RULES BLOAT & MENTAL LOAD in Warhammer 40k - How 3rd Edition Spiralled Into 7th

Different editions of 40k have dealt with the problem of 'too many rules' in a few different ways. In this video we look at how 3ed dealt with it pretty well, but how it's constraints slowly resulted in the mess of 7ed Warhammer 40,000 and how that reflects on current editions like 8ed and 9ed.
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Пікірлер: 515

  • @perigrin2115
    @perigrin21152 жыл бұрын

    So I hit a breaking point with 9th edition recently because I realized I was just playing Magic the Gathering again. The best wargames are ones where you use a simple set of units to accomplish something cool with positioning or tactics. Currently, 40k is huge on combos and playing "Gotcha" strategems at exactly the right moment before you forget them and its too late because you can only use it during one very specific part of the attack sequence or whatever. The game is often decided by what things your brought and your ability to remember when you need to press your I Win button, which makes it so massively stressful to me because you have to be constantly thinking about the exact thing you are about to do, because if you mess up that sequence you will lose. The stress is so much higher than in 3rd because with that ruleset, once you have learned what all the general rules do, you can always know what is going to happen in a situation, so you dont need to obsess over it the way you do now.

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yup, agreed!

  • @RavensEagle

    @RavensEagle

    Жыл бұрын

    So what you are saying is that 40K went from being Magic the gathering to YuGiOh because that's honestly a good description of YuGiOh

  • @jayteegamble

    @jayteegamble

    Жыл бұрын

    I just returned to 9th after previously playing 4-6th editions and "This feels more like Magic The Gathering than Warhammer" was exactly what i said.

  • @willnox1

    @willnox1

    10 ай бұрын

    3-7th was a better time I’d take decurion all over again to the crap we have now

  • @konradcurze4285

    @konradcurze4285

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@ArbitorIan do you still have that rules aide sheet?

  • @raze667
    @raze6673 жыл бұрын

    I for one, LIKED blast templates, flamers, deepstriking and scattering. It added a bit of skill to where you put your models, not just cramming everyone as closely as you could.

  • @jackbriggs9318
    @jackbriggs93183 жыл бұрын

    I've always disliked stratagems. I think the worst aspect of them is that you always need to be thinking about when to use them. Some are before shooting, some are during. Some are before you roll for morale, some are after. I think if their use was confined to the command phase, the game would flow better as you would only need to consider what you have available at a single point during the game, rather than it being something you constantly have to consider. Either that or reduce the number available to 5-10 so you can feasibly remember them all.

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. I have no problem with the idea of a restricted resource that you need to 'spend' well, or get choice in, but I think AoS achieves that much better by only having a few 'free' things to spend Command Points on and then unlocking one or two more with unit choice. The sheer scale of Stratagems, with armies having access to a pool of 40 or so special rules, so many that you don't really have a clue what your opponent can do, and have to check to see what extra STUFF you could activate each phase, makes them such a slog.

  • @HivefleetMagoladon

    @HivefleetMagoladon

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'd like to change stratagems so you pick X stratagems at the beginning of the game, and those are the stratagems you have available to you, where X changes depending on the battle size.

  • @Ondemas

    @Ondemas

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@HivefleetMagoladon 3 stratagems total, one use each, and only one stratagem per turn could be nice.

  • @yamomel7452

    @yamomel7452

    Жыл бұрын

    hey malcom in the middle has a 40k channel. good for you :)

  • @pendantblade6361
    @pendantblade63613 жыл бұрын

    Holy shit dude, you are on a roll! Also, as someone who only reads novels, and never plays the game, this is invaluable.

  • @CWElliotte
    @CWElliotte3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I sank like 200 to 300 bucks into 40K before playing my first match and experiencing basically what you outline in this video. It is a lot to keep up with, so I ended up playing OPR's Grimdark Future so that I can use the same models, but the mental load is so much more reasonable.

  • @Bluecho4

    @Bluecho4

    2 жыл бұрын

    Precisely. One Page Rules is a lot more like Chess, as Ian described. The rules, even when you factor in the army-specific ones, are fairly simple to learn and keep straight in your head. It's the way you apply those rules during play that matters.

  • @angelx9724

    @angelx9724

    2 жыл бұрын

    One Page Rules! One Page Rules! *chanting continues* Seriously, I want my local tournaments to move to OPR permanently XD

  • @jamescox953

    @jamescox953

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree. It should alway come back to smooth gameplay like chess. You should be able to add layers depending on how much time you want to spend.

  • @MrLigonater
    @MrLigonater3 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate everything 8th and 9th have done to simplify things, but Im not a fan of the stratagem part of the game. I just want to focus on moving my minis around the table.

  • @benhiscox-smith3449
    @benhiscox-smith34493 жыл бұрын

    As a kid and young adult I always thought I was not cleaver enough to understand 40k rules so just painted the minis, I was so glad when 8th clicked for me and was able to play the game. It's awesome the way you have visualised the rules changes.

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Yeah, I was midway through an official Heresy event when I did the 'demo game' of 8ed and I was like 'why do I have to keep playing 7ed all weekend!!!'

  • @Nukefandango

    @Nukefandango

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same here! I was totally lost as a 13 year old in 3rd edition, but it makes sense now. Though my Tau still miss jump shoot jump hahaha

  • @ObjectiveMedia

    @ObjectiveMedia

    3 ай бұрын

    8th is where it all went wrong

  • @DreadWaaaghGaming
    @DreadWaaaghGaming3 жыл бұрын

    ahh dude! you were behind that 1page 40k thing??? those simplified rules were genius and definitely helped me learn those older editions. Respect!

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Not me! I just did a load of reference sheets in 6/7ed. One Page 40k I think was a whole new rules system?

  • @bigjuando
    @bigjuando3 жыл бұрын

    I used to play back in 3rd and then my best friend started using opiates and my army disappeared.... anyway I quit. Now I'm in my 30s and a friend was convinced to move to the city I'm currently in and he plays 9th 40k. He asked me to play but I said no, the price and I'm still hurt as my friend from before passed away from his fight with opiates. BUT my friend who moved here decided to bribe me with a space wolves army (I had played S. Wolves in 3rd). He dropped $250 and got me an army. And I've really gotten excited about it and I love the new rules lay out. If you can just learn one faction and it's synergies you can play well and the core rules are simple. Back in the day I hated anything artistic like the model painting, after all I'm a chemist now. That said I'm really getting into painting my models in dirty dark grey blue models that really lean into that dark, dirty 80s sci-fi fantasy art style. Oh I also had 3 terminators and 3 jump pack guys and a couple random units from my late friends dark angels army that I found and repainted. I'm running them in my army to kinda remember my friend who passed. We used to play 40k before opiates and it's nice to kinda remember those days.

  • @MrDouglascalhoun

    @MrDouglascalhoun

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing that. Sad to hear about your one friend falling in his fight w opiates. Solid that your other friend bought you an army. Cherish ppl like that, they too rare. Good luck to you dude.

  • @JasonM69

    @JasonM69

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sorry about your friend dude. Glad you have another friend that sounds like a great person.

  • @paralipsis
    @paralipsis3 жыл бұрын

    As much of a fan of 40K as I am, the turn structure really holds the game back. I think it's telling how spinoff games as far back as Epic 3rd edition through Battlefleet Gothic, and more recently the new Necromunda and Kill Team all manage alternating activations, but they can't seem to break with the old turn structure on the flagship system.

  • @Bluecho4

    @Bluecho4

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's one of the reasons I love Grimdark Future from One Page Rules. It uses alternating activations, and the game is better for it.

  • @crimsonbrother

    @crimsonbrother

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, never understood how wargames got to that point of "you move/activate everything, then I move/activate everything." Imagine playing chess like that...

  • @patrickflying17

    @patrickflying17

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@crimsonbrother it makes it go faster than it already does. if you did alternating activations at the level of a match play game it would double the time it takes to get things moved. and it just depends on the game in question. Battletech has more rules than 40k ever did even with its trig vehicle movement. But you can pick and chose how man of the optional rules you put in.

  • @crimsonbrother

    @crimsonbrother

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@patrickflying17 I disagree that alternating turns would add time. Each would perform the same number of actions/rolls as you would for moving the whole army at once. It's just structured in a different flow.

  • @adzi6164

    @adzi6164

    3 жыл бұрын

    alternating activations definitely reduce downtime - if a player can do stuff with only one (or few) units at the time, then other player(s) don't have to wait long for their turn.

  • @DanSanders12
    @DanSanders123 жыл бұрын

    I've been playing since 4th, and this was a great walk down memory lane as you covered the variations. 6th drove me away, 7th was awful, 8th brought me back, but far and away for me, 5th was best.

  • @Pengi_SMILES

    @Pengi_SMILES

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree 5th felt the cleanest. 6th and 7th were a mess. I really liked 8th when it first came out but they soon started to ladle too much other stuff on top- and strategems are too much for my brain to cope with. I end up with loads of cheat sheet reminders and I still forget to use stuff.

  • @jonathanfavourite

    @jonathanfavourite

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same! I literally quit when 6th came out, and returned to the game with 8th.

  • @KneeCapHill

    @KneeCapHill

    2 жыл бұрын

    Is 9th "good"?

  • @andreapellegrino4469

    @andreapellegrino4469

    2 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely agree, I still play 5th!

  • @groundbeef6156

    @groundbeef6156

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KneeCapHill 3-7 and 8-9 noticeably have different dna. They play pretty differently so it comes down to if you like the new style of editions. I find 9 to have a LOT of army to army mental load which ive just have to accept isnt as fun as when most of the rules were in the core rule book like in 3-5, but not painfully so like in 6-7

  • @Tinblitz
    @Tinblitz3 жыл бұрын

    Those added graphics in this are so aesthetically pleasing, I'm envious. Personally a small part of me that played 3rd and 4th Ed misses things like blast markers and different armour values for different sides of the vehicles, but the game does feel a lot smoother, and I like where the hobby has gone recently.

  • @MajorSvenGaming
    @MajorSvenGaming3 жыл бұрын

    Honestly the simplicity of 3rd edition is the reason I keep coming back to it... Me and a couple of friends still play that way every now and again... (Though obviously not over the past year)... Fantastic video I would love to see you breaking down each edition of faction during an edition..

  • @sonicwingnut
    @sonicwingnut3 жыл бұрын

    I remember playing 2nd Ed. and there being some fairly ridiculous stuff you could do. I know once we did a tower defense sort of mission where we made rules for a fortress (the Ghostbusters fire station toy), and my friend's face when I just ploughed a Rhino full speed into it and a Terminator squad piled out with thunder hammers. He was like "we're gonna rain death down on your lads" - until the sergeant pulled out his single vortex grenade and vapourised the wall. Even worse as luck would have it the vortex moved directly along the length of the wall, took out the lascannon on the side of his parked tank inside, then disappeared. He was just like "I'm not even mad". I also made a conversion of Wazdakka Gutsmek. Just the horror on the guys in store's face when they realised I could legit put an Ork in mega armor on a bike with a battlecannon on top.

  • @youdontneedtoseehisidentif4939
    @youdontneedtoseehisidentif49393 жыл бұрын

    I really like the modelling and painting side of the hobby, but the size of the rule set, and the ever-changing nature of the rule set, are big reasons why I've never been very interested in the gaming side of the hobby Bizarrely though, I do enjoy reading the rules from second and (especially the tables from) first edition - I guess because they're so long and detailed they almost seem like lore

  • @adzi6164

    @adzi6164

    3 жыл бұрын

    imho, the specific editions to me feel like: 8th: general rules are dead simple, and designed for quick resolution of mass attacks, but there are things that imho shouldn't be simplified the way they were: the melee combat doesn't take into account the enemy's Weapon Skill, vehicles are just yet another units, and, instead of more complex mechanics, there are TONS of various faction-, and unit-specific special rules 3rd - kinda nice, although it has some weirdness and rules that seem like they would, in certain cases, require to go through attacks one by one. Still, army creation is easier. And melee combat and vehicles are actually different. The problems with Codexes (not all factions getting the same amount of love, with some having latest 3rd edition rules strewn across old White Dwarf issues) make it hard to get into, tho. One Page Rules (Grimdark Future) - rules so fast and simple that the simplifications from 8th editions hurt less.

  • @nekrataali

    @nekrataali

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@paulyg405 I never played 2nd, but from what I've heard, you could spend 1k points on a single Chaos Terminator squad and still have a really good chance at winning. A lot of this was because of the way close-combat worked. As you say, it was detailed and kinda clunky.

  • @sacredxgeometry

    @sacredxgeometry

    11 ай бұрын

    You would love 3rd edition.

  • @joshuaandersen1075
    @joshuaandersen10753 жыл бұрын

    3rd - 4th editions are still what I consider the best versions of the game

  • @marvthedog1972

    @marvthedog1972

    2 жыл бұрын

    i agree. pretty streamlined but not too shallow. I have not played an 8th or 9th edition game, however the comparison i hear most about it is that it's 2nd edition that has been streamlined.

  • @KneeCapHill

    @KneeCapHill

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's beyond me why they keep overhaulingnthe core game rules every so often. Want to balance the game? Change the mini datasheets. Leave the core rules alone

  • @ApolinaryPOlekPiosenki

    @ApolinaryPOlekPiosenki

    Жыл бұрын

    Great material! Exquisite journey through the history of WH rules. Thank you for this.

  • @dicedoom7162

    @dicedoom7162

    Ай бұрын

    for me it was 4th and 5th

  • @apocrypha5363
    @apocrypha53633 жыл бұрын

    One thing I'd say in favour of all the strategems, warlord traits and relics is that they (in friendly games) allow your units to feel epic even if they are not top tier unit choices. If you have a supobtimal, let's say, CSM unit... well, it still gets to use all the strategems, buffs, boosts that the hyperoptimal CSM units can, which opens up the game a lot, makes most models have a chance to do great things... in a friendly setting.

  • @ThaneOfBahamut

    @ThaneOfBahamut

    3 ай бұрын

    Strategems should just be abilities on the character sheet. Change my mind.

  • @AFnord
    @AFnord3 жыл бұрын

    As a casual touranemnt player (someone who mostly enjoys tournaments for the chance to meet and play against new people) and someone who just enjoys swinging down to the local club and challenging the people there, I do think that 40k has reached the point where the mental load becomes a bit too much for it to be fun for me. The core rules are, in my opinion, the best they've ever been in 40k's history (and I have played, though not played during, every edition), but GW has shown a lack of restraint when it comes to designing units, armies and also stratagems, making it rather tough to just go up against an army you're not too familiar with, as the entire game can be won or lost on a decisive stratagem or some obscure special rule on some unit. I would welcome a return of universal special rules, for three reasons. First of it would be easier for me and my opponent to explain what our units do, it would also limit the number of similar variants, that are still different enough that they can't be treated as the same thing and it would also limit what the rules writers can really do, preventing them from complicating things (well, as long as they keep getting told to stick to universal special rules as much as possible). And then avoid USR bloat as well

  • @andyball8707
    @andyball87073 жыл бұрын

    This channel is such a breath of fresh air! Great content, astonishingly good infographics. I’d love to hear more about the cultural history of GW as they went from grimdark heavy metal satire to a brand with massive high street presence, to a brand that’s starting to move back towards its source material

  • @SusCalvin

    @SusCalvin

    2 жыл бұрын

    I always think of an 80's british glam metal band LP cover when I think Warhammer.

  • @landerbennewith6169
    @landerbennewith61693 жыл бұрын

    There is one thing that I feel was a severe loss from WH: Fantasy, and 40k 7th edition into AoS and 40k 8th edition, and that was falling back being replaced with battle shock. I feel that the ability to have units completely break and fall back is not only more realistic, but it forces adaptive strategy and is more interesting than just loosing models come battleshock.

  • @Ellolo17
    @Ellolo173 жыл бұрын

    Speaking about simple rules, I just remembered some rules I found out as I was young: At the start of the 00s a spanish rpg publisher (nosolorol) published a miniature skirmish book called "semper fidelis". it was generic for fantasy, sci fy, you could mix them so you can use your warhammer fantasy miniatures vs your w40k miniatures, it had armies lists with points (some of them adapted from warhammer and warhammer 40k) and all that. Every miniature had a character sheet. There were only the name, inventory a few stats as percentages: Health, armor, range weapons hability and melee weapons hability. the weapons had a sheet with how many damage they do and range. Every miniature had 5 actions per turn (the same as in X-COM: move, shoot, "wait" [in the middle of the enemy turn you had one action]). - Movement: For humans the movement was 5cm for every move action. - Fight: If a miniature was able to "see" a enemy, it could shoot (and if it was close, it could do a melee attack). Then you throw your dices for your character hability. If the percentage is lower as what your character has, its a success. - Damage: If the hit character has armor, you can throw an armor save. If you had less than the number shown, the armor saved your character and the armor loses 10 points (if armor was 20% and you got 15 in your dices, then you save your character but the armor has now 10%). If not, then the damage is applied to armor first and then life. For health its very similar. You make a save throw. If you fail the character dies. If you success he lives but life is [weapon damage] less. Thats all. Bikes and horses move 10cm instead of 5. Tanks had other rules that I forgot. Magic is a weapon type (so a fireball works the same as a pistol). There were also rules for grenates and explosives. It was super easy to adapt this to a dungeon crawler withe chests to improve a character gear and after surviving a game the players could get a new level (+10% health, +10% hability), and you can make games like "these dark eldars found a planet where there are skavens, so now they are fighting in a sewer". And all that in under 100 pages. After the bloating of w40k my friends and I that started in 1998 with w40k third edition, tried warhammer fantasy and this other rules. And we loved them because as in chess: They are easy to learn but the good thing is that they allow complex strategies. The games with this were very similar to nowadays kill team.

  • @Ellolo17

    @Ellolo17

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh, man I am happy I remembered this. I was searching for those rules but I wasnt able to find them (too old, too niche, in spanish...) But I just found them in boargamegeek. There are the rules in pdf to download. Im doing that right now to remember as I was young 20 years ago. Just search there for "semper fidelis" and check the one where a barbarian is fighting vietnam war GIs comming out of a portal.

  • @MrSnippets93
    @MrSnippets933 жыл бұрын

    Very nice analysis. One additional thing to think about when discussing rules bloat IMO is power creep. Like when in Star Trek, every new bad guy had to easily beat down Worf to establish how strong they were. In 40k, seemingly every new addition adds super powerful abillities and weapons - so much so that it invalidates the strength of existing armies. Just my thoughts.

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. agreed. I was trying to keep this just about 'scale of core rules' and had to keep editing this down as other rules stuff kept creeping in! Like how, midway through 5ed, the designers realised walker rules didn't really work and started making walking robots count as Monstrous Creatures, to the point where the two or three models still actually using the Walker rules (Dreadnoughts, War Walkers, Sentinels) just became irrelevant!

  • @AndrewSmith-fd3fi

    @AndrewSmith-fd3fi

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ArbitorIan Its why I pretty much am sticking with the release 8th ed and just the indices that got released before the codexes. I may get a codex for lore and colour schemes but it was very well balanced at the start, so avoid power creep issues. Plus I don't want to have to buy a load of new stuff to do the current edition every 4ish years.

  • @hneugiii1245
    @hneugiii12453 жыл бұрын

    I started with 2nd and drew the line in the sand with 6th. Went back to 5th and never regretted it.

  • @TheCoates1980
    @TheCoates19803 жыл бұрын

    I’ve not actually played 8th or 9th after being out off the game during 6 and 7 but recently I’ve been tempted to get back in. Enjoying your videos, hope to see many more

  • @colinmack8655

    @colinmack8655

    3 жыл бұрын

    9th is super bloat

  • @karlsanko8862
    @karlsanko88623 жыл бұрын

    Late to the conversation, but my take on this is one thing I think they wanted to address in 8th. People want to play the game in different ways. Narritive play doesnt require the same rules and constant meta shifts that competitive play needs. I think 9th is the golden era of competition play, which is fantastic. My brother has never loved 40k more. But I would love a 'casuals edition' at 8th edition index levels of complexity. So we still get the rules updates that make sense like 2 wound Marines and T5 orks, but don't have the 6 million special rules and power creep that are starting to hit hard like with the new Admech codex.

  • @imaginaryatlas
    @imaginaryatlas3 жыл бұрын

    Great summary as with your other videos. I really appreciate all the effort you go to in researching the background, dates, sources and in the graphics. I made the jump from 2nd to 8th so missed all the fun in between. I’ve been enjoying 8th and 9th though. Will be interesting to see how they develop it and whether they move to something else or keep the base system static for a while. Thanks again!

  • @eldraque4556
    @eldraque45563 жыл бұрын

    I droppeb out halfway through 2nd until a year ago, so this is well handy. you can tell you've written guides,your videos are really clear and concise and enjoyable to watch, nice one.

  • @danjames4852
    @danjames48523 жыл бұрын

    Another awesome video, congrats dude!!

  • @JenxRodwell
    @JenxRodwell3 жыл бұрын

    And all of this insanity is why One Page Rules exists!

  • @jmalkvideos

    @jmalkvideos

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ooh I'd not seen OPR before, I love it! Looks chill and friendly :)

  • @proto303

    @proto303

    3 жыл бұрын

    I mainly focus on their one-offs, but yeah, they're really cool

  • @SunburntHands

    @SunburntHands

    3 жыл бұрын

    Came here to say this. Fantastic rules.

  • @jmalkvideos

    @jmalkvideos

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@proto303 what are their one-offs?

  • @proto303

    @proto303

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jmalkvideos they’re in the one-off games tab on their website. Mainly just smaller games, adaptions of other, more niche games (like a more accessible adaption of little wars, the first ever tabletop war game and a favorite hobby of Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing) or more experimental stuff, like a one page ttrpg or a war game without any rules for distances

  • @JasRGB
    @JasRGB2 жыл бұрын

    As someone who played at tournament level largely during 4th to 5th edition (3rd was when I started but I was pre-teen at the time so was mostly casual), this is a great explanation of what I was feeling when 6th started to really stretch the rules to breaking point.

  • @DreadWaaaghGaming
    @DreadWaaaghGaming3 жыл бұрын

    great video dude, really enjoy your presentation and subject depth. Liked and subbed! look forward to more!

  • @6Stevo
    @6Stevo3 жыл бұрын

    Wow! Look at that subscriber count! Well done! Lovin' the content thus far. Keep it up.

  • @danajadzia3390
    @danajadzia3390 Жыл бұрын

    This is exactly the kind of content I'm looking for! I'm getting back into WH for the first time since WH40K RT & 2nd Edition and I am fascinated by the changes that have occurred since I've been out. After learning the basics of 9th I decided to look up earlier editions and my mind was blown by how things have ebbed & flowed. Going to your patreon right now!

  • @kinkymustard2301
    @kinkymustard23012 жыл бұрын

    HOLY SHIT MAN!! thank you so much! I use all of your reference sheets to this day still! I didn't even know who made them. I play Horus Heresy and 7th edition mixed with a bunch of friends and your reference sheets have made all of our lives so much easier.

  • @Inquisdrknss
    @Inquisdrknss3 жыл бұрын

    I played 3rd in High School alot my group all dropped out about same time before 4th, then when I came back later a glance at the new books put me off getting back into it. Happy to hear it's been streamlimed again.

  • @Psycho683
    @Psycho6833 жыл бұрын

    These videos are great. I look forward to when this channel blows up. Think you'd ever do a T'au video? Specifically, their release in 2001, the fan reactions, GW's response to same, their current disuse, etc? I know T'au are generally unpopular, but they have so much untapped potential.

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, maybe. I think one of the issues with doing a video about Tau is that they haven't really changed that much since release - a bit like Necrons. Their rules have changed a bit, but the models and concept are mostly the same. I think maybe a 'new factions of 3ed' video might be interesting, though, because Tau, Necrons and Dark Eldar were all introduced within a few years of each other, and very few new factions have been introduced before or since.

  • @laurentderrien
    @laurentderrien Жыл бұрын

    I love when you do this kind of retrospectives, thanks

  • @JohnsRoses
    @JohnsRoses3 жыл бұрын

    Me and my friends got in fresh in 8th edition and we've never touched stratigums or warlord gear. We still enjoy the game.

  • @yinshaoloong2048
    @yinshaoloong2048 Жыл бұрын

    You nailed it with the concept of mental load - bloat - in 9th. Horus Heresy returned at exactly the right time for players feeling fatigue from Combohammer. Cutting CP doesn’t reduce the load of stratgems, it just sharpens their economy.

  • @TheMrFishnDucks
    @TheMrFishnDucks2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video. This is very important that many people overlook. Keep up the good work.

  • @GDSMiniatures
    @GDSMiniatures3 жыл бұрын

    All this bloat is the reason i love Warcry so much. Such a simple ruleset means you can concentrate on what you're doing in the game.

  • @paddymick4627
    @paddymick46273 жыл бұрын

    Nice one, this has filled in a few gaps for me, having missed out 3rd-8th. Getting back into the hobby right now is great.

  • @jarettduker1507
    @jarettduker1507 Жыл бұрын

    This video has so much relevance right now as we head into 10th edition. It popped up in my KZread feed and I hope it does for other people too. Your explanation of the path of the game is great and it will be curious to see what complexity trap we fall into in 10tb.

  • @aperson7552
    @aperson75523 жыл бұрын

    Interesting timing for me to come across this video having just watched some batreps with new Ad mech and Sisters codexes, both of which from the looks of it are absolutely loaded with rules to forget, misinterpret or otherwise spend forever looking up and trying to remember instead of actually playing the game. It's like they're going out of their way to undo all the good work they did with 8th simplifying things...

  • @originalbaxio
    @originalbaxio2 жыл бұрын

    This was a cracking explanation, the chart really helped too

  • @bobhope9755
    @bobhope97553 жыл бұрын

    Great video - i stopped playing during 2nd edition and started again during 7th, so this is a really helpfull explained for what the F happened in the interim

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Jumping straight in at 7ed must have been.....a lot!

  • @GooglyEyedSkull
    @GooglyEyedSkull3 жыл бұрын

    Emprah bless you for for those cheat sheets!

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ha! No worries - I mostly made them for myself at first, but then it turned out to be so useful that it became this big thing that everyone was contributing to for years. I remember being in LA and playing a game at the old Frontline Gaming and some hobby-aid manufacturers turned up with a goodie bag when they realised I'd written them, just as a thankyou for making their life easier! Wish I could remember who it was, but the community can be a really heartwarming place to be sometimes!

  • @martintaylor570
    @martintaylor5703 жыл бұрын

    Great analysis for sure! Have been around since 2nd ed and left at 7th. Missed 8 and picked up 9th again, but am starting to veer towards one page rules. The issue of bloat in 8th and 9th I feel is less mental burden and more prohibitive in cost now. The game is just less than a year old now but we are already back up to multiple books for the same armies already with codexes, supplements and field manual FAQ updates that mess with points in the other books. While this won't affect all games (especially if you're not a tourney player) there is pressure to "keep up" just to try and be accurate for points. The cost of these books is also prohibitive - it almost feels like a paper subscription system to be honest and I'm having to bow out again due to not having the disposable income. I totally admit I don't have to use all the books and am taking the choice to say no, but it's certainly annoying when books you have paid the money for are partially invalidated a couple of months after (especially with costs being what they are in Australia).

  • @8Scientist
    @8Scientist3 жыл бұрын

    For me, what I find odd is that SO MANY of the strategies, rules, auras etc do functionally similar stuff. More or less rerolls, +-1 hits etc. I'm surprised they haven't experimented way more with weapons interacting with other systems. A gun that does no damage but forces units to take morale tests, weapons that slow movement, weapons that force the unit to take armour saves each turn, weapons that half other units range. Just a tonne of cool interesting options to avoid the power level escalation.

  • @alfredpotts6136

    @alfredpotts6136

    3 жыл бұрын

    Some of that stuff was in the original Rogue Trader rules, look up Graviton Gun!

  • @lluiscavalcanticalvo1192

    @lluiscavalcanticalvo1192

    3 жыл бұрын

    There are some guns, stratagems and habilities that do this, but they are just a few. The problem with adding a lot of effects like those is that there are roo many potential interactions that make balance a nightmare. Plus, it complicstes the game both in match ups and in play exponentialy, and unless done really carfully, it can be exploited to no end.

  • @Maevola
    @Maevola3 жыл бұрын

    Nice Video, putting the finger on something i felt was there but couldnt really voice. I started playing in 6th and it was a nightmare. In our group of friends (we were around eight to ten ppl) only two had memorized a significant amount of the rules, so anytime they werent present we had to look up so much stuff the games got really long.

  • @sethflowerdaylukeflowerday2159
    @sethflowerdaylukeflowerday2159 Жыл бұрын

    I think 8th and 9th have way more mental load like you said at the army level, i like to build a list to its full potential without spamming. I think its easier to keep one large main rule set straight rather than tons of unique army specific rules. nobody likes it when their opponent teaches them about their army specific rules by housing you with them! lol great video!

  • @motnostaw2813
    @motnostaw28133 жыл бұрын

    I loved this video. I started playing in 90s in middle school with a Rogue Trader book and played every edition. With a heavy focus from 2000-2012. I made it a goal to play at least a handful of games in 6-8th, and am now returning by this summer to learning 9th and the combo focus really blew me away. Before I could have 4-5 2K point armies and switch them out to play and currently I really have to just focus on one army for how much I play because the strategims and combos require sooo much research and memory. So interesting how I use to collect an play half a dozen armies for fun over the year and now deciding the game really encourages me to just focus on learning one well. As player of the game for a few decades, loved this video.

  • @francescogiovagnoli6549
    @francescogiovagnoli65493 жыл бұрын

    Love your videos, i used to play a lot competively in five edition, with six and all the supplement and extra books i felt Lost and left the game. I'm back now in nine and i'm enjoying It a lot!

  • @stevynpritchett7746
    @stevynpritchett7746 Жыл бұрын

    This perfectly sums up the issues I had with trying to get into the new necromunda. Too many new rules and books. Badly organised books with rules all over the place. In the old necromunda all the weapons for whichever gang were largely the same in the new one each gang gets its own gang specific weapons. My friend and I found that we spent more time flicking back and forth trying to find rules and weapon profiles etc than actually playing the game which sucked all the enjoyment out of it and ultimately led to us selling up. ☹️

  • @MufassaMike
    @MufassaMike Жыл бұрын

    Update this video! New video even! With 9th retrospective + looking into 10th ed! (Maybe wait till we have more concrete 10th info?) but yeah would absolutely love to hear your take on where the entire span of 9th fits into the context of 3rd-8th eds with 10th on the horizon. Cheers!

  • @willjacobs7779
    @willjacobs77793 жыл бұрын

    An interesting and well executed video. I've always had this issue with any of GW's tabletop games, as someone with dyslexia large rule books that start to become more and more convoluted and drag on and on really put me off. Typically I just get frustrated reading them, not understanding going back reading again, getting half way through, forgetting what something means and having to again go back and check just make the whole experience very joyless. I used to be able to steal the use of my brothers far more rule oriented brain and he was the de facto DM for most games of this style (although its likely we made many, many mistakes), sadly growing up and moving from home has left me to try and figure it out with my lackluster memory. I was recently making a Necromunda gang and to be honest I just found the experience annoying. Buuut that could just be me and my brain.

  • @mrmaster9801
    @mrmaster98012 жыл бұрын

    A truly good analysis, it clarified many things I hadn't fully realized before. Also, it matches almost perfectly what happened to me: started with 3rd edition and enjoyed it a lot, grown increasingly frustrated from the overbloat of rules, seriously considered stop playing with 7th edition, started again with 8th and enjoyed it again. My main issues, rather than the rule set, is with GW's policies, expecially with the prices ones and all that comes with them. But minis and setting are still good, not to mention I still enjoy playing with my group of friends, so all in all I still keep on playing. Would be curious to test Grimdark Future though, I've heard good things about it and, from a quick read to free basic rules on their site, it seems an interesting rule set.

  • @gabrielwalton4097
    @gabrielwalton40973 жыл бұрын

    Really good video, I enjoyed the 8th edition games I've played much more than the 4th edition ones I've had, hopefully when I do get a chance to play 9th it will be fun too!

  • @vernonjennings5921
    @vernonjennings59213 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Thanks for sharing!

  • @etboyette
    @etboyette2 жыл бұрын

    As someone who started playing in 5th, played a bit of 6th (stopped before 7th) and returned in 9th; I love the simplified core rules set but I HATE stratagems. The worst was (pre-9th codex) when I had to look through multiple books of stratagems to figure out if I had one that was applicable at any given time. Now even with my 9th codex, it's like 4 pages and there's no quick way to determine which ones apply to which units in which phase other than reading the first sentence. Not to mention, it feels like a lot of things that used to be wargear or flat upgrades for points, are now stratagems. I would love for stratagems to either be removed entirely or to be pared back to like a dozen per army TOPS. Great video, Ian!

  • @lluiscavalcanticalvo1192
    @lluiscavalcanticalvo11923 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I feel that current 40k is a really enjoyable game, where you can play rather than try to remember and double check every 10 minutes how that rule works. There has been simplification and there are some ideas from previous editions that I would like to see coming back (rear armour on vehicles giving +1 to wound, for example), but overall its in a really good position. Its is true that warlord traits and relics can be a bit too much (specially since a lot of them are just worse than others and just fill the page with words), but since you just have to deal with the ones selected during the match, is not that bad. For the stratagems, maybe we could select a limited pool of them at the begining of the match, depending on game size, and spending CP to been able to choose more of them. Similar to how psykers work. Armies like space marines just have soo many that it can get ridiculous

  • @rrwholloway
    @rrwholloway3 жыл бұрын

    I loved 2nd edition. So much more character than 3rd. I remember when 3rd edition came out. My friends and I never really bothered to move on and I’ve not played since.

  • @adammsbarry

    @adammsbarry

    3 жыл бұрын

    3rd kinda killed the game for me. suddenly my 2500 points of Orks, no longer exist. i didnt even look at the hobby again until 8th

  • @JasonM69

    @JasonM69

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've only played 3rd, but aomething about 2nd always seemed magical. Recently bought a bunch of old school models and rule books.

  • @ninjamania

    @ninjamania

    2 жыл бұрын

    Third was awesome! I played three or four games of 2nd, which I loved. But 3rd was smooth.

  • @kurtkozyrski9500

    @kurtkozyrski9500

    Жыл бұрын

    Same for me, 2nd edition was a masterpiece and I stopped the hobby at 3rd edition.

  • @AnonYmous-ys2if
    @AnonYmous-ys2if3 жыл бұрын

    I started playing 40k when I bought the 2nd edition Dark Angels codex when it came out in 1996-ish? Took a break at the start of 5th edition and just recently came back to the game in 9th, and am working on a pure Deathwing Terminators army! Thanks for the trip down memory lane!

  • @WISHARTfilms
    @WISHARTfilms3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the deep dive! As someone who started playing in 8th, I love hearing the horror stories of past editions.

  • @samuelswinamer4939
    @samuelswinamer49393 жыл бұрын

    This has been a neat listen as someone who designs rules for my own games and as someone who has just started 40k this year. Without my relentless love of rules and friends that are almost as keen as I am to know what's going on I would have a really hard time ever playing a game like 40k. But it does sound and feel like I've chosen a good time to get into it

  • @Prederick
    @Prederick Жыл бұрын

    I'm a former Shadowrun GM, and this reminds me of that so much. Keeping track of combat when you had people shooting at each other, plus a Decker hacking into the opposition, plus a Rigger using drones or a vehicle was..... mind-melting.

  • @justindavies6012
    @justindavies60122 жыл бұрын

    Fab explanation! Took a break after 3rd and came back to the mess of 7th. 8th is nicely streamlined and seems smooth. (Cant comment on 9th). For me, my fave RPG is 1st ed, narrative battle is 3rd and mass battle is 8th and i still play them all with great gusto!

  • @gregh2827
    @gregh28273 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I got into GW in the early 90s and had the 2nd Ed box, but I was always more interested in the minis and painting side of things, and only recall playing a few simplified games. I dropped out of the hobby before 3rd Ed came out and got back into it with the launch of 9th, so it's interesting to see what happened in between. The core rules/basic machanics are straighforward enough, and the variety of armies and units (and therefore miniatures) is probably the main appeal of 40k for me, but, putting aside the variations within factions (e.g. dynasties, plagues companies etc), the abilities, detachment abilities, auras, stratagems, battle-round-based changes (e.g. Command Protocols), that come with it are making me wonder if I've chosen the wrong game. Gonna stick with 500-1000pt games I think!

  • @WoffBoot
    @WoffBoot3 жыл бұрын

    Great work on summarising all that. I have mixed feelings about the amount of rules 9th Ed codices seem to be adding on, but I guess we'll see when they're all out and we can take a step back. (although adding in campaign books with extra rules while the codices are still coming out is, of course, nuts)

  • @stonehorsegaming
    @stonehorsegaming3 жыл бұрын

    Great video! Been playing 40k since second edition, stopped with 8th. The while Strategems really ruined the experience for me. It turned the game from a battle between players and their skill+luck, to who has access to the better unique rule. I still play 3rd edition from time to time, mainly stick the lists in the back of the main rule book. Really find the penalties to moving with a Rapid Fire weapon add a great layer of tactical nuance to the system. Rumour has it that Andy Chambers who helped write 3rd edition, wanted 4th edition to be a whole different game. GW didn't want that, so he worked briefly with Mongoose Publishing and made the phenomenal Starship Troopers The Miniatures game. That all being said, I think that Grimdark Future by One Page Rules (got a few videos of their games on my channel) are where it is at.

  • @Drogmir
    @Drogmir Жыл бұрын

    I started in 3rd edition. and I distinctly remember calling it quits at the start of 6th edition due to how many super heavies and D strength weapons permeated my local GW store. I adored playing the old multi table mega battles at the time (effectively GW stores running narrative open play games). But because I played Inquisition with a supplement of Imperial Guard heavy on infantry. I got really tired of just getting pie plated off the table from the escalation of rule scope. I swapped over to Fantasy at the tale end of its 6th edition and honest it felt like a breath of fresh air in terms of how much more balanced it felt and its ruleset felt more consistent compared to 40K at the time. I've recently started to return to 40K and 8th def piqued my interest in simplification of rules. Though I've noticed 9th seems to be getting bloated again with how many stratagems are everywhere.

  • @misomiso8228
    @misomiso8228Ай бұрын

    13:13 this graphic is amazing. Fantastic video.

  • @reederickson3202
    @reederickson32023 жыл бұрын

    I remember when I was 16 or 17 and playing 7th edition, having a good time and all, and our games would take like 4 hours. My buddy and I picked up 8th edition's Dark Imperium box set and played a game, and I remember looking at the clock and going "Wait, we're done and it's only been 2 hours. What happened?" Well, we didn't have to stop the game, flip through the rulebook, and argue for 5 minutes every time someone wanted to shoot at a vehicle or use a flamer. It was kinda beautiful, actually.

  • @nekrataali

    @nekrataali

    3 жыл бұрын

    This was the same problem in WHFB 8th. Edition. Every 1k points in 6th. was around an hour of game time (not including terrain and whatnot). In 8th, a 2,200 point game that took 2 hours in 6th. took close to 4 hours because of all the rerolls, random tables, and so on, coupled with a larger model count.

  • @willnox1

    @willnox1

    4 ай бұрын

    Sounds like you need a better opponent

  • @drsnake10
    @drsnake103 жыл бұрын

    This is a great video. You have great game design insight. 40k historian with the rules and lore.

  • @ilpetauroquantico6908
    @ilpetauroquantico69082 жыл бұрын

    I remember playing the Dark Angels at a time where you were playing extra points for their stupid blood lineage negative bonus. Games Workshops has been playing the Adeptus Administratum for so many years

  • @aarondunn6759
    @aarondunn67593 жыл бұрын

    The shift to 3rd from second felt so watered down and 2nd edition might be my favourite rules set to this day with 8th edition coming in a close 2nd place. I haven't attempted 9th, I tried to recreate a couple of 8th edition lists to run in 9th and couldn't as the rules and weapons options had changed so I haven't bothered. If I do start playing again, I would like to develop 8th edition out more. Give Terminator Armour the 3+ on 2D6 like back in 2nd edition; I played my mates 2k Deathwing army using 2nd terminator save throw but dropping the wounds down to 1 and it was a really awesome game, I still won a bit too easily so I really want to try again at full wound capacity. The loss of a terminator should feel like an epic event. I will say though that the shift from 2nd edition to 3rd edition allowed tournament play to be a thing and that is where 40k really took off. I've played in a few tournaments over the years but my preferred play style is a game that takes an entire afternoon.

  • @SusCalvin

    @SusCalvin

    2 жыл бұрын

    The very first 3rd edition was playable with just the main book. They had the entire army lists printed in it, you could get some terrain and a few models and be ready to go. Armour reduction sounds neat. Marine 3+ power armour drops down once you start shooting them with heavy bolters and autocannons. And how vehicles can explode from a lucky hit, instead of having a mountain of Wounds. We did not have fun calculating who can hit who even in brawls between five orks in Gormakorka.

  • @aarondunn6759

    @aarondunn6759

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SusCalvin Perhaps if it was your first edition. The shift between 2nd to 3rd was very jarring as it was a complete overhaul. Everything felt watered down.

  • @SusCalvin

    @SusCalvin

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@aarondunn6759 Fighting an assault with just a handful of orks in Gorkamorka was a lot of work. I think those rules work better at that sort of skirmish level but not if 10 blokes with jetpacks are charging into 20 orks and you need to constantly figure out who is hitting who.

  • @aarondunn6759

    @aarondunn6759

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SusCalvin I never played Gorkamorka so I have no opinion on it.

  • @SusCalvin

    @SusCalvin

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@aarondunn6759 Necromunda and later Gorkamorka kept a lot of the 2nd ed rules but toned it down to a skirmish game. Close combat, armour, weapons, cover etc work similarly but it's a skirmish between two gangs/mobs of a half-dozen models instead of two armies.

  • @GhostGuitars
    @GhostGuitars2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent videos!

  • @drpretzel2086
    @drpretzel20862 жыл бұрын

    I keep an eye out for videos like this as some one who’s working on his own tabletop skirmish/war game it easy to read the rules and think ok that works but I always tend to not think about rule bloat.

  • @srdies5289
    @srdies52893 жыл бұрын

    You did those cheat sheets?! Dude, you saved some brains on my gaming group!! Thanks a looot!

  • @dekai7992
    @dekai79923 жыл бұрын

    I also came to the game in the late 2nd and early 3rd edition stage. It was lovely, all throughout and including 5th edition. 4th is probably my favourite, especially because I really dig the terrain rules from that time. Then uni came along, and that, in connection with the ridiculousness of 6th and 7th edition, made lose interest in the game for around 7 years. And then 8th came along, and it felt like 3rd all over again. Brilliantly easy to get into, while at the same time incorporating pretty much everything that came before rather smoothly, even though I miss the tactical dimension of vehicle armour values (trying to get behind tanks was a a fun challenge in and of itself in the ancient times). Current 40k with its stratagems is something I'm not fully behind, but maybe that's more a thing of practice. It's one of those "power to the players" design choices that benefit players for knowing what to do in the right moment, which is a good thing, at least on paper. And I also love the fact that GW really learned how to make each army feel as they are described in the lore, especially with the 9th edition codexes. However, I'm right there with you, as that creates a potential monstrosity of interlocking and synergising rules you need to keep in mind. I really hope they don't take it farther than they have until now, as that could easily break handling the game for casual players (like me, to be honest).

  • @TurbosTantrums
    @TurbosTantrums Жыл бұрын

    I did love the 2nd ed vehicle rules for their damage tables - great fun to have turrets fly off and land 2D6" away in a random direction and potentially squish what they land on, tanks going round in circles because you blew off a track, that kind of thing. Much more characterful than "it's fine/it's dead" But it's very crunchy and doesn't scale well for lots of vehicles.

  • @Triple_R_93
    @Triple_R_933 жыл бұрын

    Only problem with your channel is I've already seen every video XD Seriously quality videos keep it going!!

  • @macfin4862
    @macfin48623 жыл бұрын

    Fully agree with your thoughts on each edition. I painted as a kid back in 3rd. Tried to put some armies together and wrap my head around the rules right around the launch of 7th, but quickly gave up. Have found the current set (no hull points, blast markers etc) waaaay more straight forward. I've even had a few very small games with my 4 year old and watch battle reports from play on tabletop as entertainment.

  • @gigaflynn_
    @gigaflynn_3 жыл бұрын

    8 sides of A4?! And that's condensed?! I remember 3rd Ed came with reference sheets in the starter box that were double sided and that was everything you needed! Yikes on several bikes...

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    YEP. The entire 8ed Core Rules were shorter than my 7ed Reference sheets!!

  • @gigaflynn_

    @gigaflynn_

    3 жыл бұрын

    8th ed was exactly what the game needed. Same as AoS core rules, but lessons learned on implementation.

  • @dekai7992
    @dekai79923 жыл бұрын

    After having had 9th edition around for a year now, I fear that we actually may have arrived at a quasi-7th edition situation already. The difference being that we don't necessarily have bloated core rules as much as a bloated army level. Especially now with Auras and certain rules affecting only units with certain keywords. In this respect, 9th edition 40k feels like the worst version of Warmachine/Hordes at the end of its 2nd iteration. Also, while many 8th edition codices are still in effect, some 9th edition codices already have 1 or even 2 additional publications with supplemental rules (Adeptus Mechanicus being the worst offender here). Man, 9th edition is only 1 year young and I'm already eyeing my 4th edition 40k rulebook and OnePageRules with longing.

  • @Haanzer

    @Haanzer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Came here to say this - the rapid release of documents in 8th and 9th has accelerated us to a place of severe bloat at a surprising speed. After a few months off it, I find myself not really wanting to play 9th because of all the stuff I'm going to have to remember. Litanies, auras, traits, prayers, relics, stratagems - and that's before even thinking about all the special rules actually on the datasheets themselves. So many things in this game can do so unique actions that the first few times you play against any given army, so much of it feels like gotcha moments. At this point, the 7th Ed in Horus Heresy feels much simpler to me than 9th 40K.

  • @andrewallen812

    @andrewallen812

    2 жыл бұрын

    i literally am setting up a 5th ed game between my chaos nurgle and imperial guard because i cannot keep up with all the extra rules and abilities, i also play grimdark which is like 4/5th ed with alternating activations and it has much more paid content to make the game more robust if thats your thing.

  • @paeliosmandrezekial5047
    @paeliosmandrezekial50473 жыл бұрын

    Great break down my sentiments exactly. I deal with strategems by pretending they don't exist lol. They are just another phase of the game you can ignore and still get a fun time in.

  • @ArbitorIan

    @ArbitorIan

    3 жыл бұрын

    I really think this is what they should have done with Open War. Make a 'basic' set of rules - standard six missions, maelstrom cards, only war cards, build armies using any system, no secondaries, no stratagems, etc. Then really push this as 'standard 40k', pitched as a quick way to set up a fair game with some tactics (rather than the current throwaway 'do whatever you like'). Then market Crusade and Matched Play as 'expansions' or 'advanced' games. At the moment, we can all play without stratagems and secondaries, but finding players to do that is hard as it's not pushed as the norm.

  • @Hippie629
    @Hippie6293 жыл бұрын

    Got interested in 40k around 2010 my dad found the ultramarines movie in a bargain bin, I was at a lost after watching the movie it keep using terms and phrases that weren't explained in the movie. I found the setting fascinating like there was more to it that was either cut or left out because it was based on something that fans wouldn't need explained to them. Then I started looking around for more info and I found the Dawn of War RTS, and wow a movie I thought was some indie film or a reboot of a forgotten IP had a huge amount of content and was still going got me into Warhammer. Never played any of the tabletops the local tabletop scene was non existent, at most I would get a Yu-gi-oh game or a board game and when most of my gaming group entered their twenties, they either dropped gaming to start families or went purely digital. For years my 40k tabletop experience was just being a spectator watching bat reps and I'm glad that was it in hindsight looking back at all the rules and models that have come and gone, I'm glad I didn't get into 6th right when 7th came out or get into 7th when 8th came out. I never had to worry about having a sub par army or having to replace old rules or having no new rules(armies I was interested in were Astral claws, Death Korps, Eldar corsairs and Orks.) I wished I could've play the skirmish games like Necromunda and Gorkamorka when I was younger and had more free time and friends who were still interested in playing non video games, still watching bat reps might get into the table top scene online, but work and all that.

  • @joebest-rotheray493
    @joebest-rotheray4933 жыл бұрын

    I basically haven't played 40k for about 20 years since I was a kid, and I picked up the Indomitus box with the intention of getting back into a bit of painting and playing. It seems I chose a good moment to do so!

  • @Sartorius500
    @Sartorius5002 жыл бұрын

    Didn't know you were the creator of those reference cards for 7th. Thanks for those :) I liked the core rules from 7th that were taken over to HH. Agree with you on Strategums. I think 9th is very good apart from the endless Strats and the bubble producing aura abilities. I do miss armour facing though.

  • @shueyk2320
    @shueyk23203 жыл бұрын

    This is a big reason why I've always been into the world of 40k but Battletech has been what i fond more fun on TT

  • @Skyscraper125
    @Skyscraper1252 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I genuinely just only use and will ever only use battlescribe. I unsubscribed from buying books after Vigilus Ablaze and as a World Eater, very few of the books massively ever effect my army except for minor changes here or there which get updated to battlescribe a few weeks later. Maybe it's my local game store (which is still pretty big with maybe 50ish active 40k players), but I've never been scolded for still just owning the 8th edition chaos book. Here's hoping that continues.

  • @ktinga1
    @ktinga13 жыл бұрын

    My introduction to the game was 5th edition. That was the first game I played. After that game, 6th came out, and that was where I played most of my games. I took an unplanned break through almost all of 7th (and jeez, and I glad I did), so coming back to 8th was an absolute breath of fresh air. I love that if I don't need to know it, I don't, and my opponent brings it up when necessary. I'll then do a bit of research after the game, learn the basics of that army, and then I'm done, I don't need to study for hours before a game.

  • @brendanmahoney8823
    @brendanmahoney88233 жыл бұрын

    Well put good video!

  • @darnokx9277
    @darnokx9277 Жыл бұрын

    Would be interesting to hear your take on this matter in 9th edition - now over 18 months later.

  • @HBon111
    @HBon1112 жыл бұрын

    Those graphical presentations were top-notch. :)

  • @lv100Alice
    @lv100Alice3 жыл бұрын

    this is a really hige quality video and really cool to hear about the older editions

  • @evanlindsey1100
    @evanlindsey11002 жыл бұрын

    Gonna add another suggestion to try one of the versions of Grimdark Future. The basic rules are simple and easy to pick up, and there's a lot less dice rolling and games getting drawn out due to 3+ levels of saves keeping models on the far longer than they probably should.

  • @Jimbubly
    @Jimbubly3 жыл бұрын

    I got into 40K 2nd edition and it was insanely complicated. Then got back into it in 5th but couldn’t really keep up. I’m glad they made the rules more streamlined in 8th but wish they didn’t have to have so many special rules for each faction.

  • @alastaircollins1145
    @alastaircollins1145 Жыл бұрын

    I was always fond of “Shoot the Big One First!” as a special rule for ‘nids, since it was one you had to tell your opponent at the start, then it was their problem. If you’ve not read it yet, you’ll probably dig “Thinking Fast and Slow” by Daniel Kahneman, which looks at the various research going into cognitive loading and attention, but particularly the research he worked on for the US Navy. For a more fun aside, way back immediately post-High School, I was notorious at my local GW games’ night for flat out forgetting my special rules. The army case I carried my Bretonnians in had “PRAY” and “MAGIC ITEMS” painted on the clips, which I would position pointing up at me from the side of the table, AND I WOULD STILL FORGET! Being diagnosed with ADHD 15 years later wasn’t a massive surprise…

  • @8Scientist
    @8Scientist2 жыл бұрын

    Just leaned to play X-wing 2.0 I'm about half an hour. It's so good and has so much depth to it, it crazy to see the difference between that and the fact that as a veteran of 40k, I still constant forget how minor rules interactions work in 40k