Infinity/N3 Tactics/General

From 2d4chan
Revision as of 10:30, 7 June 2019 by 1d4chan>Ayaxs (Dahshat)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The high-level overview and tactica for Infinity

Beginner Advice

  • Buy a starter box: The starter boxes are small (typically 6-model) boxes that are about 150 points. That's enough to get a feel for a faction, and give you a feel for the core rules of the game. Movement, Line of Sight, Shooting, and Camouflage will come into play without it being too big of an issue. Picking up a package of cardboard terrain (~$15 or so, cheaper online) will give you plenty for a small game, and can be expanded to a 4'x4' board with one or two more packages.
    • The 2-player boxes are even better if you have someone to split it with. They include rules, terrain, and missions to get you up to speed on your own.
  • Start at 150, then jump to 300: When you decide to jump into the full game, go for 300 points. It gives you a feel for the faction and will let you play with all the rules in the book. You'll get some wrong, you'll get confused, but the rulebook and online wiki gives you the info you need to sort through it. Other sizes of games (200 and 400) create wonky balance or gaps in factions that can be hard to spot right away.
  • More Orders is easier...to a point: When you jump up to 300 points, plan for 13-15 orders. This will give you enough orders to accomplish things on the board, without starving you as your models get killed off.
  • 10 order lists are hard mode: At 300 points, 10 orders means that every lost order and every mistake is amplified. You'll want to do this size a list because of all the fun toys, but don't fall into that trap (yet).
  • Pick a couple stars, and support them: Focus on one action piece (something fancy, or dangerous with an HMG), a couple mid-tier specialists, one or two reaction pieces (Sin Eater Observant, Total Reaction Bot with HMG) that can shoot well in your reaction turn, and order monkeys to pump actions into your action piece and specialists.
  • Corners and Doors: That's where they get you. Peek out around corners enough to see a single target and shoot with as many bonuses and as many dice as possible. Weight the odds in your favor instead of attempting risky shots that 'might' pay off.
  • Paramedics can't heal: Go for a doctor if you really want to try healing your multi-wound models when they go unconscious. Paramedics are good for pushing buttons and tagging the HVT, but will kill your guys with their medkits more often than not.

If you're looking for a 'beginner friendly' faction, most are a good idea. The proliferation of 300 point boxes may make it feel like they would also be a good jumping-in point, but they're probably not something you want to get as an initial purchase. Likewise, just because you're losing with a new faction repeatedly doesn't mean they're "bad" per-se. They just might not match your play style, or have units that look super enticing but act as gameplay traps that you might not be aware of yet.

Instead, here's a good list of what to avoid as a new player:

  • JSA - the Uprising folks are a dynamic and...unstable army to play as. They can be a lot of fun, but use a lot of finesse and combos that may be hard to immediately wrap your head around. If you like the models, try something like Ikari Co. instead.
  • Spiral Corps - These bad boys (and girls) have a completely different power curve to everyone else that looks like it'll be super interesting, but also hard to teach. Consider vanilla Tohaa, or Combined Army instead.
  • Druze - While a super fluffy army, and with access to some interesting toys and combos, they're a bit of a high skill cap army. Consider Ramah or Dhashat.
  • Shasvastii - These guys are amazing, but their ebb-and-flow sacrificial play style can be tricky to get feeling right. Instead, try out Vanilla Combined (with some Shas troops).

Useful Tips

  • Burst is your friend: it's easy to forget with all the tempting bonuses and negative modifiers, but if you have the choice between an extra +3 or an extra d20 in a typical opposed roll, pick the extra d20.
    • some situations (like trying to get below a 5 on a d20) can negate this advice, but it's a good rule of thumb if you're waffling.
  • Shoot back: In ARO, your shot and your dodge will likely be about the same target number. Take the shot. It gives you a chance to damage the opposing model, and your ARO pieces are there to soak up enemy orders. You might get lucky.
    • If your opponent has a TO camo model, in your weapon's bad range, in cover (or, worse, Surprise Shot) then you should Dodge. Rolling on a 1 or 2 to hit are bad odds.
    • Be a bit more careful with 1 wound models you don't intend as ARO pieces. Saving an active piece by getting it behind cover, or forcing your enemy into LOF of your ARO piece can be worth the dodge attempt. Just remember that it's risky.

Metagame Advice

  • Specialists - Love the FO: So one particular thing is that only specialists can interact with generic objectives and only specific specialists with specific objectives. This is important because its possible to table a player in the final turn and lose because they scored objectives and you just wasted time killing shit. This means playing the scenario takes priority over just killing shit and because of this you need to have a few specialists in your list. Chain of Command, Hacker, Doctor, Engineer are fine except they often cost a premium in points or charge you precious SWC, the Forward Observer on the other hand frequently comes as a variant of the base version of a unit with no cost or a very minor increase which means you should have at least 1 in a list with one other type of specialist.
    • The Flash Pulse that comes with it also shouldn't be overlooked as, while non-lethal, it's likely going to give your line trooper better survivability in the reactive turn than AROing with their rifle due to WIP generally being a point or two higher than BS and the pulse having longer range.
  • TAGs define their matchups: This one is simple; if you don't have anti-TAG options built into your list you won't beat TAGs. TAGs are a tradeoff, they cost a lot and draw lots of fire, but are tough and can take out whole teams if they positioned poorly. TAGs can be beaten by other TAGs, but infantry need Adhesive launchers, hacking, panzerfausts, heavy rocket launchers or really high strength AP+EXP weapons to break TAGs. Because you can't guarantee that you won't bump into a Cutter or Avatar, anticipate a TAG list or be prepared to concede.
  • Orders equal actions: Basically it's important to have order monkeys or cheerleaders; units that are cheap and provide orders for good units to use for multiple activations. Losing cheerleaders means reducing the amount of actions you can use in a turn, which leads to your units doing all the work being less effective. So always have a nice blob of orders on the table in the form of a few cheap regular units. Don't take many Irregulars unless they have Impetuous or other ways to be action efficient. By the same token if you get the opportunity to wipe your opponent's cheerleaders early, take it because its a very difficult position to play from. This is doubly important for Rambo builds with TAGs because hitting the order pool before going after the TAG restricts its ability to back out of crossfire traps. A good recommendation is to have 8+ Regular Orders in your order pool when starting out. Some factions get good filler units, like 4 point Netrods for Aleph, which are an excellent way to squeeze more orders into a list.
  • Hacking with a purpose: Don't just throw hackers into a list if you aren't Nomads or Aleph. Hackers are versatile, but having a hacker should be for a reason, such as fielding/buffing remotes or dealing with HI/TAGs. In some cases, such as Myrmidons, Ekdromoi, Ninja, and Aragoto, the hacker is the only specialist profile on a troop that can deliver itself to an objective. Hacking is a good way to disrupt an opponent's game plan, so be prepared to face it, especially when playing Nomads as they have some of the most powerful hackers. Also keep an eye for units with high BTS values, eg -6. Having a few hardened units can make a difference against someone with multiple hackers.
  • Sectorials are a tradeoff: After the release of Sectorial lists the meta has been abuzz with sectorials with a lot of players neglecting vanilla lists for sectorials to use the Link Team rules. Link teams are very good, this isn't in doubt, but what is overlooked is that vanilla lists have a huge amount of diversity while sectorials run from being just a trimmed down selection with link teams (Neoterran, Qapu Kalqhi) to being tightly restricted and unable to cover some key factors (Military Orders, Hassassins and JSA).
  • Recreations are targets: A number of factions have basically artificially vat grown cyborg/androids modelled on famous historical figures, called Recreations. These are pretty powerful units and are also common choices for Lieutenants, with some being pretty much mandatory for Lt. When your opponent sees you have Saladin in your foam box, they're going to start planning to make a beeline for him, even if its just a Hazfa you deploy as Saladin, players who have had their ass handed to them by a recreation are going to make killing it ASAP a priority.
  • Have 2 plans: Build a list so that you have a rock solid Plan A and a Plan B that can work if it fails. Have a strong Link team of 5 elite units, but have linkable order monkeys with HMGs who can form their own link and brandish Sixth Sense boosted HMGs should your main link get cutdown. Hackers are a decent Plan B because you only need 1 with decent willpower and BTS to start crippling vulnerable HI or Remotes.
  • Remotes are an option: A lot of players ignore remotes because they mandate hackers or TAGs and are vulnerable to E/M and Hacking. However, for some players Remotes are really good. Vanilla Aleph for example can get around their premium pricing by using Dakini TactBots as their cheap Order Monkeys and can use Garuda TactBots for cheap disposable Airborne Deployment units instead of paying for the elite & expensive Ekdromoi. Remotes still produce orders and can shoot things, though they may not count for much in terms of objectives, they can fill holes and let you use them as disposable units compared to more precious models. With the advent of hacking supportware, many remotes become far more dangerous.