Warhammer/Tactics/8th Edition/Tomb Kings
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Why Play Tomb Kings
Tomb Kings are a pretty fragile army and unforgiving army, with many exceptions and special rules, so it is not recommended for beginners who are just leaning the ropes. Like their Egyptian parallel, Tomb kings are reliant upon light infantry blocks, regiments of archers and skirmishing light chariots, with a heavy reliance upon magic for supporting and debuffing. Unfortunately, armour is a rare sight in the Tomb king army, and only two units have natural saves greater than 5+, so your troops being numerically superior to your opponents troops is a recommended position to take. A point to note; many other armies take having troops on standby to flank for granted, but flanking is necessary for Tomb king victory, as virtually all Tomb king units are inferior to their counterparts in other armies. With this in mind, you must be very careful when maneuvering troops.
A few points about this army that do not apply to other mortal(and sometimes immortal armies). Every unit has these special rules: Unbreakable, Unstable, Fear, Tomb King Undead(which is used to distinguish tomb king units from vampire counts units for the purposes of spells, and to identify the unit for spells that specifically apply to undead units).This tells us that every Tomb king unit is reliable, very fragile, but reliable. A unit will not break and run because of a bad dice roll, so there is little to fear about losing a combat, however, because of unstable, a unit will lose the number of wounds equal to how many points it lost a combat by(if it has lost combat) and while no so troubling when it happens to a large block of skeletons, it is a great concern for monsters, small elite nits and lone heroes. Finally, because of fear, it is perfectly possible to bring a unit down to almost equal footing in combat against any unit in the Tomb king army if the opponent makes a bad dice roll, but their are ways to increase the chance of a failed leadership test.
In addition, there are special rules that only apply to Tomb Kings. These are: Animated Constructs, Arrows of the Asp and Entombed Beneath the Sands(EBTS). Animated constructs identify the unit as a automation made of bone/stone/metal/tar etc. that is not a skeleton so to say, this includes the likes of the ushabti and warsphinxes, and by having this special rule, a unit suffers one less wound due to unstable and automatically has a 5+ armour save(note it does not specify that this is a scaly skin save, nor does it imply that it is given by any kind of armour). Arrows of the asp applies to every unit in the army with a ranged weapon, and it essentially states that the unit will never benefit form bonuses or suffer from penalties when shooting, allowing a unit to move, fire into cover, fire though a unit, fire at long range etc. all without suffering penalties like other armies. EBTS allows the unit to enter play from reserve anywhere on the board(think of it like deepstriking) with the ability to move (but not charge) on the turn it arrives, the downside to this is the high potential for scattering away into terrain, and the 1 in 6 chance of rolling a misfire on the artillery dice and another 1 in 3 chance of killing of the unit(the other 2 options are not so bad). Finally, Rob Cruddace has seen It fit to completely remove any ability for a Tomb King unit to make a normal march move, and restrict the charge reactions to hold, which means skeleton archers cannot Stand And Shoot, this means that the army as a whole will be very slow and inflexible in comparison to other armies who are perfectly capable of moving twice the distance with their respective units.
Tomb king units, like vampire count units, can reliably resurrect wounds and models in units from casting spells in the lore of Nehekhara, allowing for many units in the Tomb king army to tarpit another, pricier unit, and still sustain the combat for a extended period of time as long as they receive magic support.
Unit Analysis
Lords & Heroes
Named Characters
- NOTE:
Under the current edition of WHFB, Named Characters tend to be overpriced. That being said, the following Named Characters do have certain wargear, or a combination of different wargear that are unique to them, as well as a few Special Rules. You could take another model and emulate one of the Characters from scratch to save you a few points. Just remember, if you really need to field a Named Lord/Hero, you can go right ahead, but be sure you're getting your points worth. For Tomb Kings, contrary to e.g. Ogre Kingdoms, the special characters offer some flavor and options that is not possible to emulate with normal characters. Some find the army hard-pressed to compete without them.
- Settra the Imperishable: Sporting a magnificent beard at 475 points, Lord Settra represents the pinnacle of Tomb King special characters, a good thing too as he was the first of the priest kings of khemri after years of strife between the desert tribes, and since then his only undefeated enemy was time itself. Settra must be the Army General, no two ways about it, and in addition(due to his level one wizard level)he can also be the Hierophant, if you so desire. Settra rolls the roles of caster, melee DPS and support into one package, and a mobile one at that. In terms of mobility, Settra must be fielded upon The Chariot of the Gods and may never be taken on foot(however he may be dismounted should the chariot be destroyed), the chariot itself possesses a reasonable movement value of 8" ,four basic steeds(note this makes his base width 4", a statline with five across, scythed and flaming and magical impact hits. in terms of casting, it is a minor afterthought, only level one with his only option for a spell lore being the lore of Nehekhara. In melee, Settra shines however, with a powerful statline of WS7 and five S6 attacks (note, same I3 as a Tomb King)with the added benefit of ignoring armor saves, flaming attacks, and a permanent WS and BS debuff of -1 should a character or monster be hit. In terms of a support role, his inspiring presence has a range of 18" and his My Will Be Done is a 6" bubble that provides WS 7 to all Tomb King units that are not mounts. In addition he also has a magic resistance of 1 that is conferred to the unit he is in. All of this does come at a cost however; Settra is very fragile, only sporting light armor and mounted status to provide an armor save of 5+ and a talisman to provide a 4+ ward, while his T5 will resist some of the S3/4 hits you will take, his large base size will ensure that he will receive a bucketload of those attacks.
- High Queen Khalida: Once the Queen of Lybaras in the during the 4th dynasty of Khemri, Khalida ran into a quick and sticky end at the hands of Neferata(her cousin) which prompted the god, Asaph, to purge the vampiric taint from Khalida. During the purging, she died, and was entombed in the temple of Asaph in Lybaras. A radical change from her old incarnation, she is now significantly cheaper at 365 points and arguably better for it. She retains much of her old statline(aside from once being BS4) and ASF, making her the fastest Tomb King character available, coupled with 5 attacks and S4 poisoned, she is a very formidable melee character against basic troops, but as she has lost regeneration, her T5 and light armor are not enough to protect her against other characters or monsters. However, no one takes Khalida for her combat ability, no, Khalida is the posterchild of Tombking archer lists everywhere, as her MWBD has been altered to grant her BS3 rather then her WS6 to any unit of archers she joins in addition to granting their shooting attacks poisoned, ramping up the damage output of the unit. Two minor notes, Khalida also has hatred against vampire counts and a Enchanted item which inflicts 2D6 S4 hits against a unit within 24" following the rules for magic missiles.
- Prince Apophas: A very odd character, in the sense that nothing of his kind has ever existed beforehand, which seems odd considering that skaven and dark elves have been churning out assassins for years now, with O&G only recently adding their own, so what's different? Normally an assassin hides in a unit until the most appropriate time, ready to be whipped out right under the opponents nose to gank another character with a ludicrous amount of damage items and ASF/high initiative. Apophas on the other hand, cannot join units, ever, and has the option to appear using the rule EBTS(entombed beneath the sands) which works like the deepstrike rule from 40K, allowing the assaisn to pop up anywhere on the table. There is a downside however, as he is unable to charge on the turn he appears, but can move, which makes the inevitable wall of lead or iron pelted his way a little easier to deal with. On the point of moving, Apophas can fly, has a universal strider special rule and causes terror, allowing him to port around the battlefield at will and potentially threaten light units with terror checks, and if that fails he is certainly capable of dealing with any units like dire wolves or pistolers in combat. That being said, there is not much else he can do but threaten warmachines, as his stats are pretty poor, with WS4 S4 T3 W4 I1 A5, as you can see he isn't going first against anything but zombies and steam tanks and the T3 excludes him from any combat against elite or large units, while he does have a 4+ regeneration save, that isn't much. In addition, he has two special abilities that are quite useful in a pinch, the first is Soul Reaper, which allows Apophas to reroll failed rolls to hit and wound against a nominated character during combat, and the ability to use a S2 breath weapon once per game, either in template form or close combat auto 2D6 hits form, which also doubles as a death bomb, in which every unit within 2D6 of Apophas, immediately after he has been slain, take 2D6 hits. as you can see Apophas is less of a assassin character and more of a scout hunter, wizard slayer and warmachine buster.
- Ramhotep the Visionary: A sneaky little git that circumvented the natural process of being interred in the pyramids he builds by masquerading as another necrotect overseeing the construction until the time comes to commit ritual suicide, it is only then that the "other" necrotect suddenly finds himself force fed the poisoned elixir while Ramhotep makes a hasty escape. A little bit proud and vain, he has become quite pissed seeing his "masterpieces" falling into ruin, or falling into the greedy grasping hands of lesser civilizations. Cheap for a named special character at 110 points, but ludicrously expensive in comparison to the normal necrotect, whether the increase in cost is worthwhile is up for debate. In addition to the normal necrotect special rules, Ramhotep grants frenzy to the unit he is with, in addition to having it himself, and while this does increase the initial damage output, it will only last until you lose combat, and the odds are, the unit will lose to anything competent in combat no matter how many upgrades the unit has. In addition, a random animated construct unit is given the ability to reroll failed armour saves, which immediately provokes the thought of a unit of necro knights with their 3+ armour saves as standard being re-rollable, however do no forget only one unit and the unit is selected at random. It is worth noting that Ramhotep is very fragile at T4 and W2 with only light armour for a save.
- Arkhan the Black: Once one of Nagash's lieutenants during the reign of Nagash until he took a spear to the heart, and has since been resurrected as a Lich upon Nagash's return. As the plan to resurrect Nehekhara didn't work out as planned, Arkhan buggered off for a couple of hundred years, and it is only relatively recently he has returned, hiring his services and armies out like some sort of mercenary corporation to anybody who pays the right price. At 360 points, he is a Level 5 Death Wizard that can be your army's Hierophant. 5 Spells with a +5 to cast/dispel. He also comes with the option to ride a chariot, then the option to upgrade that chariot with he ability to fly and/or take two additional steeds for extra close combat attack output. The Tomb Blade also works as a localized Restless Dead whenever he makes a kill in close combat, raising one wound of his own unit for every one he causes(make note, he has a reasonable statline for dealing with footsloggers but only has T5 to protect himself). His final piece of equipment(not counting the book)is staff of Nagash, a arcane item that can store up to three dispel dice in your opponents magic phase and converted to power dice in your own magic phase. Arkhan must take the lore of death, but has the added benefit of having the option to be the Hierophant, as a result, this is the only way to avoid the steaming pile of crap that is the lore of Nehekhara. In conclusion, Arkhan is a solid anti monster and debuff caster, while Tomb blade may be a bit "meh" and the staff of Nagash dependent on the outcome of the magic phase, he also fields a strong statline for personal protection and a superior casting/dispelling bonus above almost all other wizards.
- Grand Hierophant Khatep: The Grand Hierophant during the reign of Settra, Khatep was banished from the kingdom after Settra's resurrection for withholding the secrets of the priests from Settra, and has since been cursed to wander the world in search for a solution to Nagash's curse. A level 4 wizard that has the loremaster of Nehekkara, Khatep is the casting alternative to Arkhan at a similar price of 330 points. while being forced to use the lore of Nehekhara, he makes up for the limitation by having access to all of the spells, allowing him to be a versatile switchblade when it comes to magic, capable of resurrecting troops, increasing movement speed(otherwise known as marching), buffing friendly units with buffs for both offensive and defensive situations(including a situational can opener that allows simple skellies to harm heavily armoured troops), slowing down a opposing unit which also acts as a direct damage spell, debuffing opposing units and to top it off with a ghastly cherry, a AOE damage spell. The crowning jewel of Khatep is certainly his staff, which allows him to reroll all of the dice in a single casting attempt once per turn, allowing risky moves to be pulled with marginally less fear, and unlucky fails or miscasts to have a second chance. A final point would be the scroll of the cursing word, which is a one use item that ends all further casting attempts for one turn on a single wizard if they fail a strength test, and D3 automatic unsaveable wounds if they fail it on a 6. In case this wasn't clear enough, the item is incredibly unreliable, and highly situational.
- The Herald Nekaph: Bodyguard of Settra and the closet thing to a diplomat I suspect he has. I must make this very clear, the character is wasted potential. Very mediocre statline of WS5 S4 T4 W2 I3 A3 LD8 for a 120 point combat hero with KB and only light armour present to save him from wounds, this immediately discounts any use his Sworn Bodyguard special rule may have as he is so fragile. His gimmick is not in protection, o no, he is "supposed" to challenge opposing characters as something of a mini assassin, he must challenge and he gains a 5+invun and has his KB activate on a 5+ when he is in one, which effectively renders the flail of skulls he uses as his weapon moot, however this is all hypothetical talk, as he must first endure a barrage of hits from his opponent, and a passing glance at his statline clearly shows that he is unlikely to remain standing against any competent combat character. I mentioned the flail of skulls, a relic from the past, it essentially acts as a flail which has the multiple wounds (2) special rule. Why do I call him wasted potential? Because his special rule herald of despair is so good, and it is wasted on a character who must challenge, and will get himself killed at the first opportunity. It essentially forces your opponent to take fear tests on 3D6 like the vampire counts banner, discarding the lowest result, which is exactly what Tomb kings need in greater quantities. It is just a pity that it has gone to waste.
Generic Characters
- Tomb Kings/Prince: Both of these will be looked at together, since they're pretty similar. Tomb Kings are not mandatory (despite the name of the book), but in most cases you will take one as a General. They have high Toughness, a fine number of Wounds, and good Leadership, but (as you might expect) a low number of attacks and a pitiful Initiative. However, he is no melee beatstick; his true purpose lies in his rules, especially My Will Be Done. Essentially, any non-mount model in his unit gets to use his Weapon Skill. This provides a major boost to the survivability of your models in combat and helps with the low average WS of the army. Of course, your Tomb King (and Princes) can't be everywhere at once, so you should form a priority list of who should get it. Units that are already fairly decent should probably be on top; Tomb Guards, for instance, benefit immensely from MWBD, whereas the rule is generally a waste on basic Skeleton Warriors. His other special rules are interesting but not particularly important. When the Tomb King (or Prince), his killer takes a few Armour Ignoring hits from The Curse. Unfortunately, this only activates if you lose the Tomb King, which you don't want to happen. It will make your enemy think twice about setting an elite character-killer on him, though. The Tomb King is also Flammable, being a mummy. This is quite unfortunate, as most enemy heroes will have Flaming Attacks to deal with Regeneration. Both levels can be taken down in two Flaming Attacks, which makes their high(ish) level of Wounds a moot point. Finally, a Tomb King on a chariot can join units of chariots. However, outside of a chariot, the Tomb King is severely limited in equipment options. He cannot take a "regular" mount, he cannot take non-magical heavy armour, and he cannot take non-magical paired weapons. As such, he must invest heavily in magic items, which many other races do not have to do.
- Liche Priest/Lich High Priest: fairly cheap for a caster yet still on the expensive side of cheap, the Liche priest is a essential component of your army, this is because the army requires one caster to be the hierophant(the loci of necromantic magic that keeps the army from falling apart). Unfortunately, the hierophant must be the wizard with the highest level in the army and must also be taking the lore of Nehekhara, these two factors severely limit the flexibility of the Liche priests when choosing their spell lores, which is very frustrating when both alternative options, lore of light and lore of death, are both superior(in my opinion) to the lore of Nehekhara. In addition, in keeping with the mass unit buffing theme, the hierophant provides a 6+ regeneration save to every model in the unit he is in, which kind of offsets the penalty if the lich priest croaks, as if that occurs, every unit in the Tomb king army must pass a leadership test, or lose a number of wounds equal to the amount they failed, once every player turn. A bummer, I know right.
- Tomb Herald: Cheap combat characters, far cheaper than tomb kings, inferior stat line all round aside from attacks and strength, replacing MWBD and TC for killing blow and bodyguard(more on that later) and the option of carrying the battle standard banner and being mounted(Yayyy). The character is underwhelming, it is simply undeniable, it lacks the unit buffing abilities which makes the tomb king and necrotect so viable, and the combat potential is poor, with low initiative and Weapon skill forcing you to compensate with the use of magic items in order to compete with the faster, stronger hero choices of other races. the option for a banner is wasted as the benefits for the Tomb king army are minor in comparison to other races, even though the cost is identical. and the ability to be mounted is wasted due to a lack in quality of the army's cavalry units. The one niche where the herald really shines, is acting a s a living shield for the Tomb king( I did say he was underwhelming). The bodyguard rule allows the Tomb king player to reallocate one random wound directed at the Tomb king onto the herald per phase before saves are taken, therefore allowing the Tombking to allocate valuable magic item allowance to big swords with which to cut people up without worrying about having his head caved in. Note that the wound is allocated before saves are taken, so if you wish to load the herald up on magic armour and nearly double his cost to mitigate that one wound per phase, no one will frown at you.
- Necrotect: The necrotect is a raw support character with severely limited combat capabilities and a reasonable price tag. The necrotect comes with hatred(everything) and provides that special rule to any unit he joins, effectively turning them into dark elves. he packs a little bit of combat potential, at S and T are 4 with two attacks and paired weapons, he might be capable of taking out a few minions. Finally, any animated construct within 12" gains a 6+ regeneration save.
Core Units
- Skeleton Warriors: These guys are your basic infantry. And yes, they absolutely suck as much as their statline would suggest. Luckily, they're also among the cheapest infantry in the entire game. They're also Unbreakable and can heal with the Lore of Nehekhara. On the other hand, these guys really, really fear Unstable, since they don't get a benefit from Steadfast and they almost definitely won't win a combat, meaning they'll all just crumble away. Don't even think about giving them spears, either: you add 25% to their cost for a few more pitiful attacks. It's always better to load up on more bodies. Also, don't bother putting a Tomb King or Prince in the unit; My Will Be Done will not help them. The only reasonable way to use them is to field them in hordes. Then field hordes of hordes. Generally speaking, they aren't as good as Archers or Chariots, but they will give you a numerical advantage (albeit a partially-negated one, as you get no benefit from Steadfast).
- Skeleton Archers: You get the basic package, for a cheap price, with the same statline as your skeleton warriors including the BS of 2. However they have one saving grace - they never count bonuses or penalties for shooting. So you always hit on a 5+. Not so great you say? Fuck yeah it is - shoot at long range at a single character in cover and see what you need to hit with any other army. In fact, you can really use this to your advantage; a lot of other players will probably put guys in cover, thinking that it'll help them. Your guys may not hit much, but it will be a nasty surprise when it turns out that your opponent's careful positioning was useless.
- Skeleton Horsemen: Originally labeled heavy horsemen, but that has been revised to the more appropriate title of horsemen in this current edition, because there is nothing heavy about this unit. Unfortunately the unit is stuck in a void of not knowing what it want's to be, it has the vanguard special rule, obviously for either hitting an opponents warmachines or moving into flanking position, but it also possesses the same statline as a normal skeleton with the edition of a mount, spear and shield, which makes the unit entirely unsuitable for combat, especially when the price for each horseman is twice the price of a fully geared skeleton and there are currently no combat bonuses for charging cavalry aside from +1 strength on the spear. The only niche this unit falls into is flanking to deny steadfast, as all other units in the tomb king book that can reliably get a flank charge are either unable to form ranks, or are ludicrously inefficient when they do so. a small block of 10 cavalry on the other hand can get the charge, and stay around long enough to disrupt the opposing unit. all for the "meager" cost of 120 points.
- Skeleton Horse Archers: A more suitable cavalry unit, horse archers replace the shield and spear for a bow at 2 additional points, in addition too also possessing the fast cavalry special rule and scout special rule, making the only unit to my knowledge to posses both vanguard and scout at the same time. Like skeleton archers, horse archers never count bonuses or penalties when rolling to hit, which is quite useful when they're Bs 2.Unfortunetly they only carry standard bows, which renders their damage output pitifully low, hence they are normally used to redirect charges and hunt for warmachines.
- Skeleton Chariots: Yup, they're core. Units of chariots are core. You can build your entire army around these things. They even come with bows and the standard Tomb Kings special rules for archers. A full rank is only 3 chariots, and you get to add your rank bonus to the strength of your impact hits. Any character mounted in a chariot can join the unit too. If they can even make room for Settra's beard. Widely considered the shock troops of the tomb king army, they also pack a plethora of small bonuses to aid in their role. Chariots are toughness 4 basic, the crewmen are Ws 3 and have 2 attacks each(2 crewmen per chariot in addition to also carrying spears. The only issue with the unit is the excessive cost, at 55 points each a unit of chariots is a valuable and expensive asset that must be committed carefully, It must be stressed that it is always to your advantage if you charge chariots in the flank against a unit that has lost steadfast, rather then charging chariots directly into the front of a unit. Ensure the unit you charge will be damaged beyond combat capability with the impact hits, and tidy up whatever is left with the crew attacks, thus reducing the damaged returned to the chariots and potentially routing the unit and running them down. Charging a horde of chaos warriors head on is never a good idea.
Special Units
- Tomb Guard: The elite infantry choice of the Tomb king army book, and a clear step above skeletons, with a higher WS, S, T, I and LD in addition to also possessing killing blow and light armour as standard. This huge boost is reflected in the increase to points cost, standing at 11 points each, a unit of tomb guard is normally a large points sink. Normally a tomb guard unit is the center of attention when it comes to buffing units with a tomb king/necrotect/augment spells etc, and rightly so for such buffs are not wasted, especially when the unit can be given halberds to boost their strength to 5 to further increase their damage output, but do note that this costs a additional 2 points, making the unit very expensive.
- Necropolis Knights: While skeleton horsemen are the medium cavalry of the tomb king army, necropolis knights are the heavy cavalry. monstrous mounts sporting a fearsome statline, the defining feature of this unit is the 3+ armour save, which is the highest basic save any unit in the tomb king army can posses, giving this unit a relatively high level of staying power. Even though it posses such a save, it excels as a flanking unit in support of a large block of skeletons or tomb guard, and even though it is in direct competition with chariots, necropolis knights are more than capable of competing for a place in a army list. The rider is a buffed tomb guard, with the same statline aside from WS 4 and A 2, who also packs a spear and the killing blow special rule. The mount on the other hand has Ws3 S5 T4 A3 W3 and I3 allowing it to churn out enough damage to quickly earn it's points back in short order, especially when we also factor in a stomp attack. Obviously, the necropolis knights favor a prolonged combat whilst a unit of chariots depend upon breaking a unit on the charge, but in addition to flanking, necropolis knights also make a reasonable unit for hunting monsters, as the high strength of both the rider and mount on the charge means that many monsters will be wounded on 5s if not 4s and the poisoned attacks of the mount should also help in sneaking one or two extra wounds. Finally, for a additional 5 points, a unit of necropolis knights can be deployed in reserve and enter play though EBTS, allowing you to push your opponent on two fronts with two fairly strong lines(that is if you don't get a spell of bad luck)
- Tomb Scorpion: The Tomb scorpion has lost the crown for EBTS king and has unfortunately been relegated to a distraction role. The issue with the tomb scorpion lies in the high points cost to wounds ratio and a unreliable system to deliver several scorpions in one place to threaten the rear of a unit, a problem necropolis knights have solved by being able to field a large number in a single unit. As a result, scorpions are best used to menace warmachines or force an opponent to redirect one of his units to clear the lone monstrous beast running around behind his lines, as it does not matter what unit charges another units rear, the combat bonus is still the same. That being said, the scorpion is perfectly capable of surviving one round of combat in the rear of most units with a toughness of 5 and 3 wounds, and it may even cause a few casualties itself as it possesses Ws4 S5 I3 A4 with poisoned and killing blow. Oh and as a side point, it also has magic resistance 1, carried over from the previous edition.
- Ushabti: A major tragedy, for the miniatures look beautiful and the concept of animated statues perfect. Previously, usahbti were THE shock troopers of a tomb king army, now they have fallen into the gap of uselessness that occurs when newer units can do the same job but be better at it. The ushabti has lost the basic strength of 6 and has instead received a generic monstrous infantry statline of Ws4 Bs2 S4 T4 I3 A3 W3 Ld8 and a armour save of 5+, which now comes with the option of taking a great weapon, paired weapon or great bow for free. Unfortunately the cost was decreased from 7th edition to 8th edition but no more then that, leaving us with a 50 points per model unit that is outperformed by tomb guard or necropolis knights at whatever you intend for them, and certainly underwhelming when compared to the monstrous infantry of other armies. The only niche now seen by many tomb king players, is a heavy ranged unit, as great bows are strength 6 and as ushabti do not benefit from bonuses when shooting or suffer from penalties, the law of averages state that one in three shots per turn will hit, which therefore (theoretically) allows you to allocate a single S6 hit on any unit in 30" so it might be useful for picking off knights or dropping the wounds on a monstrous creature, but for 150 points, they are certainly not a efficient unit at their task.
- Swarm: Eh. It's a swarm. Poisoned attacks and still has the Nehekharan Undead trait so you can top em up.
- Carrion: Flyers, decent stats. War machine hunters. Undead vultures are pretty cool though. While the stats have been bumped up, ALL Tomb king flyers are suffering the aftermath of 8th edition, dropping the rate of movement by HALF without magic support.
- Khermrian Warsphinx: Sexy, sexy beast. The first of two sphinx choices. This one has a howdah packed with Tomb Guard. It looks cool, and has the stats and rules to back up its looks. You can start with T8 and 5 wounds, and go on to its poisoned attacks upgrade and its breath weapon upgrade. It has thunderstomp, and can exchange it's attacks for placing the small blast template anywhere toughing its base - anyone under the template gets a S3 hit. Except the poor bastard under the central hole. He cops a S9 hit with D3 wounds. Squish. You can also have your Tomb King riding one of these however there is very little point as he replaces the 4 tomb guard crew and loses out on the my will be done.
- Sepulchural Stalkers: D&D Nagas. Half man, half snake. All magically animated statue. Apart from their ability to appear anywhere and their decent stats, these guys have a ranged gaze attack that turns you to sand. This strength 1 attack ignores armour and doesn't need to roll to hit. Instead, you're rolling an artillery dice for each stalker gazing and adding the together for the number of automatic hits. And to top it off, those hits are rolled against your initiative, not your toughness. Good at killing small tough units, low-initiative units, war machines, and monsters.
In a one shot, glass cannon maneuver, these are a curve ball but nothing more, and are certainly not reliable with a random number of shots generated(potential to kill yourself on a misfire) and EBtS being EBtS.
Rare Units
- Necrolith Colossus: Nothing special really, it's not a bad choice, but then again it's not a great one ether, really a relatively cheap monster for someone who wants to go a tad bit into the deep end in terms of monster hordes. The unstoppable assault is only barely usable but it just hasn't made it out of the realm of gimmicks, the additional hand weapon and great weapon are solid choices, however for twenty points, the bow of the great desert will more often than not miss, in addition to distracting you from the important job of wading in and beating people down.
- Hierotitan: Another support unit. Losing an attack and the combat gimmick, the hierotitan is more suited for a defensive play style. The bound items help a little in a desperate situations and the D3 bonus to casting to all wizards in 12' also helps . However, the Hierotitan does make an excellent support unit for any unit containing a Liche Priest. Place a caster (high or low) in a unit of skeleton spearmen (preferably in horde formation) and put a Hierotitan on the flank. Not only does this make the unit a bigger threat but the additional +D3 to cast for your wizard is a big bonus. Also a devastating combination if you can fit a Casket into your list which makes for a nasty magic phase - when done with a L4 mage this tactic (mage, hierotitan, and casket) has been playtested to give an advantage in winds of magic 80% of the time and also gives the occasional +7 to casting attempts. Not a bad 'gimmick'
- Necrosphinx: The second sphinx in the list. Oh boy, is this thing nice. Whereas the Warsphinx is primarily geared towards killing infantry, the Necrosphinx is purpose built for killing big shit. It has killing blow, it's pretty damn durable at toughness 8, it causes terror, and it can be upgraded to have poisoned attacks. Plus you get one attack at S10 with Heroic Killing Blow. It's cheap at 225 points; at least, it's certainly cheaper than the things it will be killing. And you know you want to see the look on your opponents face when you chop the head off his thousand point all-killy dragon with one shot.
With the all the new large kits GW is bringing out, I'd call the Necrosphinx vital.Let's be real, in comparison between the two, the WS gets an extra four S4 hits and an boost to initiative when the inevitable purple sun hits, while the NS (for 15pts more) can "fly" (yay 4 more inches and swift stride) and packs one extra attack at S10, killing blow is situational and HKB is a one in six chance. It is advisable to observe the style of armies you normally see in your hobby area and build the sphinxes appropriately to match. But only poor players play "anti-lists" and the model for the Necrosphinx is arguably cooler than the other. Also: don't take the poisened attacks, because they will cut into your killing blow (auto wound means no 6 on wound).
- Screaming Skull Catapult: Tomb Kings stone thrower. Only it doesn't throw stones. No, this female dog throws the skulls of your enemy back at them after magically enchanting them to scream and explode. (useless swearing). Its attacks are magical, flaming and cause panic tests in the enemy after even one casualty. The Skulls of the Foe upgrade tacks a -1 penalty onto the panic test. Yeah, you can keep your cannons. Don't forget, the chances of the shot smacking into dead land are quite high, so expect to gamble with shots frequently. If you can hit them, this weapon will give Wood Elves nightmares (do note however that everything gives Wood Elves nightmares because their 11 year old army book has been outdated since 7th edition).
- Casket of Souls: This is the Ark of the Covenant straight out of Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark. Never seen the movie? Go, watch it now. You're not allowed back on this website till you've finished watching it. The casket not only looks like the Ark, it melts faces exactly the same way. It's a bound spell with a 4 foot range, and the target takes a leadership test on 3d6 adding all the results together. Every point they fail by is an automatic wound with no armour saves. Even better - on a 3+ you get to do it again to a unit within 6" of the target. And you can keep doing that to targets within 6" of the last target as long as you can roll 3+ whether you cause any casualties or not. Roll well and you can melt half the faces in the opposing army in one shot. It also gives you D3 extra power dice in you magic phase, and will explode if destroyed. For the mighty killing power and magical boost this bitch brings to your army, it should be in every damn game you play. Leaving it at home is just fucking stupid. it also eats cannonballs, trust me this will make empire players rage.
Building Your Army
Buying Your Army
Army Composition
Now that you're ready to march to war with the Undead Kings of Ages Past, it's time to think about which of the Undead Kings (or Queens) you're marching with. One of the biggest selling points of Tomb Kings is how well the army can do in a multitude of different configurations. There's no "Set" list (just a "Settra" one) that is deemed the best- they all have merits, and one or the other might work better for you based on your local meta and playstyle.
- The Unending Horde: Pretty simple, really. Skeletons. Lots and lots of Skeletons. Multiple units of 100+, big blocks of Spearmen and Tomb Guard, backed up by the Banner of the Undying Legion and Nehekharan Augments and Light Magic Buffs, invariably with Tomb Kings or Tomb Princes leading the way with My Will Be Done. Turn those cheapo Skittles into killing machines, and keep coming back for more even when the enemy outmatches you. There's a couple of variants on the Horde, as well. You will need a good deal of magic support with TK hordes as you will need to keep up your numbers and buffs.
- Khalida/Archer Spam: What it says on the canned ham. Instead of footslogging Warriors, take Archers, and pincushion the enemy to death. With Khalida, that's a lot more arrows hitting the target, and Poison is just the icing on the cake.
- TombStar: The Tomb Guard deathstar. Usually consists of a blinged out Tomb King, Necrotect, and Battle Standard Bearer Tomb Herald at the forefront of a massive block of Tomb Guard. It will kill anything it touches. The trick is getting it into combat. Do not try this against elves/VC or any other magic heavy army, as they will drop everything the have on it and crumbling is bad.
- And the Tomb Kings Rode to War: Chariots. Oh Ancient Gods, Chariots. Also known as the more evocative "Bone Train", this army features units of 3 to 6 strong Chariots running everything over front and center, often supported by Settra or Arkhan.
- Action Figure Tomb Kings: This list essentially boils down to "How many Animated Constructs can we get in the list?" and features blocks of
Ushabti, Necrolith Colossi, Hierotitans, Sepulchral Stalkers and Necropolis Knights as the main damage dealers. If you have an army like this and don't bring at least one Necrotect, you're more hollow in the head than a Screaming Skull.
- Snakes!: Utilizing one or two 6 strong units of Necropolis Knights backed up by Light magic. Is shown to deadly effect in multiple Tourneys.
- TombKittens: Tomb Kings can fit 7, 8 or even more Toughness 8 Sphinxes in a list, with 3 Warsphinxes, 2 Necrosphinxes, and both Kings and Princes riding the giant stone cats. Sure, you'll lose 1 a turn to an opponent with a cannon- but you have more Cats than the game has Turns (except if you are able to field that many cats your opponent can (and will) field more than 1 cannon (expect 3min against any army which can have cannons).
- Entombed: Similar to a Spess Mahrine Drop-pod list, but from the other direction, and, you know, actually cool. Uses naturally Entombing units, as well as the Banner of the Hidden Dead to ensure that almost all your army emerges wherever the hell you want it to on the board.
Those are just a few of the more 'thematic' lists out there- many more feature a hybrid of these, or unique strategies altogether. Again, the beauty of Tomb Kings (aside from Khalida) is the versatility of the army.
Magic Items
Tomb King magic items- a checklist of the ups and downs.
- Destroyer of eternities: aimed at giving footsloggers a fighting chance against monsters, and no longer a great weapon what more can you want. Well actually do with a little extra points to spend on something to, well... keep that 270 point lord alive. With little access to armour and no mount, 20 points is very little to spend on protection, especially since glittering scales are 25 points, a tomb herald can potentially take some of the fire but it can only soak one wound per turn. Other than that the tomb king can wallop away with a one handed S7 sword that dices monsters for lunch.
- Blade of Antarhak: A defensive magic weapon, this expensive god-send can keep a flimsy tomb king alive for those vital few turns at the cost of a potential strength boost, useful when gearing a Tank King.
- Golden Death Mask of Kharnut: Word on the street is this pricey trinket is a game winner, however I have yet to see its value in game, give it a spin, experiment. Against other undead armies it is virtually useless but it helps against most armies and completely wrecks ogres, skaven, and orcs.
- Cloak of the dunes: It wouldn't be so bad if you could join flying units and perhaps move more than 10' a turn, the flyby damage is nothing more than a gimmick due to the low number of low strength hits which are only really useful against light units, which you should be avoiding with solo characters in the first place.
- Neferra's Scrolls of Mighty Incantations: An instacast item for 50 points which is only really effective on high level lich priests, however a higher level also increases the chance of a miscast, if you need something to happen so badly that it's worth causing your Lich priest to combust, chances are it's a one trick pony and shouldn't be considered in the first place.
- Enkhil's Kanopi: Not a bad curveball for 25 points but highly situational so more often than not it's a waste of points.
- Standard of the Undying Legion: Expensive and a competent commander will never let it go (which means it's ridiculously useful).
- Banner of the Hidden Dead:
Magic
Tomb Kings have access to three lores: Nehekara, Light, and Death. Since you're required to take at least one priest with the lore of Nehekara (specifically your highest level wizard [in case of tie you can have one be another lore]) here are the spells you get.
Lore of Nehekara
Lore Attribute
allows you to regenerate d3+1 wounds to a unit that successfully receives one of your augments. Any construct will only get one wound back per magic phase. Bummer. That being said it's basically the only way to survive in a game. Keep spamming augments on your tomb guard or whatever else and you can win any war of attrition.
Signature Spell This spell is Tomb Kings version of marching. It allows friendly undead units within 12" (24" if boosted) to take a free extra move. You can't charge but it is still useful especially if you have lots of slow foot soldiers.
Spell 1 Short range augment that grants killing blow to a unit OR if the unit already has KB then it works on 5's and 6's. This spell is usually only ok but if you're playing against lots of knights or other sick armor save units its particularly useful. Fun Fact: if you cast this on chariots their impact hits get KB and that can get STUPID. This is the only augment that cannot be made to hit multiple friendly units.
Spell 2 Gives a unit a 5+ ward save. This is the best way to protect those poor bastard sphinxes with only a 5+ armor save and really everything else in your army. Combined with the lore attribute this can reallllly draw out a combat.
Spell 3 Gives a unit 1 extra attack per model and also the multiple shots (2) special rule for the ranged units. This works on mounts, each rider of a sphinx, etc. and can really dish out some pain. People claim that a unit of Bowshabti with this can become very powerful but I have never seen it. Also it works for your catapults. Also it has the largest bubble range at 24". Yes that means every friendly units within 24" of your priest get bonus attacks and models back.
That's it for augments so the last three don't benefit from the lore attribute.
Spell 4 subtracts D3 movement from an enemy unit and forces them to take dangerous terrain tests even on open ground. Occasionally very useful but usually not so great.
Spell 5 subtracts 1 from an enemy unit's strength and toughness. This spell can really mess up your opponent hard. Watch the Ogre players face when he finds out your halberd tomb guard are hitting on 3's (with prince/king) and wounding on 2's against their ironguts. This can be boosted to subtract d3 from S and T but -1 is usually enough to do the trick since you will be seriously risking a miscast if you boost this one.
Spell 6 Generic vortex. Not really worth it.
Tactics
see army composition for some builds, otherwise you want to keep your casters and general alive as you will suffer hugely from the lose of ether of them (crumbling is bad). Beyond that you will want plenty of fodder to soak up hits from magic and warmachines as well as giving you some ware to put your heroes. Like vampire counts you will need some solid numbers unless you are fielding a lot of constructs. Also units should be big enough to soak at least one round of lost combat and still be effective otherwise a good sized unit of knights or a fast moving block of heavy troops can ruin your day very quickly.