Tag: aos

  • Death, Destruction, and Chaos – An Age of Sigmar: Warcry Battle Report

    If playing tabletop wargames is your favorite part of the hobby, then you likely play a skirmish game like Warcry or Kill Team. Either provide all of the glory that traditional Warhammer provides at a significantly smaller scale. It’s been around six months since I last played a game of Warcry, so I thought it would be worthwhile to walk through some of what happened on that fateful night.

    After work, three of my friends came by to trade Magic the Gathering cards and play Warcry. I set up the board with five objectives and a couples pieces of terrain (unfortunately, I had temporarily misplaced some of my more vertical terrain) and laid out the available warbands for my friends to select. Noah chose his ever faithful Ossiarch Bonereapers, Sam stuck with his Kruleboyz, Alec brought out the Iron Golems, and I represented the Daemons of Nurgle.

    The battle plan was a simple capture and hold objective with the twist that anyone who controls an objective turns it into a healing spring for any nearby allied models. What started out as a patient game of Red Rover turned into a mosh pit in the middle of the board once we all realized that it was going to be the turning point in the game without serious upsets occurring. Alec’s sturdy Iron Golems marched to the center objective first, followed by a skeleton warrior and a Beast of Nurgle. Sam’s Kruleboyz were ambushed by Noah’s Liege Kavalos, which kept them securely in their corner of the battlefield.

    Despite having a ton of wounds, the Orruks were eventually able to fell the Ossiarch leader and begin spilling onto the rest of the board. By that time, however, most of the battle had already taken place. As the Ossiarch retreated, the Ogor Breacher and Beasts of Nurgle continued to clash over the central objective, while the Plaguebearers charging in toe were easily felled by the remaining Iron Golems.

    By the end of the game, the Kruleboyz were able to slink away mostly unharmed but without achieving their ultimate victory of poisoning the local water supply. Their job was done for them, however, as the blighted corpses of the followers of Nurgle piled up around the well and oozed foul bile into the soil. A new dawn rose slowly over the battlefield to reveal the Iron Golems standing victorious over their enemies, unaware that grandfather Nurgle’s wishes had been fulfilled as well.

  • Age of Sigmar Battle Report: Ogor Mawtribes versus Hedonites of Slaanesh

    For today’s battle report, my sparring partner and I decided to test a new Slaanesh list against my new Ogors with Kragnos in toe. Check out the lists below:

    Hedonites of Slaanesh

    • Subfaction: Pretenders
    • 1x Glutos
    • 1x Lord of Pain
    • 1x Contorted Epitome
    • 22x blissbarb archers
    • 5x blissbarb seekers
    • 10x twinsouls
    • 10x pain bringers
    • Terrain feature

    Ogor Mawtribes

    • Subfaction: +1 to spells for butchers
    • 2x butcher
    • 1x icebrow hunter
    • 1x Kragnos
    • 4x mourn fang
    • 2x frost sabres
    • 6x gluttons
    • 4 leadblechers

    We usually come up with the flavor for our match as we set up terrain, so today’s battle involved an Ogor Mawtribe on the warpath coming across Kragnos, the living earthquake, and following him into conflict with a marauding band of Slaanesh’s finest. Half the board being covered in snow helped sell the illusion that the Overwinter had followed Kragnos along with his Ogor companions to their encampment before the battle.

    Round 1: Hedonites

    I was able to win the roll off, deploy first, and gave the turn to my opponent. My goal was to aim for the double turn, and otherwise react to their movement with counter charges. As is typical for the followers of Slaanesh in 3.0, the round started with a pelting of ranged attacks and ended with the pack of seekers killing my leadblechers in one combat. My boys were able to land some nasty unleash hell damage, but otherwise the first turn was relatively uneventful, just as planned.

    Round 1: Ogors

    My turn ended up being much more eventful. Despite my subfaction giving me 2 extra casts, both of my butchers whiffed on all of their spells except for Voracious Maw, dealing a surprise amount of mortal wounds. Not having a terrain feature bit me in the butt for this match, given my list, but I think my models did okay on their own without buffs. A YouTuber once told me to never rely on my spells as an Ogors player and it felt self evident in this match. Thankfully, the remains of my ogors were able to smash into the enemy line and deal a bunch of mortal wounds. Kragnos did his thing, killing the seekers, and my general popped up out of deep strike to send his sabres in to absorb the unleash hell.

    Round 2: Ogors

    Giving up the first turn paid off! I got a double turn and was able to send Kragnos across half the board (10″ move plus a 15″ charge), tackling the Epitome and engaging most of the backline heroes in combat. My hunter was able to breath ice on the archers, charge in, and take a few down before dying himself.

    Round 2: Hedonites

    To his credit, my opponent played out the rest of the round. They finest hour’d their Epitome and went in for the attack, but a finest hour and All Out Defense from Kragnos helped keep him on a +2 despite the rend, nullifying the combat phase for the most part and keeping his army out of range of their mortal wounds on 6 ability. With the Kragnos clapback imminent and him just barely avoiding being bracketed, my opponent conceded and we had a relaxing break afterwards. Sometimes its more fun to talk about Sigmar than to play, but them’s the dice.

    Thanks for reading! If you’d like to read more about Age of Sigmar, game design, or similar topics, check out the rest of the my blog.

  • Warhammer Age of Sigmar: Dominion – 3rd Edition Review

    Tabletop wargaming is my generation’s model train. I grew up going to train conventions with my dad, collected Warhammer 40,000 models in middle school, and admired Warhammer Fantasy from afar for years. It wasn’t until the 2020’s pandemic that I took another look at my miniature collection and regained a love for tabletop wargaming. After a year and a half of learning Warhammer 40k’s 9th edition, I purchased an Age of Sigmar Dominion box and fell head over heels for the modern fantasy equivalent of Games Workshop’s most popular tabletop wargame.

    For context, Age of Sigmar is not Warhammer Fantasy—it is a brand reset for the fantasy version of Warhammer and presents a totally new product despite similar models being used in both games. While Warhammer 40,000 has the baggage of decades of legacy mechanics and rules, Age of Sigmar strips back the bloat and attempts wild and flavorful approaches to traditional wargaming tropes as opposed to the strict interpretations of the 41st millennium. 

    The core rules for Age of Sigmar are relatively simple compared to its contemporaries and help engage the players in the cooperative storytelling that makes for fun gaming sessions. Mortals of the various realms face off against terrifying daemons, horrifying beasts, and followers of chaos alike. 

    Without a ton of rules bloat to lull your brain to sleep (or boredom), Sigmar relies heavily on universal mechanics that all players can take advantage of. The more flavorful abilities are left for specific factions to utilize, but they rarely take center stage in a game primarily around statistics and predictability. This creates a game flow that helps players build up knowledge and familiarity with the game regardless of which force they select to field (the exception being OCR).

    After growing up with old metal models and janky instructions, assembling the models from the Age of Sigmar Dominion box was a breeze! Not only are the models pegged for easy, no-glue-required assembly, but their design is sleek and elegant enough to allow for more experienced builders to trim the pegs off and work with or kitbash the plastic to their heart’s content. If you like the honorable Stormcast Eternals or the slimy Kruleboyz, both armies are a steal at ~$60 each.

    If you’re interested in getting into tabletop wargaming but don’t know where to start, consider picking up the Age of Sigmar Dominion box (they currently sell for around $120 USD) to gain access to two 1,000-point armies that can be played after assembly. If you’d rather try something smaller scale, there’s always Age of Sigmar: Warcry to test your mettle against opposing warbands instead of opposing armies.