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{{Topquote|Any officer who goes into action without his sword is improperly dressed.|Jack Churchill, or "Mad Jack", British Army officer during WWII}} | {{Topquote|Any officer who goes into action without his sword is improperly dressed.|Jack Churchill, or "Mad Jack", British Army officer during WWII}} | ||
'''Shas'O Vior'la Shovah Kais Mont'yr''', | '''Shas'O Vior'la Shovah Kais Mont'yr''', better known as '''Commander Farsight''' or '''Da Red Komet''', is owner of the longest (xeno) name in the galaxy (and that's without his redundant civilian designations), as well as the closest thing the Tau have to a stone-cold badass and the only Tau /tg/ can respect since he lacks the usual naive, obnoxious and arrogant attitude of his kind. This is largely due to being the only known Tau to opt for a bloody great sword and shield over the clinical ''sub-atomic-pulse-plasma-ion-rail-blaster-rifle-cannons'' his race are famed for. His fearsome reputation is most widespread among the [[Orks]]. Oh, and his name is a fucking pun (all T'au are nearsighted and don't have good vision without their gear). | ||
He is also a [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CharClone clone of the Gundam character Char]. | He is also a [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CharClone clone of the Gundam character Char]. | ||
Farsight most resembles some sort of hybrid of Char Aznable (Red Battlesuit, separatist philosophies, arch-rivalry with a [[Shadowsun|White Battlesuited ace pilot]]) Oda Nobunaga (Ruthlesss pragmatism, scorched earth tactics, close range firearms tactics), Hojo Tokimune (Rallying the troops against an unstoppable horde of barbarians) and Kambei Shimada (Get it? The Eight? Seven Samurai?). | Farsight most resembles some sort of hybrid of Char Aznable (Red Battlesuit, separatist philosophies, arch-rivalry with a [[Shadowsun|White Battlesuited ace pilot]]), Oda Nobunaga (Ruthlesss pragmatism, scorched earth tactics, close range firearms tactics), Hojo Tokimune (Rallying the troops against an unstoppable horde of barbarians), Big Boss from the [[Video games|Metal Gear]] series (having had to kill his mentor at the behest of his leaders, and now leading a resistance group against said leaders) and Kambei Shimada (Get it? The Eight? Seven Samurai?). | ||
==Once upon a time, there lived a Tau who literally had the word "hot-blooded" in his very name...== | ==Once upon a time, there lived a Tau who literally had the word "hot-blooded" in his very name...== | ||
From the beginning, Farsight was a fiercely independent thinker and tactical genius who managed to get three years ahead of his fellow pupils with nothing but determination and planning; in fact, he was such a bright spark he ended up embarrassing his instructors, which led to a lot of them getting replaced. Though this led to some [[Butthurt|bad blood]], Farsight moved past it, becoming a famed commander in his own right. However, Farsight's personal gut instincts and a desire for close, aggressive combat put him at odds with the Empire's battle doctrine. Farsight sucked it up and continued on as best he could, and finally was promoted to a battlesuit piloting role that he took to with gusto. | From the beginning, Farsight was a fiercely independent thinker and [[Creed|tactical genius]] who managed to get three years ahead of his fellow pupils with nothing but determination and planning; in fact, he was such a bright spark he ended up embarrassing his instructors, which led to a lot of them getting replaced. Though this led to some [[Butthurt|bad blood]], Farsight moved past it, becoming a famed commander in his own right. However, Farsight's personal gut instincts and a desire for close, aggressive combat put him at odds with the Empire's battle doctrine. Farsight sucked it up and continued on as best he could, and finally was promoted to a battlesuit piloting role that he took to with gusto. | ||
Back during the halcyon days of the major conquests of the [[Tau|Tau Empire]], the majority of the army's victories could be attributed to a single commander: [[Commander Puretide|Puretide]]. Puretide was a legendary genius who wrote the book on Fire Caste tactics, and shaped the military for years to come. He was basically Sun Tzu 40k to the point where O'R'myr actually quotes Sun Tzu in the Taros Campaign book and it is attributed to Puretide. Puretide's many pupils were all famous warriors in their own right, and Puretide himself was so valuable that before he died of old age, the Earth Caste actually scanned his brain and encoded portions of his brilliance into what they called Puretide engram neurochips in order to help train future commanders. Farsight trained directly under Puretide, learning even more about battlefield tactics and strategy, and became one of his top pupils along with [[Shadowsun|Commander Shadowsun]] and [[Shas'o Kais]] (who | Back during the halcyon days of the major conquests of the [[Tau|Tau Empire]], the majority of the army's victories could be attributed to a single commander: [[Commander Puretide|Puretide]]. Puretide was a legendary genius who wrote the book on Fire Caste tactics, and shaped the military for years to come. He was basically Sun Tzu 40k to the point where O'R'myr actually quotes Sun Tzu in the Taros Campaign book and it is attributed to Puretide. Puretide's many pupils were all famous warriors in their own right, and Puretide himself was so valuable that before he died of old age, the Earth Caste actually scanned his brain and encoded portions of his brilliance into what they called Puretide engram neurochips in order to help train future commanders. Farsight trained directly under Puretide, learning even more about battlefield tactics and strategy, and became one of his top pupils along with [[Shadowsun|Commander Shadowsun]] and [[Shas'o Kais]] (who is the same Kais from [[Warhammer_40,000:_Fire_Warrior|Fire Warrior]] and [[Dawn_of_War|Dawn of War]]). After studying with Papa Puretide himself, Farsight was made the leader of a massive Tau fleet and sent out to do the Empire's bidding. In his first deployment as mission commander, he performed amazingly, trouncing the [[Orks]] singlehandedly with skill and cunning. As he fought, the young Tau realized that aggressive, up-close combat was the key to defeating the Orks, and as a result became more comfortable with the idea of close quarters combat. Though he was unhappily reassigned to another battle zone before defeating the Orks completely, Farsight met with the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miyamoto_Musashi Ethereal Aun'Shi], on whom he modeled a style of close-combat battlesuit fighting which he applied for years afterwards. | ||
Farsight's next big deployment was at Dal'yth during the [[Damocles_Crusade|Damocles Crusade]]. A branch of the [[Imperium|Imperium's]] forces had launched a steamroller attack on the sept world, knocking over colonies, shelling planets and smashing fleets to get there. Though the attack was clumsy, the sheer grit and numbers of the [[Imperial Guard]] meant that the Tau were completely on the back foot, and only Farsight and Shadowsun's combined tactics managed to hold Dal'yth together. During this battle Farsight became aware of the unsettling power of human [[Psykers|psyker]] and [[warp]] technology as well as their incredible fanaticism, and began to recognize an element of the latter in his own doctrines. In addition, some of his fellow commanders were implanted with Puretide engram neurochips by the Ethereals to make them as tactically capable as Puretide; however, Farsight found this horrifying when it turned his soldiers into robots with no will of their own and made them completely useless when psykers were involved (since Puretide had never encountered them). Finally, after a long and bloody war, the Imperium of Man had to pull out when the [[Tyranid]] [[Hive Fleet Behemoth]] reared its grotesque head in the Eastern Fringe and headed straight for [[Ultramar]]. While the rest of the Tau Empire was celebrating, Farsight was the only one who noticed that the Imperium would have won the war of attrition, and wondered if something else had | Farsight's next big deployment was at Dal'yth during the [[Damocles_Crusade|Damocles Crusade]]. A branch of the [[Imperium|Imperium's]] forces had launched a steamroller attack on the sept world, knocking over colonies, shelling planets and smashing fleets to get there. Though the attack was clumsy, the sheer grit and numbers of the [[Imperial Guard]] meant that the Tau were completely on the back foot, and only Farsight and Shadowsun's combined tactics managed to hold Dal'yth together. During this battle Farsight became aware of the unsettling power of human [[Psykers|psyker]] and [[warp]] technology as well as their incredible fanaticism, and began to recognize an element of the latter in his own doctrines. In addition, some of his fellow commanders were implanted with Puretide engram neurochips by the Ethereals to make them as tactically capable as Puretide; however, Farsight found this horrifying when it turned his soldiers into robots with no will of their own and made them completely useless when psykers were involved (since Puretide had never encountered them). Finally, after a long and bloody war, the Imperium of Man had to pull out when the [[Tyranid]] [[Hive Fleet Behemoth]] reared its grotesque head in the Eastern Fringe and headed straight for [[Ultramar]]. While the rest of the Tau Empire was celebrating, Farsight was the only one who noticed that the Imperium would have won the war of attrition, and wondered if something else had caused them to pull out. After the war, Farsight discovered to his additional alarm that when the engram chips were removed, they left the commanders brain-dead. You can probably see where this is going. | ||
However, the neurochip business was not enough for the Ethereals, who decided that some of Puretide's students should be cryogenically frozen so that they could be useful far beyond their meager lifespans. Puretide's three top pupils (Farsight, Shadowsun and Kais), all aggressive commanders with a bitter rivalry between them, were chosen for this. It was decided that the three would work in decades-long rotations, with one awake and two asleep at all times, kind of like the three vampire lords in ''Underworld'' were supposed to preside over the coven in turns. Of the three, Farsight was chosen to remain active first while Shadowsun and Kais were frozen to be brought back into service in the future, making him, for a time, the sole military hero of the Empire. | However, the neurochip business was not enough for the Ethereals, who decided that some of Puretide's students should be cryogenically frozen so that they could be useful far beyond their meager lifespans. Puretide's three top pupils (Farsight, Shadowsun and Kais), all aggressive commanders with a bitter rivalry between them, were chosen for this. It was decided that the three would work in decades-long rotations, with one awake and two asleep at all times, kind of like the three vampire lords in ''Underworld'' were supposed to preside over the coven in turns. Of the three, Farsight was chosen to remain active first while Shadowsun and Kais were frozen to be brought back into service in the future, making him, for a time, the sole military hero of the Empire. | ||
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|Head of State=Commander Farsight | |Head of State=Commander Farsight | ||
|Head of Government=Commander Farsight, The Eight | |Head of Government=Commander Farsight, The Eight | ||
|Governmental Structure=Libertarian Stratocratic Federal War Council | |Governmental Structure=Libertarian Stratocratic Federal War Council | ||
|State Religion/Ideology=Modified version of the [[Greater Good|Tau'va]] | |State Religion/Ideology=Modified version of the [[Greater Good|Tau'va]] | ||
|Demographic=[[Tau]] | |Demographic=[[Tau]] | ||
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}} | }} | ||
[[File:2013-07-12 13.36.35.png|300px|thumb|left|The modern Farsight, armed to the probably-non-existent-because-they-rotted-away-due-to-age teeth.]] | [[File:2013-07-12 13.36.35.png|300px|thumb|left|The modern Farsight, armed to the probably-non-existent-because-they-rotted-away-due-to-age teeth.]] | ||
After the Damocles Crusade, Farsight was tasked with rebuilding a series of lost colonies that had been overrun by Chaos forces. So Farsight set out with another huge fleet and a trio of Ethereals to repair the damage and take back planets. He set up a series of worlds that would become known as the Farsight Enclaves. Along the way he was attacked by Space Marines, | After the Damocles Crusade, Farsight was tasked with rebuilding a series of lost colonies that had been overrun by Chaos forces. So Farsight set out with another huge fleet and a trio of Ethereals to repair the damage and take back planets. He set up a series of worlds that would become known as the Farsight Enclaves. Along the way he was attacked by Space Marines, whom he managed to defeat by climbing in an original Coldstar suit (yes, it has a female AI, and yes she's a tsundere), and at the direction of a Daemon-possessed Water Caste member, flew towards and boarded the Space Marine ship through the grotesquely huge barrel of a gun (because the whole book is mocking the GW tropes) with the intention of disabling its Gellar Fields. Luckily the single suit didn't trigger the turrets and Space Marines forgot to deploy their fighters for no reason so Farsight was able to accomplish his mission, but gets briefly knocked out in doing so and has a few visions of the future. Because you know, newtype Tau or something. Luckily he's still able to come to and leave when the ship begins getting overrun with Daemons, as for some reason the ship never fully left the warp when it began its attack on the Tau. We also learn the Tau [[wat|have drones the size of thumbs that are powerful enough to vaporize large Daemons in a single shot]] (don't think about it too much, they never show up again). On the way back to the Tau he's attacked by a Heldrake because BUY THE NEW MINIATURES! and is nearly killed, only to be saved by the Imperials fleeing their doomed ship as they blow it up in a way that doesn't destroy the suit it's ripping apart. From there he decides it's best to just never speak of "those weird xenos" that showed up out of nowhere and vanished into smoke just as quickly; good thing not warning anyone else about this sort of thing [[Horus Heresy|never comes back to bite anyone in the ass later.]] | ||
Shortly after that however, his new territories became overrun by a huge WAAAAAGH of Orks. | Shortly after that however, his new territories became overrun by a huge WAAAAAGH of Orks. Said Orks were made up of survivors from his previous campaign, and they came both for revenge and the opportunity to loot all that fancy Tau dakka (the Orks called it the War of Dakka. No, seriously.) Although the Ethereals wanted him to keep conquering worlds from the Imperium, Farsight wisely refused as he knew all too well that the Ork menace would only get worse if he didn't deal with them. The Orks actually came up with a pretty kunnin' plan: launch an attack against a world across the Gulf to send "Da Red Runt" (Again, seriously. Subtle Phil Kelly strikes again) after them, and then strike the worlds of the Enclaves while he's off dealing with them. The plan worked at first, Farsight stopped their initial attack, but came home to find all the worlds being besieged by Orks. Against such overwhelming odds, the <s>Tau </s> Orks never stood a fucking chance. Farsight proceeded to enact what could only be described as Ork genocide, the likes of which would make Yarrick proud. He accomplished this by weaponizing the terrain of all the worlds, setting off volcanoes, earthquakes, dust storms and tsunamis to weaken the Orks before the Tau finished them off. This WAAAAAGH was eventually stopped when Farsight killed their warboss [[Awesome|by punching through his battlewagon and vaporizing him with his fusion blaster]]. The Orks that weren't killed fled from him. | ||
Though they were running scared away from the Enclaves, Farsight refused to let them escape alive, and set about hunting down the remaining Orks, which conflicted with the Ethereals' primary objective of capturing more worlds and created tension between them and Farsight. During this drawn-out campaign against the Orks, Farsight and his Ethereal advisors ended up on the dead planet of Arthas Moloch, where a swarm of [[Daemons]] was summoned after blood was spilled on a strange altar. The Daemons proceeded to wreck shit up, and put Farsight into critical condition. In this costly battle Farsight discovered an ancient sword called the Dawn Blade, as well as statues bearing hexagram medallions that somehow repelled entities of [[Chaos]] (Interestingly, this was the same symbol he used to exorcise the Daemon from the Water Caste). The Ethereals tried to use his nearly fatal injuries as a justification to just quarantine off the planet and leave it behind. Farsight, however, defied their orders yet again, and despite being on the brink of death he climbed into his Battlesuit for what he assumed would be the last time. Although the Ethereals were made aware of this suicide mission, they agreed to let him go (Since he was proving way too rebellious to keep alive any longer) as long as they went down to the planet to investigate the creatures... which one of them [[fail|accidentally named in a slip of the tongue]], revealing to Farsight that they had known about the ancient evil of Chaos, but lied to the Tau public about its existence for the sake of the [[Greater Good]], kind of like [[Imperial Truth|what the Emperor did]] in the [[Great Crusade]]. This is similar to the Emprah's plan although it is equally (if not more) stupid, since the Tau are able to be possessed by Daemons and do not have the ability to detect this possession themselves. The existence of Daemons, though, could negate a lot of their highly secular teachings. Farsight figured out that the medallions were anathema to Chaos, and chucked as many as he could find into the portal, causing it to collapse in a huge explosion. During the fight, however, the Daemons singled out and killed his Ethereals, it seems their curiosity got the better of them. | |||
When the dust settled, O'Shovah was one foot in the grave, his injuries were already life threatening and the battle had only aggravated them. His battlesuit AI advised him to return to the Manta and enter into stasis for that incredibly slim chance that he might be healed. But he looked at his scanner and discovered that there were less than 30 Orks on the surface. AKA: Too damn many. Farsight then leapt into the fray, knowing it would spell his doom, but he would not die until after the Orks did. However during the battle something unusual happened; As he chopped up the Orks, his vital signs began to stabilize and even heal. Cutting them down even gave him a strange invigorating thrill, one he noticed was absent when he killed them in other ways. Finally, the last Ork was cleaved in two and Farsight knew his task was finished. When he got back to the Manta however, not only did he notice that his injuries were completely gone, but he had actually regressed in age back to his prime. | |||
[[File:FE_Map.jpg|500px|right|thumb|Star Systems under the Enclave.]] | |||
===Gotta Go Your Own Way=== | ===Gotta Go Your Own Way=== | ||
After the events on Arthas Moloch, Farsight understood the terrifying menace of the [[Warp|Immaterium]] and Chaos, which to him explained a great deal of what he had seen during his exploits. As he continued to ponder, it became obvious to the Commander that the T'au Empire's [[Inquisition|leadership was not benign]], or at the very least woefully ignorant or in denial regarding the true perils of the galaxy. The Farsight Enclaves thereafter severed their ties with the T'au Empire and began to govern themselves. Farsight quietly left his battlesuit in a museum and went to be a hermit, fearing that [[Horus Heresy|a second Mon'tau]] would occur if what he learned ever reached the Empire. | After the events on Arthas Moloch, Farsight understood the terrifying menace of the [[Warp|Immaterium]] and Chaos and the massive dickery of Ethereals, which to him explained a great deal of what he had seen during his exploits. As he continued to ponder, it became obvious to the Commander that the T'au Empire's [[Inquisition|leadership was not benign]], or at the very least woefully ignorant or in denial regarding the true perils of the galaxy. The Farsight Enclaves thereafter severed their ties with the T'au Empire and began to govern themselves. Farsight quietly left his battlesuit in a museum and went to be a hermit, fearing that [[Horus Heresy|a second Mon'tau]] would occur if what he learned ever reached the Empire. Which makes a degree of sense. The Tau believe the Greater Good has enabled them to be on par with and even surpass all the major galactic powers. The truth is that they are nothing in comparison even though everyone has no Greater Good or Ethereals. Which would mean their beliefs are meaningless and unnecessary. | ||
===The Dawn Blade=== | ===The Dawn Blade=== | ||
The Dawn Blade is made of chronophagic (Greek for "time eating") alloys, so whenever Farsight kills something with it his life is extended as the blade [[Vampire|steals the life]] force of its victim and adds it to the wielder's. Considering he killed a lot of Orks (who are biologically immortal) and | The Dawn Blade is made of chronophagic (Greek for "time eating") alloys, so whenever Farsight kills something with it his life is extended as the blade [[Vampire|steals the life]] force of its victim and adds it to the wielder's own. Considering he killed a lot of Orks (who are biologically immortal) and Daemons (who are truly immortal, barring a ''true death'', which normally must either take place in the Warp, or else be by the hands of a blank, a Custodes, Big-E himself, or via Necron-tech) with it, it's safe to say Shovah is practically immortal right now. Farsight does not know this, but he has his suspicions, and if he were to find out that his suspicions are correct he would most likely kill himself upon realizing that he's been unwittingly sucking the life out of his enemies. He also found multiple [[D6|six-sided medallions]] with [[Culexus|anti-Warp properties]] in the same place he found the Dawn Blade. [[Trazyn_the_Infinite|Trazyn]] probably lost some of his collection or something. But seriously, based on its age and eldritch abilities, the Dawn Blade is most likely a [[C'tan]] artifact or leftover technology of the [[Old Ones]]. It's essence-eating properties however, and in particular that this effect holds true for use against daemons (which in that case is essentially tantamount to a ''true death''), means that we can probably narrow down the source to one of three likely possibilities: Eldar artifact, Dark Age of Technology Archeotech, or Necron/C'tan technology. Appearance-wise it seems to bear more visual similarities to option 3. Considering the old fluff it might actually be one of the 99 blades of Vaul, the ones that drained the enemy of life force to sustain the bearer (and the one that was normal made the line crumble and Vaul getting wrecked for his deceit). | ||
{{Template:40k-Governments}} | {{Template:40k-Governments}} | ||
==163 years later== | ==163 years later== | ||
{{Topquote|The life of a soldier is the only one I know. That's why I can never settle down.|Char Aznable}} | {{Topquote|The life of a soldier is the only one I know. That's why I can never settle down.|Char Aznable}} | ||
Over a hundred years later, the Enclaves came under threat from a [[Tyranid]] splinter fleet. Unsure of what to do, the leadership of the Enclaves suddenly got a message from a museum where an aged Farsight had suddenly shown up out of nowhere to demand his old battlesuit be removed from its display case and returned to him. Donning his armor once again, the Commander took over the defense, and thanks to some smart Earth Caste bio-engineering, managed to hold off the Great Devourer long enough to poison the fleet (Yeah, seriously, leave it to the Tau to poison a fleet that literally lives on toxins) which ended up destroying it in its entirety, making the Tau [[wat|better at creating viruses than Nurgle's daemons]] as they tried and were unable to do this. Meanwhile [[Shadowsun]], Farsight's old rival, was awakened from her cryogenic stasis in the Empire and sent back to war, and Farsight assembled a new team of elite battlesuit pilots, The Eight, to defend the Enclaves and stand opposed to the mysterious power the Ethereals held over their brethren. They would later reinforce the T'au Empire in the last campaign of the Third Sphere of Expansion. | {{Topquote|Who wants to live forever? | ||
Forever is our today, | |||
Who waits forever anyway? | |||
|Freddie Mercury (actually Brian May)}} | |||
The Tau Empire, having lost contact with the Farsight Enclaves, believed Farsight himself to be long dead and the Enclaves lost. One day, though, a [[Anal Circumference|probe]] discovered that the Enclaves were still there and flourishing, and had changed their sept markings and become Ethereal-free. Learning this, the Tau Empire branded Farsight a traitor and renamed the Enclaves the "Forbidden Zone", smashing all his statues throughout the Empire and trying to wipe him from public memory. This didn't sit well with everyone, especially members of the Fire Caste, and contacts within the Empire soon began secretly supplying the Enclaves with new weapons and hardware. | |||
Over a hundred years later, the Enclaves came under threat from a [[Tyranid]] splinter fleet. Unsure of what to do, the leadership of the Enclaves suddenly got a message from a museum where an aged Farsight had suddenly shown up out of nowhere to demand his old battlesuit be removed from its display case and returned to him. Donning his armor once again, the Commander took over the defense, and thanks to some smart Earth Caste bio-engineering, managed to hold off the Great Devourer long enough to poison the fleet (<s>Yeah, seriously, leave it to the Tau to poison a fleet that literally lives on toxins</s> The Deathwatch uses bio-toxins against the Tyranids on the regular, this is nothing new) which ended up destroying it in its entirety, making the Tau [[wat|better at creating viruses than Nurgle's daemons]] as they tried and were unable to do this. Some may remember the Imperium did this, too, but that was actually a mutagen whereas this was a poison. Meanwhile [[Shadowsun]], Farsight's old rival, was awakened from her cryogenic stasis in the Empire and sent back to war, and Farsight assembled a new team of elite battlesuit pilots, The Eight, to defend the Enclaves and stand opposed to the mysterious power the Ethereals held over their brethren. They would later reinforce the T'au Empire in the last campaign of the Third Sphere of Expansion. | |||
At some point in the early 42nd Millennium, Farsight made a journey back to Arthas Moloch alone. He stays there for 30 days before returning to the Empire to summon a war council. And...that's all we've heard from the Enclaves in 8th Edition. Considering the dangers that the [[Death Guard]]'s assault on the Tau Empire represents, it's very possible that Farsight is preparing a relief force to deal with [[Nurgle]]'s armies. Also, the reaction of the Ethereals after being rescued by a renegade would be really interesting to see, maybe putting their credibility on the line, or just trying to cover everything up, angering many in the Tau army. Maybe this is the last straw for the Tau Empire to enter a full civil war between Farsight and the Ethereal Caste (at this point I would be fine with any [[Advancing the Storyline]]; something in the vein of Farsight doing a backflip and giving everybody cake)... | |||
Come 9th Edition, the Enclaves became targeted by [[Nazdreg Ug Urdgrub]]'s "War of [[Dakka]]", where the Orks mass-adopted firepower in the hopes of blasting the Tau at their own game. Luckily, this came at a time where Farsight managed to get a new update to his Battlesuit, now dubbed the [[XV86 Supernova Battlesuit|Supernova]] by his friend who made it. Unluckily, this was also happening during at the same time as the [[Ark of Omen|Arks of Omen]] saga was going on, meaning that the war was interrupted by one emerging within the Enclaves while he was being guided back to Arthas Moloch by visions. | |||
In the end Farsight managed to defeat Nazdreg’s army after luring them to that world by unleashing a shitload of Khornate daemons sealed away in Arthas Moloch (something which almost caused him to fall to chaos in the process but thankfully didn’t) and once the Orks were mostly dealt with he proceeded to smash the damn altar the daemons were coming out of which not only stopped them in their tracks but also caused life to return to the planet. Unfortunately he failed to stop the guys from the Ark who managed to locate an artifact they were looking for and escape with it. | |||
==The Eight== | ==The Eight== | ||
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Farsight's band of battlesuit aces. Think [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Samurai ''Seven Samurai''], except with [[mecha]] and one more samurai. The Eight consist of: | Farsight's band of battlesuit aces. Think [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Samurai ''Seven Samurai''], except with [[mecha]] and one more samurai. The Eight consist of: | ||
#'''Sub-Commander Torchstar''', a Tau Empire deserter and the youngest member of the team, this [https://wiki.teamfortress.com/wiki/Pyro volatile pyromaniac female] Tau has flame tattoos on her body and pilots a | #'''Sub-Commander Torchstar''', a Tau Empire deserter and the youngest member of the team, this [https://wiki.teamfortress.com/wiki/Pyro volatile pyromaniac female] Tau has flame tattoos on her body and pilots a XV8 Crisis suit. She even fights with dual flamers and a couple of marker drones. A blue-skinned [[Chandra]] in a mecha Hot enough for ya? (The amount of sexy fanart over her are astounding, like [[Meme|OVER 9000!!!!!]]) | ||
#'''Shas'vre Ob'lotai 9-0''', an AI-controlled XV88 Broadside battlesuit armed to the teeth with twin-linked smart missile systems, twin-linked, high-yield missile pods, two missile drones, and a seeker missile. Based on the brain of Farsight's long-dead superior Ob'lotai. Is killed twice, the first is when he [[bullshit|flies directly through a battle barge's void shields at over 200 kph, isn't picked up by Imperial sensors or shot down (either by the ship or its fighter craft), flies directly into the barrel of a battle-barge's cannon and then shoots the warhead inside to blow up the entire battle barge.]] This also ends up wiping out an entire Space Marine chapter. Funnily enough too the novel that this happens in establishes well before this point that all of this would be impossible, and that if anyone were to try doing exactly what he did they would have the same result as a fly hitting a windshield (and doing this also kills the electronics that don't get crushed, which would have destroyed him as well). The second time he gets destroyed was in the events of Mont'ka, but being an AI they just slapped his engram in a new XV88 body. Also gains the ability to wirelessly transmit himself from one battlesuit to another in Farsight: Crisis of Faith, presumably because Phil Kelly forgot that he needed his chip to be plugged into a suit to control them and that he couldn't survive without his chip. | #'''Shas'vre Ob'lotai 9-0''', an AI-controlled XV88 Broadside battlesuit armed to the teeth with twin-linked smart missile systems, twin-linked, high-yield missile pods, two missile drones, and a seeker missile. Based on the brain of Farsight's long-dead superior Ob'lotai. Is killed twice, the first is when he [[bullshit|flies directly through a battle barge's void shields at over 200 kph, isn't picked up by Imperial sensors or shot down (either by the ship or its fighter craft), flies directly into the barrel of a battle-barge's cannon and then shoots the warhead inside to blow up the entire battle barge.]] This also ends up wiping out an entire Space Marine chapter. Funnily enough too the novel that this happens in establishes well before this point that all of this would be impossible, and that if anyone were to try doing exactly what he did they would have the same result as a fly hitting a windshield (and doing this also kills the electronics that don't get crushed, which would have destroyed him as well). The second time he gets destroyed was in the events of Mont'ka, but being an AI they just slapped his engram in a new XV88 body. Also gains the ability to wirelessly transmit himself from one battlesuit to another in Farsight: Crisis of Faith, presumably because Phil Kelly forgot that he needed his chip to be plugged into a suit to control them and that he couldn't survive without his chip (everyone knows the Tau never improve their technology, right?). Can also be considered a troll, screenshotting marines with no helmets taking a missile to the face. And then proceeding to send said picts to Farsight as memes. | ||
#'''Commander Sha'vastos''', an old comrade of Farsight and one of the commanders who was forcefully equipped with a [[Commander Puretide|Puretide]] engram neurochip. It was a prototype, however, and rapidly began to degrade, damaging Sha'vastos' mind, so Farsight put him in stasis and smuggled him out of the Empire. Years later his scientists finally managed to remove it safely, and in gratitude Sha'vastos fights alongside his friend and leader in his XV8 Crisis battlesuit outfitted with a plasma rifle, a flamer, and two gun drones. | #'''Commander Sha'vastos''', an old comrade of Farsight and one of the commanders who was forcefully equipped with a [[Commander Puretide|Puretide]] engram neurochip. It was a prototype, however, and rapidly began to degrade, damaging Sha'vastos' mind, so Farsight put him in stasis and smuggled him out of the Empire. Years later his scientists finally managed to remove it safely, and in gratitude Sha'vastos fights alongside his friend and leader in his XV8 Crisis battlesuit outfitted with a plasma rifle, a flamer, and two gun drones. | ||
#'''Farsight''', leader of the Enclaves. Has very dark and cracked skin thanks to exposure to heat and flames, as well as a mechanical replacement leg. He | #'''Farsight''', leader of the Enclaves. Has very dark and cracked skin thanks to exposure to heat and flames, as well as a mechanical replacement leg. He piloted an XV8 Crisis battlesuit equipped with his trademark Dawn Blade, a high-intensity plasma rifle, and a shield generator mounted on one arm. Before finding the blade he used to mount a twin-linked fusion gun. Farsight's battlesuit in early editions was notably of an archaic design, as it was [https://1d4chan.org/wiki/Warhammer_40,000/5th_Edition_Tactics/Tau over a hundred years old], but constant upgrades and crafty Earth-Caste maintenance kept the suit on par with current sleeker battlesuit designs of the rest of the Tau Empire. Why the hell we couldn’t field him in a Coldstar suit is a mystery, because he was literally the first one ever to pilot such a suit, however it doesn’t matter anymore anyway. (In a teaser video released by GeeDubs on their Warhammer channel on YouTube on March 4, 2023, it showed Farsight getting a one of a kind brand new suit dubbed the [[XV86 Supernova Battlesuit]]!) | ||
#'''Honor-Shas'vre O'Vesa''', less of a Fire Caste warrior and more of an old Earth Caste mad scientist kept alive by microdrones, given the honorary title of "Shas" to denote his position as a warrior. Pilots a massive [[Riptide]] with excellent targeting arrays, an [[ion cannon|ion accelerator]], a [[Twin-Linked|twin-linked]] [[fusion blaster]], and a pair of [[Tau drone|shielded missile drones]]. | #'''Honor-Shas'vre O'Vesa''', less of a Fire Caste warrior and more of an old Earth Caste mad scientist kept alive by microdrones, given the honorary title of "Shas" to denote his position as a warrior. Pilots a massive [[Riptide]] with excellent targeting arrays, an [[ion cannon|ion accelerator]], a [[Twin-Linked|twin-linked]] [[fusion blaster]], and a pair of [[Tau drone|shielded missile drones]]. He also designed a new battlesuit for Farsight, so we can assume he's the insane mechanic of the group. | ||
#'''Commander Bravestorm''', a very old Tau who has been burned and scarred á la [[Star Wars|Darth Vader]] and cannot leave his iridium-plated (2+ Save) XV8-02 Crisis battlesuit after taking down dozens of Imperial tanks with an experimental weapon. This gets changed to "can leave his suit after all, but pretends he can't" in Farsight: Crisis of Faith. Incredibly brave (duh) and fights with the last remaining Tau power fist-equivalent, the Onager Gauntlet. Too bad we don't actually know what it looks like and his official image doesn't depict it... Also uses a plasma rifle, a [[flamer]], and a pair of gun drones. (Re)Built to last, he also has a shield and stims injectors. His life support seems to have given him extended life, as he saves Farsight in Mont'Ka. At one point he's nearly killed by Space Marines as they tear his battlesuit apart, but he tricks them by not moving and pretending he's dead after they rip his suit open but before they attack him. It's just as retarded as it sounds. | #'''Commander Bravestorm''', a very old Tau who has been burned and scarred á la [[Star Wars|Darth Vader]] and cannot leave his iridium-plated (2+ Save) XV8-02 Crisis battlesuit after taking down dozens of Imperial tanks with an experimental weapon. This gets changed to "can leave his suit after all, but pretends he can't" in Farsight: Crisis of Faith. Incredibly brave (duh) and fights with the last remaining Tau power fist-equivalent, the [[Power_weapon#Onager Gauntlet|Onager Gauntlet]]. Too bad we don't actually know what it looks like and his official image doesn't depict it... Also uses a plasma rifle, a [[flamer]], and a pair of gun drones. (Re)Built to last, he also has a shield and stims injectors. His life support seems to have given him extended life, as he saves Farsight in Mont'Ka. At one point he's nearly killed by Space Marines as they tear his battlesuit apart, but he tricks them by not moving and pretending he's dead after they rip his suit open but before they attack him. It's just as retarded as it sounds, because marines won't stop beating a xenos even if it's a dead xenos. And you know hearing him breathe [[Gene Seed|(Lyman's Ear)]]... [[Fail|Because fuck logic]]. | ||
#'''Commander Brightsword''', supposedly a generational pilot who inherited the title from the previous Brightsword, but actually a clone of him. Possesses a scarred and pock-marked XV8 Crisis battlesuit that was also passed down, and fights with two fusion blades, which are melta swords that can also be twin-linked fusion blasters, and a shield drone. | #'''Commander Brightsword''', supposedly a generational pilot who inherited the title from the previous Brightsword, but actually a clone of him. Possesses a scarred and pock-marked XV8 Crisis battlesuit that was also passed down, and fights with two fusion blades, which are melta swords that can also be twin-linked fusion blasters, and a shield drone. | ||
#'''Commander Arra'kon''', a Tau born in the Enclaves who served as supreme military commander during Farsight's hermetic absence. An expert strategist, and damned good in a fight, especially against infantry. He pilots an XV8-05 Enforcer battlesuit armed with a plasma rifle, a cyclic ion blaster, an airbursting fragmentation projector, and two gun drones. | #'''Commander Arra'kon''', a Tau born in the Enclaves who served as supreme military commander during Farsight's hermetic absence. An expert strategist, and damned good in a fight, especially against infantry. He pilots an XV8-05 Enforcer battlesuit armed with a plasma rifle, a cyclic ion blaster, an airbursting fragmentation projector, and two gun drones. | ||
[[File:The_Eight.png|850px|thumb|center|The gang posing for action]] | |||
==Possible Psyker?== | ==Possible Psyker?== | ||
Phil Kelly's Farsight novels have been revealing quite a lot of details about the Tau | Phil Kelly's Farsight novels have been revealing quite a lot of details about the Tau Empire (whilst contradicting almost every other book about the T’au), including this rather...odd implication. In previous lore, his name came about due to him studying Ork psychology to an extreme degree, to the point where he could predict their psychological reactions to everything. This then carried over to the Imperium when he studied the Codex Astartes and was able to predict Imperial strategy because of it. However in the Kelly books, Farsight demonstrated multiple instances where he literally sees the future and what his opponent will do. Yes, by the way, [[wat|this ability shows up '''before''' he found the Dawn Blade]], implying that he might be the first Tau psyker, a [[Anime|"new type"]] of Tau if you will. This is... confusing, to say the least. There's no precedence for this and the Tau are a race with very little warp presence, so how in the hell do they suddenly jump from that to "manipulate the very warp itself with mere thought"?! To make matters worse, this only appears in the books, he has '''no''' psychic abilities on the tabletop, nothing seems to have come out of it and it's contradictory based on what happens in those books as this would also mean he gets all of the benefits of being a psyker, [[Mary Sue|without having to put in any of the work or deal with any of the downsides,]] such as being detected by other psykers and also being extremely vulnerable to both Daemons and [[enslavers|other denizens of the warp.]] | ||
Or he's just Char, one of the <s>best Gundam</s> better mobile suit pilots who develops newtype abilities. Considering the idea of the entirety of humanity becoming a psychic race in space has been copied from the Gundam series, it's not surprising anymore. | |||
==Quotes== | ==Quotes== | ||
{{topquote|Learn to shorten your reach! If your foe can come close enough to negate your striking power, all stratagem is lost, and when all stratagem is lost, the battle is lost.|Codex: Tau (3rd Edition)}} | {{topquote|Learn to shorten your reach! If your foe can come close enough to negate your striking power, all stratagem is lost, and when all stratagem is lost, the battle is lost.|Codex: Tau (3rd Edition)}} | ||
{{topquote|Each must find their own way. If those in our heartland had witnessed the savageries of the void as have we, they would know this. The hand of each of the great starfarers is turned against the other; none will join their strength together just to see their ancient enemies prosper. Neither should we.|Codex: Tau Empire (4th Edition)}} | {{topquote|Each must find their own way. If those in our heartland had witnessed the savageries of the void as have we, they would know this. The hand of each of the great starfarers is turned against the other; none will join their strength together just to see their ancient enemies prosper. Neither should we.|Codex: Tau Empire (4th Edition)}} | ||
{{topquote|I've seen things you wouldn't believe — entire worlds in flames, chains of supernovas on the edge of nothingness, the great hole in space. I am changed, an outcast now...|Codex: Tau Empire (6th Edition). | {{topquote|I've seen things you wouldn't believe — entire worlds in flames, chains of supernovas on the edge of nothingness, the great hole in space. I am changed, an outcast now...|Codex: Tau Empire (6th Edition). Geez, replicant much?}} | ||
==That's the [[fluff]], here's the [[crunch]]== | ==That's the [[fluff]], here's the [[crunch]]== | ||
[[File:Farsight Model.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The old and new Farsight models.]] | [[File:Farsight Model.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The old and new Farsight models.]] | ||
While popular fluff-wise even among non-Tau players for his badassery and generally cool backstory, Commander Farsight wasn't actually all that useful on the tabletop at first because he came with a shit ton of limitations | [[File:The_Eight_battle.png|300px|thumb|right|They are quite possable tbf]] | ||
While popular fluff-wise even among non-Tau players for his badassery and generally cool backstory, Commander Farsight wasn't actually all that useful on the tabletop at first because he came with a shit ton of limitations. See back in ye-olden-times to access additional rules we would call a 'sub faction' you had to either have a supplement to give you those rules or have a special character whose rules let you mess with how your army functioned. In Farsight Case his changes made it so you could have no auxilaries, 0-1 tanks or [[Pathfinder]]s and so on, in exchange he got a massive bodyguard blob that was [[Deathstar|too expensive and risky]] to use and additional battle suits slots. The limitations got removed as of the 6th edition codex, however, and Farsight can now even bring Ethereals with him (even though fluff-wise Aun'Shi is the only Ethereal he'd associate with). On top of that, Farsight, along with his retinue of samurai—uh, I mean battlesuit aces, is now a beatstick. He can bring a unit of <s>seven</s> '''NINE''' (It's 7th ed Shas'la) non-scattering bodyguards with him and give them all meltas, plasma rifles and target locks to allow the squad to fire at several tanks with meltas or blast the enemy [[MEQ]]s and [[MEQ#TEQ|TEQs]] on turn 2. Moreover, Farsight can now be taken in a game of any size. Although with 7th ed he isn't needed for a massive blob of mechas to rain from the sky, he merely provides the means of entry, and beacons can do the same already. | |||
Farsight is one of very few Tau units who you actually want to be in an assault as opposed to shooting. So few everyone else will be hard pressed to keep up with him. His Tau-standard plasma rifle and BS5 are merely supplements meant to soften the enemy up before he charges in (or, rather, jetpacks in) to get to slicing and dicing with the Dawnblade, which is pretty easy with WS5, S5, I5 and 4 attacks. He's also pretty durable; basically a [[Space Marine]] captain with an extra wound: T4, W4, 3+ Save and a 4++ Invulnerable with his shield generator. Surprisingly, despite having a sword that eats souls and adds their would-be lifespan to Farsight's, he doesn't have eternal warrior, leading to him getting his face smashed in by anything with Str 8. He's not meant to be a one-man (or one-Tau) badassery show, though; have him work together effectively with his elite battlesuit brethren for [[Rape|best results]]. | Farsight is one of very few Tau units who you actually want to be in an assault as opposed to shooting. So few everyone else will be hard pressed to keep up with him. His Tau-standard plasma rifle and BS5 are merely supplements meant to soften the enemy up before he charges in (or, rather, jetpacks in) to get to slicing and dicing with the Dawnblade, which is pretty easy with WS5, S5, I5 and 4 attacks. He's also pretty durable; basically a [[Space Marine]] captain with an extra wound: T4, W4, 3+ Save and a 4++ Invulnerable with his shield generator. Surprisingly, despite having a sword that eats souls and adds their would-be lifespan to Farsight's, he doesn't have eternal warrior, leading to him getting his face smashed in by anything with Str 8. He's not meant to be a one-man (or one-Tau) badassery show, though; have him work together effectively with his elite battlesuit brethren for [[Rape|best results]]. | ||
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Welcome to the future! With the latest codex a Farsight Enclave army can actually take the standard Tau systems together with their own! | Welcome to the future! With the latest codex a Farsight Enclave army can actually take the standard Tau systems together with their own! | ||
===8th Edition=== | === 8th Edition === | ||
[[Warhammer_40,000/Tactics/Tau(8E)#Special_Characters|Here's the Tactics page.]] | [[Warhammer_40,000/Tactics/Tau(8E)#Special_Characters|Here's the Tactics page.]] | ||
He's the only unit so far with the {{W40kKeyword|FARSIGHT ENCLAVES}} keyword ( | He's the only unit so far with the {{W40kKeyword|FARSIGHT ENCLAVES}} keyword (aside from the Eight who are now a Lord of War choice, although of course you can pick Farsight Enclaves as your wildcard Sept for most other units), and buffs the melee abilities (and, if they're targeting {{W40kKeyword|ORKS}}, shooting too) of all nearby Farsight Enclaves units. He's also still a beast in melee, although he's not much good against larger targets - his sword may be AP-4, but he's only got <s> 5 Strength to swing it with. </s> Strength 8 now! His incredible accuracy (WS2+ with reroll 1s) and decent number of attacks will see him happily carving up lower-Toughness units whether they're armoured or not though, and if he gets in over his head he's always got the ability to Fall Back while shooting thanks to being able to {{W40kKeyword|FLY}}. Limitations on Commanders, no ethereals, and lack of units that can keep up with Farsight <s>drag his sept down in comparison to others though. No one said going your own way was easy.</s> Are you nuts? Coldstar Commanders with Fusion Blades in melee with him can wreck some serious havoc against characters and vehicles. Rerollable 1's to wound with an Y'vahra and Breacher Teams are nothing to sneeze at, and a stratagem that actually makes Crisis Suits accurate (with or without markerlights) really helps you get the most mileage out of them. Until you realize Y'vahra with any sept except for Borkan is an overpriced statue Sure you have to play them as a high risk high reward Deep Strike heavy army that likes to get up close and personal... but chances are you were going to do that anyways if you play FSE. | ||
All in all he is fluffy, but in modern meta high risk isn't compensated with high reward, because for reasons unknown crisis bodyguards are still short-sighted and look like downgraded aggressor primarines on jetpacks. | |||
===9th Edition=== | |||
[[File:Farsight_(2023).jpg|300px|thumb|right|Farsight's new [[XV86 Supernova Battlesuit|9th edition model]]. Now in plastic and with 100% more [[Skub|tactical]] [[Deep Rock Galactic|rock]] and [[Weeaboo|samurai vibes]].]] | |||
With the new Codex Farsight lost his Supplement and with it came a tragedy worthy of Shakespeare: [[FAIL|no more fusion blades]]. Otherwise the subfaction is awesome! You get the classic "Markerlights within 9 inches" and a single wound reroll per unit. In addition you get to bring 2 Suit Commanders, one of which can be good ol' Farsight himself. Your relic, The Talisman of Arthas Moloch, is an auto take if your opponent has any psychic prowess with its free DTW with an innate +1 once every turn. The strategem is also ''phenomenal'' with the full rerolls it grants to Crisis Suits that Manta Strike. Lastly, Master of the Killing Blow is a fun alternative to Precision of the Hunter as it grants -3 AP with a wound roll of 6 and makes it impossible for your wounds to be ignored. | |||
For a brief but glorious moment, the FSE were even one of the more broken subfactions, | |||
mostly because of how broken Farsight's preferred philosophy of Mont'ka was: rerolling wound rolls of 1, additional AP, and being able to count yourself as stationary for the first three turns gave them a considerable advantage, especially when you consider that Kauyon players had to wait til turn 3 before they could even get started. GW quickly nerfed them to force some variety in Tau lists, but FSE are still quite good despite it all. <s>However, there's even more hope for FSE because [[Games Workshop|GeeDubbs]] seems to be tickling our balls with hints at a supplement for FSE again so join the prayer in the return of Fusion Blades.</s> We go diddly and fucking squat in terms of new rules; not even new rules for Far Sight’s new model! Hopefully 10th brings something good for us. | |||
Even if we don't get that supplement, FSE has retained that wonderful CQB flow from 8th which is still tons of fun if we can't laser everyone to death. One of the best Commander builds right now is a Commander with a special-issue 2D flamer that can [[Awesome|act as a melee weapon]], with all of those attacks being extra to your Onager Gauntlet (which isn't limited to 1A anymore!). One of these Commanders, fully-kitted out with complementary guns and WLT, can be a wonderful distraction to keep the heat off Farsight for once. They also may update his rules to be on-par with Shadowsun and other Supreme Commanders considering they gave him a larger base. | |||
Once you're done wacking one out to the new Farsight model, go and play some games and have some fun. | |||
{{Tau-Characters}} | {{Tau-Characters}} |
Latest revision as of 23:24, 20 June 2023
"Any officer who goes into action without his sword is improperly dressed."
- – Jack Churchill, or "Mad Jack", British Army officer during WWII
Shas'O Vior'la Shovah Kais Mont'yr, better known as Commander Farsight or Da Red Komet, is owner of the longest (xeno) name in the galaxy (and that's without his redundant civilian designations), as well as the closest thing the Tau have to a stone-cold badass and the only Tau /tg/ can respect since he lacks the usual naive, obnoxious and arrogant attitude of his kind. This is largely due to being the only known Tau to opt for a bloody great sword and shield over the clinical sub-atomic-pulse-plasma-ion-rail-blaster-rifle-cannons his race are famed for. His fearsome reputation is most widespread among the Orks. Oh, and his name is a fucking pun (all T'au are nearsighted and don't have good vision without their gear).
He is also a clone of the Gundam character Char.
Farsight most resembles some sort of hybrid of Char Aznable (Red Battlesuit, separatist philosophies, arch-rivalry with a White Battlesuited ace pilot), Oda Nobunaga (Ruthlesss pragmatism, scorched earth tactics, close range firearms tactics), Hojo Tokimune (Rallying the troops against an unstoppable horde of barbarians), Big Boss from the Metal Gear series (having had to kill his mentor at the behest of his leaders, and now leading a resistance group against said leaders) and Kambei Shimada (Get it? The Eight? Seven Samurai?).
Once upon a time, there lived a Tau who literally had the word "hot-blooded" in his very name...[edit]
From the beginning, Farsight was a fiercely independent thinker and tactical genius who managed to get three years ahead of his fellow pupils with nothing but determination and planning; in fact, he was such a bright spark he ended up embarrassing his instructors, which led to a lot of them getting replaced. Though this led to some bad blood, Farsight moved past it, becoming a famed commander in his own right. However, Farsight's personal gut instincts and a desire for close, aggressive combat put him at odds with the Empire's battle doctrine. Farsight sucked it up and continued on as best he could, and finally was promoted to a battlesuit piloting role that he took to with gusto.
Back during the halcyon days of the major conquests of the Tau Empire, the majority of the army's victories could be attributed to a single commander: Puretide. Puretide was a legendary genius who wrote the book on Fire Caste tactics, and shaped the military for years to come. He was basically Sun Tzu 40k to the point where O'R'myr actually quotes Sun Tzu in the Taros Campaign book and it is attributed to Puretide. Puretide's many pupils were all famous warriors in their own right, and Puretide himself was so valuable that before he died of old age, the Earth Caste actually scanned his brain and encoded portions of his brilliance into what they called Puretide engram neurochips in order to help train future commanders. Farsight trained directly under Puretide, learning even more about battlefield tactics and strategy, and became one of his top pupils along with Commander Shadowsun and Shas'o Kais (who is the same Kais from Fire Warrior and Dawn of War). After studying with Papa Puretide himself, Farsight was made the leader of a massive Tau fleet and sent out to do the Empire's bidding. In his first deployment as mission commander, he performed amazingly, trouncing the Orks singlehandedly with skill and cunning. As he fought, the young Tau realized that aggressive, up-close combat was the key to defeating the Orks, and as a result became more comfortable with the idea of close quarters combat. Though he was unhappily reassigned to another battle zone before defeating the Orks completely, Farsight met with the Ethereal Aun'Shi, on whom he modeled a style of close-combat battlesuit fighting which he applied for years afterwards.
Farsight's next big deployment was at Dal'yth during the Damocles Crusade. A branch of the Imperium's forces had launched a steamroller attack on the sept world, knocking over colonies, shelling planets and smashing fleets to get there. Though the attack was clumsy, the sheer grit and numbers of the Imperial Guard meant that the Tau were completely on the back foot, and only Farsight and Shadowsun's combined tactics managed to hold Dal'yth together. During this battle Farsight became aware of the unsettling power of human psyker and warp technology as well as their incredible fanaticism, and began to recognize an element of the latter in his own doctrines. In addition, some of his fellow commanders were implanted with Puretide engram neurochips by the Ethereals to make them as tactically capable as Puretide; however, Farsight found this horrifying when it turned his soldiers into robots with no will of their own and made them completely useless when psykers were involved (since Puretide had never encountered them). Finally, after a long and bloody war, the Imperium of Man had to pull out when the Tyranid Hive Fleet Behemoth reared its grotesque head in the Eastern Fringe and headed straight for Ultramar. While the rest of the Tau Empire was celebrating, Farsight was the only one who noticed that the Imperium would have won the war of attrition, and wondered if something else had caused them to pull out. After the war, Farsight discovered to his additional alarm that when the engram chips were removed, they left the commanders brain-dead. You can probably see where this is going.
However, the neurochip business was not enough for the Ethereals, who decided that some of Puretide's students should be cryogenically frozen so that they could be useful far beyond their meager lifespans. Puretide's three top pupils (Farsight, Shadowsun and Kais), all aggressive commanders with a bitter rivalry between them, were chosen for this. It was decided that the three would work in decades-long rotations, with one awake and two asleep at all times, kind of like the three vampire lords in Underworld were supposed to preside over the coven in turns. Of the three, Farsight was chosen to remain active first while Shadowsun and Kais were frozen to be brought back into service in the future, making him, for a time, the sole military hero of the Empire.
Farsight Enclaves[edit]
Farsight Enclaves | |
---|---|
Capital |
Vior'los |
Official Languages |
Tau Lexicon |
Power |
Emerging Minor Power |
Size |
4 Systems |
Head of State |
Commander Farsight |
Head of Government |
Commander Farsight, The Eight |
Governmental Structure |
Libertarian Stratocratic Federal War Council |
State Religion/Ideology |
Modified version of the Tau'va |
Demographic | |
Military Force |
Tau Forces, The Eight |
After the Damocles Crusade, Farsight was tasked with rebuilding a series of lost colonies that had been overrun by Chaos forces. So Farsight set out with another huge fleet and a trio of Ethereals to repair the damage and take back planets. He set up a series of worlds that would become known as the Farsight Enclaves. Along the way he was attacked by Space Marines, whom he managed to defeat by climbing in an original Coldstar suit (yes, it has a female AI, and yes she's a tsundere), and at the direction of a Daemon-possessed Water Caste member, flew towards and boarded the Space Marine ship through the grotesquely huge barrel of a gun (because the whole book is mocking the GW tropes) with the intention of disabling its Gellar Fields. Luckily the single suit didn't trigger the turrets and Space Marines forgot to deploy their fighters for no reason so Farsight was able to accomplish his mission, but gets briefly knocked out in doing so and has a few visions of the future. Because you know, newtype Tau or something. Luckily he's still able to come to and leave when the ship begins getting overrun with Daemons, as for some reason the ship never fully left the warp when it began its attack on the Tau. We also learn the Tau have drones the size of thumbs that are powerful enough to vaporize large Daemons in a single shot (don't think about it too much, they never show up again). On the way back to the Tau he's attacked by a Heldrake because BUY THE NEW MINIATURES! and is nearly killed, only to be saved by the Imperials fleeing their doomed ship as they blow it up in a way that doesn't destroy the suit it's ripping apart. From there he decides it's best to just never speak of "those weird xenos" that showed up out of nowhere and vanished into smoke just as quickly; good thing not warning anyone else about this sort of thing never comes back to bite anyone in the ass later.
Shortly after that however, his new territories became overrun by a huge WAAAAAGH of Orks. Said Orks were made up of survivors from his previous campaign, and they came both for revenge and the opportunity to loot all that fancy Tau dakka (the Orks called it the War of Dakka. No, seriously.) Although the Ethereals wanted him to keep conquering worlds from the Imperium, Farsight wisely refused as he knew all too well that the Ork menace would only get worse if he didn't deal with them. The Orks actually came up with a pretty kunnin' plan: launch an attack against a world across the Gulf to send "Da Red Runt" (Again, seriously. Subtle Phil Kelly strikes again) after them, and then strike the worlds of the Enclaves while he's off dealing with them. The plan worked at first, Farsight stopped their initial attack, but came home to find all the worlds being besieged by Orks. Against such overwhelming odds, the Tau Orks never stood a fucking chance. Farsight proceeded to enact what could only be described as Ork genocide, the likes of which would make Yarrick proud. He accomplished this by weaponizing the terrain of all the worlds, setting off volcanoes, earthquakes, dust storms and tsunamis to weaken the Orks before the Tau finished them off. This WAAAAAGH was eventually stopped when Farsight killed their warboss by punching through his battlewagon and vaporizing him with his fusion blaster. The Orks that weren't killed fled from him.
Though they were running scared away from the Enclaves, Farsight refused to let them escape alive, and set about hunting down the remaining Orks, which conflicted with the Ethereals' primary objective of capturing more worlds and created tension between them and Farsight. During this drawn-out campaign against the Orks, Farsight and his Ethereal advisors ended up on the dead planet of Arthas Moloch, where a swarm of Daemons was summoned after blood was spilled on a strange altar. The Daemons proceeded to wreck shit up, and put Farsight into critical condition. In this costly battle Farsight discovered an ancient sword called the Dawn Blade, as well as statues bearing hexagram medallions that somehow repelled entities of Chaos (Interestingly, this was the same symbol he used to exorcise the Daemon from the Water Caste). The Ethereals tried to use his nearly fatal injuries as a justification to just quarantine off the planet and leave it behind. Farsight, however, defied their orders yet again, and despite being on the brink of death he climbed into his Battlesuit for what he assumed would be the last time. Although the Ethereals were made aware of this suicide mission, they agreed to let him go (Since he was proving way too rebellious to keep alive any longer) as long as they went down to the planet to investigate the creatures... which one of them accidentally named in a slip of the tongue, revealing to Farsight that they had known about the ancient evil of Chaos, but lied to the Tau public about its existence for the sake of the Greater Good, kind of like what the Emperor did in the Great Crusade. This is similar to the Emprah's plan although it is equally (if not more) stupid, since the Tau are able to be possessed by Daemons and do not have the ability to detect this possession themselves. The existence of Daemons, though, could negate a lot of their highly secular teachings. Farsight figured out that the medallions were anathema to Chaos, and chucked as many as he could find into the portal, causing it to collapse in a huge explosion. During the fight, however, the Daemons singled out and killed his Ethereals, it seems their curiosity got the better of them.
When the dust settled, O'Shovah was one foot in the grave, his injuries were already life threatening and the battle had only aggravated them. His battlesuit AI advised him to return to the Manta and enter into stasis for that incredibly slim chance that he might be healed. But he looked at his scanner and discovered that there were less than 30 Orks on the surface. AKA: Too damn many. Farsight then leapt into the fray, knowing it would spell his doom, but he would not die until after the Orks did. However during the battle something unusual happened; As he chopped up the Orks, his vital signs began to stabilize and even heal. Cutting them down even gave him a strange invigorating thrill, one he noticed was absent when he killed them in other ways. Finally, the last Ork was cleaved in two and Farsight knew his task was finished. When he got back to the Manta however, not only did he notice that his injuries were completely gone, but he had actually regressed in age back to his prime.
Gotta Go Your Own Way[edit]
After the events on Arthas Moloch, Farsight understood the terrifying menace of the Immaterium and Chaos and the massive dickery of Ethereals, which to him explained a great deal of what he had seen during his exploits. As he continued to ponder, it became obvious to the Commander that the T'au Empire's leadership was not benign, or at the very least woefully ignorant or in denial regarding the true perils of the galaxy. The Farsight Enclaves thereafter severed their ties with the T'au Empire and began to govern themselves. Farsight quietly left his battlesuit in a museum and went to be a hermit, fearing that a second Mon'tau would occur if what he learned ever reached the Empire. Which makes a degree of sense. The Tau believe the Greater Good has enabled them to be on par with and even surpass all the major galactic powers. The truth is that they are nothing in comparison even though everyone has no Greater Good or Ethereals. Which would mean their beliefs are meaningless and unnecessary.
The Dawn Blade[edit]
The Dawn Blade is made of chronophagic (Greek for "time eating") alloys, so whenever Farsight kills something with it his life is extended as the blade steals the life force of its victim and adds it to the wielder's own. Considering he killed a lot of Orks (who are biologically immortal) and Daemons (who are truly immortal, barring a true death, which normally must either take place in the Warp, or else be by the hands of a blank, a Custodes, Big-E himself, or via Necron-tech) with it, it's safe to say Shovah is practically immortal right now. Farsight does not know this, but he has his suspicions, and if he were to find out that his suspicions are correct he would most likely kill himself upon realizing that he's been unwittingly sucking the life out of his enemies. He also found multiple six-sided medallions with anti-Warp properties in the same place he found the Dawn Blade. Trazyn probably lost some of his collection or something. But seriously, based on its age and eldritch abilities, the Dawn Blade is most likely a C'tan artifact or leftover technology of the Old Ones. It's essence-eating properties however, and in particular that this effect holds true for use against daemons (which in that case is essentially tantamount to a true death), means that we can probably narrow down the source to one of three likely possibilities: Eldar artifact, Dark Age of Technology Archeotech, or Necron/C'tan technology. Appearance-wise it seems to bear more visual similarities to option 3. Considering the old fluff it might actually be one of the 99 blades of Vaul, the ones that drained the enemy of life force to sustain the bearer (and the one that was normal made the line crumble and Vaul getting wrecked for his deceit).
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163 years later[edit]
"The life of a soldier is the only one I know. That's why I can never settle down."
- – Char Aznable
"Who wants to live forever? Forever is our today, Who waits forever anyway? "
- – Freddie Mercury (actually Brian May)
The Tau Empire, having lost contact with the Farsight Enclaves, believed Farsight himself to be long dead and the Enclaves lost. One day, though, a probe discovered that the Enclaves were still there and flourishing, and had changed their sept markings and become Ethereal-free. Learning this, the Tau Empire branded Farsight a traitor and renamed the Enclaves the "Forbidden Zone", smashing all his statues throughout the Empire and trying to wipe him from public memory. This didn't sit well with everyone, especially members of the Fire Caste, and contacts within the Empire soon began secretly supplying the Enclaves with new weapons and hardware.
Over a hundred years later, the Enclaves came under threat from a Tyranid splinter fleet. Unsure of what to do, the leadership of the Enclaves suddenly got a message from a museum where an aged Farsight had suddenly shown up out of nowhere to demand his old battlesuit be removed from its display case and returned to him. Donning his armor once again, the Commander took over the defense, and thanks to some smart Earth Caste bio-engineering, managed to hold off the Great Devourer long enough to poison the fleet (Yeah, seriously, leave it to the Tau to poison a fleet that literally lives on toxins The Deathwatch uses bio-toxins against the Tyranids on the regular, this is nothing new) which ended up destroying it in its entirety, making the Tau better at creating viruses than Nurgle's daemons as they tried and were unable to do this. Some may remember the Imperium did this, too, but that was actually a mutagen whereas this was a poison. Meanwhile Shadowsun, Farsight's old rival, was awakened from her cryogenic stasis in the Empire and sent back to war, and Farsight assembled a new team of elite battlesuit pilots, The Eight, to defend the Enclaves and stand opposed to the mysterious power the Ethereals held over their brethren. They would later reinforce the T'au Empire in the last campaign of the Third Sphere of Expansion.
At some point in the early 42nd Millennium, Farsight made a journey back to Arthas Moloch alone. He stays there for 30 days before returning to the Empire to summon a war council. And...that's all we've heard from the Enclaves in 8th Edition. Considering the dangers that the Death Guard's assault on the Tau Empire represents, it's very possible that Farsight is preparing a relief force to deal with Nurgle's armies. Also, the reaction of the Ethereals after being rescued by a renegade would be really interesting to see, maybe putting their credibility on the line, or just trying to cover everything up, angering many in the Tau army. Maybe this is the last straw for the Tau Empire to enter a full civil war between Farsight and the Ethereal Caste (at this point I would be fine with any Advancing the Storyline; something in the vein of Farsight doing a backflip and giving everybody cake)...
Come 9th Edition, the Enclaves became targeted by Nazdreg Ug Urdgrub's "War of Dakka", where the Orks mass-adopted firepower in the hopes of blasting the Tau at their own game. Luckily, this came at a time where Farsight managed to get a new update to his Battlesuit, now dubbed the Supernova by his friend who made it. Unluckily, this was also happening during at the same time as the Arks of Omen saga was going on, meaning that the war was interrupted by one emerging within the Enclaves while he was being guided back to Arthas Moloch by visions.
In the end Farsight managed to defeat Nazdreg’s army after luring them to that world by unleashing a shitload of Khornate daemons sealed away in Arthas Moloch (something which almost caused him to fall to chaos in the process but thankfully didn’t) and once the Orks were mostly dealt with he proceeded to smash the damn altar the daemons were coming out of which not only stopped them in their tracks but also caused life to return to the planet. Unfortunately he failed to stop the guys from the Ark who managed to locate an artifact they were looking for and escape with it.
The Eight[edit]
Farsight's band of battlesuit aces. Think Seven Samurai, except with mecha and one more samurai. The Eight consist of:
- Sub-Commander Torchstar, a Tau Empire deserter and the youngest member of the team, this volatile pyromaniac female Tau has flame tattoos on her body and pilots a XV8 Crisis suit. She even fights with dual flamers and a couple of marker drones. A blue-skinned Chandra in a mecha Hot enough for ya? (The amount of sexy fanart over her are astounding, like OVER 9000!!!!!)
- Shas'vre Ob'lotai 9-0, an AI-controlled XV88 Broadside battlesuit armed to the teeth with twin-linked smart missile systems, twin-linked, high-yield missile pods, two missile drones, and a seeker missile. Based on the brain of Farsight's long-dead superior Ob'lotai. Is killed twice, the first is when he flies directly through a battle barge's void shields at over 200 kph, isn't picked up by Imperial sensors or shot down (either by the ship or its fighter craft), flies directly into the barrel of a battle-barge's cannon and then shoots the warhead inside to blow up the entire battle barge. This also ends up wiping out an entire Space Marine chapter. Funnily enough too the novel that this happens in establishes well before this point that all of this would be impossible, and that if anyone were to try doing exactly what he did they would have the same result as a fly hitting a windshield (and doing this also kills the electronics that don't get crushed, which would have destroyed him as well). The second time he gets destroyed was in the events of Mont'ka, but being an AI they just slapped his engram in a new XV88 body. Also gains the ability to wirelessly transmit himself from one battlesuit to another in Farsight: Crisis of Faith, presumably because Phil Kelly forgot that he needed his chip to be plugged into a suit to control them and that he couldn't survive without his chip (everyone knows the Tau never improve their technology, right?). Can also be considered a troll, screenshotting marines with no helmets taking a missile to the face. And then proceeding to send said picts to Farsight as memes.
- Commander Sha'vastos, an old comrade of Farsight and one of the commanders who was forcefully equipped with a Puretide engram neurochip. It was a prototype, however, and rapidly began to degrade, damaging Sha'vastos' mind, so Farsight put him in stasis and smuggled him out of the Empire. Years later his scientists finally managed to remove it safely, and in gratitude Sha'vastos fights alongside his friend and leader in his XV8 Crisis battlesuit outfitted with a plasma rifle, a flamer, and two gun drones.
- Farsight, leader of the Enclaves. Has very dark and cracked skin thanks to exposure to heat and flames, as well as a mechanical replacement leg. He piloted an XV8 Crisis battlesuit equipped with his trademark Dawn Blade, a high-intensity plasma rifle, and a shield generator mounted on one arm. Before finding the blade he used to mount a twin-linked fusion gun. Farsight's battlesuit in early editions was notably of an archaic design, as it was over a hundred years old, but constant upgrades and crafty Earth-Caste maintenance kept the suit on par with current sleeker battlesuit designs of the rest of the Tau Empire. Why the hell we couldn’t field him in a Coldstar suit is a mystery, because he was literally the first one ever to pilot such a suit, however it doesn’t matter anymore anyway. (In a teaser video released by GeeDubs on their Warhammer channel on YouTube on March 4, 2023, it showed Farsight getting a one of a kind brand new suit dubbed the XV86 Supernova Battlesuit!)
- Honor-Shas'vre O'Vesa, less of a Fire Caste warrior and more of an old Earth Caste mad scientist kept alive by microdrones, given the honorary title of "Shas" to denote his position as a warrior. Pilots a massive Riptide with excellent targeting arrays, an ion accelerator, a twin-linked fusion blaster, and a pair of shielded missile drones. He also designed a new battlesuit for Farsight, so we can assume he's the insane mechanic of the group.
- Commander Bravestorm, a very old Tau who has been burned and scarred á la Darth Vader and cannot leave his iridium-plated (2+ Save) XV8-02 Crisis battlesuit after taking down dozens of Imperial tanks with an experimental weapon. This gets changed to "can leave his suit after all, but pretends he can't" in Farsight: Crisis of Faith. Incredibly brave (duh) and fights with the last remaining Tau power fist-equivalent, the Onager Gauntlet. Too bad we don't actually know what it looks like and his official image doesn't depict it... Also uses a plasma rifle, a flamer, and a pair of gun drones. (Re)Built to last, he also has a shield and stims injectors. His life support seems to have given him extended life, as he saves Farsight in Mont'Ka. At one point he's nearly killed by Space Marines as they tear his battlesuit apart, but he tricks them by not moving and pretending he's dead after they rip his suit open but before they attack him. It's just as retarded as it sounds, because marines won't stop beating a xenos even if it's a dead xenos. And you know hearing him breathe (Lyman's Ear)... Because fuck logic.
- Commander Brightsword, supposedly a generational pilot who inherited the title from the previous Brightsword, but actually a clone of him. Possesses a scarred and pock-marked XV8 Crisis battlesuit that was also passed down, and fights with two fusion blades, which are melta swords that can also be twin-linked fusion blasters, and a shield drone.
- Commander Arra'kon, a Tau born in the Enclaves who served as supreme military commander during Farsight's hermetic absence. An expert strategist, and damned good in a fight, especially against infantry. He pilots an XV8-05 Enforcer battlesuit armed with a plasma rifle, a cyclic ion blaster, an airbursting fragmentation projector, and two gun drones.
Possible Psyker?[edit]
Phil Kelly's Farsight novels have been revealing quite a lot of details about the Tau Empire (whilst contradicting almost every other book about the T’au), including this rather...odd implication. In previous lore, his name came about due to him studying Ork psychology to an extreme degree, to the point where he could predict their psychological reactions to everything. This then carried over to the Imperium when he studied the Codex Astartes and was able to predict Imperial strategy because of it. However in the Kelly books, Farsight demonstrated multiple instances where he literally sees the future and what his opponent will do. Yes, by the way, this ability shows up before he found the Dawn Blade, implying that he might be the first Tau psyker, a "new type" of Tau if you will. This is... confusing, to say the least. There's no precedence for this and the Tau are a race with very little warp presence, so how in the hell do they suddenly jump from that to "manipulate the very warp itself with mere thought"?! To make matters worse, this only appears in the books, he has no psychic abilities on the tabletop, nothing seems to have come out of it and it's contradictory based on what happens in those books as this would also mean he gets all of the benefits of being a psyker, without having to put in any of the work or deal with any of the downsides, such as being detected by other psykers and also being extremely vulnerable to both Daemons and other denizens of the warp.
Or he's just Char, one of the best Gundam better mobile suit pilots who develops newtype abilities. Considering the idea of the entirety of humanity becoming a psychic race in space has been copied from the Gundam series, it's not surprising anymore.
Quotes[edit]
"Learn to shorten your reach! If your foe can come close enough to negate your striking power, all stratagem is lost, and when all stratagem is lost, the battle is lost."
- – Codex: Tau (3rd Edition)
"Each must find their own way. If those in our heartland had witnessed the savageries of the void as have we, they would know this. The hand of each of the great starfarers is turned against the other; none will join their strength together just to see their ancient enemies prosper. Neither should we."
- – Codex: Tau Empire (4th Edition)
"I've seen things you wouldn't believe — entire worlds in flames, chains of supernovas on the edge of nothingness, the great hole in space. I am changed, an outcast now..."
- – Codex: Tau Empire (6th Edition). Geez, replicant much?
That's the fluff, here's the crunch[edit]
While popular fluff-wise even among non-Tau players for his badassery and generally cool backstory, Commander Farsight wasn't actually all that useful on the tabletop at first because he came with a shit ton of limitations. See back in ye-olden-times to access additional rules we would call a 'sub faction' you had to either have a supplement to give you those rules or have a special character whose rules let you mess with how your army functioned. In Farsight Case his changes made it so you could have no auxilaries, 0-1 tanks or Pathfinders and so on, in exchange he got a massive bodyguard blob that was too expensive and risky to use and additional battle suits slots. The limitations got removed as of the 6th edition codex, however, and Farsight can now even bring Ethereals with him (even though fluff-wise Aun'Shi is the only Ethereal he'd associate with). On top of that, Farsight, along with his retinue of samurai—uh, I mean battlesuit aces, is now a beatstick. He can bring a unit of seven NINE (It's 7th ed Shas'la) non-scattering bodyguards with him and give them all meltas, plasma rifles and target locks to allow the squad to fire at several tanks with meltas or blast the enemy MEQs and TEQs on turn 2. Moreover, Farsight can now be taken in a game of any size. Although with 7th ed he isn't needed for a massive blob of mechas to rain from the sky, he merely provides the means of entry, and beacons can do the same already.
Farsight is one of very few Tau units who you actually want to be in an assault as opposed to shooting. So few everyone else will be hard pressed to keep up with him. His Tau-standard plasma rifle and BS5 are merely supplements meant to soften the enemy up before he charges in (or, rather, jetpacks in) to get to slicing and dicing with the Dawnblade, which is pretty easy with WS5, S5, I5 and 4 attacks. He's also pretty durable; basically a Space Marine captain with an extra wound: T4, W4, 3+ Save and a 4++ Invulnerable with his shield generator. Surprisingly, despite having a sword that eats souls and adds their would-be lifespan to Farsight's, he doesn't have eternal warrior, leading to him getting his face smashed in by anything with Str 8. He's not meant to be a one-man (or one-Tau) badassery show, though; have him work together effectively with his elite battlesuit brethren for best results.
Additionally, the Tau Empire has a whole Farsight Enclaves Supplement now, where you can take battlesuits as Troops AND his own crazy retinue of special characters! Surprisingly, Farsight himself is rarely taken in Enclaves armies, mostly because his giant Crysis deathstar really benefits from the standard Tau relics systems.
Welcome to the future! With the latest codex a Farsight Enclave army can actually take the standard Tau systems together with their own!
8th Edition[edit]
He's the only unit so far with the FARSIGHT ENCLAVES keyword (aside from the Eight who are now a Lord of War choice, although of course you can pick Farsight Enclaves as your wildcard Sept for most other units), and buffs the melee abilities (and, if they're targeting ORKS, shooting too) of all nearby Farsight Enclaves units. He's also still a beast in melee, although he's not much good against larger targets - his sword may be AP-4, but he's only got 5 Strength to swing it with. Strength 8 now! His incredible accuracy (WS2+ with reroll 1s) and decent number of attacks will see him happily carving up lower-Toughness units whether they're armoured or not though, and if he gets in over his head he's always got the ability to Fall Back while shooting thanks to being able to FLY. Limitations on Commanders, no ethereals, and lack of units that can keep up with Farsight drag his sept down in comparison to others though. No one said going your own way was easy. Are you nuts? Coldstar Commanders with Fusion Blades in melee with him can wreck some serious havoc against characters and vehicles. Rerollable 1's to wound with an Y'vahra and Breacher Teams are nothing to sneeze at, and a stratagem that actually makes Crisis Suits accurate (with or without markerlights) really helps you get the most mileage out of them. Until you realize Y'vahra with any sept except for Borkan is an overpriced statue Sure you have to play them as a high risk high reward Deep Strike heavy army that likes to get up close and personal... but chances are you were going to do that anyways if you play FSE.
All in all he is fluffy, but in modern meta high risk isn't compensated with high reward, because for reasons unknown crisis bodyguards are still short-sighted and look like downgraded aggressor primarines on jetpacks.
9th Edition[edit]
With the new Codex Farsight lost his Supplement and with it came a tragedy worthy of Shakespeare: no more fusion blades. Otherwise the subfaction is awesome! You get the classic "Markerlights within 9 inches" and a single wound reroll per unit. In addition you get to bring 2 Suit Commanders, one of which can be good ol' Farsight himself. Your relic, The Talisman of Arthas Moloch, is an auto take if your opponent has any psychic prowess with its free DTW with an innate +1 once every turn. The strategem is also phenomenal with the full rerolls it grants to Crisis Suits that Manta Strike. Lastly, Master of the Killing Blow is a fun alternative to Precision of the Hunter as it grants -3 AP with a wound roll of 6 and makes it impossible for your wounds to be ignored.
For a brief but glorious moment, the FSE were even one of the more broken subfactions,
mostly because of how broken Farsight's preferred philosophy of Mont'ka was: rerolling wound rolls of 1, additional AP, and being able to count yourself as stationary for the first three turns gave them a considerable advantage, especially when you consider that Kauyon players had to wait til turn 3 before they could even get started. GW quickly nerfed them to force some variety in Tau lists, but FSE are still quite good despite it all. However, there's even more hope for FSE because GeeDubbs seems to be tickling our balls with hints at a supplement for FSE again so join the prayer in the return of Fusion Blades. We go diddly and fucking squat in terms of new rules; not even new rules for Far Sight’s new model! Hopefully 10th brings something good for us.
Even if we don't get that supplement, FSE has retained that wonderful CQB flow from 8th which is still tons of fun if we can't laser everyone to death. One of the best Commander builds right now is a Commander with a special-issue 2D flamer that can act as a melee weapon, with all of those attacks being extra to your Onager Gauntlet (which isn't limited to 1A anymore!). One of these Commanders, fully-kitted out with complementary guns and WLT, can be a wonderful distraction to keep the heat off Farsight for once. They also may update his rules to be on-par with Shadowsun and other Supreme Commanders considering they gave him a larger base.
Once you're done wacking one out to the new Farsight model, go and play some games and have some fun.
Heroes of the Greater Good | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ethereals: | Aun'Shi - Aun'Va | |||||
Fire Caste: | Commander Farsight - Commander Puretide Commander Shadowsun - El'Myamoto Longstrike | |||||
Dawn of War: | Shas'O Or'es'Ka - Shas'O Kais |