Epic Battle Report: Eldar v Chaos

Net Epic Evolution Battle Report: Eldar v Chaos 7,000 points

Introduction:

Since last week's Marines v Eldar battle report seemed to go down a storm - a massive thanks to the hundreds of you who read it (and those who watched the video on YouTube)! - it seemed like a no-brainer to run another! Once again, I'll be using my Net Epic Evolution rules to run the game. As an experiment, I've decided to allow units on Charge orders to fire - provided they are not engaging enemies in Close Combat - with a -1 penalty to hit. For anyone not in the know, the Evolution rules are my own variant of the Net Epic rules which, in turn, are a fan version of 2nd Edition Epic/Space Marine rules by Games Workshop. So without further ado, let's get on with the action!

For those of you who are keen for more, be sure to click on the Labels tab on this blog and then select Epic 40K - there's a 10 battle Orks v Squats campaign in the archives for you to enjoy! The Epic War! rules which I developed to run such a campaign can also be found here!

I've made a highlights video which you can watch below, but read on if you want the full story!

Scenario:

The Eldar have identified a major incursion by Chaos forces - predominantly Khorne and Tzeentch armies - on the green world of Enrathea and sent their own army to cleanse and eradicate the corruption.

Both sides have 7,000 point armies and are aiming to score 60 Victory Points (VPs) to win the battle. Victory Points are won by breaking enemy formations or seizing any of the 8 objectives. Each objective is worth 5 VPs.

Army Lists: 

Once again I'm using Net Epic costings which are better balanced than 2nd edition costings. 

Eldar:


Avatar: Free
Defender Warhost: 850
Jetbike Host: 550
Spirit Host: 500
Falcon Host: 450

2 x Cobra: 500
Tempest Squadron: 550
Nightwing Squadron: 300
2 x Dark Reapers 500
2 x Howling Banshees: 300 
2 x Striking Scorpions: 300
2 x Swooping Hawks: 300
Wave Serpent Squadron: 150
Fire Prism Cannon: 50

Exarchs: 400
Warlock Titan w/2 Psychic Lance + Las-cannon & Missile Launcher Wings): 650
Revenant Scout Titans: 500
Harlequins: 150

Total: 7,000 points


Chaos:


Primarch Angron: 300
Lord of Battles (w/Doomburner and Hellblade): 490 
World Eaters Century: 600

2 x Rhinos: 100
4 x Demonic Engines: 1200
Cannon of Khorne: 200
2 x Juggernaughts: 300

Mark of Khorne (on Khorne Berserkers): 125
Banelord Titan: 700

Magnus the Red: 300
Thousand Sons Century: 600

Silver Towers of Tzeentch: 350
Doomwing Squadron: 250
Disc Rider Squad: 200
3 x Rhinos: 150
2 x Chaos Land Raiders: 500

Daemon Horde: 400
Hellblades: 250

Total 7,015 points

Chaos Cards: Chaos receive 8 Chaos cards - 3 for the Lord of Battles, 2 for the Tzeentch daemon engines (Silver Towers and Doomwings), 1 for each Primarch and 1 for the Daemon Horde. With both the World Eaters and Thousand Sons Centuries on the board, Chaos also gain the Rewards for Khorne and Tzeentch.


Battlefield Overview & Set Up:

To ensure consistency through the report, when the left and right flanks are referred to, these relate to the battle as seen from the Chaos side of the board (as shown in the overview picture below).

Overview, Objectives and Deployment
The Battle Plan:

Eldar: The Wind Rider Host is hoping to overrun and outmanoeuvre the relatively sparse Chaos forces on the left flank. The Defender Host should be able to hold Objectives 1 & 2 without too much opposition. The Avatar, Exarchs and Harlequins (the latter inside the Wave Serpents) are tasked with capturing Objective 3 although that will be a tougher prospect with Automatons and Angron expected to challenge that objective.
The Tempests, Revenants and Spirit Host will battle for dominance through the centre of the battlefield, but they expect a brutal war of attrition as many Daemon Engines and Chaos Land Raiders expected to pour into this area.
The most desperate battles are expected to be on the right flank where squads of Howling Banshees and Striking Scorpions expect to face off against some of Chaos' most formidable close combat specialists - but they will have some serious support from the Cobra superheavy tanks and a Warlock Titan!  

Eldar: left flank

Eldar: centre

Eldar: right flank

Chaos: Opposite the Striking Scorpion and Howling Banshees are the Cauldrons of Blood which will try to thin out any opposition looking for refuge in the woods before the powerful Trolls, Minotaurs, Khorne Juggernaughts and the Khorne Berserkers launch their assault! The aim is to secure all three objectives in the woods and maybe, just maybe, capture the fourth in the nearby town. Most of the daemon engines along with the Banelord Titan and Lord of Battles expect heavy opposition through the centre of the battlefield, but expect to overcome the Eldar forces. The Silver Towers of Tzeentch hope to offer some cover to the advancing forces and to slow attrition from incoming Eldar pop-up attacks. The biggest concern is the left flank where the hope is that Angron can cling on to the objective with the assistance of Automatons.

Chaos: right flank

Chaos: centre

Chaos: left flank
Turn 1:

Units charge into cover all around the board. On the right flank, Minotaurs, Trolls, Juggernaughts and Berserkers take up position in the woods. The Berserkers bide their time to mount an assault on Objective 8 next turn... In the faraway woods, 2 squadrons of Howling Banshees and one of Striking Scorpions have firm control of their objective.


Through the centre of the battlefield, Thousand Sons trade fire with Wraithguard and Wraithlords, but neither side succeeds in inflicting casualties.


There is more caution on the left flank as Jetbikes take cover behind the hill. Wave Serpents drop off Harlequins to seize Objective 2 in the woods. Angron may have something to say about whether the Harlequins can retain it next turn!


Silver Towers of Tzeentch push forward, but their weapons prove ineffective. A Prism Cannon pops up and destroys one! So much for their field to cover the daemon engines!


Automatons pour out of Rhinos and tear up the hill opposite which is swarming with Guardians...


...and thin their ranks!


A squadron of Tower of Skulls unleashes a heavy hail of fire, but only succeed in picking off a single Wraithguard squad.


Land Raiders charge forward and target the Wraithlords and Wraithguard.


But are only able to destroy one Wraithlord!


A squadron of Guardians enter buildings around Objective 2. Cannon of Khorne roll on to the hill targeting the Guardians and the last threads the needle between the woods to target the distant Wraithlords! 


The first cannon misfires and is destroyed!


The second rolls 10 BPs on the dice, needing only 2+ to hit - but contrives to only destroy one Wraithlord of the two!


The last cannon rolls 2 BPs, a miserable 6 to hit!


It scatters behind the building, landing over a squad of Guardians and a Falcon Grav Tank...


...but a roll of double 6 sees the Guardian and Falcon hit - and wiped off the battlefield!


Death Dealers surge forward and World Eaters Marines advance out to spray fire upon the Vyper Jet Bikes! 


...but, despite the amount of firepower unleashed from both Marines and vehicles, only 2 Vypers are picked off!


Exarchs swoop into position and fire upon the freshly-deployed World Eaters!


...killing three squads!


Doomwings glide across the battlefield to douse Jetbikes and Guardians with their fiery payload!


Destroying five Jet Bikes and a squad of Guardians!


The Eldar Warlock places his Eldritch storm upon the hill. The Lord of Battles charges forward but is unable to inflict any damage on anything!


A Revenant spots the opportunity, but is equally ineffective - the three "hits" all miss the Greater Daemon's head and succeed only in tearing up the air around him! None of the Revenant's other weapons hit anything either!


Blood Reapers open fire as they charge...


...and destroy two Wraithlords and one squad of Dark Reapers!


The Warlock Titan charges forward and fires both of its Psychic Lance at the Lord of Battles while the wing weapons target Thousand Sons Marines and Land Raiders in the crater - but it misses everything!


As the Banelord enters the battlefield, it finds its targets restricted by the Warlock's Eldritch Storm. It targets Dark Reapers in the buildings...


...but only manages to kill one squad!


Another Revenant enters the fray... 


...but only succeeds in picking off a single squad of Marines! Only one shot hits the Lord of Battles - and again it misses the head and everything else on the location chart!


A Cobra pops up and fires its D-Cannon - it scatters but hits a building and a Blood Reaper!


The building soaks up the hit - but the Blood Reaper is destroyed!


With the Cauldron of Blood daemon engines forced to move, Falcons advance forward and open fire as their Striking Scorpions pour out of the skimmers and head into the woods! 


A Disc-Rider is the only casualty from the Falcon attack.


Hellblades target the Wave Serpents which threaten to disrupt Thousand Sons units next turn!


...and successfully destroy them!


Nightwings swing into attack the Hellblades with their Shuriken...


...as well as Doomwings with Lascannon and Thousands Sons with missiles!


The Thousand Sons survive the missile attack, but a Doomwing is shot down by the Lascannon and the Hellblades are decimated by the Shuriken!


 With all of Chaos having activated, the Eldar activate again, this time with their Tempests...
 

They pop up and hit the Lord of Battles with everything they've got!


...and they blow its head clean off - the Lord of Battles is destroyed!


A Cobra is last to activate. It targets a group of Daemon Engines...


...but its shot scatters, hitting the nearby building instead!


And destroying it!


Somewhat remarkably - given that both sides have plenty of close combat specialists in their ranks - there is no Close Combat, so this was the last action of Turn 1!

End Phase: 

Overview: The Eldar have snapped up a whopping 6 Objectives, while Chaos have only taken 2. However, that should change in turn 2...

Battlefield Overview

Overview with Objectives

Note that the Eldar Vyper Jetbikes claimed Objective #1 despite the Doomwings being closer. This is because fliers cannot claim objectives.

Left flank

Centre

Right Flank
Eldar Casualties:

Note that the Swooping Hawks are not casualties: they have yet to enter the battle!

Though the Wind Rider Host did not break, it is on the brink!

Wave Serpents: 2 VPs

Turn 1 Total (awarded to Chaos): 2 VPs


Chaos Casualties:

Lord of Battles: 5 VPs
Hellblades: 3 VPs
Silver Towers of Tzeentch: 4 VPs

Turn 1 Total (awarded to Eldar): 12 VPs


End of Turn 1:


Eldar: 42 VPs
Chaos: 12 VPs


Turn 2:

Eldar win Initiative and a Cobra pops up to attack the Cauldron of Blood daemon engines which are a threat to their nearby infantry!


...and destroy two of the engines!


Magnus the Red moves out from behind the building and unleashes his deadly Beam of Power!


The shot tears through the Cobra like a knife through butter - obliterating it!


Exarchs activate, opening fire upon the remaining Doomwings and Thousand Sons Land Raiders!


The Land Raiders' armour stands up to the attack - but both of the remaining Doomwings are destroyed!


Thousand Sons Marines activate and fire upon one Revenant - while casting their Chaos reward - a Vortex - upon the other! The vortex deviates, but not far enough for the Revenant to escape it!


The Chaos Marines destroy the wing on the first Revenant, while the other takes 5 hits from the vortex! It rips the Titan apart, causing it to explode spectacularly! Then, in the next instant, the flames are extinguished as the Titan is sucked into the vortex and erased from the battlefield!


Though it is dangerous to do so, the Revenant takes cover behind the Vortex - and fires its Pulse Laser, stripping three Void Shields from the Banelord!


Land Raiders activate and shoot at the nearby Nightwings!


Two are destroyed!


Dark Reapers open fire upon the Banelord - 7 hits, stripping the Banelord of its remaining Void Shields and landing 4 hits! Unfortunately for the Eldar, the Banelord passes all of its saves!


Sensing its time may be nearing an end, the Banelord activates and strides forward menacingly! It launches two volleys of its Havoc missiles...


...and wipes out four Guardians...


...and two Wraithlords and a Wraithguard squad!


It targets nearby Dark Reapers with its Bloodletter Battle head and Doomfist...


...killing most of them!


Unfortunately, the Titan's remaining weapons fail to hit the Revenant and the Warlock Titan - and the Banelord's activation ends.

A Cobra pops up and tries to finish off the Banelord with its D-Cannon, but it scatters and fails to hit anything!


The Silver Tower moves forward and attempts to shoot down the Cobra with its Beam of Power - but misses!


It does manage to pick off a nearby Falcon Grav Tank.


His entourage almost wiped out, the Warlock heads for a building and tries to take out the Banelord with a Psychic Scream - but fails!


World Eaters Marines activate and fire at the Vyper Jetbikes...


Destroying one!


Falcons pop up and fire at the Blood Reapers and Tower of Skulls - but miss every shot! The Blood Reapers gratefully move into the nearby ruins...


 and return fire at their attackers! 


But only succeed in killing the last squad of Dark Reapers in the nearest building!


The Warlock Titan closes in on the Banelord to finish it off with the Psychic Lances!


...while the Missile Launchers target Disc Riders!


...killing two of the Riders! However, the Lascannon miss the nearby Tower of Skulls - and worse still, the Psychic Lances miss the Banelord!


Cannon of Khorne are next to activate...


But all they seem good for is destroying themselves! The one that does manage to fire only rolls 2 Barrage Points and misses its targets!


The Vypers activate and fire at the Chaos Marines and Deathdealers...


Destroying one of each!


The Cauldron of Blood moves forward and sprays the Striking Scorpions with boiling daemonic blood...


...consigning three squads of Striking Scorpions to a horrific fate!


The Fire Prism destroys a Tower of Skulls on the hill! The other pushes forward and shoots at both the Fire Prism and a Falcon Grav Tank...


...and destroys both!


Falcons pop up to fire at Deathdealers, but fail to destroy either! In the distance, Land Raiders open fire while the Falcons are exposed...


...and take down another!


Dark Reapers fire at the Banelord, but once again it soaks up the ordnance directed at it!


World Eaters target the Warlock in the building beside the Dark Reapers...


...and hit him several times, tearing up his floor with missile fire! The Warlock is no more!


Another Falcon pops up...


...and destroys the last Tower of Skulls!


Juggernaughts jump the last of the Striking Scorpions while another squadron of Falcons pop up to fire at the Blood Reapers in the ruins...


Destroying one!


Thousand Sons open fire on more Guardians...


...and pick off another 2 squads! The Defender Warhost is on the brink of breaking!


...and the Marines also manage to pick off another Dark Reaper, clearing the objective!


Guardians in the buildings target the Deathdealer and squad of World Eater Marines!


The Marines are cut down and somewhat improbably, the Deathdealer is destroyed too!


The last Deathdealer fires at the two Vyper Jetbikes...


...and wipes them out!


The Wraithlord and Wraithguard fire at the Thousand Sons Marines, killing one.


Automatons shamble forward and open fire at the Guardians...


...killing one squad - but it is enough to break the Warhost!


Another squad of Juggernaughts push into the woods, securing the objective!


Tempests pop up. Their task is to deliver the killing blow to the Banelord...


But once again, its armour soaks up the hits! Unbelievable!


Minotaurs secure another objective...


Jetbikes jump the last Cannon of Khorne...


While Rhinos charge in to steal an objective from the remaining Jetbikes - but Swooping Hawks deep strike to ambush them!


Disc Riders steal another objective from under the noses of the Eldar!


The last of the Falcons pop up and fire at the Land Raiders...


Destroying two!


Close Combat Phase:

The Jetbikes easily destroy the Cannon of Khorne.


The Rhinos manage to destroy a few Jetbikes, but suffer the wrath of the Swooping Hawks!


Angron kills one squad of Harlequins, but cannot take the objective!


Rhinos destroy a Falcon Grav Tank!


Juggernaughts clash with Striking Scorpions and Howling Banshees...


Both sides suffer casualties!



End Phase: 

The Banelord regenerates 3 Void Shields! With the exception of its Havoc Missiles being destroyed, it has survived Turn 2 well!

At the end of Turn 2, both sides have 4 objectives each - Eldar hold objectives #1 - #3 and objective #7 while Chaos control objectives #4 - #6 and objective #8.

Battlefield Overview

Overview with Objectives

Left flank

Centre

Right flank

Eldar Casualties:

Defender Host: 9 VPs
Jetbike Host: 6 VPs
Spirit Host: 5 VPs
2 x Dark Reapers: 6 VPs
Nightwing Squadron: 3 VPs
Revenant Titan: 3 VPs
Cobra Tank: 3 VPs
Striking Scorpions: 2 VPs
Prism Cannon: 1 VPs

Turn 1 Total (awarded to Chaos): 2 VPs
Turn 2 Total (awarded to Chaos): 38 VPs

Eldar Casualties

Chaos Casualties:

4 x Demonic Engines: 12 VPs
Doomwing: Squadron: 3 VPs
Land Raider Squadron: 3 VPs
Cannon of Khorne: 2 VPs
Disc Riders: 2 VPs
Juggernaughts:  2 VPs
2 x Rhinos: 2 VPs

Turn 1 Total (awarded to Eldar): 12 VPs
Turn 2 Total (awarded to Eldar): 26 VPs


Chaos Casualties


End of Turn 2:

Eldar: 58 VPs
Chaos: 60 VPs

Blood for the Blood God - Victory to Chaos!


Closing Reflections:

While there had been a fair amount of attrition, it seemed that the battle was destined for another turn which almost certainly would have resulted in a draw - so the realisation that Chaos had managed to win with the slightest of margins came as a shock! The fact that the Banelord in particular managed to survive Turn 2 was something of a miracle as it survived attacks from a Revenant Titan, a Cobra, the Tempest squadron, and, most shockingly, the Warlock Titan, so the Eldar can feel hard done by. Had the Warlock not pushed forward to attempt to take the Banelord down with a Psychic Scream, the game would have continued another turn. 

Had the game it done so, it would likely have seen the Banelord finally brought to its knees and Angron overwhelmed, but other than that, it's hard to see where the Eldar could have scored more points as both the World Eaters and Thousand Sons would have required to have suffered heavy losses for either to break. From the Chaos side of things, they would have hoped to win Initiative for the Banelord to engage the Warlord in Close Combat - had the Banelord once again survived the Psychic Lance, it may have destroyed the Warlord, but this is a huge maybe! The remaining Revenant Titan was exposed and the Falcon Host was only a couple of vehicles away from breaking, but the real place they could expect to make significant inroads would have been on the right flank where the Berserkers were poised to call upon their Chaos reward to storm the wood where Howling Banshees and Striking Scorpions were protecting an objective. The Blood Rage of Khorne reward would have allowed the Berserkers to move triple speed and add 1D6 to their CAF, making engaging the Scorpions a 50/50 proposition - except that the Uncontrollable Flatulence would have halved the Striking Scorpions' CAF! Howling Banshees would have suffered the same issue if they attempted to gang up on the Berserkers, but even if they sat on the objective, the Berserkers would have had Blood Rage to press on for a fresh Close Combat attack and Warp Frenzy at their disposal on top of the reward and Flatulence to deal with them (the effects of the Chaos cards all lasted for the duration of the Close Combat segment so would have carried on to the next attack)! It would have been utter carnage!

One small note is that I have a lot more varied terrain than was on display in this battle, but I deliberately used the old buildings and simple terrain to evoke the feel of the White Dwarf battle reports which I thought some people might appreciate. The next board will be very different!

I was concerned that the experiment with allowing units to fire on Charge Orders with a -1 on their rolls to hit would unbalance the game, but they worked fine; even though units were making use of the attacks, most were dropping from rolls of 5+ to hit to 6+ and barely any shots from charging units inflicted any casualties on the opposition. As a result, I will carry this experiment on to the next battle...which will see the Orks and Imperial Guard going head to head!

Watch this space for more soon!
















An Epic Life

Introduction:

Having been invited to to talk about my love of Epic Warhammer 40,000 on The Crown of Command Podcast which you can find here, it got me thinking about the 30+ years that I've played the game. Since Epic seems to be going through something of a mini-resurgence thanks to the current pandemic - with lapsed gamers suddenly dusting off their old armies either to paint or play with - I thought it might be interesting to share a bit of my history with the game. 


Before Epic:

I first became aware of Games Workshop in 1987. I was a big fan of 2000AD and at that time GW produced Judge Dredd: The Roleplaying Game - even though I was unfamiliar with roleplaying, I remember the concept of setting a game set in Mega-City One being one that excited me and so I picked up a copy! It wasn't long before I spent endless hours preparing and running games for my friends using that system. Later that year I learned in White Dwarf magazine that a game called Warhammer 40,000 was going to be released. As Tolkien fans, myself and my friends were intrigued by this new game which was going to mix fantasy with science fiction. When it came out, we enjoyed it, but for some reason we never fully engaged with it and only played it a handful of times. 



Epic Roots:

A couple of years later, Games Workshop opened their shop in Glasgow Queen Street, and one cold January morning I turned up with some birthday money burning a hole in my pocket, looking to see what goodies I could pick up. When I spotted a game called Adeptus Titanicus in their sale items going for £10 and snapped it up. We found the game fun, but, at that stage the game was nothing more than a skirmish between 6 Imperial Titans. It was the box artwork - and some photos on the side which showed tanks and tiny Marine miniatures at the feet of the Titans - which really captured my imagination. The idea that we could be fighting large scale battles rather than the small-scale skirmishes of 40K filled me with excitement and I remember avidly awaiting the release of Space Marine.



1st Edition:

When Space Marine arrived, it didn’t disappoint. I loved the game and would literally spend weekends playing it. I couldn’t get enough of it. The only problem was that it took hours to play a single game. 1st Edition Space Marine was essentially a game bolted on to the Titan combat game of Adeptus Titanicus and both rulesets were complex and involved. A single game required my friends to commit to coming over to mine to play on both a Saturday and Sunday…and even then it wasn’t unusual for games to have to finish without having come to a complete conclusion. 



The impracticality of running 1st Edition battles did nothing to stop my imagination running riot, though - In those days I had no gaming table or terrain (other than the buildings provided in both games) so I’d throw some video and cassette tapes on to the floor to build makeshift hills and then throw an old white sheet over it to create my battlefield - the snowfields of Hoth from The Empire Strikes Back was how I imagined it! 


2nd Edition:

When 2nd Edition was announced, I remember not being too delighted at the prospect as I was happy with Epic the way it was - and had a feeling even in those early days that Games Workshop were trying to fleece their fans into buying a game they already owned a second time. My curiosity got the better of me though, and I invested in a copy of 2nd Edition Space Marine. I’m so glad I did! I recall really liking the structure that was given to the game by the scoring of Victory Points which suddenly meant a game of Epic could be played in a single session - quite the revelation! I remember being shocked too by how lethal the system was; in first edition everything had a saving throw and vehicles often had to be damaged twice before being destroyed. Initially, the loss of some of the nuance and complexity of 1st Edition put me off as I felt they’d went too far. I quickly realised that it was the saving of the game for me as I was able to bring friends - who’d been disheartened by 1st Edition’s endless sessions - back into the game now that it was at a more manageable runtime. 



Myself, my brother and another of my friends had a lot of great games at that time. I think there was a point where I was playing on a weekly basis and a lot of my time was spent talking to friends about battles we’d fought and about which units we liked to field. Eldar were my personal favourites, probably because their skimmers’ pop-up attacks were a really cool idea, but also because the Howling Banshees and Striking Scorpions were always beasts in Close Combat who could even deal damage against multiple opponents! I also pored over White Dwarf articles and battle reports, trying to spot if there were any tactics that I hadn’t thought of. All in all, I have a lot of very happy memories of that time.


One thing I’m extremely thankful for back then was that GW used to release boxes of plastic Epic miniatures which meant that I could afford to build sizeable forces relatively cheaply. I suspect the thinking was that players would top up on a lot of these forces by buying a lot of the metal miniatures that came in the Blister packs but, while I had a few of these, I really didn’t have the funds to afford much of that stuff, so my armies were, by and large, sourced from what was available in those boxes. If I’m honest, it probably restricted my enjoyment of the game as the lack of variety meant that we almost always played Marines v Elder because the other factions required metal miniatures that we didn’t own. 



I have to say, I feel very sorry for young people nowadays trying to get into wargaming as it is not cheap. I’m sure there are parents who are happy to buy their kids all of these expensive kits - there's far worse things their adolescents could be up to, after all - but I do think that the price probably makes it difficult to get young people interested when they can buy immersive computer games comparatively cheaply. I do wonder if younger generations will still play war-games when they have so many other options.


Anyway, back to life in the mid-nineties... As I was now in my late teens, the amount of time I was able commit to Epic waned as myself and my friends found other interests to occupy our time, but we still played intermittently. When Titan Legions came around in 1994, it almost turned me off Epic. When I played it, I felt the Imperator Titan and Mega-Gargants took all of the strategy out of the game by making it about those two incredibly powerful models - and the business of their Titan sheets seemed to create a mini-game that distracted from the action on the tabletop. I also hated the Knights because I thought they looked like 40K miniatures - and that was a game that I had no interest in playing. Fortunately, I also realised that I didn’t have to bother with any of the new units that Titan Legions introduced as I was perfectly happy with the game as it was. I continued playing, but on an increasingly infrequent basis for probably about 10 years.



Post-millennium Epic:

I can’t recall exactly when it happened - early 2000’s I think - but one of my friends discovered an early version of Net Epic on the internet. He recommended that I check out the rules, and I agreed that the system was pretty great. It’s basically 2nd edition with bells and whistles, and I’ve been running some version of Net Epic ever since. The advent of eBay and of finally having a decent disposable income meant that I was able to buy a lot of the metal miniatures that I’d so long wanted and my collection has probably quadrupled in size. Other than Marines and Eldar, my forces were largely unpainted and, although I don’t claim that my painting is that great, I’ve since invested a lot of time in making sure my Ork, Squat, Imperial Guard and Chaos forces are table-worthy.



I missed out on Epic 40K and the same is true of the latest version of Adeptus Titanicus, but I have dabbled a little in Epic: Armageddon. There was a lot about E:A that I liked, especially the mechanic that enabled units to resolve movement and firing in the one activation. Ultimately though, I wanted to play it with the units and stats that I was familiar with from 2nd Edition. As a result, I designed my own house rules, Net Epic Evolution (available here), which brings that mechanic to Net Epic. 


My Epic Campaign rules - Epic War! (available here) - came from an idea that had been swirling in my head for the best part of two decades (I remember discussing the idea with one of the staff in GW not long after 2nd Edition was released). I’ve since run 2 campaigns using the system; the first was Marines v Eldar and the second Orks v Squats and both were a lot of fun! I hope to run another sometime soon! 


I also hope to play some Imperious Dominatus very soon - it's a system which takes all of the best parts of 1st and 2nd edition Epic and applies them to a D10 system (much better than D6)!


Although I’ve dabbled in some other games of late, when it comes to tabletop gaming, Epic will always hold a special place in my heart. I’ve recently made a return to the game and have begun putting up some new battle reports and videos which I hope the community will enjoy!


Speaking of which, the Epic community is one of the friendliest gaming communities I’ve come across, and I’ve made a lot of new friends and acquaintances through Epic - right across the world - so I have a lot to thank the game for! I hope in my own small way that by sharing my love for Epic whenever possible that I’ve been able to give something back to the game that has given me so much enjoyment over the years! Here's to the next 30 years!

Strontium Dog Miniatures Game - Mutant Army Generals

Mutant Army Generals Strontium Dog Mutant Generals Image (c) Warlord Games Along with the Kreelers, one of the last sets that was released f...