Tactical Squad: Difference between revisions
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{{Topquote|Initiate tactical advance.|[[Tarkus]]}} | |||
A '''Tactical Squad''' is a squad of [[Space Marines]] who are used as the flexible backbone of Space Marine chapters. Having previously served in both [[Assault Squad|Assault]] and [[Devastator Squad|Devastator]] squads, Tactical Marines have experience in both heavy weapons and close quarters combat, and are thus ideal for any type of combat situation. Tactical Marines are armed with [[bolter|bolters]] for ranged combat and a [[Bolt Pistol|bolt pistol]] and [[Basic_Close_Combat_Weapons#Astartes Combat Knife|combat blade]] (most humans would consider it a short sword, but in Astartes hands it is a knife) for close combat even though they were trained in and spent years using a chainsword. Some members will be armed with specialist weapons like a [[Flamer]], [[Grav-Weaponry#Grav-Gun|Grav-Gun]], [[Heavy Bolter]], or [[Missile Launcher]]. The squad's [[Brother-Sergeant]] will usually be armed with a [[chainsword]], [[power weapon]], or [[combi-weapon]]. | |||
The lore supporting Tactical Marines states that they've mastered every form of Astartes warfare: they are experts who are fully versed in all of their Chapter's tactics and wargear. So, in theory, any individual Tactical Marine could slip into any other role immediately if needed. Unfortunately, the fiction doesn't usually portray them being used this way, and they can't be used that way on the tabletop at all. Some people claim that this makes Tactical Marines ineffective, but this just isn't true. In 8th/9th Edition, a Tactical squad sitting in cover on an objective can be a very hard nugget for your opponent to crack, and the amount of firepower that the squad can spit out is also quite formidable. Furthermore, regular Space Marines are way, way toned down on the tabletop in order for other armies to remain competitive. If you'd like to get a sense of just how scary regular plain-Jane Tactical marines can be, check out the [[Warhammer Films|Astartes]] fan film or the old [[Deathwatch]] RPG by Fantasy Flight Games. | |||
The Dark Angels under the Lion used them best as skirmishers/black ops while most of his Marines were dedicated to armored warfare, heavy weapons, assault, fast attack, or were Terminators. Basically, he did everything right as expected of the Primarch equivalent of Creed, despite being an unlikeable cunt. Tactical Squad equivalents in the Raven Guard and Night Lords were also used in a similar way. | |||
Under a [[Codex Astartes|Codex]]-compliant Chapter, the composition of four battle companies (2nd through 5th) will include six tactical squads, while two of the reserve companies (6th and 7th) will be composed entirely of Tactical Marines who train using bikes and land speeders. Among the [[Space Wolves]], the role of Tactical Marine is filled by the [[Grey Hunter]]s, Wolves who have been promoted out of the [[Blood Claw]]s and show a degree of skill at controlling the inner wolf. Among the [[Black Templars]], the role of Tactical Marines are held by Initiates; those who have received their Black Carapace and have been assigned to oversee the training of a [[Neophyte]]. | |||
==Equipment== | |||
All Tactical Marines wear the standard Space Marine [[Mark VII: Aquila/Imperator Armour|Mark VII Aquila Armour]], although certain chapters such as the [[Raven Guard]] and [[Iron Hands]] prefer the [[Mark VI: Corvus Armour|Mark VI Corvus Armour]] (also known as [[Beakie|Beakie Armour]]) and [[Mark IV: Maximus Armour|Mark IV Maximus Armour]] respectively, whilst other... poorer chapters like the [[Space Sharks|Carcharodons]] are forced to rely on the <s>older</s> bargain bin [[Mark V: Heresy Armour|Mark V Heresy Armour]]. Back in the [[Great Crusade]], Tactical Squads all wore [[Mark II: Crusade Armour|Mark II Crusade Armour]] and [[Mark III: Iron Armour|Mark III Iron Armour]], but by the time of the [[Horus Heresy]], these obsolete shits were being phased out by newer and more modern power armour, so it is very rare to see modern Space Marine chapters to house these older museum pieces nowadays. | |||
Other than power armour, they carry a [[Bolt Pistol|bolt pistol,]] a [[Astartes Boltgun|boltgun,]] a [[Basic_Close_Combat_Weapons#Astartes Combat Knife|combat knife]], and [[Grenades & Explosives#Frag Grenade|frag]] or [[Grenades & Explosives#Krak Grenade|krak grenades]]. They may also be armed with a variety of [[Flamer#Flamer|Flamers]], [[Meltagun]]s, [[Grav-Gun]]s, [[Plasma Gun]]s, [[Heavy Bolter]]s, [[Lascannon]]s, [[Missile Launcher#Missile Launcher|Missile Launchers]], [[Multi-Melta]]s, and [[Plasma Cannon]]s. If you are a Space Marine Chapter with good relations with [[Forgeworld]] Graia, you may gain exclusive access to the [[Vengeance Grenade Launcher]] too. During the Great Crusade and the Horus Heresy, it was quite common to see at least half a squad of Tacticals wielding boltguns with [[Chain Weapon#Chainblade|chainblade]] attachments. By the 41st millennium, however, such attachments are rare. | |||
The Space Marine Sergeant may also have melta bombs and a teleport homer, and can exchange his boltgun and/or bolt pistol for a [[Chainsword]], [[Combi-Melta]], [[Combi-Flamer]], [[Combi-Plasma]], [[Storm Bolter]], [[Grav-Pistol]], [[Plasma Pistol]], [[Power weapon]], or [[Powerfist]]. | |||
==On the tabletop== | |||
[[File:Lords of macragge by majesticchicken.jpg|500px|thumb|right|A tactical squad displaying a surprising amount of CQC ability against Orks]] | [[File:Lords of macragge by majesticchicken.jpg|500px|thumb|right|A tactical squad displaying a surprising amount of CQC ability against Orks]] | ||
As of 9th edition, Scouts have been shuffled off to the Elites section and replaced with various flavours of [[Primaris Marines|Primaris]]. This means that if you're still stubbornly anti-Primaris, you'd better get used to tactical squads. They're now your ONLY firstborn option for Troops. | |||
Offensively, a bare-bones tactical squad is on the wrong side of mediocre. The classic bolter suffered from losing its AP in the move to 8th edition, and even bolter discipline isn't enough to offset its low fire rate, making their shooting surprisingly anaemic. They're little better in melee, where at best they can expect to dish out two S4 attacks, again without AP. | |||
Defensively, tacs have benefitted from moving to 2W, doubling their resistance to most small-arms fire, and T4 with a 3+ save makes them reasonably durable. Unfortunately, there's nothing about them that really puts them in a sweet spot of resilience like lots of wounds, high toughness or FNP, and 9th has increased the number of weapons which are D2, so while the extra wound is nice in practice there are plenty of ways for opponents to mop them up quickly. | |||
Beyond the classic flavour, one the main reasons to use Tactical Squads is their access to heavy weapons. Most heavy weapons have seen a points drop in 9th edition, and can be fired after moving at a small penalty when rolling to-hit. Adding a heavy weapon to a tactical squad can ''dramatically'' boost their effectiveness; for just a measly 10pts, adding a grav-cannon will more than triple your average outgoing damage against enemy marines, while either a lascannon or multi-melta makes for a viable anti-vehicle punch. Even the missile launcher is a good choice here, allowing tactical squads to remain flexible and plug holes that emerge in your offensive options as the battle goes on and more important units get wiped out. [[Salamanders]] in particular love this because their free wound re-roll is most efficient when the good guns are spread over multiple squads. | |||
If your opponent wants to get rid of them, they need to go through 8 T4 3+ wounds first, meaning they [[DISTRACTION CARNIFEX|need to focus on completely destroying the unit with firepower that could be pointed at your other, more important units - and all they're removing is a unit that isn't really all that dangerous anyway.]] However, if they just ignore the tactical squad, so long as you choose the appropriate targets a heavy weapon will usually more than pay for itself over the course of the battle. | |||
Another merit the Tactical squad has over [[Primaris Marines]] is mobility. Primaris troops will need to hitch a ride in either the [[Impulsor]] or [[Repulsor Tank|Repulsor]], while the Tacs can take either a [[Rhino]] or [[Razorback]]. The Rhino is by far the cheapest option and carries 10 models, so is ideal if all you want is a cheap, speedy box with no expensive frills, while the pricier Razorback holds just 6 but makes up for it with access to heavier guns. By contrast, the Impulsor costs the same as Razorback and carries the same number of models; it's very marginally tougher and slightly faster, but has a notably weaker ranged armament. The Repulsor is most akin to a Land Raider, and like a Land Raider, using it to ferry bog-standard Troops around instead of more valuable units is a completely waste of potential and points. | |||
Paradoxically, the main strength of a tactical squad therefore lies in the fact that it's ''kind of a shitty unit''. For this reason, always take a heavy weapon; the worst-case scenario is that it'll be shot off the board before it can fire, and since you have to take troops as a tax anyway you're only paying the cost of the weapon, which is low enough to be expendable. Remember, every wound you suffer here is one fewer for your devastators, veterans or centurions - and if the heavy weapon marine survives then your opponent's shooting until that point is basically wasted. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery> | |||
image:UltramarinesTacticalSquad.png|<center>Ultramarines</center> | |||
image:BloodAngelsTacticalSquad.png|<center>Blood Angels</center> | |||
image:IronHandsTacticalSquad.png|<center>Iron Hands</center> | |||
image:MarkIIITacticalSquad.png|<center>Ultramarines</center><center>(Heresy-era, Mark III, note that they all have chainswords)</center> | |||
image:MarkIVTacticalSquad.png|<center>Ultramarines</center><center>(Heresy-era, Mark IV)</center> | |||
</gallery> | |||
== See Also == | |||
* Primaris [[Intercessor]] | |||
* Grey Knight [[Strike Squad]] | |||
* Adepta Sororitas [[Battle Sister Squad]] | |||
[[Category: Warhammer 40,000]] | |||
[[Category: Imperial]] | |||
[[Category: Space Marines]] | |||
[[Category: Official Space Marine Chapters]] | |||
[[Category: Blood Angels]] | |||
[[Category: Dark Angels]] | |||
{{Marines-Forces}} | {{Marines-Forces}} | ||
{{Ultramarines}} | |||
{{Blood Angels}} | {{Blood Angels}} | ||
{{Dark Angels}} | {{Dark Angels}} | ||
{{Imperial Fists}} | |||
{{White Scars}} | |||
{{Iron Hands}} | |||
{{Salamanders}} | |||
{{Raven Guard}} |
Latest revision as of 08:34, 23 June 2023
"Initiate tactical advance."
- – Tarkus
A Tactical Squad is a squad of Space Marines who are used as the flexible backbone of Space Marine chapters. Having previously served in both Assault and Devastator squads, Tactical Marines have experience in both heavy weapons and close quarters combat, and are thus ideal for any type of combat situation. Tactical Marines are armed with bolters for ranged combat and a bolt pistol and combat blade (most humans would consider it a short sword, but in Astartes hands it is a knife) for close combat even though they were trained in and spent years using a chainsword. Some members will be armed with specialist weapons like a Flamer, Grav-Gun, Heavy Bolter, or Missile Launcher. The squad's Brother-Sergeant will usually be armed with a chainsword, power weapon, or combi-weapon.
The lore supporting Tactical Marines states that they've mastered every form of Astartes warfare: they are experts who are fully versed in all of their Chapter's tactics and wargear. So, in theory, any individual Tactical Marine could slip into any other role immediately if needed. Unfortunately, the fiction doesn't usually portray them being used this way, and they can't be used that way on the tabletop at all. Some people claim that this makes Tactical Marines ineffective, but this just isn't true. In 8th/9th Edition, a Tactical squad sitting in cover on an objective can be a very hard nugget for your opponent to crack, and the amount of firepower that the squad can spit out is also quite formidable. Furthermore, regular Space Marines are way, way toned down on the tabletop in order for other armies to remain competitive. If you'd like to get a sense of just how scary regular plain-Jane Tactical marines can be, check out the Astartes fan film or the old Deathwatch RPG by Fantasy Flight Games.
The Dark Angels under the Lion used them best as skirmishers/black ops while most of his Marines were dedicated to armored warfare, heavy weapons, assault, fast attack, or were Terminators. Basically, he did everything right as expected of the Primarch equivalent of Creed, despite being an unlikeable cunt. Tactical Squad equivalents in the Raven Guard and Night Lords were also used in a similar way.
Under a Codex-compliant Chapter, the composition of four battle companies (2nd through 5th) will include six tactical squads, while two of the reserve companies (6th and 7th) will be composed entirely of Tactical Marines who train using bikes and land speeders. Among the Space Wolves, the role of Tactical Marine is filled by the Grey Hunters, Wolves who have been promoted out of the Blood Claws and show a degree of skill at controlling the inner wolf. Among the Black Templars, the role of Tactical Marines are held by Initiates; those who have received their Black Carapace and have been assigned to oversee the training of a Neophyte.
Equipment[edit]
All Tactical Marines wear the standard Space Marine Mark VII Aquila Armour, although certain chapters such as the Raven Guard and Iron Hands prefer the Mark VI Corvus Armour (also known as Beakie Armour) and Mark IV Maximus Armour respectively, whilst other... poorer chapters like the Carcharodons are forced to rely on the older bargain bin Mark V Heresy Armour. Back in the Great Crusade, Tactical Squads all wore Mark II Crusade Armour and Mark III Iron Armour, but by the time of the Horus Heresy, these obsolete shits were being phased out by newer and more modern power armour, so it is very rare to see modern Space Marine chapters to house these older museum pieces nowadays.
Other than power armour, they carry a bolt pistol, a boltgun, a combat knife, and frag or krak grenades. They may also be armed with a variety of Flamers, Meltaguns, Grav-Guns, Plasma Guns, Heavy Bolters, Lascannons, Missile Launchers, Multi-Meltas, and Plasma Cannons. If you are a Space Marine Chapter with good relations with Forgeworld Graia, you may gain exclusive access to the Vengeance Grenade Launcher too. During the Great Crusade and the Horus Heresy, it was quite common to see at least half a squad of Tacticals wielding boltguns with chainblade attachments. By the 41st millennium, however, such attachments are rare.
The Space Marine Sergeant may also have melta bombs and a teleport homer, and can exchange his boltgun and/or bolt pistol for a Chainsword, Combi-Melta, Combi-Flamer, Combi-Plasma, Storm Bolter, Grav-Pistol, Plasma Pistol, Power weapon, or Powerfist.
On the tabletop[edit]
As of 9th edition, Scouts have been shuffled off to the Elites section and replaced with various flavours of Primaris. This means that if you're still stubbornly anti-Primaris, you'd better get used to tactical squads. They're now your ONLY firstborn option for Troops.
Offensively, a bare-bones tactical squad is on the wrong side of mediocre. The classic bolter suffered from losing its AP in the move to 8th edition, and even bolter discipline isn't enough to offset its low fire rate, making their shooting surprisingly anaemic. They're little better in melee, where at best they can expect to dish out two S4 attacks, again without AP.
Defensively, tacs have benefitted from moving to 2W, doubling their resistance to most small-arms fire, and T4 with a 3+ save makes them reasonably durable. Unfortunately, there's nothing about them that really puts them in a sweet spot of resilience like lots of wounds, high toughness or FNP, and 9th has increased the number of weapons which are D2, so while the extra wound is nice in practice there are plenty of ways for opponents to mop them up quickly.
Beyond the classic flavour, one the main reasons to use Tactical Squads is their access to heavy weapons. Most heavy weapons have seen a points drop in 9th edition, and can be fired after moving at a small penalty when rolling to-hit. Adding a heavy weapon to a tactical squad can dramatically boost their effectiveness; for just a measly 10pts, adding a grav-cannon will more than triple your average outgoing damage against enemy marines, while either a lascannon or multi-melta makes for a viable anti-vehicle punch. Even the missile launcher is a good choice here, allowing tactical squads to remain flexible and plug holes that emerge in your offensive options as the battle goes on and more important units get wiped out. Salamanders in particular love this because their free wound re-roll is most efficient when the good guns are spread over multiple squads.
If your opponent wants to get rid of them, they need to go through 8 T4 3+ wounds first, meaning they need to focus on completely destroying the unit with firepower that could be pointed at your other, more important units - and all they're removing is a unit that isn't really all that dangerous anyway. However, if they just ignore the tactical squad, so long as you choose the appropriate targets a heavy weapon will usually more than pay for itself over the course of the battle.
Another merit the Tactical squad has over Primaris Marines is mobility. Primaris troops will need to hitch a ride in either the Impulsor or Repulsor, while the Tacs can take either a Rhino or Razorback. The Rhino is by far the cheapest option and carries 10 models, so is ideal if all you want is a cheap, speedy box with no expensive frills, while the pricier Razorback holds just 6 but makes up for it with access to heavier guns. By contrast, the Impulsor costs the same as Razorback and carries the same number of models; it's very marginally tougher and slightly faster, but has a notably weaker ranged armament. The Repulsor is most akin to a Land Raider, and like a Land Raider, using it to ferry bog-standard Troops around instead of more valuable units is a completely waste of potential and points.
Paradoxically, the main strength of a tactical squad therefore lies in the fact that it's kind of a shitty unit. For this reason, always take a heavy weapon; the worst-case scenario is that it'll be shot off the board before it can fire, and since you have to take troops as a tax anyway you're only paying the cost of the weapon, which is low enough to be expendable. Remember, every wound you suffer here is one fewer for your devastators, veterans or centurions - and if the heavy weapon marine survives then your opponent's shooting until that point is basically wasted.
Gallery[edit]
-
Ultramarines -
Blood Angels -
Iron Hands -
Ultramarines (Heresy-era, Mark III, note that they all have chainswords) -
Ultramarines (Heresy-era, Mark IV)
See Also[edit]
- Primaris Intercessor
- Grey Knight Strike Squad
- Adepta Sororitas Battle Sister Squad
Forces of the Blood Angels | |
---|---|
Command: | Apothecary - Brother-Captain - Brother-Sergeant - Chaplain Chapter Master - Librarian - Sanguinary Priest - Techmarine |
Troops: | Assault Squad - Devastator Squad - Sanguinary Guard - Scout Squad Tactical Squad - Terminator Squad - Veteran Squad |
Death Company: | Death Company - Death Company Chaplain - Death Company Terminator |
Great Crusade-era: | Angel's Tears - Crimson Paladin - Dawnbreaker |
Walkers: | Contemptor-Furioso Dreadnought - Contemptor-Incaendius Dreadnought Death Company Dreadnought - Dreadnought - Furioso Dreadnought Librarian Dreadnought |
Transports: | Razorback - Rhino |
Vehicles: | Baal Predator - Land Raider (Land Raider Crusader - Land Raider Phobos Land Raider Redeemer - Land Raider Angel Infernus) Predator Tank - Vindicator - Hunter - Stalker - Whirlwind |
Flyers: | Stormhawk - Stormraven - Stormtalon - Storm Eagle - Thunderhawk |
Spacecraft: | Boarding Torpedo - Drop Pod - Space Marine Landing Craft |
Allies: | Space Marines - Primaris Marines |
Forces of the White Scars | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Command: | Apothecary - Brother-Captain - Brother-Sergeant Chaplain - Chapter Master - Command Squad Stormseer - Techmarine | |||||||
Troops: | Assault Squad - Chapter Serf - Scout Squad Tactical Squad - Veteran Squad | |||||||
Great Crusade-era: | Ebon Keshig - Falcon's Claws - Golden Keshig Karaoghlanlar - Legion Outrider Squad - Sky Hunter Squad | |||||||
Vehicles: | Bike Squad - Imperial Jetbike - Javelin Attack Speeder Kyzagan Assault Speeder - Land Speeder (Tempest) Predator Tank - Rhino Transport | |||||||
Flyers: | Nephilim Jetfighter - Fire Raptor - Storm Eagle Stormhawk - Stormtalon - Thunderhawk | |||||||
Spacecraft: | Drop Pod (Adeptus Astartes - Deathstorm) | |||||||
Allies: | Fallen Angels - Space Marines - Primaris Marines |
Forces of the Raven Guard | |
---|---|
Command | Apothecary • Brother-Captain • Brother-Sergeant • Chaplain • Chapter Master • Command Squad • Librarian • Techmarine |
Troops | Assault Squad • Chapter Serf • Devastator Squad • Mor Deythan • Scout Squad • Tactical Squad • Veteran Squad |
Great Crusade-era | Dark Furies • Deliverers • Shadow Wardens • Moritat • Raptors • Legion Vigilator • Reconnaissance Squad |
Transports | Land Speeder Storm |
Vehicles | Bike Squad • Imperial Jetbike • Javelin Attack Speeder • Land Speeder (Land Speeder Tornado • Land Speeder Typhoon) |
Flyers | Chiropteran Scout • Storm Eagle (Darkwing) • Stormhawk • Stormtalon • Stormraven • Thunderhawk • (Shadowhawk) • Whispercutter |
Spacecraft | Drop Pod • Space Marine Landing Craft |
Allies | Fallen Angels • Space Marines • Primaris Marines |