Back in January, I had the opportunity to attend CoastalCarnage, and although I am a bit tardy in my response, I did want to review this
excellent event. This was a new GT,
organized by internet wargaming superstar, Lord Inquisitor, along with another
local player (Ron). It was held in Chesapeake,
VA at The Tower of Gaming, which proved to be a hospitable, if a bit small,
venue. After having some time to reflect,
here are my reactions to the Mid-Atlantic’s newest GT:
·
They decided to go with a W-L-D scoring system,
which was a welcomed change of pace from the 20-0 systems that have become very
popular in the area. Obviously, some
armies are more effective at claiming huge victories than are other
armies. I, myself, tend to favor
avoidance type lists that seek to hit weak spots in the opposition while
avoiding their heavy hitters, and this play style tends to lead to close games. I’m all for variety in our GT formats, and
this system did seem to encourage a different type of play. With the influx of tournaments in the region,
I think players will begin being more selective about the types of events that
they attend, so I’m of the opinion that organizers will need to consider
carefully things like scoring and comp (I’m only planning to attend one Swedish
event this year besides the Masters). I
believe part of the reason that the Fowl Intentions GT filled up so quickly is
that it chose the ETC format, which is pretty rare in this region.
·
The organizers chose to go with a fairly light
comp, and I didn’t really see much difference in the lists. The only comp at Coastal Carnage was a
prohibition in taking three of the same specials and two of the same rares and
an elimination of special characters.
This affected a few builds (triple chimera, double steam tank, double
hellcannon); however, I’d imagine this amounted to no comp for most
people. Honestly, I couldn’t tell a huge
difference in the power of the list here compared to most Southern Swedish Comp
tournaments (although I think actually applying the victory points bonuses for
comp gaps greatly affected the lists at the Masters; hopefully, TOs planning to
use this particular system will apply it in this manner in the future). I’m at a place right now where the only thing
that I can see creating truly unfriendly lists are a handful of special
characters (Everqueen and Epidemius
mainly. Maybe Teclis and Morathi as well). In this regard, I think CC proved that it we
don’t need giant spreadsheets to keep the lists manageable but that a ban on
some special characters might be wise.
·
Competitive Warhammer Fantasy is growing
stronger in the Mid-Atlantic. This
tournament filled up in 24 hours. The
next tournament on the schedule, Fowl Intentions, saw huge demand which forced
them to seek ways to increase their capacity.
Brawler Bash reached 70 players in two days and will probably end up
making it to 100. When the new
tournament schedule was released, some people were worrying about diluting the
player pool. If anything, all of these
options have energized the crowd (and the Masters undoubtedly have something to
do with this as well).
Overall, I had a great time at the event. Everything went smoothly. I loved the terrain maps, which standardized the
boards each round (and I’m hoping this is something that other events may start
employing). Due to space limitations,
the event was a bit small (only about 36 people); they’ll probably need to
consider their options if it is to be part of the Masters circuit next
year. I liked their paint scoring
system, which like their battle scoring system, seemed designed to maintain a
tighter spread on the scoring.
Basically, a player would get a 5/10/15 as a holistic army score and a
handful of bonus points could then be added.
The top score was 21 while most people clustered together in the 12-15
range. I have heard some talk that there
will be a universal scoring system for Master’s qualifiers in the future, but I
hope this is not true. I would prefer
that we have as much variety in paint scoring as we do in battle scoring and
comp and think it would be nice to have an event like this one that focuses on
holistic army appearance, another that reward truly technical skill, another
that benefits heavily converted/themed armies, and so-on.
Personally, I went 3-1-1 with my double dragon list. I was using the star dragon, a dragon mage, a
BSB on eagle, 2 units of reavers, 2 units of silver helms, a unit of archers, a
unit of dragon princes with the banner of the world dragon, a skycutter with
bolt thrower, and a frost phoenix. I
lost in the first round to a coven of light Empire build in the Battle for the
Pass scenario. The extra distance really
hurt me, and that army is really the perfect counter to what I run. I defeated a chariot/chimera Warriors army, a
skaven army, and a beastman army and drew a Slannesh Warriors army (after Mr.
Wiatt made some smooth moves in the final round to swing a ton of victory
points into his favor). This gave me
enough to finish 8th in battle (I think) with my soft scores (2nd
in painting, 1st in sports) I jumped up to 3rd overall,
which I’m very happy with. I’ve had some
pretty good luck with sports scores lately, and I have some ideas about what
goes into winning these types of awards. I heard the Ohiohammer guys suggest that winning
sports awards has to do with kissing up to or bribing opponents, but I don’t
think those things have anything to do with it. Indeed, I think they can
actually work against a person’s score. Maybe I’ll write up an essay on the
subject for a future post (I think a lot of it comes down to the style of list
a person plays).
That’s enough for now.
Right now, I’m gearing up for the Master’s on Feb. 21. I apparently drew one of the Northeast Region’s
top players and was picked to lose by the experts (I’m in the second matchup
reviewed on this video – I really like the Sportscenter-style analysis they did
with all of the matchups. Kudos to
Jerry, Once Bitten, and all of the guest hosts). I’m really looking forward to this match-up
because I think my opponent has a very unique build which will interact with
mine in an interesting way. I see him as
having some counters to my stuff, but I also think that I have some counters to
his. Here's the preview video (there will be four of these, each with a different Warhammer internet personality):
As far as my hobby goals, I have completed 5 shadow warriors,
converted a dragon into a frost phoenix, and finished skycutter since my last
post. I’m working on 5 more dragon
princes, a mounted mage, and a skycutter, which all need to be finished before
the Masters. Wish me luck. I’ll post some more pictures and go over my
Masters list next time.