Unfortunately, I think there’s one unit casting a particularly long shadow over the metagame. However, people are finding more and more ways to craft armies that can take a swing at the top builds, including with the latest books, and that would normally pep things up long enough to see the scene through to the next major update. Part of that is that is fatigue – the top armies have been dominant for an extended period, which is always going to be a bit demoralising. Finally, we’re about to get our first new book for a while in the form of Black Templars, with the promise of two more to spice things up before the end of the year.Īmidst all of this, however, there’s a lot of glumness among tournament players. We’re entering this period with a healthy diversity of viable armies to boot – AdMech and Drukhari still rule the roost, but pretty much every army that’s received a 9th Edition codex in 2021 has been putting in good performances, people have found ways to make a solid half of the Marine Chapters do real work and wild out-there builds are winning occasional majors. We’ve got plenty more massive showcases to come as well – we’re only a month or so out from the next pair of supermajors in the Coventry GT and Austin GW Open, and October-November tend to be dense periods in the competitive calendar anyway, with Majors all over the shop (including the one we’re putting on in just a few weeks). It’s been a massive few weeks for Competitive 40K, with supermajors firing on both sides of the Atlantic and two powerful new books entering the ring and making a splash.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |