
Originally Posted by
Chicago Slim
I absolutely love this sort of hyperbole, which is awesome specifically because it cannot be disproven.
The fact that I'm 5-1 with my Wood Elves in a take-all-comers tourney clearly means that my opponents are inexperienced and/or bringing uncompetitive builds, right? I had this out in another thread earlier this week, when I wrote about how my most recent opponent (a Dwarf who brought lots of shooting) was stuck with killing 1 dryad or war dancer per turn with his bolt throwers and cannon. "Clearly," wrote another poster, "he didn't bring a competitive build-- if he had, his organ guns would have made quick work of those skirmishers." Actually, though, that opponent had brought 2 organ guns, which were both dead by Turn 3, despite having 32 Quarrelers defending them.
*shrug* Wood elves now do everything they were meant to do, when they first appeared 15-20 years ago. They pick a target to whittle down with shooting, then crush that target in a fast and brutal round or two of combat, all while minimizing their own casualties through exceptional maneuverability. They will, at best, have a hard time winning any kind of stand-up fight (though I actually think that a couple of 6-packs of Tree Kin may be at the heart of a viable build).
Really large units (50+ models) made of decent troops (T4 and/or armored-- anything that costs more than 5 point per model) are pretty rare. Against T3 lightly armored hordes (goblins, skaven, men-at-arms, marauders, skeletons, etc.) shooting works very well: At close range, 10 Glade Guard expect to generate about 4-5 kills per round-- which means that 30 Glade Guard expect to drop something like a full rank from a horde with a single turn's shooting. Give me a round at long and one at close, and then two or three units of Dryads/Tree Kin/Wardancers charging in, and I fully expect to pick up a couple hundred points from a cheap horde, while giving up nothing. As a bonus, I've probably just cleared a flank, and can spend the rest of the game happily dancing through the backfield, avoiding any other combat.
Yeah, that was exactly what I expected to find, when I decided to play them for this 9-game tourney. A couple of months later, I find myself sitting at 5-1 (and, yeah, SOME of those opponents were inexperienced, but none of them deliberately build a fluff-list, and some of them have decades of experience), which made me seriously reconsider...