, 5 Bikes, 2 Land Speeders, plus the Raven.)

 

:rolleyes:

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  • 2 weeks later...
for me, ive considered using the BA dex for a few games, but i couldnt be without my LSS, it loses all feel to the army without at least one of these badboys zipping around making a nuisance.

 

I've played a few games now with the BA dex and it's not the same at all. While the 'Raven is a cool model and looks good with 50 Scouts around it, the LSS's really bring character to a Scout Army.

 

for fun games, I'll use the BA dex once in a while. But for the most part, it's Telion, Shrike and the Storms all the way! ( I may try a Khan bike list soon though...)

 

 

:mellow:

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  • 1 month later...

as a long-term stalker of this site, i am a massive fan of your tactics and run a similar themed army myself. this article has helped massively.

 

if you are suffer with ranged support why not try a rifleman dread? he works very effectively for me on av12 and less. have you considered IA8's korvidae model and maybe assault marines?

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if you are suffer with ranged support why not try a rifleman dread? he works very effectively for me on av12 and less. have you considered IA8's korvidae model and maybe assault marines?

 

Hi scatmandoo thanks for the kind words

i think most options have been considered and rejected over the years.. i have a very strict set of self imposed rules about my theme, neither of these options would fit unfortunately

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