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40K: Necron Codex Review – Part 2

9 Minute Read
Nov 10 2011
Warhammer 40K
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~By HERO

Today, lets get down and dirty with the Necrons, picking up from Part 1 from yesterday. Lets take a look at the units.

I’ll break this down into FOC sections, and like always, I’ll touch upon what I think is the most interesting.

Headquarters
First, the HQ section.  When I look through the HQ section, I actually get a little bit confused.  I’m happy in a sense that there’s a lot of flavor, but I’m disappointed in my competitive choices.  The big guy in this book is Imotekh the Stormlord.  He’s pretty good overall, has basic Necron Lord stats with a lot of nifty items.  Comes with 2+/3++ in his cost, D3 wounds respawn but no Res Orb!  Has a bunch of cool special rules like perpetual night fighting and Vect’s 4+ seize vs. non-Ork armies but that’s about it.  Personally, I expected better.  His fighting stats are mediocre and his army-wide rules are nowhere as game-changing as say… Logan Grimnar or Draigo Kaldor.  Fighting wise, he’s not as good as Vect or Mephiston so it’s safe to say that’s he’s pretty mediocre.  For the big guy in the book, I expected better.  However, one can argue that making Night Fighting last for half the game can bring back footslogging lists!  Heck, I would love to see that happen.

The one guy that caught my eye in the book is Nemesor Zahndrekh and Vargard Obyron.  You basically buy both all the time because they’re pretty much a package deal.  I mean, you can buy them separately, but that would be like buying a hotdog without the bun.  Anyways, the reason I love these two is because they’re fantastic for the price.  For 185 on Nemesor, you get 2+/3++ and a Res Orb.  You do that with your generic Necron Overlord and it comes out to be 180.  See what I mean about the DIY Lord?  Back to the Nemesor:  On top of the wargear, what really makes him tick is his special abilities:  Adaptive Tactics and Counter Tactics.  First, I love the fluff.  Zahndrekh is a great general and these special abilities fit his character perfectly.  Adaptive Tactics allows you to give anyone in your army a USR (CA, Furious Charge, Stealth, Tank Hunters, Hit and Run..etc) every turn.  This means you can give your Warscythe-totting Lychguard S8 with Furious Charge, Wraiths or Flayed Ones Hit and Run or Heavy Destroyers Tank Hunters with S9 AP2.  Outrageous combos are yours to invent.  You throw on the fact that he has Counter Tactics, which at the start of the turn you choose a enemy unit in his LoS and they lose and cannot gain the same set of USRs until next turn.  Your Blood Angels want to charge?  Cool, no FC vs. my T5 Lychguard.  Grey Hunters expecting to Counter-Attack?  Nope.  Dante has gives Hit and Run?  No he doesn’t.  The list goes on.  Lastly, he has Phased Reinforcements.  As long as Zahndrekh is on the battlefield, any number of units in reserve coming in from DS can enter the play on the enemy turn just like Deathmarks.  Pretty much, he gives the entire army Ethereal Interception.  All for what?  5 more points than a generic Overlord.  I think this is the biggest hit and miss and one of the reasons why I shot the Internal Balance a full point lower.

Next is Vargard Obyron.  He’s the only WS6 in the entire book and he comes stock with a 2+ armor save.  T5 with 3W and 3A just like most Overlords, but he has Ghostwalk Mantle which is a souped up version of Veil of Darkness.  When he uses it, his entire unit is removed from the table and placed anywhere via DS just like Veil.  The big kicker here is that unlike Veil, he can use this even if he’s locked in combat.  He just peaces out and takes his entire squad to wherever the fighting is the thickest.  The best part about this is that with Vargard’s Duty, he does not scatter if he’s within 6″Zahndrekh.  In addition, if Zahndrekh is ever in trouble, Obyron will literally appear next to him and pile into whatever combat the Nemesor is in, even if Obryon is in a transport.  That’s just freaking outrageous.  To make the fluff even better, Vargard Obyron has Cleaving Counterblow.  If you swing at him and miss, you keep a tally of how many attacks missed him and when it’s his time to swing, he swings back with his normal attacks +1 more for each attack missed (up to 6).  Pray you hit him, or else he’ll be hitting on 3s wounding with 2s vs. 90% of the game with no armor save.  Oh, and he doesn’t count towards your HQ choice if you buy Nemesor Zahndrekh.

Like I said, the other HQ choices are good:  Andrakyr the Traveler can take control of an enemy vehicle within 18″ of him on a 3+ and force it to shoot their own allies.  Imagine taking control of a Vindicator and having it pound Dante’s squad into dust.  He also comes with Furious Charge and Counter-Attack and gives a unit of Immortals the same USRs.  Orikan the Diviner is pretty fun to mess around with to see if the stars align and the ability to take a Royal Court with you is pretty neat.  For example:  If you buy a big named Lord guy or a DIY Overlord, you can buy a Royal Court with 0-5 Necron Lords (with 1W) and 0-5 Crypteks.  Crypteks are cheap and have cool weapons and abilities and Necron Lords are just beaters.  They can split off like Wolf Guard and go to other squads to buff up their CC or Shooting.  This flexibility is really nice.

Troops
As for troops, there’s only two:  Warriors or Immortals.  One is obviously more expensive than the other and you can only take 10 Immortals per squad.  That’s cool, because they can put out Rapid Fire S5 AP4 shots whereas the Warriors can only put out S4.  Warriors are now 13ppm but come with a 4+ armor save.  The WBB rule is now a 5+ and Res Orb from the Overlords is the only thing that can make it 4+.  Immortals have a better armor save but the fact that they can’t select a Ghost Ark as a dedicated transport means they’re going to be bouncing around via Monolith or footslogging across the field.  They can go into a Night Scythe since the thing has a 15-model transport, but AV11 with no Quantum Shielding is meh at best.  Even if you Supersonic 36″.  Regardless, they are now Troop choices and that’s awesome.  Necron Warriors can go up to 20 and they can take a Ghost Ark to travel around in (if you take 10).  Ghost Arks have Quantum Shielding, Living Metal and 2x Guass Flayer arrays so you can broadside things.  AV13, open-top so Necrons can spew from any angle and Skimmer means this is a good transport for 115 points.  Good, not great because of the points.

Elites
Elites have all kinds of cool stuff in it and that’s always good:  Deathmarks are a interesting shooting solution with Rapid Fire Sniper weapons and Hunters from Hyperspace.  Hunters gives them the ability to mark any non-vehicle target before the game starts and any shooting done vs. it wounds on 2+.  That’s pretty strong considering they can come out of nowhere (and on your opponent’s turn) with Ethereal Interception and start shooting things up.

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Lychguard are your Terminator-like beaters with Warscythes default, S7 power weapons on a T5 3+ armor model.  They cost the same as Terminators and you can buy them up to Hyperphase Swords and Dispersion Shields.  DShields have a 4++ invulnerable and is capable of bouncing shots back at the enemy within 6″.  Say you’re a Grey Hunter squad and you’re ready to launch an assault.  Before the assault, you shoot 2x Meltagun shots at them, hit with 2, wounds with 2, he saves both and 2 of your Grey Hunters gets gibbed because of it.  A pretty good deterrence from assault-based shooting if you’re totting melta or plasma weaponry if you ask me.

Triarch Prateorians are pretty interesting, combining Jump Infantry status with T5 3+ armor.  Their Rods of Covenant can shoot out S5 AP2 at 6″ and they count as power weapons.  With I2 and only 1A, I can see them as anti-TH/SS Terminators or any exposed MEQ.  A full squad of them can be expensive, but I don’t recall seeing any other T5 Jump Infantry in the game so that’s definitely interesting.

Next in the Elite slot, we have the C’Tan Shard.  It’s a little weaker than before with only S7 T7, but most of the rules is still the same.  4++ stock with Monstrous Creature, Eternal Warrior and ignore difficult terrain and a bunch of buy-up abilities that’s very cool.  Since he has BS5, he can buy up a S9 AP2 shot from 24″ away, has the ability to take pseudo offensive and defensive grenades + Stealth, or have a Large Blast template centered on him that inflicts S3 no armor saves plus it heals him.  I think for my strategy, I would give him Grand Illusion and Writhing Worldscape.  Grand Illusion allows him to reposition D3 of your units after deployment and Writhing Worldscape makes the entire board count difficult as dangerous terrain for your enemy.  If the terrain is already dangerous, he fails DT tests on 1 and 2.  To make things even funnier, you take this with Orikan the Diviner because of his special ability:  Temporal Snares.  It reads:  During the first game turn, all enemy units that move count as moving through difficult terrain.  In addition, if units are actually moving through DT, they take the lowest D6 result rather than the highest.  Damn, I kinda want to see this game played vs. a Green Tide player.

The next two I’ll cover really quick because they’re pretty straight forward.  Flayed Ones can be taken in units of 20 and have 3 attacks each with Infiltrate.  They’re the same cost as Warriors so that’s pretty cool.  The Necrons also get a Walker in the form of Triarch Stalker and he has Quantum Shielding and Living Metal with Move Through Cover.  He can act as an additional shooter for the army because he can take a Twin-linked Heavy Gauss Cannon (same as Heavy Destroyers, S9 AP2) and any time he hits a target, all additional units shooting at that target count as twin-linked.  If that’s not cool enough, he comes standard with a Heat Ray which is a 24″ Heavy 2 S8 AP1 Melta.  He can turn that into a Heavy Flamer too.


Fast Attack
Looking at Fast Attack, you have quite a bit of options.  Wraiths are your basic 3++ Jump Infantry who ignore terrain and slice things up with their claws (S6 Rending).  They can also take Whip Coils which act the same way as Lash Whips so things in CC with them will be very sad.  Canoptek Scarabs do what they do best and that’s smacking vehicles and applying their Entropic Strike.  On a 4+, the vehicle’s armor is permanently reduced by 1 on all sides for the rest of the game.

Tomb Blades are the Necron’s version of Jetbikes and I don’t find them that amazing, but that’s because I’m comparing them to Destroyers.  Destroyers and Heavy Destroyers in FA is awesome.  T5 with 3+ armor saves Jump Infantry with Preferred Enemy everything.  You can buy up to 5 Destroyers for 40ppm and can upgrade up to 3 of them to Heavy Destroyers for 20 more.  So ideally, you run 3 HDs at 180 for the unit.  Attach a Destroyer Lord with a Warscythe, Res Orb and 2+ armor save and you’re pretty much good to go as a lethal flanking unit.

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Heavy Support
Heavy Support sees the return of the popular Monolith minus the brokeness of last edition.  It trades nigh-invulnerability with the fact that it can suck enemy units into it and have it S-test or be removed from the game.  The Heavy Slot sees versatility in that it has anti-infantry in the form of the Annihilation Barge totting Twin-linked Tesla Destructors and the Doomsday Ark which is strictly anti-everything.  It has Quantum Shielding, Living Metal and carries the deadliest ranged weapon in the game as long as it doesn’t move.  As long as the Doomsday Ark remains stationary, it can shoot out a S9 AP1 Large Blast, which honestly is enough to erase any squad of MEQ from the game, Paladin or not.  The effects of it on vehicles such as Razorbacks is self-explanatory.  You can mess around with your enemies by putting some of these on the field and then re-positioning them with Grand Illusion if you have a Shard.

I’m a little disappointed with the Doom Scythe figher-plane looking thing though.  For 175 points, it’s a AV11 Fast Skimmer with no Quantum Shielding.  It has really cool fluff, looks like the Alien craft from Independence Day and has awesome weaponry (Death Ray!).  It also comes with Aerial Assault and Supersonic just like the Voidraven, but is not as powerful from far away.  Personally, I think this is a strong indication that there’ll be a change made to Flyers next edition to make them more viable.

~Alright guys, that’s about it.  Like I said, the book is very solid and is very fun to play with.  I think I would rank this book in par with Phil Kelly’s Dark Eldar.  That’s really saying something.

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Author: Larry Vela
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