Warhammer 40k House Rules: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 19:52, 30 January 2014
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For those that dont know, House Rules are tweaks to a game system that (hopefully) rebalance the game in question in a positive way. Below are some minor tweaks to the core system without creating (currently) known imbalances or unfair advantages after extended play testing. If you add to this page, please limit the rule changes to minor tweaks you have personally tested. This is not the place to debate the results of these house rules, merely to list the ones your group uses.
- Deep Strike- Instead of the standard disembark/shoot standard, allow a single "phase". The unit may move, shoot, or assault. Through playtesting, it was found this made assault units much more effective for their point cost and much more balanced for 6E's heavy emphasis on shooting.
- Shooting into Assault- A nice counterpoint that just makes sense. Think 'nids, orks, tau (greater good), or even the imperium would care about a little friendly fire? All shots that miss the enemy unit will instead hit your own units. Twin-linked weapons will still hit your own unit on the failed hit (can hit your own unit twice for double fail). You must pass a leadership check in order to fire into an assault.
- Alternate take: Only 1s will hit your own, no blast weapons. Otherwise most low BS troops ('nids, orks, and Guard, ie the ones who would do this) will end up hitting mostly there own.
- Random Generation- One of the more odd changes in 6E was the random generation of psychic powers and warlord traits. It doesn't support the narrative play style conducive to an entertaining game. For psychic powers, choose a single discipline. You know all the powers but can only use as many as your warp charges allow. For warlord traits, choose one from your army's codex or the main rulebook. This will hopefully re-introduce a bit of flavor into your armies.
- Alternate take on warlord traits: Roll the D6 first, then choose the table. Since there are 3 tables in the BRB you can choose from 3-4 different traits where some will always help you instead of having a bad roll that screws with your plans. It's less random but still random enough for a tabletop wargame. Not very narrative though.
- Flying Units- It really doesn't take much to shoot a flying target, especially if they are capable of accurately shooting at you. Units are no longer limited to firing snap shots at flying units.