Thursday, September 12, 2013

Getting started (or how not to do it like I did)

In this exciting episode, I will talk about logic, or the lack thereof, when building a space marine army.

When I finally worked up the nerve to start building my army, the first thing I did wrong was to start buying models randomly, without a thought for the rules or army building. What I did do was buy stuff that looked cool or inspired me to buy more stuff. All the while putting them together wrong. By wrong, I mean not legal for play. After 2-3 models I picked up the codex. As I absorbed the pages, which took me about a month. I realized, to my horror, That I was doing it all wrong. I set out to right my wrongs. I started hanging out at my FLGS. I watched as Marine players fielded their armies. I gained a glimpse of army-building. It was also at this point that I met my new gaming buddy, Grumpy Guardsmen. Grumpy and I hit it off well. We discussed the Marines in general. We talked tactics and tried to figure the best course of building for me. 

So with that being said, let me now impart my wisdom to you. So that you, the reader, may gain from my mistakes.

Step one: Go watch people play.
And by this I mean,"Watch the game all the way through, to learn what-army-you-like's play-style."

 It is easy to go back now and correct my errors. I have spent well over a 1000 dollars in models and can pretty much field what I like. But for the new guy, this is the opportunity to really suss out what works for you. 
Ask questions. Not, "Wanna be my friend" questions. Direct questions. "Why did you choose that army" or "What makes that unit so special". Everyone playing that I know will gladly talk to you. Some of us are a bit more grumpy while in a game (me). All of us, will however stop and talk to you about the hobby. Goob is half the hobby. The meta game of army-lists. 
Try to find either the "fluff" or "style of play" army that suites you through your questions. Don't just jump on the first thing that looks cool. Look for that "I must have that" aspect that will give you the staying power throughout your early days of losing... a lot.

Step two: Go buy the books- Base Rule Book (BRB) and your codex.
Read the BRB. No really, read it. Your codex has so many cool rules and things to play with, but if you don't understand charging through difficult terrain, your early days are going to suck. Trust me, I know. Once you have the general understanding of the rules, dive into your codex. Learn each units strengths and weaknesses. Try to understand the synergies between the units themselves. And not just the obvious, spelled out in your codex ones. EX: Telion with a scout squad, obvious. Running Rhinos with your Tacticals, obvious. Using Telion on a quad gun, not so obvious.

Granted the examples I am laying out are pretty simple ones. But they make my point for me.

Try to really see the strength of your army as a whole, not just single units and the awesome ability they have.

Step three: Build your first army-list, THEN buy the models.
If you have made it this far and not have bought a model. Then you, my friend, have a amazing willpower. I would already be 20 models in. The point of this exercise is not to structure your hobby, just give you some better buying power.
So at this point we begin the most agonizing part. Building your list. Following the force organization chart. Try to get the most bang for the buck. All while trying to build that great tactic you dreamed up. Trust me you will dream up some wild tactics. Half of which are either horribly illegal or just plain mean.

 Then take your list to your gaming store of choice and find the pieces.

If you want and have the willpower, take your list to other gamers. Bell of Lost Souls, Bolter and Chainsword, Dakka Dakka are all great websites to help test your lists. They each have Army-list sections on their forums. Go to your FLGS and ask the guys playing there what they think. Don't be shy. We might show you a flaw in your army, you didn't see.

With all this said and done, buy your models. Assemble them so they reflect your lists. Use the"What you see is what you get" rule. If a guy has a Boltgun, put it on the model. It will save you the heart ache of having to remember who is carrying what while playing. Try to not get carried away. Not that easy, at least for me. Build only what you need for your lists. Keep the extra bits. They will be handy on future models.

Step four: Paint your models.
OK this is my downfall. I suck at painting. I have an amazing wife that is brilliant at painting. I am truly the luckiest man alive. I however, could a rats butt about painting models. I just want to thrash stuff. That being said, I have played guys that enjoy the immersion and without my opponents, I have no game. So at least make an effort. Maybe not a pro paint job, but at least prime/basecoat/and one highlight color.

With all this being said, go forth. Build armies and conquer your foes! Or at the very least, build your army with a bit more confidence.

I hope this helps.

ATSKNF,
T/Z

Friday, August 23, 2013

The new guy on the block...

So I have decided to use this crazy blog thing to outline my experiences with my new war-gaming hobby in the hopes that others may gain from my experiences. Yes there are all sorts of war-gaming blogs out there, in the interwebs. My blog is more for me than you, anyways. I will endeavor to discuss the hobby from a new guy point of view. What problems I encountered and what solutions I came up with (with a little help from my friends!). 


Disclaimer: I only play 40k. This is not the whole of war-gaming. Just the part I choose to take part in. I know its dated and expensive. (Curses GW, WHY!!!!) I just really love the Space marines, and more so the Ultramarines. I will not regale you with the boring story of how this came to be. Just that it's a stated fact, from the onset. 
Also, as I said before this is an expensive habit. I have hustled a goodly portion of my army through craigslist, eBay, friend deals. I am in no way saying not to buy from your FLGS (friendly local gaming store, for the unenlightened- yes I had to ask the first time I saw it). Only that this was a convenient method to get started, for me. I have, since my start in the hobby, made many purchases with my local store.(Much love to Gabi and Olympic Cards and Comics)
So with that said, and all claims of grandiose pompous knowledge of the amazing-ness of my skills thrown out the window, I will begin posting the tale of my beat downs!

ATSKNF,