PAGE Apocalypse 2014: The Defense of Kimball Prime

kingbreakers-icon

With the fall of Caldor IV and Rittenhouse Hive, yet another of Abaddon’s years-long black crusades continues to build momentum.  Gazing deep into sector holomaps, Kingbreakers’ leadership decides to make a stand on Kimball Prime.  Great works begin as the planet is made into a fortress world, with bunkers, shield generators, and innumerable weapons batteries built from the ice wastes of the poles to the sweltering jungles of the equator.  Here the traitor’s tide of war will be blunted, or the incursion will rage through the sector unstoppable.

Despite a snowstorm shortly before and a variety of other hiccups, most of the PAGE crew got together for its much planned 2014 New Year’s Apocalypse this weekend, to smashing success.  Brett, Colin, Lovell, Steve, Tom, and Warren joined armies to form the Forces of Discord.  Akil, Jason, Justin, Owen, and myself made up the Forces of Order.

Lots more photos are in the Flickr gallery.

The battle underway!

The battle underway!

Listen, we could spend all day rollin' butt loads of dice, or you and me could just Rochambeau right now and get a beer?

Listen, we could spend all day rollin’ butt loads of dice, or you and me could just Rochambeau right now and get a beer?

Armies

After extensive ad hoc rebalancing for missing players—presumably caught in the Warp—the two teams came out to about 20,400 points each, from an originally planned 24,000, including all Titans, superheavies, and gargantuan creatures.  The armies of Discord brought a variety of Chaos Marines, Daemons, Cultists, Traitor Guard, and Necrons, supported by a Reaver, Warhound, a Baneblade chassis, Greater Bloodthirster of Khorne, Great Brass Scorpion, all lead by Abaddon.  The Forces of Order brought together many allies, including Space Marines, Space Wolves, Dark Angels, Tau, and Imperial Guard, supported by a Reaver, Warhound, and three Baneblade chassis, lead by Librarian Rorschach.

The planet writhes in flames as the war grinds on to near stalemate.  Finally all the hosts come to a head in a single line of battle stretching across half the planet.  Desperate times at hand, the great heroes Grimnar, Belial, and Creed together with legendary commander Farsight hurl themselves into combat at the head of great columns of men and vehicles.  Awaiting them lies a brutal gallows roll of all the mightiest foes of the Imperium, from blackest Abaddon himself to the greatest daemons of the Warp, with even the machined strategist Imhotekh and all his advisors rising from a newly awoken Tomb Citadel to throw in his lot with the bid to take down an Imperial sector.  The last push begun, Captain Angholan clasps gauntlets with his battle brother Rorschach and embarks to the front, leaving the latter and his Council of Librarians to divine the Emperor’s light and guide the forces of order.

This planet is ours now.

This planet is ours now.

Party's on the other side of the table, boys!

Party’s on the other side of the table, boys!

Scenario

The board was 6′ x 17’4″, with teams each taking a 2ft long-edge deployment zone.  Chaos won zone selection in a roll-off, and then took first turn as well after bidding 5 minutes’ deployment.  The Imperium, expecting such a low bid from the heretics and having significant foot and vehicular forces to field, bid for a full 30 minutes of setup.  Discord placed a dual set of Void Shield Generators and Vengeance Battery fortifications, with a Necron Tomb Citadel nearby.  Loyalist fortifications included multiple Imperial Bunkers, Vengeance Batteries, and a Void Shield Generator creating a 12″ protective bubble over their central position.

Heretics placed one home objective in the Citadel, another safely ensconced within the overlapping Shield Generators, and targeted an immensely important fir tree among the ice caves on the Imperial flank for their opposed objective.  Kingbreakers declared their central command buildings as tightly clustered home objectives, while the Dark Angels and Tau targeted a critical defensive wall in the jungle temple on Discord’s far right flank as the breach point through which to break the crusade.

Table setup and deployment; click for larger view.

Table setup and deployment; click for larger view.

We followed standard 6th edition Apocalypse scoring for the match: Killing superheavies, gargantuans, and the designated supreme Warmaster are each worth a point; objectives are scored at multiple times and progressively increase in value, in this case after Turns 2, 4, and 5 (game end), and for 1, 2, and 3 points per objective each time.

Let's do this thing!  Steve's scratchbuilt Warhound Titan.

Let’s do this thing! Steve’s scratchbuilt Warhound Titan.

Battle

How quickly shift the tides of war!

Major axes of movement & reserve arrivals; click to enlarge.

Major axes of movement & reserve arrivals; click to enlarge.

Turn 1

Combat began hectically, with the defensive Imperials in particular rushing to activate all of their comparatively numerous models and ultimately skipping a fair bit of shooting when time ran out.  Chaos declared a Trophy Kill objective on Grimnar on the Imperial right flank and began pursuing it with a massive Traitor Guard armoured spearhead combined with Abaddon himself and his Terminator bodyguards.  Innumerable daemons spawned into existence, anchored to the Materium by a host of greater daemons bursting forth from the Warp at each corner of the battle and shrouding the field in their Tetragon of Darkness.  A massive Necron Pylon came into existence in the very center of the combat, while Necron Sentry Pylons also beamed into place around the Discord objectives.  Discord claimed a Baneblade chassis while Imperials killed the Pylon to gain one point each through the course of the first turn.

Necron, Traitor Guard, and Abaddon, what could go wrong?!

Necron, Traitor Guard, and Abaddon, what could go wrong?!

Turn 2

The Emperor’s light shone brightly in the next round as the Great Brass Scorpion approached Imperial lines but fell to massed multi-melta and lascannon fire.  Chaos’ foul Tetragon was also quickly broken, with several greater daemons assassinated at their anchor points.  Imperial shooting also took out a Baneblade chassis, and all this without giving up a kill point themselves.  Further, Discord discarded their previously earned point to enact the Lies of Tzeentch Strategic Resource and temporarily control the opposing Reaver, forcing it to friendly fire and obliterate a number of Dark Angels Terminators.  Fast moving Necron Destroyers rushing from their recently awoken Citadel did manage to contest the Space Wolves’ objective, leaving Order only 2 points on objectives versus the Discord 3, but the Imperials and allies still came out ahead after Turn 2.

Ohmygod, we're so behind schedule; I need to take a break...

Ohmygod, we’re so behind schedule; I need to take a break…

Turn 3

Quickly though the clouds darkened over the Imperium.  Abaddon and friends bested Logan Grimnar in personal combat, achieving a Trophy Kill strategic asset and claiming 3 points.  Simultaneously the traitor Reaver and tank columns took down a loyalist Baneblade chassis for another point, the earth shaking crunch as its flaming pieces hit the ground second only to that of Grimnar.  These combined losses in the polar fighting left the Space Wolves distraught and open to systematic decimation in the coming turns.

Ongoing tremendous amounts of heavy shooting also did little to stop the inexorable flanking march of the Greater Bloodthirster onto the Imperial’s command bunker.  Only sustained sacrificial delaying tactics and careful positioning of many Space Marines, Imperial Guard, and Tau vehicles and infantry continued to keep it from reaching the Kingbreakers’ encampment and cracking open the critical Void Shields.  Ultimately Order gained no points and ceded its lead in the planet-wide battle royale.

For the greater good!  Blood for the Blood God!

For the greater good! Blood for the Blood God!

Turn 4

Approaching the endgame, the match pitched into a grinding battle of quarter inches and small chances.  Discord caused a cataclysmic explosion on the jungle flank by exploding the Imperial Reaver.  More damningly, the raging Bloodthirster, chosen warrior of Khorne, achieved his primary objective and crushed in a single blow the Imperials’ Void Shield Generator, exposing the command bunker and both objectives previously under its aegis.

Recovering from their mounting losses though, Order achieved several critical successes.  Hulking in screaming victory over the savaged ruins of the Shield Generator, the massive Bloodthirster was yet again lit up and wracked by fire from every possible weapon across half the field of battle and finally succumbed, sent back to its blood god at the very door of the Imperial command bunker.  The great warmonger Abaddon was similarly forced to flee the battle in the face of mounting personal injury, yielding Order 2 points for these kills.

Significantly, the Dark Angels’ long battle through the heart of an equatorial jungle temple paid dividends.  With the bulk of the Chaos flank guards tied up by the Unforgiven, the Tau, Imperial Guard, and Kingbreakers were able to sweep the targeted strategic breach point.  At the same time, Kroot reserves and Imperial Guard bombardments arrived to reinforce the Space Wolves struggling under massive combined assault and help prevent further Necron and Traitor Guard incursion.  These actions denied Discord a third objective for the second round of scoring, which awarded two objectives each.

Air cav inbound!

Air cav inbound!

Turn 5

In its last moments the epic battle for Kimball Prime reached a fever pitch of critical moves, last-chance shots, and final coups de grâce.  Resurrecting the courage of Russ, Space Wolves squadrons regrouped into secure positions overlooking the bizarrely anonymous Discord objective in their midst.  Charged thrusts from elite soldiers and fast attack vehicles of the Tau, Dark Angels, Imperial Guard, and Kingbreakers also swept away the straggling Chaos Cultists and lesser daemons attempting to resecure the breachpoint, the nearby traitor Warhound stomping in rage at its inability to stop the loyalist troops swarming about its feet.

These are not the droids you're looking for!

These are not the droids you’re looking for!

But even as the Forces of Order prepped for these advances on the flanks, Discord piled all of its remaining heavy shooting onto the Kingbreakers’ command headquarters, the Bloodthirster’s suicidal, singleminded, successful mission to cripple the Shield Generator having rendered it exposed for the first time in the battle.  With the points near tied and Discord’s two home objectives safely held but the third stripped away and Order claiming its own flank objective, everything came down to the two on the bunker complex.

With nearly all other long range shooting eliminated or crippled, the traitor Reaver and Warhound Titans combined fire to strip away the bunker’s internal Void Shields and then pummel it with the most powerful weaponry ever fielded.  They were prevented though from directly targeting the most critical troop units and the bunker itself by a well placed Shield Generator Strategic Asset, carefully saved for exactly a deeply dire moment such as this.  A precious few Forest Guard platoon members survive the incoming blasts, even as nearby Kingbreakers Tactical Squads rush in to shore them up.  The Forces of Order continued to hold their two home objectives.

The last of the flanking Obliterators dead and Skarbrand sent back to the Warp, Captain Angholan pauses to survey the battlefield and catch his breath.  His muscles all clench though and his eyes yield to horror as he turns just in time to watch a final massive overcharged plasma blast from a retreating tainted Reaver slam into the newly unshielded command bunker, instantly obliterating its top ramparts and engulfing an extraordinary area in blazing gouts of flame.  Sprinting into the blinding rockrete dust, he calls on all his decades of steely training to choke back surging memories of the fall of Forestway and his own long entrapment in the collapsed capital building.  Armor servos shriek in protest as he rips apart nanobar and flings away huge chunks of rockrete.  Finally tossing aside an entire interior wall, he falls to his knees.  Ahead of him is a large energy bubble supporting all the tremendous rubble of the upper levels.  Huddled inside are a few all-but-dead yet still living Guardsmen and Space Marines.  At the center is his great, troubled friend Rorschach and the Kingbreakers’ Council of Librarians, eyes closed and faces a rictus of concentration from the inconceivable effort of maintaining the telekinetic shield.  With Angholan frozen in relieved shock, Squad Scolirus finally catches up and slips around their Captain to begin carefully extricating the survivors.  The battle is won.

Kingbreakers dance in the flames!

Kingbreakers dance in the flames!

Results

The Forces of Order break Discord’s Apocalypse winning streak!

Reap the tallyman, Nurgle!

Reap the tallyman, Nurgle!

Order claimed 5 of the 7 possible kill points offered by the Discord forces by tagging the Pylon, Scorpion, Bloodthirster, Baneblade chassis, and the Warmaster (Abaddon), leaving the Warhound and Reaver on the table.  Order also held two objectives after Turns 2 and 4 as well as three after game end, for a total of 20 points.

Discord claimed 3 of the 6 possible bonus points offered by the Order forces by eliminating the Warhound and two Baneblade chassis, leaving the Reaver standing.  It also claimed 3 more in achieving a Trophy Kill on Grimnar, declared as one of their Strategic Asset selections.  However it spent 1 to enact Lies of Tzeentch.  Discord also held three objectives after Turn 2, as well as two after Turn 4 and game end, for a total of 18 points.

Final disposition; click to enlarge.

Final disposition; click to enlarge.

Game Thoughts

In a game like this there’s a thousand big and small things of note that happen.  These are just a couple very top level notable observations.

Range and Formations

It was really helpful to have Owen, a newcomer to our Apoc fights, be able to make the battle.  That made a big difference in equalizing the 6th edition experience levels across the two teams, helping Order play both better and within the time limits.  Tactically speaking, it was particularly helpful that he plays Guard and has played a few large battles before as he thus brought a significant increase in Order’s long range, heavy shooting.  On an 18′ long table even the normally impressive 48″ reach of a lascannon just doesn’t amount to much.  Without that we would have been in real trouble.  I was really counting on some of the missing players’ armies to provide the ability to go out offensively and hit things at distance, but the Guard shooting at range probably present a safer way to do that anyway.

Sometimes you just gotta call in the veterans.

Sometimes you just gotta call in the veterans.

Despite the story text above, my Librarians were yet again a huge, huge disappointment.  At this point I’m pretty used to how limited in appeal they are for normal play.  But I had high hopes for the Apocalypse formation I fielded, basically 5 Librarians potentially tossing out a D weapon large blast every turn.  Literally nothing walked into their line of sight and range though that wasn’t immediately swept away by much less risky shooting.  One consequence of having two redundantly Void Shielded, heavily armed encampments staring at each other across a relatively open expanse was that almost nothing ventured into what became a completely empty dead man’s land across the desert terrain.  I thought about having them disembark the bunker to get better sightlines, but even then not that many targets wandered close enough, and our little Warmaster would be out running around with giant Greater Bloodthirsters and such running amok in close quarters.  I love the models & concept so much, but…

In stark contrast to the Kingbreakers' flaming self-entombment, the Necron basically stand around all day just talkin' about how awesome their fortress is, not even noticing it blasting stuff on its own.

In stark contrast to the Kingbreakers’ flaming self-entombment, the Necron basically stand around all day just talkin’ about how awesome their fortress is, not even noticing it blasting stuff on its own.

The general point there though is that the Apocalypse formations are basically dumb.  They’re either (1) incredibly hard to field, (2) very brittle, or (3) have limited effect.  To (1), of the Space Marine formations, the majority involve fielding a full company of troops or a weird collection of very specific HQs.  On (2), a great many of their effects can be easily defeated, e.g., no one walking within two whole feet of my Librarians, or Brett’s Tetragon of Darkness being popped almost immediately.  For (3), due to the extra points available with the missing players Justin did actually field and use a Space Wolves Great Company.  But despite the large number of models and points that entails, I couldn’t tell you that I noticed the benefits.  Similarly, I actually fielded the requirements for a Space Marine Predator Assassin Squadron.  But I didn’t select the formation because it seemed more limiting than useful.

Hey, hey, buddy, don't start nothin', won't be nothin'!

Hey, hey, buddy, don’t start nothin’, won’t be nothin’!

Balance

Obviously critical to the success of all of our Apocalypse games is the effort put beforehand into balancing the headliner models.  Coincidentally but unfortunately, the Forces of Discord have many more Titans, superheavies, and gargantuans at hand than Order.  Fortunately though they have so many that there’s enough—and they’re more than willing—to share them around and balance things out.

But, to that need to put a lot of effort into balancing things, D weapons are pretty dumb.  Since they’re so strong against everything, they make everything else all uniformly worthless.  With no protection of any kind being allowed against them, there’s no reason to field anything but the cheapest possible options and put all the points toward your own D weapons.  Given that they’re both equally dead if tagged, and equally unable to strike back at the shooter, why field 14 point Marines when a 5 point Guardsman is just as useless?  A ~250 point Landraider versus a 55 point Chimera?  Previously I had mixed feelings about the recent expansion of D weapons into the regular game.  Watching them up close again though has really pushed me to be very concerned.

Yep...  Good luck with that axe, buddy!

Yep… Good luck with that axe, buddy!

Similarly but in the other direction, the new Void Shields fortifications are probably also a problem.  I don’t have as much of an issue with them because ultimately they don’t directly remove models, and they’re somewhat readily countered on their own as well as much more internally balanced—you do what the Bloodthirster did: Walk right in, get protected from remote shooting by the Void Shields themselves, and then smash them.  But they’re almost certainly too cheap though for such a massive buff to a potentially large number of units.

Conclusion

Beyond that, I’m going to save for another post some thoughts on organizing and executing Apocalypse battles.  Ultimately we all collectively put a lot of thought into crafting a good plan and come at the game with the right mindset, and that all paid off in overcoming near disaster with multiple missing players and instead having a truly great day of gaming.

Again, more photos are in the Flickr gallery.  Till next time; the Emperor protects!

Huh... I guess he's really good with that axe?  Sergeant Harmon contests the Discord flank objective!

Huh… I guess he’s really good with that axe? Sergeant Harmon contests the Discord flank objective!

40k: Redcap’s 1250pt Tournament

kingbreakers-iconRedcap’s December 40k tournament went off well yesterday, ten people attending.  The majority of armies were loyalist Marines, with a sprinkling of Chaos, Eldar, Tau, and Orks.  Colin’s Noise Marines wound up second, Brett’s Orks somewhere in the middle.  I only finished seventh, getting annihilated in the first game by Owen’s Blood Angels, which went on to win, and a closely fought but ultimately crushing loss to Jeremy’s Daemons in the third.

Benn and Adam have Redcap’s 40k tournaments super dialed at this point.  All the small but critical stuff a bunch of us have asked for over time, like posted  terrain specifications and tournament standings formulas, are all getting done, and notably lacking at other similar venues.  As always the missions are straight forward and well balanced, with a number of critical details from the book missions adjusted, like setting a fixed and even numbers of objectives where appropriate.  This diversity of nice looking, well playing tables also really demonstrated their excellent terrain collection, especially with a lot of very thematic setups.  I myself played in a French village, in a lush greenland canyon, and a parched, corrupted desert.  Other tables featured a snowy border checkpoint, ruined mega cathedral, and Imperial loading dock.  Pretty sweet!

Orks invading... no, running away from... an Imperial dockyard.

Orks invading… no, running away from… an Imperial dockyard.

More photos are in the Flickr gallery; I was able to get at least a few of most of the armies.

Army

In dropping my usual list(s) down to 1250 points I wound up with one that was built of my standard elements but felt very different overall:

  • Capt Angholan—Vulkan
  • Sternguard x5 w/ w/ 3x Combi-Meltas
  • Tacticals x10 w/ Razorback, Vet Sgt, Powerfist, Plasmagun, Missile Launcher
  • Tacticals x10 w/ Rhino, Vet Sgt, Melta Bombs, Meltagun, Missile Laucher
  • Devastators x5 w/ Vet Sgt, 2x Plasmacannons, 2x Heavy Bolters
  • Predators x2 w/ Autocannon, Heavy Bolter sponsons
  • Aegis Defense Line w/ Quad-gun

Notably missing are the Librarian, the Sternguard’s Drop Pod, my numerous Landspeeders, and fewer Troops than I usually run even at this point level.  From these changes it was much less alpha/early-strike oriented, and much less able to spam camp objectives.

It’s worth noting that all the games were played on 4×4 boards.

Round 1

First up was Purge the Alien against Owen’s Black Templars-disguised Blood Angels.  This was brutal.  To a large extent I think I was just rusty, not having played at all since last month’s Alternate Universes tournament and still being hesitant enough with 6th edition for that to have a big impact.  I could definitely tell the difference in my play between the 1st and 3rd rounds.

There were really two problems.  One was that my table side was dominated by two large impassable buildings, situated such that I only had two small pockets with clear firing lanes on opposite table edges to deploy into.  With my new gunline oriented army vibe this is a big problem.  I debated castling up behind the buildings almost entirely, but then I would have gotten only at best one round of shooting off before getting assaulted.  In the end my army wound up divided in half with two components relatively unable to support each other due to the terrain.  Owen was thus able to specifically pit his dudes against their best match in my army, e.g., keeping his Land Raider away from my Sternguard melta-bubble and crushing Tacticals on the other table edge.

Damn it, people, I said everybody better bring melta, *everybody*!

Damn it, people, I said everybody better bring melta, *everybody*!

The other issue was his army, essentially a tight, hard brick with only seven units.  Through the first couple turns the only things facing me were that Land Raider Redeemer, a Mortis Pattern Contemptor Dreadnought, a well hidden TL Lascannon Razorback, and some Scouts tucked away in his backfield.  That basically meant I was staring down AV 14, AV 13, and a serious cover save.  With just a few (combi-) meltas on hand, and none particularly mobile at that, the Land Raider was basically unstoppable.  The Contemptor similarly shrugged off what limited Str 7+ shooting I could apply to it, while it in turn rained down tons of high strength shots.

In fairly narrative fashion, the Contemptor climbed up into the top of a ruined steeple and began raining down high strength shots while the Land Raider drove itself like a wedge forward into one of my encampments under its baleful gaze.  A Reclusiarch and Death Company then piled out and annihilated what few Kingbreakers were left standing, turning this into a complete rout.

Hahaha, I will rule this world like a king!  LOLz!

Hahaha, I will rule this world like a king! LOLz!

Somewhat ironically, my traditional lists that I’ve been moving away from and left behind almost entirely this tournament would have been much better suited to this opponent.  Owen would be tough no matter what, and I could do better with this weekend’s list in a rematch when I’m less fuzzy, but this is basically exactly the opponent for which my Melta-Pod Sternguard/Landspeeder Multi-melta fleet/Vulkan re-roll army and aggresive, mobile play-style was designed.  Damn it!

Round 2

Next up was John, a new player, and his Dark Angels, in the Scouring.  To a large extent I had a number of significant lucky breaks go my way this game.  First, tragically for his entirely Deep Striking army, we wound up on a table with tons of rock columns.  I then won table edge selection and used that to fill up the single clear area on the entire board with all of my dudes.  No stranger to aggressive Drop Pod tactics myself, I was careful to leave almost no space for him to come down within my lines, and to have a lot of overlapping fire fields on anything that did land nearby.  The highest value objective also came up right in my ideal location.

Let's go this way!

Let’s go this way!

The terrain, my deployment, and bad scatter all worked to put his Drop Pods down in unfortunate locations.  His warlord Librarian and a Command Squad with Banner of Devastation were wiped out immediately after landing, having only managed to take out a Predator.  In the final substantial lucky break for me, one of his two teleporting Terminator squads mishapped itself out of the game.

Supported by my firebase and with a large portion of his army out unduly early, I was able to spread pretty thinly, with a Combat Squad on one objective, a Tactical Rhino advancing to another, Sternguard eventually running to and clearing one of the Dark Angels’, and Capt Angholan + Squad Scolirus wiping out another DA squad to claim a third objective and a crushing victory.

Though they didn’t last long enough to have a ton of impact, I did like John’s Command Squad fielding multiple meltaguns and a Banner of Devastation.  At some point I expect to start fielding a Kingbreakers Command, it’s almost definitely become a worthwhile & efficient unit this edition.

Noooope, can't get out that way.

Noooope, can’t get out that way.

One very interesting thing that happened in this game was that I actually wound up boxed out in deploying my three objectives.  Between me placing two in my quarter (Vanguard Strike deployment) and John running his across the center diagonal, the geometry worked out that I could not put my third anywhere near my dudes and had to put it in his table half.  Granted, by necessity that means one of his was not too far from my corner, but I was a bit flummoxed for a moment.  I don’t think I’ve ever had that really happen before, an unanticipated consequence of the small 4×4 tables and large number of objectives (6) that I should have anticipated better.

Round 3

Finally I faced Jeremy and his Chaos Daemons in Big Guns Never Tire.  His army is hilarious, in a positive way, because it consists entirely of 6 units: 4 big daemons, and 2 groups of 10 little daemons.  It’s just funny to look around at the various hordes and fleets of flyers and big vehicles… and then see his force very neatly arranged onto an 8.5×11 sheet of paper.

CHAAAAOOOSSSSSSSS!!!

CHAAAAOOOSSSSSSSS!!!

Deployment

I put one objective deep in a corner and he did the same across the table, probably meaning that I would have had to go straight through his heavy hitters to get to it, rather than flanking around like I would hope.  My second also went along my back edge reasonably close to the first, and he put his second at table center, conveniently enough in the middle of a Chaos Shrine offering improved invulnerable and cover saves to the Daemons.

I gave him first turn, thinking otherwise he’d just deploy entirely into reserve and leave me nothing to shoot at.  Some plaguebearers camped out in a ruin around the Chaos backfield objective and basically removed themselves entirely from the game at that point.  Certainly the Kingbreakers never got over there to ask what they were doing or if we could have the objective instead.  The Khorne Prince and two generic Princes then set up a flying vanguard phalanx at table center in front of a Keeper of Secrets.

Let's do this thing.

Let’s do this thing.

Kingbreakers took a few risks in deployment.  Unusually for me, I broke both Tacticals into Combat Squads, on the theory that:

  • Daemons would eat them in assault no matter how big the squads were;
  • One each could then be used as a speed bump, sacrificing itself to keep bad guys away from its partner on an objective for another turn;
  • One would then be able to fire at a daemon and force a grounding check, hopefully enabling the other with a heavy weapon to fire at full effect.

Contrary to the lessons of the first round and my usual preferences for large self-supporting groups, I also broke the army into three groups.  Sternguard, Tacticals, and a Predator camped out in an Aegis encirclement around one objective.  Devastators and the second Predator camped out on the opposite table edge.  Angholan and Tacticals prepared to move toward the center objective, leaving behind a Combat Squad on another.  The main rational was that on a 4×4 table and very clear board with broad sightlines, my relatively large number of 36″ weapons would still be able to support each other all across the back edge, which turned out to be largely true.

Early goings.

Early goings.

Fight!

Those overlapping fire fields then went to work on the daemons as they flitted about.  One generic Prince went down immediately, though he would later make a brief reappearance via Warp Tether.  The Predators both went down and various Marines got Vector Striked, but the two fire camps did a good job at taking down the Khorne and generic Princes that split up to go after them.

In the midst of and following that, the center field featured extended tight action with the Keeper of Secrets.  Angholan was deceived by its tricksy ways and rolled four 1s on his buffed out 2+/3++ to die immediately in combat with the beast.  Tacticals strove bravely against it but were slowly chewed down.  By the time supporting fire could end its rampage, Kingbreakers were left with a single Troop unit to hold the home objectives.

Simultaneously with the end of those fights, a unit of Daemonettes spawned onto the center objective.  Faced with a tough choice, Sternguard trusted the Tacticals to do their duty to the Emperor and handle the Keeper while they attempted to clear this horde off the shrine.  Their valiant effort was for nought though as the daemons managed to sweep them up in their claws, and carried that momentum onto the remaining Tacticals and the Kingbreakers’ home turf.  The Marines stood their ground staunchly, but could not ultimately claim the field of battle.

TO THE DEATH.

TO THE DEATH.

Outcome

Like many great battles, in the end this swung from pretty tight to a crushing win for Jeremy.  I could only contest the one objective—with a single Marine, locked in combat—plus Slay the Warlord, while he claimed an objective, Slay, First Blood, and Linebreaker for the victory.

At one point near the end I could have played more strongly for a draw by sending the Sternguard to support the already-stricken Tacticals on my second objective against the oncoming Keeper.  I consciously decided though to risk a loss and play for the win by attempting to clear the center objective, hoping the Tacticals would also wipe the Keeper and remain to hold their objective.

That didn’t work out, but I can’t complain.  It was a tight and fun game, and any number of small changes in rolls could have tipped it either way.  Even just Angholan (Vulkan) not uterrly failing all of his saves and getting in a single wound on the Keeper would have a good chance of leading to at least a draw.

Umm, yeah, to the death?  Whatever those guys said...  I guess?  Help!

Umm, yeah, to the death? Whatever those guys said… I guess? Help!

Analysis

I’ll have to think more about Daemons and first turn now that they can actually deploy rather than spawn.  Particularly with a bunch of flying creatures and their relative survivability to shooting making it more feasible for the opponent to start them on the board, there’s probably little reason to give them the first go.

In picking table sides I did choose wrongly.  They were both very clear so I didn’t think too hard about it.  There was though on my side a very small impassable building in the center of my deployment zone, while the other side was totally clear between the edges.  That meager couple inches of blocking though did eliminate just a couple potential shots, particularly approaching the endgame.  Though only a slight change, in such tight action in my home field, having those could have made a huge difference.

One huge standout in this game were the heavy bolters in my Devastators.  The unit got decimated by Vector Strikes, but they continued to hang tough and contributed enormously to the game.  Their ability to target the flying creatures and attempt to force ground checks was a big deal, while the plasma cannons were almost useless in this particular game.  I’ve always maintained that the 2x Plasma, 2x Bolter Dev mix is pretty good, even when it was overpriced last edition, and this is yet another reason why in the new 6th edition rules.

For the emperor.

For the emperor.

Lastly, one small note is that in general I really dislike such clear boards despite my recent shooting-oriented efforts.  Redcap’s boards and terrain look so good though that I really like the visuals of the empty-ish, desert themed boards they make, and they ensure just enough key terrain on to make it interesting game-wise.

General Thoughts

This was a great day, even after I got crushed in the opening.  The small boards and well thought out, thematic terrain looked particularly good.  I was also pleased to fight three very different armies, from Owen’s mechanized Power Armour, to John’s alpha-strike Drop Pods & Terminators, to Jeremy’s extremely compact Daemon force, with an especially good game to end the day.  I’m not super sure how I feel about the increasingly static shooting nature of my army, but it’s reasonably credible, and has at least been interesting to experiment with.

Again, more photos are in the Flickr gallery.

Boogedy-boogedy-boo!

Boogedy-boogedy-boo!

Betrayer

betrayer-coverContinuing my Horus Heresy kick, over the weekend I read Betrayer by Aaron Dembski-Bowden.  I  was a little hesitant to grab this book but did so because it comes up on a number of best-of-series lists, not all of which are reliable (too much focus on action).  Turns out though Betrayer is very much possibly the best 40k/30k novel I’ve read, and certainly among the top.  Part of this I attribute to Dembski-Bowden apparently being an actual player of the game, something I don’t get from a number of the authors.  Not that it’s necessary, but it might bring an extra level of love to the work.

There are no spoilers in these thoughts.

Characters

Here that love’s paid off because he’s done the totally unexpected: Made the World Eaters, Angron, and especially Khârn possibly the most fascinating characters in the entire series.  My hesitation about the book was precisely because by the 40th century they never come across as particularly interesting.  Mindless killing machines, they do what they say—Kill!  Maim!  Burn!—and little else.  Their action sequences are boring, and they have basically no characterization to speak of.  Their appearance also raises a lot of uncomfortable questions, like how could such a bloodthirsty, disorganized fighting unit actually function?

The answer is barely.  This novel really explores in flashback and discussion the degradation of the legion and how costly their every minor victory has become.  A number of the characters spend a fair amount of time trying to come to grips with how precisely they can keep fighting when their extreme lack of discipline leaves them exposed and vulnerable any number of ways.  The action and training scenes demonstrate this well and between that, the characters’ discussions, and a healthy dose of the Warp, it’s an interesting progression that renders the 40k world more plausible (well, within the universe’s basic assumptions).

More importantly, Angron makes a good run here to be the most tragic of the Heresy characters.  That’s a big claim to make given Horus, but the novel makes it pretty credible.  My favorite though is Khârn.  He’s fascinating, and realizing that in the first couple pages is basically mind blowing given that I’d previously never found him particularly interesting.  He has a band of friends, many of them with their own solid characterizations—especially Argel Tal of the Word Bearers—and he has doubts, so many doubts.  Khârn’s so compelling, I’m almost motivated right now to go model up some Chaos Marine champion to represent him (I’m only 50/50 on his actual model).  Khârn’s depth and wisdom come across so well, it only highlights his glee and fury in battle.  The first, brief appearance of his catchphrase at a desperate moment is chilling: Kill, maim, burn.  Betrayer manages to make all of these utter villains extremely sympathetic and then next chapter they’re turning your stomach as they torture and murder with abandon, an excellent feat of writing.

Also excellently done, for the book that had every possibility of being the least humanized and the most purely testosterone driven given its very male lead legions and characters, there are a number of solid women characters.  In particular, Captain Sarrin of the Conqueror has a lot of pages and comes across strongly.  She’s key in manufacturing one of the standout scenes mentioned below, has a number of welcome interactions with her friend Khârn in the heat of battle, and it’s actually really cool to read with what glee and skill she goes about fighting the Imperialists.  In the grimdark future there is war and blood for everyone, not just men.

Fight!

As discussed regarding Know No Fear, 40k and especially the Heresy series has a ton of potential depth to it, and it’s the more character-study oriented novels that are the best.  All too often though they devolve into purely extended action sequences, as that novel does.  Here though a perfect balance is struck.  The action and character studies are so interwoven throughout the text, and often set within each other, that Betrayer never becomes a drawn out, boring slugfest, nor does it ever slow down and become purely dialog and thought with no chainswords or powerfists.  In terms of the technical execution of the plot and characters, the text’s arrangement is really well done.

Great Scenes

On top of all the overall excellence, the novel has a large number of great scenes.  Just a few of the most memorable, holding back the details:

  • Lorgar’s desperate battle to retrieve Angron, and the latter’s desperate struggle to then save the former.  This is the best primarch battle scene I can recall.  Forget inhumanly fast sword strikes and mega-punches.  There are goddamn vehicles being thrown like toys, and it’s not the least cheesy.
  • The legion’s censure of Delvarus after the battle of Armatura.  This opens with a great tense hangar bay standoff, once that captures that might alone is not always right, then pages later comes back with a darkly beautiful scene of fraternity, regret, and forgiveness.
  • Lhorke’s remembrance of Khârn and Argel Tal in the gladiator pits.  It’s a touching view of two soul brothers, ultimate warriors not yet mindless death machines, and has a rare touch of fun and mirth among a life of constant war.
  • Lorgar and Angron discussing the latter’s pre-heresy fight with Russ.  It has a sadness and quiet to it that’s heartfelt, with Lorgar pained because Angron doesn’t understand, and Angron pained because he does but can’t, shackled and crippled by his past.

Summary

Basically, go read it.  A fair bit of Heresy background and 40k foreknowledge is required to really appreciate everything.  Even having read a bunch and knowing a lot of 40k lore, even I wish just a little that I had read more of the Heresy series before reading this to catch all the references and character history.  But it’s got depth and action to spare so this is a minor concern.  Betrayer is an awesome novel that every 40k fan should really appreciate.

Kill. Maim. Burn.

Kill. Maim. Burn.

Update: Total sidenote, if the Khan model looked more like this conversion I’d be all about it.  The official model though is just a little to goofy and busy looking.  By absolutely no means the worst of the older GW sculpts, but after this read I really hope he gets an update or Forge World model sometime to be a bit more serious and dramatic.