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		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen</title>
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		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Monsters */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Sar Sotek!|Game battle chant for Lizardmen}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactics page for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why play Lizardmen==&lt;br /&gt;
*You love the parts of Jurassic Park where the dinosaurs eat everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
*They&#039;re [[awesome|aztec dinosaurs riding dinosaurs]] into battle. Some of those dinosaurs also have magical lasers strapped to them.&lt;br /&gt;
*You want to be a master of the arcane, but you don&#039;t want to wear [[High Elves|foppish headgear]] or have a racial lifespan only in the [[The Empire (Warhammer Fantasy)|double digits]].&lt;br /&gt;
*You&#039;ll have a nearly fearless army that&#039;s more likely to fight to the death before they turn tail and run.&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMwpC70di2w Do you want to see what one of these does to your enemies?]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;A Multitude of Monsters&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Lizardmen have the largest diversity of massive monsters in the game at their disposal. Between the various Bastilidons, Stegadons and Carnosaurs you can field, you won&#039;t be wanting for big beasties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Intimidating Presence&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unsurprisingly, the average man will struggle to keep calm and collected when facing down a stampede of hungry carnivorous dinosaurs many times his size. Virtually every monster and cavalry unit in this army inspires fear and terror in the mortal hearts of men; a few well timed Carnosaur charges can break and rout forces not outright immune to psychology. Conversely, this also renders your monsters immune to fear/terror effects as well.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Resilient Frontline&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus Warriors, even unshielded, are among the most durable baseline infantry units in the game. Though their damage output is rather low, their good armor and leadership will ensure they&#039;ll hold the line. Most non-AP grindfests will tend to work out in your favor on virtue of that alone. Of course this isn&#039;t even mentioning how tanky higher tier units like the Temple Guard or Kroxigors are.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mastery of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039; - With the notable exception of High Elves, Lizardmen have reliable access to more schools of magic than any other race. Slann and the mighty Lord Kroak offer not only some of the most reliable casting in the game, but have consistent access to the otherwise elusive Greater Arcane Conduit skill. Your skink priests are no push overs in magical matters either and are very cost effective options for when slann [[heresy|just aren&#039;t your thing]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexible Artillery&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where most other factions have to slowly wheel siege engines into place and are vulnerable to attacks in melee, Lizardmen give no fucks. Due to their Solar Engines and Ballistae being strapped on the backs of mighty Bastilidons/Stegadons, they can easily reposition themselves and hold their own in melee combat. Additionally, were the actual artillery models of other races can actually be destroyed, the Ballistae and Solar Engines will remain fully intact so long as the creature bearing it remains standing.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cavalcade of Cavalry&#039;&#039;&#039; - Cold Ones, Horned Ones, Terradons and Ripperdactyls, oh my! Though not as fast or as effective as some other faction&#039;s cavalry, you have a very diverse selection of fast-moving dinosaurs that can outflank enemies and flexibly adapt to the variety of terrain you may find yourself in. Just don&#039;t expect your cav to top any particular charts when compared against any faction that specializes in them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - As your army consists heavily of predatory animals that excel at sniffing out prey, your enemies will be hard pressed to remain hidden from them. Enemies that rely on stealthy abilities like Stalk are revealed to you far more quickly than others, giving you far more time to react to (in battle) ambushes than other factions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of the weapons wielded by your Skinks are poisonous, inhibiting the mobility/combat performance of enemies afflicted by their noxious attacks. Despite poison no longer dealing constant damage like on the tabletop, their debuffs are still useful for weakening the enemy for your frontline troops. Thank to the recent update that removes any form of poison debuffs that can apply to the player units through friendly fire, Skink&#039;s poison darts are even better.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - You are tied with the Skaven for the honor of having the most DLC. You also have two FLC lords on top of all this, so between a grand total of 7 legendary lords and three DLC lord packs, you are the most supported main game faction in Total War: Warhammer II.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessings of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of your units have &amp;quot;Blessed&amp;quot; variants available in casual multiplayer matches or the campaign. Blessed units are effectively pseudo-Regiments of Renown and every single one is given a buffed health pool and, where applicable, an increased model count per unit. Additionally, many of these blessed units receive additional passive abilities or upgraded stats to further their combat potential. What&#039;s better is, unlike Regiments of Renown, you can technically have as many blessed units as you want. The only downside (admittedly a big one) is that in order to acquire blessed units in the campaign, you must complete randomly generated quests that issue a set quantity of a random blessed unit upon completion. If you want an army of blessed Carnosaurs, you&#039;re going to have to earn it. This is a complete non-issue in causal multiplayer matches, where blessed units are freely available for a very minor upcharge in cost compared to regular variants. Blessed units are unavailable in competitive games.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slow&#039;&#039;&#039; - A majority of the Lizardmen list, namely Saurus infantry, take their sweet time to cross the field. Though there are exceptions to this, such as the various cavalry and Skink units available to you, this particular weakness is exacerbated by...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vulnerable to Range&#039;&#039;&#039; - ...their dearth of viable missile units. The only ranged infantry available to you are Skinks; particularly squishy infantry that, though nimble, have pitiful range and DPS against anything shielded and/or armored. Your more potent offensive options, namely Salamanders or Stegadons/Bastilodons, cannot fire while moving and are rather easy to tie down in melee. Defensively, though your Saurus are quite tanky and often come with shields, they are very vulnerable to being kited by ranged cavalry/infantry due to their rather slow movement speed. Additionally, all your units save for Gor-Rok are stuck with Bronze Shields (35% block chance), meaning that even when they&#039;re in a position to use them, you&#039;ll still be soaking a significant portion of the incoming shots all the same. The same can also be said about most of your monsters, with some minor exceptions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Generic Character Usefulness&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a big one. Other than your magic characters (i.e. Slann and Skink Oracles which are pretty much good because they have magic), your other generic lords/heroes just don&#039;t stack up. When you compare them to the other factions&#039; characters, they fall short in their respective roles, whether that&#039;s melee prowess, support utility, campaign map usefulness, you name it. Best to rely on your monstrous units and magic to fulfill their roles!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sub-par Air-Force&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though you have flyers, a luxury many other factions lack, they&#039;re among the weakest/slowest of them. Terradons, Ripperdactyls, and Coatls aren&#039;t &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039;, per se, but they will lose if faced with the flying cavalry/monsters in their weight class from the likes of Bretonnia or High/Wood Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive Roster&#039;&#039;&#039; - As you can imagine, breeding and training massive dinosaurs and mounting arcane instruments of war onto them isn&#039;t cheap. All of your high tier units can get crazy expensive both in initial cost and upkeep. Even the bog standard Saurus Warriors come at a premium compared to some other factions options, though this is only particularly notable in competitive multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rampage&#039;&#039;&#039; - This was a much bigger problem in Game 2, where pretty much everything except for Skinks and Slaan would lose control and mindlessly charge the closest thing they could see. Game 3 has more or less restricted this issue to your feral monsters, letting your infantry keep their cool and do their jobs. That said, it&#039;s still a problem if your Carnosaur suddenly bolts into that nearby unit of halberds while your lords/heroes are otherwise occupied.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bland Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Oxyotl and &#039;&#039;possibly&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, the Lizardmen have the most boring campaign mechanics of any of the game II races (including some of the game I ones). Their unique mechanic, the Geomantic Web, is a very passive and basic provincial buff that takes a lot of resources and time to properly build up to a level you&#039;ll actually notice the effects of and offer no benefit to provinces you don&#039;t &#039;&#039;completely&#039;&#039; control. Yes, losing that one minor settlement causes the provincial capital to shut off its Geomantic Pylon until you reclaim it. Additionally, without mod support, Lizardmen are among the most stubborn and oppositional to confederation. Fortunately, though it isn&#039;t a top priority for them, CA is aware that Lizardmen need their campaign mechanics updated to bring them up to modern standards. Hopefully that update comes soon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Locked Content&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though a con for virtually every other faction in the game, this is a particularly notable one for Lizardmen. Many, if not most of the Lizardmen&#039;s better units are locked behind DLC lord packs. You&#039;ll need the Prophet and the Warlock for all units marked with DLC 1, the Hunter and the Beast for everything marked with DLC 2 and the Silence and the Fury for everything marked DLC 3.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
There are a couple of perks and abilities shared across a significant portion of the lizardmen unit roster, which will be mentioned here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Primal Instincts&#039;&#039;&#039; - A perk found on a majority of the Lizardmen roster (exempting Lords/Heroes and Skinks), primal instincts will cause a unit with this ability to rampage out of control should their health drop to 20% or less. This can be a bit of a mixed blessing, as the rampaging unit will receive a +15% Charge Bonus and a +8 Melee Attack bonus and continue to fight nearby opponents in situations that any other unit would turn tail and rout. The bad news is that your opponent has more control over the rampaging unit than you do; rampaging units will single-mindedly charge at the nearest enemy unit, which your opponent can take to his advantage by using faster infantry/cavalry to kite the rampaging unit while his ranged infantry/artillery finishes it off. Of course, this is also factoring in that by the time these bonuses kick in, your Saurus unit or Carnosaur is typically on its last legs and won&#039;t last much longer anyways. Should the rampage end &#039;&#039;before&#039;&#039; the unit dies, they&#039;ll usually begin to rout from the field and will often be too far out of position for you to properly recover them.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; buffs Primal Instincts for Saurus Units; no longer causing rampage (thank god) while triggering much sooner (Triggering at 50% health as opposed to TWWII&#039;s 20%). When active, it gives Saurus units a +15% Charge Bonus, +10 Melee Attack and +5% Physical Resist buffs that remain active indefinitely so long as the Primal Instinct threshold has been crossed. This applies even to Saurus cavalry and since you can actually &#039;&#039;control&#039;&#039; them when Primal Instincts pops now, you can be far more surgical when taking advantage of these buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold Blooded&#039;&#039;&#039; - A targetable ability found on most Lizardmen Lords and Heroes, Cold Blooded helps to counter the innate weakness in the Lizardmen faction; their tendency to rampage. When used, Cold Blooded will snap a single unit out of a rampage (if they are currently doing so) and will temporarily buff their leadership. This ability can be used pre/post rampage as well, as the leadership buff can potentially prevent a rampage from occurring or can help prevent a tattered unit from routing once their rampage expires. As this ability has a somewhat lengthy cooldown an is only found on Lords/Heroes, care should be taken on when it is used and what it is used on. It can also be used on units that were forced to rampage by an ability or spell from enemy units, providing a unique bit of counterplay against such tactics that other factions lack.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all non-Slann/Skink units in your roster, this allows your units to detect hidden or stealthed units far sooner and from farther away than other armies (around 160 meters). This also disregards any faction/unit/terrain modifiers that enhance stealth, with the only exception being the &#039;&#039;Unspottable&#039;&#039; trait. With proper coverage, this can make ambushing or outflanking your forces extremely challenging to do discreetly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Aquatic&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all Skink infantry, Kroxigors (though their stat card doesn&#039;t mention the trait, they still receive the Aquatic bonus) and your Salamander/Razordon hunting packs, this not only allows them to ignore the usual penalties for fighting in water-logged environments, but gives them a 20% bonus to melee attack/defense when they do so. Considering non-aquatic infantry suffers a 20% malus to those stats when slogging around in the water, this can become a rather substantial combat buff for a significant portion of your roster (keep your Saurus dry). Potentially losing matchups will suddenly swing into your favor and that&#039;s not even factoring in your abundant poisoned weaponry and robust catalog of supportive magics to widen that gap further. As amazing as all that sounds... marsh and shallow water environments are rather few and far in between. Additionally, for the maps that &#039;&#039;do&#039;&#039; have swamped areas, coercing your opponent to willingly splash around with you is a battle all its own, one you&#039;re not likely to succeed in without careful planning.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Quick Learners&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another Skink-exclusive ability, this greatly increases the rate that your Skinks gain ranks. This helps distinguish Skinks against comparable chaff infantry since they&#039;ll benefit from rank-boosted stats much more quickly and, as such, makes them surprisingly effective early-mid game infantry. This perk also applies to units such as Terradon Riders due to having Skink Riders.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Campaign Mechanics==&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Geomantic Web&#039;&#039;&#039;: Pretty much the only unique thing every Lizardmen faction (except Nakai) has, and it&#039;s a bit lackluster. Lizardmen have access to a special view of the global map that displays the Geomantic Web, with every region capital acting as a nexus point. Once you control an entire region, you can build up Geomantic Pylons in order to strengthen the Geomantic Web, which in turn offers gradually stronger perks (like an increasing percentage to building income, higher ranked recruitment, etc) the more you increase it. At the beginning of the game, these bonuses are quite small, but as you expand and enhance the Geomantic Web over the course of the campaign, these benefits can make a genuine impact on your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a few problems with this mechanic, however. The first major one is that you receive &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; bonuses if you don&#039;t control the entire region. Obviously, this isn&#039;t a problem when you&#039;re surrounded by factions you were planning on killing off, but this becomes complicated if an ally suddenly captures that last settlement in a region before you could. If it was another Lizardmen faction, you could maybe play the long game and eventually confederate them, but otherwise you&#039;d be forced to attack them in order to claim the region so that you can actually activate the Geomantic Web benefits. Warhammer III and mods have offered ways to purchase or trade settlements, but in many cases the AI tends to value each settlement they own far more than anything else you could offer them. This often leads to lengthy wars against what could&#039;ve otherwise been a valuable trading partner and buffer against foreign elements that you&#039;d otherwise have to deal with yourself. The second major problem with the Geomantic Web is that even if you build up a regional capitol to tier V and build the appropriate pylon, it does &#039;&#039;nothing&#039;&#039; without an adjacent region &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; having a tier V capitol and pylon. That&#039;s right, the strength of the Geomantic Web is reliant on multiple regions being entirely under your control and also having them fully built up. This can be a time and gold consuming process that forces the Lizardmen player to take it slow; Lizardmen economy tends to be on the low side of the spectrum, made worse by their fairly expensive unit roster and lengthy build/research timeframes. And of course, if an enemy army rolls in and claims one of your minor settlements, the Geomantic Web benefits for that entire region are shut off entirely, further stemming your growth rates. The third issue with the Geomantic Web; it&#039;s a very basic and uninteractive mechanic. Aside the baked in map-painter that is the (Im)Mortal Empires campaign, there&#039;s not much incentive or direction to build up the Geomantic Web besides using it to squeeze every last bit of gold or growth you can to boost your dismal economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Rites&#039;&#039;&#039;: Much like most of the Warhammer II races, Lizardmen have access to special rites that, generally, grant them temporary buffs for the cost of some gold. While every faction has one or two unique rites, every Lizardmen faction has access to and must perform the &#039;&#039;Rite of Awakening&#039;&#039; in order to recruit new Slann lords. Fluffy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacrifices to Sotek (Tehenhauin)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tehenhauin&#039;s unique focus, in addition to the Geomantic Web, is his crusade against all of Skaven kind. By gathering captives from battles, you can sacrifice them to Sotek to gain empire-wide boosts to growth or to recruit the Blessed variants of the Lizardmen roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Dedication to the Old Ones (Nakai)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Nakai&#039;s main mechanic as a Horde faction. By capturing settlements and dedicating them to one of three Old Ones, Nakai can unlock faction-wide buffs to his hordes. He can also spend the accumulated Favor of the Old Ones to recruit Blessed Units or activate temporary buffs or bonuses for use in battle.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Visions of the Old Ones (Oxyotl)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Oxyotl&#039;s special perk, Oxyotl can teleport across the entire Warhammer Fantasy world to specific targets once per turn in order to accomplish an issued mission for rewards. By completing these missions, he can be given several rewards (such as Blessed Spawnings, increased favor from fellow Lizardmen factions or temporary buffs for certain units), but the most prominent and consistent reward are special gems used to purchase Silent Sanctums. Silent Sanctums act much like Skaven Undercities in that they are built under any settlement across the map. Doing so gives Oxyotl vision of the province that settlement is located in (and can be upgraded to give him vision of all adjacent provinces as well) as well as two building slots that can give him anything from upkeep reduction to increased ammunition and missile damage. Additionally, one such sanctum can be upgraded to act as a teleport node, allowing Oxyotl&#039;s army to warp to that Silent Sanctum at any time (much like Oxyotl&#039;s capitol).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
The scaly faces of the Lizardmen. With the exception of the Slann Mage-Priest, which outperforms even most Legendary Lords, the Lizardmen aren&#039;t exactly a character-centric faction. Their LL&#039;s are very pointy. Most of them are great on the battlefield (with either melee or magic prowess), but their army buffs vary in usefulness and their factionwide buffs are nearly non-existant, with only a couple lords like Kroq-Gar providing any whatsoever. It&#039;s very difficult to justify taking even Legendary Lords (let alone your generic lords, which are frankly terrible) over any flavor of slann mage-priest due to the sheer versatility the latter bring to your army, especially since you are not hurting for giant, single entity beatsticks to ram into enemy formations. Slann benefit from Star Chambers in campaign, others don&#039;t, no contest, only use Slann if stacking Star Chambers (which you really should).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mazdamundi&#039;&#039;&#039; - The last of the second generation Slann (lore-wise), Mazdamundi uses magic primarily from the Lore of Light to act as a hybrid support/offensive caster. The two main selling points of Mazdamundi over a generic Slann Mage-Priest are his Stegadon mount Zlaaq and his signature spell &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;. Zlaaq allows Mazdamundi to actually engage in melee, something no other Slann can safely do, and makes him substantially more durable against most forms of attack. &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;, especially when combined with &#039;&#039;Banishment&#039;&#039;, makes Mazdamundi an excellent AoE caster capable of tearing infantry focused armies to shreds with ease without chewing through your Winds of Magic reserve. These spells are limited however, being bounded spells, so make sure you wait until the right moment to utilize them. Additionally, don&#039;t put too much faith in them; as their movement patterns are random, these spells (particularly Ruination of Cities) can just as easily do nothing or even devastate your own forces as they can your enemies if you aren&#039;t careful.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; brings a few buffs to his toolkit; the barrier mechanic normally reserved for Tzeentch armies is now also granted to all Slann as well, helping mitigate the first few attacks against him. Additionally, to better represent the almighty toad&#039;s arcane prowess, Mazdamundi receives a 50% increase in range to all spells he casts. This turns him into a sort of magical artillery engine, as he&#039;ll have virtually no issues slapping that Banishment or Comet of Cassandora cast pretty much wherever he damn well pleases.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroq-Gar&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your dedicated duelist, Kroq-Gar is an offensive powerhouse that shines when seated atop Grimloq, his faithful Carnosaur mount. Though expensive, Kroq-Gar/Grimloq can engage virtually any enemy type in the game effectively and is able to duel against many enemy lords and come out on top. Though a monstrous force on his own merits, Kroq-Gar is something of a glass cannon however and as a larger target is prone to getting mobbed by multiple units or getting focused down by ranged infantry/artillery. Another notable shortcoming is that he provides limited support for the rest of your army (a bit of a problem for all Saurus Oldbloods), and as such is not recommended for dino-heavy army builds, his bonuses to armor and leadership being less important than the healing abilities of Life Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tehenhauin (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only Skink-Priest lord choice, Tehenhauin is something of a niche pick. He can deal solid enough damage against footlords/cavalry lords in a fight (particularly if on a Ripperdactyl) and is also capable of dealing notable damage to swarms of infantry (with his Lore of Beasts and/or with his Engine of the Gods), but he&#039;s extremely frail for a Lizardmen lord when unmounted. Never get the Fanatic skill in his skill tree; it only benefits Skink units and they are pretty trash after the mid-game.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tiktaq&#039;to (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another somewhat niche pick, Tiktaq&#039;to is a dedicated flyer who excels in lists built with Terradons, Ripperdactyls and Coatls as the focus. Though mounted on Zwuup, Tiktaq&#039;to is your squishiest (Legendary) Lord and lacks the support/damage options available to the others, but he&#039;s inarguably the swiftest of the bunch (which doesn&#039;t mean much compared to other flying lords and heroes). Under no circumstances is he a direct combat lord; against any duelist or large/monstrous lord he will lose handily. The only targets he can safely engage are dedicated casters, artillery and dedicated ranged infantry. Because of this, playing him requires far more finesse than what is required for virtually every other lord; even against targets he &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; engage effectively, prolonged combat will invariably whittle him down and may the Old Ones help you if he&#039;s surrounded while grounded. Keep a squad or two of Ripperdactyls close by to make up the difference in combat ability and to take advantage of Tiktaq&#039;to&#039;s buffs. Also, his unique Epic weapon doesn&#039;t work if he is attacking a ground target in melee because its attack bonuses are only in effect when flying, so he&#039;s weaker than a Skink Terradon Rider when attacking ground targets UNLESS you swap out his weapon. When used in campaign, much of his value comes from his rather insane and stackable upkeep discount for flyer units. Even on higher difficulties, it is extraordinarily easy to stack enough upkeep cost reductions to have a full Coatl doomstack damn near for free (until the Supply Lines penalties become particularly swollen, at least). Additionally, his unique rite gives all of his armies the ability to easily chase down fleeing armies or attack multiple settlements a turn which can be &#039;&#039;devastating&#039;&#039; to an enemy faction if used at the right moment.&lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nakai (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The largest and oldest of the Kroxigor Ancients, Nakai is an infantry mulcher who (thanks to his enthusiastic animations) will literally sweep his way through the thickest blobs of infantry. Nakai possesses a few notable traits over his competitors; his ability to grant perfect vigour to nearby allies ensures they&#039;re in peak form throughout the entire battle while his Miasma of Despair can cripple enemies within his presence; a potentially nasty combo that can ensure your forces slowly but steadily chew through enemy frontlines. Unfortunately, Nakai has a few major weaknesses: As a large entity, he&#039;s vulnerable to anti-large weaponry (which does abound among baseline infantry) and is an easy, defenseless target for ranged units to snipe. He also struggles to properly duel opposing heroes/lords due to his size and janky animations making him lunge about haphazardly while they continue to poke him to death. Because of this, he tends to work best as a force multiplier for infantry builds.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gor-Rok (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where Kroq-Gar is the spear, Gor-Rok stands as the shield. Gor-Rok is a dedicated footlord, among the slowest of them, but makes up for it through sheer, unbreaking resilience. As the only unit in the entire Lizardmen roster with a silver shield (55% missile block chance), Gor-Rok is able to shoulder his way through the kind of firepower that would fell a lesser Old-Blood on the approach. Gor-Rok can also stand neck-deep among hordes of angry infantry and walk out seemingly unscathed. When equipped with the &#039;&#039;Mace of Ulumak&#039;&#039;, Gor-Rok can also prove a competent duelist in his own right, even if it&#039;s only in temporary bursts. Gor-Rok does falter against mounted/monstrous heroes/lords and is vulnerable to duelists with good AP values, though the Twisted and the Twilight patch has helped address the issue of him being staggered to hell and back. Never the less, Gor-Rok is a relatively cost effective Legendary Lord who can and will hold the line until the bitter end. His campaign starts with Lord Kroak fully unlocked and active, which makes his campaign among the easiest in the entire game, even on higher difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
**Gor-Rok&#039;s rite will be changed in Immortal Empires, giving his units Barrier and immunity to certain debuffs, like Poison. Unlike Tzeentch, his version of barrier probably won&#039;t be as game-breaking because of how slow Saurus and that they do their best stuck-in.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Oxyotl (DLC 3) &#039;&#039;&#039; - The legendary daemon-slaying chameleon skink of Oyxl is the last legendary lord for the faction (at least for TWW2). As to be expected from any shape or form of a Chameleon Skink, Oxyotl is a rather cheap, stealthy character hunter who behaves somewhat like a Wood Elf Waystalker. Unlike Waystalkers, Oxyotl has a particularly nasty trick in the form of Master Predator; a toggle-able skill that reduces his movement speed in exchange for an increase in range, Snipe and the ability to remain undetectable unless the enemy gets extremely close to his position. Combined with his modestly powerful armor piercing missiles, this can quickly wear down most armored lords and heroes rather quickly if left to his own devices. Of course, as a reasonably cost effective LL, the drawbacks have to come in somewhere and for Oxyotl, that drawback is melee combat. While he has acceptable melee attack and defense, Oxyotl has no armor or damage mitigation tools at his disposal. Any combat lord or hero worth his or her salt can and will kill him in a hand-to-hand duel. Fortunately, he&#039;s fast enough that virtually no footlord can catch up to him unless you willfully allow it. He also struggles to deal with the rank and file and lacks any notable support abilities for his own forces, but that&#039;s fairly typical of the niche Oxyotl fills.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
Your generic lords aren&#039;t amazing in campaign compared to other factions, but can really shine in competitive multiplayer. In the campaign, you&#039;ll generally never want to get non-slann lords after turn 20(ish) because lizardmen Star Chamber buildings give 3 bonus levels to your slann lords, meaning they quickly outpace any other lord available. Any need for a melee lord can be filled by one of the many lizardmen heroes, who can also be easily recruited at higher starting level than the melee lords. You may still find the need to recruit cheaper stand in lords in case of an emergency, as the Rite of Awakening&#039;s cooldown is a notable hitch in acquiring more slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slann Mage-Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your almighty magic toads, slann are dedicated mages who don&#039;t participate in fights directly, but wreak havoc upon your enemies from afar with their magics or supplement your forces with defensive/healing energies. Slann are among the precious few generic lords in the game who have access to the &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; ability which, when combined with their reliable casting, can allow savvy players to call upon vast reserves of the Winds of Magic long after lesser mages have tapped out of theirs. In addition to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039;, each slann has access to Banishment as a bound spell as well as the &#039;&#039;Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;; a large AoE defensive buff that applies a 22% damage resistance modifier to all allied units within it&#039;s bubble. Understandably, for all their arcane might, slann are practically helpless if caught in a fight. They are the single slowest unit in your entire army and are quite chunky, making them easy targets up close or at range. To this end, you&#039;ll almost always want a screening unit of Temple Guard (or at least shielded saurus) to keep enemies from ganking them. Outside of that, there are four varieties of Slann Mage-Priests, each dedicated to a specific lore of magic:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Fire Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - When you want to burn the [[HERESY|heretic]] in holy fire for the Old Ones. Combined with their bound Banishment, fire slann are capable of mulching clumps of infantry wholesale and can even churn out respectable single target damage with their Fireball and Piercing Bolts of Burning spells. Fire damage is particularly useful against the myriad of enemies with regeneration, and practically mandatory when facing undead crises in campaign. Being able to buff an entire line of saurus with an upcast Flaming Sword/Cloak of Flame can turn the game in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Life Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are the MVP in any monster heavy list; though you have a few other options for healing (such as the Revivification Bastilidon, high slann and the newly added Skink Oracle), life slann are still the uncontested kings at it. If you want an army built on the back of beasts, a life slann is essential to keeping them in the fight. With a life slann, you can wipe away any damage your stack of monsters take during the routing phase of a battle, making them both tactically and strategically important. Pair one with a Revivification Bastilidon to very rapidly resurrect slain models in any infantry unit and bring back even the most tattered units to full fighting strength. Additionally, should you encounter blobs of infantry that pose a notable danger to your larger beasties, Life slann are able to slap down Dwellers Below to deal frankly startling amounts of damage to practically every non-flying unit caught within its radius.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Light Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Light slann are fantastic supports for an infantry-heavy army namely due to two spells: Net of Amyntok and Birona&#039;s Timewarp. Like every other army, Net of Amyntok is an excellent tool for pinning down faster cavalry from the likes of Bretonnia or the Dark Elves so that your &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; slower saurus can catch up and engage them in melee (or to keep them still while your Salamanders incinerate them wholesale). Birona&#039;s Timewarp can turn the tide in a key engagement when used properly. Offensively, being able to cast Banishment much more frequently can also deal devastating damage to enemy infantry. That said, even your Greater Arcane Conduit will struggle to keep you topped off; the Lore of Light can consume your Winds of Magic quite quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;High Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Similarly to light slann, high slann are a hybrid offensive/support caster. Unlike the Lore of Light, you do have access to minor magical healing through Apotheosis and have access to an excellent anti-flier vortex spell in Tempest (Net of Amyntok is superior in most cases, however). High slann offensively specialize in single target damage and can deal devastating amounts of it between the Arcane Unforging and Soul Quench spells, giving them a solid niche against duelist lords/heroes and larger monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Heavens Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Multiplayer only, the Heavens Slann is unfortunately the worst slann of the bunch. It&#039;s not that the Heavens lore is lacking nor is it the slann himself, but the fact that he faces strict competition against your Skink Priests of all things. A Skink Priest of Heavens, though lacking the Greater Arcane Conduit, is a much faster/smaller target by default and has access to several mount options that make him much more flexible offensively or defensively. Additionally, as a hero, you can take a more offensively focused melee lord or a slann attuned to a different lore for more magical variety. Even if you&#039;re only running one with nothing but the crest on his skinky-head, the cheaper price alone makes the Heavens slann a hard sell comparatively.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039;: All Slann become a bit more defensible with the boon of their own personal barriers, a &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed buff to these fat frog&#039;s personal defenses. Of course, barriers will do little to assuage prolonged and unsupported melee combat, but it will help protect them from the stray blast or occasional skirmish.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: A minor nerf to the Slann, Star Chambers can now only ever be constructed in Province capitals, &#039;&#039;severely&#039;&#039; curbing how quickly you can recruit high-level Slann right out the gate. They can still be abused, though you now need to capture &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; more territories before you can crank out Slann on par with their Mortal Empires power level. The good news is, the Rite of Awakening is now free to use once unlocked and can be spammed on cooldown to try farming for second/third generation Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Old-Blood&#039;&#039;&#039; - Offensive duelists through and through, saurus old-bloods are flexible masters of combat who can lead on foot, on the back of a cold one, or atop a mighty carnosaur (you&#039;ll usually want one on a carnosaur). Compared to the kroxigor ancient, saurus old-bloods are less powerful in melee combat but can be much faster and have marginally better faction support skills. For the purposes of both Multiplayer and Campaign, you&#039;ll want to avoid taking Old-Bloods as your lord (unless you have &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; DLC content). Their role can easily be filled by Saurus Scar Veterans, who &#039;&#039;don&#039;t&#039;&#039; take up your only Lord slot for the army (and are, for all intents and purposes, identical sans Campaign skill trees). If you insist on taking an Old-Blood, take Kroq-Gar. Otherwise, a Slann or Kroxigor Ancient would be better suited for your needs.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Saurus Old-Bloods get some new life pumped into their battle-tested bones in Immortal Empires, at least when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s banner. Universal 15% Upkeep discounts for all armies led by Saurus Old-Bloods and an additional +1% Weapon Strength boost for each level your Old-Blood gains make these guys your go-to beatsticks. Their discounted upkeep costs also make it easier to field &#039;&#039;more&#039;&#039; armies which, especially in the mid-late game, is particularly valuable as your empire&#039;s borders outpace your glacial economy&#039;s ability to upgrade settlement infrastructure in a timely manner. Slann are, of course, still quite valuable, though with Sacred Spawning Caverns and Temple Guard Barracks providing increased starting ranks to Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans, it&#039;s hard to say no to these guys. At least when riding with Kroq-Gar.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skink Chief (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your discount Lord and the one you&#039;ll want to take if you want to reserve as much money for your big beasties as possible. Of course, you could splurge a little to put him atop an ancient stegadon to scorch swaths of infantry with the Engine of the Gods (though if you&#039;re going to do that, you may as well spring for Tehenhauin so that you at least have access to the Lore of Beasts as well). The RCSC is a competent combatant equipped with poisonous, armor-piercing attacks that can make him surprisingly dangerous in a fight, though like everything skinky, he&#039;s a particularly squishy lord when unmounted. The best use you can put him to is boosting your heroes in a &#039;Pompous&#039; trait-stacking lizardman hero army, which makes an already broken strategy even stronger.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigor Ancient (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Baby Nakais for those who don&#039;t quite feel up for splurging on the big boy himself. Kroxigor ancients are quite literally just watered down versions of Nakai; though they won&#039;t grant perfect vigour to all friendly forces near them, they will still wade through most infantry due to their size and mass and put out such raw damage that most non-elite infantry will falter swiftly against them. However, just like Nakai, they are completely helpless at range, are vulnerable to AP and anti-large weapons and are &#039;&#039;slow&#039;&#039;. In competitive multiplayer, though they are still a bit of a niche pick, they are much more attractive than Nakai due to their cheaper price and because they have access to the Amulet of Itzl, which grants the Kroxigor Ancient 66% damage resistance for a short time. This can give them enough of an edge to eek out against enemy duelists or to survive long enough for reinforcements to arrive.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
As said, the Lizardmen characters can be a little sub-par compared to other factions (with the exception of the Skink Oracle, see below), but their selection is surprisingly versatile, and the Lizardmen have some of the best &#039;&#039;mounts&#039;&#039; in the game, which really helps push their characters battlefield potential. The Lizardmen also have one of the strongest Legendary Heroes in the game: Lord Kroak. These guys are capable of dealing immense damage to your enemies and &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; of them (except Kroak) can be mounted on one of your massive dinosaurs.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Hero===&lt;br /&gt;
You&#039;ve only got the one, but he&#039;s all you&#039;ll need. Lord Kroak is your expensive but powerful offensive caster and forms the center of many army formations.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lord Kroak (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The first of the Slann doesn&#039;t let something as trivial as death inconvenience him, or keep him from kicking warmblood ass to the Old World and back. Lord Kroak is one of a very select few heroes in the game with access to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; (which can be paired with another Slann&#039;s Greater Arcane Conduit), making him a fantastic force multiplier in a caster-heavy list just from being present. For better or worse, Kroak doesn&#039;t have access to any lore of magic and only has two notable abilities. But &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; can those abilities turn the tide of battle. His only bound ability (other than the universal Cold-Blooded) is the &#039;&#039;Supreme Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;, an upgraded version of the regular Shield of the Old Ones that grants allies a 44% damage resistance while within it (and stacks with the regular version if you&#039;re really in a bind). The only spell(s) he has access to is his signature Deliverance of Itza (and its three varying strengths). Deliverance of Itza, &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason you&#039;re bringing him, can virtually delete entire units from existence with an efficiency only known to the Winds of Death spell, but it has a few major drawbacks. First, it is intensely mana hungry: you&#039;ll typically only get one or two DoI (III) casts per battle before you run dangerously low on magic. By relying on DoI I or II, you won&#039;t consume as much magic per cast, but the difference in damage dealt becomes very apparent. Secondly, there is a very lengthy and obvious tell for when the spell is cast; most competent opponents will be able to move their forces away from the blast before it goes off unless you manage to pin them down with supporting spells like the Net of Amyntok or simply bodyblocking them from all sides. Thirdly, this spell is virtually useless against single entities such as Lords/Heroes and giant monsters, meaning he&#039;ll do little towards more elite doomstack lists. Despite all these cons working against him, a well timed Deliverance of Itza can and will win you battles if you plan accordingly. The best part, it deals absolutely no friendly fire damage. [[Meme|You may fire when ready]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Heroes===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, all Lizardmen heroes benefit from the &#039;Humble&#039; trait, which appears on Lords and Heroes at random. This lets you recruit them at 2 additional ranks higher than their default rank, with unlimited stacking potential, making them stronger and more versatile earlier in the game than heroes of other factions. In the late-game, you can disband Humble heroes as you build more Slann Star-Chambers, however these are expensive buildings for non-Hexoatl factions; for the 6000 gold needed for 1 Star-Chamber, you can hire at least 4 Humble heroes for 8 bonus levels. Of course, those extra heroes each take up their respective hero slots and will take a modest sum out of your income every turn and as such are less efficient in the long run compared to Star Chambers.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Scar-Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039; - A step down from the Old-Blood, Scar-Veterans behave in much the same manner as your generic saurus lords. Vicious and powerful combatants, Scar-Veterans are built to brazenly charge into combat and deal bloody death to all who stand in their way. The real reason you&#039;ll want to take any Scar-Vets isn&#039;t for the saurus himself, however badass he may be, but for the carnosaur mount you can put him on. Though a more expensive version of the feral carnosaur, Scar-Vets are immune to rampaging (and can indeed stop others from rampaging thanks to their Cold Blooded ability) and have a slightly stronger statline, making them excellent all-round threats to whatever your opponent might be packing. These Scar-Vets are ideal choices for armies led by slann-mage priests; they won&#039;t be competing for Winds of Magic like the skink priests and will more than make up for the slann&#039;s melee deficiency. If you want to keep him cheaper, you can take one on foot to lead fellow saurus infantry into battle, or stick in on a Cold One to ride with the rest of your cavalry. A modestly popular tactic in Multiplayer is to take two of these guys on Cold Ones to act as hero/lord hunters.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scar-Veterans, though still quite capable in every other Lizardmen subfaction, truly shine when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s flag. +30% experience gain and +1% weapon strength per earned rank (max buff of 50%) can make these guys quite vicious very quickly. Since the Humble trait, the Star Chamber and Temple Guard Barracks rank boost effects stack, you can also recruit highly ranked Scar-Veterans &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; early on in the campaign (relatively, that is). It&#039;s to such a degree that you could very easily start cranking out freshly recruited Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs with a bonus 18% or higher Weapon Strength buff right out of the gate. Put in an army lead by a Saurus Old-Blood for that 15% upkeep reduction and you have yourself a solidly cost effective doomstack that, post level 20, will just respawn back home if they ever bite off more than they can chew.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink priests are your humble, mortal casters. Cheap and nimble, these guys can easily outrun most footslogging infantry and are fantastically flexible mages that can fill any offensive or defensive holes your army might have. If mounted on a terradon, their speed will be unparalleled (for Lizardmen); they&#039;ll be able to rain magical death anywhere on the battlefield with ease and can quickly deliver support to your forces no matter how spread out they may be. Alternatively, you may mount them on stegadons or ancient stegadons to make them terrifying all-rounders, though their price tag will quickly reflect that. probably want to stick with the regular stegadon, great hybrid artillery and melee monster&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Heavens)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Heavens discipline is among the better offensive lores of magic in the game for the instant raw damage output it&#039;s capable of. Wind Blast and Chain Lightning will be your go-to offensive spells. Comet of Cassandora, though powerful, should generally be avoided due to how long its casting time is. Harmonic Convergence and Curse of the Midnight Wind are staples of support sets and can turn your saurus infantry into immovable walls of tooth and claw.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Beasts)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Formerly your worst discipline, the Lore of Beasts has recently received a bit of a tweaking to make it considerably more attractive and usable. It&#039;s still among the least potent of your available magics, but it is among the most flexible in utility. Wyssan&#039;s Wild Form and Pann&#039;s Impenetrable Pelt provide rather significant combat buffs (particularly when stacked) while Curse of Anraheir debilitates your enemies. Offensively, Flock of Doom is a fantastic and cheap chaff cleaner that affects any units that have at least one model within its 30m range. For your single target needs, The Amber Spear allows your caster to act as impromptu artillery should the need arise. Formerly &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason to take a Beasts caster was for the Transformation of Kadon; being able to summon up to two Manticores to flank enemy formations or dive into backlines can have a massive impact on the flow of battle, but a bump up to &#039;&#039;20&#039;&#039; Winds of Magic per summon makes it challenging to make much use of your other spells in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Chief&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your skirmishing duelist, skink chiefs cripple enemy forces with their poisonous darts so that your army can face weaker resistance. Skink chiefs are a force to be feared when mounted on a stegadon, allowing them to easily face down many enemy heroes/lords in a one-on-one fight. In the campaign, the ability to build skink chief capacity-increasing buildings in minor settlements means you can spam them across the map or stack up to 19 of them into an army, which can be hilariously broken depending on the traits and items you equip them with.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Oracle (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - By far the best Hero for the Lizardmen, the Skink Oracle brings a cavalcade of well rounded offensive and supportive magic to the field atop a mighty Troglodon. And only on a Troglodon, so he&#039;s very much an &amp;quot;all or nothing&amp;quot; type of unit. The first major reason the Skink Oracle makes for a popular pick is the fact that he&#039;s your only non-Slann source of magical healing, potentially freeing up your Lord choice for a more offensive beat stick like Kroq-Gar or even a Kroxigor Ancient. Secondly, as a hero, not only does your Skink Oracle provide a use of Cold-Blooded for the rest of your forces, but his own Troglodon will never rampage. Magical prowess aside, this alone is worth considering the rather steep price-tag. Speaking of, the Troglodon allows the Skink Oracle to function as a mid-range anti-Monster skirmisher. Combined with a potential Fireball cast here or there, the Skink Oracle &#039;&#039;excels&#039;&#039; at chunking opposing Lords/Heroes, especially if they&#039;re atop a mount or naturally monstrous in size. Just don&#039;t have him brazenly lead the charge into melee combat, as he won&#039;t last terribly long in it. If your army would like to use a non-Lore of Life Slann or any non-Slann Lord for that matter (effectively any LL banner army), a Skink Oracle and a Revivification Bastilodon or two are excellent tools to keep your forces in tip-top shape so that they can keep doing what they do best.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
Many lizardmen units are available in standard and &#039;blessed&#039; variants. Blessed units are only made available in the campaign by completing random timed missions, such as getting 1000 kills or winning 4 battles, but make up for their randomness and limited quantity by being free to recruit at any time in any army and by having at least one extra ability or superior stat over their contemporary counterparts. They aren&#039;t to be confused with Regiments of Renown, unique units recruited at max rank and limited to one instance per. In casual multiplayer matches with Unit Caps turned off, Blessed Units are recruitable for only a modest bump in price over their generic counterparts.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
Infantry provide the foundation of every army in Total War: Warhammer, and the Lizardmen are no different. Indeed, even the humble skinks have their place.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Melee Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls and shields, skink cohorts are cheap chaff units primarily used to fill out rosters or to support your more expensive infantry actually doing the killing. Despite being shielded, these guys will die by the score due to their pitiful defensive statline if they face any frontline infantry head on and are one of the few lizardmen units prone to routing from leadership issues. Having said that, skink cohorts are among the fastest cheap infantry units in the game and are still rather decent combatants when fighting similar unarmored units and tend to win such engagements (namely against chaff or low tier infantry like Bretonnian peasantry or Vampire Count zombies). Indeed, their speed is invaluable for flanking enemies tied up by your saurus warriors and chasing routing enemies off the map. When pinching pennies, you can&#039;t argue with that. In campaign these guys can be skipped entirely for the javelin version instead as the missile attack for 10 extra upkeep per turn is leagues better than just having the club.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skinks (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. Red-Crested Skinks provide an invaluable source of early game/cheap melee AP damage and poison, though they&#039;re less effective against unarmored targets as a whole compared to regular Skink Cohorts. They lack both shields and armor and as they are simply skinks, they will die in droves unless they&#039;re taking refuge among the far burlier saurus warriors. On that note, RC skinks synergize excellently with saurus warriors, as they can simultaneously chew through armored units the saurus tend to bounce off of and further cripple these enemies with poison, allowing your much slower saurus to both catch up to and butcher them with greater ease. Just like skink cohorts, these guys are at home in watery environments and are easily able to outflank many slower infantry units.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Sotek (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unbreakable angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. These guys have a unique ability, &#039;&#039;Refuse to Die&#039;&#039;. When active, no skink models can die (they can still take damage, however), which can maximize their damage output when taking sudden burst damage or ensure that they hold the enemy in place for a precious few more seconds. The fact that they&#039;re unbreakable really synergizes well with this perk, as it means that your opponent is going to have to commit to completely eradicating the unit (which, admittedly, isn&#039;t really &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; tall an ask all things considered). This can buy some of your other forces some precious moments to regroup should the tide be against your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign Note&#039;&#039;&#039;: Auto-Resolve tends to value every flavor of Red-Crested Skink just slightly more than the dirt they stand on, so unless you are ok with them taking massive casualties or outright getting wiped out every time you click that auto-resolve button, you&#039;ll either need to fight your battles manually or pick up regular Skink Cohorts if you need chaff infantry to pad out your forces.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus warriors are probably the first thing that comes to mind when one mentions the lizardmen, and for good reason. Resilient, determined and natural fighters, saurus warriors are one of the most durable base line infantry units in the game due to their high HP and armor and can hold their own even against the more elite infantry options of other factions (Note: they can fight a unit of chaos warriors to stalemate). Should they find themselves in a losing matchup, their naturally high leadership will keep them standing firm against the enemy far longer than their equivalents in other factions would, even if they lose control and rampage towards their inevitable deaths (in game II. They&#039;ve since become far more disciplined in game III). To compensate, saurus are slow and are prone to being kited, so skink skirmishers/cohorts should be utilized to help pin down the enemy line until the saurus make it into combat. Saurus warriors are available in both standard and shielded variants, but the only reason to not get the shielded version is if you need every last gold coin you can rub together for your bigger monsters on a tight, competitive budget.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Shielded saurus warriors with an even higher base health and [[awesome|perfect vigour]]. These guys make fantastically cost efficient walls that will never tire no matter how hard they&#039;re pushed. In the campaign, they are one of the better frontline choices you can give your non-doomstack armies that can find a place even into the late game, so long as they manage to survive and rank up. Gor-Rok, if chosen as your initial legendary lord, can use his rite to grant further defensive bonuses and &#039;&#039;unbreakable&#039;&#039; to them (in game II. Game III replaces unbreakable with the barrier ability and immunity to hostile effects like Poison instead); they will never yield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Warriors equipped with anti-large spears for engaging cavalry and monsters. They&#039;re nearly identical to regular saurus warriors in every other way, though they do slightly less damage against regular infantry in exchange for their anti-large speciality. Like the warriors, they come in unshielded or, for a slight premium, shielded variants.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Buffed up saurus spears with shields, the blessed variant of these saurus are dramatically inferior to their standard cousins since they lack perfect vigour. Instead, the bonus ability granted to them is Forest Strider, a perk that grants additional melee attack and defense buffs to them while fighting in forests. If you can lure cavalry and large monsters into forests, where they&#039;ll suffer additional penalties simply due to how forests interact with them, you can deal impressive sustained damage to them in short order. Unfortunately, this ability does nothing for them outside of forests and &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; battlefields will have a dearth of forest patches that you can fight in. Additionally, uncooperative opponents will generally avoid trying to engage your forces inside forests and trying to convince them otherwise may prove too time consuming for what it&#039;s worth. Regardless, they still have more health than the regular saurus spears. That&#039;s always a plus.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Legion of Chaqua (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Legion of Chaqua, thanks to their special ability, are able to provide themselves and all nearby allied units a surprising 44% missile resistance for a limited time upon activation. This is an invaluable skill to have on the approach, as many of your unshielded infantry and larger monsters are vulnerable to being focused down by the much superior ranged infantry found in other armies and can be further supplemented by a Slann&#039;s Shield of the Old Ones if necessary. Otherwise, these guys simply behave exactly as Saurus Spears are expected to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - The fearsome Temple Guards, renowned for their devotion to their Slann masters, stand ready to slaughter all who&#039;d bring harm to their otherwise vulnerable charges. Temple Guard are the only &amp;quot;elite&amp;quot; infantry within the lizardmen roster, which is more a testament to how strong regular saurus are compared to the melee infantry of other armies. Speaking of how strong regular saurus are, Temple Guard fall short of them against unarmored infantry on the whole. This isn&#039;t to say Temple Guard aren&#039;t impressive; their heightened statline makes them less likely to budge than regular saurus are while their charge defense and bonus damage against large foes and predominantly armor-piercing weaponry lets them effectively face down a majority of late-game/elite cavalry, monsters and even armored infantry much more effectively than regular saurus. Unfortunately, this general prowess reflects heavily in their price tag and you&#039;ll struggle to field multiple units of these without heavily cutting into your other options.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - Recolored Temple Guards, these guys are a slightly more offensive version of their default variants thanks to an increased charge bonus. This makes them significantly more well rounded and will allow you to more flexibly choose how you engage your enemies; do you brace and negate an incoming charge, or is the foe squishy enough where a counter charge would be more punishing? All in all a nice upgrade if only for the usual buff to their health blessed units receive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Star-Chamber Guardians (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Take Temple Guard and make their weapons also deal magical damage: you now have &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; most elite infantry unit available to the Lizardmen. Having magical attacks allows the SCG to engage many undead/demonic forces that utilize high physical resistance and cut them down with ease. SCG also serve as excellent bodyguards for lords (particularly Slann) due to their Guardian ability and when properly supported with healing magic, these guys will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; die. Their only major weakness of note is prolonged anti-armor ranged firepower and artillery, but as they are armored and shielded and have a frankly gargantuan health pool, it will take a long time to fully whittle them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Missile Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort with Javelins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls, shields and three javelins each. For pennies over a regular skink cohort, you can give them limited ranged support with poisonous javelins; a fantastic way to soften up an enemy unit for your front line infantry on the charge. With their speed, they can also easily circle about and pepper an opposing unit&#039;s backsides before charging in to cut off their escape while your saurus chew through them. Once they throw all their javelins, they&#039;re identical to the default skink cohort in virtually every way. Generally, if you&#039;re planning on taking skink cohorts at all, you should almost always pick these guys up over the standard versions (unless you &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; need every gold coin you can possibly scrape together for a specific competitive multiplayer build).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts, and your first dedicated missile infantry. Skink skirmishers lack the sheer range available to most other factions and struggle to do damage against armored opponents. Instead, they should be used exclusively as harassers; their speed, ability to fire while moving and vanguard deployment options allow them to easily get into flanking positions and kite enemy infantry while inflicting poison onto them for when the rest of your army catches up. These guys will melt quickly if caught in the crosshairs of opposing archers/gunners and are pitiful in a fistfight, so you should only get one or two of these units at most, and only if you absolutely cannot afford taking chameleon skinks instead.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink skirmishers with more health and an innate magic spell resistance. This extra durability is nice, but the spell resistance in particular isn&#039;t going to see much use due to these guys rather high mobility and any targetable spell an opponent &#039;&#039;could&#039;&#039; cast on them would be served much better against... literally anything else in your army. There&#039;s virtually no reason to bring these in Multiplayer (even if Blessed units are allowed for the match) and the only reason you&#039;ll want to recruit them in any of your Campaigns would be if you&#039;re in desperate need of reinforcements for a beat-up army you simply cannot afford to lose and you just &#039;&#039;happen&#039;&#039; to have some Blessed Skink Skirmishers to burn. The moment you are in a position where you can recruit/replace other units, these guys should be the first to go.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ninja skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts. Though fewer in number than basic skink skirmishers, chameleon skinks are considerably more durable thanks to their flat 40% missile resistance and have a much easier time sneaking around enemies thanks to their Chameleon ability. This, along with their loose formation, can make them surprisingly effective at countering enemy archers. They otherwise fulfill the exact same harassment role your regular skink skirmishers do and deal a disappointingly low amount of damage against armored targets. Also, like skink skirmishers, they are unable to curve their shots well meaning they&#039;re less effective in siege battles than the archers of other races.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Slightly swole Chameleon Skinks with twice the charge bonus (which is barely anything, especially combined with their rather tragic melee statline) and a few extra darts per skink. More ammunition is always welcome in a firefight, but it&#039;s hardly a game changer. Regardless, better stats do open up options and if you have a choice between these and regular Chameleon Skinks, may as well pick these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
:::Oxyotl&#039;s banner army in the campaign should almost entirely consist of these guys. Between the AP bonus damage, variant ammunitions he can grant them in addition to giving them perks like Snipe, there&#039;s almost no force these guys can&#039;t just shoot to death with relative ease. Siege Battles or battles featuring multiple enemy banner armies might become tricky, but that&#039;s why you always have at least a couple Skink Oracles or Skink Chiefs with Stalk to clean up shop.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Stalkers (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry ninja skinks with little blowpipes and [[what|explosive darts]]. Chameleon Stalkers fill the rather niche role of shock infantry for the Lizardmen. Each skink is equipped with two Precursor blowpipe shots that deal rather impressive burst damage against unarmored targets either on the charge or when falling back from a melee engagement. As they possess the same Chameleon ability their standard Chameleon Skink kin have, they do have a lot of wiggle room to get into an optimal charging position and can quickly fade away from the fray when things go south. Speaking of things going south, though Stalkers are reasonably decent at combat due to their poisoned attacks and mediocre stats, they still tend to lose against medium tier and above infantry or anything with armor. That said, even against armored infantry, much of the Stalker&#039;s value comes from the heavy formation disruption their Precursor Rounds cause, slowing down their targets and interrupting their charge so that you can take the initiative in the ensuing engagement. They can also deal decent burst damage against single entity units in a pinch, but this is generally an inefficient use of them.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Monstrous Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors, as to be expected from 12-foot tall crocodile men, are beastly armor-piercing anti-infantry blenders who can carve through lower tier units like butter and are sturdy enough to hold back more elite units for your more capable specialists. Though quite tanky and reasonably quick (compared to your saurus), they are still large (with the weaknesses all that entails) and very vulnerable to getting shot to hell and back or getting slammed by larger cavalry/monsters. While Kroxigors do hit damn hard, their total damage is divided between three subcatagories: Base, Anti-Infantry and Armor-Piercing. As such, they only really get the most bang for their buck when thrown against armored infantry. While they are able to tie up units that fall outside of those categories, they become dramatically less effective and &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; lose the grindfest if they aren&#039;t supported. Just like in the tabletop, they pair fantastically with supporting skinks to flank and tie up enemy forces or debuff them with poison to make them even more vulnerable to the kroxigors.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you thought regular kroxigors were thick, you haven&#039;t seen these thunder-thighs strut their stuff. Though the standard health increase is all well and good, blessed kroxigors received a substantial buff to their charge bonus. This can make them surprisingly deadly cycle-chargers which, combined with their anti-infantry/armor niche, will let them crack massive holes in front lines.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacred Kroxigors (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors with [[power fists]]. These magical boxing gloves turn your kroxigors into all-purpose ass pounders who punch holes in armored foes effortlessly and tear through things with low magic resistance like so much wet paper. Much like regular kroxigors, sacred kroxigors get the most bang for their buck when supported by skinks (ideal) or saurus (when you don&#039;t want to move from that spot). Unlike standard Kroxigors, Sacred Kroxigors are much more well rounded offensively and will perform much more efficiently against opponents regular Kroxigors tend to struggle or stalemate against. Additionally, as the only non-RoR/Lord unit in your roster with Magical Attacks, these guys are your go-to melee force to deal with Ethereal units, Treemen and other high-physical resistance targets. Additionally, as Magic Resist is slated to change to only affect damage caused by Spells, Sacred Kroxigors will be very well suited to deal with the forces of the Dwarfs and Khorne going forward.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Huatl (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sacred kroxigors with much higher physical resistance and straight up sunder enemy armor, allowing units like your saurus warriors to deal more damage to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen cavalry are slow, for cavalry. They will never catch horse-mounted cavalry of other races, and it is risky to use them as a distraction if your enemy is using anything more than basic cavalry archers. Expect lizardmen cavalry to take heavy losses in prolonged combat, and learn to cycle-charge with them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - A pack of clever girls, with no saurus riders. Feral cold ones are extremely speedy units (by lizardmen standards) that effectively function as light cavalry built for chasing down skirmishers, ranged back lines and artillery pieces. Their ability to cause fear also comes in handy for landing rear charges against a foe tied up in combat with your frontline infantry, as well as ensuring routed enemies leave the battlefield permanently. Unfortunately, their raw damage output is rather low and they themselves are particularly frail and prone to rampaging, which means a bad engagement will result in a swift end for them. They&#039;re cheap as chips though, so you can&#039;t complain too much over losing &#039;em.&lt;br /&gt;
**Being able to summon them after performing the Rite of Primeval Glory is really handy when facing off against Skaven artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Standard cold one riders are your first full-blooded cavalry option. Though significantly swifter than your infantry, cold one riders lag behind their competition in other factions and are particularly vulnerable to anti-large cavalry units because of this. In an ideal setting, cold one riders will serve as the hammer to the anvil that is your saurus frontline; decisive charges into the rear of enemy formations can deal heavy damage and can completely lock down ranged infantry or artillery. Being both armored and shielded gives them respectable staying power as well and allows them to remain in extended combat should the need arise. That said, like most cavalry, they truly shine when they&#039;re able to freely cycle charge to maximize their damage output and heavily abuse enemy morale.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - The name says it all; these are cold one riders with spears. This turns them into a dedicated anti-large cavalry unit that can deal not inconsequential damage to opposing cavalry, artillery and monsters. Unfortunately, in cav v. cav engagements, cold one spear riders will often fall short due to their below average speed letting many opposing options run circles around them. As such, they tend to work best when used defensively. When opposing cavalry buckles down to charge into your flanks, counter charge them with your spear-riders to either intercept or divert them from your more vulnerable elements. They do deal decent armor-piercing damage on their own right, but they&#039;ll often lose against more elite cavalry options and their strength quickly diminishes in prolonged engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed cold one spears are extremely similar to the Pok-Hopak Cohort in the sense that they both don&#039;t run the risk of rampaging. This is a very valuable perk on a unit that will often find itself separated from your main army, especially when combined with their heightened durability. If you have a need for cold one spears and have access to these, there&#039;s literally no reason not to take them.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pok-Hopak Cohort (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Fearless and focused spear-riders, these guys are both immune to psychology &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; lack primal instincts, meaning you&#039;ll never need to worry about them rampaging or fleeing from enemy monsters. Additionally, the Pok-Hopak cohort is able to utilize vanguard deployment, giving them a tactical edge over their generic counterparts that cannot be underestimated. If you&#039;re thinking about taking a unit of spear-riders, there&#039;s literally no reason to not just take these guys instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only elite cavalry, horned ones are simply buffed up cold one riders, plain and simple. They are significantly faster than all of your cold one riders and as such are on par with the cavalry options found in many other factions. They pack a meaty punch with a rather chunky charge bonus to boot, letting them simply smash through frontline infantry as both hammer and anvil. You&#039;ll be paying for that swollen statline though, as they are one of your most expensive non-monster units out of your entire roster (they&#039;re even more expensive than some of your monsters).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Just like the blessed cold one spears, blessed horned ones won&#039;t rampage when caught unawares. Considering these are your elite cav units, you will &#039;&#039;always&#039;&#039; want to make sure they can get out of a bad engagement whenever you need them to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Javelin skinks riding Terradons and carrying stone bombs. While relatively fast for the lizardmen, terradon riders are among the slowest flying cavalry in the game, and are a fairly niche choice in battle. This niche can best be summed up as aerial harriers, ideal for sniping out artillery, mages or unarmored infantry or monsters (which is admittedly a bit of a rarity). Their attacks also apply Poison, which makes them a little more useful than their raw stats make them seem on paper and helps further support other units in your army. Additionally, they are quite micro-friendly since they are able to fire and move with their javelins and, with proper positioning, can drop a once-per-battle set of stone bombs to deal massive damage to clustered up infantry beneath their wings. That said, as fairly large, unarmored and slow moving targets with fairly pitiful melee stats, these guys can be very easy to snipe out of the air by decent missile infantry and are &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; vulnerable to pretty much anything else that is also in the air with them. In a pinch, they can also be used as rear-chargers to help route enemies or tie down missile infantry, but Old Ones help them if something points an extra long stick at them. If you&#039;re facing an infantry heavy army, Fireleech Bolas Terradons tend to net you better value.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pahuax Sentinels (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - These special edition terradon riders are particularly nimble and have an innate resistance to melee and missile attacks that gives them &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more staying power than any of your other flying cavalry. If only to serve as a distraction, these guys can be used in lieu of skink priests/chiefs in an attempt to waste your opponent&#039;s missile infantry/artillery ammo. Otherwise, use them to harass enemy units with poisoned missiles and to escort routing foes off the battlefield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Fireleech Bolas Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - These are far better Terradon Riders than the base variant. While they no longer inflict Poison on enemy units, their fireleech bolas deal explosive fire damage, inflicting greater damage overall against infantry formations and fire-weak entities while dealing higher leadership penalties in the process. Like regular Terradon Riders, they also can fire and move, letting them more or less function as prehistoric bombers. They still carry stone bombs, which can be devastatingly effective when used in concert with a line of saurus warriors pinning enemy melee units or shutting down artillery, but just like regular Terradon Riders, they are fairly useless in melee and are terribly vulnerable to other fliers and ranged missile fire. If you&#039;re dealing with smaller, physically larger units (monstrous infantry or single-entity monsters) with low armor, Terradon Riders are more efficient against them. &lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed Terradon Riders, aside the traditional increase in health, only received one minor adjustment over their basic counterparts; speed. At a speed stat of 110 as opposed to the standard 90, Blessed Terradon Riders can manuever across the battlefield notably more quickly than any other unit in your entire army. Nice, for a unit designed to harass and waste/dodge enemy missile fire, but ultimately a rather minor selling point on an admittedly mediocre and situational unit.&lt;br /&gt;
**Fireleech Bolas can be used to game the AI, especially when you&#039;re facing off against the Chaos Invasion. Even having just three of these guys bombard the Chaos Hellcannons can save you a lot of grief, and you&#039;re not really going to miss them if they got shot down. They&#039;re also really helpful against Vampire Coast, as they&#039;re one of the few skirmishers you have that can raise hell against a zombie gunline/artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ripperdactyl Riders (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The obsidian knife of lizardmen flyers. Ripperdactyls are your flying can-openers with a minor bonus against infantry and a &#039;&#039;massive&#039;&#039; AP bonus. Combined with their solid melee attack stat and Frenzy bonus, these guys utterly shred armored foot soldiers. Unfortunately, their non-existent armor, low melee defense, low model count and large size makes these guys terribly susceptible to counterattack. If they get boxed in, much less by anything with an anti-large bonus, you will be impressed by how quickly they die. Because of this, and the fact much of their damage is dedicated against armored targets, Ripperdactyls tend to be a bit of a niche choice in army lists not built around Tiktaq&#039;to. None-the-less, they are much more effective than Terradon Riders at shutting down missile infantry formations and artillery platforms. Just make sure you are constantly aware of the tactical situation and only call them down when you can support them or escape before enemy reinforcements manage to pin them down.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Colossadon Hunters (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Bigger, hungrier ripperdactyls with a penchant for bigger prey; an additional anti-large bonus can turn them into cavalry buzzsaws and can let them deal sickening damage to mounted enemy lords or cavalry and are the best/only option for fighting flying enemy lords/heroes on semi-even ground. Suffice to say, they&#039;re still very weak to anti-large weaponry themselves and will seldom win against combat dedicated lords/heroes in a &amp;quot;1&amp;quot;v1 fight. As such, they&#039;ll need support through terradon riders (for the poison) as well as additional ripperdactyls to stand an honest shot against such a foe, though they&#039;re still not guaranteed a victory. Should they lose, they&#039;ll still leave a hell of a mark on whatever cavalry/monster they were fighting and such scars could prove pivotal to bringing them down with the rest of your army.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Hunting Packs===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Salamander Hunting Pack (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed addition to the Lizardmen&#039;s borderline vacant missile unit roster, Salamander Hunting Packs are a fantastic general use ranged unit and are among the better missile cavalry options in the game. Though they can&#039;t fire while moving like other missile cavalry options, they deal a rather frightening amount of flaming explosive damage per volley with not inconsequential AP and rather notable anti-large bonuses to top it off. Much like your other non-single entity heavy hitters, Salamanders can do some damage in melee, but they really should avoid it unless absolutely necessary. Terrible defensive values will make Salamander Hunting Packs feel every blow that hits their unarmored hides. If you want to keep them in the fight, make sure you have a few Saurus Spears or Spear Cold One Riders to counter enemy cavalry. They can fire over units and obstacles.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Umbral Tide (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sneaky salamander hunting packs with perfect vigour and stalk, the Umbral Tide is able to covertly cross a majority of the battlefields you may find yourself on and can easily set up an ambush against unsuspecting opponents. Even after running from one end of the battle to the other and loosing every last fireball from their collective gullets, the Umbral Tide will still have a spring to their step should they join the melee fray. If you can only afford a single Salamander Pack, try to budget for these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Razordon Hunting Pack (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons are your anti-armor missile cavalry. Unlike the Salamanders, who burp up one flaming projectile apiece, Razordons lob three spikes at a time when they attack. Though the damage per individual projectile is... well, pitiful, combined they can deal a rather staggering amount of AP damage that can either be divided among dense clusters of armored infantry formations or a single armored target. Additionally, Razordons are much more adept at lobbing their shots, giving them a bit of an edge over Salamanders in uneven terrain. Unfortunately, that&#039;s about where the good news ends. With a shorter firing range than Salamanders and utterly abysmal base damage on their projectiles ([[What|Chameleon Skinks have stronger missiles against unarmored foes than these guys]]) and no additional bonuses to speak of (fire damage, explosive damage, anti-large/infantry, nothing), there&#039;s generally no reason to take Razordons over Salamanders in general lists. Against the heavily armored forces of the Warriors of Chaos, Dwarfs or even other Lizardmen, Razordons might find a more valuable niche.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; Not only have these guys gained a better firing arc, enabling them to better fire spikes at targets over terrain/allied units, but the projectiles themselves now pierce through multiple entities. Currently, they&#039;re particularly powerful and can quickly mulch armored infantry with as few as two or three volleys.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Amaxon Barbs (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons with poisonous spikes and a flat 15% missile resistance, these guys aren&#039;t much to write home about. Yes, poison is nice, but you don&#039;t exactly need to dig very deep for alternative ways to access it. The missile resistance is a nice, if moderately more situational perk, but it&#039;s not a particularly notable resistance and it does nothing for potential melee engagements. In the event you need a razordon hunting pack for anti-armor firepower, you may as well pick these guys up, but only if you have the extra gold once you&#039;ve established your core army roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
The big beasts and the creatures most opponents expect to face when fighting the lizardmen. Potent and powerful monsters, you have a dinosaur for every occasion; you&#039;ll simply need to choose the right ones. Beware of enemy tarpits if you don&#039;t have a high-level mage in your army; dinosaurs will take additional damage from their flanks and rear if they are surrounded and that can quickly wear them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral [[Bastilidon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your cheapest single entity dinosaur as well as your sturdiest. Feral bastilidons are effectively just a [[DISTRACTION CARNIFEX]] that you throw into enemy frontlines to stir up some chaos, cause some fear and just generally soak damage while the rest of your army dismantles the enemy. These guys can still earn you some crazy value against armies that field a lot of chaff infantry, like Skaven, Beastmen or Bretonnia.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039;: These guys are your entry-level monsters, being recruitable basically from the start of the game. As tanky anti-infantry monsters, these guys can net you some crazy value against the early-game armies of other factions for cheap-as-chips prices.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your first, cheaper artillery option. Solar Engines fire off a single missile that simultaneously blinds and burns enemy units, reducing their combat effectiveness and dealing bonus damage against anything that regenerates health naturally. These laser bolts have a lower maximum range, are relatively slow moving and are much easier to dodge than the smaller, faster, harder to see bolts fired by the stegadon, but they have slightly higher damage per shot and a larger splash radius when targeting groups of infantry. In another contrast to the stegadon, the beams fired by the solar engine deal flat magical damage, meaning enemies with high magical resistance will largely shrug off the damage dealt by the solar engine itself. The only &#039;&#039;major&#039;&#039; drawback of the solar engine is that the Beam of Chotek, though an armor-piercing missile (its unit toolbar does not show the armor-piercing icon), deals relatively low bonus damage against armored units and as such will become less efficient compared to the stegadon when targeting heavily armored monsters over formations of armored infantry. At the end of the day, when all else fails, there&#039;s still a fully grown bastilidon underneath that laser crystal. Keep in mind, like every ranged unit, firing their missiles depletes their vigour and should be taken into account if you&#039;re planning on sending it into combat.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Perfect vigour&#039;s value cannot be overstated on a melee capable monster that would otherwise tire itself out just from holding a laser cannon in place. The greater defensive value of the bastilidon compliments the increased health quite nicely and will allow the blessed variant to stay in the thick of it considerably longer than others of its kind.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Revivification Crystal Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only non-magical source of healing, revivification crystals are one of the few healing options in the game that not only restores a unit&#039;s health but also actually revives dead models; a perk that&#039;s particularly valuable on your elite units like kroxigors or temple guard. A revivification crystal pairs excellently with a Life Slann in infantry heavy lists as you can very rapidly bring a unit back from the brink to near pristine (or whatever their healing cap is, depending on how used and abused they are), or for ensuring crucial monsters (like carnosaurs and dread saurians) become virtually unkillable. They are of limited use in a dinosaur army if your lord isn&#039;t a Life Slann, as their minor healing ability is short-ranged and can only target a single unit with a relatively lengthy cooldown between uses. Additionally, and this is a notable hitch, models don&#039;t start coming back to life until all the still living models have been fully healed up. This, consequently, makes it difficult to rebuild your forces if they&#039;re in active combat or taking damage from other sources. Having said that, they&#039;re still one of two sources of healing non-slann lords have access to and the only healing option that doesn&#039;t impose on your Winds of Magic reserve (which is still a plus, as other armies don&#039;t have such a luxury). As a bastilidon variant, it can also throw itself into combat with little fear. Pro tip: Don&#039;t click that &amp;quot;end battle&amp;quot; button; instead, use it to revive what you can and win the fight with fewer casualties.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ark of Sotek Bastilodon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Functionally just a regular bastilidon, but with the ability to unleash an AoE burst of poison on all enemies surrounding it. As it&#039;s only a minor increase in cost over the feral version, the Ark of Sotek may be worth getting for the very minor amount of damage and extra poison it can apply to the invariable mosh pits bastilidons often find themselves in. Alternatively, you can get much more utility from the other two non-feral variants, and rely on your skinks to supply poison or your mages to deal burst damage to tarpits of infantry. In Campaign these boys are one of your mainstay units until tier 4 stegadons, with the lizardmens low growth and poor early-game economy the low-cost high reward of these guys can easily melt through tons of early game infantry, a must-get.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - A wild stegadon, pure and simple. A living battering ram, stegadons are fantastic line breakers and are well rounded enough to survive the ensuing melee while dealing respectable damage in turn. Like all feral dinosaur variants, its only major weakness is a vulnerability to rampaging courtesy of its lower leadership. This is a forgivable flaw, considering how cheap they are and the fact that you can simply use Cold Blooded to snap them out of it definitely lessens the severity of an occasional rampage.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Stegadon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - A stegadon with a long-range ballista and skink handlers mounted upon its back. Stegadons serve as the second of your two artillery options and are arguably the best at dealing raw damage: the ballista is unerringly accurate and can easily snipe opposing artillery pieces, usually destroying the cannon/catapult models in question before they can get much usage. What&#039;s more is that, as it&#039;s connected to a single entity monster itself, the ballista is not vulnerable to these same tactics. Like Cygors or Steam Tanks, Stegadons compensate for the lack of firepower volume traditional artillery pieces can put out by retaining its long ranged assaults until it is either out of ammunition or has been killed. The stegadon&#039;s ranged attack generally struggles to deal significant damage to infantry formations due to the narrow projectiles and low splash damage (despite the bonus anti-infantry modifiers it gets). Regardless, the shot still deals incredible damage to heavily armored, single entity monsters (particularly a majority of mounted lords/heroes) due to their immense bonus AP damage. Even should you run out of ammunition or should your opponent try to tie it down in melee... it&#039;s still a stegadon. With skinks firing poisoned darts at everything surrounding its legs, it will put up just as much of a fight as its feral counterpart and then some. The only downside to the ballista is that firing it will drain the stegadon&#039;s vigour (even if it&#039;s standing perfectly still), meaning it&#039;ll likely perform less efficiently in any ensuing melee if it doesn&#039;t get a break between firing and fighting.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hoh boy, now we&#039;re talking. A massive buff to the stegadon&#039;s health will allow him to take significantly more punishment over the rest of his variants, but that&#039;s not really the main selling point here. The blessed stegadon is also gifted with perfect vigour; a massive boon to the offensive prowess of this beast. Being able to act as full blown artillery then rush into glorious melee combat to tear enemies a new asshole at peak performance is something no other faction can achieve remotely as effectively as these guys can. If a quest pops up in the campaign with these as a reward, you should do your damndest to accomplish it. They&#039;re well worth it.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where the stegadon does its best work from afar, the ancient stegadon needs to get up close and personal to do business. The howdah, though packed with significantly more ammo, is much shorter ranged and is primarily meant to soften up nearby targets for a follow up charge into melee. Ancient stegadons are somewhat tankier than other stegadon variants, though their limited range debatably renders them less effective offensively. In general, you should either spring for the Engine of the Gods or stick with a regular stegadon..&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Thunderous One (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A beefed up ancient stegadon that calls down bolts of lighting every 20 seconds, the Thunderous One was made to wade into the enemy&#039;s front line and deal indiscriminate damage. Unfortunately, these bolts of lightning can and will deal friendly fire to your units. This can make it somewhat challenging to support its charge with infantry or cavalry, though allied single entity monsters typically won&#039;t mind the stray blast.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Engine of the Gods Ancient Stegadon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Is all the gold armor embedded into your ancient stegadon not quite flashy enough for you? Just give it the ability to call down an orbital bombardment to glass swarms of warmbloods in the name of the Great Plan. The Stegadon itself is, functionally, an Ancient Stegadon. It behaves identically like one and has the exact same statline, but once you get to its abilities, things start to get interesting. It has two supporting abilities, Arcane Configuration (Winds of Magic Power Recharge rate boost) and the Portent of Warding (a 5% Ward Save for all allied units within 40m). These effects make EotG Stegadons fantastic supporting units simply from their presence alone. And yes, this applies to EotG Stegadon Mounts, so your Skink Priests have access to their own personal WoM batteries. The third, and debatably the main reason you&#039;re considering this ornate beast, is the Burning Alignment active ability. Though limited to only two uses, the Engine of the Gods can deal devastating damage to infantry focused lists if the Burning Alignment is used at just the right moment. It&#039;s particularly effective when fired into choke points or along your enemy&#039;s frontline ranks when they&#039;re tied up with your forces. Thankfully, the Burning Alignment ability is extremely accurate for (what is functionally) a wind spell; so long as you aim carefully and don&#039;t wander your lizardmen into it&#039;s path, you can drop it right in front of your forces with little fear.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Salamander (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A single giant salamander, tempered with age, experience and able to melt opponents with extra spicy hellfire. Ancient salamanders are more durable than their lesser hunting pack kin and are more reliably able to survive the occasional melee scuffle, though it generally shouldn&#039;t participate in it. Instead, the ancient salamander truly shines when paired with fire slann, salamander hunting packs, fireleech bolas terradons, or solar engine bastilidons thanks to its ability to render enemy units flammable with its own fireballs. This flammable effect greatly improves the damage dealt by flaming attacks and when executed properly and will burn through most infantry-focused armies with terrifying efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - An offensive machine, the apex predator of Lustria (you know, conventionally) and a signature monster of the lizardmen, the carnosaur is a ferocious beast that specializes in hunting other monsters, skaven weapon teams, and artillery due to their innate anti-large bonuses and armor-piercing capabilities. They&#039;re considerably frailer than stegadons and bastilidons defensively, though they are much swifter and tear through most enemies far more quickly due to their much higher attack. When funds are too tight to take a Saurus Scar-Vet or Old Blood on a carnosaur, a feral version with proper support won&#039;t steer you wrong. Just make sure you keep a leader or hero with Cold-Blooded on standby in case they get a little carried away.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - The blessed carnosaur. Formerly the pinnacle of lizardmen might (the dread saurian says hi), blessed carnosaurs have all the anti-large, armor-piercing wrath of the regular carnosaur supplemented by a much more rounded defensive statline. Additional health and magic resistance makes the blessed carnosaur surprisingly survivable against a myriad of generic threats and allows it to commit to fights that regular carnosaurs would hesitate towards. They are still just as vulnerable as any other carnosaur to getting mobbed or picked apart from regular armor-piercing weapons and absolutely will rampage in a bind, so don&#039;t get reckless with your charges.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Geltblöm’s Terror (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Carnosaur that never rampages and is blessed with both Vanguard deployment and the Strider ability, enabling it to keep up to speed in any terrain. Vanguard deployment and rampage immunity is a fantastic combination for a Lizardmen monster designed to fight other monsters, but don&#039;t get reckless.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Troglodon (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Troglodon without a Skink Oracle to keep it in check. Troglodons are in essence a hybrid between an Ancient Salamander and Carnosaur in that they&#039;re able to burp up potent poisonous spit that&#039;s extremely effective against large targets. Troglodons are quite possibly the first real &amp;quot;skirmisher&amp;quot; single entity monster introduced: though they&#039;re quick for ground-bound dinosaurs, they should generally only engage in melee as a last resort or with &#039;&#039;heavy&#039;&#039; support because they are not designed to put up much of a fight. In a direct melee engagement against most other combat monsters, Troglodons tend to lose pretty handily. Their low leadership also tends to cause them to rampage quickly when caught up in a brawl. However, if they focus on kiting and sniping their targets rather than charging them, they can do frankly sickening amounts of damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Pale Death (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Troglodon that can buff itself and nearby allies in melee whenever it uses it&#039;s Primeval Roar, giving them a rather substantial Melee Attack bonus for a short while. Though a buff of 24 Melee Attack is certainly an eyebrow raiser, it only recharges when the Pale Death is actively engaged in melee combat. For 60 seconds. On a creature that&#039;s prone to rampaging at the drop of a hat, this is a very risky commitment without a Lord/Hero nearby to keep it in check.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, dread saurians are nigh uncontested in raw damage output and are more than capable of killing every other unit in the game in a straight fight. Unfortunately for you, your opponent will be able to field &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more units than your dread saurian will be able to deal with at once and most of said units will likely be picking it off at range. As a massive, lumbering behemoth, dodging even slow moving projectiles is well and truly beyond the dread saurian and it will take tremendous damage on the approach. Even once it arrives in melee, the sheer volume of bodies capable of surrounding it and poking it with anti-armor/anti-large sticks will wear it down quite quickly. Their size also provides another source of jank whenever they get bogged down by hordes; they&#039;ll struggle to properly path their way through the crowds (it doesn&#039;t help that the Dread Saurian also has relatively low mass considering it&#039;s literal size) and their attacks, while lethally brutal, also tend to miss depending on the terrain it&#039;s fighting on. They are also prohibitively expensive and will eat up a significant portion of your funds, meaning the rest of your army will be extremely limited in number. Ensure you have a proper supporting mage (a life slann is essential) if you&#039;re bringing one.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, now wearing a howdah filled to the brim with skinks. A modest price bump from the already exorbitant feral variant will grant the regular dread saurian a higher leadership, ranged attacks and poison. There&#039;s little reason not to go ahead and splurge for these upgrades, feral or not the dread saurian will be the centerpiece of your army which you&#039;ll do everything to keep alive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Shredder of Lustria (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single most expensive beast you could ever field, and boy does he do work. In addition to all that a dread saurian can bring to bear, the Shredder of Lustria is stacked with the full complement of veterinary stat buffs and a leadership debuff for all enemies surrounding it, a perk that, when combined with the innate fear and terror dread saurians cause, will make most enemy infantry run the &#039;&#039;fuck&#039;&#039; away very fast. If that weren&#039;t enough, the Shredder of Lustria also encourages all nearby allied troops, buffing their leadership. After all, who wouldn&#039;t be inspired by seeing the apex of lizardmen might devouring any and all who oppose the Great Plan? Speaking of the Great Plan, you&#039;re going to need one: considering how much money you&#039;re sinking into this puppy, you&#039;re going to need to really budget the rest of your army carefully.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Coatl (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Previously a relic of a long lost bit of Lizardmen lore, the Coatl makes a rather striking return as the premier Lizardmen flying monster. The Coatl, though packing two casts of Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and one cast of Lesser Chain Lighting as bound spells, is designed more as a source of support for ground-bound allies. Infact, the main draw to the Coatl isn&#039;t its combat capabilities (which are mediocre at best), but for the fact that it grants all allied units under its wings Stalk. Yes, everything from that unit of Red-Crested Skinks to that Dread Saurian doomstack becomes invisible and untargetable until they&#039;re either far too close to do anything about or the Coatl &amp;quot;lands&amp;quot; or dies. As a faction desperately starved of long range missile units, this is a massive boon for protecting your high-value targets on the approach. Once the Coatl has safely delivered it&#039;s charges into battle, it still can serve as an excellent disruptor of backline units, Snipe artillery or single entity monsters with thunderbolt or punish a large blob with lesser chain lighting. Just be careful: even your Terradons move faster than this thing and its size does it no favors when trying to dodge missile fire.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Spirit of Tepok (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Coatl that has Banishment and Shield of Thorns as bound spells instead. The option to lean more heavily into a support role does suit the Coatl quite well, though this largely depends on what lord choice and focus your army has. If you brought a life slann or a skink priest, a regular Coatl might get you more mileage.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen are a very versatile faction when viewed over the entire campaign, however there will be times when your army composition and thus tactics are limited depending on the progress you&#039;ve made in developing your empire. Your greatest limiting factor will be money; be it in single-player or multiplayer, many mid-high tier units will cost a fortune and you will invariably have a lower unit count compared to other armies. You will need to carefully consider the faction you&#039;re currently facing when forming your armies.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
So, you want to show the world a Great Plan, and TED talks aren&#039;t getting it done? You might think of the Lizardmen as just another &#039;big monster&#039; faction in multiplayer, but you&#039;re limiting yourself if you think that way. The scalies have a surprising amount of options within their roster. From super wide infantry builds to kite builds built around chameleon skinks, to more mobile cavalry-centric strategies, the Lizardmen can be quite a versatile opponent. The thing you&#039;re pretty much going to universally struggle against however is factions that are heavy on the ranged play. You need to think carefully about your army comp and lord choices, then bring the Great Plan to the four corners of the Earth (or multiplayer lobby, or whatever).&lt;br /&gt;
====Faction Counterplay====&lt;br /&gt;
A list of all the other factions in the game, along side their various strengths, weaknesses and best strategies you have to combat them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - Highly mobile and capable of dishing out impressive damage, the Beastmen are among the fastest armies in the game (only rivaled by the Wood Elves and Slaanesh). This can be difficult to deal with, as the only infantry you possess that can potentially keep up with them are your Skinks. Skinks...generally aren&#039;t a great pick against Beastmen. They&#039;re slower still than a significant portion of the Beastmen roster and will die quite quickly due to their lack of armor and defensive stats. Skink Skirmishers/Chameleon Skinks are a minor exception, as between their poisonous missiles and the Beastmen&#039;s lack of armor, they&#039;ll actually deal respectable damage to them. Otherwise, the stalwart Saurus (Spears) will be your best frontline unit; solid charge defenses, shields and anti-large bonuses will stop any rush in its tracks and the Beastmen&#039;s complete lack of armor means that they&#039;ll take the full brunt of their attacks. Your monsters USED to be fantastic here, but with the addition of the anti-large regenerating Ghorgon, they are a much more risky proposition. Seriously, this thing will beat the pants off of pretty much any monster you bring to the table, and its surprising mobility means that your slow-moving infantry will have a hard time tarpitting it. Shredder of Lustria builds and monster mash builds which used to be hilariously effective against the Beastie Boys are now quite dangerous to bring. Without being able to overly rely on your monsters, it&#039;s going to be up to your characters and magic to be the game-changer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039; - The end-all, be-all cavalry faction, Brettonia has access to some of the strongest mounted soldiers in the game. Their peasantry, though feeble, isn&#039;t to be underestimated in sufficient numbers and can still do notable damage through their archers and pikemen. That said, your Skink Cohorts can easily best any peasants they (effortlessly) pin down and a unit or two of kroxigors will &#039;&#039;evicerate&#039;&#039; any foot soldier unfortunate enough to meet them in combat. Bretonnians will also struggle to hold their lines together from the sheer amount of fear/terror your monsters can cause. However, their cavalry (particularly Grail Knights) won&#039;t falter from fear alone and are renowned for their devastating charges. Brace units of temple guard (or saurus spears, if you&#039;re cheap) to mitigate their damage and box them in before they have a chance to pull back. A light slann with the Net of Amyntok can shut down Brettonian cavalry &#039;&#039;hard&#039;&#039; and should heavily be considered as your lord for this matchup.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - The general battle plan here can best be summarized with &amp;quot;Grab a bunch of ranged and 2 Solar Engines and defend them at all costs because otherwise you have no way to deal with Dark Rider Crossbow and Scourgerunner spam.&amp;quot; Seriously, those damn Anti Large missile chariots were pretty much designed to fight you. A pure melee monster rush isn&#039;t going to work otherwise you will just get kited into oblivion. Have the solar engines shoot them from afar and see if you can get you Chameleon skins to slow them down so your Cold One riders can catch up to them. Your dino cav is better than their dino cav, take advantage of that. Mazdamundi is also great for nets to lock down cavalry and get them ready for a pounding. If you can get rid of all that mobile ranged, the infantry fight should fall in your favor in no time.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039; - Dwarfs tend to form nigh impenetrable walls of armorclad infantry and are one of the few factions capable of holding the line better than you. AP weaponry is a must, so mixing Red-Crested Skinks among your Saurus can help chew through thicker formations. Kroxigors, particularly Sacred Kroxigors, will be your best infantry can openers in this fight. Despite their innate spell resistance, your offensive magics can still work wonders against most dwarfen infantry, so a heavens skink priest or fire slann wouldn&#039;t be amiss in your army here. Beware of their Giant Slayers; though fragile, they will deal terrible damage to any armored cavalry or monsters they can get their grubby dawi mitts on. Skink skirmishers/chameleon skinks can easily outpace slayer units and whittle them down with their poisoned missiles, though they&#039;ll do absolutely nothing against any of the armored infantry. Terradon riders are virtually untouchable to their ground bound forces with a special shout-out for the Fireleech Bolas variant, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to take down any Gyrocopters contesting the skies if you want to get your money&#039;s worth. Lastly, you&#039;ll want to destroy any artillery they bring before turning your attention to the rest of their forces; Ripperdactyls can easily flank and shred such devices, though you&#039;ll need to draw away any screening units if you want them to survive the aftermath. Lastly, this is one of the few matchups where Razordons are a more attractive mid-ranged option than your Salamanders.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039; - Karl Franz brings a relatively balanced roster to the table, with plenty of long ranged anti-armor firepower and cavalry that&#039;ll run circles around yours. With the sheer volume of AP [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units and artillery, this is a faction you&#039;ll generally want to leave the Saurus at home for. Skink Cohorts with shields are for once a rather reliable pick for your frontline, with Red-Crested Skinks and/or Kroxigors diving in once you&#039;ve tied down the missile units that otherwise threaten them. Additionally, your Terradon Riders can actually be quite effective in this matchup, particularly in shutting down Grenade Launcher Outriders. A Skink Priest of Heavens with Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and/or Comet of Cassandora is a rather cost-efficient answer to units such as the Steam Tank and Artillery Platforms, though regular Stegadons can punch holes through them if you can keep them safe. A Slann Priest with Light Magic and the Net of Amyntok coupled with a squad or two of Salamander Hunting Packs makes for an excellent cavalry deleting squad, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to shield them with your own cavalry or at the very least some shielded Saurus Spears.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039; - Go fast and hard into cathay&#039;s lines. Cathay brings a good amount of options against single-entity units with accurate grand cannons and iron hail gunners amongst others. The largest you should go is an ark of sotek or two to mass-poison damage cathay&#039;s entire packed formation. Go full offensive with saurus and try to briefly contest the skies to disrupt the artillery and missiles on the charge. in general it&#039;s a poor matchup as while the other &#039;monster race&#039; in the ogres is great against cathay it&#039;s simply a matter of price. ogres can beat cathay with a lot cheaper units than you can bring with kroxigors filling the same role as ogre bulls but 2.5 times the price. Unless your units get major discounts in multiplayer for immortal empires it&#039;s not a good time&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hordes of expendable Goblins and Ork Boyz make up the rank and file of the Greenskins. Despite having a particular focus towards mobbing you in melee combat, the Greenskins have a fairly diverse roster capable of performing decently well at ranged combat or skirmishing with their relatively diverse cavalry options. As the coup-de-grace, Greenskins also have access to several monstrous units between their selection of (river) trolls and Arachnarok Spiders that can mulch their weight in infantry. However, there are two major weaknesses to the Greenskin roster: they typically have &#039;&#039;terrible&#039;&#039; leadership (especially their expendable Goblin and Troll units) and a majority of their roster is unarmored. Saurus units will typically stand firm on the front lines while your Skink skirmishers will actually do some solid work while easily outpacing the sluggish Ork Boyz, but you will &#039;&#039;need&#039;&#039; to watch out for their Cavalry. Fireleech Bolas Terradons and Salamanders will have a field day against their infantry as well, especially against the fire-weak troll units who will crumble rapidly in the face of their flammability and terrible leadership. On the note of leadership; your pantheon of Jurassic beasties will have the time of their lives against the Greenskins. Their lack of charge defense, anti-large, and low leadership means that a Carnosaur or two will bowl through their ranks largely uncontested. However, keep an eye out for Black Orcs; they&#039;re one of the few armored infantry units in the Ork roster, are armor piercing and are immune to Fear/Terror. Red-Crested Skinks are a decent budget option to deal with them, though you may prefer to kite them with Razordon Hunting Packs instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Lizardmen will have some trouble countering High Elf flying monsters, particularly phoenixes. Your ranged units aren&#039;t going to get the chance to take them down in the air, so you have to rely on catching them when they drop down to attack and that can be tricky if you&#039;re running an all-dino army. At the same time, if you&#039;re using saurus then you will take some heavy losses from archers and cavalry if you commit them all to tarpitting the phoenix. Chameleon Skinks are an excellent pick against archer heavy builds; their lose formation coupled with their innate missile resistance will make them extremely hard to take down at range while their chameleon skin will let them dip in and out of combat with relative ease. Sisters of Averlorn are a priority target if present on the field; a Skink Priest of Beasts may be considered if only to summon manticores to tie them down. Additionally, the Legion of Chaqua should strongly be considered as a core part of your frontline; the ability to grant multiple units around it a 44% missile resistance is too valuable to ignore.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039; - Don&#039;t bring Skinks to this matchup. Barring Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers if you want to be cheap, all of your Skink Infantry will do little more than feed their skulls to Khorne&#039;s throne before they get an opportunity to do anything meaningful. A pricy saurus front line is definitely worth it here, potentially supported by Kroxigors. For once the &#039;engine of the gods&#039; stegadon&#039;s death-beam will actually be useful as the stegadon itself can knock about units and the death-beam being magic and AP will counter any infantry khorne can bring. Bring saurus, bring magic and your anti-large carnosaur. A very good matchup in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kislev is a relatively fearless foe for you, a nice change of pace for mere mortal men. Their higher tier infantry is generally able to out-trade yours, Tzar Guard (especially the Great Weapon variety) can and will gradually carve their way through regular Saurus lines while Streltsi and Ice Guard will prove quite competent at dealing with your forces at range. Fortunately, your sheer versatility means you aren&#039;t wanting for options. Even if they&#039;re a bit slower, your Cavalry will generally outclass Kislev&#039;s, barring any War Bear Riders they may have brought. Even regular Cold One Riders will make a fantastic hammer to the anvil that is your Saurus and even a losing matchup against their stronger Tzar Guard will quickly turn in your favor with a rear charge or two. Of course, aside their War Bear Riders, Kislev&#039;s monsters can&#039;t hold a candle to yours. Once you shut down some of the ranged AP Missiles, your dinos can wreak terrible havoc upon the enemy lines. Razordons are particularly effective right now, though Salamanders can be used to efficiently deal with the more monstrous enemy units. Terradons are almost always a never-pick however as since in essence every single kislev unit has a ranged attack that is more than capable of dealing with them terradons are free kills for even kossars.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - This...should be a no brainer in concept, though countering opposing lizardmen can be somewhat difficult to execute. Anti-large units in some shape or form are an inarguable must; cold one spear-riders accompanied by saurus spears can surround and pin down enemy monsters in a relatively cost-effective manner. Red-crested skinks are an ideal infantry choice due to their poison and armor piercing bonus coming into play against a majority of the lizardman roster. Salamander hunting packs and ancient salamanders are fantastic all-rounders that can deal terrifying damage across the entire board. Your main objective should be to focus down any slann mage-priest or skink priests present on the field, followed by any other lord/hero keeping potential rampages in check. If there is an opposing slann, avoid clumping up your infantry to reduce the threat of a banishment and/or any other vortex spell devastating your frontlines. Regular stegadons are fantastic monster snipers who should focus fire on major threats like carnosaurs or dread saurians before anything else.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are pretty much Warriors of Chaos with a little bit of [[Space Wolf|wolf]] thrown in. Like the Warriors of Chaos, they have a relative lack of missile units but unlike the Warriors of Chaos, are considerably less armored as a whole. However, they more than make up for it with their mobility and plentiful sources of anti-large, which can be seriously dangerous for one of your central strategies. Saurus Warriors as such are substantially better at holding off the bulk of their front lines while Temple Guard are a fantastic answer to their Skin Wolves and Trolls. You need to be on top of your positioning however, as Skin Wolves and Ice Wolves can run circles around your plodding infantry. Skink Skirmishers are also fantastic for dealing chip damage and applying poison while staying well out of arm&#039;s reach for a majority of their forces. (Ancient) Salamanders are also a superb choice, as are Fireleech Bolas Terradons as general damage dealers. Stegadons and Carnosaurs will likely be your go-to monsters, as a pair of Carnosaurs can typically take down a War Mammoth, at least in theory. Caution should be exercised against War Mammoths in particular, as they are one of the best monster units in the game. Considering the fact that half your list is made of monsters, that&#039;s saying something. No Norscan worth his salt will allow you to freely target down the crown jewel of his army, so make sure you commit well and truly to the fight.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039; -Nurgle has no anti-large, bad armour piercing, relies on outlasting his enemies, has almost no ranged firepower worth mentioning, has incredibly poor armour, is ridiculously slow, hates fire damage, and is mediocre in the air-game. Basically, everything Nurgle hates is something you have plenty of while Nurgle has precisely zero counters to your playstyle. You almost can&#039;t lose this match-up it&#039;s so one-sided.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is a fairly balanced matchup depending on what you bring. Saurus spears are the obvious pick here and try to avoid skink units entirely unless you want to give the gorgers free food. Carnosaurs with their anti-large are an obvious pick here and going for a stegadon with or without a hero on the back is great for counterplay against leadbelchers.The scariest thing ogres can bring are rhinoxes or their artillery. Essentially settle in for a large-on-large slugfest.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039; - An iconic matchup, the skaven are everything the lizardmen aren&#039;t. Massive hordes of cheap, cowardly cannon fodder will fill the ranks of many skaven lists purely to get in the way of your Jurassic might and their rickety engines of war. Aside delaying the inevitable through piles of bodies, the ratmen have precious little in the way of durable front line units and will typically fall apart when thrown in the grinder. Rather, Skaven will rely on their wide array of artillery and arcane firearms to rain warpfire upon the hapless masses (friend and foe alike). Ratling Gunners are notorious for their ability to rapidly shred infantry, cavalry and monsters alike while their jezzails excel at picking apart single entity monsters, lords and heroes from halfway across the battlefield. Any frontline infantry you have you&#039;ll want shielded. In general, skaven are modestly quick on their feet, so you&#039;ll want a selection of cavalry or skinks to catch up to and tie down their missile infantry. Chameleon Skinks are generally a strong pick against skaven due to their missile resistance and for once can do respectable damage due to the relative lack of armor in the skaven roster. Skink Cohorts will typically win in a straight fight against Skaven Slaves or Clanrats, though against anything more elite you&#039;ll want saurus or kroxigors to deal with them. Your monsters will also have virtually free reign should they manage to make it into melee, though you&#039;ll want to ensure any artillery or missile infantry are well and truly tied down before you let them loose.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039; - Much like the Dark Elves, this matchup falls considerably in their favor. Speedy infantry, cavalry and chariots &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; packing AP damage makes a front line of Saurus undesirable. However, unlike the Dark Elves, Slaanesh [[/d/|comes]] up short in the ranged game; your Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers and even both Terradon Riders will prove quite valuable at whittling away Slaaneshi daemons, though exquisite care will be needed for your skink infantry; even with poison debuffs, Slaaneshi units are &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; fast and will still be able to chase down and tie up your Skinks without screening support. Other options include your trademark dinosaurs; despite packing AP damage, Slaanesh is not generally kitted with a diverse Anti-Large roster and may struggle trying to hold back your high-mass monsters from tearing through their ranks. When it comes to your Terradons, take a care. Slaanesh will usually pack some Furies to help defend the skies and though Furies won&#039;t win against any of your other monsters, your Terradons aren&#039;t most other monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039; - There&#039;s not a lot a basic skeleton army can do to lizardmen. Unit for unit, saurus are just better and skinks will be more maneuverable. An all-dino army can destroy ushabti and higher-tier units with ease, provided you&#039;ve picked the right dinos (stegadons). However, this is not a reason to be complacent - the Tomb Kings roster has some very deadly Anti-Large AP units on their roster that will make very short work of your dinos. Of particular note are the Ushabti Greatbows and Necrosphinx; the former are dedicated monster snipers and the latter is absolute murder against other single-entity monsters. Try to mob these units with your infantry or try to make them irrelevant with magic, because the high innate armor and mass these units naturally have will mean they can and will be able to move around the battlefield with impunity.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039; - The key against Tzeentch is to get into melee quick and hold their units in place; Tzeentch daemons, even with their Protoss-like shields, aren&#039;t built for combat and will either try to do all their work at range (something you &#039;&#039;desperately&#039;&#039; will not want to combat them at) or by cycle charging before you get a chance to crack their shields. This is one of the rare matchups your Cold One Riders can actually excel at; they&#039;re rather decent in combat and can engage the enemy far sooner than your standard Saurus or Skinks can (and will likely/hopefully suffer less casualties for it). Additionally, Chameleon Stalkers can safely sneak up to vulnerable flanks; open up with a rather explosive burst of their own and start chewing through Horrors before they get much opportunity to return fire. Try not to contest the skies if you can, though Ripperdactyls will likely best most of the units they&#039;d be fighting in the skies... they&#039;ll be outnumbered substantially &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; move much more slowly. They&#039;ll be lit up far before they can ever catch up to anything.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039; - In terms of punching through these undeads&#039; lines they&#039;re even easier than their Vampire Counts brothers with very little in the way of durable infantry to hold back your Saurus killing machines. Where you will have to watch out is their ranged units - they have one of the cheapest gunlines in the game and it&#039;s even harder to break open their protectors because they&#039;re all undead and can&#039;t run. Their monsters will tarpit your dinos but rarely kill them, but without proper maneuvering you will be munching on polearm zombies all day while their undead musketeers and cannons fuck you up. Abuse magic hard and don&#039;t let them bog down your dinos, keep them constantly rolling through the zombies until you can trample over their gunners. Be very wary about Necrofex Colossi, not only can they kite your dinos but they can also put substantial hurt on them if not checked quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039; - If there&#039;s any faction in the game more stunted in the range-game, it&#039;s the Vampire Counts. Hordes upon hordes of meat-shields often form the rank and file of many undead lists while the lords and heroes do all the heavy lifting. You&#039;ll want to avoid clumping your units up or getting bogged down by the fodder, as a single Winds of Death can delete your entire frontline if you allow it. Kroxigors will make short work of any infantry the Vampire Counts send your way and Sacred Kroxigors in particular are extremely valuable against the ethereal units that might otherwise threaten your physical forces. Additionally, Skink Skirmishers will prove a frustrating thorn in your opponents side as they kite any non-cav across the field and back. Typically you&#039;ll want to focus on bringing down any characters the Vampire Counts field, as they quite literally hold the army together. Without their leadership and magic support, many of the undead will quickly crumble against the might of your superior soldiers. Fire damage is particularly useful in this regard, so Salamander Hunting Packs, Ancient Salamanders, Solar Engines and Fire Slann can quickly incinerate many of these lords and heroes (in the case of the Slann, they are also fantastic at dealing with ethereal heroes).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemons of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Expect to see a roster comprising mostly of Slaanesh and Tzeentch daemons. If this is the case, you&#039;re in for a rough one. If your opponent decided to focus on Khorne or Nurgle forces... well, hopefully you enjoy the borderline free win. Regardless, this can be a tricky matchup to properly plan for, so just try to take a balanced list. With a slight focus against Tzeentch/Slaanesh, of course.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another faction almost devoid of ranged options, the Warriors of Chaos is almost dedicated to advancing a wall of steel and meat from one end of the map to the other. Many of their units are armored and/or shielded and as such, armor-piercing units will be your friend against them. Take a few units of Saurus (Spears) to hold their units in place while you have some Red-Crested Skinks chip away at them. Spears are strongly suggested due to the relative abundance of large/monstrous units within their roster; they might not win against them, but your spears will go down fighting much harder than your regular warriors would. Take a unit or two of Ripperdactyls to shut down any Hellcannons they might&#039;ve brought to the table. Take no half-measures with them either; they&#039;re unbreakable so you &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; need to completely wipe them out if you don&#039;t want to be bombarded the entire match. Otherwise, some (Sacred) Kroxigors, Razordons and Stegadons are fantastic damage dealers and a Skink Priest of Heavens or a Fire Slann can delete large chunks of their infantry at a time with proper placement and timing.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Wood Elves are a flighty foe and one of the hardest for your army to actually pin down. Their relatively cheap access to long-ranged anti-armor missile infantry will pose a massive pain in the ass and their basic frontline infantry, the Eternal Guard, can hold their own surprisingly well against your monsters courtesy of their spears. In a rare twist, a front line of skink cohorts will prove more effective than your saurus against wood elves; they&#039;re quicker still than many elven infantry options and can further hinder their combat effectiveness thanks to their poison. Chameleon skinks will prove invaluable at harassing enemy archers and can kite a majority of their infantry with relative ease. Now when it comes to dealing with their tree units, I have one word for you. Fire. (Ancient) Salamanders can deal with dryads, tree kin and treemen with laughable ease and will prove just as effective at dealing with the rest of the wood elf roster, though you&#039;ll absolutely want a contingent or two of saurus spears to screen against Wild Riders. Wood Elves are also a rare instance of being a faction with &#039;&#039;less&#039;&#039; artillery than you (hint, they have none). Solar Engine bastilidons can heavily discourage their archers from setting up and will do bonus damage to any tree units they shoot. Lastly, many Wood Elf units are capable of vanguard deployment; keep an eye on your surroundings once the battle starts to ensure you aren&#039;t caught unawares.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;S/S-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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Though you aren&#039;t the undisputed king of Domination, Lizardmen are absolutely positioned as one of the top factions for this game mode currently. A very flexible faction with many options, you have excellent early game presence in the form of skinks. Your quick-footed infantry chaff will easily contest objectives due to their higher capture weight compared to the expendable chaff infantry other factions might field and will have a much easier time getting to them shortly after the game begins. Particularly any of the skirmishing variety that you vanguard deployed. Speaking of, Chameleon Stalkers/Skinks are still excellent skirmishers and harassers who can dive in and disrupt outlying forces, making objective contesting a painful nuisance for ill-equipped foes. When it comes to holding the line, your Saurus infantry is as durable as ever. When supported by regular skinks, it will take a concentrated effort if not a full hard counter in order to shift your forces off of an objective. This is made even more challenging due to your rather plentiful healing options; Life Slann, Skink Oracles and even Revivification Bastilidons are fantastic for keeping your forces in the fight. Even more so if further supported by any Slann&#039;s Ward save nope-bubble that they can plant down on any objective to thoroughly lock it down. This isn&#039;t even really getting into your single entity beat-sticks; Kroq-Gar can prove the equal of lords such as Be&#039;lakor with the right support and Lord Kroak can still Deliver Itza hard enough to evaporate enemy blobs with frightening ease.&lt;br /&gt;
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At the end of the day, your sheer versatility affords you &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more flexibility in dealing with the highly varied factions you&#039;ll be facing while still being able to focus on defending objectives. Yes, there are still some factions you&#039;ll generally struggle to deal with, but you will at least have a couple tools to handle them while you hold your ground. This is something some of the other factions (like the Dwarfs or Vampire Coast) cannot quite claim.&lt;br /&gt;
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A particular note, if you&#039;re going up against one of the other top-tier factions in this game mode, such as Nurgle or Vampire Counts, bring fire. A Salamander Hunting Pack or two, a Fire Slann and &#039;&#039;maybe&#039;&#039; a Fireleech Bolas Terradon Rider can more efficiently stymie those factions regenerative strengths while further exploiting their innate flammability. A Burning Head or Firestorm will incinerate most of their blobs while dealing moderately little to your armored Saurus lines while Salamanders will also prove quite potent against the larger monsters/chariots supporting them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, be it the Vortex or Mortal Empires, the biggest concern lizardmen have is obtaining a consistent source of income; skinks will only carry you so far in the early game and sacking settlements will only provide a quick short-term boost to your treasury. Your economy generally lacks bonuses, especially compared to other Warhammer 2 factions, though you won&#039;t be as constrained as, say, Wood Elves or Beastmen, and expanding the Geomantic Web and getting upkeep reduction skills will go a long, long way. As such, if you aren&#039;t playing as Hexoatl it is imperative to get the city as soon as possible for its landmark, which reduces upkeep on the lizardmen&#039;s most powerful units. Most other landmark buildings add some bonus to several unit chains, such as additional damage for skinks or more defense for saurus warriors.&lt;br /&gt;
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Lizardmen research is locked behind building completion; many important technologies cannot be accessed until a specific, often mediocre in mid-early game, building is built in one of your settlements. Generally speaking, it is better to unlock research to start improving your weaker units rather than focus on your economy in the early- to mid-game. You simply won&#039;t be generating much revenue from economy buildings until the Geomantic Web is expanded and upkeep is reduced. However, that also means you need to be smart about what buildings to construct in your limited settlements; depending on how much money you have coming in through battles and sacking, it may be worth it to construct something just to unlock research and then destroy it to make room for something you genuinely need.&lt;br /&gt;
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Despite skinks being largely cannon fodder after turn 75, the skink Spawning Pool building should be built in every minor settlement so that you can hire as many Skink Chief heroes as possible. Not only are they the faction assassins, which help lizardmen remove otherwise troublesome heroes that would be difficult to snipe on the battlefield, they can all get stegadon or ancient stegadon mounts. These are functionally equivalent to the generic version but come with extended range and bonuses to damage. It is possible to have two full armies of just Skink Chiefs by the Chaos invasion, if you so wish, and it is even more OP than the standard dinostack. Skink Priests also have access to these mounts, but increasing their recruiting slots is much more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
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Once you start becoming established and have a few provinces under your belt, it is imperative to begin constructing Star Chambers in every province you can afford to do so. Each Star Chamber boosts the starting rank of all newly recruited Slann Mage-Priests by 3 levels and all new heroes by 2. Yes, this stacks all the way up so that you can recruit max level Slann every 10 turns. Each Star Chamber also offers a small but lucrative bonus to all income for the whole Province, which helps to address your stone-age economy and extends enemy sieges by an extra 3 turns, potentially granting you just enough time to save the city should it fall under attack.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Mortal Empires/Vortex===&lt;br /&gt;
With the advent of Immortal Empires in the third game, this will admittedly feel like a lackluster experience compared to it. Having said that, if you feel like sticking to the &amp;quot;OG&amp;quot; experience or don&#039;t quite want to pick up game III yet, here are some tips and tricks. In general, if you&#039;re starting as one of the factions starting on your home turf of Lustria, you&#039;re going to feel quite cramped.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;City of the Sun&#039;&#039;&#039; - Big boss Mazdamundi starts with a couple nice things going for him; As the proud owner of Hexoatl, late game Dino-Doomstacks can become particularly affordable. Additionally, he can expand south relatively freely due to a province&#039;s worth of abandoned settlements ripe for the plundering/taking. Not everything is as bright as his city&#039;s namesake suggests; A permanent -10 diplomatic penalty to all Non-Lizardmen factions can make diplomacy somewhat problematic. This is exacerbated by the fact that Mazda starts directly south of the Dark Elves and has a cluster of aggressive Vampire Coast and lizard-hating Empire colonists barring his access to the rest of Lustria. After you secure your initial holdings, you should weigh your options carefully then commit to eradicating one threat at a time if you can help it. Wiping out Morathi&#039;s Dark Elves is the more challenging prospect; their abundance of Armor Piercing weaponry (melee and ranged) can make early game excursions north particularly brutal. This is made worse by the climate incompatibilities, where growth and replenishment are dramatically hindered. On the other hand, Morathi&#039;s capital city does provide some rather significant bonuses to your research, income and public order (reduction of penalties from corruption). Should you choose to go south, you&#039;ll have a much easier time and will be able to meet up with several other Lizardmen factions you can trade/confederate with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Last Defender&#039;&#039;&#039; - Starting in the ass-crack of the southeast, Kroq-Gar has a bit of a rough start. His only legendary lord neighbor, Tiktaq&#039;to, is still a veritable hike through Vampire/Tomb King infested deserts and Skaven/Ork-filled mountains. You do have two other generic Lizardmen factions nearby, but they often get wiped out within the first 20 turns by either Vampires, Tomb Kings or Malus Darkblade, if you don&#039;t do the job for them. To get to the rest of your Lizard brethren (who actually matter), you&#039;re going to have to carve a path of bloody carnage across the literal length of the map. There are a couple of ways to go about it, however. If you focus your efforts, you can shove off the coast above your capital city and take the Dragon Isles province directly to the north. If you head north quickly, you can snag a veritable batch of handy Legendary Lord traits that&#039;ll turn Kroq-Gar into a particularly potent duelist and secure a number of relatively isolated, defendable provinces before you press westward. If you&#039;d rather focus on pressing west initially... prepare for the long haul. You&#039;ll want to keep a banner army stationed either in Charnel Valley (where Clan Mors starts) or in Devil&#039;s Backbone (where the Court of Lybaras starts) to help defend against Ork or potential Dark Elf incursions.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lllllet&#039;s get ready to RUMBLE!&#039;&#039;&#039; - Brace yourself, you&#039;re deep in the Lustria-Bowl. Tehenhauin has the roughest start of all your lords, even including Horde-faction Nakai; though he has one potential ally to his immediate south, he has Vampire Coast, Dark Elves, Skaven and expansionist Empire folk surrounding him on all sides. Worse, you&#039;re effectively stuck with Skinks for infantry until you can make progress on your Skaven genocide quest. To this end, you&#039;re going to want to either focus on pumping out a flood of Skinks or focus on building your Beast Lairs to try to pump out some monstrous units to compensate for your lack of early-game muscle. Taking out the Vampire Coast first is strongly recommended, as not only do they spread vampiric corruption, but all of their settlements will provide you with valuable ports. From there, you can put the screws to the Dark Elves and Skaven to the south and claim some valuable land and sacrifices for Sotek.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tiktaq&#039;to====&lt;br /&gt;
* Perhaps the most... bland campaign, Tiktaq&#039;to just kind of exists in the middle of the Southlands, caught between some Tomb Kings, a random Empire faction and a fair few crusading Bretonnians. If you want, you can focus on allying with the Tomb Kings initially. They can provide a reasonable source of Trade income and provide a buffer against the burgeoning Greenskin-tide while you clean up the Bretonnians and Empire. Additionally, if you focus on sweeping east, you can get a solid point of entry into Lustria.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Gor-Rok==== &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The world is your Itza&#039;&#039;&#039; - Despite being solidly in the Lustria-Bowl and being a Saurus-dedicated, exclusive footlord, Gor-Rok is basically guaranteed supremecy due to beginning the game with Lord Kroak &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; starting with Itza as his capitol. Tehenhauin will often end up confederating with you pretty early and without much fuss due to the various Lustria-Bowl contenders beating the piss out of him. You&#039;ll likely want to focus your initial expansion down south to clear out the Skaven and secure the various resources found on the southeast coastline before pushing north to clear out the Vampires. Once you control the majority of Lustria, you effectively have free reign to set your sights anywhere you feel like conquering.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Nakai====&lt;br /&gt;
* Formerly the most wayward of the Children of the Old Ones, Nakai&#039;s start in Albion effectively tries to throw you against the forces of Norsca for a majority of your early-mid game. After some research, he&#039;s admittedly geared for it; natural Snow and Chaos Attrition immunity courtesy of your unique tech tree grants Nakai a lot more flexibility for engaging the northern Chaos factions and despite not controlling any of the settlements he captures, the Defenders of the Great Plan generate a &#039;&#039;ton&#039;&#039; of Untainted corruption. Though this won&#039;t really benefit you personally much, your allies (or fellow players on Co-Op campaigns) will find traversing the north considerably less threatening. Having said that, due to being a Horde faction, you&#039;re perfectly free to just abandon Albion entirely and find new stomping grounds to start your Campaign in.&lt;br /&gt;
In immortal empires he&#039;s even more lost starting in fucking cathay. But he does get a proper stegadon as a starting unit so that&#039;s a big bonus&lt;br /&gt;
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====Oxyotl====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Deep in enemy territory&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Nakai and &#039;&#039;potentially&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, Oxyotl has the most unique (and arguably best) Campaign. His initial start is a bit rough, being awkwardly sandwiched in the far north between the rapidly confederating Dark Elves to the west and the pugnacious Norscans to the east. Though his universal climate habitability is a (necessary) godsend, he&#039;ll find it somewhat difficult to defend and expand his home territory. If you can, try to focus down the Dark Elves once you secure your home province. Oxyotl&#039;s particular playstyle actually counters Dark Elves to a degree and if you can nip Malekith in the bud before he confederates the rest of his misbegotten kind, you can spare yourself a late-game headache and get a hell of an infrastructure set up with all the unique building chains found in Naggarond. Just make sure you keep a couple standing armies in the region for the Chaos Invasion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t neglect your missions&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is because, unless you want to get constant debuffs, buff random enemy armies into the stratosphere or cause the Chaos Invasion to happen way ahead of schedule, Oxyotl&#039;s army is going to be consistently busy warping around the map doing missions rather than naturally expanding your home territory. He can warp back to the capitol and any one Silent Sanctum of your choosing freely (which you can establish in any settlement you&#039;ve laid eyes upon at least once), but only once per turn and he does not regain any of the movement/actions spent prior to the warp. However, many of the missions Oxyotl needs to undertake often involves him razing or capturing enemy settlements, so you&#039;ll often find yourself with various holdouts sprinkled across the map. Just make sure that you get a banner army or two to defend your capitol if you can help it; things get &#039;&#039;extremely&#039;&#039; messy once the Chaos Invasion starts.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Your Silent Sanctums&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your other unique mechanic is a game-changer for the Lizardmen. Functionally, they&#039;re similar to Skaven Undercities; you can construct unique buildings to benefit any of your forces within the Region it was established, as well as any other regions neighboring it. This can include granting your forces permanent vision on everything within those regions, a flat 20% upkeep reduction for all of your forces within the area or even a random chance to deal damage to enemy forces happening by. Whenever you amass 8 gems, you can construct a Silent Sanctum in any settlement any of your characters have personally seen. One key function truly unique to Oxyotl is that you can actually construct a building that allows Oxyotl&#039;s army to teleport there at will. You can literally teleport a full Stegadon doomstack right next to an enemy faction&#039;s capitol city if you so desire. Suffice to say, Silent Sanctums are extremely useful and worth investing in.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Take Albion!&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you can afford the excursion, send Oxyotl or a generic banner army south to Albion and claim it. Several unique buildings in Konquata provide rather substantial financial boons and, especially when coupled with a specially kitted out Silent Sanctum, can serve as a rapid recruitment center for your efforts in the Old World. You&#039;re the only Lizardmen faction within a reasonable distance who can actually make use of these unique buildings and an early capture can prove to be a rather profitable investment for your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Immortal Empires===&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s here, the biggest Total War map to date, spanning effectively the entire Old World and then some (only a few less than fleshed out regions such as Nippon are excluded). The Lustriabowl has for the most part calmed down, a majority of the non-lizardmen factions have set sail for greener pastures and with the inclusion of the entire southern half of the continent, what factions that remain now have some breathing room. Having said that, this season, it&#039;s time for the Southlands Thunderdome to kick off! While Gor-Rok and Tehenhauin can breathe a sigh of relief, Kroq-Gar and Tiktaq&#039;to are now sandwiched in with factions from damn near every walk of (un)life; Vampire Counts, Tomb Kings, Daemons of Khorne and Tzeentch, Dwarfs, Orks, Skaven, High Elves, Empire, Bretonnians, the list goes ON.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re playing as Gor-Rok, Tehenhauin or even Mazdamundi, don&#039;t get too comfortable in Lustria however. Dark Elves in the form of Rakarth have set up shop on the western coast of Lustria, Clan Pestilins has borderline free reign of the south-eastern coastline, Markus Wulfhart continues his colonial ways in northern Lustria alongside his new-found Bretonnian buddy Alberic. The Vampire Coast is, in fact, still infested with the Vampire Coast and a few rogue factions of daemons muck about in central Lustria. Though it won&#039;t be &#039;&#039;quite&#039;&#039; as chaotic as before, given the extra breathing room, you&#039;ll still need to remain vigilant if you want to kick all the warm-bloods out of your homeland.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
One notable change is the Rite of Awakening; it no longer costs any gold to use, so once you unlock it, there&#039;s &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; reason to not immediately use it to spawn in a Slann for your recruitment pool. Enact that shit every single time it pops off cooldown.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scar-Veteran Doomstack Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;: Kroq-Gar probably got the biggest buff/change transitioning from Mortal Empires to Immortal Empires among lizardmen. The first notable perk is that his faction has been &#039;&#039;heavily&#039;&#039; re-tooled to focus on Saurus; specifically Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans. Faction wide, Saurus Spawning pools now grant additional perks beyond the ability to recruit Saurus units and, at 4th tier, will grant an additional +2 recruit rank for Scar-Veterans. This stacks with both the Humble trait and Star Chambers (which now, unfortunately, can only be constructed in province capitals), letting you &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; quickly start cranking out high-ranking Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs. If that weren&#039;t enough, all Scar-Veterans and Old-Bloods gain a 30% boost to experience gain and get an extra 1% Weapon Strength per rank they have (capping out at a [[/d/|+50% weapon strength buff at max level]]). The Last Defenders did lose their universal -10% upkeep discounts, but it&#039;s slightly made up for since Old-Bloods gain a -15% Upkeep reduction for their banner armies, encouraging you to run them as Lords for your more expensive doomstacks. Though by no means should you forsake taking a Slann here and there.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Kroq-Gar himself downgraded some of his personal buffs, comparatively. Gone are the leadership and armor buffs for Stegadons, Bastiladons, Terradons and Carnosaurs. Instead, Saurus and Cold-One Riders gain a 25% experience gain buff and his former -50% upkeep reduction for Saurus and Cold One units has simply dropped down to the fairly standard -15% universal upkeep reduction all his Old-Blood units get. Much more versatile than before, though.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Speaking of the scaly lizard, he starts on the eastern coast of the Southlands, smack dab above Teclis (for now). Teclis makes for a decent defensive ally if you so wish and a valuable buffer against the southern Chaos forces such as Kairos. Almost invariably, you&#039;re going to be forced upwards in your wars; smaller Skaven infest the Kingdom of Beasts province and Khalida is often prone to declaring war against you once you work your way north. Immediately following Khalida, you&#039;ll likely draw the ire of Clan Mors and be drawn straight into the Karak Eight-Peaks race, oddly enough.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Should you sail northeast, you can evict Ku&#039;gath from the Dragon Isles for a nice footstep into southern Grand Cathay and the Darklands. Anyone who&#039;s played enough of Mortal Empires might be so inspired for a fresh change of scenery.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Heading directly west to meet up with your lizard brethren is also far more tenable, now that you don&#039;t need to fight your way through an entire desert&#039;s worth of Tomb Kings. You&#039;ll still need to secure your starting province, but as the Golden Tower now stands as a convenient mountain pass, you can meet and greet Tiktaq&#039;to extremely early in the campaign. His starting region offers a nice launching point into your ancestral home, where you can ideally encounter Tehenhauin clinging to life on the bottom cape of Lustria. Should you wish to actually expand there for all the unique buildings and legendary lords ripe for confederation, you&#039;ll need to make sure you don&#039;t neglect your Southlands homelands.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039; - Probably the biggest change from TWWH2 is the expansion of Lustria and the separation of North and South &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;America&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Lustria. Warhammer Mexico has been tweaked a little bit, with Skeggi and the coast being their own province. Skeggi is more challenging now since they can spam Marauder Champions, meaning you&#039;ll be tied up with them a bit more than before.&lt;br /&gt;
**Cylostra is now further north, next to Alith Anar, but you&#039;ll still have to deal with Rakarth, Wulfhart, Bordelaux, and of course, the Awakened. Most of these guys, and especially Rakarth, are packing lots of anti-Large, so you&#039;ll want to plan your armies ahead: Carnosaurs and Temple Guard can deal with Rakarth, but you&#039;ll want some artillery to deal with Wulfhart.&lt;br /&gt;
**North of Hexoatl is still the same clusterfuck, and you&#039;ll want to appease the Sisters of Twilight so that you&#039;re not dealing with a war on two fronts; their AI is stupidly annoying, and they will break non-aggression pacts with you if your relations hover even slightly above neutral. This anon recommends trading any settlements that you capture from Morathi to them in exchange for a fee, which can net you 7-8k in gold and some goodwill. Any settlement north of the Fallen Gates is useless to you anyway, and because Wood Elves have terrible settlement defense, as soon as Morathi takes them back, you can do it all over again and farm gold, allegiance, and positive relations.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
The Cult of Sotek got a minor buff with the reworking of their sacrificial pyramid. Regiments of Renown now unlock normally, while sacrifices can be spent to acquire powerful Blessed units. In addition, the updated character UI makes swapping Tehenhauin&#039;s unique banners and ancillaries very convenient and a little more useful.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin starts in the southwest corner of Lustria and will need to move fast to prevent Rakarth and Lord Skrolk from getting too established. Generally, Skrolk will expand further and faster, taking most of southern Lustria from the minor faction to your east. Rakarth will have few targets for expansion and will declare war on you fairly early, whereas Skrolk will ignore you until he completes his conquest. However, Skrolk is likely to be easier to defeat early on and taking his territories will give Tehenhauin some safe territory to develop since Gor-Rok will be to your north and there&#039;s little to no chance the AI will cross the ocean from the Southlands. Then you can build up the resources you need to defeat Rakarth armies of darkshards and spearmen, which are far more difficult for Tehenhauin&#039;s early-game armies to deal with. Humble heroes and skink chiefs on stegadons can be very useful at that point.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Once these two threats are dealt with, it&#039;s up to you whether you&#039;ll finish off the remaining minor factions in Lustria (Spine of Sotek Dwarfs, Tower of Dusk, Bordeleaux Errants, Luthor Harkon) or ally with them to get some unit variety. If you head north, Markus Wulfhart still can&#039;t be negotiated with and you&#039;ll have to destroy him if you want to reach Hexoatl. You may find it more interesting to head east and reach &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;the Southlands&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Mordor, where Tiktaqto and Kroq-gar should be clinging to life as the Vermintide bears down on them. But be wary; heading to the Southlands means you&#039;ll likely meet Kairos and will need to deal with Changing of the Ways if you don&#039;t finish him off. Luckily, his defeat trait is useful for Tehenhauin.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Alternatively, using the new sea lanes will bring you to Grand Cathay and Nakai the Wanderer. Most of the territory available will be yellow, whereas Lustrian and Southlands territories are green, but the areas of Cathay you can conquer/confederate will be almost completely secure from future attack as long as you maintain good relations with Zhao Ming and Meow Ying. Nakai tends to be fairly easy to confederate once you&#039;ve gotten 3 or more armies, and while he&#039;s not a stellar legendary lord he is one of the best fighters available to the lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin can meet Oxyotl very early in the campaign, however all of Oxyotl&#039;s territory will be red. It&#039;s probably better to leave him independent rather than confederate him, as the AI cheats will allow him to defeat all the Chaos factions in the Southern Chaos Wastes far more easily than the player can, and none of that territory is worth anything to the Cult of Sotek. Of course, this could all be a moot point considering how hard it is to confederate Lizardmen in general.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=DISTRACTION_CARNIFEX&amp;diff=159576</id>
		<title>DISTRACTION CARNIFEX</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=DISTRACTION_CARNIFEX&amp;diff=159576"/>
		<updated>2023-06-19T14:27:54Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Total War: WARHAMMER */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{Cleanup}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Remember - SHOOT THE BIG ONES.|[[Imperial Infantryman&#039;s Uplifting Primer]] on Tyranids}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|All warfare is based on deception. Hence, when able to attack, we must seem unable; when using our forces, we must seem inactive; when we are near, we must make the enemy believe we are far away; when far away, we must make him believe we are near.| Sun Tzu, The Art of War}}&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Carnifex|CARNIFEX]]!&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;EVERYONE START [[dakka|SHOOTING]]!!&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
DISTRACTION CARNIFEX is a psychological wargame tactic that originated from [[Warhammer 40,000]] armies and has since spread to numerous other tabletop games. The short version is that you plonk a huge, scary-looking model in the middle of the table, which draws a tremendous amount of enemy gunfire, while the real threats make it up the field relatively unmolested. Basically like an RPG tank.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s named after the [[Carnifex]], one of the big monsters of the [[Tyranid]] faction, because the DISTRACTION CARNIFEX was one of that faction&#039;s most popular tactics after their 4th edition codex. Many models other than the Carnifex can be used as a DISTRACTION model; in that case, it might still be called a DISTRACTION CARNIFEX (even if it isn&#039;t a Tyranid), a DISTRACTION &amp;lt;WHATEVER&amp;gt; (e.g. &amp;quot;DISTRACTION [[Battlesuit#XV104_Riptide_Battlesuit|RIPTIDE]]&amp;quot;), or simply a DISTRACTION. The use of all caps is &#039;&#039;&#039;NOT&#039;&#039;&#039; optional.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==DISTRACTION TACTICS==&lt;br /&gt;
First, choose your DISTRACTION model. A DISTRACTION model must have the following properties:&lt;br /&gt;
*Physical size. Remember, you &#039;&#039;want&#039;&#039; the DISTRACTION to get shot. You still want it to stay alive so, by all means, chase after cover saves as best you can, but if there&#039;s ever a ranged threat on the table that can&#039;t see the DISTRACTION, then you&#039;re doing it wrong.&lt;br /&gt;
*Toughness. DISTRACTIONS don&#039;t necessarily need offensive punch -- they&#039;re actually fairly likely to die before they hit melee -- but you need them to grip the table for as long as possible.&lt;br /&gt;
*Scariness. Remember that DISTRACTION is a psychological tactic; the bigger and scarier your model &#039;&#039;looks&#039;&#039;, the better your chances are of it pulling enemy gunfire.&lt;br /&gt;
*Low(ish) points cost. The DISTRACTION is a &#039;&#039;support&#039;&#039; model (indirectly) -- it should not be hogging your army points. By all means, give it all the toughness-boosting wargear you can get, and maybe one really scary-looking melee weapon wouldn&#039;t go amiss, but you want the rest of your army to be able to compensate for the loss of the DISTRACTION in the early game.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Second, choose the rest of your army. Anything that can boost the DISTRACTION&#039;s toughness without being too vulnerable itself is a must. Aside from that, try to build your army with a focus on smaller models and glass cannons -- if the DISTRACTION is taking fire, you don&#039;t need to worry so much about the little guys.&lt;br /&gt;
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When you&#039;re deploying your army on the table, put the DISTRACTION down first, and put it right in the middle of the board (unless there&#039;s an obstacle in the middle, in which case you should put it in the longest unobstructed lane from front to back). Alternatively, you can deploy the DISTRACTION model through [[Deep Strike]], but only if you have a [[Drop Pod]] or some other method for guaranteeing that it&#039;ll enter from reserve by Turn 2 at the latest.&lt;br /&gt;
*As of 8th Edition rules, deep strike rules and all their mishaps and issues (e.g. scattering and delays) no longer apply, but you can only deep strike units outside of your own deployment zone starting on Turn 2, and even then the deep striking has to be at least 9&amp;quot; away from enemy models. As a result, it&#039;s best suited for things which either have a way to reroll charges or have something to shoot with in case they don&#039;t make the charge. &lt;br /&gt;
*You could also plonk your DISTRACTION down last, after building an intentionally-there hole in the middle of your army. Make it nice and memorable, and the other guy won&#039;t even remember you put the rest of the army there to begin with.&lt;br /&gt;
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During the battle, move the DISTRACTION either first or last in your turn order, and keep it in front of the rest of your force to keep its alleged threat fresh in your opponents&#039; minds.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If the DISTRACTION pays off, the battle will go something like this:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Guard turn 1:&#039;&#039;&#039; Everything shoots the DISTRACTION CARNIFEX.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyranids turn 1:&#039;&#039;&#039; Tyranids advance.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Guard turn 2:&#039;&#039;&#039; Everything shoots the DISTRACTION CARNIFEX.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyranids turn 2:&#039;&#039;&#039; Tyranids advance.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Guard turn 3:&#039;&#039;&#039; Everything shoots the DISTRACTION CARNIFEX. DISTRACTION CARNIFEX finally dies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyranids turn 3:&#039;&#039;&#039; Remaining Tyranids eat everyone else&#039;s face.&lt;br /&gt;
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===How to counter a DISTRACTION===&lt;br /&gt;
To be honest, if you can recognize a DISTRACTION play, you already know how to counter it; &#039;&#039;don&#039;t dedicate your entire army just to killing the DISTRACTION.&#039;&#039; If you spread your firepower in a vaguely sensible way, then you can weaken the DISTRACTION and the rest of the opponent&#039;s army. For example, if you have some weapon which only hurts the DISTRACTION on a 6+ and doesn&#039;t break its armor, maybe don&#039;t shoot the DISTRACTION with it.&lt;br /&gt;
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*In 8th Edition, many larger single-model DISTRACTIONS now have degrading statlines that significantly weaken their offensive presence if they drop a tier or two on that. If ignoring the DISTRACTION isn&#039;t fully an option, simply slapping it down a peg to gimp its stats is enough to safely prioritize more important aspects of your enemy&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*9th Edition has set a new standard in power creep that further reduces the viability of DISTRACTIONS. While monsters/vehicles can now fire their (non-Blast) ranged weapons while in melee at the target&#039;s they&#039;re &#039;&#039;in&#039;&#039; combat with (at a -1 to hit penalty if said weapons are Heavy), many weapons received not insubstantial buffs that make taking down single-entity targets like monsters and vehicles significantly easier (looking at you, Multi-meltas). New units like the Space Marine Eradicators can turn a DISTRACTION CARNIFEX inside out with a single shooting phase and in the (unlikely event) the DISTRACTION survives, it still likely has to deal with dramatically reduced stats thanks to the damage table mechanics introduced last edition.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Is it really a DISTRACTION model?===&lt;br /&gt;
People often confuse DISTRACTION units with Death Star units. To alleviate these misconceptions, we&#039;ll give a brief run-down of each role:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*DISTRACTION - a DISTRACTION unit, is large, menacing, and most importantly &#039;&#039;expendable&#039;&#039;. It needs to serve as its namesake suggests: as a DISTRACTION. It&#039;s not meant to be a line-breaker (although it can certainly act as one if given the chance), it&#039;s an assistant to your line-breakers, by re-directing damage from them that would otherwise gimp your front line. A DISTRACTION unit doesn&#039;t have to be heavily armed or be an avatar of destruction, it just has to be cost-effective enough that it seems menacing that your opponent can&#039;t leave it alone for too long (as it can still do a number to their units if it got close enough to be effective), but at the same time: cheap enough that losing it doesn&#039;t cripple your chances of victory.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Death Star - like the Star Wars superweapon it&#039;s named after, Death Star unit(s) are typically large (in body or bodies), destructive and &#039;&#039;expensive&#039;&#039;. They will typically (not necessarily always) encompass a significant portion of your army list, if your list wasn&#039;t already just tailor-made to support the Death Star unit(s) you&#039;re bringing. Where a DISTRACTION doing any real damage to your opponent&#039;s forces is simply taken as a bonus, a Death Star&#039;s entire purpose is to decimate your opponent&#039;s armies with impunity. Because of this, Death Stars &#039;&#039;aren&#039;t&#039;&#039; expendable and losing them early on can irrevocably cripple your army for the rest of the game (if you don&#039;t just lose shortly afterwards). As such, this is where your cost efficient DISTRACTION units come into play; DISTRACTIONS advance and tie up your opponent&#039;s army and attention while your Death Star gets into position and burns through their forces. &lt;br /&gt;
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It should be noted that there are cases where the line between a DS and a DISTRACTION starts to get blurry, either because the unit is far more powerful than its cost would suggest or because the rest of your units are almost as expensive as the unit in question. While very rare, such hybrids are by far the most effective DISTRACTIONS of all since if they&#039;re not killed immediately, they place an opponent in a no-win situation where ignoring the DISTRACTION is as likely to make them lose as falling for the DISTRACTION.  Primarchs stand out in particular, as they are always lethal and usually tanky enough to make their points back against anything other than another Primarch (if not table the opponent entirely given enough time and a particularly bad matchup).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Some good DISTRACTION models==&lt;br /&gt;
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===[[Warhammer 40,000]]===&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Tyranids]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Carnifex|CARNIFEX]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The original, but not really the best any more, because the Carnifex&#039;s point cost and access to toughness-boosting abilities have bounced back and forth a bit between editions. It was essential in 4th Ed, impossible in 5th Ed, and possible but not great in 6th, was up to the RNGs 7th, but work fairly well for the role in 8th and 9th. Scythefexes can do a huge amount of attacks at S6 for their relatively low points cost (and if you splurge for Screamer-Killers instead they get a LD debuff aura and an improved Bio-Plasma that messes up MEQs/TEQs), and Dakkafexes can put out absurd amounts of S6 firepower with much better accuracy than other Nids and some other armies might get: A full brood of Dakkafexes with two Devourers each can put out a whopping 72 S6 AP-0 shots, hitting on 3s with enhanced senses; their Thornback cousins don&#039;t get quite as many shots due to only getting one set of Devourers, but their Stranglethorn Cannons still give them a bit of punch and they ignore cover with all their shots. You bet people are gonna put firepower into them. [[Just as planned|Because they&#039;ll have no choice as your Dakkafexes will turn their infantry into mulch otherwise.]] Also you need it, because 8 and 9 (before codex updates) are the horde editions.&lt;br /&gt;
**They can also get a built-in -1 to hit via Spore Cysts for only 10 points per &#039;fex. Needless to say, it&#039;s totally worth it since it frees up your Venomthropes to protect other units.  &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Haruspex|HARUSPEX]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; A 6th Ed beast that seems to be practically made to fill the DISTRACTION role, especially since it can regain wounds by killing models in melee (if it gets there). [[Games Workshop|So the new unit replaces an old one that can&#039;t do its job any more]] -- [[JUST AS PLANNED]]. AS of 8th, they&#039;ve kinda fallen out of favor in favor of cheaper models or more powerful models, but it retains its melee power and self-healing effect. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION STONECRUSHER CARNIFEX&#039;&#039;&#039; - Same as the Carnifex above, but it absolutely annihilates enemy vehicles, as opposed to making mincemeat out of medium infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Hierodule|HIERODULE]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your Tyranid Knight equivalent. Massive damage sink and can be buffed to be nigh-invulnerable. For ~400 points, they put out titanic amounts of hurt and can absorb just as much.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Genestealer Aberrants|ABOMINANT]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Genestealer Cults have theirs too! He hits like a tank - he&#039;s got a solid 3 attacks with a S12 (he&#039;s S6 x2) AP-3 D6 hammer that has a rule which makes it always roll a 3 or higher for damage - plus exploding sixes. He&#039;s also rocking a 5+ Feel No Pain, -1 to incoming damage to a minimum of 1 and he regenerates D3 wounds every round. Granted, his save&#039;s nothing special, but he hits hard. Combine that with Cult deepstrike shenanigans and maybe a squad of Aberrants with Hammers (they get his -1 damage and FNP anyway, and his exploding sixes are an aura) and you&#039;ve got a hard-hitting distraction for not too many points - the Abominant&#039;s only 105, himself, and a squad of Aberrants with all Hammers (always take a Hypermorph for this configuration) is only 175 - the squad&#039;s unnecessary, but it makes for a harder-hitting deathball. This guy works especially well for this in smaller games, where he&#039;s bigger relative to everything around him.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Imperium]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Dreadnought#Chapter_Specific_Dreads|AXE DREADNOUGHT]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Again, drop pod one of these guys face first into the opponent&#039;s army and watch your opponents cry as your Dreadnought shrugs off even the strongest of attacks with its 3++ save on top of its AV12. Be careful though, if they get your back armor you&#039;re dead.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Saint Celestine|CELESTINE]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Celestine is at first glance unimpressive in this department, what with T3 W6 Sv 2+/4++, plus two flunkies with T3 W6 Sv 2+/4++. The fun, however, begins with the abilities. On top of having a 12&amp;quot; move with FLY and 6&amp;quot; Heroic Intervention, all attacks automatically go to the flunkies, who don&#039;t force morale tests. Thanks to Armor of Contempt, she has a functional 1+/4++ against attacks with AP. If worse comes to worst, you can always force a successful save with miracle dice. Then, any damage dealt to Celestine is reduced by 1. She can &#039;&#039;then&#039;&#039; skip her movement and shooting phases to resurrect a flunky and heal all her wounds. And if you somehow manage to get through all this, the first time Celestine dies, she comes back on a roll of anything but one. Keep a [[Sisters Hospitaller|Hospitaller]] nearby for a feel no pain if you really want to hammer it in.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Deathwing|DEATHWING KNIGHTS]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Put [[Belial]] with them, deepstrike them right next to all the most dangerous units in your foe&#039;s army, and watch them squirm to murder them all. They may all die either by the sheer amounts of firepower or melee directed towards them, but it&#039;s worth watching your foe ignore Devastators, Deathwing Terminators, Ravenwing, and other such unit, just for the sheer infamous reputation that the Knights have gained.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Dreadknight|DREADKNIGHT]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Take a T6 W4 Termi with a weapon for ~170 points and see the enemy focus him without really damaging him fast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Ogryn|OGRYNS]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; 10 Ogryn with 2 Primaris Psykers (faq stated each get 2 rolls) with biomancy for toughness and allied dark angel psyker for rerolls on everything and 4+ invulnerabilities. Watch it absorb loads upon loads of fire as your tactical units sneak up on the enemy.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Space Wolves|LONE WOLF]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Give your Lone Wolf 2 Fen Wolves and Terminator Armor and just let him roam. If you feel generous, slap a Chainfist on him. The fact that you gain points by letting this guy die means you can expend him without much consequence.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Skitarii|SKITARII VANGUARDS]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; To be honest, this only really works against someone who hasn&#039;t played against your army much, if at all (which, since it still isn&#039;t very common, should mean this works quite often). Barebones vanilla vanguard will run you 100pts for a ten-man squad and with their basic guns can put a serious smackdown on anything with a toughness value; add plasma calivers for extra distraction, though realize that this will make the unit a prohibitively expensive meat shield. That being said, if your opponent is targeting one vanguard squad with plasma calivers while the other three are closing in with a plethora of haywire and rad-weaponry unscathed then you&#039;re doing it right.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Adeptus_Mechanicus|KASTELANS]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; T7 W3 FNP 3+/(5++ against shooting) robots, take 4+ and a Techpriest Dominus with the Relic Pimp Cane in formation for extra hilarity. Give one of the Datasmiths the Robes of the Technomartyr for the sweet, sweet boon of giving everyone Cognis. Their ability to severely hurt assaulters on Overwatch will perturb your opponent even more&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Adeptus_Custodes|CUSTODES]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The entire army is basically Terminators on Steroids (albeit lacking in anti-tank) &#039;&#039;at the bare minimum&#039;&#039;. Special mention goes to the [[Telemon Heavy Dreadnought]], which is devastating in both melee and ranged combat, can take a heavy beating, is able to deep strike via From Golden Light They Come, and pretty much forces the opponent to either focus fire on it or die. And given that your other units will be moving up while the Telemon does its thing, the opponent may very well die even if he doesn&#039;t fall for the distraction. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Culexus|CULEXUS]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; While this sounds as though it shouldn&#039;t work (the Culexus model is human-sized), the eighth-edition target priority rules force the enemy of an all-assassin army to shoot the closest model, even if that model is an invisible (hit on a 6+, always) culexus assassin. With a low cost (they&#039;re cheaper than most armies&#039; infantry squads), five wounds apiece and a 4+ invulnerable save, they&#039;re almost impossible to kill too. Thankfully no longer possible with the Beta rules for targeting characters.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Imperial_Ordnance#Demolisher_Cannon|DEMOLISHER CANNON]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Historically the [[Vindicator]] and its cousin the [[Leman Russ Demolisher]] bounces back and forth between DISTRACTION and actual killing tool. The sheer power and potential of the Demolisher cannon meant that players would focus fire on them and be at risk of over committing, especially with the Leman Russ&#039;s high armor. At the same time, if ignored they could get their points back just by shooting once. They become DISTRACTIONs because if left alone they can ruin an enemy&#039;s plan, allowing them to flip back and forth between DISTRACTION and asset almost at will. Sadly the lack of templates in the latest ruleset weaken their killing power, shifting them more toward DISTRACTION as their reputation from ages past means a player with any amount of beard will have had it drilled into them not to ignore them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Rogal Dorn Battle Tank|ROGAL DORN]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The newest tank the Guard has access to has Toughness 9, a 2+ save, and 17 wounds. While it isn&#039;t core, it doesn&#039;t always matter. The Industrial Efficiency regimental doctrine lets it ignore AP -1. Nab the Knight of Piety Tank Ace for a 5++ and 5+++ versus mortal wounds, or Mechanical Pack Rat for a 1-3 Transhuman. Keep a Primaris Psyker nearby to require a 4+ to hit, and an [[Enginseer]] to heal it and apply a 5++.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Chaos]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION&#039;&#039;&#039; &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Chaos Space Marines|MURDER SWORD]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Chaos Space Marine one. Give a &#039;&#039;&#039;MURDER SWORD&#039;&#039;&#039; to a (random champion (&amp;lt;strike&amp;gt;NOT LEGAL&amp;lt;/strike&amp;gt; Exalted Champion...)) chaos lord,  or DAEMON PRINCE(illegal too (&amp;lt;strike&amp;gt;Nope, Daemon Princes can take it&amp;lt;/strike&amp;gt; NO, you really can&#039;t. A Hellforge sword is NOT a &amp;quot;powersword&amp;quot;)), stick it in a nest of Cultists, and laugh as the enemy targets it for the rest of the game because they don&#039;t want it getting within 400 clicks of their special snowflake character, though you are fucked if the enemy has good snipers, fucking Vindicaires... or artillery... or any decent amount of guns AH FUCK IT! This one doesn&#039;t work! &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Still decent for removing faggots like [[Marneus Calgar|papa smurf]].&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; NOPE! Calgar has Eternal Warrior, making him immune to the Sword&#039;s ID. Better have the dice gods at your back. [[Forge World|Almost makes us wonder how this thing can be a threat to a]] [[Primarch]]. &lt;br /&gt;
** (clears throat) &amp;quot;Look Out, Sir!&amp;quot; - on a 2+ for special characters. Even against Vindicares (but with a -2 penalty so ICs get 4+ LoS while everyone else gets a 6+) and Precision Shots. Yes, I checked before posting.&lt;br /&gt;
** (punches previous speaker in the throat) As the power creep goes on, even the Cultist ball gets stomped on (literally) by the new Knights as Stomp results of 6 remove all models from under the Blast. Yes, Removes. No saves, 2++, FNP or Look out Sir. Just pick those models off the table and put them into your bag. Even then, it wasn&#039;t that scary as a single turn of decent shooting can wipe your &#039;&#039;&#039;MURDERER&#039;&#039;&#039; before he gets near the corpse.&lt;br /&gt;
**Then again, the fact that the MURDER SWORD gets shot off the table means something else get is not getting shot at, so as far as distractions it&#039;s working.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Nurgling|NURGLINGS]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Take 6-9 bases of these cute little shits, infiltrate them as close to the enemy as possible behind ruins, enjoy a tasty 2+ cover save while your army moves up. Just pray they don&#039;t have flamers or ignore cover weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Daemon Engine|DAEMON ENGINE]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; A Forgefiend, Maulerfiend, Defiler, Kytan, or Heldrake will be a guaranteed fire magnet. Fortunately, they all have It Will not Die (tied for second best name for a 40k rule ever with He Has A Plan, only recently dethroned by the arrival in 40K of WHFB&#039;s best named rule, My Will Be Done), and the Drake has the added bonus of being a flyer when Skyfire is still a relative rarity. The reputation of the Defiler and Heldrake in particular will ensure that literally everything the enemy has will be hurled at you, including the models, the table, the dice, the players at the WHFB table, and chairs. Lots of chairs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Mutilator|MUTILATOR]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Pretty much the only use for Mutilators with the new CSM book, Deep Strike one behind the enemy (bonus points if it&#039;s a Tau or Guard gunline) and it will die in style as the enemy wastes a turn of valuable shooting which could have been better spent trying to bring down that Land Raider full of Terminators, or the rampaging Maulerfiend in the corner&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Eldar]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Wave Serpent|WAVE SERPENT]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Eldar&#039;s (in)famous transport, Wave Serpents will often immediately draw your opponent&#039;s eye, especially if you loaded it up with something threatening like Wraithguard, Howling Banshees or Fire Dragons. The part that&#039;ll piss them off, however, will be how unyieldingly difficult it is for someone to crack it open; no matter what gun they point at it, nothing is scratching that wave serpent&#039;s paint on a wound roll of 1-3 and &#039;&#039;even&#039;&#039; then, you still have a 3+, 5++ profile to deflect what actually does make it through. In a bind, Lightning Fast Reflexes can make this tank yet more challenging to crack open as well. If you need to give your opponents a little more incentive to try to focus fire on the Wave Serpent, the Twin-Linked Bright Lance will punch holes in other vehicles/monsters while the Twin-Linked Scatter Laser/Shuriken Cannon will chunk most squads of infantry quite rapidly. Probably your most &#039;&#039;practical&#039;&#039; DISTRACTION, you probably were bringing one anyways.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Wraithlord|WRAITHLORD]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; It&#039;s big, scary, has a 3+ save, is T8, subtracts 1 damage from multi-damage hits and is capable of fucking shit up. For the best results, make sure that you spring for the Ghostglaive; if your opponent wasn&#039;t taking your Wraithlord seriously before, they sure as hell will once that statue tears through one of their Leman Russ tanks or an entire squad of Space Marines like they&#039;re nothing. Even better, this thing is a {{W40kkeyword|core}} unit, so the full swath of psychic powers like Protect and Fortune can further enhance this thing&#039;s durability while Jinx and Doom can enhance the Wraithlord&#039;s lethality.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Wraithseer|WRAITHSEER]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; It&#039;s also big, scary, has a 3+ save with a 5++ just in case, subtracts 1 damage from multi-damage hits, is T8 and capable of fucking shit up. Its Ghostspear wrecks face at S10 AP-3 Dd3+3 and it can take a D-Cannon to slam enemies with a d3 S12 AP-4 Dd6 blast weapon that ignores line of sight. They&#039;re also full-blown psykers these days and can toss a Smite or two around, or just trade it out to turn its Ghostspear into a [[Rape|Dd3+5]] weapon, make enemies trying to fend it off subtract 1 from their hit/wound rolls against it or just cause some general psychic shenanigans. They also don&#039;t suffer from degrading statlines anymore, so even if it gets horribly maimed, it&#039;ll keep doing its job fantastically until the bitter end.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Wraithknight|WRAITHKNIGHT]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Its bigger, scarier, and has more D than the average pornstar. It&#039;s not cost efficient at all these days (3CP and 325 points minimum), but the unwary opponent who doesn&#039;t know better or someone still caught in an episode of 7th-Edition PTSD may get intimidated into overly committing firepower into it. That&#039;s not to say it isn&#039;t dangerous though. If you really want your opponent to pay attention to it, give it the Heavy Wraithcannons or Titanic Ghostglaive and evaporate one or two of their heavy support units.&lt;br /&gt;
**All of the above have access to healing through the &#039;&#039;&#039;Tears of Isha&#039;&#039;&#039; stratagem and Bonesinger (when allowed) support to make them even &#039;&#039;harder&#039;&#039; to kill.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Dark Eldar]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION TALOS PAIN ENGINE:&#039;&#039;&#039; The best part about DISTRACTION TALOS is that nobody plays DEldar. Therefore, the majority of the player population has no idea what to expect. Player: &amp;quot;Wait, Toughness &amp;lt;i&amp;gt;&amp;lt;b&amp;gt;seven&amp;lt;/b&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/i&amp;gt;?!&amp;quot; You: &amp;quot;Yep.&amp;quot; Player: &amp;quot;With 3+ and FnP?!&amp;quot; You: &amp;quot;You betcha. Oh, also, enjoy [[Rip_and_tear|haywire and Shred]].&amp;quot; Your enemy then proceeds to unload &amp;lt;i&amp;gt;&amp;lt;b&amp;gt;everything they have&amp;lt;/b&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/i&amp;gt; at your slow, dead &#039;ard, floating scorpion beast while your gunboats, Scourges, and Reavers tear them [[Anal_circumference|several new assholes]]. For better results,(aka:something that can also function as a threat) add a cronos with a spirit probe. &amp;quot;&amp;lt;i&amp;gt;&amp;lt;b&amp;gt;4+ &amp;lt;/b&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/i&amp;gt; FnP!?!?!&amp;quot;. If you have the [[Haemonculus]] covens supplement then take the dark artisan formation and give your heamonculus the nightmare doll for a 3+ FnP, if you make him your warlord then you get a 3+ FnP re-rolling 1s.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Orks]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Deff Dred|DEFF DRED]]&#039;&#039;&#039; Just kit it out with a few scary looking weapons, let it stumble forward with the boys. This is really effective when your enemy takes less anti tank because you are playing a mainly infantry army.  This is also better used in smaller games, as this thing looks like a scary, choppy hulk of metal (which it is).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Ork Boy|BOYZ]]&#039;&#039;&#039; Let’s face it, as 8th is Horde Edition, a good old-fashioned Boyz mob and a [[Weirdboy]] using the psychic power Da Jump means you can deposit said Boyz Mob (almost) exactly where you want it. Just make sure the mob is 20-30 strong and they might actually survive past the DISTRACTION period. Also make sure you have several more 30-Boy mobz heading across the board. [[Ork Kommando|Kommandos]] also make an excellent DISTRACTION unit, especially being (in 9th) only 3 points more expensive than Boyz; a deep strike and first turn charge in the backline is pure cancer to Tau and IG gunlines.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Ghazghkull Mag Uruk Thraka|THRAKA]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ghazghkull is now the definition of absolute unit, being both dead &#039;ard and dead choppy - he&#039;s got a S14 melee weapon with -4 AP and 4 flat damage, plus a 2+ to hit - and, since he is a GOFF ORK and his captain aura benefits GOFF ORKS, he&#039;s re-rolling ones. He also takes a maximum of 4 wounds a turn, he&#039;s rocking a 2+ save with a 4+ invuln, and - with Makari - a 6+ Feel No Pain on top of all of that. Ghaz can go toe-to-toe with Guilliman and win somewhat consistently - he&#039;s most definitely a DISTRACTION if he wants to be. Granted, he&#039;s got a steep points cost, but if you stick him in the Tellyporta, he&#039;ll DISTRACT the hell out of his enemies and then proceed to krump the closest Knight.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Tau]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[El&#039;Myamoto (Sub-commander Darkstrider)|DARKSTRIDER]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Enemy has a charging focused army and you only took one Pathfinder squad, stick this guy in there with a Grav-Inhibitor Drone and laugh as your opponents thrashing, snarling wave of hate never comes anywhere close.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Stealthsuit_Team|STEALTHSUITS]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dirt Cheap and pretty durable for their cost (T4, 3+ armor, 2W apiece and you can mount shield generators on the lot of them). Infiltration lets you deploy them right on top of relics and capture points, which will certainly draw the enemy to them. With a minus 1 to hit debuff that they benefit from all the time, your enemy will have a hard time hitting them. Plus you can mount some Fusion Blasters on them for added scariness. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Battlesuit#XV95_Ghostkeel_Battlesuit|GHOSTKEEL]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The stealth field grants a -1 to hit with shooting attacks. The drones an additional -1. Most infantry will only be able to hit this thing at 6+, Marines at 5+ and Conscripts/Boyz can&#039;t hit it at all. This will goad them into charging into melee. 2 flamers are recommended to prevent reliable charges. Slap on a target lock for accuracy and a shield generator for survivability. Infiltration will allow you to place it right in the enemy&#039;s face, perfect for baiting them into wasting their firepower. Oh and you can easily field 2 of these for the cost of one riptide. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Battlesuit#KV128_Stormsurge_Ballistic_Suit|STORMSURGE]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Its big and has even bigger gun. Slap it somewhere centerline and in plain sight behind some cover and perhaps drone or three and you have fine DISTRACTION that can sometimes hit something with said big gun.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====[[Necrons]]====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[C&#039;tan|C&#039;TAN SHARD]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Now you have several flavors of C&#039;Tan shards to use: The Nightbringer, Deceiver, Void Dragon, and Transcendent C&#039;Tan. All very dangerous and capable of dealing tons of damage if left alone. They also can only take three damage per phase. An opponent will have to dedicate themselves to attacking them three phases in a row in order to deal the 9 wounds required to defeat them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Monolith|MONOLITH]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Use only if you are [[Stupid|retarded.]] &amp;quot;Could&amp;quot; be used to quickly cut line of sight on more important units and has a few nifty tricks up its sleeve, as a &#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION MONOLITH&#039;&#039;&#039; can turn into a &#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION BLOB&#039;&#039;&#039; if it&#039;s allowed to use its gate, but in practice it&#039;s more like [[Shit_twinkie|syphilis.]]&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Tomb_Stalker|TOMB STALKER]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Deep strikes reliably, doesn&#039;t deteriorate with damage, has good weapons and durability, and can carry a gloom prism to screw with psykers. Deep striking a T7, 9 wound MC that can make Deny the Witch rolls directly on top of your enemy&#039;s backline is sure to cause a stir.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Skorpekh Destroyer|SKORPEKH DESTROYER]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Cheap, fast, and capable of eating heavy infantry, monsters, and even tanks alive in melee, they bring a 3+ save and 3 T5 wounds per model, letting them hit that perfect sweet spot of being tough enough to survive your opponent&#039;s attention for a few turns while still being fragile enough to keep your opponent from feeling like they&#039;re wasting their shots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Canoptek Doomstalker|DOOMSTALKER]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Size matters, and at 6 inches tall this is one of the biggest regular units in the game. This thing absolutely towers over the battlefield, and it&#039;s topped with an ECKS BAWKS HUEG gun that will surely delete everything in sight if it gets a good roll.  12 wounds isn&#039;t all that much for a tank so it&#039;s a tempting target, but T6 with a 4++ invuln and Living Metal will soak up a tremendous amount of infantry fire and damage brackets don&#039;t affect shooting stats. It even gets to cover nearby friendlies with a free overwatch shot from its main gun.  All this for only 130 points.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Warhammer Fantasy Battles===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION [[Skaven|HELLPIT ABOMINATION]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - A giant scary monster, which can wreck whole hordes of infantry with some luck. Due to it&#039;s ability to regenerate, any sensible enemy will focus it down... Except it also has a chance to RISE FROM THE GRAVE, which forces the enemy to continue focusing on it until it dies for good.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION TREEMAN&#039;&#039;&#039; - Being worse than it was in last edition, it is still big and tall, and is a fine monster killer, and its shooting can wreck small elite units, so it is likely to attract much dakka (vs very inexperienced player).  Beware of fire, or Treebeard&#039;s cousin becomes kindling.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION WYVERN&#039;&#039;&#039; - Just fliess behind enemy units the whole game. Wrecks chaos very easily, assuming the enemy doesn&#039;t realize that it&#039;s just a distraction.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION MONSTROUS ARCANUM MONSTERS&#039;&#039;&#039; - Exactly as it says on the tin. The supplement gave players a whole lot of monsters to add into their armies, but some are essentially tailor-made to be effective distractions. From the Dreadmaw, the Dread Saurian, Rogue Idol, Khemric Titan to the gamut of creatures that have the word dragon in their names, there is a wide choice for players. And most of those monsters are ridiculously powerful to boot.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Warmachine and Hordes===&lt;br /&gt;
It can be done here too!&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION CENTURION&#039;&#039;&#039; - The [[Cygnar|Cygnarian]] Heavy Warjack Centurion is made for this - Though reasonably killy in and of itself, it&#039;s main job is absorbing stupid amounts of fire and hits while your shooty army gets into place, and with defensive buffs up the arse, Cygnar can easily make it even tougher.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION BERSERKER&#039;&#039;&#039; - Khador is nothing but inventive - Though the Beserker Heavy Warjack is unstable and technologically weak compared to its predecessors, it can still majorly fuck up some unlucky sod with its twin axes. That is not why you use it, though - It is because it have a tendency to explode when given focus. It is fairly cheap too, so send it after whatever you want and watch as it gets blown up by anyone on the field - Your enemy if they manage to bring it down, or you, for the lulz.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION GHORDSON BASHER&#039;&#039;&#039; - This might just be the epitome of distraction - A rather fast Heavy Warjack made for one thing, smashing things with its head. Really. That is what it does. Throw it into the enemy and watch as it bounces the enemy about like gravity went on a break.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION AVATAR OF MENOTH&#039;&#039;&#039; - Arguably the best of the Character Heavy Warjacks (The [[Cryx]] Deathjack being the only other real contended for the title), it is big, scary, hits like an a freight train and is hard enough to endure the return fire. Throw the Choir Hymn of Passage, the Vassal of Menoth&#039;s Enliven and, if you are playing Grand Scrutator Severius, put Defenders Ward on it for a 12/23 monster that&#039;s immune to non-magical shooting, can move after taking damage and can lock enemy units in place/force them to move towards you for your next turn when shit is going to get fucked. This is literally the Sain Distraction Carnifex as it forces the enemy to move towards it instead of doing anything productive, and combined with Harbinger of Menoth&#039;s feat you either force the enemy to stay still, or get blasted by instagibbing Fire damage roll.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION COLOSSAL&#039;&#039;&#039; - Basically every Colossal is a giant distraction tool to draw fire. Especially against inexperienced players who vastly overestimate their threat value.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Warhammer Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
There a few rather eye popping units that get many players scrambling to throw everything and the kitchen sink at them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION GOTREK&#039;&#039;&#039; - Considering the sheer volume of Mortal Wounds this bugger can throw out, the re rolls to hit and wound, and reducing all multi damage and insta kill attacks done to him to one damage, many players may have a tendency to panic and throw everything they have at him.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION MEGA-GARGANT&#039;&#039;&#039; - The newly released (and over priced) Mega-Gargant can be allies into any army in a similar manner to Gotrek. Each of the three variants is a colossal model that can stare down the Everchosen and is immune to insta-kill abilities. Naturally, this tactic is less effective when running their own faction [[Sons of Behemat]], where everything is a big scary monster.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DISTRACTION GOD&#039;&#039;&#039; - Most AoS factions have access to some God or Demigod level character, and befitting such characters, they often include some mixture of [[Kragnos|monstrous combat dps]], [[Nagash|insane]] [[Teclis|magic]] abilities, game bending shenanigans, or a bit of everything. So naturally, most opponents will try to single out this threat.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Total War (Historical)===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Cavalry. Always cavalry. Regardless of the version, cavalry in Total War exists to be the distraction. On their own, cavalry tends to fare poorly against anything but missile infantry. But a cavalry flank attack against already engaged infantry will cause all but the most elite units to collapse instantly. If the AI has anti-cavalry units on the field expect them to brainlessly follow your cavalry around. In Shogun Total War however, Cavalry stood no chance to [[Samurai|samurai&#039;s 1000-fold katana of destruction]] that they only exist to snipe artillery or generals, not for prolong combat.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Total War: WARHAMMER===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Due to how differently total war&#039;s vision for warhammer is when comparing to it&#039;s tabletop version (no toughness stats, regen has limit, poison is a debuff, physical resists gets countered by magic attack, character entity deals splash damage instead of having many attacks, etc...), while adding some Total War trademark  mechanics like fatigue, and wounded (added in game 3 where single target unit gets weaker the less health they have), many units that were known for their DISTRACTION CARNIFEX status on the tabletop [[skub|may have subjected to changes]]. Not to mentioned Total War is a video game that does not have the same &amp;quot;use dice to determine your unit&#039;s fate&amp;quot; RNG&amp;quot; gameplay like the tabletop. Without toughness and wound, monsters instead have high hp per model, reign supreme against the infantries with their AP damage and splash attacks while routing them with fear and terror. Infantry do have some advantages by giving halberd and spear unit anti-large, which sort of works, but still not enough since monster units can splash damage and terror route those poor fuckers. Sword or anti-infantry infantries are purely garbage and snacks to the superior monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Variations==&lt;br /&gt;
There are a couple variations on the DISTRACTION Carnifex theme.&lt;br /&gt;
*High Axe Low Sword - Used primarily in fantasy wargames, especially pre-Age of Sigmar Warhammer, although it can be applied elsewhere. The idea is to place several Distraction Carnifexes on one side of the field, forcing you opponent to overcommit to one side with their &amp;quot;tough&amp;quot; units. On the other side of the field, a fast, hard-hitting unit or units is placed, allowing that group to strike before proper defense can be mounted.&lt;br /&gt;
*Magician&#039;s Left Hand - The magician&#039;s left hand is the opposite of a Distraction Carnifex.  It is valuable, innocuous, and fragile. Typically it&#039;s worth far more points than it appears and can inflict massive damage if ignored.  Small, elite units with attached characters often fit into this category (although they aren&#039;t tough enough to be Death Stars). Distraction Carnifexes are almost mandatory with these types of units, as it allows them to function properly.&lt;br /&gt;
*Space Created - Stolen from [[video game]] MOBAs, the term refers to a player character acting as a Distraction Carnifex. This generally allows that player&#039;s team to secure an objective or just deny the opponent farm, often at the cost of the player&#039;s life. Also used facetiously to refer to a player faffing about. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Warhammer 40,000]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Warhammer 40000 Tactics]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen&amp;diff=505152</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen</title>
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		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Lords */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Sar Sotek!|Game battle chant for Lizardmen}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactics page for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why play Lizardmen==&lt;br /&gt;
*You love the parts of Jurassic Park where the dinosaurs eat everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
*They&#039;re [[awesome|aztec dinosaurs riding dinosaurs]] into battle. Some of those dinosaurs also have magical lasers strapped to them.&lt;br /&gt;
*You want to be a master of the arcane, but you don&#039;t want to wear [[High Elves|foppish headgear]] or have a racial lifespan only in the [[The Empire (Warhammer Fantasy)|double digits]].&lt;br /&gt;
*You&#039;ll have a nearly fearless army that&#039;s more likely to fight to the death before they turn tail and run.&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMwpC70di2w Do you want to see what one of these does to your enemies?]&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;A Multitude of Monsters&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Lizardmen have the largest diversity of massive monsters in the game at their disposal. Between the various Bastilidons, Stegadons and Carnosaurs you can field, you won&#039;t be wanting for big beasties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Intimidating Presence&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unsurprisingly, the average man will struggle to keep calm and collected when facing down a stampede of hungry carnivorous dinosaurs many times his size. Virtually every monster and cavalry unit in this army inspires fear and terror in the mortal hearts of men; a few well timed Carnosaur charges can break and rout forces not outright immune to psychology. Conversely, this also renders your monsters immune to fear/terror effects as well.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Resilient Frontline&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus Warriors, even unshielded, are among the most durable baseline infantry units in the game. Though their damage output is rather low, their good armor and leadership will ensure they&#039;ll hold the line. Most non-AP grindfests will tend to work out in your favor on virtue of that alone. Of course this isn&#039;t even mentioning how tanky higher tier units like the Temple Guard or Kroxigors are.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mastery of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039; - With the notable exception of High Elves, Lizardmen have reliable access to more schools of magic than any other race. Slann and the mighty Lord Kroak offer not only some of the most reliable casting in the game, but have consistent access to the otherwise elusive Greater Arcane Conduit skill. Your skink priests are no push overs in magical matters either and are very cost effective options for when slann [[heresy|just aren&#039;t your thing]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexible Artillery&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where most other factions have to slowly wheel siege engines into place and are vulnerable to attacks in melee, Lizardmen give no fucks. Due to their Solar Engines and Ballistae being strapped on the backs of mighty Bastilidons/Stegadons, they can easily reposition themselves and hold their own in melee combat. Additionally, were the actual artillery models of other races can actually be destroyed, the Ballistae and Solar Engines will remain fully intact so long as the creature bearing it remains standing.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cavalcade of Cavalry&#039;&#039;&#039; - Cold Ones, Horned Ones, Terradons and Ripperdactyls, oh my! Though not as fast or as effective as some other faction&#039;s cavalry, you have a very diverse selection of fast-moving dinosaurs that can outflank enemies and flexibly adapt to the variety of terrain you may find yourself in. Just don&#039;t expect your cav to top any particular charts when compared against any faction that specializes in them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - As your army consists heavily of predatory animals that excel at sniffing out prey, your enemies will be hard pressed to remain hidden from them. Enemies that rely on stealthy abilities like Stalk are revealed to you far more quickly than others, giving you far more time to react to (in battle) ambushes than other factions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of the weapons wielded by your Skinks are poisonous, inhibiting the mobility/combat performance of enemies afflicted by their noxious attacks. Despite poison no longer dealing constant damage like on the tabletop, their debuffs are still useful for weakening the enemy for your frontline troops. Thank to the recent update that removes any form of poison debuffs that can apply to the player units through friendly fire, Skink&#039;s poison darts are even better.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - You are tied with the Skaven for the honor of having the most DLC. You also have two FLC lords on top of all this, so between a grand total of 7 legendary lords and three DLC lord packs, you are the most supported main game faction in Total War: Warhammer II.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessings of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of your units have &amp;quot;Blessed&amp;quot; variants available in casual multiplayer matches or the campaign. Blessed units are effectively pseudo-Regiments of Renown and every single one is given a buffed health pool and, where applicable, an increased model count per unit. Additionally, many of these blessed units receive additional passive abilities or upgraded stats to further their combat potential. What&#039;s better is, unlike Regiments of Renown, you can technically have as many blessed units as you want. The only downside (admittedly a big one) is that in order to acquire blessed units in the campaign, you must complete randomly generated quests that issue a set quantity of a random blessed unit upon completion. If you want an army of blessed Carnosaurs, you&#039;re going to have to earn it. This is a complete non-issue in causal multiplayer matches, where blessed units are freely available for a very minor upcharge in cost compared to regular variants. Blessed units are unavailable in competitive games.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slow&#039;&#039;&#039; - A majority of the Lizardmen list, namely Saurus infantry, take their sweet time to cross the field. Though there are exceptions to this, such as the various cavalry and Skink units available to you, this particular weakness is exacerbated by...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vulnerable to Range&#039;&#039;&#039; - ...their dearth of viable missile units. The only ranged infantry available to you are Skinks; particularly squishy infantry that, though nimble, have pitiful range and DPS against anything shielded and/or armored. Your more potent offensive options, namely Salamanders or Stegadons/Bastilodons, cannot fire while moving and are rather easy to tie down in melee. Defensively, though your Saurus are quite tanky and often come with shields, they are very vulnerable to being kited by ranged cavalry/infantry due to their rather slow movement speed. Additionally, all your units save for Gor-Rok are stuck with Bronze Shields (35% block chance), meaning that even when they&#039;re in a position to use them, you&#039;ll still be soaking a significant portion of the incoming shots all the same. The same can also be said about most of your monsters, with some minor exceptions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Generic Character Usefulness&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a big one. Other than your magic characters (i.e. Slann and Skink Oracles which are pretty much good because they have magic), your other generic lords/heroes just don&#039;t stack up. When you compare them to the other factions&#039; characters, they fall short in their respective roles, whether that&#039;s melee prowess, support utility, campaign map usefulness, you name it. Best to rely on your monstrous units and magic to fulfill their roles!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sub-par Air-Force&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though you have flyers, a luxury many other factions lack, they&#039;re among the weakest/slowest of them. Terradons, Ripperdactyls, and Coatls aren&#039;t &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039;, per se, but they will lose if faced with the flying cavalry/monsters in their weight class from the likes of Bretonnia or High/Wood Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive Roster&#039;&#039;&#039; - As you can imagine, breeding and training massive dinosaurs and mounting arcane instruments of war onto them isn&#039;t cheap. All of your high tier units can get crazy expensive both in initial cost and upkeep. Even the bog standard Saurus Warriors come at a premium compared to some other factions options, though this is only particularly notable in competitive multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rampage&#039;&#039;&#039; - This was a much bigger problem in Game 2, where pretty much everything except for Skinks and Slaan would lose control and mindlessly charge the closest thing they could see. Game 3 has more or less restricted this issue to your feral monsters, letting your infantry keep their cool and do their jobs. That said, it&#039;s still a problem if your Carnosaur suddenly bolts into that nearby unit of halberds while your lords/heroes are otherwise occupied.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bland Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Oxyotl and &#039;&#039;possibly&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, the Lizardmen have the most boring campaign mechanics of any of the game II races (including some of the game I ones). Their unique mechanic, the Geomantic Web, is a very passive and basic provincial buff that takes a lot of resources and time to properly build up to a level you&#039;ll actually notice the effects of and offer no benefit to provinces you don&#039;t &#039;&#039;completely&#039;&#039; control. Yes, losing that one minor settlement causes the provincial capital to shut off its Geomantic Pylon until you reclaim it. Additionally, without mod support, Lizardmen are among the most stubborn and oppositional to confederation. Fortunately, though it isn&#039;t a top priority for them, CA is aware that Lizardmen need their campaign mechanics updated to bring them up to modern standards. Hopefully that update comes soon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Locked Content&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though a con for virtually every other faction in the game, this is a particularly notable one for Lizardmen. Many, if not most of the Lizardmen&#039;s better units are locked behind DLC lord packs. You&#039;ll need the Prophet and the Warlock for all units marked with DLC 1, the Hunter and the Beast for everything marked with DLC 2 and the Silence and the Fury for everything marked DLC 3.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
There are a couple of perks and abilities shared across a significant portion of the lizardmen unit roster, which will be mentioned here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Primal Instincts&#039;&#039;&#039; - A perk found on a majority of the Lizardmen roster (exempting Lords/Heroes and Skinks), primal instincts will cause a unit with this ability to rampage out of control should their health drop to 20% or less. This can be a bit of a mixed blessing, as the rampaging unit will receive a +15% Charge Bonus and a +8 Melee Attack bonus and continue to fight nearby opponents in situations that any other unit would turn tail and rout. The bad news is that your opponent has more control over the rampaging unit than you do; rampaging units will single-mindedly charge at the nearest enemy unit, which your opponent can take to his advantage by using faster infantry/cavalry to kite the rampaging unit while his ranged infantry/artillery finishes it off. Of course, this is also factoring in that by the time these bonuses kick in, your Saurus unit or Carnosaur is typically on its last legs and won&#039;t last much longer anyways. Should the rampage end &#039;&#039;before&#039;&#039; the unit dies, they&#039;ll usually begin to rout from the field and will often be too far out of position for you to properly recover them.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; buffs Primal Instincts for Saurus Units; no longer causing rampage (thank god) while triggering much sooner (Triggering at 50% health as opposed to TWWII&#039;s 20%). When active, it gives Saurus units a +15% Charge Bonus, +10 Melee Attack and +5% Physical Resist buffs that remain active indefinitely so long as the Primal Instinct threshold has been crossed. This applies even to Saurus cavalry and since you can actually &#039;&#039;control&#039;&#039; them when Primal Instincts pops now, you can be far more surgical when taking advantage of these buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold Blooded&#039;&#039;&#039; - A targetable ability found on most Lizardmen Lords and Heroes, Cold Blooded helps to counter the innate weakness in the Lizardmen faction; their tendency to rampage. When used, Cold Blooded will snap a single unit out of a rampage (if they are currently doing so) and will temporarily buff their leadership. This ability can be used pre/post rampage as well, as the leadership buff can potentially prevent a rampage from occurring or can help prevent a tattered unit from routing once their rampage expires. As this ability has a somewhat lengthy cooldown an is only found on Lords/Heroes, care should be taken on when it is used and what it is used on. It can also be used on units that were forced to rampage by an ability or spell from enemy units, providing a unique bit of counterplay against such tactics that other factions lack.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all non-Slann/Skink units in your roster, this allows your units to detect hidden or stealthed units far sooner and from farther away than other armies (around 160 meters). This also disregards any faction/unit/terrain modifiers that enhance stealth, with the only exception being the &#039;&#039;Unspottable&#039;&#039; trait. With proper coverage, this can make ambushing or outflanking your forces extremely challenging to do discreetly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Aquatic&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all Skink infantry, Kroxigors (though their stat card doesn&#039;t mention the trait, they still receive the Aquatic bonus) and your Salamander/Razordon hunting packs, this not only allows them to ignore the usual penalties for fighting in water-logged environments, but gives them a 20% bonus to melee attack/defense when they do so. Considering non-aquatic infantry suffers a 20% malus to those stats when slogging around in the water, this can become a rather substantial combat buff for a significant portion of your roster (keep your Saurus dry). Potentially losing matchups will suddenly swing into your favor and that&#039;s not even factoring in your abundant poisoned weaponry and robust catalog of supportive magics to widen that gap further. As amazing as all that sounds... marsh and shallow water environments are rather few and far in between. Additionally, for the maps that &#039;&#039;do&#039;&#039; have swamped areas, coercing your opponent to willingly splash around with you is a battle all its own, one you&#039;re not likely to succeed in without careful planning.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Quick Learners&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another Skink-exclusive ability, this greatly increases the rate that your Skinks gain ranks. This helps distinguish Skinks against comparable chaff infantry since they&#039;ll benefit from rank-boosted stats much more quickly and, as such, makes them surprisingly effective early-mid game infantry. This perk also applies to units such as Terradon Riders due to having Skink Riders.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Campaign Mechanics==&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Geomantic Web&#039;&#039;&#039;: Pretty much the only unique thing every Lizardmen faction (except Nakai) has, and it&#039;s a bit lackluster. Lizardmen have access to a special view of the global map that displays the Geomantic Web, with every region capital acting as a nexus point. Once you control an entire region, you can build up Geomantic Pylons in order to strengthen the Geomantic Web, which in turn offers gradually stronger perks (like an increasing percentage to building income, higher ranked recruitment, etc) the more you increase it. At the beginning of the game, these bonuses are quite small, but as you expand and enhance the Geomantic Web over the course of the campaign, these benefits can make a genuine impact on your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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There are a few problems with this mechanic, however. The first major one is that you receive &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; bonuses if you don&#039;t control the entire region. Obviously, this isn&#039;t a problem when you&#039;re surrounded by factions you were planning on killing off, but this becomes complicated if an ally suddenly captures that last settlement in a region before you could. If it was another Lizardmen faction, you could maybe play the long game and eventually confederate them, but otherwise you&#039;d be forced to attack them in order to claim the region so that you can actually activate the Geomantic Web benefits. Warhammer III and mods have offered ways to purchase or trade settlements, but in many cases the AI tends to value each settlement they own far more than anything else you could offer them. This often leads to lengthy wars against what could&#039;ve otherwise been a valuable trading partner and buffer against foreign elements that you&#039;d otherwise have to deal with yourself. The second major problem with the Geomantic Web is that even if you build up a regional capitol to tier V and build the appropriate pylon, it does &#039;&#039;nothing&#039;&#039; without an adjacent region &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; having a tier V capitol and pylon. That&#039;s right, the strength of the Geomantic Web is reliant on multiple regions being entirely under your control and also having them fully built up. This can be a time and gold consuming process that forces the Lizardmen player to take it slow; Lizardmen economy tends to be on the low side of the spectrum, made worse by their fairly expensive unit roster and lengthy build/research timeframes. And of course, if an enemy army rolls in and claims one of your minor settlements, the Geomantic Web benefits for that entire region are shut off entirely, further stemming your growth rates. The third issue with the Geomantic Web; it&#039;s a very basic and uninteractive mechanic. Aside the baked in map-painter that is the (Im)Mortal Empires campaign, there&#039;s not much incentive or direction to build up the Geomantic Web besides using it to squeeze every last bit of gold or growth you can to boost your dismal economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Rites&#039;&#039;&#039;: Much like most of the Warhammer II races, Lizardmen have access to special rites that, generally, grant them temporary buffs for the cost of some gold. While every faction has one or two unique rites, every Lizardmen faction has access to and must perform the &#039;&#039;Rite of Awakening&#039;&#039; in order to recruit new Slann lords. Fluffy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacrifices to Sotek (Tehenhauin)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tehenhauin&#039;s unique focus, in addition to the Geomantic Web, is his crusade against all of Skaven kind. By gathering captives from battles, you can sacrifice them to Sotek to gain empire-wide boosts to growth or to recruit the Blessed variants of the Lizardmen roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Dedication to the Old Ones (Nakai)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Nakai&#039;s main mechanic as a Horde faction. By capturing settlements and dedicating them to one of three Old Ones, Nakai can unlock faction-wide buffs to his hordes. He can also spend the accumulated Favor of the Old Ones to recruit Blessed Units or activate temporary buffs or bonuses for use in battle.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Visions of the Old Ones (Oxyotl)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Oxyotl&#039;s special perk, Oxyotl can teleport across the entire Warhammer Fantasy world to specific targets once per turn in order to accomplish an issued mission for rewards. By completing these missions, he can be given several rewards (such as Blessed Spawnings, increased favor from fellow Lizardmen factions or temporary buffs for certain units), but the most prominent and consistent reward are special gems used to purchase Silent Sanctums. Silent Sanctums act much like Skaven Undercities in that they are built under any settlement across the map. Doing so gives Oxyotl vision of the province that settlement is located in (and can be upgraded to give him vision of all adjacent provinces as well) as well as two building slots that can give him anything from upkeep reduction to increased ammunition and missile damage. Additionally, one such sanctum can be upgraded to act as a teleport node, allowing Oxyotl&#039;s army to warp to that Silent Sanctum at any time (much like Oxyotl&#039;s capitol).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
The scaly faces of the Lizardmen. With the exception of the Slann Mage-Priest, which outperforms even most Legendary Lords, the Lizardmen aren&#039;t exactly a character-centric faction. Their LL&#039;s are very pointy. Most of them are great on the battlefield (with either melee or magic prowess), but their army buffs vary in usefulness and their factionwide buffs are nearly non-existant, with only a couple lords like Kroq-Gar providing any whatsoever. It&#039;s very difficult to justify taking even Legendary Lords (let alone your generic lords, which are frankly terrible) over any flavor of slann mage-priest due to the sheer versatility the latter bring to your army, especially since you are not hurting for giant, single entity beatsticks to ram into enemy formations. Slann benefit from Star Chambers in campaign, others don&#039;t, no contest, only use Slann if stacking Star Chambers (which you really should).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mazdamundi&#039;&#039;&#039; - The last of the second generation Slann (lore-wise), Mazdamundi uses magic primarily from the Lore of Light to act as a hybrid support/offensive caster. The two main selling points of Mazdamundi over a generic Slann Mage-Priest are his Stegadon mount Zlaaq and his signature spell &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;. Zlaaq allows Mazdamundi to actually engage in melee, something no other Slann can safely do, and makes him substantially more durable against most forms of attack. &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;, especially when combined with &#039;&#039;Banishment&#039;&#039;, makes Mazdamundi an excellent AoE caster capable of tearing infantry focused armies to shreds with ease without chewing through your Winds of Magic reserve. These spells are limited however, being bounded spells, so make sure you wait until the right moment to utilize them. Additionally, don&#039;t put too much faith in them; as their movement patterns are random, these spells (particularly Ruination of Cities) can just as easily do nothing or even devastate your own forces as they can your enemies if you aren&#039;t careful.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; brings a few buffs to his toolkit; the barrier mechanic normally reserved for Tzeentch armies is now also granted to all Slann as well, helping mitigate the first few attacks against him. Additionally, to better represent the almighty toad&#039;s arcane prowess, Mazdamundi receives a 50% increase in range to all spells he casts. This turns him into a sort of magical artillery engine, as he&#039;ll have virtually no issues slapping that Banishment or Comet of Cassandora cast pretty much wherever he damn well pleases.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroq-Gar&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your dedicated duelist, Kroq-Gar is an offensive powerhouse that shines when seated atop Grimloq, his faithful Carnosaur mount. Though expensive, Kroq-Gar/Grimloq can engage virtually any enemy type in the game effectively and is able to duel against many enemy lords and come out on top. Though a monstrous force on his own merits, Kroq-Gar is something of a glass cannon however and as a larger target is prone to getting mobbed by multiple units or getting focused down by ranged infantry/artillery. Another notable shortcoming is that he provides limited support for the rest of your army (a bit of a problem for all Saurus Oldbloods), and as such is not recommended for dino-heavy army builds, his bonuses to armor and leadership being less important than the healing abilities of Life Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tehenhauin (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only Skink-Priest lord choice, Tehenhauin is something of a niche pick. He can deal solid enough damage against footlords/cavalry lords in a fight (particularly if on a Ripperdactyl) and is also capable of dealing notable damage to swarms of infantry (with his Lore of Beasts and/or with his Engine of the Gods), but he&#039;s extremely frail for a Lizardmen lord when unmounted. Never get the Fanatic skill in his skill tree; it only benefits Skink units and they are pretty trash after the mid-game.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tiktaq&#039;to (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another somewhat niche pick, Tiktaq&#039;to is a dedicated flyer who excels in lists built with Terradons, Ripperdactyls and Coatls as the focus. Though mounted on Zwuup, Tiktaq&#039;to is your squishiest (Legendary) Lord and lacks the support/damage options available to the others, but he&#039;s inarguably the swiftest of the bunch (which doesn&#039;t mean much compared to other flying lords and heroes). Under no circumstances is he a direct combat lord; against any duelist or large/monstrous lord he will lose handily. The only targets he can safely engage are dedicated casters, artillery and dedicated ranged infantry. Because of this, playing him requires far more finesse than what is required for virtually every other lord; even against targets he &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; engage effectively, prolonged combat will invariably whittle him down and may the Old Ones help you if he&#039;s surrounded while grounded. Keep a squad or two of Ripperdactyls close by to make up the difference in combat ability and to take advantage of Tiktaq&#039;to&#039;s buffs. Also, his unique Epic weapon doesn&#039;t work if he is attacking a ground target in melee because its attack bonuses are only in effect when flying, so he&#039;s weaker than a Skink Terradon Rider when attacking ground targets UNLESS you swap out his weapon. When used in campaign, much of his value comes from his rather insane and stackable upkeep discount for flyer units. Even on higher difficulties, it is extraordinarily easy to stack enough upkeep cost reductions to have a full Coatl doomstack damn near for free (until the Supply Lines penalties become particularly swollen, at least). Additionally, his unique rite gives all of his armies the ability to easily chase down fleeing armies or attack multiple settlements a turn which can be &#039;&#039;devastating&#039;&#039; to an enemy faction if used at the right moment.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nakai (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The largest and oldest of the Kroxigor Ancients, Nakai is an infantry mulcher who (thanks to his enthusiastic animations) will literally sweep his way through the thickest blobs of infantry. Nakai possesses a few notable traits over his competitors; his ability to grant perfect vigour to nearby allies ensures they&#039;re in peak form throughout the entire battle while his Miasma of Despair can cripple enemies within his presence; a potentially nasty combo that can ensure your forces slowly but steadily chew through enemy frontlines. Unfortunately, Nakai has a few major weaknesses: As a large entity, he&#039;s vulnerable to anti-large weaponry (which does abound among baseline infantry) and is an easy, defenseless target for ranged units to snipe. He also struggles to properly duel opposing heroes/lords due to his size and janky animations making him lunge about haphazardly while they continue to poke him to death. Because of this, he tends to work best as a force multiplier for infantry builds.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gor-Rok (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where Kroq-Gar is the spear, Gor-Rok stands as the shield. Gor-Rok is a dedicated footlord, among the slowest of them, but makes up for it through sheer, unbreaking resilience. As the only unit in the entire Lizardmen roster with a silver shield (55% missile block chance), Gor-Rok is able to shoulder his way through the kind of firepower that would fell a lesser Old-Blood on the approach. Gor-Rok can also stand neck-deep among hordes of angry infantry and walk out seemingly unscathed. When equipped with the &#039;&#039;Mace of Ulumak&#039;&#039;, Gor-Rok can also prove a competent duelist in his own right, even if it&#039;s only in temporary bursts. Gor-Rok does falter against mounted/monstrous heroes/lords and is vulnerable to duelists with good AP values, though the Twisted and the Twilight patch has helped address the issue of him being staggered to hell and back. Never the less, Gor-Rok is a relatively cost effective Legendary Lord who can and will hold the line until the bitter end. His campaign starts with Lord Kroak fully unlocked and active, which makes his campaign among the easiest in the entire game, even on higher difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
**Gor-Rok&#039;s rite will be changed in Immortal Empires, giving his units Barrier and immunity to certain debuffs, like Poison. Unlike Tzeentch, his version of barrier probably won&#039;t be as game-breaking because of how slow Saurus and that they do their best stuck-in.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Oxyotl (DLC 3) &#039;&#039;&#039; - The legendary daemon-slaying chameleon skink of Oyxl is the last legendary lord for the faction (at least for TWW2). As to be expected from any shape or form of a Chameleon Skink, Oxyotl is a rather cheap, stealthy character hunter who behaves somewhat like a Wood Elf Waystalker. Unlike Waystalkers, Oxyotl has a particularly nasty trick in the form of Master Predator; a toggle-able skill that reduces his movement speed in exchange for an increase in range, Snipe and the ability to remain undetectable unless the enemy gets extremely close to his position. Combined with his modestly powerful armor piercing missiles, this can quickly wear down most armored lords and heroes rather quickly if left to his own devices. Of course, as a reasonably cost effective LL, the drawbacks have to come in somewhere and for Oxyotl, that drawback is melee combat. While he has acceptable melee attack and defense, Oxyotl has no armor or damage mitigation tools at his disposal. Any combat lord or hero worth his or her salt can and will kill him in a hand-to-hand duel. Fortunately, he&#039;s fast enough that virtually no footlord can catch up to him unless you willfully allow it. He also struggles to deal with the rank and file and lacks any notable support abilities for his own forces, but that&#039;s fairly typical of the niche Oxyotl fills.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
Your generic lords aren&#039;t amazing in campaign compared to other factions, but can really shine in competitive multiplayer. In the campaign, you&#039;ll generally never want to get non-slann lords after turn 20(ish) because lizardmen Star Chamber buildings give 3 bonus levels to your slann lords, meaning they quickly outpace any other lord available. Any need for a melee lord can be filled by one of the many lizardmen heroes, who can also be easily recruited at higher starting level than the melee lords. You may still find the need to recruit cheaper stand in lords in case of an emergency, as the Rite of Awakening&#039;s cooldown is a notable hitch in acquiring more slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slann Mage-Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your almighty magic toads, slann are dedicated mages who don&#039;t participate in fights directly, but wreak havoc upon your enemies from afar with their magics or supplement your forces with defensive/healing energies. Slann are among the precious few generic lords in the game who have access to the &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; ability which, when combined with their reliable casting, can allow savvy players to call upon vast reserves of the Winds of Magic long after lesser mages have tapped out of theirs. In addition to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039;, each slann has access to Banishment as a bound spell as well as the &#039;&#039;Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;; a large AoE defensive buff that applies a 22% damage resistance modifier to all allied units within it&#039;s bubble. Understandably, for all their arcane might, slann are practically helpless if caught in a fight. They are the single slowest unit in your entire army and are quite chunky, making them easy targets up close or at range. To this end, you&#039;ll almost always want a screening unit of Temple Guard (or at least shielded saurus) to keep enemies from ganking them. Outside of that, there are four varieties of Slann Mage-Priests, each dedicated to a specific lore of magic:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Fire Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - When you want to burn the [[HERESY|heretic]] in holy fire for the Old Ones. Combined with their bound Banishment, fire slann are capable of mulching clumps of infantry wholesale and can even churn out respectable single target damage with their Fireball and Piercing Bolts of Burning spells. Fire damage is particularly useful against the myriad of enemies with regeneration, and practically mandatory when facing undead crises in campaign. Being able to buff an entire line of saurus with an upcast Flaming Sword/Cloak of Flame can turn the game in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Life Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are the MVP in any monster heavy list; though you have a few other options for healing (such as the Revivification Bastilidon, high slann and the newly added Skink Oracle), life slann are still the uncontested kings at it. If you want an army built on the back of beasts, a life slann is essential to keeping them in the fight. With a life slann, you can wipe away any damage your stack of monsters take during the routing phase of a battle, making them both tactically and strategically important. Pair one with a Revivification Bastilidon to very rapidly resurrect slain models in any infantry unit and bring back even the most tattered units to full fighting strength. Additionally, should you encounter blobs of infantry that pose a notable danger to your larger beasties, Life slann are able to slap down Dwellers Below to deal frankly startling amounts of damage to practically every non-flying unit caught within its radius.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Light Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Light slann are fantastic supports for an infantry-heavy army namely due to two spells: Net of Amyntok and Birona&#039;s Timewarp. Like every other army, Net of Amyntok is an excellent tool for pinning down faster cavalry from the likes of Bretonnia or the Dark Elves so that your &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; slower saurus can catch up and engage them in melee (or to keep them still while your Salamanders incinerate them wholesale). Birona&#039;s Timewarp can turn the tide in a key engagement when used properly. Offensively, being able to cast Banishment much more frequently can also deal devastating damage to enemy infantry. That said, even your Greater Arcane Conduit will struggle to keep you topped off; the Lore of Light can consume your Winds of Magic quite quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;High Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Similarly to light slann, high slann are a hybrid offensive/support caster. Unlike the Lore of Light, you do have access to minor magical healing through Apotheosis and have access to an excellent anti-flier vortex spell in Tempest (Net of Amyntok is superior in most cases, however). High slann offensively specialize in single target damage and can deal devastating amounts of it between the Arcane Unforging and Soul Quench spells, giving them a solid niche against duelist lords/heroes and larger monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Heavens Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Multiplayer only, the Heavens Slann is unfortunately the worst slann of the bunch. It&#039;s not that the Heavens lore is lacking nor is it the slann himself, but the fact that he faces strict competition against your Skink Priests of all things. A Skink Priest of Heavens, though lacking the Greater Arcane Conduit, is a much faster/smaller target by default and has access to several mount options that make him much more flexible offensively or defensively. Additionally, as a hero, you can take a more offensively focused melee lord or a slann attuned to a different lore for more magical variety. Even if you&#039;re only running one with nothing but the crest on his skinky-head, the cheaper price alone makes the Heavens slann a hard sell comparatively.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039;: All Slann become a bit more defensible with the boon of their own personal barriers, a &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed buff to these fat frog&#039;s personal defenses. Of course, barriers will do little to assuage prolonged and unsupported melee combat, but it will help protect them from the stray blast or occasional skirmish.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: A minor nerf to the Slann, Star Chambers can now only ever be constructed in Province capitals, &#039;&#039;severely&#039;&#039; curbing how quickly you can recruit high-level Slann right out the gate. They can still be abused, though you now need to capture &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; more territories before you can crank out Slann on par with their Mortal Empires power level. The good news is, the Rite of Awakening is now free to use once unlocked and can be spammed on cooldown to try farming for second/third generation Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Old-Blood&#039;&#039;&#039; - Offensive duelists through and through, saurus old-bloods are flexible masters of combat who can lead on foot, on the back of a cold one, or atop a mighty carnosaur (you&#039;ll usually want one on a carnosaur). Compared to the kroxigor ancient, saurus old-bloods are less powerful in melee combat but can be much faster and have marginally better faction support skills. For the purposes of both Multiplayer and Campaign, you&#039;ll want to avoid taking Old-Bloods as your lord (unless you have &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; DLC content). Their role can easily be filled by Saurus Scar Veterans, who &#039;&#039;don&#039;t&#039;&#039; take up your only Lord slot for the army (and are, for all intents and purposes, identical sans Campaign skill trees). If you insist on taking an Old-Blood, take Kroq-Gar. Otherwise, a Slann or Kroxigor Ancient would be better suited for your needs.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Saurus Old-Bloods get some new life pumped into their battle-tested bones in Immortal Empires, at least when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s banner. Universal 15% Upkeep discounts for all armies led by Saurus Old-Bloods and an additional +1% Weapon Strength boost for each level your Old-Blood gains make these guys your go-to beatsticks. Their discounted upkeep costs also make it easier to field &#039;&#039;more&#039;&#039; armies which, especially in the mid-late game, is particularly valuable as your empire&#039;s borders outpace your glacial economy&#039;s ability to upgrade settlement infrastructure in a timely manner. Slann are, of course, still quite valuable, though with Sacred Spawning Caverns and Temple Guard Barracks providing increased starting ranks to Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans, it&#039;s hard to say no to these guys. At least when riding with Kroq-Gar.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skink Chief (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your discount Lord and the one you&#039;ll want to take if you want to reserve as much money for your big beasties as possible. Of course, you could splurge a little to put him atop an ancient stegadon to scorch swaths of infantry with the Engine of the Gods (though if you&#039;re going to do that, you may as well spring for Tehenhauin so that you at least have access to the Lore of Beasts as well). The RCSC is a competent combatant equipped with poisonous, armor-piercing attacks that can make him surprisingly dangerous in a fight, though like everything skinky, he&#039;s a particularly squishy lord when unmounted. The best use you can put him to is boosting your heroes in a &#039;Pompous&#039; trait-stacking lizardman hero army, which makes an already broken strategy even stronger.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigor Ancient (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Baby Nakais for those who don&#039;t quite feel up for splurging on the big boy himself. Kroxigor ancients are quite literally just watered down versions of Nakai; though they won&#039;t grant perfect vigour to all friendly forces near them, they will still wade through most infantry due to their size and mass and put out such raw damage that most non-elite infantry will falter swiftly against them. However, just like Nakai, they are completely helpless at range, are vulnerable to AP and anti-large weapons and are &#039;&#039;slow&#039;&#039;. In competitive multiplayer, though they are still a bit of a niche pick, they are much more attractive than Nakai due to their cheaper price and because they have access to the Amulet of Itzl, which grants the Kroxigor Ancient 66% damage resistance for a short time. This can give them enough of an edge to eek out against enemy duelists or to survive long enough for reinforcements to arrive.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
As said, the Lizardmen characters can be a little sub-par compared to other factions (with the exception of the Skink Oracle, see below), but their selection is surprisingly versatile, and the Lizardmen have some of the best &#039;&#039;mounts&#039;&#039; in the game, which really helps push their characters battlefield potential. The Lizardmen also have one of the strongest Legendary Heroes in the game: Lord Kroak. These guys are capable of dealing immense damage to your enemies and &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; of them (except Kroak) can be mounted on one of your massive dinosaurs.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Hero===&lt;br /&gt;
You&#039;ve only got the one, but he&#039;s all you&#039;ll need. Lord Kroak is your expensive but powerful offensive caster and forms the center of many army formations.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lord Kroak (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The first of the Slann doesn&#039;t let something as trivial as death inconvenience him, or keep him from kicking warmblood ass to the Old World and back. Lord Kroak is one of a very select few heroes in the game with access to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; (which can be paired with another Slann&#039;s Greater Arcane Conduit), making him a fantastic force multiplier in a caster-heavy list just from being present. For better or worse, Kroak doesn&#039;t have access to any lore of magic and only has two notable abilities. But &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; can those abilities turn the tide of battle. His only bound ability (other than the universal Cold-Blooded) is the &#039;&#039;Supreme Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;, an upgraded version of the regular Shield of the Old Ones that grants allies a 44% damage resistance while within it (and stacks with the regular version if you&#039;re really in a bind). The only spell(s) he has access to is his signature Deliverance of Itza (and its three varying strengths). Deliverance of Itza, &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason you&#039;re bringing him, can virtually delete entire units from existence with an efficiency only known to the Winds of Death spell, but it has a few major drawbacks. First, it is intensely mana hungry: you&#039;ll typically only get one or two DoI (III) casts per battle before you run dangerously low on magic. By relying on DoI I or II, you won&#039;t consume as much magic per cast, but the difference in damage dealt becomes very apparent. Secondly, there is a very lengthy and obvious tell for when the spell is cast; most competent opponents will be able to move their forces away from the blast before it goes off unless you manage to pin them down with supporting spells like the Net of Amyntok or simply bodyblocking them from all sides. Thirdly, this spell is virtually useless against single entities such as Lords/Heroes and giant monsters, meaning he&#039;ll do little towards more elite doomstack lists. Despite all these cons working against him, a well timed Deliverance of Itza can and will win you battles if you plan accordingly. The best part, it deals absolutely no friendly fire damage. [[Meme|You may fire when ready]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Heroes===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, all Lizardmen heroes benefit from the &#039;Humble&#039; trait, which appears on Lords and Heroes at random. This lets you recruit them at 2 additional ranks higher than their default rank, with unlimited stacking potential, making them stronger and more versatile earlier in the game than heroes of other factions. In the late-game, you can disband Humble heroes as you build more Slann Star-Chambers, however these are expensive buildings for non-Hexoatl factions; for the 6000 gold needed for 1 Star-Chamber, you can hire at least 4 Humble heroes for 8 bonus levels. Of course, those extra heroes each take up their respective hero slots and will take a modest sum out of your income every turn and as such are less efficient in the long run compared to Star Chambers.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Scar-Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039; - A step down from the Old-Blood, Scar-Veterans behave in much the same manner as your generic saurus lords. Vicious and powerful combatants, Scar-Veterans are built to brazenly charge into combat and deal bloody death to all who stand in their way. The real reason you&#039;ll want to take any Scar-Vets isn&#039;t for the saurus himself, however badass he may be, but for the carnosaur mount you can put him on. Though a more expensive version of the feral carnosaur, Scar-Vets are immune to rampaging (and can indeed stop others from rampaging thanks to their Cold Blooded ability) and have a slightly stronger statline, making them excellent all-round threats to whatever your opponent might be packing. These Scar-Vets are ideal choices for armies led by slann-mage priests; they won&#039;t be competing for Winds of Magic like the skink priests and will more than make up for the slann&#039;s melee deficiency. If you want to keep him cheaper, you can take one on foot to lead fellow saurus infantry into battle, or stick in on a Cold One to ride with the rest of your cavalry. A modestly popular tactic in Multiplayer is to take two of these guys on Cold Ones to act as hero/lord hunters.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scar-Veterans, though still quite capable in every other Lizardmen subfaction, truly shine when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s flag. +30% experience gain and +1% weapon strength per earned rank (max buff of 50%) can make these guys quite vicious very quickly. Since the Humble trait, the Star Chamber and Temple Guard Barracks rank boost effects stack, you can also recruit highly ranked Scar-Veterans &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; early on in the campaign (relatively, that is). It&#039;s to such a degree that you could very easily start cranking out freshly recruited Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs with a bonus 18% or higher Weapon Strength buff right out of the gate. Put in an army lead by a Saurus Old-Blood for that 15% upkeep reduction and you have yourself a solidly cost effective doomstack that, post level 20, will just respawn back home if they ever bite off more than they can chew.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink priests are your humble, mortal casters. Cheap and nimble, these guys can easily outrun most footslogging infantry and are fantastically flexible mages that can fill any offensive or defensive holes your army might have. If mounted on a terradon, their speed will be unparalleled (for Lizardmen); they&#039;ll be able to rain magical death anywhere on the battlefield with ease and can quickly deliver support to your forces no matter how spread out they may be. Alternatively, you may mount them on stegadons or ancient stegadons to make them terrifying all-rounders, though their price tag will quickly reflect that. probably want to stick with the regular stegadon, great hybrid artillery and melee monster&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Heavens)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Heavens discipline is among the better offensive lores of magic in the game for the instant raw damage output it&#039;s capable of. Wind Blast and Chain Lightning will be your go-to offensive spells. Comet of Cassandora, though powerful, should generally be avoided due to how long its casting time is. Harmonic Convergence and Curse of the Midnight Wind are staples of support sets and can turn your saurus infantry into immovable walls of tooth and claw.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Beasts)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Formerly your worst discipline, the Lore of Beasts has recently received a bit of a tweaking to make it considerably more attractive and usable. It&#039;s still among the least potent of your available magics, but it is among the most flexible in utility. Wyssan&#039;s Wild Form and Pann&#039;s Impenetrable Pelt provide rather significant combat buffs (particularly when stacked) while Curse of Anraheir debilitates your enemies. Offensively, Flock of Doom is a fantastic and cheap chaff cleaner that affects any units that have at least one model within its 30m range. For your single target needs, The Amber Spear allows your caster to act as impromptu artillery should the need arise. Formerly &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason to take a Beasts caster was for the Transformation of Kadon; being able to summon up to two Manticores to flank enemy formations or dive into backlines can have a massive impact on the flow of battle, but a bump up to &#039;&#039;20&#039;&#039; Winds of Magic per summon makes it challenging to make much use of your other spells in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Chief&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your skirmishing duelist, skink chiefs cripple enemy forces with their poisonous darts so that your army can face weaker resistance. Skink chiefs are a force to be feared when mounted on a stegadon, allowing them to easily face down many enemy heroes/lords in a one-on-one fight. In the campaign, the ability to build skink chief capacity-increasing buildings in minor settlements means you can spam them across the map or stack up to 19 of them into an army, which can be hilariously broken depending on the traits and items you equip them with.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Oracle (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - By far the best Hero for the Lizardmen, the Skink Oracle brings a cavalcade of well rounded offensive and supportive magic to the field atop a mighty Troglodon. And only on a Troglodon, so he&#039;s very much an &amp;quot;all or nothing&amp;quot; type of unit. The first major reason the Skink Oracle makes for a popular pick is the fact that he&#039;s your only non-Slann source of magical healing, potentially freeing up your Lord choice for a more offensive beat stick like Kroq-Gar or even a Kroxigor Ancient. Secondly, as a hero, not only does your Skink Oracle provide a use of Cold-Blooded for the rest of your forces, but his own Troglodon will never rampage. Magical prowess aside, this alone is worth considering the rather steep price-tag. Speaking of, the Troglodon allows the Skink Oracle to function as a mid-range anti-Monster skirmisher. Combined with a potential Fireball cast here or there, the Skink Oracle &#039;&#039;excels&#039;&#039; at chunking opposing Lords/Heroes, especially if they&#039;re atop a mount or naturally monstrous in size. Just don&#039;t have him brazenly lead the charge into melee combat, as he won&#039;t last terribly long in it. If your army would like to use a non-Lore of Life Slann or any non-Slann Lord for that matter (effectively any LL banner army), a Skink Oracle and a Revivification Bastilodon or two are excellent tools to keep your forces in tip-top shape so that they can keep doing what they do best.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
Many lizardmen units are available in standard and &#039;blessed&#039; variants. Blessed units are only made available in the campaign by completing random timed missions, such as getting 1000 kills or winning 4 battles, but make up for their randomness and limited quantity by being free to recruit at any time in any army and by having at least one extra ability or superior stat over their contemporary counterparts. They aren&#039;t to be confused with Regiments of Renown, unique units recruited at max rank and limited to one instance per. In casual multiplayer matches with Unit Caps turned off, Blessed Units are recruitable for only a modest bump in price over their generic counterparts.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
Infantry provide the foundation of every army in Total War: Warhammer, and the Lizardmen are no different. Indeed, even the humble skinks have their place.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Melee Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls and shields, skink cohorts are cheap chaff units primarily used to fill out rosters or to support your more expensive infantry actually doing the killing. Despite being shielded, these guys will die by the score due to their pitiful defensive statline if they face any frontline infantry head on and are one of the few lizardmen units prone to routing from leadership issues. Having said that, skink cohorts are among the fastest cheap infantry units in the game and are still rather decent combatants when fighting similar unarmored units and tend to win such engagements (namely against chaff or low tier infantry like Bretonnian peasantry or Vampire Count zombies). Indeed, their speed is invaluable for flanking enemies tied up by your saurus warriors and chasing routing enemies off the map. When pinching pennies, you can&#039;t argue with that. In campaign these guys can be skipped entirely for the javelin version instead as the missile attack for 10 extra upkeep per turn is leagues better than just having the club.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skinks (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. Red-Crested Skinks provide an invaluable source of early game/cheap melee AP damage and poison, though they&#039;re less effective against unarmored targets as a whole compared to regular Skink Cohorts. They lack both shields and armor and as they are simply skinks, they will die in droves unless they&#039;re taking refuge among the far burlier saurus warriors. On that note, RC skinks synergize excellently with saurus warriors, as they can simultaneously chew through armored units the saurus tend to bounce off of and further cripple these enemies with poison, allowing your much slower saurus to both catch up to and butcher them with greater ease. Just like skink cohorts, these guys are at home in watery environments and are easily able to outflank many slower infantry units.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Sotek (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unbreakable angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. These guys have a unique ability, &#039;&#039;Refuse to Die&#039;&#039;. When active, no skink models can die (they can still take damage, however), which can maximize their damage output when taking sudden burst damage or ensure that they hold the enemy in place for a precious few more seconds. The fact that they&#039;re unbreakable really synergizes well with this perk, as it means that your opponent is going to have to commit to completely eradicating the unit (which, admittedly, isn&#039;t really &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; tall an ask all things considered). This can buy some of your other forces some precious moments to regroup should the tide be against your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign Note&#039;&#039;&#039;: Auto-Resolve tends to value every flavor of Red-Crested Skink just slightly more than the dirt they stand on, so unless you are ok with them taking massive casualties or outright getting wiped out every time you click that auto-resolve button, you&#039;ll either need to fight your battles manually or pick up regular Skink Cohorts if you need chaff infantry to pad out your forces.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus warriors are probably the first thing that comes to mind when one mentions the lizardmen, and for good reason. Resilient, determined and natural fighters, saurus warriors are one of the most durable base line infantry units in the game due to their high HP and armor and can hold their own even against the more elite infantry options of other factions (Note: they can fight a unit of chaos warriors to stalemate). Should they find themselves in a losing matchup, their naturally high leadership will keep them standing firm against the enemy far longer than their equivalents in other factions would, even if they lose control and rampage towards their inevitable deaths (in game II. They&#039;ve since become far more disciplined in game III). To compensate, saurus are slow and are prone to being kited, so skink skirmishers/cohorts should be utilized to help pin down the enemy line until the saurus make it into combat. Saurus warriors are available in both standard and shielded variants, but the only reason to not get the shielded version is if you need every last gold coin you can rub together for your bigger monsters on a tight, competitive budget.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Shielded saurus warriors with an even higher base health and [[awesome|perfect vigour]]. These guys make fantastically cost efficient walls that will never tire no matter how hard they&#039;re pushed. In the campaign, they are one of the better frontline choices you can give your non-doomstack armies that can find a place even into the late game, so long as they manage to survive and rank up. Gor-Rok, if chosen as your initial legendary lord, can use his rite to grant further defensive bonuses and &#039;&#039;unbreakable&#039;&#039; to them (in game II. Game III replaces unbreakable with the barrier ability and immunity to hostile effects like Poison instead); they will never yield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Warriors equipped with anti-large spears for engaging cavalry and monsters. They&#039;re nearly identical to regular saurus warriors in every other way, though they do slightly less damage against regular infantry in exchange for their anti-large speciality. Like the warriors, they come in unshielded or, for a slight premium, shielded variants.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Buffed up saurus spears with shields, the blessed variant of these saurus are dramatically inferior to their standard cousins since they lack perfect vigour. Instead, the bonus ability granted to them is Forest Strider, a perk that grants additional melee attack and defense buffs to them while fighting in forests. If you can lure cavalry and large monsters into forests, where they&#039;ll suffer additional penalties simply due to how forests interact with them, you can deal impressive sustained damage to them in short order. Unfortunately, this ability does nothing for them outside of forests and &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; battlefields will have a dearth of forest patches that you can fight in. Additionally, uncooperative opponents will generally avoid trying to engage your forces inside forests and trying to convince them otherwise may prove too time consuming for what it&#039;s worth. Regardless, they still have more health than the regular saurus spears. That&#039;s always a plus.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Legion of Chaqua (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Legion of Chaqua, thanks to their special ability, are able to provide themselves and all nearby allied units a surprising 44% missile resistance for a limited time upon activation. This is an invaluable skill to have on the approach, as many of your unshielded infantry and larger monsters are vulnerable to being focused down by the much superior ranged infantry found in other armies and can be further supplemented by a Slann&#039;s Shield of the Old Ones if necessary. Otherwise, these guys simply behave exactly as Saurus Spears are expected to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - The fearsome Temple Guards, renowned for their devotion to their Slann masters, stand ready to slaughter all who&#039;d bring harm to their otherwise vulnerable charges. Temple Guard are the only &amp;quot;elite&amp;quot; infantry within the lizardmen roster, which is more a testament to how strong regular saurus are compared to the melee infantry of other armies. Speaking of how strong regular saurus are, Temple Guard fall short of them against unarmored infantry on the whole. This isn&#039;t to say Temple Guard aren&#039;t impressive; their heightened statline makes them less likely to budge than regular saurus are while their charge defense and bonus damage against large foes and predominantly armor-piercing weaponry lets them effectively face down a majority of late-game/elite cavalry, monsters and even armored infantry much more effectively than regular saurus. Unfortunately, this general prowess reflects heavily in their price tag and you&#039;ll struggle to field multiple units of these without heavily cutting into your other options.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - Recolored Temple Guards, these guys are a slightly more offensive version of their default variants thanks to an increased charge bonus. This makes them significantly more well rounded and will allow you to more flexibly choose how you engage your enemies; do you brace and negate an incoming charge, or is the foe squishy enough where a counter charge would be more punishing? All in all a nice upgrade if only for the usual buff to their health blessed units receive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Star-Chamber Guardians (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Take Temple Guard and make their weapons also deal magical damage: you now have &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; most elite infantry unit available to the Lizardmen. Having magical attacks allows the SCG to engage many undead/demonic forces that utilize high physical resistance and cut them down with ease. SCG also serve as excellent bodyguards for lords (particularly Slann) due to their Guardian ability and when properly supported with healing magic, these guys will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; die. Their only major weakness of note is prolonged anti-armor ranged firepower and artillery, but as they are armored and shielded and have a frankly gargantuan health pool, it will take a long time to fully whittle them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Missile Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort with Javelins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls, shields and three javelins each. For pennies over a regular skink cohort, you can give them limited ranged support with poisonous javelins; a fantastic way to soften up an enemy unit for your front line infantry on the charge. With their speed, they can also easily circle about and pepper an opposing unit&#039;s backsides before charging in to cut off their escape while your saurus chew through them. Once they throw all their javelins, they&#039;re identical to the default skink cohort in virtually every way. Generally, if you&#039;re planning on taking skink cohorts at all, you should almost always pick these guys up over the standard versions (unless you &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; need every gold coin you can possibly scrape together for a specific competitive multiplayer build).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts, and your first dedicated missile infantry. Skink skirmishers lack the sheer range available to most other factions and struggle to do damage against armored opponents. Instead, they should be used exclusively as harassers; their speed, ability to fire while moving and vanguard deployment options allow them to easily get into flanking positions and kite enemy infantry while inflicting poison onto them for when the rest of your army catches up. These guys will melt quickly if caught in the crosshairs of opposing archers/gunners and are pitiful in a fistfight, so you should only get one or two of these units at most, and only if you absolutely cannot afford taking chameleon skinks instead.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink skirmishers with more health and an innate magic spell resistance. This extra durability is nice, but the spell resistance in particular isn&#039;t going to see much use due to these guys rather high mobility and any targetable spell an opponent &#039;&#039;could&#039;&#039; cast on them would be served much better against... literally anything else in your army. There&#039;s virtually no reason to bring these in Multiplayer (even if Blessed units are allowed for the match) and the only reason you&#039;ll want to recruit them in any of your Campaigns would be if you&#039;re in desperate need of reinforcements for a beat-up army you simply cannot afford to lose and you just &#039;&#039;happen&#039;&#039; to have some Blessed Skink Skirmishers to burn. The moment you are in a position where you can recruit/replace other units, these guys should be the first to go.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ninja skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts. Though fewer in number than basic skink skirmishers, chameleon skinks are considerably more durable thanks to their flat 40% missile resistance and have a much easier time sneaking around enemies thanks to their Chameleon ability. This, along with their loose formation, can make them surprisingly effective at countering enemy archers. They otherwise fulfill the exact same harassment role your regular skink skirmishers do and deal a disappointingly low amount of damage against armored targets. Also, like skink skirmishers, they are unable to curve their shots well meaning they&#039;re less effective in siege battles than the archers of other races.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Slightly swole Chameleon Skinks with twice the charge bonus (which is barely anything, especially combined with their rather tragic melee statline) and a few extra darts per skink. More ammunition is always welcome in a firefight, but it&#039;s hardly a game changer. Regardless, better stats do open up options and if you have a choice between these and regular Chameleon Skinks, may as well pick these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
:::Oxyotl&#039;s banner army in the campaign should almost entirely consist of these guys. Between the AP bonus damage, variant ammunitions he can grant them in addition to giving them perks like Snipe, there&#039;s almost no force these guys can&#039;t just shoot to death with relative ease. Siege Battles or battles featuring multiple enemy banner armies might become tricky, but that&#039;s why you always have at least a couple Skink Oracles or Skink Chiefs with Stalk to clean up shop.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Stalkers (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry ninja skinks with little blowpipes and [[what|explosive darts]]. Chameleon Stalkers fill the rather niche role of shock infantry for the Lizardmen. Each skink is equipped with two Precursor blowpipe shots that deal rather impressive burst damage against unarmored targets either on the charge or when falling back from a melee engagement. As they possess the same Chameleon ability their standard Chameleon Skink kin have, they do have a lot of wiggle room to get into an optimal charging position and can quickly fade away from the fray when things go south. Speaking of things going south, though Stalkers are reasonably decent at combat due to their poisoned attacks and mediocre stats, they still tend to lose against medium tier and above infantry or anything with armor. That said, even against armored infantry, much of the Stalker&#039;s value comes from the heavy formation disruption their Precursor Rounds cause, slowing down their targets and interrupting their charge so that you can take the initiative in the ensuing engagement. They can also deal decent burst damage against single entity units in a pinch, but this is generally an inefficient use of them.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Monstrous Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors, as to be expected from 9-foot tall crocodile men, are beastly armor-piercing anti-infantry blenders who can carve through lower tier units like butter and are sturdy enough to hold back more elite units for your more capable specialists. Though quite tanky and reasonably quick (compared to your saurus), they are still large (with the weaknesses all that entails) and very vulnerable to getting shot to hell and back or getting slammed by larger cavalry/monsters. While Kroxigors do hit damn hard, their total damage is divided between three subcatagories: Base, Anti-Infantry and Armor-Piercing. As such, they only really get the most bang for their buck when thrown against armored infantry. While they are able to tie up units that fall outside of those categories, they become dramatically less effective and &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; lose the grindfest if they aren&#039;t supported. Just like in the tabletop, they pair fantastically with supporting skinks to flank and tie up enemy forces or debuff them with poison to make them even more vulnerable to the kroxigors.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you thought regular kroxigors were thick, you haven&#039;t seen these thunder-thighs strut their stuff. Though the standard health increase is all well and good, blessed kroxigors received a substantial buff to their charge bonus. This can make them surprisingly deadly cycle-chargers which, combined with their anti-infantry/armor niche, will let them crack massive holes in front lines.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacred Kroxigors (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors with [[power fists]]. These magical boxing gloves turn your kroxigors into all-purpose ass pounders who punch holes in armored foes effortlessly and tear through things with low magic resistance like so much wet paper. Much like regular kroxigors, sacred kroxigors get the most bang for their buck when supported by skinks (ideal) or saurus (when you don&#039;t want to move from that spot). Unlike standard Kroxigors, Sacred Kroxigors are much more well rounded offensively and will perform much more efficiently against opponents regular Kroxigors tend to struggle or stalemate against. Additionally, as the only non-RoR/Lord unit in your roster with Magical Attacks, these guys are your go-to melee force to deal with Ethereal units, Treemen and other high-physical resistance targets. Additionally, as Magic Resist is slated to change to only affect damage caused by Spells, Sacred Kroxigors will be very well suited to deal with the forces of the Dwarfs and Khorne going forward.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Huatl (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sacred kroxigors with much higher physical resistance and straight up sunder enemy armor, allowing units like your saurus warriors to deal more damage to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen cavalry are slow, for cavalry. They will never catch horse-mounted cavalry of other races, and it is risky to use them as a distraction if your enemy is using anything more than basic cavalry archers. Expect lizardmen cavalry to take heavy losses in prolonged combat, and learn to cycle-charge with them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - A pack of clever girls, with no saurus riders. Feral cold ones are extremely speedy units (by lizardmen standards) that effectively function as light cavalry built for chasing down skirmishers, ranged back lines and artillery pieces. Their ability to cause fear also comes in handy for landing rear charges against a foe tied up in combat with your frontline infantry, as well as ensuring routed enemies leave the battlefield permanently. Unfortunately, their raw damage output is rather low and they themselves are particularly frail and prone to rampaging, which means a bad engagement will result in a swift end for them. They&#039;re cheap as chips though, so you can&#039;t complain too much over losing &#039;em.&lt;br /&gt;
**Being able to summon them after performing the Rite of Primeval Glory is really handy when facing off against Skaven artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Standard cold one riders are your first full-blooded cavalry option. Though significantly swifter than your infantry, cold one riders lag behind their competition in other factions and are particularly vulnerable to anti-large cavalry units because of this. In an ideal setting, cold one riders will serve as the hammer to the anvil that is your saurus frontline; decisive charges into the rear of enemy formations can deal heavy damage and can completely lock down ranged infantry or artillery. Being both armored and shielded gives them respectable staying power as well and allows them to remain in extended combat should the need arise. That said, like most cavalry, they truly shine when they&#039;re able to freely cycle charge to maximize their damage output and heavily abuse enemy morale.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - The name says it all; these are cold one riders with spears. This turns them into a dedicated anti-large cavalry unit that can deal not inconsequential damage to opposing cavalry, artillery and monsters. Unfortunately, in cav v. cav engagements, cold one spear riders will often fall short due to their below average speed letting many opposing options run circles around them. As such, they tend to work best when used defensively. When opposing cavalry buckles down to charge into your flanks, counter charge them with your spear-riders to either intercept or divert them from your more vulnerable elements. They do deal decent armor-piercing damage on their own right, but they&#039;ll often lose against more elite cavalry options and their strength quickly diminishes in prolonged engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed cold one spears are extremely similar to the Pok-Hopak Cohort in the sense that they both don&#039;t run the risk of rampaging. This is a very valuable perk on a unit that will often find itself separated from your main army, especially when combined with their heightened durability. If you have a need for cold one spears and have access to these, there&#039;s literally no reason not to take them.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pok-Hopak Cohort (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Fearless and focused spear-riders, these guys are both immune to psychology &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; lack primal instincts, meaning you&#039;ll never need to worry about them rampaging or fleeing from enemy monsters. Additionally, the Pok-Hopak cohort is able to utilize vanguard deployment, giving them a tactical edge over their generic counterparts that cannot be underestimated. If you&#039;re thinking about taking a unit of spear-riders, there&#039;s literally no reason to not just take these guys instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only elite cavalry, horned ones are simply buffed up cold one riders, plain and simple. They are significantly faster than all of your cold one riders and as such are on par with the cavalry options found in many other factions. They pack a meaty punch with a rather chunky charge bonus to boot, letting them simply smash through frontline infantry as both hammer and anvil. You&#039;ll be paying for that swollen statline though, as they are one of your most expensive non-monster units out of your entire roster (they&#039;re even more expensive than some of your monsters).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Just like the blessed cold one spears, blessed horned ones won&#039;t rampage when caught unawares. Considering these are your elite cav units, you will &#039;&#039;always&#039;&#039; want to make sure they can get out of a bad engagement whenever you need them to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Javelin skinks riding Terradons and carrying stone bombs. While relatively fast for the lizardmen, terradon riders are among the slowest flying cavalry in the game, and are a fairly niche choice in battle. This niche can best be summed up as aerial harriers, ideal for sniping out artillery, mages or unarmored infantry or monsters (which is admittedly a bit of a rarity). Their attacks also apply Poison, which makes them a little more useful than their raw stats make them seem on paper and helps further support other units in your army. Additionally, they are quite micro-friendly since they are able to fire and move with their javelins and, with proper positioning, can drop a once-per-battle set of stone bombs to deal massive damage to clustered up infantry beneath their wings. That said, as fairly large, unarmored and slow moving targets with fairly pitiful melee stats, these guys can be very easy to snipe out of the air by decent missile infantry and are &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; vulnerable to pretty much anything else that is also in the air with them. In a pinch, they can also be used as rear-chargers to help route enemies or tie down missile infantry, but Old Ones help them if something points an extra long stick at them. If you&#039;re facing an infantry heavy army, Fireleech Bolas Terradons tend to net you better value.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pahuax Sentinels (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - These special edition terradon riders are particularly nimble and have an innate resistance to melee and missile attacks that gives them &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more staying power than any of your other flying cavalry. If only to serve as a distraction, these guys can be used in lieu of skink priests/chiefs in an attempt to waste your opponent&#039;s missile infantry/artillery ammo. Otherwise, use them to harass enemy units with poisoned missiles and to escort routing foes off the battlefield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Fireleech Bolas Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - These are far better Terradon Riders than the base variant. While they no longer inflict Poison on enemy units, their fireleech bolas deal explosive fire damage, inflicting greater damage overall against infantry formations and fire-weak entities while dealing higher leadership penalties in the process. Like regular Terradon Riders, they also can fire and move, letting them more or less function as prehistoric bombers. They still carry stone bombs, which can be devastatingly effective when used in concert with a line of saurus warriors pinning enemy melee units or shutting down artillery, but just like regular Terradon Riders, they are fairly useless in melee and are terribly vulnerable to other fliers and ranged missile fire. If you&#039;re dealing with smaller, physically larger units (monstrous infantry or single-entity monsters) with low armor, Terradon Riders are more efficient against them. &lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed Terradon Riders, aside the traditional increase in health, only received one minor adjustment over their basic counterparts; speed. At a speed stat of 110 as opposed to the standard 90, Blessed Terradon Riders can manuever across the battlefield notably more quickly than any other unit in your entire army. Nice, for a unit designed to harass and waste/dodge enemy missile fire, but ultimately a rather minor selling point on an admittedly mediocre and situational unit.&lt;br /&gt;
**Fireleech Bolas can be used to game the AI, especially when you&#039;re facing off against the Chaos Invasion. Even having just three of these guys bombard the Chaos Hellcannons can save you a lot of grief, and you&#039;re not really going to miss them if they got shot down. They&#039;re also really helpful against Vampire Coast, as they&#039;re one of the few skirmishers you have that can raise hell against a zombie gunline/artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ripperdactyl Riders (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The obsidian knife of lizardmen flyers. Ripperdactyls are your flying can-openers with a minor bonus against infantry and a &#039;&#039;massive&#039;&#039; AP bonus. Combined with their solid melee attack stat and Frenzy bonus, these guys utterly shred armored foot soldiers. Unfortunately, their non-existent armor, low melee defense, low model count and large size makes these guys terribly susceptible to counterattack. If they get boxed in, much less by anything with an anti-large bonus, you will be impressed by how quickly they die. Because of this, and the fact much of their damage is dedicated against armored targets, Ripperdactyls tend to be a bit of a niche choice in army lists not built around Tiktaq&#039;to. None-the-less, they are much more effective than Terradon Riders at shutting down missile infantry formations and artillery platforms. Just make sure you are constantly aware of the tactical situation and only call them down when you can support them or escape before enemy reinforcements manage to pin them down.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Colossadon Hunters (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Bigger, hungrier ripperdactyls with a penchant for bigger prey; an additional anti-large bonus can turn them into cavalry buzzsaws and can let them deal sickening damage to mounted enemy lords or cavalry and are the best/only option for fighting flying enemy lords/heroes on semi-even ground. Suffice to say, they&#039;re still very weak to anti-large weaponry themselves and will seldom win against combat dedicated lords/heroes in a &amp;quot;1&amp;quot;v1 fight. As such, they&#039;ll need support through terradon riders (for the poison) as well as additional ripperdactyls to stand an honest shot against such a foe, though they&#039;re still not guaranteed a victory. Should they lose, they&#039;ll still leave a hell of a mark on whatever cavalry/monster they were fighting and such scars could prove pivotal to bringing them down with the rest of your army.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Hunting Packs===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Salamander Hunting Pack (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed addition to the Lizardmen&#039;s borderline vacant missile unit roster, Salamander Hunting Packs are a fantastic general use ranged unit and are among the better missile cavalry options in the game. Though they can&#039;t fire while moving like other missile cavalry options, they deal a rather frightening amount of flaming explosive damage per volley with not inconsequential AP and rather notable anti-large bonuses to top it off. Much like your other non-single entity heavy hitters, Salamanders can do some damage in melee, but they really should avoid it unless absolutely necessary. Terrible defensive values will make Salamander Hunting Packs feel every blow that hits their unarmored hides. If you want to keep them in the fight, make sure you have a few Saurus Spears or Spear Cold One Riders to counter enemy cavalry. They can fire over units and obstacles.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Umbral Tide (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sneaky salamander hunting packs with perfect vigour and stalk, the Umbral Tide is able to covertly cross a majority of the battlefields you may find yourself on and can easily set up an ambush against unsuspecting opponents. Even after running from one end of the battle to the other and loosing every last fireball from their collective gullets, the Umbral Tide will still have a spring to their step should they join the melee fray. If you can only afford a single Salamander Pack, try to budget for these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Razordon Hunting Pack (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons are your anti-armor missile cavalry. Unlike the Salamanders, who burp up one flaming projectile apiece, Razordons lob three spikes at a time when they attack. Though the damage per individual projectile is... well, pitiful, combined they can deal a rather staggering amount of AP damage that can either be divided among dense clusters of armored infantry formations or a single armored target. Additionally, Razordons are much more adept at lobbing their shots, giving them a bit of an edge over Salamanders in uneven terrain. Unfortunately, that&#039;s about where the good news ends. With a shorter firing range than Salamanders and utterly abysmal base damage on their projectiles ([[What|Chameleon Skinks have stronger missiles against unarmored foes than these guys]]) and no additional bonuses to speak of (fire damage, explosive damage, anti-large/infantry, nothing), there&#039;s generally no reason to take Razordons over Salamanders in general lists. Against the heavily armored forces of the Warriors of Chaos, Dwarfs or even other Lizardmen, Razordons might find a more valuable niche.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; Not only have these guys gained a better firing arc, enabling them to better fire spikes at targets over terrain/allied units, but the projectiles themselves now pierce through multiple entities. Currently, they&#039;re particularly powerful and can quickly mulch armored infantry with as few as two or three volleys.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Amaxon Barbs (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons with poisonous spikes and a flat 15% missile resistance, these guys aren&#039;t much to write home about. Yes, poison is nice, but you don&#039;t exactly need to dig very deep for alternative ways to access it. The missile resistance is a nice, if moderately more situational perk, but it&#039;s not a particularly notable resistance and it does nothing for potential melee engagements. In the event you need a razordon hunting pack for anti-armor firepower, you may as well pick these guys up, but only if you have the extra gold once you&#039;ve established your core army roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
The big beasts and the creatures most opponents expect to face when fighting the lizardmen. Potent and powerful monsters, you have a dinosaur for every occasion; you&#039;ll simply need to choose the right ones. Beware of enemy tarpits if you don&#039;t have a high-level mage in your army; dinosaurs will take additional damage from their flanks and rear if they are surrounded and that can quickly wear them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral [[Bastilidon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your cheapest single entity dinosaur as well as your sturdiest. Feral bastilidons are effectively just a [[DISTRACTION CARNIFEX]] that you throw into enemy frontlines to stir up some chaos, cause some fear and just generally soak damage while the rest of your army dismantles the enemy. These guys can still earn you some crazy value against armies that field a lot of chaff infantry, like Skaven, Beastmen or Bretonnia.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039;: These guys are your entry-level monsters, being recruitable basically from the start of the game. As tanky anti-infantry monsters, these guys can net you some crazy value against the early-game armies of other factions for cheap-as-chips prices.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your first, cheaper artillery option. Solar Engines fire off a single missile that simultaneously blinds and burns enemy units, reducing their combat effectiveness and dealing bonus damage against anything that regenerates health naturally. These laser bolts have a lower maximum range, are relatively slow moving and are much easier to dodge than the smaller, faster, harder to see bolts fired by the stegadon, but they have slightly higher damage per shot and a larger splash radius when targeting groups of infantry. In another contrast to the stegadon, the beams fired by the solar engine deal flat magical damage, meaning enemies with high magical resistance will largely shrug off the damage dealt by the solar engine itself. The only &#039;&#039;major&#039;&#039; drawback of the solar engine is that the Beam of Chotek, though an armor-piercing missile (its unit toolbar does not show the armor-piercing icon), deals relatively low bonus damage against armored units and as such will become less efficient compared to the stegadon when targeting heavily armored monsters over formations of armored infantry. At the end of the day, when all else fails, there&#039;s still a fully grown bastilidon underneath that laser crystal. Keep in mind, like every ranged unit, firing their missiles depletes their vigour and should be taken into account if you&#039;re planning on sending it into combat.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Perfect vigour&#039;s value cannot be overstated on a melee capable monster that would otherwise tire itself out just from holding a laser cannon in place. The greater defensive value of the bastilidon compliments the increased health quite nicely and will allow the blessed variant to stay in the thick of it considerably longer than others of its kind.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Revivification Crystal Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only non-magical source of healing, revivification crystals are one of the few healing options in the game that not only restores a unit&#039;s health but also actually revives dead models; a perk that&#039;s particularly valuable on your elite units like kroxigors or temple guard. A revivification crystal pairs excellently with a Life Slann in infantry heavy lists as you can very rapidly bring a unit back from the brink to near pristine (or whatever their healing cap is, depending on how used and abused they are), or for ensuring crucial monsters (like carnosaurs and dread saurians) become virtually unkillable. They are of limited use in a dinosaur army if your lord isn&#039;t a Life Slann, as their minor healing ability is short-ranged and can only target a single unit with a relatively lengthy cooldown between uses. Additionally, and this is notable hitch, models don&#039;t start coming back to life until all the still living models have been fully healed up. This, consequently, makes it difficult to rebuild your forces if they&#039;re in active combat or taking damage from other sources. Having said that, they&#039;re still one of two sources of healing non-slann lords have access to and the only healing option that doesn&#039;t impose on your Winds of Magic reserve (which is still a plus, as other armies don&#039;t have such a luxury). As a bastilidon variant, it can also throw itself into combat with little fear. Pro tip: Don&#039;t click that &amp;quot;end battle&amp;quot; button; instead, use it to revive what you can and win the fight with fewer casualties.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ark of Sotek Bastilodon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Functionally just a regular bastilidon, but with the ability to unleash an AoE burst of poison on all enemies surrounding it. As it&#039;s only a minor increase in cost over the feral version, the Ark of Sotek may be worth getting for the very minor amount of damage and extra poison it can apply to the invariable mosh pits bastilidons often find themselves in. Alternatively, you can get much more utility from the other two non-feral variants, and rely on your skinks to supply poison or your mages to deal burst damage to tarpits of infantry. In Campaign these boys are one of your mainstay units until tier 4 stegadons, with the lizardmens low growth and poor early-game economy the low-cost high reward of these guys can easily melt through tons of early game infantry, a must-get.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - A wild stegadon, pure and simple. A living battering ram, stegadons are fantastic line breakers and are well rounded enough to survive the ensuing melee while dealing respectable damage in turn. Like all feral dinosaur variants, its only major weakness is a vulnerability to rampaging courtesy of its lower leadership. This is a forgivable flaw, considering how cheap they are and the fact that you can simply use Cold Blooded to snap them out of it definitely lessens the severity of an occasional rampage.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Stegadon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - A stegadon with a long-range ballista and skink handlers mounted upon its back. Stegadons serve as the second of your two artillery options and are arguably the best at dealing raw damage: the ballista is unerringly accurate and can easily snipe opposing artillery pieces, usually destroying the cannon/catapult models in question before they can get much usage. What&#039;s more is that, as it&#039;s connected to a single entity monster itself, the ballista is not vulnerable to these same tactics. Like Cygors or Steam Tanks, Stegadons compensate for the lack of firepower volume traditional artillery pieces can put out by retaining its long ranged assaults until it is either out of ammunition or has been killed. The stegadon&#039;s ranged attack generally struggles to deal significant damage to infantry formations due to the narrow projectiles and low splash damage (despite the bonus anti-infantry modifiers it gets). Regardless, the shot still deals incredible damage to heavily armored, single entity monsters (particularly a majority of mounted lords/heroes) due to their immense bonus AP damage. Even should you run out of ammunition or should your opponent try to tie it down in melee... it&#039;s still a stegadon. With skinks firing poisoned darts at everything surrounding its legs, it will put up just as much of a fight as its feral counterpart and then some. The only downside to the ballista is that firing it will drain the stegadon&#039;s vigour (even if it&#039;s standing perfectly still), meaning it&#039;ll likely perform less efficiently in any ensuing melee if it doesn&#039;t get a break between firing and fighting.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hoh boy, now we&#039;re talking. A massive buff to the stegadon&#039;s health will allow him to take significantly more punishment over the rest of his variants, but that&#039;s not really the main selling point here. The blessed stegadon is also gifted with perfect vigour; a massive boon to the offensive prowess of this beast. Being able to act as full blown artillery then rush into glorious melee combat to tear enemies a new asshole at peak performance is something no other faction can achieve remotely as effectively as these guys can. If a quest pops up in the campaign with these as a reward, you should do your damndest to accomplish it. They&#039;re well worth it.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where the stegadon does its best work from afar, the ancient stegadon needs to get up close and personal to do business. The howdah, though packed with significantly more ammo, is much shorter ranged and is primarily meant to soften up nearby targets for a follow up charge into melee. Ancient stegadons are somewhat tankier than other stegadon variants, though their limited range debatably renders them less effective offensively. In general, you should either spring for the Engine of the Gods or stick with a regular stegadon..&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Thunderous One (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A beefed up ancient stegadon that calls down bolts of lighting every 20 seconds, the Thunderous One was made to wade into the enemy&#039;s front line and deal indiscriminate damage. Unfortunately, these bolts of lightning can and will deal friendly fire to your units. This can make it somewhat challenging to support its charge with infantry or cavalry, though allied single entity monsters typically won&#039;t mind the stray blast.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Engine of the Gods Ancient Stegadon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Is all the gold armor embedded into your ancient stegadon not quite flashy enough for you? Just give it the ability to call down an orbital bombardment to glass swarms of warmbloods in the name of the Great Plan. The Stegadon itself is, functionally, an Ancient Stegadon. It behaves identically like one and has the exact same statline, but once you get to its abilities, things start to get interesting. It has two supporting abilities, Arcane Configuration (Winds of Magic Power Recharge rate boost) and the Portent of Warding (a 5% Ward Save for all allied units within 40m). These effects make EotG Stegadons fantastic supporting units simply from their presence alone. And yes, this applies to EotG Stegadon Mounts, so your Skink Priests have access to their own personal WoM batteries. The third, and debatably the main reason you&#039;re considering this ornate beast, is the Burning Alignment active ability. Though limited to only two uses, the Engine of the Gods can deal devastating damage to infantry focused lists if the Burning Alignment is used at just the right moment. It&#039;s particularly effective when fired into choke points or along your enemy&#039;s frontline ranks when they&#039;re tied up with your forces. Thankfully, the Burning Alignment ability is extremely accurate for (what is functionally) a wind spell; so long as you aim carefully and don&#039;t wander your lizardmen into it&#039;s path, you can drop it right in front of your forces with little fear.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Salamander (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A single giant salamander, tempered with age, experience and able to melt opponents with extra spicy hellfire. Ancient salamanders are more durable than their lesser hunting pack kin and are more reliably able to survive the occasional melee scuffle, though it generally shouldn&#039;t participate in it. Instead, the ancient salamander truly shines when paired with fire slann, salamander hunting packs, fireleech bolas terradons, or solar engine bastilidons thanks to its ability to render enemy units flammable with its own fireballs. This flammable effect greatly improves the damage dealt by flaming attacks and when executed properly and will burn through most infantry-focused armies with terrifying efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - An offensive machine, the apex predator of Lustria (you know, conventionally) and a signature monster of the lizardmen, the carnosaur is a ferocious beast that specializes in hunting other monsters, skaven weapon teams, and artillery due to their innate anti-large bonuses and armor-piercing capabilities. They&#039;re considerably frailer than stegadons and bastilidons defensively, though they are much swifter and tear through most enemies far more quickly due to their much higher attack. When funds are too tight to take a Saurus Scar-Vet or Old Blood on a carnosaur, a feral version with proper support won&#039;t steer you wrong. Just make sure you keep a leader or hero with Cold-Blooded on standby in case they get a little carried away.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - The blessed carnosaur. Formerly the pinnacle of lizardmen might (the dread saurian says hi), blessed carnosaurs have all the anti-large, armor-piercing wrath of the regular carnosaur supplemented by a much more rounded defensive statline. Additional health and magic resistance makes the blessed carnosaur surprisingly survivable against a myriad of generic threats and allows it to commit to fights that regular carnosaurs would hesitate towards. They are still just as vulnerable as any other carnosaur to getting mobbed or picked apart from regular armor-piercing weapons and absolutely will rampage in a bind, so don&#039;t get reckless with your charges.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Geltblöm’s Terror (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Carnosaur that never rampages and is blessed with both Vanguard deployment and the Strider ability, enabling it to keep up to speed in any terrain. Vanguard deployment and rampage immunity is a fantastic combination for a Lizardmen monster designed to fight other monsters, but don&#039;t get reckless.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Troglodon (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Troglodon without a Skink Oracle to keep it in check. Troglodons are in essence a hybrid between an Ancient Salamander and Carnosaur in that they&#039;re able to burp up potent poisonous spit that&#039;s extremely effective against large targets. Troglodons are quite possibly the first real &amp;quot;skirmisher&amp;quot; single entity monster introduced: though they&#039;re quick for ground-bound dinosaurs, they should generally only engage in melee as a last resort or with &#039;&#039;heavy&#039;&#039; support because they are not designed to put up much of a fight. In a direct melee engagement against most other combat monsters, Troglodons tend to lose pretty handily. Their low leadership also tends to cause them to rampage quickly when caught up in a brawl. However, if they focus on kiting and sniping their targets rather than charging them, they can do frankly sickening amounts of damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Pale Death (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Troglodon that can buff itself and nearby allies in melee whenever it uses it&#039;s Primeval Roar, giving them a rather substantial Melee Attack bonus for a short while. Though a buff of 24 Melee Attack is certainly an eyebrow raiser, it only recharges when the Pale Death is actively engaged in melee combat. For 60 seconds. On a creature that&#039;s prone to rampaging at the drop of a hat, this is a very risky commitment without a Lord/Hero nearby to keep it in check.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, dread saurians are nigh uncontested in raw damage output and are more than capable of killing every other unit in the game in a straight fight. Unfortunately for you, your opponent will be able to field &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more units than your dread saurian will be able to deal with at once and most of said units will likely be picking it off at range. As a massive, lumbering behemoth, dodging even slow moving projectiles is well and truly beyond the dread saurian and it will take tremendous damage on the approach. Even once it arrives in melee, the sheer volume of bodies capable of surrounding it and poking it with anti-armor/anti-large sticks will wear it down quite quickly. Their size also provides another source of jank whenever they get bogged down by hordes; they&#039;ll struggle to properly path their way through the crowds (it doesn&#039;t help that the Dread Saurian also has relatively low mass considering it&#039;s literal size) and their attacks, while lethally brutal, also tend to miss depending on the terrain it&#039;s fighting on. They are also prohibitively expensive and will eat up a significant portion of your funds, meaning the rest of your army will be extremely limited in number. Ensure you have a proper supporting mage (a life slann is essential) if you&#039;re bringing one.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, now wearing a howdah filled to the brim with skinks. A modest price bump from the already exorbitant feral variant will grant the regular dread saurian a higher leadership, ranged attacks and poison. There&#039;s little reason not to go ahead and splurge for these upgrades, feral or not the dread saurian will be the centerpiece of your army which you&#039;ll do everything to keep alive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Shredder of Lustria (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single most expensive beast you could ever field, and boy does he do work. In addition to all that a dread saurian can bring to bear, the Shredder of Lustria is stacked with the full complement of veterinary stat buffs and a leadership debuff for all enemies surrounding it, a perk that, when combined with the innate fear and terror dread saurians cause, will make most enemy infantry run the &#039;&#039;fuck&#039;&#039; away very fast. If that weren&#039;t enough, the Shredder of Lustria also encourages all nearby allied troops, buffing their leadership. After all, who wouldn&#039;t be inspired by seeing the apex of lizardmen might devouring any and all who oppose the Great Plan? Speaking of the Great Plan, you&#039;re going to need one: considering how much money you&#039;re sinking into this puppy, you&#039;re going to need to really budget the rest of your army carefully.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Coatl (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Previously a relic of a long lost bit of Lizardmen lore, the Coatl makes a rather striking return as the premier Lizardmen flying monster. The Coatl, though packing two casts of Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and one cast of Lesser Chain Lighting as bound spells, is designed more as a source of support for ground-bound allies. Infact, the main draw to the Coatl isn&#039;t its combat capabilities (which are mediocre at best), but for the fact that it grants all allied units under its wings Stalk. Yes, everything from that unit of Red-Crested Skinks to that Dread Saurian doomstack becomes invisible and untargetable until they&#039;re either far too close to do anything about or the Coatl &amp;quot;lands&amp;quot; or dies. As a faction desperately starved of long range missile units, this is a massive boon for protecting your high-value targets on the approach. Once the Coatl has safely delivered it&#039;s charges into battle, it still can serve as an excellent disruptor of backline units, Snipe artillery or single entity monsters with thunderbolt or punish a large blob with lesser chain lighting. Just be careful: even your Terradons move faster than this thing and its size does it no favors when trying to dodge missile fire.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Spirit of Tepok (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Coatl that has Banishment and Shield of Thorns as bound spells instead. The option to lean more heavily into a support role does suit the Coatl quite well, though this largely depends on what lord choice and focus your army has. If you brought a life slann or a skink priest, a regular Coatl might get you more mileage.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen are a very versatile faction when viewed over the entire campaign, however there will be times when your army composition and thus tactics are limited depending on the progress you&#039;ve made in developing your empire. Your greatest limiting factor will be money; be it in single-player or multiplayer, many mid-high tier units will cost a fortune and you will invariably have a lower unit count compared to other armies. You will need to carefully consider the faction you&#039;re currently facing when forming your armies.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
So, you want to show the world a Great Plan, and TED talks aren&#039;t getting it done? You might think of the Lizardmen as just another &#039;big monster&#039; faction in multiplayer, but you&#039;re limiting yourself if you think that way. The scalies have a surprising amount of options within their roster. From super wide infantry builds to kite builds built around chameleon skinks, to more mobile cavalry-centric strategies, the Lizardmen can be quite a versatile opponent. The thing you&#039;re pretty much going to universally struggle against however is factions that are heavy on the ranged play. You need to think carefully about your army comp and lord choices, then bring the Great Plan to the four corners of the Earth (or multiplayer lobby, or whatever).&lt;br /&gt;
====Faction Counterplay====&lt;br /&gt;
A list of all the other factions in the game, along side their various strengths, weaknesses and best strategies you have to combat them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - Highly mobile and capable of dishing out impressive damage, the Beastmen are among the fastest armies in the game (only rivaled by the Wood Elves and Slaanesh). This can be difficult to deal with, as the only infantry you possess that can potentially keep up with them are your Skinks. Skinks...generally aren&#039;t a great pick against Beastmen. They&#039;re slower still than a significant portion of the Beastmen roster and will die quite quickly due to their lack of armor and defensive stats. Skink Skirmishers/Chameleon Skinks are a minor exception, as between their poisonous missiles and the Beastmen&#039;s lack of armor, they&#039;ll actually deal respectable damage to them. Otherwise, the stalwart Saurus (Spears) will be your best frontline unit; solid charge defenses, shields and anti-large bonuses will stop any rush in its tracks and the Beastmen&#039;s complete lack of armor means that they&#039;ll take the full brunt of their attacks. Your monsters USED to be fantastic here, but with the addition of the anti-large regenerating Ghorgon, they are a much more risky proposition. Seriously, this thing will beat the pants off of pretty much any monster you bring to the table, and its surprising mobility means that your slow-moving infantry will have a hard time tarpitting it. Shredder of Lustria builds and monster mash builds which used to be hilariously effective against the Beastie Boys are now quite dangerous to bring. Without being able to overly rely on your monsters, it&#039;s going to be up to your characters and magic to be the game-changer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039; - The end-all, be-all cavalry faction, Brettonia has access to some of the strongest mounted soldiers in the game. Their peasantry, though feeble, isn&#039;t to be underestimated in sufficient numbers and can still do notable damage through their archers and pikemen. That said, your Skink Cohorts can easily best any peasants they (effortlessly) pin down and a unit or two of kroxigors will &#039;&#039;evicerate&#039;&#039; any foot soldier unfortunate enough to meet them in combat. Bretonnians will also struggle to hold their lines together from the sheer amount of fear/terror your monsters can cause. However, their cavalry (particularly Grail Knights) won&#039;t falter from fear alone and are renowned for their devastating charges. Brace units of temple guard (or saurus spears, if you&#039;re cheap) to mitigate their damage and box them in before they have a chance to pull back. A light slann with the Net of Amyntok can shut down Brettonian cavalry &#039;&#039;hard&#039;&#039; and should heavily be considered as your lord for this matchup.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - The general battle plan here can best be summarized with &amp;quot;Grab a bunch of ranged and 2 Solar Engines and defend them at all costs because otherwise you have no way to deal with Dark Rider Crossbow and Scourgerunner spam.&amp;quot; Seriously, those damn Anti Large missile chariots were pretty much designed to fight you. A pure melee monster rush isn&#039;t going to work otherwise you will just get kited into oblivion. Have the solar engines shoot them from afar and see if you can get you Chameleon skins to slow them down so your Cold One riders can catch up to them. Your dino cav is better than their dino cav, take advantage of that. Mazdamundi is also great for nets to lock down cavalry and get them ready for a pounding. If you can get rid of all that mobile ranged, the infantry fight should fall in your favor in no time.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039; - Dwarfs tend to form nigh impenetrable walls of armorclad infantry and are one of the few factions capable of holding the line better than you. AP weaponry is a must, so mixing Red-Crested Skinks among your Saurus can help chew through thicker formations. Kroxigors, particularly Sacred Kroxigors, will be your best infantry can openers in this fight. Despite their innate spell resistance, your offensive magics can still work wonders against most dwarfen infantry, so a heavens skink priest or fire slann wouldn&#039;t be amiss in your army here. Beware of their Giant Slayers; though fragile, they will deal terrible damage to any armored cavalry or monsters they can get their grubby dawi mitts on. Skink skirmishers/chameleon skinks can easily outpace slayer units and whittle them down with their poisoned missiles, though they&#039;ll do absolutely nothing against any of the armored infantry. Terradon riders are virtually untouchable to their ground bound forces with a special shout-out for the Fireleech Bolas variant, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to take down any Gyrocopters contesting the skies if you want to get your money&#039;s worth. Lastly, you&#039;ll want to destroy any artillery they bring before turning your attention to the rest of their forces; Ripperdactyls can easily flank and shred such devices, though you&#039;ll need to draw away any screening units if you want them to survive the aftermath. Lastly, this is one of the few matchups where Razordons are a more attractive mid-ranged option than your Salamanders.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039; - Karl Franz brings a relatively balanced roster to the table, with plenty of long ranged anti-armor firepower and cavalry that&#039;ll run circles around yours. With the sheer volume of AP [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units and artillery, this is a faction you&#039;ll generally want to leave the Saurus at home for. Skink Cohorts with shields are for once a rather reliable pick for your frontline, with Red-Crested Skinks and/or Kroxigors diving in once you&#039;ve tied down the missile units that otherwise threaten them. Additionally, your Terradon Riders can actually be quite effective in this matchup, particularly in shutting down Grenade Launcher Outriders. A Skink Priest of Heavens with Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and/or Comet of Cassandora is a rather cost-efficient answer to units such as the Steam Tank and Artillery Platforms, though regular Stegadons can punch holes through them if you can keep them safe. A Slann Priest with Light Magic and the Net of Amyntok coupled with a squad or two of Salamander Hunting Packs makes for an excellent cavalry deleting squad, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to shield them with your own cavalry or at the very least some shielded Saurus Spears.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039; - Go fast and hard into cathay&#039;s lines. Cathay brings a good amount of options against single-entity units with accurate grand cannons and iron hail gunners amongst others. The largest you should go is an ark of sotek or two to mass-poison damage cathay&#039;s entire packed formation. Go full offensive with saurus and try to briefly contest the skies to disrupt the artillery and missiles on the charge. in general it&#039;s a poor matchup as while the other &#039;monster race&#039; in the ogres is great against cathay it&#039;s simply a matter of price. ogres can beat cathay with a lot cheaper units than you can bring with kroxigors filling the same role as ogre bulls but 2.5 times the price. Unless your units get major discounts in multiplayer for immortal empires it&#039;s not a good time&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hordes of expendable Goblins and Ork Boyz make up the rank and file of the Greenskins. Despite having a particular focus towards mobbing you in melee combat, the Greenskins have a fairly diverse roster capable of performing decently well at ranged combat or skirmishing with their relatively diverse cavalry options. As the coup-de-grace, Greenskins also have access to several monstrous units between their selection of (river) trolls and Arachnarok Spiders that can mulch their weight in infantry. However, there are two major weaknesses to the Greenskin roster: they typically have &#039;&#039;terrible&#039;&#039; leadership (especially their expendable Goblin and Troll units) and a majority of their roster is unarmored. Saurus units will typically stand firm on the front lines while your Skink skirmishers will actually do some solid work while easily outpacing the sluggish Ork Boyz, but you will &#039;&#039;need&#039;&#039; to watch out for their Cavalry. Fireleech Bolas Terradons and Salamanders will have a field day against their infantry as well, especially against the fire-weak troll units who will crumble rapidly in the face of their flammability and terrible leadership. On the note of leadership; your pantheon of Jurassic beasties will have the time of their lives against the Greenskins. Their lack of charge defense, anti-large, and low leadership means that a Carnosaur or two will bowl through their ranks largely uncontested. However, keep an eye out for Black Orcs; they&#039;re one of the few armored infantry units in the Ork roster, are armor piercing and are immune to Fear/Terror. Red-Crested Skinks are a decent budget option to deal with them, though you may prefer to kite them with Razordon Hunting Packs instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Lizardmen will have some trouble countering High Elf flying monsters, particularly phoenixes. Your ranged units aren&#039;t going to get the chance to take them down in the air, so you have to rely on catching them when they drop down to attack and that can be tricky if you&#039;re running an all-dino army. At the same time, if you&#039;re using saurus then you will take some heavy losses from archers and cavalry if you commit them all to tarpitting the phoenix. Chameleon Skinks are an excellent pick against archer heavy builds; their lose formation coupled with their innate missile resistance will make them extremely hard to take down at range while their chameleon skin will let them dip in and out of combat with relative ease. Sisters of Averlorn are a priority target if present on the field; a Skink Priest of Beasts may be considered if only to summon manticores to tie them down. Additionally, the Legion of Chaqua should strongly be considered as a core part of your frontline; the ability to grant multiple units around it a 44% missile resistance is too valuable to ignore.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039; - Don&#039;t bring Skinks to this matchup. Barring Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers if you want to be cheap, all of your Skink Infantry will do little more than feed their skulls to Khorne&#039;s throne before they get an opportunity to do anything meaningful. A pricy saurus front line is definitely worth it here, potentially supported by Kroxigors. For once the &#039;engine of the gods&#039; stegadon&#039;s death-beam will actually be useful as the stegadon itself can knock about units and the death-beam being magic and AP will counter any infantry khorne can bring. Bring saurus, bring magic and your anti-large carnosaur. A very good matchup in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kislev is a relatively fearless foe for you, a nice change of pace for mere mortal men. Their higher tier infantry is generally able to out-trade yours, Tzar Guard (especially the Great Weapon variety) can and will gradually carve their way through regular Saurus lines while Streltsi and Ice Guard will prove quite competent at dealing with your forces at range. Fortunately, your sheer versatility means you aren&#039;t wanting for options. Even if they&#039;re a bit slower, your Cavalry will generally outclass Kislev&#039;s, barring any War Bear Riders they may have brought. Even regular Cold One Riders will make a fantastic hammer to the anvil that is your Saurus and even a losing matchup against their stronger Tzar Guard will quickly turn in your favor with a rear charge or two. Of course, aside their War Bear Riders, Kislev&#039;s monsters can&#039;t hold a candle to yours. Once you shut down some of the ranged AP Missiles, your dinos can wreak terrible havoc upon the enemy lines. Razordons are particularly effective right now, though Salamanders can be used to efficiently deal with the more monstrous enemy units. Terradons are almost always a never-pick however as since in essence every single kislev unit has a ranged attack that is more than capable of dealing with them terradons are free kills for even kossars.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - This...should be a no brainer in concept, though countering opposing lizardmen can be somewhat difficult to execute. Anti-large units in some shape or form are an inarguable must; cold one spear-riders accompanied by saurus spears can surround and pin down enemy monsters in a relatively cost-effective manner. Red-crested skinks are an ideal infantry choice due to their poison and armor piercing bonus coming into play against a majority of the lizardman roster. Salamander hunting packs and ancient salamanders are fantastic all-rounders that can deal terrifying damage across the entire board. Your main objective should be to focus down any slann mage-priest or skink priests present on the field, followed by any other lord/hero keeping potential rampages in check. If there is an opposing slann, avoid clumping up your infantry to reduce the threat of a banishment and/or any other vortex spell devastating your frontlines. Regular stegadons are fantastic monster snipers who should focus fire on major threats like carnosaurs or dread saurians before anything else.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are pretty much Warriors of Chaos with a little bit of [[Space Wolf|wolf]] thrown in. Like the Warriors of Chaos, they have a relative lack of missile units but unlike the Warriors of Chaos, are considerably less armored as a whole. However, they more than make up for it with their mobility and plentiful sources of anti-large, which can be seriously dangerous for one of your central strategies. Saurus Warriors as such are substantially better at holding off the bulk of their front lines while Temple Guard are a fantastic answer to their Skin Wolves and Trolls. You need to be on top of your positioning however, as Skin Wolves and Ice Wolves can run circles around your plodding infantry. Skink Skirmishers are also fantastic for dealing chip damage and applying poison while staying well out of arm&#039;s reach for a majority of their forces. (Ancient) Salamanders are also a superb choice, as are Fireleech Bolas Terradons as general damage dealers. Stegadons and Carnosaurs will likely be your go-to monsters, as a pair of Carnosaurs can typically take down a War Mammoth, at least in theory. Caution should be exercised against War Mammoths in particular, as they are one of the best monster units in the game. Considering the fact that half your list is made of monsters, that&#039;s saying something. No Norscan worth his salt will allow you to freely target down the crown jewel of his army, so make sure you commit well and truly to the fight.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039; -Nurgle has no anti-large, bad armour piercing, relies on outlasting his enemies, has almost no ranged firepower worth mentioning, has incredibly poor armour, is ridiculously slow, hates fire damage, and is mediocre in the air-game. Basically, everything Nurgle hates is something you have plenty of while Nurgle has precisely zero counters to your playstyle. You almost can&#039;t lose this match-up it&#039;s so one-sided.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is a fairly balanced matchup depending on what you bring. Saurus spears are the obvious pick here and try to avoid skink units entirely unless you want to give the gorgers free food. Carnosaurs with their anti-large are an obvious pick here and going for a stegadon with or without a hero on the back is great for counterplay against leadbelchers.The scariest thing ogres can bring are rhinoxes or their artillery. Essentially settle in for a large-on-large slugfest.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039; - An iconic matchup, the skaven are everything the lizardmen aren&#039;t. Massive hordes of cheap, cowardly cannon fodder will fill the ranks of many skaven lists purely to get in the way of your Jurassic might and their rickety engines of war. Aside delaying the inevitable through piles of bodies, the ratmen have precious little in the way of durable front line units and will typically fall apart when thrown in the grinder. Rather, Skaven will rely on their wide array of artillery and arcane firearms to rain warpfire upon the hapless masses (friend and foe alike). Ratling Gunners are notorious for their ability to rapidly shred infantry, cavalry and monsters alike while their jezzails excel at picking apart single entity monsters, lords and heroes from halfway across the battlefield. Any frontline infantry you have you&#039;ll want shielded. In general, skaven are modestly quick on their feet, so you&#039;ll want a selection of cavalry or skinks to catch up to and tie down their missile infantry. Chameleon Skinks are generally a strong pick against skaven due to their missile resistance and for once can do respectable damage due to the relative lack of armor in the skaven roster. Skink Cohorts will typically win in a straight fight against Skaven Slaves or Clanrats, though against anything more elite you&#039;ll want saurus or kroxigors to deal with them. Your monsters will also have virtually free reign should they manage to make it into melee, though you&#039;ll want to ensure any artillery or missile infantry are well and truly tied down before you let them loose.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039; - Much like the Dark Elves, this matchup falls considerably in their favor. Speedy infantry, cavalry and chariots &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; packing AP damage makes a front line of Saurus undesirable. However, unlike the Dark Elves, Slaanesh [[/d/|comes]] up short in the ranged game; your Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers and even both Terradon Riders will prove quite valuable at whittling away Slaaneshi daemons, though exquisite care will be needed for your skink infantry; even with poison debuffs, Slaaneshi units are &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; fast and will still be able to chase down and tie up your Skinks without screening support. Other options include your trademark dinosaurs; despite packing AP damage, Slaanesh is not generally kitted with a diverse Anti-Large roster and may struggle trying to hold back your high-mass monsters from tearing through their ranks. When it comes to your Terradons, take a care. Slaanesh will usually pack some Furies to help defend the skies and though Furies won&#039;t win against any of your other monsters, your Terradons aren&#039;t most other monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039; - There&#039;s not a lot a basic skeleton army can do to lizardmen. Unit for unit, saurus are just better and skinks will be more maneuverable. An all-dino army can destroy ushabti and higher-tier units with ease, provided you&#039;ve picked the right dinos (stegadons). However, this is not a reason to be complacent - the Tomb Kings roster has some very deadly Anti-Large AP units on their roster that will make very short work of your dinos. Of particular note are the Ushabti Greatbows and Necrosphinx; the former are dedicated monster snipers and the latter is absolute murder against other single-entity monsters. Try to mob these units with your infantry or try to make them irrelevant with magic, because the high innate armor and mass these units naturally have will mean they can and will be able to move around the battlefield with impunity.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039; - The key against Tzeentch is to get into melee quick and hold their units in place; Tzeentch daemons, even with their Protoss-like shields, aren&#039;t built for combat and will either try to do all their work at range (something you &#039;&#039;desperately&#039;&#039; will not want to combat them at) or by cycle charging before you get a chance to crack their shields. This is one of the rare matchups your Cold One Riders can actually excel at; they&#039;re rather decent in combat and can engage the enemy far sooner than your standard Saurus or Skinks can (and will likely/hopefully suffer less casualties for it). Additionally, Chameleon Stalkers can safely sneak up to vulnerable flanks; open up with a rather explosive burst of their own and start chewing through Horrors before they get much opportunity to return fire. Try not to contest the skies if you can, though Ripperdactyls will likely best most of the units they&#039;d be fighting in the skies... they&#039;ll be outnumbered substantially &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; move much more slowly. They&#039;ll be lit up far before they can ever catch up to anything.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039; - In terms of punching through these undeads&#039; lines they&#039;re even easier than their Vampire Counts brothers with very little in the way of durable infantry to hold back your Saurus killing machines. Where you will have to watch out is their ranged units - they have one of the cheapest gunlines in the game and it&#039;s even harder to break open their protectors because they&#039;re all undead and can&#039;t run. Their monsters will tarpit your dinos but rarely kill them, but without proper maneuvering you will be munching on polearm zombies all day while their undead musketeers and cannons fuck you up. Abuse magic hard and don&#039;t let them bog down your dinos, keep them constantly rolling through the zombies until you can trample over their gunners. Be very wary about Necrofex Colossi, not only can they kite your dinos but they can also put substantial hurt on them if not checked quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039; - If there&#039;s any faction in the game more stunted in the range-game, it&#039;s the Vampire Counts. Hordes upon hordes of meat-shields often form the rank and file of many undead lists while the lords and heroes do all the heavy lifting. You&#039;ll want to avoid clumping your units up or getting bogged down by the fodder, as a single Winds of Death can delete your entire frontline if you allow it. Kroxigors will make short work of any infantry the Vampire Counts send your way and Sacred Kroxigors in particular are extremely valuable against the ethereal units that might otherwise threaten your physical forces. Additionally, Skink Skirmishers will prove a frustrating thorn in your opponents side as they kite any non-cav across the field and back. Typically you&#039;ll want to focus on bringing down any characters the Vampire Counts field, as they quite literally hold the army together. Without their leadership and magic support, many of the undead will quickly crumble against the might of your superior soldiers. Fire damage is particularly useful in this regard, so Salamander Hunting Packs, Ancient Salamanders, Solar Engines and Fire Slann can quickly incinerate many of these lords and heroes (in the case of the Slann, they are also fantastic at dealing with ethereal heroes).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemons of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Expect to see a roster comprising mostly of Slaanesh and Tzeentch daemons. If this is the case, you&#039;re in for a rough one. If your opponent decided to focus on Khorne or Nurgle forces... well, hopefully you enjoy the borderline free win. Regardless, this can be a tricky matchup to properly plan for, so just try to take a balanced list. With a slight focus against Tzeentch/Slaanesh, of course.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another faction almost devoid of ranged options, the Warriors of Chaos is almost dedicated to advancing a wall of steel and meat from one end of the map to the other. Many of their units are armored and/or shielded and as such, armor-piercing units will be your friend against them. Take a few units of Saurus (Spears) to hold their units in place while you have some Red-Crested Skinks chip away at them. Spears are strongly suggested due to the relative abundance of large/monstrous units within their roster; they might not win against them, but your spears will go down fighting much harder than your regular warriors would. Take a unit or two of Ripperdactyls to shut down any Hellcannons they might&#039;ve brought to the table. Take no half-measures with them either; they&#039;re unbreakable so you &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; need to completely wipe them out if you don&#039;t want to be bombarded the entire match. Otherwise, some (Sacred) Kroxigors, Razordons and Stegadons are fantastic damage dealers and a Skink Priest of Heavens or a Fire Slann can delete large chunks of their infantry at a time with proper placement and timing.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Wood Elves are a flighty foe and one of the hardest for your army to actually pin down. Their relatively cheap access to long-ranged anti-armor missile infantry will pose a massive pain in the ass and their basic frontline infantry, the Eternal Guard, can hold their own surprisingly well against your monsters courtesy of their spears. In a rare twist, a front line of skink cohorts will prove more effective than your saurus against wood elves; they&#039;re quicker still than many elven infantry options and can further hinder their combat effectiveness thanks to their poison. Chameleon skinks will prove invaluable at harassing enemy archers and can kite a majority of their infantry with relative ease. Now when it comes to dealing with their tree units, I have one word for you. Fire. (Ancient) Salamanders can deal with dryads, tree kin and treemen with laughable ease and will prove just as effective at dealing with the rest of the wood elf roster, though you&#039;ll absolutely want a contingent or two of saurus spears to screen against Wild Riders. Wood Elves are also a rare instance of being a faction with &#039;&#039;less&#039;&#039; artillery than you (hint, they have none). Solar Engine bastilidons can heavily discourage their archers from setting up and will do bonus damage to any tree units they shoot. Lastly, many Wood Elf units are capable of vanguard deployment; keep an eye on your surroundings once the battle starts to ensure you aren&#039;t caught unawares.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;S/S-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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Though you aren&#039;t the undisputed king of Domination, Lizardmen are absolutely positioned as one of the top factions for this game mode currently. A very flexible faction with many options, you have excellent early game presence in the form of skinks. Your quick-footed infantry chaff will easily contest objectives due to their higher capture weight compared to the expendable chaff infantry other factions might field and will have a much easier time getting to them shortly after the game begins. Particularly any of the skirmishing variety that you vanguard deployed. Speaking of, Chameleon Stalkers/Skinks are still excellent skirmishers and harassers who can dive in and disrupt outlying forces, making objective contesting a painful nuisance for ill-equipped foes. When it comes to holding the line, your Saurus infantry is as durable as ever. When supported by regular skinks, it will take a concentrated effort if not a full hard counter in order to shift your forces off of an objective. This is made even more challenging due to your rather plentiful healing options; Life Slann, Skink Oracles and even Revivification Bastilidons are fantastic for keeping your forces in the fight. Even more so if further supported by any Slann&#039;s Ward save nope-bubble that they can plant down on any objective to thoroughly lock it down. This isn&#039;t even really getting into your single entity beat-sticks; Kroq-Gar can prove the equal of lords such as Be&#039;lakor with the right support and Lord Kroak can still Deliver Itza hard enough to evaporate enemy blobs with frightening ease.&lt;br /&gt;
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At the end of the day, your sheer versatility affords you &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more flexibility in dealing with the highly varied factions you&#039;ll be facing while still being able to focus on defending objectives. Yes, there are still some factions you&#039;ll generally struggle to deal with, but you will at least have a couple tools to handle them while you hold your ground. This is something some of the other factions (like the Dwarfs or Vampire Coast) cannot quite claim.&lt;br /&gt;
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A particular note, if you&#039;re going up against one of the other top-tier factions in this game mode, such as Nurgle or Vampire Counts, bring fire. A Salamander Hunting Pack or two, a Fire Slann and &#039;&#039;maybe&#039;&#039; a Fireleech Bolas Terradon Rider can more efficiently stymie those factions regenerative strengths while further exploiting their innate flammability. A Burning Head or Firestorm will incinerate most of their blobs while dealing moderately little to your armored Saurus lines while Salamanders will also prove quite potent against the larger monsters/chariots supporting them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, be it the Vortex or Mortal Empires, the biggest concern lizardmen have is obtaining a consistent source of income; skinks will only carry you so far in the early game and sacking settlements will only provide a quick short-term boost to your treasury. Your economy generally lacks bonuses, especially compared to other Warhammer 2 factions, though you won&#039;t be as constrained as, say, Wood Elves or Beastmen, and expanding the Geomantic Web and getting upkeep reduction skills will go a long, long way. As such, if you aren&#039;t playing as Hexoatl it is imperative to get the city as soon as possible for its landmark, which reduces upkeep on the lizardmen&#039;s most powerful units. Most other landmark buildings add some bonus to several unit chains, such as additional damage for skinks or more defense for saurus warriors.&lt;br /&gt;
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Lizardmen research is locked behind building completion; many important technologies cannot be accessed until a specific, often mediocre in mid-early game, building is built in one of your settlements. Generally speaking, it is better to unlock research to start improving your weaker units rather than focus on your economy in the early- to mid-game. You simply won&#039;t be generating much revenue from economy buildings until the Geomantic Web is expanded and upkeep is reduced. However, that also means you need to be smart about what buildings to construct in your limited settlements; depending on how much money you have coming in through battles and sacking, it may be worth it to construct something just to unlock research and then destroy it to make room for something you genuinely need.&lt;br /&gt;
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Despite skinks being largely cannon fodder after turn 75, the skink Spawning Pool building should be built in every minor settlement so that you can hire as many Skink Chief heroes as possible. Not only are they the faction assassins, which help lizardmen remove otherwise troublesome heroes that would be difficult to snipe on the battlefield, they can all get stegadon or ancient stegadon mounts. These are functionally equivalent to the generic version but come with extended range and bonuses to damage. It is possible to have two full armies of just Skink Chiefs by the Chaos invasion, if you so wish, and it is even more OP than the standard dinostack. Skink Priests also have access to these mounts, but increasing their recruiting slots is much more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
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Once you start becoming established and have a few provinces under your belt, it is imperative to begin constructing Star Chambers in every province you can afford to do so. Each Star Chamber boosts the starting rank of all newly recruited Slann Mage-Priests by 3 levels and all new heroes by 2. Yes, this stacks all the way up so that you can recruit max level Slann every 10 turns. Each Star Chamber also offers a small but lucrative bonus to all income for the whole Province, which helps to address your stone-age economy and extends enemy sieges by an extra 3 turns, potentially granting you just enough time to save the city should it fall under attack.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Mortal Empires/Vortex===&lt;br /&gt;
With the advent of Immortal Empires in the third game, this will admittedly feel like a lackluster experience compared to it. Having said that, if you feel like sticking to the &amp;quot;OG&amp;quot; experience or don&#039;t quite want to pick up game III yet, here are some tips and tricks. In general, if you&#039;re starting as one of the factions starting on your home turf of Lustria, you&#039;re going to feel quite cramped.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;City of the Sun&#039;&#039;&#039; - Big boss Mazdamundi starts with a couple nice things going for him; As the proud owner of Hexoatl, late game Dino-Doomstacks can become particularly affordable. Additionally, he can expand south relatively freely due to a province&#039;s worth of abandoned settlements ripe for the plundering/taking. Not everything is as bright as his city&#039;s namesake suggests; A permanent -10 diplomatic penalty to all Non-Lizardmen factions can make diplomacy somewhat problematic. This is exacerbated by the fact that Mazda starts directly south of the Dark Elves and has a cluster of aggressive Vampire Coast and lizard-hating Empire colonists barring his access to the rest of Lustria. After you secure your initial holdings, you should weigh your options carefully then commit to eradicating one threat at a time if you can help it. Wiping out Morathi&#039;s Dark Elves is the more challenging prospect; their abundance of Armor Piercing weaponry (melee and ranged) can make early game excursions north particularly brutal. This is made worse by the climate incompatibilities, where growth and replenishment are dramatically hindered. On the other hand, Morathi&#039;s capital city does provide some rather significant bonuses to your research, income and public order (reduction of penalties from corruption). Should you choose to go south, you&#039;ll have a much easier time and will be able to meet up with several other Lizardmen factions you can trade/confederate with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Last Defender&#039;&#039;&#039; - Starting in the ass-crack of the southeast, Kroq-Gar has a bit of a rough start. His only legendary lord neighbor, Tiktaq&#039;to, is still a veritable hike through Vampire/Tomb King infested deserts and Skaven/Ork-filled mountains. You do have two other generic Lizardmen factions nearby, but they often get wiped out within the first 20 turns by either Vampires, Tomb Kings or Malus Darkblade, if you don&#039;t do the job for them. To get to the rest of your Lizard brethren (who actually matter), you&#039;re going to have to carve a path of bloody carnage across the literal length of the map. There are a couple of ways to go about it, however. If you focus your efforts, you can shove off the coast above your capital city and take the Dragon Isles province directly to the north. If you head north quickly, you can snag a veritable batch of handy Legendary Lord traits that&#039;ll turn Kroq-Gar into a particularly potent duelist and secure a number of relatively isolated, defendable provinces before you press westward. If you&#039;d rather focus on pressing west initially... prepare for the long haul. You&#039;ll want to keep a banner army stationed either in Charnel Valley (where Clan Mors starts) or in Devil&#039;s Backbone (where the Court of Lybaras starts) to help defend against Ork or potential Dark Elf incursions.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lllllet&#039;s get ready to RUMBLE!&#039;&#039;&#039; - Brace yourself, you&#039;re deep in the Lustria-Bowl. Tehenhauin has the roughest start of all your lords, even including Horde-faction Nakai; though he has one potential ally to his immediate south, he has Vampire Coast, Dark Elves, Skaven and expansionist Empire folk surrounding him on all sides. Worse, you&#039;re effectively stuck with Skinks for infantry until you can make progress on your Skaven genocide quest. To this end, you&#039;re going to want to either focus on pumping out a flood of Skinks or focus on building your Beast Lairs to try to pump out some monstrous units to compensate for your lack of early-game muscle. Taking out the Vampire Coast first is strongly recommended, as not only do they spread vampiric corruption, but all of their settlements will provide you with valuable ports. From there, you can put the screws to the Dark Elves and Skaven to the south and claim some valuable land and sacrifices for Sotek.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tiktaq&#039;to====&lt;br /&gt;
* Perhaps the most... bland campaign, Tiktaq&#039;to just kind of exists in the middle of the Southlands, caught between some Tomb Kings, a random Empire faction and a fair few crusading Bretonnians. If you want, you can focus on allying with the Tomb Kings initially. They can provide a reasonable source of Trade income and provide a buffer against the burgeoning Greenskin-tide while you clean up the Bretonnians and Empire. Additionally, if you focus on sweeping east, you can get a solid point of entry into Lustria.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Gor-Rok==== &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The world is your Itza&#039;&#039;&#039; - Despite being solidly in the Lustria-Bowl and being a Saurus-dedicated, exclusive footlord, Gor-Rok is basically guaranteed supremecy due to beginning the game with Lord Kroak &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; starting with Itza as his capitol. Tehenhauin will often end up confederating with you pretty early and without much fuss due to the various Lustria-Bowl contenders beating the piss out of him. You&#039;ll likely want to focus your initial expansion down south to clear out the Skaven and secure the various resources found on the southeast coastline before pushing north to clear out the Vampires. Once you control the majority of Lustria, you effectively have free reign to set your sights anywhere you feel like conquering.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Nakai====&lt;br /&gt;
* Formerly the most wayward of the Children of the Old Ones, Nakai&#039;s start in Albion effectively tries to throw you against the forces of Norsca for a majority of your early-mid game. After some research, he&#039;s admittedly geared for it; natural Snow and Chaos Attrition immunity courtesy of your unique tech tree grants Nakai a lot more flexibility for engaging the northern Chaos factions and despite not controlling any of the settlements he captures, the Defenders of the Great Plan generate a &#039;&#039;ton&#039;&#039; of Untainted corruption. Though this won&#039;t really benefit you personally much, your allies (or fellow players on Co-Op campaigns) will find traversing the north considerably less threatening. Having said that, due to being a Horde faction, you&#039;re perfectly free to just abandon Albion entirely and find new stomping grounds to start your Campaign in.&lt;br /&gt;
In immortal empires he&#039;s even more lost starting in fucking cathay. But he does get a proper stegadon as a starting unit so that&#039;s a big bonus&lt;br /&gt;
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====Oxyotl====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Deep in enemy territory&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Nakai and &#039;&#039;potentially&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, Oxyotl has the most unique (and arguably best) Campaign. His initial start is a bit rough, being awkwardly sandwiched in the far north between the rapidly confederating Dark Elves to the west and the pugnacious Norscans to the east. Though his universal climate habitability is a (necessary) godsend, he&#039;ll find it somewhat difficult to defend and expand his home territory. If you can, try to focus down the Dark Elves once you secure your home province. Oxyotl&#039;s particular playstyle actually counters Dark Elves to a degree and if you can nip Malekith in the bud before he confederates the rest of his misbegotten kind, you can spare yourself a late-game headache and get a hell of an infrastructure set up with all the unique building chains found in Naggarond. Just make sure you keep a couple standing armies in the region for the Chaos Invasion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t neglect your missions&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is because, unless you want to get constant debuffs, buff random enemy armies into the stratosphere or cause the Chaos Invasion to happen way ahead of schedule, Oxyotl&#039;s army is going to be consistently busy warping around the map doing missions rather than naturally expanding your home territory. He can warp back to the capitol and any one Silent Sanctum of your choosing freely (which you can establish in any settlement you&#039;ve laid eyes upon at least once), but only once per turn and he does not regain any of the movement/actions spent prior to the warp. However, many of the missions Oxyotl needs to undertake often involves him razing or capturing enemy settlements, so you&#039;ll often find yourself with various holdouts sprinkled across the map. Just make sure that you get a banner army or two to defend your capitol if you can help it; things get &#039;&#039;extremely&#039;&#039; messy once the Chaos Invasion starts.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Your Silent Sanctums&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your other unique mechanic is a game-changer for the Lizardmen. Functionally, they&#039;re similar to Skaven Undercities; you can construct unique buildings to benefit any of your forces within the Region it was established, as well as any other regions neighboring it. This can include granting your forces permanent vision on everything within those regions, a flat 20% upkeep reduction for all of your forces within the area or even a random chance to deal damage to enemy forces happening by. Whenever you amass 8 gems, you can construct a Silent Sanctum in any settlement any of your characters have personally seen. One key function truly unique to Oxyotl is that you can actually construct a building that allows Oxyotl&#039;s army to teleport there at will. You can literally teleport a full Stegadon doomstack right next to an enemy faction&#039;s capitol city if you so desire. Suffice to say, Silent Sanctums are extremely useful and worth investing in.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Take Albion!&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you can afford the excursion, send Oxyotl or a generic banner army south to Albion and claim it. Several unique buildings in Konquata provide rather substantial financial boons and, especially when coupled with a specially kitted out Silent Sanctum, can serve as a rapid recruitment center for your efforts in the Old World. You&#039;re the only Lizardmen faction within a reasonable distance who can actually make use of these unique buildings and an early capture can prove to be a rather profitable investment for your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Immortal Empires===&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s here, the biggest Total War map to date, spanning effectively the entire Old World and then some (only a few less than fleshed out regions such as Nippon are excluded). The Lustriabowl has for the most part calmed down, a majority of the non-lizardmen factions have set sail for greener pastures and with the inclusion of the entire southern half of the continent, what factions that remain now have some breathing room. Having said that, this season, it&#039;s time for the Southlands Thunderdome to kick off! While Gor-Rok and Tehenhauin can breathe a sigh of relief, Kroq-Gar and Tiktaq&#039;to are now sandwiched in with factions from damn near every walk of (un)life; Vampire Counts, Tomb Kings, Daemons of Khorne and Tzeentch, Dwarfs, Orks, Skaven, High Elves, Empire, Bretonnians, the list goes ON.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re playing as Gor-Rok, Tehenhauin or even Mazdamundi, don&#039;t get too comfortable in Lustria however. Dark Elves in the form of Rakarth have set up shop on the western coast of Lustria, Clan Pestilins has borderline free reign of the south-eastern coastline, Markus Wulfhart continues his colonial ways in northern Lustria alongside his new-found Bretonnian buddy Alberic. The Vampire Coast is, in fact, still infested with the Vampire Coast and a few rogue factions of daemons muck about in central Lustria. Though it won&#039;t be &#039;&#039;quite&#039;&#039; as chaotic as before, given the extra breathing room, you&#039;ll still need to remain vigilant if you want to kick all the warm-bloods out of your homeland.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
One notable change is the Rite of Awakening; it no longer costs any gold to use, so once you unlock it, there&#039;s &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; reason to not immediately use it to spawn in a Slann for your recruitment pool. Enact that shit every single time it pops off cooldown.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scar-Veteran Doomstack Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;: Kroq-Gar probably got the biggest buff/change transitioning from Mortal Empires to Immortal Empires among lizardmen. The first notable perk is that his faction has been &#039;&#039;heavily&#039;&#039; re-tooled to focus on Saurus; specifically Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans. Faction wide, Saurus Spawning pools now grant additional perks beyond the ability to recruit Saurus units and, at 4th tier, will grant an additional +2 recruit rank for Scar-Veterans. This stacks with both the Humble trait and Star Chambers (which now, unfortunately, can only be constructed in province capitals), letting you &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; quickly start cranking out high-ranking Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs. If that weren&#039;t enough, all Scar-Veterans and Old-Bloods gain a 30% boost to experience gain and get an extra 1% Weapon Strength per rank they have (capping out at a [[/d/|+50% weapon strength buff at max level]]). The Last Defenders did lose their universal -10% upkeep discounts, but it&#039;s slightly made up for since Old-Bloods gain a -15% Upkeep reduction for their banner armies, encouraging you to run them as Lords for your more expensive doomstacks. Though by no means should you forsake taking a Slann here and there.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Kroq-Gar himself downgraded some of his personal buffs, comparatively. Gone are the leadership and armor buffs for Stegadons, Bastiladons, Terradons and Carnosaurs. Instead, Saurus and Cold-One Riders gain a 25% experience gain buff and his former -50% upkeep reduction for Saurus and Cold One units has simply dropped down to the fairly standard -15% universal upkeep reduction all his Old-Blood units get. Much more versatile than before, though.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Speaking of the scaly lizard, he starts on the eastern coast of the Southlands, smack dab above Teclis (for now). Teclis makes for a decent defensive ally if you so wish and a valuable buffer against the southern Chaos forces such as Kairos. Almost invariably, you&#039;re going to be forced upwards in your wars; smaller Skaven infest the Kingdom of Beasts province and Khalida is often prone to declaring war against you once you work your way north. Immediately following Khalida, you&#039;ll likely draw the ire of Clan Mors and be drawn straight into the Karak Eight-Peaks race, oddly enough.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Should you sail northeast, you can evict Ku&#039;gath from the Dragon Isles for a nice footstep into southern Grand Cathay and the Darklands. Anyone who&#039;s played enough of Mortal Empires might be so inspired for a fresh change of scenery.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Heading directly west to meet up with your lizard brethren is also far more tenable, now that you don&#039;t need to fight your way through an entire desert&#039;s worth of Tomb Kings. You&#039;ll still need to secure your starting province, but as the Golden Tower now stands as a convenient mountain pass, you can meet and greet Tiktaq&#039;to extremely early in the campaign. His starting region offers a nice launching point into your ancestral home, where you can ideally encounter Tehenhauin clinging to life on the bottom cape of Lustria. Should you wish to actually expand there for all the unique buildings and legendary lords ripe for confederation, you&#039;ll need to make sure you don&#039;t neglect your Southlands homelands.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039; - Probably the biggest change from TWWH2 is the expansion of Lustria and the separation of North and South &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;America&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Lustria. Warhammer Mexico has been tweaked a little bit, with Skeggi and the coast being their own province. Skeggi is more challenging now since they can spam Marauder Champions, meaning you&#039;ll be tied up with them a bit more than before.&lt;br /&gt;
**Cylostra is now further north, next to Alith Anar, but you&#039;ll still have to deal with Rakarth, Wulfhart, Bordelaux, and of course, the Awakened. Most of these guys, and especially Rakarth, are packing lots of anti-Large, so you&#039;ll want to plan your armies ahead: Carnosaurs and Temple Guard can deal with Rakarth, but you&#039;ll want some artillery to deal with Wulfhart.&lt;br /&gt;
**North of Hexoatl is still the same clusterfuck, and you&#039;ll want to appease the Sisters of Twilight so that you&#039;re not dealing with a war on two fronts; their AI is stupidly annoying, and they will break non-aggression pacts with you if your relations hover even slightly above neutral. This anon recommends trading any settlements that you capture from Morathi to them in exchange for a fee, which can net you 7-8k in gold and some goodwill. Any settlement north of the Fallen Gates is useless to you anyway, and because Wood Elves have terrible settlement defense, as soon as Morathi takes them back, you can do it all over again and farm gold, allegiance, and positive relations.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
The Cult of Sotek got a minor buff with the reworking of their sacrificial pyramid. Regiments of Renown now unlock normally, while sacrifices can be spent to acquire powerful Blessed units. In addition, the updated character UI makes swapping Tehenhauin&#039;s unique banners and ancillaries very convenient and a little more useful.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin starts in the southwest corner of Lustria and will need to move fast to prevent Rakarth and Lord Skrolk from getting too established. Generally, Skrolk will expand further and faster, taking most of southern Lustria from the minor faction to your east. Rakarth will have few targets for expansion and will declare war on you fairly early, whereas Skrolk will ignore you until he completes his conquest. However, Skrolk is likely to be easier to defeat early on and taking his territories will give Tehenhauin some safe territory to develop since Gor-Rok will be to your north and there&#039;s little to no chance the AI will cross the ocean from the Southlands. Then you can build up the resources you need to defeat Rakarth armies of darkshards and spearmen, which are far more difficult for Tehenhauin&#039;s early-game armies to deal with. Humble heroes and skink chiefs on stegadons can be very useful at that point.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Once these two threats are dealt with, it&#039;s up to you whether you&#039;ll finish off the remaining minor factions in Lustria (Spine of Sotek Dwarfs, Tower of Dusk, Bordeleaux Errants, Luthor Harkon) or ally with them to get some unit variety. If you head north, Markus Wulfhart still can&#039;t be negotiated with and you&#039;ll have to destroy him if you want to reach Hexoatl. You may find it more interesting to head east and reach &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;the Southlands&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Mordor, where Tiktaqto and Kroq-gar should be clinging to life as the Vermintide bears down on them. But be wary; heading to the Southlands means you&#039;ll likely meet Kairos and will need to deal with Changing of the Ways if you don&#039;t finish him off. Luckily, his defeat trait is useful for Tehenhauin.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Alternatively, using the new sea lanes will bring you to Grand Cathay and Nakai the Wanderer. Most of the territory available will be yellow, whereas Lustrian and Southlands territories are green, but the areas of Cathay you can conquer/confederate will be almost completely secure from future attack as long as you maintain good relations with Zhao Ming and Meow Ying. Nakai tends to be fairly easy to confederate once you&#039;ve gotten 3 or more armies, and while he&#039;s not a stellar legendary lord he is one of the best fighters available to the lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin can meet Oxyotl very early in the campaign, however all of Oxyotl&#039;s territory will be red. It&#039;s probably better to leave him independent rather than confederate him, as the AI cheats will allow him to defeat all the Chaos factions in the Southern Chaos Wastes far more easily than the player can, and none of that territory is worth anything to the Cult of Sotek. Of course, this could all be a moot point considering how hard it is to confederate Lizardmen in general.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen&amp;diff=505151</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen&amp;diff=505151"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:56:33Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Universal Traits */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Sar Sotek!|Game battle chant for Lizardmen}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactics page for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why play Lizardmen==&lt;br /&gt;
*You love the parts of Jurassic Park where the dinosaurs eat everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
*They&#039;re [[awesome|aztec dinosaurs riding dinosaurs]] into battle. Some of those dinosaurs also have magical lasers strapped to them.&lt;br /&gt;
*You want to be a master of the arcane, but you don&#039;t want to wear [[High Elves|foppish headgear]] or have a racial lifespan only in the [[The Empire (Warhammer Fantasy)|double digits]].&lt;br /&gt;
*You&#039;ll have a nearly fearless army that&#039;s more likely to fight to the death before they turn tail and run.&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMwpC70di2w Do you want to see what one of these does to your enemies?]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;A Multitude of Monsters&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Lizardmen have the largest diversity of massive monsters in the game at their disposal. Between the various Bastilidons, Stegadons and Carnosaurs you can field, you won&#039;t be wanting for big beasties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Intimidating Presence&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unsurprisingly, the average man will struggle to keep calm and collected when facing down a stampede of hungry carnivorous dinosaurs many times his size. Virtually every monster and cavalry unit in this army inspires fear and terror in the mortal hearts of men; a few well timed Carnosaur charges can break and rout forces not outright immune to psychology. Conversely, this also renders your monsters immune to fear/terror effects as well.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Resilient Frontline&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus Warriors, even unshielded, are among the most durable baseline infantry units in the game. Though their damage output is rather low, their good armor and leadership will ensure they&#039;ll hold the line. Most non-AP grindfests will tend to work out in your favor on virtue of that alone. Of course this isn&#039;t even mentioning how tanky higher tier units like the Temple Guard or Kroxigors are.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mastery of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039; - With the notable exception of High Elves, Lizardmen have reliable access to more schools of magic than any other race. Slann and the mighty Lord Kroak offer not only some of the most reliable casting in the game, but have consistent access to the otherwise elusive Greater Arcane Conduit skill. Your skink priests are no push overs in magical matters either and are very cost effective options for when slann [[heresy|just aren&#039;t your thing]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexible Artillery&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where most other factions have to slowly wheel siege engines into place and are vulnerable to attacks in melee, Lizardmen give no fucks. Due to their Solar Engines and Ballistae being strapped on the backs of mighty Bastilidons/Stegadons, they can easily reposition themselves and hold their own in melee combat. Additionally, were the actual artillery models of other races can actually be destroyed, the Ballistae and Solar Engines will remain fully intact so long as the creature bearing it remains standing.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cavalcade of Cavalry&#039;&#039;&#039; - Cold Ones, Horned Ones, Terradons and Ripperdactyls, oh my! Though not as fast or as effective as some other faction&#039;s cavalry, you have a very diverse selection of fast-moving dinosaurs that can outflank enemies and flexibly adapt to the variety of terrain you may find yourself in. Just don&#039;t expect your cav to top any particular charts when compared against any faction that specializes in them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - As your army consists heavily of predatory animals that excel at sniffing out prey, your enemies will be hard pressed to remain hidden from them. Enemies that rely on stealthy abilities like Stalk are revealed to you far more quickly than others, giving you far more time to react to (in battle) ambushes than other factions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of the weapons wielded by your Skinks are poisonous, inhibiting the mobility/combat performance of enemies afflicted by their noxious attacks. Despite poison no longer dealing constant damage like on the tabletop, their debuffs are still useful for weakening the enemy for your frontline troops. Thank to the recent update that removes any form of poison debuffs that can apply to the player units through friendly fire, Skink&#039;s poison darts are even better.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - You are tied with the Skaven for the honor of having the most DLC. You also have two FLC lords on top of all this, so between a grand total of 7 legendary lords and three DLC lord packs, you are the most supported main game faction in Total War: Warhammer II.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessings of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of your units have &amp;quot;Blessed&amp;quot; variants available in casual multiplayer matches or the campaign. Blessed units are effectively pseudo-Regiments of Renown and every single one is given a buffed health pool and, where applicable, an increased model count per unit. Additionally, many of these blessed units receive additional passive abilities or upgraded stats to further their combat potential. What&#039;s better is, unlike Regiments of Renown, you can technically have as many blessed units as you want. The only downside (admittedly a big one) is that in order to acquire blessed units in the campaign, you must complete randomly generated quests that issue a set quantity of a random blessed unit upon completion. If you want an army of blessed Carnosaurs, you&#039;re going to have to earn it. This is a complete non-issue in causal multiplayer matches, where blessed units are freely available for a very minor upcharge in cost compared to regular variants. Blessed units are unavailable in competitive games.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slow&#039;&#039;&#039; - A majority of the Lizardmen list, namely Saurus infantry, take their sweet time to cross the field. Though there are exceptions to this, such as the various cavalry and Skink units available to you, this particular weakness is exacerbated by...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vulnerable to Range&#039;&#039;&#039; - ...their dearth of viable missile units. The only ranged infantry available to you are Skinks; particularly squishy infantry that, though nimble, have pitiful range and DPS against anything shielded and/or armored. Your more potent offensive options, namely Salamanders or Stegadons/Bastilodons, cannot fire while moving and are rather easy to tie down in melee. Defensively, though your Saurus are quite tanky and often come with shields, they are very vulnerable to being kited by ranged cavalry/infantry due to their rather slow movement speed. Additionally, all your units save for Gor-Rok are stuck with Bronze Shields (35% block chance), meaning that even when they&#039;re in a position to use them, you&#039;ll still be soaking a significant portion of the incoming shots all the same. The same can also be said about most of your monsters, with some minor exceptions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Generic Character Usefulness&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a big one. Other than your magic characters (i.e. Slann and Skink Oracles which are pretty much good because they have magic), your other generic lords/heroes just don&#039;t stack up. When you compare them to the other factions&#039; characters, they fall short in their respective roles, whether that&#039;s melee prowess, support utility, campaign map usefulness, you name it. Best to rely on your monstrous units and magic to fulfill their roles!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sub-par Air-Force&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though you have flyers, a luxury many other factions lack, they&#039;re among the weakest/slowest of them. Terradons, Ripperdactyls, and Coatls aren&#039;t &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039;, per se, but they will lose if faced with the flying cavalry/monsters in their weight class from the likes of Bretonnia or High/Wood Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive Roster&#039;&#039;&#039; - As you can imagine, breeding and training massive dinosaurs and mounting arcane instruments of war onto them isn&#039;t cheap. All of your high tier units can get crazy expensive both in initial cost and upkeep. Even the bog standard Saurus Warriors come at a premium compared to some other factions options, though this is only particularly notable in competitive multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rampage&#039;&#039;&#039; - This was a much bigger problem in Game 2, where pretty much everything except for Skinks and Slaan would lose control and mindlessly charge the closest thing they could see. Game 3 has more or less restricted this issue to your feral monsters, letting your infantry keep their cool and do their jobs. That said, it&#039;s still a problem if your Carnosaur suddenly bolts into that nearby unit of halberds while your lords/heroes are otherwise occupied.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bland Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Oxyotl and &#039;&#039;possibly&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, the Lizardmen have the most boring campaign mechanics of any of the game II races (including some of the game I ones). Their unique mechanic, the Geomantic Web, is a very passive and basic provincial buff that takes a lot of resources and time to properly build up to a level you&#039;ll actually notice the effects of and offer no benefit to provinces you don&#039;t &#039;&#039;completely&#039;&#039; control. Yes, losing that one minor settlement causes the provincial capital to shut off its Geomantic Pylon until you reclaim it. Additionally, without mod support, Lizardmen are among the most stubborn and oppositional to confederation. Fortunately, though it isn&#039;t a top priority for them, CA is aware that Lizardmen need their campaign mechanics updated to bring them up to modern standards. Hopefully that update comes soon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Locked Content&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though a con for virtually every other faction in the game, this is a particularly notable one for Lizardmen. Many, if not most of the Lizardmen&#039;s better units are locked behind DLC lord packs. You&#039;ll need the Prophet and the Warlock for all units marked with DLC 1, the Hunter and the Beast for everything marked with DLC 2 and the Silence and the Fury for everything marked DLC 3.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
There are a couple of perks and abilities shared across a significant portion of the lizardmen unit roster, which will be mentioned here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Primal Instincts&#039;&#039;&#039; - A perk found on a majority of the Lizardmen roster (exempting Lords/Heroes and Skinks), primal instincts will cause a unit with this ability to rampage out of control should their health drop to 20% or less. This can be a bit of a mixed blessing, as the rampaging unit will receive a +15% Charge Bonus and a +8 Melee Attack bonus and continue to fight nearby opponents in situations that any other unit would turn tail and rout. The bad news is that your opponent has more control over the rampaging unit than you do; rampaging units will single-mindedly charge at the nearest enemy unit, which your opponent can take to his advantage by using faster infantry/cavalry to kite the rampaging unit while his ranged infantry/artillery finishes it off. Of course, this is also factoring in that by the time these bonuses kick in, your Saurus unit or Carnosaur is typically on its last legs and won&#039;t last much longer anyways. Should the rampage end &#039;&#039;before&#039;&#039; the unit dies, they&#039;ll usually begin to rout from the field and will often be too far out of position for you to properly recover them.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; buffs Primal Instincts for Saurus Units; no longer causing rampage (thank god) while triggering much sooner (Triggering at 50% health as opposed to TWWII&#039;s 20%). When active, it gives Saurus units a +15% Charge Bonus, +10 Melee Attack and +5% Physical Resist buffs that remain active indefinitely so long as the Primal Instinct threshold has been crossed. This applies even to Saurus cavalry and since you can actually &#039;&#039;control&#039;&#039; them when Primal Instincts pops now, you can be far more surgical when taking advantage of these buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold Blooded&#039;&#039;&#039; - A targetable ability found on most Lizardmen Lords and Heroes, Cold Blooded helps to counter the innate weakness in the Lizardmen faction; their tendency to rampage. When used, Cold Blooded will snap a single unit out of a rampage (if they are currently doing so) and will temporarily buff their leadership. This ability can be used pre/post rampage as well, as the leadership buff can potentially prevent a rampage from occurring or can help prevent a tattered unit from routing once their rampage expires. As this ability has a somewhat lengthy cooldown an is only found on Lords/Heroes, care should be taken on when it is used and what it is used on. It can also be used on units that were forced to rampage by an ability or spell from enemy units, providing a unique bit of counterplay against such tactics that other factions lack.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all non-Slann/Skink units in your roster, this allows your units to detect hidden or stealthed units far sooner and from farther away than other armies (around 160 meters). This also disregards any faction/unit/terrain modifiers that enhance stealth, with the only exception being the &#039;&#039;Unspottable&#039;&#039; trait. With proper coverage, this can make ambushing or outflanking your forces extremely challenging to do discreetly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Aquatic&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all Skink infantry, Kroxigors (though their stat card doesn&#039;t mention the trait, they still receive the Aquatic bonus) and your Salamander/Razordon hunting packs, this not only allows them to ignore the usual penalties for fighting in water-logged environments, but gives them a 20% bonus to melee attack/defense when they do so. Considering non-aquatic infantry suffers a 20% malus to those stats when slogging around in the water, this can become a rather substantial combat buff for a significant portion of your roster (keep your Saurus dry). Potentially losing matchups will suddenly swing into your favor and that&#039;s not even factoring in your abundant poisoned weaponry and robust catalog of supportive magics to widen that gap further. As amazing as all that sounds... marsh and shallow water environments are rather few and far in between. Additionally, for the maps that &#039;&#039;do&#039;&#039; have swamped areas, coercing your opponent to willingly splash around with you is a battle all its own, one you&#039;re not likely to succeed in without careful planning.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Quick Learners&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another Skink-exclusive ability, this greatly increases the rate that your Skinks gain ranks. This helps distinguish Skinks against comparable chaff infantry since they&#039;ll benefit from rank-boosted stats much more quickly and, as such, makes them surprisingly effective early-mid game infantry. This perk also applies to units such as Terradon Riders due to having Skink Riders.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Campaign Mechanics==&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Geomantic Web&#039;&#039;&#039;: Pretty much the only unique thing every Lizardmen faction (except Nakai) has, and it&#039;s a bit lackluster. Lizardmen have access to a special view of the global map that displays the Geomantic Web, with every region capital acting as a nexus point. Once you control an entire region, you can build up Geomantic Pylons in order to strengthen the Geomantic Web, which in turn offers gradually stronger perks (like an increasing percentage to building income, higher ranked recruitment, etc) the more you increase it. At the beginning of the game, these bonuses are quite small, but as you expand and enhance the Geomantic Web over the course of the campaign, these benefits can make a genuine impact on your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a few problems with this mechanic, however. The first major one is that you receive &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; bonuses if you don&#039;t control the entire region. Obviously, this isn&#039;t a problem when you&#039;re surrounded by factions you were planning on killing off, but this becomes complicated if an ally suddenly captures that last settlement in a region before you could. If it was another Lizardmen faction, you could maybe play the long game and eventually confederate them, but otherwise you&#039;d be forced to attack them in order to claim the region so that you can actually activate the Geomantic Web benefits. Warhammer III and mods have offered ways to purchase or trade settlements, but in many cases the AI tends to value each settlement they own far more than anything else you could offer them. This often leads to lengthy wars against what could&#039;ve otherwise been a valuable trading partner and buffer against foreign elements that you&#039;d otherwise have to deal with yourself. The second major problem with the Geomantic Web is that even if you build up a regional capitol to tier V and build the appropriate pylon, it does &#039;&#039;nothing&#039;&#039; without an adjacent region &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; having a tier V capitol and pylon. That&#039;s right, the strength of the Geomantic Web is reliant on multiple regions being entirely under your control and also having them fully built up. This can be a time and gold consuming process that forces the Lizardmen player to take it slow; Lizardmen economy tends to be on the low side of the spectrum, made worse by their fairly expensive unit roster and lengthy build/research timeframes. And of course, if an enemy army rolls in and claims one of your minor settlements, the Geomantic Web benefits for that entire region are shut off entirely, further stemming your growth rates. The third issue with the Geomantic Web; it&#039;s a very basic and uninteractive mechanic. Aside the baked in map-painter that is the (Im)Mortal Empires campaign, there&#039;s not much incentive or direction to build up the Geomantic Web besides using it to squeeze every last bit of gold or growth you can to boost your dismal economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Rites&#039;&#039;&#039;: Much like most of the Warhammer II races, Lizardmen have access to special rites that, generally, grant them temporary buffs for the cost of some gold. While every faction has one or two unique rites, every Lizardmen faction has access to and must perform the &#039;&#039;Rite of Awakening&#039;&#039; in order to recruit new Slann lords. Fluffy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacrifices to Sotek (Tehenhauin)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tehenhauin&#039;s unique focus, in addition to the Geomantic Web, is his crusade against all of Skaven kind. By gathering captives from battles, you can sacrifice them to Sotek to gain empire-wide boosts to growth or to recruit the Blessed variants of the Lizardmen roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Dedication to the Old Ones (Nakai)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Nakai&#039;s main mechanic as a Horde faction. By capturing settlements and dedicating them to one of three Old Ones, Nakai can unlock faction-wide buffs to his hordes. He can also spend the accumulated Favor of the Old Ones to recruit Blessed Units or activate temporary buffs or bonuses for use in battle.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Visions of the Old Ones (Oxyotl)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Oxyotl&#039;s special perk, Oxyotl can teleport across the entire Warhammer Fantasy world to specific targets once per turn in order to accomplish an issued mission for rewards. By completing these missions, he can be given several rewards (such as Blessed Spawnings, increased favor from fellow Lizardmen factions or temporary buffs for certain units), but the most prominent and consistent reward are special gems used to purchase Silent Sanctums. Silent Sanctums act much like Skaven Undercities in that they are built under any settlement across the map. Doing so gives Oxyotl vision of the province that settlement is located in (and can be upgraded to give him vision of all adjacent provinces as well) as well as two building slots that can give him anything from upkeep reduction to increased ammunition and missile damage. Additionally, one such sanctum can be upgraded to act as a teleport node, allowing Oxyotl&#039;s army to warp to that Silent Sanctum at any time (much like Oxyotl&#039;s capitol).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
The scaly faces of the Lizardmen. With the exception of the Slann Mage-Priest, which outperforms even most Legendary Lords, the Lizardmen aren&#039;t exactly a character-centric faction. Their LL&#039;s are very pointy. Most of them are great on the battlefield (with either melee or magic prowess), but their army buffs vary in usefulness and their factionwide buffs are nearly non-existant, with only a couple lords like Kroq-Gar providing any whatsoever. It&#039;s very difficult to justify taking even Legendary Lords (let alone your generic lords, which are frankly terrible) over any flavor of slann mage-priest due to the sheer versatility the latter bring to your army, especially since you are not hurting for giant, single entity beatsticks to ram into enemy formations. Slaan benefit from star chambers in campaign, other don&#039;t, no contest, only use slaan if stacking chambers (which you really should).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mazdamundi&#039;&#039;&#039; - The last second generation Slann (lore-wise), Mazdamundi uses magic primarily from the Lore of Light to act as a hybrid support/offensive caster. The two main selling points of Mazdamundi over a generic Slann Mage-Priest are his stegadon mount Zlaaq and his signature spell &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;. Zlaaq allows Mazdamundi to actually engage in melee, something no other Slann can safely do, and makes him substantially more durable against most forms of attack. &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;, especially when combined with &#039;&#039;Banishment&#039;&#039;, makes Mazdamundi an excellent AoE caster capable of tearing infantry focused armies to shreds with ease without chewing through your Winds of Magic reserve. These spells are limited however, being bounded spells, so make sure you wait until the right moment to utilize them. Additionally, don&#039;t put too much faith in them; as their movement patterns are random, these spells (particularly Ruination of Cities) can just as easily do nothing or even devastate your own forces as they can your enemies if you aren&#039;t careful.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; brings a few buffs to his toolkit; the barrier mechanic normally reserved for Tzeentch armies is now also granted to all Slann as well, helping mitigate the first few attacks against him. Additionally, to better represent the almighty toad&#039;s arcane prowess, Mazdamundi receives a 50% increase in range to all spells he casts. This turns him into a sort of magical artillery engine, as he&#039;ll have virtually no issues slapping that Banishment or Comet of Cassandora cast pretty much wherever he damn well pleases.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroq-Gar&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your dedicated duelist, Kroq-Gar is an offensive powerhouse that shines when seated atop Grimloq, his faithful Carnosaur mount. Though expensive, Kroq-Gar/Grimloq can engage virtually any enemy type in the game effectively and is able to duel against many enemy lords and come out on top. Though a monstrous force on his own merits, Kroq-Gar is something of a glass cannon however and as a larger target is prone to getting mobbed by multiple units or getting focused down by ranged infantry/artillery. Another notable shortcoming is that he provides limited support for the rest of your army (a bit of a problem for all Saurus Oldbloods), and as such is not recommended for dino-heavy army builds, his bonuses to armor and leadership being less important than the healing abilities of Life Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tehenhauin (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only Skink-Priest lord choice, Tehenhauin is something of a niche pick. He can deal solid enough damage against footlords/cavalry lords in a fight (particularly if on a Ripperdactyl) and is also capable of dealing notable damage to swarms of infantry (with his Lore of Beasts and/or with his Engine of the Gods), but he&#039;s extremely frail for a Lizardmen lord when unmounted. Never get the Fanatic skill in his skill tree; it only benefits skink units and they are pretty trash after the mid-game.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tiktaq&#039;to (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another somewhat niche pick, Tiktaq&#039;to is a dedicated flier who excels in lists built with Terradons, Ripperdactyls and Coatls as the focus. Though mounted on Zwuup, Tiktaq&#039;to is your squishiest (legendary) lord and lacks the support/damage options available to the others, but he&#039;s inarguably the swiftest of the bunch (which doesn&#039;t mean much compared to other flying lords and heroes). Under no circumstances is he a direct combat lord; against any duelist or large/monstrous lord he will lose handily. The only targets he can safely engage are dedicated casters, artillery and dedicated ranged infantry. Because of this, playing him requires far more finesse than what is required for virtually every other lord; even against targets he &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; engage effectively, prolonged combat will invariably whittle him down and may the Old Ones help you if he&#039;s surrounded while grounded. Keep a squad or two of Ripperdactyls close by to make up the difference in combat ability and to take advantage of Tiktaq&#039;to&#039;s buffs. Also, his unique Epic weapon doesn&#039;t work if he is attacking a ground target in melee because its attack bonuses are only in effect when flying, so he&#039;s weaker than a Skink Terradon Rider when attacking ground targets UNLESS you swap out his weapon. When used in campaign, much of his value comes from his rather insane and stackable upkeep discount for flier units. Even on higher difficulties, it is extraordinarily easy to stack enough upkeep cost reductions to have a full Coatl doomstack damn near for free (until the Supply Lines penalties become particularly swollen, at least). Additionally, his unique rite gives all of his armies the ability to easily chase down fleeing armies or attack multiple settlements a turn which can be &#039;&#039;devastating&#039;&#039; to an enemy faction if used at the right moment.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nakai (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The largest and oldest of the Kroxigor Ancients, Nakai is an infantry mulcher who (thanks to his enthusiastic animations) will literally sweep his way through the thickest blobs of infantry. Nakai possesses a few notable traits over his competitors; his ability to grant perfect vigour to nearby allies ensures they&#039;re in peak form throughout the entire battle while his Miasma of Dispair can cripple enemies within his presence; a potentially nasty combo that can ensure your forces slowly but steadily chew through enemy frontlines. Unfortunately, Nakai has a few major weaknesses: As a large entity, he&#039;s vulnerable to anti-large weaponry (which does abound among baseline infantry) and is an easy, defenseless target for ranged units to snipe. He also struggles to properly duel opposing heroes/lords due to his size and janky animations making him lunge about haphazardly while they continue to poke him to death. Because of this, he tends to work best as a force multiplier for infantry builds.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gor-Rok (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where Kroq-Gar is the spear, Gor-Rok stands as the shield. Gor-Rok is a dedicated footlord, among the slowest of them, but makes up for it through sheer, unbreaking resilience. As the only unit in the entire Lizardmen roster with a silver shield (55% missile block chance), Gor-Rok is able to shoulder his way through the kind of firepower that would fell a lesser Old-Blood on the approach. Gor-Rok can also stand neck-deep among hordes of angry infantry and walk out seemingly unscathed. When equipped with the &#039;&#039;Mace of Ulumak&#039;&#039;, Gor-Rok can also prove a competent duelist in his own right, even if it&#039;s only in temporary bursts. Gor-Rok does falter against mounted/monstrous heroes/lords and is vulnerable to duelists with good AP values, though the Twisted and the Twilight patch has helped address the issue of him being staggered to hell and back. Never the less, Gor-Rok is a relatively cost effective legendary lord who can and will hold the line until the bitter end. His campaign starts with Lord Kroak fully unlocked and active, which makes his campaign among the easiest in the entire game, even on higher difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
**Gor-Rok&#039;s rite will be changed in Immortal Empires, giving his units Barrier and immunity to certain debuffs, like Poison. Unlike Tzeentch, his version of barrier probably won&#039;t be as game-breaking because of how slow Saurus and that they do their best stuck-in.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Oxyotl (DLC 3) &#039;&#039;&#039; - The legendary daemon-slaying chameleon skink of Oyxl is the last legendary lord for the faction (at least for TWW2). As to be expected from any shape or form of a Chameleon Skink, Oxyotl is a rather cheap, stealthy character hunter who behaves somewhat like a Wood Elf Waystalker. Unlike Waystalkers, Oxyotl has a particularly nasty trick in the form of Master Predator; a toggle-able skill that reduces his movement speed in exchange for an increase in range, Snipe and the ability to remain undetectable unless the enemy gets extremely close to his position. Combined with his modestly powerful armor piercing missiles, this can quickly wear down most armored lords and heroes rather quickly if left to his own devices. Of course, as a reasonably cost effective LL, the drawbacks have to come in somewhere and for Oxyotl, that drawback is melee combat. While he has acceptable melee attack and defense, Oxyotl has no armor or damage mitigation tools at his disposal. Any combat lord or hero worth his or her salt can and will kill him in a hand-to-hand duel. Fortunately, he&#039;s fast enough that virtually no footlord can catch up to him unless you willfully allow it. He also struggles to deal with the rank and file and lacks any notable support abilities for his own forces, but that&#039;s fairly typical of the niche Oxyotl fills.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
Your generic lords aren&#039;t amazing in campaign compared to other factions, but can really shine in competitive multiplayer. In the campaign, you&#039;ll generally never want to get non-slann lords after turn 20(ish) because lizardmen Star Chamber buildings give 3 bonus levels to your slann lords, meaning they quickly outpace any other lord available. Any need for a melee lord can be filled by one of the many lizardmen heroes, who can also be easily recruited at higher starting level than the melee lords. You may still find the need to recruit cheaper stand in lords in case of an emergency, as the Rite of Awakening&#039;s cooldown is a notable hitch in acquiring more slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slann Mage-Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your almighty magic toads, slann are dedicated mages who don&#039;t participate in fights directly, but wreak havoc upon your enemies from afar with their magics or supplement your forces with defensive/healing energies. Slann are among the precious few generic lords in the game who have access to the &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; ability which, when combined with their reliable casting, can allow savvy players to call upon vast reserves of the Winds of Magic long after lesser mages have tapped out of theirs. In addition to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039;, each slann has access to Banishment as a bound spell as well as the &#039;&#039;Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;; a large AoE defensive buff that applies a 22% damage resistance modifier to all allied units within it&#039;s bubble. Understandably, for all their arcane might, slann are practically helpless if caught in a fight. They are the single slowest unit in your entire army and are quite chunky, making them easy targets up close or at range. To this end, you&#039;ll almost always want a screening unit of Temple Guard (or at least shielded saurus) to keep enemies from ganking them. Outside of that, there are four varieties of Slann Mage-Priests, each dedicated to a specific lore of magic:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Fire Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - When you want to burn the [[HERESY|heretic]] in holy fire for the Old Ones. Combined with their bound Banishment, fire slann are capable of mulching clumps of infantry wholesale and can even churn out respectable single target damage with their Fireball and Piercing Bolts of Burning spells. Fire damage is particularly useful against the myriad of enemies with regeneration, and practically mandatory when facing undead crises in campaign. Being able to buff an entire line of saurus with an upcast Flaming Sword/Cloak of Flame can turn the game in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Life Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are the MVP in any monster heavy list; though you have a few other options for healing (such as the Revivification Bastilidon, high slann and the newly added Skink Oracle), life slann are still the uncontested kings at it. If you want an army built on the back of beasts, a life slann is essential to keeping them in the fight. With a life slann, you can wipe away any damage your stack of monsters take during the routing phase of a battle, making them both tactically and strategically important. Pair one with a Revivification Bastilidon to very rapidly resurrect slain models in any infantry unit and bring back even the most tattered units to full fighting strength. Additionally, should you encounter blobs of infantry that pose a notable danger to your larger beasties, Life slann are able to slap down Dwellers Below to deal frankly startling amounts of damage to practically every non-flying unit caught within its radius.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Light Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Light slann are fantastic supports for an infantry-heavy army namely due to two spells: Net of Amyntok and Birona&#039;s Timewarp. Like every other army, Net of Amyntok is an excellent tool for pinning down faster cavalry from the likes of Bretonnia or the Dark Elves so that your &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; slower saurus can catch up and engage them in melee (or to keep them still while your Salamanders incinerate them wholesale). Birona&#039;s Timewarp can turn the tide in a key engagement when used properly. Offensively, being able to cast Banishment much more frequently can also deal devastating damage to enemy infantry. That said, even your Greater Arcane Conduit will struggle to keep you topped off; the Lore of Light can consume your Winds of Magic quite quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;High Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Similarly to light slann, high slann are a hybrid offensive/support caster. Unlike the Lore of Light, you do have access to minor magical healing through Apotheosis and have access to an excellent anti-flier vortex spell in Tempest (Net of Amyntok is superior in most cases, however). High slann offensively specialize in single target damage and can deal devastating amounts of it between the Arcane Unforging and Soul Quench spells, giving them a solid niche against duelist lords/heroes and larger monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Heavens Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Multiplayer only, the Heavens Slann is unfortunately the worst slann of the bunch. It&#039;s not that the Heavens lore is lacking nor is it the slann himself, but the fact that he faces strict competition against your Skink Priests of all things. A Skink Priest of Heavens, though lacking the Greater Arcane Conduit, is a much faster/smaller target by default and has access to several mount options that make him much more flexible offensively or defensively. Additionally, as a hero, you can take a more offensively focused melee lord or a slann attuned to a different lore for more magical variety. Even if you&#039;re only running one with nothing but the crest on his skinky-head, the cheaper price alone makes the Heavens slann a hard sell comparatively.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039;: All Slann become a bit more defensible with the boon of their own personal barriers, a &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed buff to these fat frog&#039;s personal defenses. Of course, barriers will do little to assuage prolonged and unsupported melee combat, but it will help protect them from the stray blast or occasional skirmish.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: A minor nerf to the Slann, Star Chambers can now only ever be constructed in Province capitals, &#039;&#039;severely&#039;&#039; curbing how quickly you can recruit high-level Slann right out the gate. They can still be abused, though you now need to capture &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; more territories before you can crank out Slann on par with their Mortal Empires power level. The good news is, the Rite of Awakening is now free to use once unlocked and can be spammed on cooldown to try farming for second/third generation Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Old-Blood&#039;&#039;&#039; - Offensive duelists through and through, saurus old-bloods are flexible masters of combat who can lead on foot, on the back of a cold one, or atop a mighty carnosaur (you&#039;ll usually want one on a carnosaur). Compared to the kroxigor ancient, saurus old-bloods are less powerful in melee combat but can be much faster and have marginally better faction support skills. For the purposes of both Multiplayer and Campaign, you&#039;ll want to avoid taking Old-Bloods as your lord (unless you have &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; DLC content). Their role can easily be filled by Saurus Scar Veterans, who &#039;&#039;don&#039;t&#039;&#039; take up your only Lord slot for the army (and are, for all intents and purposes, identical sans Campaign skill trees). If you insist on taking an Old-Blood, take Kroq-Gar. Otherwise, a Slann or Kroxigor Ancient would be better suited for your needs.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Saurus Old-Bloods get some new life pumped into their battle-tested bones in Immortal Empires, at least when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s banner. Universal 15% Upkeep discounts for all armies led by Saurus Old-Bloods and an additional +1% Weapon Strength boost for each level your Old-Blood gains make these guys your go-to beatsticks. Their discounted upkeep costs also make it easier to field &#039;&#039;more&#039;&#039; armies which, especially in the mid-late game, is particularly valuable as your empire&#039;s borders outpace your glacial economy&#039;s ability to upgrade settlement infrastructure in a timely manner. Slann are, of course, still quite valuable, though with Sacred Spawning Caverns and Temple Guard Barracks providing increased starting ranks to Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans, it&#039;s hard to say no to these guys. At least when riding with Kroq-Gar.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skink Chief (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your discount Lord and the one you&#039;ll want to take if you want to reserve as much money for your big beasties as possible. Of course, you could splurge a little to put him atop an ancient stegadon to scorch swaths of infantry with the Engine of the Gods (though if you&#039;re going to do that, you may as well spring for Tehenhauin so that you at least have access to the Lore of Beasts as well). The RCSC is a competent combatant equipped with poisonous, armor-piercing attacks that can make him surprisingly dangerous in a fight, though like everything skinky, he&#039;s a particularly squishy lord when unmounted. The best use you can put him to is boosting your heroes in a &#039;Pompous&#039; trait-stacking lizardman hero army, which makes an already broken strategy even stronger.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigor Ancient (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Baby Nakais for those who don&#039;t quite feel up for splurging on the big boy himself. Kroxigor ancients are quite literally just watered down versions of Nakai; though they won&#039;t grant perfect vigour to all friendly forces near them, they will still wade through most infantry due to their size and mass and put out such raw damage that most non-elite infantry will falter swiftly against them. However, just like Nakai, they are completely helpless at range, are vulnerable to AP and anti-large weapons and are &#039;&#039;slow&#039;&#039;. In competitive multiplayer, though they are still a bit of a niche pick, they are much more attractive than Nakai due to their cheaper price and because they have access to the Amulet of Itzl, which grants the Kroxigor Ancient 66% damage resistance for a short time. This can give them enough of an edge to eek out against enemy duelists or to survive long enough for reinforcements to arrive.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
As said, the Lizardmen characters can be a little sub-par compared to other factions (with the exception of the Skink Oracle, see below), but their selection is surprisingly versatile, and the Lizardmen have some of the best &#039;&#039;mounts&#039;&#039; in the game, which really helps push their characters battlefield potential. The Lizardmen also have one of the strongest Legendary Heroes in the game: Lord Kroak. These guys are capable of dealing immense damage to your enemies and &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; of them (except Kroak) can be mounted on one of your massive dinosaurs.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Hero===&lt;br /&gt;
You&#039;ve only got the one, but he&#039;s all you&#039;ll need. Lord Kroak is your expensive but powerful offensive caster and forms the center of many army formations.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lord Kroak (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The first of the Slann doesn&#039;t let something as trivial as death inconvenience him, or keep him from kicking warmblood ass to the Old World and back. Lord Kroak is one of a very select few heroes in the game with access to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; (which can be paired with another Slann&#039;s Greater Arcane Conduit), making him a fantastic force multiplier in a caster-heavy list just from being present. For better or worse, Kroak doesn&#039;t have access to any lore of magic and only has two notable abilities. But &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; can those abilities turn the tide of battle. His only bound ability (other than the universal Cold-Blooded) is the &#039;&#039;Supreme Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;, an upgraded version of the regular Shield of the Old Ones that grants allies a 44% damage resistance while within it (and stacks with the regular version if you&#039;re really in a bind). The only spell(s) he has access to is his signature Deliverance of Itza (and its three varying strengths). Deliverance of Itza, &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason you&#039;re bringing him, can virtually delete entire units from existence with an efficiency only known to the Winds of Death spell, but it has a few major drawbacks. First, it is intensely mana hungry: you&#039;ll typically only get one or two DoI (III) casts per battle before you run dangerously low on magic. By relying on DoI I or II, you won&#039;t consume as much magic per cast, but the difference in damage dealt becomes very apparent. Secondly, there is a very lengthy and obvious tell for when the spell is cast; most competent opponents will be able to move their forces away from the blast before it goes off unless you manage to pin them down with supporting spells like the Net of Amyntok or simply bodyblocking them from all sides. Thirdly, this spell is virtually useless against single entities such as Lords/Heroes and giant monsters, meaning he&#039;ll do little towards more elite doomstack lists. Despite all these cons working against him, a well timed Deliverance of Itza can and will win you battles if you plan accordingly. The best part, it deals absolutely no friendly fire damage. [[Meme|You may fire when ready]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Heroes===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, all Lizardmen heroes benefit from the &#039;Humble&#039; trait, which appears on Lords and Heroes at random. This lets you recruit them at 2 additional ranks higher than their default rank, with unlimited stacking potential, making them stronger and more versatile earlier in the game than heroes of other factions. In the late-game, you can disband Humble heroes as you build more Slann Star-Chambers, however these are expensive buildings for non-Hexoatl factions; for the 6000 gold needed for 1 Star-Chamber, you can hire at least 4 Humble heroes for 8 bonus levels. Of course, those extra heroes each take up their respective hero slots and will take a modest sum out of your income every turn and as such are less efficient in the long run compared to Star Chambers.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Scar-Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039; - A step down from the Old-Blood, Scar-Veterans behave in much the same manner as your generic saurus lords. Vicious and powerful combatants, Scar-Veterans are built to brazenly charge into combat and deal bloody death to all who stand in their way. The real reason you&#039;ll want to take any Scar-Vets isn&#039;t for the saurus himself, however badass he may be, but for the carnosaur mount you can put him on. Though a more expensive version of the feral carnosaur, Scar-Vets are immune to rampaging (and can indeed stop others from rampaging thanks to their Cold Blooded ability) and have a slightly stronger statline, making them excellent all-round threats to whatever your opponent might be packing. These Scar-Vets are ideal choices for armies led by slann-mage priests; they won&#039;t be competing for Winds of Magic like the skink priests and will more than make up for the slann&#039;s melee deficiency. If you want to keep him cheaper, you can take one on foot to lead fellow saurus infantry into battle, or stick in on a Cold One to ride with the rest of your cavalry. A modestly popular tactic in Multiplayer is to take two of these guys on Cold Ones to act as hero/lord hunters.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scar-Veterans, though still quite capable in every other Lizardmen subfaction, truly shine when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s flag. +30% experience gain and +1% weapon strength per earned rank (max buff of 50%) can make these guys quite vicious very quickly. Since the Humble trait, the Star Chamber and Temple Guard Barracks rank boost effects stack, you can also recruit highly ranked Scar-Veterans &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; early on in the campaign (relatively, that is). It&#039;s to such a degree that you could very easily start cranking out freshly recruited Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs with a bonus 18% or higher Weapon Strength buff right out of the gate. Put in an army lead by a Saurus Old-Blood for that 15% upkeep reduction and you have yourself a solidly cost effective doomstack that, post level 20, will just respawn back home if they ever bite off more than they can chew.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink priests are your humble, mortal casters. Cheap and nimble, these guys can easily outrun most footslogging infantry and are fantastically flexible mages that can fill any offensive or defensive holes your army might have. If mounted on a terradon, their speed will be unparalleled (for Lizardmen); they&#039;ll be able to rain magical death anywhere on the battlefield with ease and can quickly deliver support to your forces no matter how spread out they may be. Alternatively, you may mount them on stegadons or ancient stegadons to make them terrifying all-rounders, though their price tag will quickly reflect that. probably want to stick with the regular stegadon, great hybrid artillery and melee monster&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Heavens)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Heavens discipline is among the better offensive lores of magic in the game for the instant raw damage output it&#039;s capable of. Wind Blast and Chain Lightning will be your go-to offensive spells. Comet of Cassandora, though powerful, should generally be avoided due to how long its casting time is. Harmonic Convergence and Curse of the Midnight Wind are staples of support sets and can turn your saurus infantry into immovable walls of tooth and claw.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Beasts)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Formerly your worst discipline, the Lore of Beasts has recently received a bit of a tweaking to make it considerably more attractive and usable. It&#039;s still among the least potent of your available magics, but it is among the most flexible in utility. Wyssan&#039;s Wild Form and Pann&#039;s Impenetrable Pelt provide rather significant combat buffs (particularly when stacked) while Curse of Anraheir debilitates your enemies. Offensively, Flock of Doom is a fantastic and cheap chaff cleaner that affects any units that have at least one model within its 30m range. For your single target needs, The Amber Spear allows your caster to act as impromptu artillery should the need arise. Formerly &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason to take a Beasts caster was for the Transformation of Kadon; being able to summon up to two Manticores to flank enemy formations or dive into backlines can have a massive impact on the flow of battle, but a bump up to &#039;&#039;20&#039;&#039; Winds of Magic per summon makes it challenging to make much use of your other spells in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Chief&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your skirmishing duelist, skink chiefs cripple enemy forces with their poisonous darts so that your army can face weaker resistance. Skink chiefs are a force to be feared when mounted on a stegadon, allowing them to easily face down many enemy heroes/lords in a one-on-one fight. In the campaign, the ability to build skink chief capacity-increasing buildings in minor settlements means you can spam them across the map or stack up to 19 of them into an army, which can be hilariously broken depending on the traits and items you equip them with.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Oracle (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - By far the best Hero for the Lizardmen, the Skink Oracle brings a cavalcade of well rounded offensive and supportive magic to the field atop a mighty Troglodon. And only on a Troglodon, so he&#039;s very much an &amp;quot;all or nothing&amp;quot; type of unit. The first major reason the Skink Oracle makes for a popular pick is the fact that he&#039;s your only non-Slann source of magical healing, potentially freeing up your Lord choice for a more offensive beat stick like Kroq-Gar or even a Kroxigor Ancient. Secondly, as a hero, not only does your Skink Oracle provide a use of Cold-Blooded for the rest of your forces, but his own Troglodon will never rampage. Magical prowess aside, this alone is worth considering the rather steep price-tag. Speaking of, the Troglodon allows the Skink Oracle to function as a mid-range anti-Monster skirmisher. Combined with a potential Fireball cast here or there, the Skink Oracle &#039;&#039;excels&#039;&#039; at chunking opposing Lords/Heroes, especially if they&#039;re atop a mount or naturally monstrous in size. Just don&#039;t have him brazenly lead the charge into melee combat, as he won&#039;t last terribly long in it. If your army would like to use a non-Lore of Life Slann or any non-Slann Lord for that matter (effectively any LL banner army), a Skink Oracle and a Revivification Bastilodon or two are excellent tools to keep your forces in tip-top shape so that they can keep doing what they do best.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
Many lizardmen units are available in standard and &#039;blessed&#039; variants. Blessed units are only made available in the campaign by completing random timed missions, such as getting 1000 kills or winning 4 battles, but make up for their randomness and limited quantity by being free to recruit at any time in any army and by having at least one extra ability or superior stat over their contemporary counterparts. They aren&#039;t to be confused with Regiments of Renown, unique units recruited at max rank and limited to one instance per. In casual multiplayer matches with Unit Caps turned off, Blessed Units are recruitable for only a modest bump in price over their generic counterparts.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
Infantry provide the foundation of every army in Total War: Warhammer, and the Lizardmen are no different. Indeed, even the humble skinks have their place.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Melee Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls and shields, skink cohorts are cheap chaff units primarily used to fill out rosters or to support your more expensive infantry actually doing the killing. Despite being shielded, these guys will die by the score due to their pitiful defensive statline if they face any frontline infantry head on and are one of the few lizardmen units prone to routing from leadership issues. Having said that, skink cohorts are among the fastest cheap infantry units in the game and are still rather decent combatants when fighting similar unarmored units and tend to win such engagements (namely against chaff or low tier infantry like Bretonnian peasantry or Vampire Count zombies). Indeed, their speed is invaluable for flanking enemies tied up by your saurus warriors and chasing routing enemies off the map. When pinching pennies, you can&#039;t argue with that. In campaign these guys can be skipped entirely for the javelin version instead as the missile attack for 10 extra upkeep per turn is leagues better than just having the club.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skinks (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. Red-Crested Skinks provide an invaluable source of early game/cheap melee AP damage and poison, though they&#039;re less effective against unarmored targets as a whole compared to regular Skink Cohorts. They lack both shields and armor and as they are simply skinks, they will die in droves unless they&#039;re taking refuge among the far burlier saurus warriors. On that note, RC skinks synergize excellently with saurus warriors, as they can simultaneously chew through armored units the saurus tend to bounce off of and further cripple these enemies with poison, allowing your much slower saurus to both catch up to and butcher them with greater ease. Just like skink cohorts, these guys are at home in watery environments and are easily able to outflank many slower infantry units.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Sotek (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unbreakable angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. These guys have a unique ability, &#039;&#039;Refuse to Die&#039;&#039;. When active, no skink models can die (they can still take damage, however), which can maximize their damage output when taking sudden burst damage or ensure that they hold the enemy in place for a precious few more seconds. The fact that they&#039;re unbreakable really synergizes well with this perk, as it means that your opponent is going to have to commit to completely eradicating the unit (which, admittedly, isn&#039;t really &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; tall an ask all things considered). This can buy some of your other forces some precious moments to regroup should the tide be against your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign Note&#039;&#039;&#039;: Auto-Resolve tends to value every flavor of Red-Crested Skink just slightly more than the dirt they stand on, so unless you are ok with them taking massive casualties or outright getting wiped out every time you click that auto-resolve button, you&#039;ll either need to fight your battles manually or pick up regular Skink Cohorts if you need chaff infantry to pad out your forces.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus warriors are probably the first thing that comes to mind when one mentions the lizardmen, and for good reason. Resilient, determined and natural fighters, saurus warriors are one of the most durable base line infantry units in the game due to their high HP and armor and can hold their own even against the more elite infantry options of other factions (Note: they can fight a unit of chaos warriors to stalemate). Should they find themselves in a losing matchup, their naturally high leadership will keep them standing firm against the enemy far longer than their equivalents in other factions would, even if they lose control and rampage towards their inevitable deaths (in game II. They&#039;ve since become far more disciplined in game III). To compensate, saurus are slow and are prone to being kited, so skink skirmishers/cohorts should be utilized to help pin down the enemy line until the saurus make it into combat. Saurus warriors are available in both standard and shielded variants, but the only reason to not get the shielded version is if you need every last gold coin you can rub together for your bigger monsters on a tight, competitive budget.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Shielded saurus warriors with an even higher base health and [[awesome|perfect vigour]]. These guys make fantastically cost efficient walls that will never tire no matter how hard they&#039;re pushed. In the campaign, they are one of the better frontline choices you can give your non-doomstack armies that can find a place even into the late game, so long as they manage to survive and rank up. Gor-Rok, if chosen as your initial legendary lord, can use his rite to grant further defensive bonuses and &#039;&#039;unbreakable&#039;&#039; to them (in game II. Game III replaces unbreakable with the barrier ability and immunity to hostile effects like Poison instead); they will never yield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Warriors equipped with anti-large spears for engaging cavalry and monsters. They&#039;re nearly identical to regular saurus warriors in every other way, though they do slightly less damage against regular infantry in exchange for their anti-large speciality. Like the warriors, they come in unshielded or, for a slight premium, shielded variants.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Buffed up saurus spears with shields, the blessed variant of these saurus are dramatically inferior to their standard cousins since they lack perfect vigour. Instead, the bonus ability granted to them is Forest Strider, a perk that grants additional melee attack and defense buffs to them while fighting in forests. If you can lure cavalry and large monsters into forests, where they&#039;ll suffer additional penalties simply due to how forests interact with them, you can deal impressive sustained damage to them in short order. Unfortunately, this ability does nothing for them outside of forests and &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; battlefields will have a dearth of forest patches that you can fight in. Additionally, uncooperative opponents will generally avoid trying to engage your forces inside forests and trying to convince them otherwise may prove too time consuming for what it&#039;s worth. Regardless, they still have more health than the regular saurus spears. That&#039;s always a plus.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Legion of Chaqua (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Legion of Chaqua, thanks to their special ability, are able to provide themselves and all nearby allied units a surprising 44% missile resistance for a limited time upon activation. This is an invaluable skill to have on the approach, as many of your unshielded infantry and larger monsters are vulnerable to being focused down by the much superior ranged infantry found in other armies and can be further supplemented by a Slann&#039;s Shield of the Old Ones if necessary. Otherwise, these guys simply behave exactly as Saurus Spears are expected to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - The fearsome Temple Guards, renowned for their devotion to their Slann masters, stand ready to slaughter all who&#039;d bring harm to their otherwise vulnerable charges. Temple Guard are the only &amp;quot;elite&amp;quot; infantry within the lizardmen roster, which is more a testament to how strong regular saurus are compared to the melee infantry of other armies. Speaking of how strong regular saurus are, Temple Guard fall short of them against unarmored infantry on the whole. This isn&#039;t to say Temple Guard aren&#039;t impressive; their heightened statline makes them less likely to budge than regular saurus are while their charge defense and bonus damage against large foes and predominantly armor-piercing weaponry lets them effectively face down a majority of late-game/elite cavalry, monsters and even armored infantry much more effectively than regular saurus. Unfortunately, this general prowess reflects heavily in their price tag and you&#039;ll struggle to field multiple units of these without heavily cutting into your other options.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - Recolored Temple Guards, these guys are a slightly more offensive version of their default variants thanks to an increased charge bonus. This makes them significantly more well rounded and will allow you to more flexibly choose how you engage your enemies; do you brace and negate an incoming charge, or is the foe squishy enough where a counter charge would be more punishing? All in all a nice upgrade if only for the usual buff to their health blessed units receive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Star-Chamber Guardians (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Take Temple Guard and make their weapons also deal magical damage: you now have &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; most elite infantry unit available to the Lizardmen. Having magical attacks allows the SCG to engage many undead/demonic forces that utilize high physical resistance and cut them down with ease. SCG also serve as excellent bodyguards for lords (particularly Slann) due to their Guardian ability and when properly supported with healing magic, these guys will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; die. Their only major weakness of note is prolonged anti-armor ranged firepower and artillery, but as they are armored and shielded and have a frankly gargantuan health pool, it will take a long time to fully whittle them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Missile Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort with Javelins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls, shields and three javelins each. For pennies over a regular skink cohort, you can give them limited ranged support with poisonous javelins; a fantastic way to soften up an enemy unit for your front line infantry on the charge. With their speed, they can also easily circle about and pepper an opposing unit&#039;s backsides before charging in to cut off their escape while your saurus chew through them. Once they throw all their javelins, they&#039;re identical to the default skink cohort in virtually every way. Generally, if you&#039;re planning on taking skink cohorts at all, you should almost always pick these guys up over the standard versions (unless you &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; need every gold coin you can possibly scrape together for a specific competitive multiplayer build).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts, and your first dedicated missile infantry. Skink skirmishers lack the sheer range available to most other factions and struggle to do damage against armored opponents. Instead, they should be used exclusively as harassers; their speed, ability to fire while moving and vanguard deployment options allow them to easily get into flanking positions and kite enemy infantry while inflicting poison onto them for when the rest of your army catches up. These guys will melt quickly if caught in the crosshairs of opposing archers/gunners and are pitiful in a fistfight, so you should only get one or two of these units at most, and only if you absolutely cannot afford taking chameleon skinks instead.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink skirmishers with more health and an innate magic spell resistance. This extra durability is nice, but the spell resistance in particular isn&#039;t going to see much use due to these guys rather high mobility and any targetable spell an opponent &#039;&#039;could&#039;&#039; cast on them would be served much better against... literally anything else in your army. There&#039;s virtually no reason to bring these in Multiplayer (even if Blessed units are allowed for the match) and the only reason you&#039;ll want to recruit them in any of your Campaigns would be if you&#039;re in desperate need of reinforcements for a beat-up army you simply cannot afford to lose and you just &#039;&#039;happen&#039;&#039; to have some Blessed Skink Skirmishers to burn. The moment you are in a position where you can recruit/replace other units, these guys should be the first to go.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ninja skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts. Though fewer in number than basic skink skirmishers, chameleon skinks are considerably more durable thanks to their flat 40% missile resistance and have a much easier time sneaking around enemies thanks to their Chameleon ability. This, along with their loose formation, can make them surprisingly effective at countering enemy archers. They otherwise fulfill the exact same harassment role your regular skink skirmishers do and deal a disappointingly low amount of damage against armored targets. Also, like skink skirmishers, they are unable to curve their shots well meaning they&#039;re less effective in siege battles than the archers of other races.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Slightly swole Chameleon Skinks with twice the charge bonus (which is barely anything, especially combined with their rather tragic melee statline) and a few extra darts per skink. More ammunition is always welcome in a firefight, but it&#039;s hardly a game changer. Regardless, better stats do open up options and if you have a choice between these and regular Chameleon Skinks, may as well pick these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
:::Oxyotl&#039;s banner army in the campaign should almost entirely consist of these guys. Between the AP bonus damage, variant ammunitions he can grant them in addition to giving them perks like Snipe, there&#039;s almost no force these guys can&#039;t just shoot to death with relative ease. Siege Battles or battles featuring multiple enemy banner armies might become tricky, but that&#039;s why you always have at least a couple Skink Oracles or Skink Chiefs with Stalk to clean up shop.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Stalkers (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry ninja skinks with little blowpipes and [[what|explosive darts]]. Chameleon Stalkers fill the rather niche role of shock infantry for the Lizardmen. Each skink is equipped with two Precursor blowpipe shots that deal rather impressive burst damage against unarmored targets either on the charge or when falling back from a melee engagement. As they possess the same Chameleon ability their standard Chameleon Skink kin have, they do have a lot of wiggle room to get into an optimal charging position and can quickly fade away from the fray when things go south. Speaking of things going south, though Stalkers are reasonably decent at combat due to their poisoned attacks and mediocre stats, they still tend to lose against medium tier and above infantry or anything with armor. That said, even against armored infantry, much of the Stalker&#039;s value comes from the heavy formation disruption their Precursor Rounds cause, slowing down their targets and interrupting their charge so that you can take the initiative in the ensuing engagement. They can also deal decent burst damage against single entity units in a pinch, but this is generally an inefficient use of them.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Monstrous Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors, as to be expected from 9-foot tall crocodile men, are beastly armor-piercing anti-infantry blenders who can carve through lower tier units like butter and are sturdy enough to hold back more elite units for your more capable specialists. Though quite tanky and reasonably quick (compared to your saurus), they are still large (with the weaknesses all that entails) and very vulnerable to getting shot to hell and back or getting slammed by larger cavalry/monsters. While Kroxigors do hit damn hard, their total damage is divided between three subcatagories: Base, Anti-Infantry and Armor-Piercing. As such, they only really get the most bang for their buck when thrown against armored infantry. While they are able to tie up units that fall outside of those categories, they become dramatically less effective and &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; lose the grindfest if they aren&#039;t supported. Just like in the tabletop, they pair fantastically with supporting skinks to flank and tie up enemy forces or debuff them with poison to make them even more vulnerable to the kroxigors.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you thought regular kroxigors were thick, you haven&#039;t seen these thunder-thighs strut their stuff. Though the standard health increase is all well and good, blessed kroxigors received a substantial buff to their charge bonus. This can make them surprisingly deadly cycle-chargers which, combined with their anti-infantry/armor niche, will let them crack massive holes in front lines.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacred Kroxigors (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors with [[power fists]]. These magical boxing gloves turn your kroxigors into all-purpose ass pounders who punch holes in armored foes effortlessly and tear through things with low magic resistance like so much wet paper. Much like regular kroxigors, sacred kroxigors get the most bang for their buck when supported by skinks (ideal) or saurus (when you don&#039;t want to move from that spot). Unlike standard Kroxigors, Sacred Kroxigors are much more well rounded offensively and will perform much more efficiently against opponents regular Kroxigors tend to struggle or stalemate against. Additionally, as the only non-RoR/Lord unit in your roster with Magical Attacks, these guys are your go-to melee force to deal with Ethereal units, Treemen and other high-physical resistance targets. Additionally, as Magic Resist is slated to change to only affect damage caused by Spells, Sacred Kroxigors will be very well suited to deal with the forces of the Dwarfs and Khorne going forward.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Huatl (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sacred kroxigors with much higher physical resistance and straight up sunder enemy armor, allowing units like your saurus warriors to deal more damage to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen cavalry are slow, for cavalry. They will never catch horse-mounted cavalry of other races, and it is risky to use them as a distraction if your enemy is using anything more than basic cavalry archers. Expect lizardmen cavalry to take heavy losses in prolonged combat, and learn to cycle-charge with them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - A pack of clever girls, with no saurus riders. Feral cold ones are extremely speedy units (by lizardmen standards) that effectively function as light cavalry built for chasing down skirmishers, ranged back lines and artillery pieces. Their ability to cause fear also comes in handy for landing rear charges against a foe tied up in combat with your frontline infantry, as well as ensuring routed enemies leave the battlefield permanently. Unfortunately, their raw damage output is rather low and they themselves are particularly frail and prone to rampaging, which means a bad engagement will result in a swift end for them. They&#039;re cheap as chips though, so you can&#039;t complain too much over losing &#039;em.&lt;br /&gt;
**Being able to summon them after performing the Rite of Primeval Glory is really handy when facing off against Skaven artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Standard cold one riders are your first full-blooded cavalry option. Though significantly swifter than your infantry, cold one riders lag behind their competition in other factions and are particularly vulnerable to anti-large cavalry units because of this. In an ideal setting, cold one riders will serve as the hammer to the anvil that is your saurus frontline; decisive charges into the rear of enemy formations can deal heavy damage and can completely lock down ranged infantry or artillery. Being both armored and shielded gives them respectable staying power as well and allows them to remain in extended combat should the need arise. That said, like most cavalry, they truly shine when they&#039;re able to freely cycle charge to maximize their damage output and heavily abuse enemy morale.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - The name says it all; these are cold one riders with spears. This turns them into a dedicated anti-large cavalry unit that can deal not inconsequential damage to opposing cavalry, artillery and monsters. Unfortunately, in cav v. cav engagements, cold one spear riders will often fall short due to their below average speed letting many opposing options run circles around them. As such, they tend to work best when used defensively. When opposing cavalry buckles down to charge into your flanks, counter charge them with your spear-riders to either intercept or divert them from your more vulnerable elements. They do deal decent armor-piercing damage on their own right, but they&#039;ll often lose against more elite cavalry options and their strength quickly diminishes in prolonged engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed cold one spears are extremely similar to the Pok-Hopak Cohort in the sense that they both don&#039;t run the risk of rampaging. This is a very valuable perk on a unit that will often find itself separated from your main army, especially when combined with their heightened durability. If you have a need for cold one spears and have access to these, there&#039;s literally no reason not to take them.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pok-Hopak Cohort (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Fearless and focused spear-riders, these guys are both immune to psychology &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; lack primal instincts, meaning you&#039;ll never need to worry about them rampaging or fleeing from enemy monsters. Additionally, the Pok-Hopak cohort is able to utilize vanguard deployment, giving them a tactical edge over their generic counterparts that cannot be underestimated. If you&#039;re thinking about taking a unit of spear-riders, there&#039;s literally no reason to not just take these guys instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only elite cavalry, horned ones are simply buffed up cold one riders, plain and simple. They are significantly faster than all of your cold one riders and as such are on par with the cavalry options found in many other factions. They pack a meaty punch with a rather chunky charge bonus to boot, letting them simply smash through frontline infantry as both hammer and anvil. You&#039;ll be paying for that swollen statline though, as they are one of your most expensive non-monster units out of your entire roster (they&#039;re even more expensive than some of your monsters).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Just like the blessed cold one spears, blessed horned ones won&#039;t rampage when caught unawares. Considering these are your elite cav units, you will &#039;&#039;always&#039;&#039; want to make sure they can get out of a bad engagement whenever you need them to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Javelin skinks riding Terradons and carrying stone bombs. While relatively fast for the lizardmen, terradon riders are among the slowest flying cavalry in the game, and are a fairly niche choice in battle. This niche can best be summed up as aerial harriers, ideal for sniping out artillery, mages or unarmored infantry or monsters (which is admittedly a bit of a rarity). Their attacks also apply Poison, which makes them a little more useful than their raw stats make them seem on paper and helps further support other units in your army. Additionally, they are quite micro-friendly since they are able to fire and move with their javelins and, with proper positioning, can drop a once-per-battle set of stone bombs to deal massive damage to clustered up infantry beneath their wings. That said, as fairly large, unarmored and slow moving targets with fairly pitiful melee stats, these guys can be very easy to snipe out of the air by decent missile infantry and are &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; vulnerable to pretty much anything else that is also in the air with them. In a pinch, they can also be used as rear-chargers to help route enemies or tie down missile infantry, but Old Ones help them if something points an extra long stick at them. If you&#039;re facing an infantry heavy army, Fireleech Bolas Terradons tend to net you better value.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pahuax Sentinels (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - These special edition terradon riders are particularly nimble and have an innate resistance to melee and missile attacks that gives them &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more staying power than any of your other flying cavalry. If only to serve as a distraction, these guys can be used in lieu of skink priests/chiefs in an attempt to waste your opponent&#039;s missile infantry/artillery ammo. Otherwise, use them to harass enemy units with poisoned missiles and to escort routing foes off the battlefield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Fireleech Bolas Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - These are far better Terradon Riders than the base variant. While they no longer inflict Poison on enemy units, their fireleech bolas deal explosive fire damage, inflicting greater damage overall against infantry formations and fire-weak entities while dealing higher leadership penalties in the process. Like regular Terradon Riders, they also can fire and move, letting them more or less function as prehistoric bombers. They still carry stone bombs, which can be devastatingly effective when used in concert with a line of saurus warriors pinning enemy melee units or shutting down artillery, but just like regular Terradon Riders, they are fairly useless in melee and are terribly vulnerable to other fliers and ranged missile fire. If you&#039;re dealing with smaller, physically larger units (monstrous infantry or single-entity monsters) with low armor, Terradon Riders are more efficient against them. &lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed Terradon Riders, aside the traditional increase in health, only received one minor adjustment over their basic counterparts; speed. At a speed stat of 110 as opposed to the standard 90, Blessed Terradon Riders can manuever across the battlefield notably more quickly than any other unit in your entire army. Nice, for a unit designed to harass and waste/dodge enemy missile fire, but ultimately a rather minor selling point on an admittedly mediocre and situational unit.&lt;br /&gt;
**Fireleech Bolas can be used to game the AI, especially when you&#039;re facing off against the Chaos Invasion. Even having just three of these guys bombard the Chaos Hellcannons can save you a lot of grief, and you&#039;re not really going to miss them if they got shot down. They&#039;re also really helpful against Vampire Coast, as they&#039;re one of the few skirmishers you have that can raise hell against a zombie gunline/artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ripperdactyl Riders (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The obsidian knife of lizardmen flyers. Ripperdactyls are your flying can-openers with a minor bonus against infantry and a &#039;&#039;massive&#039;&#039; AP bonus. Combined with their solid melee attack stat and Frenzy bonus, these guys utterly shred armored foot soldiers. Unfortunately, their non-existent armor, low melee defense, low model count and large size makes these guys terribly susceptible to counterattack. If they get boxed in, much less by anything with an anti-large bonus, you will be impressed by how quickly they die. Because of this, and the fact much of their damage is dedicated against armored targets, Ripperdactyls tend to be a bit of a niche choice in army lists not built around Tiktaq&#039;to. None-the-less, they are much more effective than Terradon Riders at shutting down missile infantry formations and artillery platforms. Just make sure you are constantly aware of the tactical situation and only call them down when you can support them or escape before enemy reinforcements manage to pin them down.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Colossadon Hunters (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Bigger, hungrier ripperdactyls with a penchant for bigger prey; an additional anti-large bonus can turn them into cavalry buzzsaws and can let them deal sickening damage to mounted enemy lords or cavalry and are the best/only option for fighting flying enemy lords/heroes on semi-even ground. Suffice to say, they&#039;re still very weak to anti-large weaponry themselves and will seldom win against combat dedicated lords/heroes in a &amp;quot;1&amp;quot;v1 fight. As such, they&#039;ll need support through terradon riders (for the poison) as well as additional ripperdactyls to stand an honest shot against such a foe, though they&#039;re still not guaranteed a victory. Should they lose, they&#039;ll still leave a hell of a mark on whatever cavalry/monster they were fighting and such scars could prove pivotal to bringing them down with the rest of your army.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Hunting Packs===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Salamander Hunting Pack (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed addition to the Lizardmen&#039;s borderline vacant missile unit roster, Salamander Hunting Packs are a fantastic general use ranged unit and are among the better missile cavalry options in the game. Though they can&#039;t fire while moving like other missile cavalry options, they deal a rather frightening amount of flaming explosive damage per volley with not inconsequential AP and rather notable anti-large bonuses to top it off. Much like your other non-single entity heavy hitters, Salamanders can do some damage in melee, but they really should avoid it unless absolutely necessary. Terrible defensive values will make Salamander Hunting Packs feel every blow that hits their unarmored hides. If you want to keep them in the fight, make sure you have a few Saurus Spears or Spear Cold One Riders to counter enemy cavalry. They can fire over units and obstacles.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Umbral Tide (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sneaky salamander hunting packs with perfect vigour and stalk, the Umbral Tide is able to covertly cross a majority of the battlefields you may find yourself on and can easily set up an ambush against unsuspecting opponents. Even after running from one end of the battle to the other and loosing every last fireball from their collective gullets, the Umbral Tide will still have a spring to their step should they join the melee fray. If you can only afford a single Salamander Pack, try to budget for these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Razordon Hunting Pack (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons are your anti-armor missile cavalry. Unlike the Salamanders, who burp up one flaming projectile apiece, Razordons lob three spikes at a time when they attack. Though the damage per individual projectile is... well, pitiful, combined they can deal a rather staggering amount of AP damage that can either be divided among dense clusters of armored infantry formations or a single armored target. Additionally, Razordons are much more adept at lobbing their shots, giving them a bit of an edge over Salamanders in uneven terrain. Unfortunately, that&#039;s about where the good news ends. With a shorter firing range than Salamanders and utterly abysmal base damage on their projectiles ([[What|Chameleon Skinks have stronger missiles against unarmored foes than these guys]]) and no additional bonuses to speak of (fire damage, explosive damage, anti-large/infantry, nothing), there&#039;s generally no reason to take Razordons over Salamanders in general lists. Against the heavily armored forces of the Warriors of Chaos, Dwarfs or even other Lizardmen, Razordons might find a more valuable niche.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; Not only have these guys gained a better firing arc, enabling them to better fire spikes at targets over terrain/allied units, but the projectiles themselves now pierce through multiple entities. Currently, they&#039;re particularly powerful and can quickly mulch armored infantry with as few as two or three volleys.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Amaxon Barbs (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons with poisonous spikes and a flat 15% missile resistance, these guys aren&#039;t much to write home about. Yes, poison is nice, but you don&#039;t exactly need to dig very deep for alternative ways to access it. The missile resistance is a nice, if moderately more situational perk, but it&#039;s not a particularly notable resistance and it does nothing for potential melee engagements. In the event you need a razordon hunting pack for anti-armor firepower, you may as well pick these guys up, but only if you have the extra gold once you&#039;ve established your core army roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
The big beasts and the creatures most opponents expect to face when fighting the lizardmen. Potent and powerful monsters, you have a dinosaur for every occasion; you&#039;ll simply need to choose the right ones. Beware of enemy tarpits if you don&#039;t have a high-level mage in your army; dinosaurs will take additional damage from their flanks and rear if they are surrounded and that can quickly wear them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral [[Bastilidon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your cheapest single entity dinosaur as well as your sturdiest. Feral bastilidons are effectively just a [[DISTRACTION CARNIFEX]] that you throw into enemy frontlines to stir up some chaos, cause some fear and just generally soak damage while the rest of your army dismantles the enemy. These guys can still earn you some crazy value against armies that field a lot of chaff infantry, like Skaven, Beastmen or Bretonnia.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039;: These guys are your entry-level monsters, being recruitable basically from the start of the game. As tanky anti-infantry monsters, these guys can net you some crazy value against the early-game armies of other factions for cheap-as-chips prices.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your first, cheaper artillery option. Solar Engines fire off a single missile that simultaneously blinds and burns enemy units, reducing their combat effectiveness and dealing bonus damage against anything that regenerates health naturally. These laser bolts have a lower maximum range, are relatively slow moving and are much easier to dodge than the smaller, faster, harder to see bolts fired by the stegadon, but they have slightly higher damage per shot and a larger splash radius when targeting groups of infantry. In another contrast to the stegadon, the beams fired by the solar engine deal flat magical damage, meaning enemies with high magical resistance will largely shrug off the damage dealt by the solar engine itself. The only &#039;&#039;major&#039;&#039; drawback of the solar engine is that the Beam of Chotek, though an armor-piercing missile (its unit toolbar does not show the armor-piercing icon), deals relatively low bonus damage against armored units and as such will become less efficient compared to the stegadon when targeting heavily armored monsters over formations of armored infantry. At the end of the day, when all else fails, there&#039;s still a fully grown bastilidon underneath that laser crystal. Keep in mind, like every ranged unit, firing their missiles depletes their vigour and should be taken into account if you&#039;re planning on sending it into combat.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Perfect vigour&#039;s value cannot be overstated on a melee capable monster that would otherwise tire itself out just from holding a laser cannon in place. The greater defensive value of the bastilidon compliments the increased health quite nicely and will allow the blessed variant to stay in the thick of it considerably longer than others of its kind.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Revivification Crystal Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only non-magical source of healing, revivification crystals are one of the few healing options in the game that not only restores a unit&#039;s health but also actually revives dead models; a perk that&#039;s particularly valuable on your elite units like kroxigors or temple guard. A revivification crystal pairs excellently with a Life Slann in infantry heavy lists as you can very rapidly bring a unit back from the brink to near pristine (or whatever their healing cap is, depending on how used and abused they are), or for ensuring crucial monsters (like carnosaurs and dread saurians) become virtually unkillable. They are of limited use in a dinosaur army if your lord isn&#039;t a Life Slann, as their minor healing ability is short-ranged and can only target a single unit with a relatively lengthy cooldown between uses. Additionally, and this is notable hitch, models don&#039;t start coming back to life until all the still living models have been fully healed up. This, consequently, makes it difficult to rebuild your forces if they&#039;re in active combat or taking damage from other sources. Having said that, they&#039;re still one of two sources of healing non-slann lords have access to and the only healing option that doesn&#039;t impose on your Winds of Magic reserve (which is still a plus, as other armies don&#039;t have such a luxury). As a bastilidon variant, it can also throw itself into combat with little fear. Pro tip: Don&#039;t click that &amp;quot;end battle&amp;quot; button; instead, use it to revive what you can and win the fight with fewer casualties.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ark of Sotek Bastilodon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Functionally just a regular bastilidon, but with the ability to unleash an AoE burst of poison on all enemies surrounding it. As it&#039;s only a minor increase in cost over the feral version, the Ark of Sotek may be worth getting for the very minor amount of damage and extra poison it can apply to the invariable mosh pits bastilidons often find themselves in. Alternatively, you can get much more utility from the other two non-feral variants, and rely on your skinks to supply poison or your mages to deal burst damage to tarpits of infantry. In Campaign these boys are one of your mainstay units until tier 4 stegadons, with the lizardmens low growth and poor early-game economy the low-cost high reward of these guys can easily melt through tons of early game infantry, a must-get.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - A wild stegadon, pure and simple. A living battering ram, stegadons are fantastic line breakers and are well rounded enough to survive the ensuing melee while dealing respectable damage in turn. Like all feral dinosaur variants, its only major weakness is a vulnerability to rampaging courtesy of its lower leadership. This is a forgivable flaw, considering how cheap they are and the fact that you can simply use Cold Blooded to snap them out of it definitely lessens the severity of an occasional rampage.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Stegadon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - A stegadon with a long-range ballista and skink handlers mounted upon its back. Stegadons serve as the second of your two artillery options and are arguably the best at dealing raw damage: the ballista is unerringly accurate and can easily snipe opposing artillery pieces, usually destroying the cannon/catapult models in question before they can get much usage. What&#039;s more is that, as it&#039;s connected to a single entity monster itself, the ballista is not vulnerable to these same tactics. Like Cygors or Steam Tanks, Stegadons compensate for the lack of firepower volume traditional artillery pieces can put out by retaining its long ranged assaults until it is either out of ammunition or has been killed. The stegadon&#039;s ranged attack generally struggles to deal significant damage to infantry formations due to the narrow projectiles and low splash damage (despite the bonus anti-infantry modifiers it gets). Regardless, the shot still deals incredible damage to heavily armored, single entity monsters (particularly a majority of mounted lords/heroes) due to their immense bonus AP damage. Even should you run out of ammunition or should your opponent try to tie it down in melee... it&#039;s still a stegadon. With skinks firing poisoned darts at everything surrounding its legs, it will put up just as much of a fight as its feral counterpart and then some. The only downside to the ballista is that firing it will drain the stegadon&#039;s vigour (even if it&#039;s standing perfectly still), meaning it&#039;ll likely perform less efficiently in any ensuing melee if it doesn&#039;t get a break between firing and fighting.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hoh boy, now we&#039;re talking. A massive buff to the stegadon&#039;s health will allow him to take significantly more punishment over the rest of his variants, but that&#039;s not really the main selling point here. The blessed stegadon is also gifted with perfect vigour; a massive boon to the offensive prowess of this beast. Being able to act as full blown artillery then rush into glorious melee combat to tear enemies a new asshole at peak performance is something no other faction can achieve remotely as effectively as these guys can. If a quest pops up in the campaign with these as a reward, you should do your damndest to accomplish it. They&#039;re well worth it.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where the stegadon does its best work from afar, the ancient stegadon needs to get up close and personal to do business. The howdah, though packed with significantly more ammo, is much shorter ranged and is primarily meant to soften up nearby targets for a follow up charge into melee. Ancient stegadons are somewhat tankier than other stegadon variants, though their limited range debatably renders them less effective offensively. In general, you should either spring for the Engine of the Gods or stick with a regular stegadon..&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Thunderous One (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A beefed up ancient stegadon that calls down bolts of lighting every 20 seconds, the Thunderous One was made to wade into the enemy&#039;s front line and deal indiscriminate damage. Unfortunately, these bolts of lightning can and will deal friendly fire to your units. This can make it somewhat challenging to support its charge with infantry or cavalry, though allied single entity monsters typically won&#039;t mind the stray blast.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Engine of the Gods Ancient Stegadon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Is all the gold armor embedded into your ancient stegadon not quite flashy enough for you? Just give it the ability to call down an orbital bombardment to glass swarms of warmbloods in the name of the Great Plan. The Stegadon itself is, functionally, an Ancient Stegadon. It behaves identically like one and has the exact same statline, but once you get to its abilities, things start to get interesting. It has two supporting abilities, Arcane Configuration (Winds of Magic Power Recharge rate boost) and the Portent of Warding (a 5% Ward Save for all allied units within 40m). These effects make EotG Stegadons fantastic supporting units simply from their presence alone. And yes, this applies to EotG Stegadon Mounts, so your Skink Priests have access to their own personal WoM batteries. The third, and debatably the main reason you&#039;re considering this ornate beast, is the Burning Alignment active ability. Though limited to only two uses, the Engine of the Gods can deal devastating damage to infantry focused lists if the Burning Alignment is used at just the right moment. It&#039;s particularly effective when fired into choke points or along your enemy&#039;s frontline ranks when they&#039;re tied up with your forces. Thankfully, the Burning Alignment ability is extremely accurate for (what is functionally) a wind spell; so long as you aim carefully and don&#039;t wander your lizardmen into it&#039;s path, you can drop it right in front of your forces with little fear.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Salamander (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A single giant salamander, tempered with age, experience and able to melt opponents with extra spicy hellfire. Ancient salamanders are more durable than their lesser hunting pack kin and are more reliably able to survive the occasional melee scuffle, though it generally shouldn&#039;t participate in it. Instead, the ancient salamander truly shines when paired with fire slann, salamander hunting packs, fireleech bolas terradons, or solar engine bastilidons thanks to its ability to render enemy units flammable with its own fireballs. This flammable effect greatly improves the damage dealt by flaming attacks and when executed properly and will burn through most infantry-focused armies with terrifying efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - An offensive machine, the apex predator of Lustria (you know, conventionally) and a signature monster of the lizardmen, the carnosaur is a ferocious beast that specializes in hunting other monsters, skaven weapon teams, and artillery due to their innate anti-large bonuses and armor-piercing capabilities. They&#039;re considerably frailer than stegadons and bastilidons defensively, though they are much swifter and tear through most enemies far more quickly due to their much higher attack. When funds are too tight to take a Saurus Scar-Vet or Old Blood on a carnosaur, a feral version with proper support won&#039;t steer you wrong. Just make sure you keep a leader or hero with Cold-Blooded on standby in case they get a little carried away.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - The blessed carnosaur. Formerly the pinnacle of lizardmen might (the dread saurian says hi), blessed carnosaurs have all the anti-large, armor-piercing wrath of the regular carnosaur supplemented by a much more rounded defensive statline. Additional health and magic resistance makes the blessed carnosaur surprisingly survivable against a myriad of generic threats and allows it to commit to fights that regular carnosaurs would hesitate towards. They are still just as vulnerable as any other carnosaur to getting mobbed or picked apart from regular armor-piercing weapons and absolutely will rampage in a bind, so don&#039;t get reckless with your charges.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Geltblöm’s Terror (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Carnosaur that never rampages and is blessed with both Vanguard deployment and the Strider ability, enabling it to keep up to speed in any terrain. Vanguard deployment and rampage immunity is a fantastic combination for a Lizardmen monster designed to fight other monsters, but don&#039;t get reckless.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Troglodon (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Troglodon without a Skink Oracle to keep it in check. Troglodons are in essence a hybrid between an Ancient Salamander and Carnosaur in that they&#039;re able to burp up potent poisonous spit that&#039;s extremely effective against large targets. Troglodons are quite possibly the first real &amp;quot;skirmisher&amp;quot; single entity monster introduced: though they&#039;re quick for ground-bound dinosaurs, they should generally only engage in melee as a last resort or with &#039;&#039;heavy&#039;&#039; support because they are not designed to put up much of a fight. In a direct melee engagement against most other combat monsters, Troglodons tend to lose pretty handily. Their low leadership also tends to cause them to rampage quickly when caught up in a brawl. However, if they focus on kiting and sniping their targets rather than charging them, they can do frankly sickening amounts of damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Pale Death (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Troglodon that can buff itself and nearby allies in melee whenever it uses it&#039;s Primeval Roar, giving them a rather substantial Melee Attack bonus for a short while. Though a buff of 24 Melee Attack is certainly an eyebrow raiser, it only recharges when the Pale Death is actively engaged in melee combat. For 60 seconds. On a creature that&#039;s prone to rampaging at the drop of a hat, this is a very risky commitment without a Lord/Hero nearby to keep it in check.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, dread saurians are nigh uncontested in raw damage output and are more than capable of killing every other unit in the game in a straight fight. Unfortunately for you, your opponent will be able to field &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more units than your dread saurian will be able to deal with at once and most of said units will likely be picking it off at range. As a massive, lumbering behemoth, dodging even slow moving projectiles is well and truly beyond the dread saurian and it will take tremendous damage on the approach. Even once it arrives in melee, the sheer volume of bodies capable of surrounding it and poking it with anti-armor/anti-large sticks will wear it down quite quickly. Their size also provides another source of jank whenever they get bogged down by hordes; they&#039;ll struggle to properly path their way through the crowds (it doesn&#039;t help that the Dread Saurian also has relatively low mass considering it&#039;s literal size) and their attacks, while lethally brutal, also tend to miss depending on the terrain it&#039;s fighting on. They are also prohibitively expensive and will eat up a significant portion of your funds, meaning the rest of your army will be extremely limited in number. Ensure you have a proper supporting mage (a life slann is essential) if you&#039;re bringing one.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, now wearing a howdah filled to the brim with skinks. A modest price bump from the already exorbitant feral variant will grant the regular dread saurian a higher leadership, ranged attacks and poison. There&#039;s little reason not to go ahead and splurge for these upgrades, feral or not the dread saurian will be the centerpiece of your army which you&#039;ll do everything to keep alive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Shredder of Lustria (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single most expensive beast you could ever field, and boy does he do work. In addition to all that a dread saurian can bring to bear, the Shredder of Lustria is stacked with the full complement of veterinary stat buffs and a leadership debuff for all enemies surrounding it, a perk that, when combined with the innate fear and terror dread saurians cause, will make most enemy infantry run the &#039;&#039;fuck&#039;&#039; away very fast. If that weren&#039;t enough, the Shredder of Lustria also encourages all nearby allied troops, buffing their leadership. After all, who wouldn&#039;t be inspired by seeing the apex of lizardmen might devouring any and all who oppose the Great Plan? Speaking of the Great Plan, you&#039;re going to need one: considering how much money you&#039;re sinking into this puppy, you&#039;re going to need to really budget the rest of your army carefully.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Coatl (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Previously a relic of a long lost bit of Lizardmen lore, the Coatl makes a rather striking return as the premier Lizardmen flying monster. The Coatl, though packing two casts of Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and one cast of Lesser Chain Lighting as bound spells, is designed more as a source of support for ground-bound allies. Infact, the main draw to the Coatl isn&#039;t its combat capabilities (which are mediocre at best), but for the fact that it grants all allied units under its wings Stalk. Yes, everything from that unit of Red-Crested Skinks to that Dread Saurian doomstack becomes invisible and untargetable until they&#039;re either far too close to do anything about or the Coatl &amp;quot;lands&amp;quot; or dies. As a faction desperately starved of long range missile units, this is a massive boon for protecting your high-value targets on the approach. Once the Coatl has safely delivered it&#039;s charges into battle, it still can serve as an excellent disruptor of backline units, Snipe artillery or single entity monsters with thunderbolt or punish a large blob with lesser chain lighting. Just be careful: even your Terradons move faster than this thing and its size does it no favors when trying to dodge missile fire.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Spirit of Tepok (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Coatl that has Banishment and Shield of Thorns as bound spells instead. The option to lean more heavily into a support role does suit the Coatl quite well, though this largely depends on what lord choice and focus your army has. If you brought a life slann or a skink priest, a regular Coatl might get you more mileage.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen are a very versatile faction when viewed over the entire campaign, however there will be times when your army composition and thus tactics are limited depending on the progress you&#039;ve made in developing your empire. Your greatest limiting factor will be money; be it in single-player or multiplayer, many mid-high tier units will cost a fortune and you will invariably have a lower unit count compared to other armies. You will need to carefully consider the faction you&#039;re currently facing when forming your armies.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
So, you want to show the world a Great Plan, and TED talks aren&#039;t getting it done? You might think of the Lizardmen as just another &#039;big monster&#039; faction in multiplayer, but you&#039;re limiting yourself if you think that way. The scalies have a surprising amount of options within their roster. From super wide infantry builds to kite builds built around chameleon skinks, to more mobile cavalry-centric strategies, the Lizardmen can be quite a versatile opponent. The thing you&#039;re pretty much going to universally struggle against however is factions that are heavy on the ranged play. You need to think carefully about your army comp and lord choices, then bring the Great Plan to the four corners of the Earth (or multiplayer lobby, or whatever).&lt;br /&gt;
====Faction Counterplay====&lt;br /&gt;
A list of all the other factions in the game, along side their various strengths, weaknesses and best strategies you have to combat them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - Highly mobile and capable of dishing out impressive damage, the Beastmen are among the fastest armies in the game (only rivaled by the Wood Elves and Slaanesh). This can be difficult to deal with, as the only infantry you possess that can potentially keep up with them are your Skinks. Skinks...generally aren&#039;t a great pick against Beastmen. They&#039;re slower still than a significant portion of the Beastmen roster and will die quite quickly due to their lack of armor and defensive stats. Skink Skirmishers/Chameleon Skinks are a minor exception, as between their poisonous missiles and the Beastmen&#039;s lack of armor, they&#039;ll actually deal respectable damage to them. Otherwise, the stalwart Saurus (Spears) will be your best frontline unit; solid charge defenses, shields and anti-large bonuses will stop any rush in its tracks and the Beastmen&#039;s complete lack of armor means that they&#039;ll take the full brunt of their attacks. Your monsters USED to be fantastic here, but with the addition of the anti-large regenerating Ghorgon, they are a much more risky proposition. Seriously, this thing will beat the pants off of pretty much any monster you bring to the table, and its surprising mobility means that your slow-moving infantry will have a hard time tarpitting it. Shredder of Lustria builds and monster mash builds which used to be hilariously effective against the Beastie Boys are now quite dangerous to bring. Without being able to overly rely on your monsters, it&#039;s going to be up to your characters and magic to be the game-changer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039; - The end-all, be-all cavalry faction, Brettonia has access to some of the strongest mounted soldiers in the game. Their peasantry, though feeble, isn&#039;t to be underestimated in sufficient numbers and can still do notable damage through their archers and pikemen. That said, your Skink Cohorts can easily best any peasants they (effortlessly) pin down and a unit or two of kroxigors will &#039;&#039;evicerate&#039;&#039; any foot soldier unfortunate enough to meet them in combat. Bretonnians will also struggle to hold their lines together from the sheer amount of fear/terror your monsters can cause. However, their cavalry (particularly Grail Knights) won&#039;t falter from fear alone and are renowned for their devastating charges. Brace units of temple guard (or saurus spears, if you&#039;re cheap) to mitigate their damage and box them in before they have a chance to pull back. A light slann with the Net of Amyntok can shut down Brettonian cavalry &#039;&#039;hard&#039;&#039; and should heavily be considered as your lord for this matchup.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - The general battle plan here can best be summarized with &amp;quot;Grab a bunch of ranged and 2 Solar Engines and defend them at all costs because otherwise you have no way to deal with Dark Rider Crossbow and Scourgerunner spam.&amp;quot; Seriously, those damn Anti Large missile chariots were pretty much designed to fight you. A pure melee monster rush isn&#039;t going to work otherwise you will just get kited into oblivion. Have the solar engines shoot them from afar and see if you can get you Chameleon skins to slow them down so your Cold One riders can catch up to them. Your dino cav is better than their dino cav, take advantage of that. Mazdamundi is also great for nets to lock down cavalry and get them ready for a pounding. If you can get rid of all that mobile ranged, the infantry fight should fall in your favor in no time.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039; - Dwarfs tend to form nigh impenetrable walls of armorclad infantry and are one of the few factions capable of holding the line better than you. AP weaponry is a must, so mixing Red-Crested Skinks among your Saurus can help chew through thicker formations. Kroxigors, particularly Sacred Kroxigors, will be your best infantry can openers in this fight. Despite their innate spell resistance, your offensive magics can still work wonders against most dwarfen infantry, so a heavens skink priest or fire slann wouldn&#039;t be amiss in your army here. Beware of their Giant Slayers; though fragile, they will deal terrible damage to any armored cavalry or monsters they can get their grubby dawi mitts on. Skink skirmishers/chameleon skinks can easily outpace slayer units and whittle them down with their poisoned missiles, though they&#039;ll do absolutely nothing against any of the armored infantry. Terradon riders are virtually untouchable to their ground bound forces with a special shout-out for the Fireleech Bolas variant, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to take down any Gyrocopters contesting the skies if you want to get your money&#039;s worth. Lastly, you&#039;ll want to destroy any artillery they bring before turning your attention to the rest of their forces; Ripperdactyls can easily flank and shred such devices, though you&#039;ll need to draw away any screening units if you want them to survive the aftermath. Lastly, this is one of the few matchups where Razordons are a more attractive mid-ranged option than your Salamanders.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039; - Karl Franz brings a relatively balanced roster to the table, with plenty of long ranged anti-armor firepower and cavalry that&#039;ll run circles around yours. With the sheer volume of AP [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units and artillery, this is a faction you&#039;ll generally want to leave the Saurus at home for. Skink Cohorts with shields are for once a rather reliable pick for your frontline, with Red-Crested Skinks and/or Kroxigors diving in once you&#039;ve tied down the missile units that otherwise threaten them. Additionally, your Terradon Riders can actually be quite effective in this matchup, particularly in shutting down Grenade Launcher Outriders. A Skink Priest of Heavens with Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and/or Comet of Cassandora is a rather cost-efficient answer to units such as the Steam Tank and Artillery Platforms, though regular Stegadons can punch holes through them if you can keep them safe. A Slann Priest with Light Magic and the Net of Amyntok coupled with a squad or two of Salamander Hunting Packs makes for an excellent cavalry deleting squad, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to shield them with your own cavalry or at the very least some shielded Saurus Spears.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039; - Go fast and hard into cathay&#039;s lines. Cathay brings a good amount of options against single-entity units with accurate grand cannons and iron hail gunners amongst others. The largest you should go is an ark of sotek or two to mass-poison damage cathay&#039;s entire packed formation. Go full offensive with saurus and try to briefly contest the skies to disrupt the artillery and missiles on the charge. in general it&#039;s a poor matchup as while the other &#039;monster race&#039; in the ogres is great against cathay it&#039;s simply a matter of price. ogres can beat cathay with a lot cheaper units than you can bring with kroxigors filling the same role as ogre bulls but 2.5 times the price. Unless your units get major discounts in multiplayer for immortal empires it&#039;s not a good time&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hordes of expendable Goblins and Ork Boyz make up the rank and file of the Greenskins. Despite having a particular focus towards mobbing you in melee combat, the Greenskins have a fairly diverse roster capable of performing decently well at ranged combat or skirmishing with their relatively diverse cavalry options. As the coup-de-grace, Greenskins also have access to several monstrous units between their selection of (river) trolls and Arachnarok Spiders that can mulch their weight in infantry. However, there are two major weaknesses to the Greenskin roster: they typically have &#039;&#039;terrible&#039;&#039; leadership (especially their expendable Goblin and Troll units) and a majority of their roster is unarmored. Saurus units will typically stand firm on the front lines while your Skink skirmishers will actually do some solid work while easily outpacing the sluggish Ork Boyz, but you will &#039;&#039;need&#039;&#039; to watch out for their Cavalry. Fireleech Bolas Terradons and Salamanders will have a field day against their infantry as well, especially against the fire-weak troll units who will crumble rapidly in the face of their flammability and terrible leadership. On the note of leadership; your pantheon of Jurassic beasties will have the time of their lives against the Greenskins. Their lack of charge defense, anti-large, and low leadership means that a Carnosaur or two will bowl through their ranks largely uncontested. However, keep an eye out for Black Orcs; they&#039;re one of the few armored infantry units in the Ork roster, are armor piercing and are immune to Fear/Terror. Red-Crested Skinks are a decent budget option to deal with them, though you may prefer to kite them with Razordon Hunting Packs instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Lizardmen will have some trouble countering High Elf flying monsters, particularly phoenixes. Your ranged units aren&#039;t going to get the chance to take them down in the air, so you have to rely on catching them when they drop down to attack and that can be tricky if you&#039;re running an all-dino army. At the same time, if you&#039;re using saurus then you will take some heavy losses from archers and cavalry if you commit them all to tarpitting the phoenix. Chameleon Skinks are an excellent pick against archer heavy builds; their lose formation coupled with their innate missile resistance will make them extremely hard to take down at range while their chameleon skin will let them dip in and out of combat with relative ease. Sisters of Averlorn are a priority target if present on the field; a Skink Priest of Beasts may be considered if only to summon manticores to tie them down. Additionally, the Legion of Chaqua should strongly be considered as a core part of your frontline; the ability to grant multiple units around it a 44% missile resistance is too valuable to ignore.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039; - Don&#039;t bring Skinks to this matchup. Barring Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers if you want to be cheap, all of your Skink Infantry will do little more than feed their skulls to Khorne&#039;s throne before they get an opportunity to do anything meaningful. A pricy saurus front line is definitely worth it here, potentially supported by Kroxigors. For once the &#039;engine of the gods&#039; stegadon&#039;s death-beam will actually be useful as the stegadon itself can knock about units and the death-beam being magic and AP will counter any infantry khorne can bring. Bring saurus, bring magic and your anti-large carnosaur. A very good matchup in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kislev is a relatively fearless foe for you, a nice change of pace for mere mortal men. Their higher tier infantry is generally able to out-trade yours, Tzar Guard (especially the Great Weapon variety) can and will gradually carve their way through regular Saurus lines while Streltsi and Ice Guard will prove quite competent at dealing with your forces at range. Fortunately, your sheer versatility means you aren&#039;t wanting for options. Even if they&#039;re a bit slower, your Cavalry will generally outclass Kislev&#039;s, barring any War Bear Riders they may have brought. Even regular Cold One Riders will make a fantastic hammer to the anvil that is your Saurus and even a losing matchup against their stronger Tzar Guard will quickly turn in your favor with a rear charge or two. Of course, aside their War Bear Riders, Kislev&#039;s monsters can&#039;t hold a candle to yours. Once you shut down some of the ranged AP Missiles, your dinos can wreak terrible havoc upon the enemy lines. Razordons are particularly effective right now, though Salamanders can be used to efficiently deal with the more monstrous enemy units. Terradons are almost always a never-pick however as since in essence every single kislev unit has a ranged attack that is more than capable of dealing with them terradons are free kills for even kossars.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - This...should be a no brainer in concept, though countering opposing lizardmen can be somewhat difficult to execute. Anti-large units in some shape or form are an inarguable must; cold one spear-riders accompanied by saurus spears can surround and pin down enemy monsters in a relatively cost-effective manner. Red-crested skinks are an ideal infantry choice due to their poison and armor piercing bonus coming into play against a majority of the lizardman roster. Salamander hunting packs and ancient salamanders are fantastic all-rounders that can deal terrifying damage across the entire board. Your main objective should be to focus down any slann mage-priest or skink priests present on the field, followed by any other lord/hero keeping potential rampages in check. If there is an opposing slann, avoid clumping up your infantry to reduce the threat of a banishment and/or any other vortex spell devastating your frontlines. Regular stegadons are fantastic monster snipers who should focus fire on major threats like carnosaurs or dread saurians before anything else.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are pretty much Warriors of Chaos with a little bit of [[Space Wolf|wolf]] thrown in. Like the Warriors of Chaos, they have a relative lack of missile units but unlike the Warriors of Chaos, are considerably less armored as a whole. However, they more than make up for it with their mobility and plentiful sources of anti-large, which can be seriously dangerous for one of your central strategies. Saurus Warriors as such are substantially better at holding off the bulk of their front lines while Temple Guard are a fantastic answer to their Skin Wolves and Trolls. You need to be on top of your positioning however, as Skin Wolves and Ice Wolves can run circles around your plodding infantry. Skink Skirmishers are also fantastic for dealing chip damage and applying poison while staying well out of arm&#039;s reach for a majority of their forces. (Ancient) Salamanders are also a superb choice, as are Fireleech Bolas Terradons as general damage dealers. Stegadons and Carnosaurs will likely be your go-to monsters, as a pair of Carnosaurs can typically take down a War Mammoth, at least in theory. Caution should be exercised against War Mammoths in particular, as they are one of the best monster units in the game. Considering the fact that half your list is made of monsters, that&#039;s saying something. No Norscan worth his salt will allow you to freely target down the crown jewel of his army, so make sure you commit well and truly to the fight.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039; -Nurgle has no anti-large, bad armour piercing, relies on outlasting his enemies, has almost no ranged firepower worth mentioning, has incredibly poor armour, is ridiculously slow, hates fire damage, and is mediocre in the air-game. Basically, everything Nurgle hates is something you have plenty of while Nurgle has precisely zero counters to your playstyle. You almost can&#039;t lose this match-up it&#039;s so one-sided.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is a fairly balanced matchup depending on what you bring. Saurus spears are the obvious pick here and try to avoid skink units entirely unless you want to give the gorgers free food. Carnosaurs with their anti-large are an obvious pick here and going for a stegadon with or without a hero on the back is great for counterplay against leadbelchers.The scariest thing ogres can bring are rhinoxes or their artillery. Essentially settle in for a large-on-large slugfest.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039; - An iconic matchup, the skaven are everything the lizardmen aren&#039;t. Massive hordes of cheap, cowardly cannon fodder will fill the ranks of many skaven lists purely to get in the way of your Jurassic might and their rickety engines of war. Aside delaying the inevitable through piles of bodies, the ratmen have precious little in the way of durable front line units and will typically fall apart when thrown in the grinder. Rather, Skaven will rely on their wide array of artillery and arcane firearms to rain warpfire upon the hapless masses (friend and foe alike). Ratling Gunners are notorious for their ability to rapidly shred infantry, cavalry and monsters alike while their jezzails excel at picking apart single entity monsters, lords and heroes from halfway across the battlefield. Any frontline infantry you have you&#039;ll want shielded. In general, skaven are modestly quick on their feet, so you&#039;ll want a selection of cavalry or skinks to catch up to and tie down their missile infantry. Chameleon Skinks are generally a strong pick against skaven due to their missile resistance and for once can do respectable damage due to the relative lack of armor in the skaven roster. Skink Cohorts will typically win in a straight fight against Skaven Slaves or Clanrats, though against anything more elite you&#039;ll want saurus or kroxigors to deal with them. Your monsters will also have virtually free reign should they manage to make it into melee, though you&#039;ll want to ensure any artillery or missile infantry are well and truly tied down before you let them loose.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039; - Much like the Dark Elves, this matchup falls considerably in their favor. Speedy infantry, cavalry and chariots &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; packing AP damage makes a front line of Saurus undesirable. However, unlike the Dark Elves, Slaanesh [[/d/|comes]] up short in the ranged game; your Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers and even both Terradon Riders will prove quite valuable at whittling away Slaaneshi daemons, though exquisite care will be needed for your skink infantry; even with poison debuffs, Slaaneshi units are &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; fast and will still be able to chase down and tie up your Skinks without screening support. Other options include your trademark dinosaurs; despite packing AP damage, Slaanesh is not generally kitted with a diverse Anti-Large roster and may struggle trying to hold back your high-mass monsters from tearing through their ranks. When it comes to your Terradons, take a care. Slaanesh will usually pack some Furies to help defend the skies and though Furies won&#039;t win against any of your other monsters, your Terradons aren&#039;t most other monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039; - There&#039;s not a lot a basic skeleton army can do to lizardmen. Unit for unit, saurus are just better and skinks will be more maneuverable. An all-dino army can destroy ushabti and higher-tier units with ease, provided you&#039;ve picked the right dinos (stegadons). However, this is not a reason to be complacent - the Tomb Kings roster has some very deadly Anti-Large AP units on their roster that will make very short work of your dinos. Of particular note are the Ushabti Greatbows and Necrosphinx; the former are dedicated monster snipers and the latter is absolute murder against other single-entity monsters. Try to mob these units with your infantry or try to make them irrelevant with magic, because the high innate armor and mass these units naturally have will mean they can and will be able to move around the battlefield with impunity.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039; - The key against Tzeentch is to get into melee quick and hold their units in place; Tzeentch daemons, even with their Protoss-like shields, aren&#039;t built for combat and will either try to do all their work at range (something you &#039;&#039;desperately&#039;&#039; will not want to combat them at) or by cycle charging before you get a chance to crack their shields. This is one of the rare matchups your Cold One Riders can actually excel at; they&#039;re rather decent in combat and can engage the enemy far sooner than your standard Saurus or Skinks can (and will likely/hopefully suffer less casualties for it). Additionally, Chameleon Stalkers can safely sneak up to vulnerable flanks; open up with a rather explosive burst of their own and start chewing through Horrors before they get much opportunity to return fire. Try not to contest the skies if you can, though Ripperdactyls will likely best most of the units they&#039;d be fighting in the skies... they&#039;ll be outnumbered substantially &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; move much more slowly. They&#039;ll be lit up far before they can ever catch up to anything.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039; - In terms of punching through these undeads&#039; lines they&#039;re even easier than their Vampire Counts brothers with very little in the way of durable infantry to hold back your Saurus killing machines. Where you will have to watch out is their ranged units - they have one of the cheapest gunlines in the game and it&#039;s even harder to break open their protectors because they&#039;re all undead and can&#039;t run. Their monsters will tarpit your dinos but rarely kill them, but without proper maneuvering you will be munching on polearm zombies all day while their undead musketeers and cannons fuck you up. Abuse magic hard and don&#039;t let them bog down your dinos, keep them constantly rolling through the zombies until you can trample over their gunners. Be very wary about Necrofex Colossi, not only can they kite your dinos but they can also put substantial hurt on them if not checked quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039; - If there&#039;s any faction in the game more stunted in the range-game, it&#039;s the Vampire Counts. Hordes upon hordes of meat-shields often form the rank and file of many undead lists while the lords and heroes do all the heavy lifting. You&#039;ll want to avoid clumping your units up or getting bogged down by the fodder, as a single Winds of Death can delete your entire frontline if you allow it. Kroxigors will make short work of any infantry the Vampire Counts send your way and Sacred Kroxigors in particular are extremely valuable against the ethereal units that might otherwise threaten your physical forces. Additionally, Skink Skirmishers will prove a frustrating thorn in your opponents side as they kite any non-cav across the field and back. Typically you&#039;ll want to focus on bringing down any characters the Vampire Counts field, as they quite literally hold the army together. Without their leadership and magic support, many of the undead will quickly crumble against the might of your superior soldiers. Fire damage is particularly useful in this regard, so Salamander Hunting Packs, Ancient Salamanders, Solar Engines and Fire Slann can quickly incinerate many of these lords and heroes (in the case of the Slann, they are also fantastic at dealing with ethereal heroes).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemons of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Expect to see a roster comprising mostly of Slaanesh and Tzeentch daemons. If this is the case, you&#039;re in for a rough one. If your opponent decided to focus on Khorne or Nurgle forces... well, hopefully you enjoy the borderline free win. Regardless, this can be a tricky matchup to properly plan for, so just try to take a balanced list. With a slight focus against Tzeentch/Slaanesh, of course.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another faction almost devoid of ranged options, the Warriors of Chaos is almost dedicated to advancing a wall of steel and meat from one end of the map to the other. Many of their units are armored and/or shielded and as such, armor-piercing units will be your friend against them. Take a few units of Saurus (Spears) to hold their units in place while you have some Red-Crested Skinks chip away at them. Spears are strongly suggested due to the relative abundance of large/monstrous units within their roster; they might not win against them, but your spears will go down fighting much harder than your regular warriors would. Take a unit or two of Ripperdactyls to shut down any Hellcannons they might&#039;ve brought to the table. Take no half-measures with them either; they&#039;re unbreakable so you &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; need to completely wipe them out if you don&#039;t want to be bombarded the entire match. Otherwise, some (Sacred) Kroxigors, Razordons and Stegadons are fantastic damage dealers and a Skink Priest of Heavens or a Fire Slann can delete large chunks of their infantry at a time with proper placement and timing.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Wood Elves are a flighty foe and one of the hardest for your army to actually pin down. Their relatively cheap access to long-ranged anti-armor missile infantry will pose a massive pain in the ass and their basic frontline infantry, the Eternal Guard, can hold their own surprisingly well against your monsters courtesy of their spears. In a rare twist, a front line of skink cohorts will prove more effective than your saurus against wood elves; they&#039;re quicker still than many elven infantry options and can further hinder their combat effectiveness thanks to their poison. Chameleon skinks will prove invaluable at harassing enemy archers and can kite a majority of their infantry with relative ease. Now when it comes to dealing with their tree units, I have one word for you. Fire. (Ancient) Salamanders can deal with dryads, tree kin and treemen with laughable ease and will prove just as effective at dealing with the rest of the wood elf roster, though you&#039;ll absolutely want a contingent or two of saurus spears to screen against Wild Riders. Wood Elves are also a rare instance of being a faction with &#039;&#039;less&#039;&#039; artillery than you (hint, they have none). Solar Engine bastilidons can heavily discourage their archers from setting up and will do bonus damage to any tree units they shoot. Lastly, many Wood Elf units are capable of vanguard deployment; keep an eye on your surroundings once the battle starts to ensure you aren&#039;t caught unawares.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;S/S-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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Though you aren&#039;t the undisputed king of Domination, Lizardmen are absolutely positioned as one of the top factions for this game mode currently. A very flexible faction with many options, you have excellent early game presence in the form of skinks. Your quick-footed infantry chaff will easily contest objectives due to their higher capture weight compared to the expendable chaff infantry other factions might field and will have a much easier time getting to them shortly after the game begins. Particularly any of the skirmishing variety that you vanguard deployed. Speaking of, Chameleon Stalkers/Skinks are still excellent skirmishers and harassers who can dive in and disrupt outlying forces, making objective contesting a painful nuisance for ill-equipped foes. When it comes to holding the line, your Saurus infantry is as durable as ever. When supported by regular skinks, it will take a concentrated effort if not a full hard counter in order to shift your forces off of an objective. This is made even more challenging due to your rather plentiful healing options; Life Slann, Skink Oracles and even Revivification Bastilidons are fantastic for keeping your forces in the fight. Even more so if further supported by any Slann&#039;s Ward save nope-bubble that they can plant down on any objective to thoroughly lock it down. This isn&#039;t even really getting into your single entity beat-sticks; Kroq-Gar can prove the equal of lords such as Be&#039;lakor with the right support and Lord Kroak can still Deliver Itza hard enough to evaporate enemy blobs with frightening ease.&lt;br /&gt;
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At the end of the day, your sheer versatility affords you &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more flexibility in dealing with the highly varied factions you&#039;ll be facing while still being able to focus on defending objectives. Yes, there are still some factions you&#039;ll generally struggle to deal with, but you will at least have a couple tools to handle them while you hold your ground. This is something some of the other factions (like the Dwarfs or Vampire Coast) cannot quite claim.&lt;br /&gt;
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A particular note, if you&#039;re going up against one of the other top-tier factions in this game mode, such as Nurgle or Vampire Counts, bring fire. A Salamander Hunting Pack or two, a Fire Slann and &#039;&#039;maybe&#039;&#039; a Fireleech Bolas Terradon Rider can more efficiently stymie those factions regenerative strengths while further exploiting their innate flammability. A Burning Head or Firestorm will incinerate most of their blobs while dealing moderately little to your armored Saurus lines while Salamanders will also prove quite potent against the larger monsters/chariots supporting them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, be it the Vortex or Mortal Empires, the biggest concern lizardmen have is obtaining a consistent source of income; skinks will only carry you so far in the early game and sacking settlements will only provide a quick short-term boost to your treasury. Your economy generally lacks bonuses, especially compared to other Warhammer 2 factions, though you won&#039;t be as constrained as, say, Wood Elves or Beastmen, and expanding the Geomantic Web and getting upkeep reduction skills will go a long, long way. As such, if you aren&#039;t playing as Hexoatl it is imperative to get the city as soon as possible for its landmark, which reduces upkeep on the lizardmen&#039;s most powerful units. Most other landmark buildings add some bonus to several unit chains, such as additional damage for skinks or more defense for saurus warriors.&lt;br /&gt;
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Lizardmen research is locked behind building completion; many important technologies cannot be accessed until a specific, often mediocre in mid-early game, building is built in one of your settlements. Generally speaking, it is better to unlock research to start improving your weaker units rather than focus on your economy in the early- to mid-game. You simply won&#039;t be generating much revenue from economy buildings until the Geomantic Web is expanded and upkeep is reduced. However, that also means you need to be smart about what buildings to construct in your limited settlements; depending on how much money you have coming in through battles and sacking, it may be worth it to construct something just to unlock research and then destroy it to make room for something you genuinely need.&lt;br /&gt;
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Despite skinks being largely cannon fodder after turn 75, the skink Spawning Pool building should be built in every minor settlement so that you can hire as many Skink Chief heroes as possible. Not only are they the faction assassins, which help lizardmen remove otherwise troublesome heroes that would be difficult to snipe on the battlefield, they can all get stegadon or ancient stegadon mounts. These are functionally equivalent to the generic version but come with extended range and bonuses to damage. It is possible to have two full armies of just Skink Chiefs by the Chaos invasion, if you so wish, and it is even more OP than the standard dinostack. Skink Priests also have access to these mounts, but increasing their recruiting slots is much more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
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Once you start becoming established and have a few provinces under your belt, it is imperative to begin constructing Star Chambers in every province you can afford to do so. Each Star Chamber boosts the starting rank of all newly recruited Slann Mage-Priests by 3 levels and all new heroes by 2. Yes, this stacks all the way up so that you can recruit max level Slann every 10 turns. Each Star Chamber also offers a small but lucrative bonus to all income for the whole Province, which helps to address your stone-age economy and extends enemy sieges by an extra 3 turns, potentially granting you just enough time to save the city should it fall under attack.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Mortal Empires/Vortex===&lt;br /&gt;
With the advent of Immortal Empires in the third game, this will admittedly feel like a lackluster experience compared to it. Having said that, if you feel like sticking to the &amp;quot;OG&amp;quot; experience or don&#039;t quite want to pick up game III yet, here are some tips and tricks. In general, if you&#039;re starting as one of the factions starting on your home turf of Lustria, you&#039;re going to feel quite cramped.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;City of the Sun&#039;&#039;&#039; - Big boss Mazdamundi starts with a couple nice things going for him; As the proud owner of Hexoatl, late game Dino-Doomstacks can become particularly affordable. Additionally, he can expand south relatively freely due to a province&#039;s worth of abandoned settlements ripe for the plundering/taking. Not everything is as bright as his city&#039;s namesake suggests; A permanent -10 diplomatic penalty to all Non-Lizardmen factions can make diplomacy somewhat problematic. This is exacerbated by the fact that Mazda starts directly south of the Dark Elves and has a cluster of aggressive Vampire Coast and lizard-hating Empire colonists barring his access to the rest of Lustria. After you secure your initial holdings, you should weigh your options carefully then commit to eradicating one threat at a time if you can help it. Wiping out Morathi&#039;s Dark Elves is the more challenging prospect; their abundance of Armor Piercing weaponry (melee and ranged) can make early game excursions north particularly brutal. This is made worse by the climate incompatibilities, where growth and replenishment are dramatically hindered. On the other hand, Morathi&#039;s capital city does provide some rather significant bonuses to your research, income and public order (reduction of penalties from corruption). Should you choose to go south, you&#039;ll have a much easier time and will be able to meet up with several other Lizardmen factions you can trade/confederate with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Last Defender&#039;&#039;&#039; - Starting in the ass-crack of the southeast, Kroq-Gar has a bit of a rough start. His only legendary lord neighbor, Tiktaq&#039;to, is still a veritable hike through Vampire/Tomb King infested deserts and Skaven/Ork-filled mountains. You do have two other generic Lizardmen factions nearby, but they often get wiped out within the first 20 turns by either Vampires, Tomb Kings or Malus Darkblade, if you don&#039;t do the job for them. To get to the rest of your Lizard brethren (who actually matter), you&#039;re going to have to carve a path of bloody carnage across the literal length of the map. There are a couple of ways to go about it, however. If you focus your efforts, you can shove off the coast above your capital city and take the Dragon Isles province directly to the north. If you head north quickly, you can snag a veritable batch of handy Legendary Lord traits that&#039;ll turn Kroq-Gar into a particularly potent duelist and secure a number of relatively isolated, defendable provinces before you press westward. If you&#039;d rather focus on pressing west initially... prepare for the long haul. You&#039;ll want to keep a banner army stationed either in Charnel Valley (where Clan Mors starts) or in Devil&#039;s Backbone (where the Court of Lybaras starts) to help defend against Ork or potential Dark Elf incursions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lllllet&#039;s get ready to RUMBLE!&#039;&#039;&#039; - Brace yourself, you&#039;re deep in the Lustria-Bowl. Tehenhauin has the roughest start of all your lords, even including Horde-faction Nakai; though he has one potential ally to his immediate south, he has Vampire Coast, Dark Elves, Skaven and expansionist Empire folk surrounding him on all sides. Worse, you&#039;re effectively stuck with Skinks for infantry until you can make progress on your Skaven genocide quest. To this end, you&#039;re going to want to either focus on pumping out a flood of Skinks or focus on building your Beast Lairs to try to pump out some monstrous units to compensate for your lack of early-game muscle. Taking out the Vampire Coast first is strongly recommended, as not only do they spread vampiric corruption, but all of their settlements will provide you with valuable ports. From there, you can put the screws to the Dark Elves and Skaven to the south and claim some valuable land and sacrifices for Sotek.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Tiktaq&#039;to====&lt;br /&gt;
* Perhaps the most... bland campaign, Tiktaq&#039;to just kind of exists in the middle of the Southlands, caught between some Tomb Kings, a random Empire faction and a fair few crusading Bretonnians. If you want, you can focus on allying with the Tomb Kings initially. They can provide a reasonable source of Trade income and provide a buffer against the burgeoning Greenskin-tide while you clean up the Bretonnians and Empire. Additionally, if you focus on sweeping east, you can get a solid point of entry into Lustria.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Gor-Rok==== &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The world is your Itza&#039;&#039;&#039; - Despite being solidly in the Lustria-Bowl and being a Saurus-dedicated, exclusive footlord, Gor-Rok is basically guaranteed supremecy due to beginning the game with Lord Kroak &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; starting with Itza as his capitol. Tehenhauin will often end up confederating with you pretty early and without much fuss due to the various Lustria-Bowl contenders beating the piss out of him. You&#039;ll likely want to focus your initial expansion down south to clear out the Skaven and secure the various resources found on the southeast coastline before pushing north to clear out the Vampires. Once you control the majority of Lustria, you effectively have free reign to set your sights anywhere you feel like conquering.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Nakai====&lt;br /&gt;
* Formerly the most wayward of the Children of the Old Ones, Nakai&#039;s start in Albion effectively tries to throw you against the forces of Norsca for a majority of your early-mid game. After some research, he&#039;s admittedly geared for it; natural Snow and Chaos Attrition immunity courtesy of your unique tech tree grants Nakai a lot more flexibility for engaging the northern Chaos factions and despite not controlling any of the settlements he captures, the Defenders of the Great Plan generate a &#039;&#039;ton&#039;&#039; of Untainted corruption. Though this won&#039;t really benefit you personally much, your allies (or fellow players on Co-Op campaigns) will find traversing the north considerably less threatening. Having said that, due to being a Horde faction, you&#039;re perfectly free to just abandon Albion entirely and find new stomping grounds to start your Campaign in.&lt;br /&gt;
In immortal empires he&#039;s even more lost starting in fucking cathay. But he does get a proper stegadon as a starting unit so that&#039;s a big bonus&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Oxyotl====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Deep in enemy territory&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Nakai and &#039;&#039;potentially&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, Oxyotl has the most unique (and arguably best) Campaign. His initial start is a bit rough, being awkwardly sandwiched in the far north between the rapidly confederating Dark Elves to the west and the pugnacious Norscans to the east. Though his universal climate habitability is a (necessary) godsend, he&#039;ll find it somewhat difficult to defend and expand his home territory. If you can, try to focus down the Dark Elves once you secure your home province. Oxyotl&#039;s particular playstyle actually counters Dark Elves to a degree and if you can nip Malekith in the bud before he confederates the rest of his misbegotten kind, you can spare yourself a late-game headache and get a hell of an infrastructure set up with all the unique building chains found in Naggarond. Just make sure you keep a couple standing armies in the region for the Chaos Invasion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t neglect your missions&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is because, unless you want to get constant debuffs, buff random enemy armies into the stratosphere or cause the Chaos Invasion to happen way ahead of schedule, Oxyotl&#039;s army is going to be consistently busy warping around the map doing missions rather than naturally expanding your home territory. He can warp back to the capitol and any one Silent Sanctum of your choosing freely (which you can establish in any settlement you&#039;ve laid eyes upon at least once), but only once per turn and he does not regain any of the movement/actions spent prior to the warp. However, many of the missions Oxyotl needs to undertake often involves him razing or capturing enemy settlements, so you&#039;ll often find yourself with various holdouts sprinkled across the map. Just make sure that you get a banner army or two to defend your capitol if you can help it; things get &#039;&#039;extremely&#039;&#039; messy once the Chaos Invasion starts.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Your Silent Sanctums&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your other unique mechanic is a game-changer for the Lizardmen. Functionally, they&#039;re similar to Skaven Undercities; you can construct unique buildings to benefit any of your forces within the Region it was established, as well as any other regions neighboring it. This can include granting your forces permanent vision on everything within those regions, a flat 20% upkeep reduction for all of your forces within the area or even a random chance to deal damage to enemy forces happening by. Whenever you amass 8 gems, you can construct a Silent Sanctum in any settlement any of your characters have personally seen. One key function truly unique to Oxyotl is that you can actually construct a building that allows Oxyotl&#039;s army to teleport there at will. You can literally teleport a full Stegadon doomstack right next to an enemy faction&#039;s capitol city if you so desire. Suffice to say, Silent Sanctums are extremely useful and worth investing in.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Take Albion!&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you can afford the excursion, send Oxyotl or a generic banner army south to Albion and claim it. Several unique buildings in Konquata provide rather substantial financial boons and, especially when coupled with a specially kitted out Silent Sanctum, can serve as a rapid recruitment center for your efforts in the Old World. You&#039;re the only Lizardmen faction within a reasonable distance who can actually make use of these unique buildings and an early capture can prove to be a rather profitable investment for your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Immortal Empires===&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s here, the biggest Total War map to date, spanning effectively the entire Old World and then some (only a few less than fleshed out regions such as Nippon are excluded). The Lustriabowl has for the most part calmed down, a majority of the non-lizardmen factions have set sail for greener pastures and with the inclusion of the entire southern half of the continent, what factions that remain now have some breathing room. Having said that, this season, it&#039;s time for the Southlands Thunderdome to kick off! While Gor-Rok and Tehenhauin can breathe a sigh of relief, Kroq-Gar and Tiktaq&#039;to are now sandwiched in with factions from damn near every walk of (un)life; Vampire Counts, Tomb Kings, Daemons of Khorne and Tzeentch, Dwarfs, Orks, Skaven, High Elves, Empire, Bretonnians, the list goes ON.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re playing as Gor-Rok, Tehenhauin or even Mazdamundi, don&#039;t get too comfortable in Lustria however. Dark Elves in the form of Rakarth have set up shop on the western coast of Lustria, Clan Pestilins has borderline free reign of the south-eastern coastline, Markus Wulfhart continues his colonial ways in northern Lustria alongside his new-found Bretonnian buddy Alberic. The Vampire Coast is, in fact, still infested with the Vampire Coast and a few rogue factions of daemons muck about in central Lustria. Though it won&#039;t be &#039;&#039;quite&#039;&#039; as chaotic as before, given the extra breathing room, you&#039;ll still need to remain vigilant if you want to kick all the warm-bloods out of your homeland.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
One notable change is the Rite of Awakening; it no longer costs any gold to use, so once you unlock it, there&#039;s &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; reason to not immediately use it to spawn in a Slann for your recruitment pool. Enact that shit every single time it pops off cooldown.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scar-Veteran Doomstack Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;: Kroq-Gar probably got the biggest buff/change transitioning from Mortal Empires to Immortal Empires among lizardmen. The first notable perk is that his faction has been &#039;&#039;heavily&#039;&#039; re-tooled to focus on Saurus; specifically Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans. Faction wide, Saurus Spawning pools now grant additional perks beyond the ability to recruit Saurus units and, at 4th tier, will grant an additional +2 recruit rank for Scar-Veterans. This stacks with both the Humble trait and Star Chambers (which now, unfortunately, can only be constructed in province capitals), letting you &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; quickly start cranking out high-ranking Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs. If that weren&#039;t enough, all Scar-Veterans and Old-Bloods gain a 30% boost to experience gain and get an extra 1% Weapon Strength per rank they have (capping out at a [[/d/|+50% weapon strength buff at max level]]). The Last Defenders did lose their universal -10% upkeep discounts, but it&#039;s slightly made up for since Old-Bloods gain a -15% Upkeep reduction for their banner armies, encouraging you to run them as Lords for your more expensive doomstacks. Though by no means should you forsake taking a Slann here and there.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Kroq-Gar himself downgraded some of his personal buffs, comparatively. Gone are the leadership and armor buffs for Stegadons, Bastiladons, Terradons and Carnosaurs. Instead, Saurus and Cold-One Riders gain a 25% experience gain buff and his former -50% upkeep reduction for Saurus and Cold One units has simply dropped down to the fairly standard -15% universal upkeep reduction all his Old-Blood units get. Much more versatile than before, though.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Speaking of the scaly lizard, he starts on the eastern coast of the Southlands, smack dab above Teclis (for now). Teclis makes for a decent defensive ally if you so wish and a valuable buffer against the southern Chaos forces such as Kairos. Almost invariably, you&#039;re going to be forced upwards in your wars; smaller Skaven infest the Kingdom of Beasts province and Khalida is often prone to declaring war against you once you work your way north. Immediately following Khalida, you&#039;ll likely draw the ire of Clan Mors and be drawn straight into the Karak Eight-Peaks race, oddly enough.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Should you sail northeast, you can evict Ku&#039;gath from the Dragon Isles for a nice footstep into southern Grand Cathay and the Darklands. Anyone who&#039;s played enough of Mortal Empires might be so inspired for a fresh change of scenery.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Heading directly west to meet up with your lizard brethren is also far more tenable, now that you don&#039;t need to fight your way through an entire desert&#039;s worth of Tomb Kings. You&#039;ll still need to secure your starting province, but as the Golden Tower now stands as a convenient mountain pass, you can meet and greet Tiktaq&#039;to extremely early in the campaign. His starting region offers a nice launching point into your ancestral home, where you can ideally encounter Tehenhauin clinging to life on the bottom cape of Lustria. Should you wish to actually expand there for all the unique buildings and legendary lords ripe for confederation, you&#039;ll need to make sure you don&#039;t neglect your Southlands homelands.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039; - Probably the biggest change from TWWH2 is the expansion of Lustria and the separation of North and South &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;America&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Lustria. Warhammer Mexico has been tweaked a little bit, with Skeggi and the coast being their own province. Skeggi is more challenging now since they can spam Marauder Champions, meaning you&#039;ll be tied up with them a bit more than before.&lt;br /&gt;
**Cylostra is now further north, next to Alith Anar, but you&#039;ll still have to deal with Rakarth, Wulfhart, Bordelaux, and of course, the Awakened. Most of these guys, and especially Rakarth, are packing lots of anti-Large, so you&#039;ll want to plan your armies ahead: Carnosaurs and Temple Guard can deal with Rakarth, but you&#039;ll want some artillery to deal with Wulfhart.&lt;br /&gt;
**North of Hexoatl is still the same clusterfuck, and you&#039;ll want to appease the Sisters of Twilight so that you&#039;re not dealing with a war on two fronts; their AI is stupidly annoying, and they will break non-aggression pacts with you if your relations hover even slightly above neutral. This anon recommends trading any settlements that you capture from Morathi to them in exchange for a fee, which can net you 7-8k in gold and some goodwill. Any settlement north of the Fallen Gates is useless to you anyway, and because Wood Elves have terrible settlement defense, as soon as Morathi takes them back, you can do it all over again and farm gold, allegiance, and positive relations.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
The Cult of Sotek got a minor buff with the reworking of their sacrificial pyramid. Regiments of Renown now unlock normally, while sacrifices can be spent to acquire powerful Blessed units. In addition, the updated character UI makes swapping Tehenhauin&#039;s unique banners and ancillaries very convenient and a little more useful.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin starts in the southwest corner of Lustria and will need to move fast to prevent Rakarth and Lord Skrolk from getting too established. Generally, Skrolk will expand further and faster, taking most of southern Lustria from the minor faction to your east. Rakarth will have few targets for expansion and will declare war on you fairly early, whereas Skrolk will ignore you until he completes his conquest. However, Skrolk is likely to be easier to defeat early on and taking his territories will give Tehenhauin some safe territory to develop since Gor-Rok will be to your north and there&#039;s little to no chance the AI will cross the ocean from the Southlands. Then you can build up the resources you need to defeat Rakarth armies of darkshards and spearmen, which are far more difficult for Tehenhauin&#039;s early-game armies to deal with. Humble heroes and skink chiefs on stegadons can be very useful at that point.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Once these two threats are dealt with, it&#039;s up to you whether you&#039;ll finish off the remaining minor factions in Lustria (Spine of Sotek Dwarfs, Tower of Dusk, Bordeleaux Errants, Luthor Harkon) or ally with them to get some unit variety. If you head north, Markus Wulfhart still can&#039;t be negotiated with and you&#039;ll have to destroy him if you want to reach Hexoatl. You may find it more interesting to head east and reach &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;the Southlands&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Mordor, where Tiktaqto and Kroq-gar should be clinging to life as the Vermintide bears down on them. But be wary; heading to the Southlands means you&#039;ll likely meet Kairos and will need to deal with Changing of the Ways if you don&#039;t finish him off. Luckily, his defeat trait is useful for Tehenhauin.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Alternatively, using the new sea lanes will bring you to Grand Cathay and Nakai the Wanderer. Most of the territory available will be yellow, whereas Lustrian and Southlands territories are green, but the areas of Cathay you can conquer/confederate will be almost completely secure from future attack as long as you maintain good relations with Zhao Ming and Meow Ying. Nakai tends to be fairly easy to confederate once you&#039;ve gotten 3 or more armies, and while he&#039;s not a stellar legendary lord he is one of the best fighters available to the lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin can meet Oxyotl very early in the campaign, however all of Oxyotl&#039;s territory will be red. It&#039;s probably better to leave him independent rather than confederate him, as the AI cheats will allow him to defeat all the Chaos factions in the Southern Chaos Wastes far more easily than the player can, and none of that territory is worth anything to the Cult of Sotek. Of course, this could all be a moot point considering how hard it is to confederate Lizardmen in general.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen&amp;diff=505150</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen&amp;diff=505150"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:51:55Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Cons */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Sar Sotek!|Game battle chant for Lizardmen}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactics page for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why play Lizardmen==&lt;br /&gt;
*You love the parts of Jurassic Park where the dinosaurs eat everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
*They&#039;re [[awesome|aztec dinosaurs riding dinosaurs]] into battle. Some of those dinosaurs also have magical lasers strapped to them.&lt;br /&gt;
*You want to be a master of the arcane, but you don&#039;t want to wear [[High Elves|foppish headgear]] or have a racial lifespan only in the [[The Empire (Warhammer Fantasy)|double digits]].&lt;br /&gt;
*You&#039;ll have a nearly fearless army that&#039;s more likely to fight to the death before they turn tail and run.&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMwpC70di2w Do you want to see what one of these does to your enemies?]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;A Multitude of Monsters&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Lizardmen have the largest diversity of massive monsters in the game at their disposal. Between the various Bastilidons, Stegadons and Carnosaurs you can field, you won&#039;t be wanting for big beasties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Intimidating Presence&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unsurprisingly, the average man will struggle to keep calm and collected when facing down a stampede of hungry carnivorous dinosaurs many times his size. Virtually every monster and cavalry unit in this army inspires fear and terror in the mortal hearts of men; a few well timed Carnosaur charges can break and rout forces not outright immune to psychology. Conversely, this also renders your monsters immune to fear/terror effects as well.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Resilient Frontline&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus Warriors, even unshielded, are among the most durable baseline infantry units in the game. Though their damage output is rather low, their good armor and leadership will ensure they&#039;ll hold the line. Most non-AP grindfests will tend to work out in your favor on virtue of that alone. Of course this isn&#039;t even mentioning how tanky higher tier units like the Temple Guard or Kroxigors are.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mastery of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039; - With the notable exception of High Elves, Lizardmen have reliable access to more schools of magic than any other race. Slann and the mighty Lord Kroak offer not only some of the most reliable casting in the game, but have consistent access to the otherwise elusive Greater Arcane Conduit skill. Your skink priests are no push overs in magical matters either and are very cost effective options for when slann [[heresy|just aren&#039;t your thing]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexible Artillery&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where most other factions have to slowly wheel siege engines into place and are vulnerable to attacks in melee, Lizardmen give no fucks. Due to their Solar Engines and Ballistae being strapped on the backs of mighty Bastilidons/Stegadons, they can easily reposition themselves and hold their own in melee combat. Additionally, were the actual artillery models of other races can actually be destroyed, the Ballistae and Solar Engines will remain fully intact so long as the creature bearing it remains standing.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cavalcade of Cavalry&#039;&#039;&#039; - Cold Ones, Horned Ones, Terradons and Ripperdactyls, oh my! Though not as fast or as effective as some other faction&#039;s cavalry, you have a very diverse selection of fast-moving dinosaurs that can outflank enemies and flexibly adapt to the variety of terrain you may find yourself in. Just don&#039;t expect your cav to top any particular charts when compared against any faction that specializes in them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - As your army consists heavily of predatory animals that excel at sniffing out prey, your enemies will be hard pressed to remain hidden from them. Enemies that rely on stealthy abilities like Stalk are revealed to you far more quickly than others, giving you far more time to react to (in battle) ambushes than other factions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of the weapons wielded by your Skinks are poisonous, inhibiting the mobility/combat performance of enemies afflicted by their noxious attacks. Despite poison no longer dealing constant damage like on the tabletop, their debuffs are still useful for weakening the enemy for your frontline troops. Thank to the recent update that removes any form of poison debuffs that can apply to the player units through friendly fire, Skink&#039;s poison darts are even better.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - You are tied with the Skaven for the honor of having the most DLC. You also have two FLC lords on top of all this, so between a grand total of 7 legendary lords and three DLC lord packs, you are the most supported main game faction in Total War: Warhammer II.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessings of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of your units have &amp;quot;Blessed&amp;quot; variants available in casual multiplayer matches or the campaign. Blessed units are effectively pseudo-Regiments of Renown and every single one is given a buffed health pool and, where applicable, an increased model count per unit. Additionally, many of these blessed units receive additional passive abilities or upgraded stats to further their combat potential. What&#039;s better is, unlike Regiments of Renown, you can technically have as many blessed units as you want. The only downside (admittedly a big one) is that in order to acquire blessed units in the campaign, you must complete randomly generated quests that issue a set quantity of a random blessed unit upon completion. If you want an army of blessed Carnosaurs, you&#039;re going to have to earn it. This is a complete non-issue in causal multiplayer matches, where blessed units are freely available for a very minor upcharge in cost compared to regular variants. Blessed units are unavailable in competitive games.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slow&#039;&#039;&#039; - A majority of the Lizardmen list, namely Saurus infantry, take their sweet time to cross the field. Though there are exceptions to this, such as the various cavalry and Skink units available to you, this particular weakness is exacerbated by...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vulnerable to Range&#039;&#039;&#039; - ...their dearth of viable missile units. The only ranged infantry available to you are Skinks; particularly squishy infantry that, though nimble, have pitiful range and DPS against anything shielded and/or armored. Your more potent offensive options, namely Salamanders or Stegadons/Bastilodons, cannot fire while moving and are rather easy to tie down in melee. Defensively, though your Saurus are quite tanky and often come with shields, they are very vulnerable to being kited by ranged cavalry/infantry due to their rather slow movement speed. Additionally, all your units save for Gor-Rok are stuck with Bronze Shields (35% block chance), meaning that even when they&#039;re in a position to use them, you&#039;ll still be soaking a significant portion of the incoming shots all the same. The same can also be said about most of your monsters, with some minor exceptions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Generic Character Usefulness&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a big one. Other than your magic characters (i.e. Slann and Skink Oracles which are pretty much good because they have magic), your other generic lords/heroes just don&#039;t stack up. When you compare them to the other factions&#039; characters, they fall short in their respective roles, whether that&#039;s melee prowess, support utility, campaign map usefulness, you name it. Best to rely on your monstrous units and magic to fulfill their roles!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sub-par Air-Force&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though you have flyers, a luxury many other factions lack, they&#039;re among the weakest/slowest of them. Terradons, Ripperdactyls, and Coatls aren&#039;t &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039;, per se, but they will lose if faced with the flying cavalry/monsters in their weight class from the likes of Bretonnia or High/Wood Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive Roster&#039;&#039;&#039; - As you can imagine, breeding and training massive dinosaurs and mounting arcane instruments of war onto them isn&#039;t cheap. All of your high tier units can get crazy expensive both in initial cost and upkeep. Even the bog standard Saurus Warriors come at a premium compared to some other factions options, though this is only particularly notable in competitive multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rampage&#039;&#039;&#039; - This was a much bigger problem in Game 2, where pretty much everything except for Skinks and Slaan would lose control and mindlessly charge the closest thing they could see. Game 3 has more or less restricted this issue to your feral monsters, letting your infantry keep their cool and do their jobs. That said, it&#039;s still a problem if your Carnosaur suddenly bolts into that nearby unit of halberds while your lords/heroes are otherwise occupied.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bland Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Oxyotl and &#039;&#039;possibly&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, the Lizardmen have the most boring campaign mechanics of any of the game II races (including some of the game I ones). Their unique mechanic, the Geomantic Web, is a very passive and basic provincial buff that takes a lot of resources and time to properly build up to a level you&#039;ll actually notice the effects of and offer no benefit to provinces you don&#039;t &#039;&#039;completely&#039;&#039; control. Yes, losing that one minor settlement causes the provincial capital to shut off its Geomantic Pylon until you reclaim it. Additionally, without mod support, Lizardmen are among the most stubborn and oppositional to confederation. Fortunately, though it isn&#039;t a top priority for them, CA is aware that Lizardmen need their campaign mechanics updated to bring them up to modern standards. Hopefully that update comes soon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Locked Content&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though a con for virtually every other faction in the game, this is a particularly notable one for Lizardmen. Many, if not most of the Lizardmen&#039;s better units are locked behind DLC lord packs. You&#039;ll need the Prophet and the Warlock for all units marked with DLC 1, the Hunter and the Beast for everything marked with DLC 2 and the Silence and the Fury for everything marked DLC 3.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
There are a couple of perks and abilities shared across a significant portion of the lizardmen unit roster, which will be mentioned here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Primal Instincts&#039;&#039;&#039; - A perk found on a majority of the lizardman roster (exempting lords/heroes and skinks), primal instincts will cause a unit with this ability to rampage out of control should their health drop to 20% or less. This can be a bit of a mixed blessing, as the rampaging unit will receive a +15% Charge Bonus and a +8 Melee Attack bonus and continue to fight nearby opponents in situations that any other unit would turn tail and rout. The bad news is that your opponent has more control over the rampaging unit than you do; rampaging units will single-mindedly charge at the nearest enemy unit, which your opponent can take to his advantage by using faster infantry/cavalry to kite the rampaging unit while his ranged infantry/artillery finishes it off. Of course, this is also factoring in that by the time these bonuses kick in, your Saurus unit or Carnosaur is typically on its last legs and won&#039;t last much longer anyways. Should the rampage end &#039;&#039;before&#039;&#039; the unit dies, they&#039;ll usually begin to rout from the field and will often be too far out of position for you to properly recover them.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; buffs Primal Instincts for Saurus Units; no longer causing rampage (thank god) while triggering much sooner (Triggering at 50% health as opposed to TWWII&#039;s 20%). When active, it gives Saurus units a +15% Charge Bonus, +10 Melee Attack and +5% Physical Resist buffs that remain active indefinitely so long as the Primal Instinct threshold has been crossed. This applies even to Saurus cavalry and since you can actually &#039;&#039;control&#039;&#039; them when Primal Instincts pops now, you can be far more surgical when taking advantage of these buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold Blooded&#039;&#039;&#039; - A targetable ability found on most lizardmen lords and heroes, Cold Blooded helps to counter the innate weakness in the lizardmen faction; their tendency to rampage. When used, Cold Blooded will snap a single unit out of a rampage (if they are currently doing so) and will temporarily buff their leadership. This ability can be used pre/post rampage as well, as the leadership buff can potentially prevent a rampage from occurring or can help prevent a tattered unit from routing once their rampage expires. As this ability has a somewhat lengthy cooldown an is only found on lords/heroes, care should be taken on when it is used and what it is used on. It can also be used on units that were forced to rampage by an ability or spell from enemy units, providing a unique bit of counterplay against such tactics that other factions lack.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all non-Slann/Skink units in your roster, this allows your units to detect hidden or stealthed units far sooner and from farther away than other armies (around 160 meters). This also disregards any faction/unit/terrain modifiers that enhance stealth, with the only exception being the &#039;&#039;Unspottable&#039;&#039; trait. With proper coverage, this can make ambushing or outflanking your forces extremely challenging to do discreetly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Aquatic&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all Skink infantry, Kroxigors (though their stat card doesn&#039;t mention the trait, they still receive the Aquatic bonus) and your Salamander/Razordon hunting packs, this not only allows them to ignore the usual penalties for fighting in water-logged environments, but gives them a 20% bonus to melee attack/defense when they do so. Considering non-aquatic infantry suffers a 20% malus to those stats when slogging around in the water, this can become a rather substantial combat buff for a significant portion of your roster (keep your Saurus dry). Potentially losing matchups will suddenly swing into your favor and that&#039;s not even factoring in your abundant poisoned weaponry and robust catalog of supportive magics to widen that gap further. As amazing as all that sounds... marsh and shallow water environments are rather few and far in between. Additionally, for the maps that &#039;&#039;do&#039;&#039; have swamped areas, coercing your opponent to willingly splash around with you is a battle all its own, one you&#039;re not likely to succeed in without careful planning.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Quick Learners&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another Skink-exclusive ability, this greatly increases the rate that your Skinks gain ranks. This helps distinguish skinks against comparable chaff infantry since they&#039;ll benefit from rank-boosted stats much more quickly and, as such, makes them surprisingly effective early-mid game infantry. This perk also applies to units such as Terradon Riders due to having Skink Riders.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Campaign Mechanics==&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Geomantic Web&#039;&#039;&#039;: Pretty much the only unique thing every Lizardmen faction (except Nakai) has, and it&#039;s a bit lackluster. Lizardmen have access to a special view of the global map that displays the Geomantic Web, with every region capital acting as a nexus point. Once you control an entire region, you can build up Geomantic Pylons in order to strengthen the Geomantic Web, which in turn offers gradually stronger perks (like an increasing percentage to building income, higher ranked recruitment, etc) the more you increase it. At the beginning of the game, these bonuses are quite small, but as you expand and enhance the Geomantic Web over the course of the campaign, these benefits can make a genuine impact on your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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There are a few problems with this mechanic, however. The first major one is that you receive &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; bonuses if you don&#039;t control the entire region. Obviously, this isn&#039;t a problem when you&#039;re surrounded by factions you were planning on killing off, but this becomes complicated if an ally suddenly captures that last settlement in a region before you could. If it was another Lizardmen faction, you could maybe play the long game and eventually confederate them, but otherwise you&#039;d be forced to attack them in order to claim the region so that you can actually activate the Geomantic Web benefits. Warhammer III and mods have offered ways to purchase or trade settlements, but in many cases the AI tends to value each settlement they own far more than anything else you could offer them. This often leads to lengthy wars against what could&#039;ve otherwise been a valuable trading partner and buffer against foreign elements that you&#039;d otherwise have to deal with yourself. The second major problem with the Geomantic Web is that even if you build up a regional capitol to tier V and build the appropriate pylon, it does &#039;&#039;nothing&#039;&#039; without an adjacent region &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; having a tier V capitol and pylon. That&#039;s right, the strength of the Geomantic Web is reliant on multiple regions being entirely under your control and also having them fully built up. This can be a time and gold consuming process that forces the Lizardmen player to take it slow; Lizardmen economy tends to be on the low side of the spectrum, made worse by their fairly expensive unit roster and lengthy build/research timeframes. And of course, if an enemy army rolls in and claims one of your minor settlements, the Geomantic Web benefits for that entire region are shut off entirely, further stemming your growth rates. The third issue with the Geomantic Web; it&#039;s a very basic and uninteractive mechanic. Aside the baked in map-painter that is the (Im)Mortal Empires campaign, there&#039;s not much incentive or direction to build up the Geomantic Web besides using it to squeeze every last bit of gold or growth you can to boost your dismal economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Rites&#039;&#039;&#039;: Much like most of the Warhammer II races, Lizardmen have access to special rites that, generally, grant them temporary buffs for the cost of some gold. While every faction has one or two unique rites, every Lizardmen faction has access to and must perform the &#039;&#039;Rite of Awakening&#039;&#039; in order to recruit new Slann lords. Fluffy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacrifices to Sotek (Tehenhauin)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tehenhauin&#039;s unique focus, in addition to the Geomantic Web, is his crusade against all of Skaven kind. By gathering captives from battles, you can sacrifice them to Sotek to gain empire-wide boosts to growth or to recruit the Blessed variants of the Lizardmen roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Dedication to the Old Ones (Nakai)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Nakai&#039;s main mechanic as a Horde faction. By capturing settlements and dedicating them to one of three Old Ones, Nakai can unlock faction-wide buffs to his hordes. He can also spend the accumulated Favor of the Old Ones to recruit Blessed Units or activate temporary buffs or bonuses for use in battle.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Visions of the Old Ones (Oxyotl)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Oxyotl&#039;s special perk, Oxyotl can teleport across the entire Warhammer Fantasy world to specific targets once per turn in order to accomplish an issued mission for rewards. By completing these missions, he can be given several rewards (such as Blessed Spawnings, increased favor from fellow Lizardmen factions or temporary buffs for certain units), but the most prominent and consistent reward are special gems used to purchase Silent Sanctums. Silent Sanctums act much like Skaven Undercities in that they are built under any settlement across the map. Doing so gives Oxyotl vision of the province that settlement is located in (and can be upgraded to give him vision of all adjacent provinces as well) as well as two building slots that can give him anything from upkeep reduction to increased ammunition and missile damage. Additionally, one such sanctum can be upgraded to act as a teleport node, allowing Oxyotl&#039;s army to warp to that Silent Sanctum at any time (much like Oxyotl&#039;s capitol).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
The scaly faces of the Lizardmen. With the exception of the Slann Mage-Priest, which outperforms even most Legendary Lords, the Lizardmen aren&#039;t exactly a character-centric faction. Their LL&#039;s are very pointy. Most of them are great on the battlefield (with either melee or magic prowess), but their army buffs vary in usefulness and their factionwide buffs are nearly non-existant, with only a couple lords like Kroq-Gar providing any whatsoever. It&#039;s very difficult to justify taking even Legendary Lords (let alone your generic lords, which are frankly terrible) over any flavor of slann mage-priest due to the sheer versatility the latter bring to your army, especially since you are not hurting for giant, single entity beatsticks to ram into enemy formations. Slaan benefit from star chambers in campaign, other don&#039;t, no contest, only use slaan if stacking chambers (which you really should).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mazdamundi&#039;&#039;&#039; - The last second generation Slann (lore-wise), Mazdamundi uses magic primarily from the Lore of Light to act as a hybrid support/offensive caster. The two main selling points of Mazdamundi over a generic Slann Mage-Priest are his stegadon mount Zlaaq and his signature spell &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;. Zlaaq allows Mazdamundi to actually engage in melee, something no other Slann can safely do, and makes him substantially more durable against most forms of attack. &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;, especially when combined with &#039;&#039;Banishment&#039;&#039;, makes Mazdamundi an excellent AoE caster capable of tearing infantry focused armies to shreds with ease without chewing through your Winds of Magic reserve. These spells are limited however, being bounded spells, so make sure you wait until the right moment to utilize them. Additionally, don&#039;t put too much faith in them; as their movement patterns are random, these spells (particularly Ruination of Cities) can just as easily do nothing or even devastate your own forces as they can your enemies if you aren&#039;t careful.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; brings a few buffs to his toolkit; the barrier mechanic normally reserved for Tzeentch armies is now also granted to all Slann as well, helping mitigate the first few attacks against him. Additionally, to better represent the almighty toad&#039;s arcane prowess, Mazdamundi receives a 50% increase in range to all spells he casts. This turns him into a sort of magical artillery engine, as he&#039;ll have virtually no issues slapping that Banishment or Comet of Cassandora cast pretty much wherever he damn well pleases.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroq-Gar&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your dedicated duelist, Kroq-Gar is an offensive powerhouse that shines when seated atop Grimloq, his faithful Carnosaur mount. Though expensive, Kroq-Gar/Grimloq can engage virtually any enemy type in the game effectively and is able to duel against many enemy lords and come out on top. Though a monstrous force on his own merits, Kroq-Gar is something of a glass cannon however and as a larger target is prone to getting mobbed by multiple units or getting focused down by ranged infantry/artillery. Another notable shortcoming is that he provides limited support for the rest of your army (a bit of a problem for all Saurus Oldbloods), and as such is not recommended for dino-heavy army builds, his bonuses to armor and leadership being less important than the healing abilities of Life Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tehenhauin (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only Skink-Priest lord choice, Tehenhauin is something of a niche pick. He can deal solid enough damage against footlords/cavalry lords in a fight (particularly if on a Ripperdactyl) and is also capable of dealing notable damage to swarms of infantry (with his Lore of Beasts and/or with his Engine of the Gods), but he&#039;s extremely frail for a Lizardmen lord when unmounted. Never get the Fanatic skill in his skill tree; it only benefits skink units and they are pretty trash after the mid-game.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tiktaq&#039;to (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another somewhat niche pick, Tiktaq&#039;to is a dedicated flier who excels in lists built with Terradons, Ripperdactyls and Coatls as the focus. Though mounted on Zwuup, Tiktaq&#039;to is your squishiest (legendary) lord and lacks the support/damage options available to the others, but he&#039;s inarguably the swiftest of the bunch (which doesn&#039;t mean much compared to other flying lords and heroes). Under no circumstances is he a direct combat lord; against any duelist or large/monstrous lord he will lose handily. The only targets he can safely engage are dedicated casters, artillery and dedicated ranged infantry. Because of this, playing him requires far more finesse than what is required for virtually every other lord; even against targets he &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; engage effectively, prolonged combat will invariably whittle him down and may the Old Ones help you if he&#039;s surrounded while grounded. Keep a squad or two of Ripperdactyls close by to make up the difference in combat ability and to take advantage of Tiktaq&#039;to&#039;s buffs. Also, his unique Epic weapon doesn&#039;t work if he is attacking a ground target in melee because its attack bonuses are only in effect when flying, so he&#039;s weaker than a Skink Terradon Rider when attacking ground targets UNLESS you swap out his weapon. When used in campaign, much of his value comes from his rather insane and stackable upkeep discount for flier units. Even on higher difficulties, it is extraordinarily easy to stack enough upkeep cost reductions to have a full Coatl doomstack damn near for free (until the Supply Lines penalties become particularly swollen, at least). Additionally, his unique rite gives all of his armies the ability to easily chase down fleeing armies or attack multiple settlements a turn which can be &#039;&#039;devastating&#039;&#039; to an enemy faction if used at the right moment.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nakai (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The largest and oldest of the Kroxigor Ancients, Nakai is an infantry mulcher who (thanks to his enthusiastic animations) will literally sweep his way through the thickest blobs of infantry. Nakai possesses a few notable traits over his competitors; his ability to grant perfect vigour to nearby allies ensures they&#039;re in peak form throughout the entire battle while his Miasma of Dispair can cripple enemies within his presence; a potentially nasty combo that can ensure your forces slowly but steadily chew through enemy frontlines. Unfortunately, Nakai has a few major weaknesses: As a large entity, he&#039;s vulnerable to anti-large weaponry (which does abound among baseline infantry) and is an easy, defenseless target for ranged units to snipe. He also struggles to properly duel opposing heroes/lords due to his size and janky animations making him lunge about haphazardly while they continue to poke him to death. Because of this, he tends to work best as a force multiplier for infantry builds.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gor-Rok (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where Kroq-Gar is the spear, Gor-Rok stands as the shield. Gor-Rok is a dedicated footlord, among the slowest of them, but makes up for it through sheer, unbreaking resilience. As the only unit in the entire Lizardmen roster with a silver shield (55% missile block chance), Gor-Rok is able to shoulder his way through the kind of firepower that would fell a lesser Old-Blood on the approach. Gor-Rok can also stand neck-deep among hordes of angry infantry and walk out seemingly unscathed. When equipped with the &#039;&#039;Mace of Ulumak&#039;&#039;, Gor-Rok can also prove a competent duelist in his own right, even if it&#039;s only in temporary bursts. Gor-Rok does falter against mounted/monstrous heroes/lords and is vulnerable to duelists with good AP values, though the Twisted and the Twilight patch has helped address the issue of him being staggered to hell and back. Never the less, Gor-Rok is a relatively cost effective legendary lord who can and will hold the line until the bitter end. His campaign starts with Lord Kroak fully unlocked and active, which makes his campaign among the easiest in the entire game, even on higher difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
**Gor-Rok&#039;s rite will be changed in Immortal Empires, giving his units Barrier and immunity to certain debuffs, like Poison. Unlike Tzeentch, his version of barrier probably won&#039;t be as game-breaking because of how slow Saurus and that they do their best stuck-in.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Oxyotl (DLC 3) &#039;&#039;&#039; - The legendary daemon-slaying chameleon skink of Oyxl is the last legendary lord for the faction (at least for TWW2). As to be expected from any shape or form of a Chameleon Skink, Oxyotl is a rather cheap, stealthy character hunter who behaves somewhat like a Wood Elf Waystalker. Unlike Waystalkers, Oxyotl has a particularly nasty trick in the form of Master Predator; a toggle-able skill that reduces his movement speed in exchange for an increase in range, Snipe and the ability to remain undetectable unless the enemy gets extremely close to his position. Combined with his modestly powerful armor piercing missiles, this can quickly wear down most armored lords and heroes rather quickly if left to his own devices. Of course, as a reasonably cost effective LL, the drawbacks have to come in somewhere and for Oxyotl, that drawback is melee combat. While he has acceptable melee attack and defense, Oxyotl has no armor or damage mitigation tools at his disposal. Any combat lord or hero worth his or her salt can and will kill him in a hand-to-hand duel. Fortunately, he&#039;s fast enough that virtually no footlord can catch up to him unless you willfully allow it. He also struggles to deal with the rank and file and lacks any notable support abilities for his own forces, but that&#039;s fairly typical of the niche Oxyotl fills.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
Your generic lords aren&#039;t amazing in campaign compared to other factions, but can really shine in competitive multiplayer. In the campaign, you&#039;ll generally never want to get non-slann lords after turn 20(ish) because lizardmen Star Chamber buildings give 3 bonus levels to your slann lords, meaning they quickly outpace any other lord available. Any need for a melee lord can be filled by one of the many lizardmen heroes, who can also be easily recruited at higher starting level than the melee lords. You may still find the need to recruit cheaper stand in lords in case of an emergency, as the Rite of Awakening&#039;s cooldown is a notable hitch in acquiring more slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slann Mage-Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your almighty magic toads, slann are dedicated mages who don&#039;t participate in fights directly, but wreak havoc upon your enemies from afar with their magics or supplement your forces with defensive/healing energies. Slann are among the precious few generic lords in the game who have access to the &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; ability which, when combined with their reliable casting, can allow savvy players to call upon vast reserves of the Winds of Magic long after lesser mages have tapped out of theirs. In addition to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039;, each slann has access to Banishment as a bound spell as well as the &#039;&#039;Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;; a large AoE defensive buff that applies a 22% damage resistance modifier to all allied units within it&#039;s bubble. Understandably, for all their arcane might, slann are practically helpless if caught in a fight. They are the single slowest unit in your entire army and are quite chunky, making them easy targets up close or at range. To this end, you&#039;ll almost always want a screening unit of Temple Guard (or at least shielded saurus) to keep enemies from ganking them. Outside of that, there are four varieties of Slann Mage-Priests, each dedicated to a specific lore of magic:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Fire Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - When you want to burn the [[HERESY|heretic]] in holy fire for the Old Ones. Combined with their bound Banishment, fire slann are capable of mulching clumps of infantry wholesale and can even churn out respectable single target damage with their Fireball and Piercing Bolts of Burning spells. Fire damage is particularly useful against the myriad of enemies with regeneration, and practically mandatory when facing undead crises in campaign. Being able to buff an entire line of saurus with an upcast Flaming Sword/Cloak of Flame can turn the game in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Life Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are the MVP in any monster heavy list; though you have a few other options for healing (such as the Revivification Bastilidon, high slann and the newly added Skink Oracle), life slann are still the uncontested kings at it. If you want an army built on the back of beasts, a life slann is essential to keeping them in the fight. With a life slann, you can wipe away any damage your stack of monsters take during the routing phase of a battle, making them both tactically and strategically important. Pair one with a Revivification Bastilidon to very rapidly resurrect slain models in any infantry unit and bring back even the most tattered units to full fighting strength. Additionally, should you encounter blobs of infantry that pose a notable danger to your larger beasties, Life slann are able to slap down Dwellers Below to deal frankly startling amounts of damage to practically every non-flying unit caught within its radius.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Light Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Light slann are fantastic supports for an infantry-heavy army namely due to two spells: Net of Amyntok and Birona&#039;s Timewarp. Like every other army, Net of Amyntok is an excellent tool for pinning down faster cavalry from the likes of Bretonnia or the Dark Elves so that your &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; slower saurus can catch up and engage them in melee (or to keep them still while your Salamanders incinerate them wholesale). Birona&#039;s Timewarp can turn the tide in a key engagement when used properly. Offensively, being able to cast Banishment much more frequently can also deal devastating damage to enemy infantry. That said, even your Greater Arcane Conduit will struggle to keep you topped off; the Lore of Light can consume your Winds of Magic quite quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;High Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Similarly to light slann, high slann are a hybrid offensive/support caster. Unlike the Lore of Light, you do have access to minor magical healing through Apotheosis and have access to an excellent anti-flier vortex spell in Tempest (Net of Amyntok is superior in most cases, however). High slann offensively specialize in single target damage and can deal devastating amounts of it between the Arcane Unforging and Soul Quench spells, giving them a solid niche against duelist lords/heroes and larger monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Heavens Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Multiplayer only, the Heavens Slann is unfortunately the worst slann of the bunch. It&#039;s not that the Heavens lore is lacking nor is it the slann himself, but the fact that he faces strict competition against your Skink Priests of all things. A Skink Priest of Heavens, though lacking the Greater Arcane Conduit, is a much faster/smaller target by default and has access to several mount options that make him much more flexible offensively or defensively. Additionally, as a hero, you can take a more offensively focused melee lord or a slann attuned to a different lore for more magical variety. Even if you&#039;re only running one with nothing but the crest on his skinky-head, the cheaper price alone makes the Heavens slann a hard sell comparatively.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039;: All Slann become a bit more defensible with the boon of their own personal barriers, a &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed buff to these fat frog&#039;s personal defenses. Of course, barriers will do little to assuage prolonged and unsupported melee combat, but it will help protect them from the stray blast or occasional skirmish.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: A minor nerf to the Slann, Star Chambers can now only ever be constructed in Province capitals, &#039;&#039;severely&#039;&#039; curbing how quickly you can recruit high-level Slann right out the gate. They can still be abused, though you now need to capture &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; more territories before you can crank out Slann on par with their Mortal Empires power level. The good news is, the Rite of Awakening is now free to use once unlocked and can be spammed on cooldown to try farming for second/third generation Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Old-Blood&#039;&#039;&#039; - Offensive duelists through and through, saurus old-bloods are flexible masters of combat who can lead on foot, on the back of a cold one, or atop a mighty carnosaur (you&#039;ll usually want one on a carnosaur). Compared to the kroxigor ancient, saurus old-bloods are less powerful in melee combat but can be much faster and have marginally better faction support skills. For the purposes of both Multiplayer and Campaign, you&#039;ll want to avoid taking Old-Bloods as your lord (unless you have &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; DLC content). Their role can easily be filled by Saurus Scar Veterans, who &#039;&#039;don&#039;t&#039;&#039; take up your only Lord slot for the army (and are, for all intents and purposes, identical sans Campaign skill trees). If you insist on taking an Old-Blood, take Kroq-Gar. Otherwise, a Slann or Kroxigor Ancient would be better suited for your needs.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Saurus Old-Bloods get some new life pumped into their battle-tested bones in Immortal Empires, at least when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s banner. Universal 15% Upkeep discounts for all armies led by Saurus Old-Bloods and an additional +1% Weapon Strength boost for each level your Old-Blood gains make these guys your go-to beatsticks. Their discounted upkeep costs also make it easier to field &#039;&#039;more&#039;&#039; armies which, especially in the mid-late game, is particularly valuable as your empire&#039;s borders outpace your glacial economy&#039;s ability to upgrade settlement infrastructure in a timely manner. Slann are, of course, still quite valuable, though with Sacred Spawning Caverns and Temple Guard Barracks providing increased starting ranks to Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans, it&#039;s hard to say no to these guys. At least when riding with Kroq-Gar.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skink Chief (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your discount Lord and the one you&#039;ll want to take if you want to reserve as much money for your big beasties as possible. Of course, you could splurge a little to put him atop an ancient stegadon to scorch swaths of infantry with the Engine of the Gods (though if you&#039;re going to do that, you may as well spring for Tehenhauin so that you at least have access to the Lore of Beasts as well). The RCSC is a competent combatant equipped with poisonous, armor-piercing attacks that can make him surprisingly dangerous in a fight, though like everything skinky, he&#039;s a particularly squishy lord when unmounted. The best use you can put him to is boosting your heroes in a &#039;Pompous&#039; trait-stacking lizardman hero army, which makes an already broken strategy even stronger.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigor Ancient (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Baby Nakais for those who don&#039;t quite feel up for splurging on the big boy himself. Kroxigor ancients are quite literally just watered down versions of Nakai; though they won&#039;t grant perfect vigour to all friendly forces near them, they will still wade through most infantry due to their size and mass and put out such raw damage that most non-elite infantry will falter swiftly against them. However, just like Nakai, they are completely helpless at range, are vulnerable to AP and anti-large weapons and are &#039;&#039;slow&#039;&#039;. In competitive multiplayer, though they are still a bit of a niche pick, they are much more attractive than Nakai due to their cheaper price and because they have access to the Amulet of Itzl, which grants the Kroxigor Ancient 66% damage resistance for a short time. This can give them enough of an edge to eek out against enemy duelists or to survive long enough for reinforcements to arrive.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
As said, the Lizardmen characters can be a little sub-par compared to other factions (with the exception of the Skink Oracle, see below), but their selection is surprisingly versatile, and the Lizardmen have some of the best &#039;&#039;mounts&#039;&#039; in the game, which really helps push their characters battlefield potential. The Lizardmen also have one of the strongest Legendary Heroes in the game: Lord Kroak. These guys are capable of dealing immense damage to your enemies and &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; of them (except Kroak) can be mounted on one of your massive dinosaurs.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Hero===&lt;br /&gt;
You&#039;ve only got the one, but he&#039;s all you&#039;ll need. Lord Kroak is your expensive but powerful offensive caster and forms the center of many army formations.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lord Kroak (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The first of the Slann doesn&#039;t let something as trivial as death inconvenience him, or keep him from kicking warmblood ass to the Old World and back. Lord Kroak is one of a very select few heroes in the game with access to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; (which can be paired with another Slann&#039;s Greater Arcane Conduit), making him a fantastic force multiplier in a caster-heavy list just from being present. For better or worse, Kroak doesn&#039;t have access to any lore of magic and only has two notable abilities. But &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; can those abilities turn the tide of battle. His only bound ability (other than the universal Cold-Blooded) is the &#039;&#039;Supreme Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;, an upgraded version of the regular Shield of the Old Ones that grants allies a 44% damage resistance while within it (and stacks with the regular version if you&#039;re really in a bind). The only spell(s) he has access to is his signature Deliverance of Itza (and its three varying strengths). Deliverance of Itza, &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason you&#039;re bringing him, can virtually delete entire units from existence with an efficiency only known to the Winds of Death spell, but it has a few major drawbacks. First, it is intensely mana hungry: you&#039;ll typically only get one or two DoI (III) casts per battle before you run dangerously low on magic. By relying on DoI I or II, you won&#039;t consume as much magic per cast, but the difference in damage dealt becomes very apparent. Secondly, there is a very lengthy and obvious tell for when the spell is cast; most competent opponents will be able to move their forces away from the blast before it goes off unless you manage to pin them down with supporting spells like the Net of Amyntok or simply bodyblocking them from all sides. Thirdly, this spell is virtually useless against single entities such as Lords/Heroes and giant monsters, meaning he&#039;ll do little towards more elite doomstack lists. Despite all these cons working against him, a well timed Deliverance of Itza can and will win you battles if you plan accordingly. The best part, it deals absolutely no friendly fire damage. [[Meme|You may fire when ready]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Heroes===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, all Lizardmen heroes benefit from the &#039;Humble&#039; trait, which appears on Lords and Heroes at random. This lets you recruit them at 2 additional ranks higher than their default rank, with unlimited stacking potential, making them stronger and more versatile earlier in the game than heroes of other factions. In the late-game, you can disband Humble heroes as you build more Slann Star-Chambers, however these are expensive buildings for non-Hexoatl factions; for the 6000 gold needed for 1 Star-Chamber, you can hire at least 4 Humble heroes for 8 bonus levels. Of course, those extra heroes each take up their respective hero slots and will take a modest sum out of your income every turn and as such are less efficient in the long run compared to Star Chambers.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Scar-Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039; - A step down from the Old-Blood, Scar-Veterans behave in much the same manner as your generic saurus lords. Vicious and powerful combatants, Scar-Veterans are built to brazenly charge into combat and deal bloody death to all who stand in their way. The real reason you&#039;ll want to take any Scar-Vets isn&#039;t for the saurus himself, however badass he may be, but for the carnosaur mount you can put him on. Though a more expensive version of the feral carnosaur, Scar-Vets are immune to rampaging (and can indeed stop others from rampaging thanks to their Cold Blooded ability) and have a slightly stronger statline, making them excellent all-round threats to whatever your opponent might be packing. These Scar-Vets are ideal choices for armies led by slann-mage priests; they won&#039;t be competing for Winds of Magic like the skink priests and will more than make up for the slann&#039;s melee deficiency. If you want to keep him cheaper, you can take one on foot to lead fellow saurus infantry into battle, or stick in on a Cold One to ride with the rest of your cavalry. A modestly popular tactic in Multiplayer is to take two of these guys on Cold Ones to act as hero/lord hunters.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scar-Veterans, though still quite capable in every other Lizardmen subfaction, truly shine when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s flag. +30% experience gain and +1% weapon strength per earned rank (max buff of 50%) can make these guys quite vicious very quickly. Since the Humble trait, the Star Chamber and Temple Guard Barracks rank boost effects stack, you can also recruit highly ranked Scar-Veterans &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; early on in the campaign (relatively, that is). It&#039;s to such a degree that you could very easily start cranking out freshly recruited Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs with a bonus 18% or higher Weapon Strength buff right out of the gate. Put in an army lead by a Saurus Old-Blood for that 15% upkeep reduction and you have yourself a solidly cost effective doomstack that, post level 20, will just respawn back home if they ever bite off more than they can chew.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink priests are your humble, mortal casters. Cheap and nimble, these guys can easily outrun most footslogging infantry and are fantastically flexible mages that can fill any offensive or defensive holes your army might have. If mounted on a terradon, their speed will be unparalleled (for Lizardmen); they&#039;ll be able to rain magical death anywhere on the battlefield with ease and can quickly deliver support to your forces no matter how spread out they may be. Alternatively, you may mount them on stegadons or ancient stegadons to make them terrifying all-rounders, though their price tag will quickly reflect that. probably want to stick with the regular stegadon, great hybrid artillery and melee monster&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Heavens)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Heavens discipline is among the better offensive lores of magic in the game for the instant raw damage output it&#039;s capable of. Wind Blast and Chain Lightning will be your go-to offensive spells. Comet of Cassandora, though powerful, should generally be avoided due to how long its casting time is. Harmonic Convergence and Curse of the Midnight Wind are staples of support sets and can turn your saurus infantry into immovable walls of tooth and claw.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Beasts)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Formerly your worst discipline, the Lore of Beasts has recently received a bit of a tweaking to make it considerably more attractive and usable. It&#039;s still among the least potent of your available magics, but it is among the most flexible in utility. Wyssan&#039;s Wild Form and Pann&#039;s Impenetrable Pelt provide rather significant combat buffs (particularly when stacked) while Curse of Anraheir debilitates your enemies. Offensively, Flock of Doom is a fantastic and cheap chaff cleaner that affects any units that have at least one model within its 30m range. For your single target needs, The Amber Spear allows your caster to act as impromptu artillery should the need arise. Formerly &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason to take a Beasts caster was for the Transformation of Kadon; being able to summon up to two Manticores to flank enemy formations or dive into backlines can have a massive impact on the flow of battle, but a bump up to &#039;&#039;20&#039;&#039; Winds of Magic per summon makes it challenging to make much use of your other spells in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Chief&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your skirmishing duelist, skink chiefs cripple enemy forces with their poisonous darts so that your army can face weaker resistance. Skink chiefs are a force to be feared when mounted on a stegadon, allowing them to easily face down many enemy heroes/lords in a one-on-one fight. In the campaign, the ability to build skink chief capacity-increasing buildings in minor settlements means you can spam them across the map or stack up to 19 of them into an army, which can be hilariously broken depending on the traits and items you equip them with.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Oracle (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - By far the best Hero for the Lizardmen, the Skink Oracle brings a cavalcade of well rounded offensive and supportive magic to the field atop a mighty Troglodon. And only on a Troglodon, so he&#039;s very much an &amp;quot;all or nothing&amp;quot; type of unit. The first major reason the Skink Oracle makes for a popular pick is the fact that he&#039;s your only non-Slann source of magical healing, potentially freeing up your Lord choice for a more offensive beat stick like Kroq-Gar or even a Kroxigor Ancient. Secondly, as a hero, not only does your Skink Oracle provide a use of Cold-Blooded for the rest of your forces, but his own Troglodon will never rampage. Magical prowess aside, this alone is worth considering the rather steep price-tag. Speaking of, the Troglodon allows the Skink Oracle to function as a mid-range anti-Monster skirmisher. Combined with a potential Fireball cast here or there, the Skink Oracle &#039;&#039;excels&#039;&#039; at chunking opposing Lords/Heroes, especially if they&#039;re atop a mount or naturally monstrous in size. Just don&#039;t have him brazenly lead the charge into melee combat, as he won&#039;t last terribly long in it. If your army would like to use a non-Lore of Life Slann or any non-Slann Lord for that matter (effectively any LL banner army), a Skink Oracle and a Revivification Bastilodon or two are excellent tools to keep your forces in tip-top shape so that they can keep doing what they do best.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
Many lizardmen units are available in standard and &#039;blessed&#039; variants. Blessed units are only made available in the campaign by completing random timed missions, such as getting 1000 kills or winning 4 battles, but make up for their randomness and limited quantity by being free to recruit at any time in any army and by having at least one extra ability or superior stat over their contemporary counterparts. They aren&#039;t to be confused with Regiments of Renown, unique units recruited at max rank and limited to one instance per. In casual multiplayer matches with Unit Caps turned off, Blessed Units are recruitable for only a modest bump in price over their generic counterparts.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
Infantry provide the foundation of every army in Total War: Warhammer, and the Lizardmen are no different. Indeed, even the humble skinks have their place.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Melee Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls and shields, skink cohorts are cheap chaff units primarily used to fill out rosters or to support your more expensive infantry actually doing the killing. Despite being shielded, these guys will die by the score due to their pitiful defensive statline if they face any frontline infantry head on and are one of the few lizardmen units prone to routing from leadership issues. Having said that, skink cohorts are among the fastest cheap infantry units in the game and are still rather decent combatants when fighting similar unarmored units and tend to win such engagements (namely against chaff or low tier infantry like Bretonnian peasantry or Vampire Count zombies). Indeed, their speed is invaluable for flanking enemies tied up by your saurus warriors and chasing routing enemies off the map. When pinching pennies, you can&#039;t argue with that. In campaign these guys can be skipped entirely for the javelin version instead as the missile attack for 10 extra upkeep per turn is leagues better than just having the club.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skinks (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. Red-Crested Skinks provide an invaluable source of early game/cheap melee AP damage and poison, though they&#039;re less effective against unarmored targets as a whole compared to regular Skink Cohorts. They lack both shields and armor and as they are simply skinks, they will die in droves unless they&#039;re taking refuge among the far burlier saurus warriors. On that note, RC skinks synergize excellently with saurus warriors, as they can simultaneously chew through armored units the saurus tend to bounce off of and further cripple these enemies with poison, allowing your much slower saurus to both catch up to and butcher them with greater ease. Just like skink cohorts, these guys are at home in watery environments and are easily able to outflank many slower infantry units.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Sotek (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unbreakable angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. These guys have a unique ability, &#039;&#039;Refuse to Die&#039;&#039;. When active, no skink models can die (they can still take damage, however), which can maximize their damage output when taking sudden burst damage or ensure that they hold the enemy in place for a precious few more seconds. The fact that they&#039;re unbreakable really synergizes well with this perk, as it means that your opponent is going to have to commit to completely eradicating the unit (which, admittedly, isn&#039;t really &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; tall an ask all things considered). This can buy some of your other forces some precious moments to regroup should the tide be against your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign Note&#039;&#039;&#039;: Auto-Resolve tends to value every flavor of Red-Crested Skink just slightly more than the dirt they stand on, so unless you are ok with them taking massive casualties or outright getting wiped out every time you click that auto-resolve button, you&#039;ll either need to fight your battles manually or pick up regular Skink Cohorts if you need chaff infantry to pad out your forces.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus warriors are probably the first thing that comes to mind when one mentions the lizardmen, and for good reason. Resilient, determined and natural fighters, saurus warriors are one of the most durable base line infantry units in the game due to their high HP and armor and can hold their own even against the more elite infantry options of other factions (Note: they can fight a unit of chaos warriors to stalemate). Should they find themselves in a losing matchup, their naturally high leadership will keep them standing firm against the enemy far longer than their equivalents in other factions would, even if they lose control and rampage towards their inevitable deaths (in game II. They&#039;ve since become far more disciplined in game III). To compensate, saurus are slow and are prone to being kited, so skink skirmishers/cohorts should be utilized to help pin down the enemy line until the saurus make it into combat. Saurus warriors are available in both standard and shielded variants, but the only reason to not get the shielded version is if you need every last gold coin you can rub together for your bigger monsters on a tight, competitive budget.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Shielded saurus warriors with an even higher base health and [[awesome|perfect vigour]]. These guys make fantastically cost efficient walls that will never tire no matter how hard they&#039;re pushed. In the campaign, they are one of the better frontline choices you can give your non-doomstack armies that can find a place even into the late game, so long as they manage to survive and rank up. Gor-Rok, if chosen as your initial legendary lord, can use his rite to grant further defensive bonuses and &#039;&#039;unbreakable&#039;&#039; to them (in game II. Game III replaces unbreakable with the barrier ability and immunity to hostile effects like Poison instead); they will never yield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Warriors equipped with anti-large spears for engaging cavalry and monsters. They&#039;re nearly identical to regular saurus warriors in every other way, though they do slightly less damage against regular infantry in exchange for their anti-large speciality. Like the warriors, they come in unshielded or, for a slight premium, shielded variants.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Buffed up saurus spears with shields, the blessed variant of these saurus are dramatically inferior to their standard cousins since they lack perfect vigour. Instead, the bonus ability granted to them is Forest Strider, a perk that grants additional melee attack and defense buffs to them while fighting in forests. If you can lure cavalry and large monsters into forests, where they&#039;ll suffer additional penalties simply due to how forests interact with them, you can deal impressive sustained damage to them in short order. Unfortunately, this ability does nothing for them outside of forests and &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; battlefields will have a dearth of forest patches that you can fight in. Additionally, uncooperative opponents will generally avoid trying to engage your forces inside forests and trying to convince them otherwise may prove too time consuming for what it&#039;s worth. Regardless, they still have more health than the regular saurus spears. That&#039;s always a plus.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Legion of Chaqua (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Legion of Chaqua, thanks to their special ability, are able to provide themselves and all nearby allied units a surprising 44% missile resistance for a limited time upon activation. This is an invaluable skill to have on the approach, as many of your unshielded infantry and larger monsters are vulnerable to being focused down by the much superior ranged infantry found in other armies and can be further supplemented by a Slann&#039;s Shield of the Old Ones if necessary. Otherwise, these guys simply behave exactly as Saurus Spears are expected to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - The fearsome Temple Guards, renowned for their devotion to their Slann masters, stand ready to slaughter all who&#039;d bring harm to their otherwise vulnerable charges. Temple Guard are the only &amp;quot;elite&amp;quot; infantry within the lizardmen roster, which is more a testament to how strong regular saurus are compared to the melee infantry of other armies. Speaking of how strong regular saurus are, Temple Guard fall short of them against unarmored infantry on the whole. This isn&#039;t to say Temple Guard aren&#039;t impressive; their heightened statline makes them less likely to budge than regular saurus are while their charge defense and bonus damage against large foes and predominantly armor-piercing weaponry lets them effectively face down a majority of late-game/elite cavalry, monsters and even armored infantry much more effectively than regular saurus. Unfortunately, this general prowess reflects heavily in their price tag and you&#039;ll struggle to field multiple units of these without heavily cutting into your other options.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - Recolored Temple Guards, these guys are a slightly more offensive version of their default variants thanks to an increased charge bonus. This makes them significantly more well rounded and will allow you to more flexibly choose how you engage your enemies; do you brace and negate an incoming charge, or is the foe squishy enough where a counter charge would be more punishing? All in all a nice upgrade if only for the usual buff to their health blessed units receive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Star-Chamber Guardians (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Take Temple Guard and make their weapons also deal magical damage: you now have &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; most elite infantry unit available to the Lizardmen. Having magical attacks allows the SCG to engage many undead/demonic forces that utilize high physical resistance and cut them down with ease. SCG also serve as excellent bodyguards for lords (particularly Slann) due to their Guardian ability and when properly supported with healing magic, these guys will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; die. Their only major weakness of note is prolonged anti-armor ranged firepower and artillery, but as they are armored and shielded and have a frankly gargantuan health pool, it will take a long time to fully whittle them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Missile Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort with Javelins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls, shields and three javelins each. For pennies over a regular skink cohort, you can give them limited ranged support with poisonous javelins; a fantastic way to soften up an enemy unit for your front line infantry on the charge. With their speed, they can also easily circle about and pepper an opposing unit&#039;s backsides before charging in to cut off their escape while your saurus chew through them. Once they throw all their javelins, they&#039;re identical to the default skink cohort in virtually every way. Generally, if you&#039;re planning on taking skink cohorts at all, you should almost always pick these guys up over the standard versions (unless you &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; need every gold coin you can possibly scrape together for a specific competitive multiplayer build).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts, and your first dedicated missile infantry. Skink skirmishers lack the sheer range available to most other factions and struggle to do damage against armored opponents. Instead, they should be used exclusively as harassers; their speed, ability to fire while moving and vanguard deployment options allow them to easily get into flanking positions and kite enemy infantry while inflicting poison onto them for when the rest of your army catches up. These guys will melt quickly if caught in the crosshairs of opposing archers/gunners and are pitiful in a fistfight, so you should only get one or two of these units at most, and only if you absolutely cannot afford taking chameleon skinks instead.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink skirmishers with more health and an innate magic spell resistance. This extra durability is nice, but the spell resistance in particular isn&#039;t going to see much use due to these guys rather high mobility and any targetable spell an opponent &#039;&#039;could&#039;&#039; cast on them would be served much better against... literally anything else in your army. There&#039;s virtually no reason to bring these in Multiplayer (even if Blessed units are allowed for the match) and the only reason you&#039;ll want to recruit them in any of your Campaigns would be if you&#039;re in desperate need of reinforcements for a beat-up army you simply cannot afford to lose and you just &#039;&#039;happen&#039;&#039; to have some Blessed Skink Skirmishers to burn. The moment you are in a position where you can recruit/replace other units, these guys should be the first to go.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ninja skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts. Though fewer in number than basic skink skirmishers, chameleon skinks are considerably more durable thanks to their flat 40% missile resistance and have a much easier time sneaking around enemies thanks to their Chameleon ability. This, along with their loose formation, can make them surprisingly effective at countering enemy archers. They otherwise fulfill the exact same harassment role your regular skink skirmishers do and deal a disappointingly low amount of damage against armored targets. Also, like skink skirmishers, they are unable to curve their shots well meaning they&#039;re less effective in siege battles than the archers of other races.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Slightly swole Chameleon Skinks with twice the charge bonus (which is barely anything, especially combined with their rather tragic melee statline) and a few extra darts per skink. More ammunition is always welcome in a firefight, but it&#039;s hardly a game changer. Regardless, better stats do open up options and if you have a choice between these and regular Chameleon Skinks, may as well pick these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
:::Oxyotl&#039;s banner army in the campaign should almost entirely consist of these guys. Between the AP bonus damage, variant ammunitions he can grant them in addition to giving them perks like Snipe, there&#039;s almost no force these guys can&#039;t just shoot to death with relative ease. Siege Battles or battles featuring multiple enemy banner armies might become tricky, but that&#039;s why you always have at least a couple Skink Oracles or Skink Chiefs with Stalk to clean up shop.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Stalkers (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry ninja skinks with little blowpipes and [[what|explosive darts]]. Chameleon Stalkers fill the rather niche role of shock infantry for the Lizardmen. Each skink is equipped with two Precursor blowpipe shots that deal rather impressive burst damage against unarmored targets either on the charge or when falling back from a melee engagement. As they possess the same Chameleon ability their standard Chameleon Skink kin have, they do have a lot of wiggle room to get into an optimal charging position and can quickly fade away from the fray when things go south. Speaking of things going south, though Stalkers are reasonably decent at combat due to their poisoned attacks and mediocre stats, they still tend to lose against medium tier and above infantry or anything with armor. That said, even against armored infantry, much of the Stalker&#039;s value comes from the heavy formation disruption their Precursor Rounds cause, slowing down their targets and interrupting their charge so that you can take the initiative in the ensuing engagement. They can also deal decent burst damage against single entity units in a pinch, but this is generally an inefficient use of them.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Monstrous Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors, as to be expected from 9-foot tall crocodile men, are beastly armor-piercing anti-infantry blenders who can carve through lower tier units like butter and are sturdy enough to hold back more elite units for your more capable specialists. Though quite tanky and reasonably quick (compared to your saurus), they are still large (with the weaknesses all that entails) and very vulnerable to getting shot to hell and back or getting slammed by larger cavalry/monsters. While Kroxigors do hit damn hard, their total damage is divided between three subcatagories: Base, Anti-Infantry and Armor-Piercing. As such, they only really get the most bang for their buck when thrown against armored infantry. While they are able to tie up units that fall outside of those categories, they become dramatically less effective and &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; lose the grindfest if they aren&#039;t supported. Just like in the tabletop, they pair fantastically with supporting skinks to flank and tie up enemy forces or debuff them with poison to make them even more vulnerable to the kroxigors.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you thought regular kroxigors were thick, you haven&#039;t seen these thunder-thighs strut their stuff. Though the standard health increase is all well and good, blessed kroxigors received a substantial buff to their charge bonus. This can make them surprisingly deadly cycle-chargers which, combined with their anti-infantry/armor niche, will let them crack massive holes in front lines.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacred Kroxigors (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors with [[power fists]]. These magical boxing gloves turn your kroxigors into all-purpose ass pounders who punch holes in armored foes effortlessly and tear through things with low magic resistance like so much wet paper. Much like regular kroxigors, sacred kroxigors get the most bang for their buck when supported by skinks (ideal) or saurus (when you don&#039;t want to move from that spot). Unlike standard Kroxigors, Sacred Kroxigors are much more well rounded offensively and will perform much more efficiently against opponents regular Kroxigors tend to struggle or stalemate against. Additionally, as the only non-RoR/Lord unit in your roster with Magical Attacks, these guys are your go-to melee force to deal with Ethereal units, Treemen and other high-physical resistance targets. Additionally, as Magic Resist is slated to change to only affect damage caused by Spells, Sacred Kroxigors will be very well suited to deal with the forces of the Dwarfs and Khorne going forward.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Huatl (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sacred kroxigors with much higher physical resistance and straight up sunder enemy armor, allowing units like your saurus warriors to deal more damage to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen cavalry are slow, for cavalry. They will never catch horse-mounted cavalry of other races, and it is risky to use them as a distraction if your enemy is using anything more than basic cavalry archers. Expect lizardmen cavalry to take heavy losses in prolonged combat, and learn to cycle-charge with them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - A pack of clever girls, with no saurus riders. Feral cold ones are extremely speedy units (by lizardmen standards) that effectively function as light cavalry built for chasing down skirmishers, ranged back lines and artillery pieces. Their ability to cause fear also comes in handy for landing rear charges against a foe tied up in combat with your frontline infantry, as well as ensuring routed enemies leave the battlefield permanently. Unfortunately, their raw damage output is rather low and they themselves are particularly frail and prone to rampaging, which means a bad engagement will result in a swift end for them. They&#039;re cheap as chips though, so you can&#039;t complain too much over losing &#039;em.&lt;br /&gt;
**Being able to summon them after performing the Rite of Primeval Glory is really handy when facing off against Skaven artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Standard cold one riders are your first full-blooded cavalry option. Though significantly swifter than your infantry, cold one riders lag behind their competition in other factions and are particularly vulnerable to anti-large cavalry units because of this. In an ideal setting, cold one riders will serve as the hammer to the anvil that is your saurus frontline; decisive charges into the rear of enemy formations can deal heavy damage and can completely lock down ranged infantry or artillery. Being both armored and shielded gives them respectable staying power as well and allows them to remain in extended combat should the need arise. That said, like most cavalry, they truly shine when they&#039;re able to freely cycle charge to maximize their damage output and heavily abuse enemy morale.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - The name says it all; these are cold one riders with spears. This turns them into a dedicated anti-large cavalry unit that can deal not inconsequential damage to opposing cavalry, artillery and monsters. Unfortunately, in cav v. cav engagements, cold one spear riders will often fall short due to their below average speed letting many opposing options run circles around them. As such, they tend to work best when used defensively. When opposing cavalry buckles down to charge into your flanks, counter charge them with your spear-riders to either intercept or divert them from your more vulnerable elements. They do deal decent armor-piercing damage on their own right, but they&#039;ll often lose against more elite cavalry options and their strength quickly diminishes in prolonged engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed cold one spears are extremely similar to the Pok-Hopak Cohort in the sense that they both don&#039;t run the risk of rampaging. This is a very valuable perk on a unit that will often find itself separated from your main army, especially when combined with their heightened durability. If you have a need for cold one spears and have access to these, there&#039;s literally no reason not to take them.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pok-Hopak Cohort (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Fearless and focused spear-riders, these guys are both immune to psychology &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; lack primal instincts, meaning you&#039;ll never need to worry about them rampaging or fleeing from enemy monsters. Additionally, the Pok-Hopak cohort is able to utilize vanguard deployment, giving them a tactical edge over their generic counterparts that cannot be underestimated. If you&#039;re thinking about taking a unit of spear-riders, there&#039;s literally no reason to not just take these guys instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only elite cavalry, horned ones are simply buffed up cold one riders, plain and simple. They are significantly faster than all of your cold one riders and as such are on par with the cavalry options found in many other factions. They pack a meaty punch with a rather chunky charge bonus to boot, letting them simply smash through frontline infantry as both hammer and anvil. You&#039;ll be paying for that swollen statline though, as they are one of your most expensive non-monster units out of your entire roster (they&#039;re even more expensive than some of your monsters).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Just like the blessed cold one spears, blessed horned ones won&#039;t rampage when caught unawares. Considering these are your elite cav units, you will &#039;&#039;always&#039;&#039; want to make sure they can get out of a bad engagement whenever you need them to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Javelin skinks riding Terradons and carrying stone bombs. While relatively fast for the lizardmen, terradon riders are among the slowest flying cavalry in the game, and are a fairly niche choice in battle. This niche can best be summed up as aerial harriers, ideal for sniping out artillery, mages or unarmored infantry or monsters (which is admittedly a bit of a rarity). Their attacks also apply Poison, which makes them a little more useful than their raw stats make them seem on paper and helps further support other units in your army. Additionally, they are quite micro-friendly since they are able to fire and move with their javelins and, with proper positioning, can drop a once-per-battle set of stone bombs to deal massive damage to clustered up infantry beneath their wings. That said, as fairly large, unarmored and slow moving targets with fairly pitiful melee stats, these guys can be very easy to snipe out of the air by decent missile infantry and are &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; vulnerable to pretty much anything else that is also in the air with them. In a pinch, they can also be used as rear-chargers to help route enemies or tie down missile infantry, but Old Ones help them if something points an extra long stick at them. If you&#039;re facing an infantry heavy army, Fireleech Bolas Terradons tend to net you better value.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pahuax Sentinels (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - These special edition terradon riders are particularly nimble and have an innate resistance to melee and missile attacks that gives them &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more staying power than any of your other flying cavalry. If only to serve as a distraction, these guys can be used in lieu of skink priests/chiefs in an attempt to waste your opponent&#039;s missile infantry/artillery ammo. Otherwise, use them to harass enemy units with poisoned missiles and to escort routing foes off the battlefield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Fireleech Bolas Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - These are far better Terradon Riders than the base variant. While they no longer inflict Poison on enemy units, their fireleech bolas deal explosive fire damage, inflicting greater damage overall against infantry formations and fire-weak entities while dealing higher leadership penalties in the process. Like regular Terradon Riders, they also can fire and move, letting them more or less function as prehistoric bombers. They still carry stone bombs, which can be devastatingly effective when used in concert with a line of saurus warriors pinning enemy melee units or shutting down artillery, but just like regular Terradon Riders, they are fairly useless in melee and are terribly vulnerable to other fliers and ranged missile fire. If you&#039;re dealing with smaller, physically larger units (monstrous infantry or single-entity monsters) with low armor, Terradon Riders are more efficient against them. &lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed Terradon Riders, aside the traditional increase in health, only received one minor adjustment over their basic counterparts; speed. At a speed stat of 110 as opposed to the standard 90, Blessed Terradon Riders can manuever across the battlefield notably more quickly than any other unit in your entire army. Nice, for a unit designed to harass and waste/dodge enemy missile fire, but ultimately a rather minor selling point on an admittedly mediocre and situational unit.&lt;br /&gt;
**Fireleech Bolas can be used to game the AI, especially when you&#039;re facing off against the Chaos Invasion. Even having just three of these guys bombard the Chaos Hellcannons can save you a lot of grief, and you&#039;re not really going to miss them if they got shot down. They&#039;re also really helpful against Vampire Coast, as they&#039;re one of the few skirmishers you have that can raise hell against a zombie gunline/artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ripperdactyl Riders (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The obsidian knife of lizardmen flyers. Ripperdactyls are your flying can-openers with a minor bonus against infantry and a &#039;&#039;massive&#039;&#039; AP bonus. Combined with their solid melee attack stat and Frenzy bonus, these guys utterly shred armored foot soldiers. Unfortunately, their non-existent armor, low melee defense, low model count and large size makes these guys terribly susceptible to counterattack. If they get boxed in, much less by anything with an anti-large bonus, you will be impressed by how quickly they die. Because of this, and the fact much of their damage is dedicated against armored targets, Ripperdactyls tend to be a bit of a niche choice in army lists not built around Tiktaq&#039;to. None-the-less, they are much more effective than Terradon Riders at shutting down missile infantry formations and artillery platforms. Just make sure you are constantly aware of the tactical situation and only call them down when you can support them or escape before enemy reinforcements manage to pin them down.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Colossadon Hunters (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Bigger, hungrier ripperdactyls with a penchant for bigger prey; an additional anti-large bonus can turn them into cavalry buzzsaws and can let them deal sickening damage to mounted enemy lords or cavalry and are the best/only option for fighting flying enemy lords/heroes on semi-even ground. Suffice to say, they&#039;re still very weak to anti-large weaponry themselves and will seldom win against combat dedicated lords/heroes in a &amp;quot;1&amp;quot;v1 fight. As such, they&#039;ll need support through terradon riders (for the poison) as well as additional ripperdactyls to stand an honest shot against such a foe, though they&#039;re still not guaranteed a victory. Should they lose, they&#039;ll still leave a hell of a mark on whatever cavalry/monster they were fighting and such scars could prove pivotal to bringing them down with the rest of your army.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Hunting Packs===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Salamander Hunting Pack (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed addition to the Lizardmen&#039;s borderline vacant missile unit roster, Salamander Hunting Packs are a fantastic general use ranged unit and are among the better missile cavalry options in the game. Though they can&#039;t fire while moving like other missile cavalry options, they deal a rather frightening amount of flaming explosive damage per volley with not inconsequential AP and rather notable anti-large bonuses to top it off. Much like your other non-single entity heavy hitters, Salamanders can do some damage in melee, but they really should avoid it unless absolutely necessary. Terrible defensive values will make Salamander Hunting Packs feel every blow that hits their unarmored hides. If you want to keep them in the fight, make sure you have a few Saurus Spears or Spear Cold One Riders to counter enemy cavalry. They can fire over units and obstacles.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Umbral Tide (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sneaky salamander hunting packs with perfect vigour and stalk, the Umbral Tide is able to covertly cross a majority of the battlefields you may find yourself on and can easily set up an ambush against unsuspecting opponents. Even after running from one end of the battle to the other and loosing every last fireball from their collective gullets, the Umbral Tide will still have a spring to their step should they join the melee fray. If you can only afford a single Salamander Pack, try to budget for these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Razordon Hunting Pack (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons are your anti-armor missile cavalry. Unlike the Salamanders, who burp up one flaming projectile apiece, Razordons lob three spikes at a time when they attack. Though the damage per individual projectile is... well, pitiful, combined they can deal a rather staggering amount of AP damage that can either be divided among dense clusters of armored infantry formations or a single armored target. Additionally, Razordons are much more adept at lobbing their shots, giving them a bit of an edge over Salamanders in uneven terrain. Unfortunately, that&#039;s about where the good news ends. With a shorter firing range than Salamanders and utterly abysmal base damage on their projectiles ([[What|Chameleon Skinks have stronger missiles against unarmored foes than these guys]]) and no additional bonuses to speak of (fire damage, explosive damage, anti-large/infantry, nothing), there&#039;s generally no reason to take Razordons over Salamanders in general lists. Against the heavily armored forces of the Warriors of Chaos, Dwarfs or even other Lizardmen, Razordons might find a more valuable niche.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; Not only have these guys gained a better firing arc, enabling them to better fire spikes at targets over terrain/allied units, but the projectiles themselves now pierce through multiple entities. Currently, they&#039;re particularly powerful and can quickly mulch armored infantry with as few as two or three volleys.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Amaxon Barbs (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons with poisonous spikes and a flat 15% missile resistance, these guys aren&#039;t much to write home about. Yes, poison is nice, but you don&#039;t exactly need to dig very deep for alternative ways to access it. The missile resistance is a nice, if moderately more situational perk, but it&#039;s not a particularly notable resistance and it does nothing for potential melee engagements. In the event you need a razordon hunting pack for anti-armor firepower, you may as well pick these guys up, but only if you have the extra gold once you&#039;ve established your core army roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
The big beasts and the creatures most opponents expect to face when fighting the lizardmen. Potent and powerful monsters, you have a dinosaur for every occasion; you&#039;ll simply need to choose the right ones. Beware of enemy tarpits if you don&#039;t have a high-level mage in your army; dinosaurs will take additional damage from their flanks and rear if they are surrounded and that can quickly wear them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral [[Bastilidon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your cheapest single entity dinosaur as well as your sturdiest. Feral bastilidons are effectively just a [[DISTRACTION CARNIFEX]] that you throw into enemy frontlines to stir up some chaos, cause some fear and just generally soak damage while the rest of your army dismantles the enemy. These guys can still earn you some crazy value against armies that field a lot of chaff infantry, like Skaven, Beastmen or Bretonnia.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039;: These guys are your entry-level monsters, being recruitable basically from the start of the game. As tanky anti-infantry monsters, these guys can net you some crazy value against the early-game armies of other factions for cheap-as-chips prices.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your first, cheaper artillery option. Solar Engines fire off a single missile that simultaneously blinds and burns enemy units, reducing their combat effectiveness and dealing bonus damage against anything that regenerates health naturally. These laser bolts have a lower maximum range, are relatively slow moving and are much easier to dodge than the smaller, faster, harder to see bolts fired by the stegadon, but they have slightly higher damage per shot and a larger splash radius when targeting groups of infantry. In another contrast to the stegadon, the beams fired by the solar engine deal flat magical damage, meaning enemies with high magical resistance will largely shrug off the damage dealt by the solar engine itself. The only &#039;&#039;major&#039;&#039; drawback of the solar engine is that the Beam of Chotek, though an armor-piercing missile (its unit toolbar does not show the armor-piercing icon), deals relatively low bonus damage against armored units and as such will become less efficient compared to the stegadon when targeting heavily armored monsters over formations of armored infantry. At the end of the day, when all else fails, there&#039;s still a fully grown bastilidon underneath that laser crystal. Keep in mind, like every ranged unit, firing their missiles depletes their vigour and should be taken into account if you&#039;re planning on sending it into combat.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Perfect vigour&#039;s value cannot be overstated on a melee capable monster that would otherwise tire itself out just from holding a laser cannon in place. The greater defensive value of the bastilidon compliments the increased health quite nicely and will allow the blessed variant to stay in the thick of it considerably longer than others of its kind.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Revivification Crystal Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only non-magical source of healing, revivification crystals are one of the few healing options in the game that not only restores a unit&#039;s health but also actually revives dead models; a perk that&#039;s particularly valuable on your elite units like kroxigors or temple guard. A revivification crystal pairs excellently with a Life Slann in infantry heavy lists as you can very rapidly bring a unit back from the brink to near pristine (or whatever their healing cap is, depending on how used and abused they are), or for ensuring crucial monsters (like carnosaurs and dread saurians) become virtually unkillable. They are of limited use in a dinosaur army if your lord isn&#039;t a Life Slann, as their minor healing ability is short-ranged and can only target a single unit with a relatively lengthy cooldown between uses. Additionally, and this is notable hitch, models don&#039;t start coming back to life until all the still living models have been fully healed up. This, consequently, makes it difficult to rebuild your forces if they&#039;re in active combat or taking damage from other sources. Having said that, they&#039;re still one of two sources of healing non-slann lords have access to and the only healing option that doesn&#039;t impose on your Winds of Magic reserve (which is still a plus, as other armies don&#039;t have such a luxury). As a bastilidon variant, it can also throw itself into combat with little fear. Pro tip: Don&#039;t click that &amp;quot;end battle&amp;quot; button; instead, use it to revive what you can and win the fight with fewer casualties.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ark of Sotek Bastilodon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Functionally just a regular bastilidon, but with the ability to unleash an AoE burst of poison on all enemies surrounding it. As it&#039;s only a minor increase in cost over the feral version, the Ark of Sotek may be worth getting for the very minor amount of damage and extra poison it can apply to the invariable mosh pits bastilidons often find themselves in. Alternatively, you can get much more utility from the other two non-feral variants, and rely on your skinks to supply poison or your mages to deal burst damage to tarpits of infantry. In Campaign these boys are one of your mainstay units until tier 4 stegadons, with the lizardmens low growth and poor early-game economy the low-cost high reward of these guys can easily melt through tons of early game infantry, a must-get.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - A wild stegadon, pure and simple. A living battering ram, stegadons are fantastic line breakers and are well rounded enough to survive the ensuing melee while dealing respectable damage in turn. Like all feral dinosaur variants, its only major weakness is a vulnerability to rampaging courtesy of its lower leadership. This is a forgivable flaw, considering how cheap they are and the fact that you can simply use Cold Blooded to snap them out of it definitely lessens the severity of an occasional rampage.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Stegadon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - A stegadon with a long-range ballista and skink handlers mounted upon its back. Stegadons serve as the second of your two artillery options and are arguably the best at dealing raw damage: the ballista is unerringly accurate and can easily snipe opposing artillery pieces, usually destroying the cannon/catapult models in question before they can get much usage. What&#039;s more is that, as it&#039;s connected to a single entity monster itself, the ballista is not vulnerable to these same tactics. Like Cygors or Steam Tanks, Stegadons compensate for the lack of firepower volume traditional artillery pieces can put out by retaining its long ranged assaults until it is either out of ammunition or has been killed. The stegadon&#039;s ranged attack generally struggles to deal significant damage to infantry formations due to the narrow projectiles and low splash damage (despite the bonus anti-infantry modifiers it gets). Regardless, the shot still deals incredible damage to heavily armored, single entity monsters (particularly a majority of mounted lords/heroes) due to their immense bonus AP damage. Even should you run out of ammunition or should your opponent try to tie it down in melee... it&#039;s still a stegadon. With skinks firing poisoned darts at everything surrounding its legs, it will put up just as much of a fight as its feral counterpart and then some. The only downside to the ballista is that firing it will drain the stegadon&#039;s vigour (even if it&#039;s standing perfectly still), meaning it&#039;ll likely perform less efficiently in any ensuing melee if it doesn&#039;t get a break between firing and fighting.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hoh boy, now we&#039;re talking. A massive buff to the stegadon&#039;s health will allow him to take significantly more punishment over the rest of his variants, but that&#039;s not really the main selling point here. The blessed stegadon is also gifted with perfect vigour; a massive boon to the offensive prowess of this beast. Being able to act as full blown artillery then rush into glorious melee combat to tear enemies a new asshole at peak performance is something no other faction can achieve remotely as effectively as these guys can. If a quest pops up in the campaign with these as a reward, you should do your damndest to accomplish it. They&#039;re well worth it.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where the stegadon does its best work from afar, the ancient stegadon needs to get up close and personal to do business. The howdah, though packed with significantly more ammo, is much shorter ranged and is primarily meant to soften up nearby targets for a follow up charge into melee. Ancient stegadons are somewhat tankier than other stegadon variants, though their limited range debatably renders them less effective offensively. In general, you should either spring for the Engine of the Gods or stick with a regular stegadon..&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Thunderous One (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A beefed up ancient stegadon that calls down bolts of lighting every 20 seconds, the Thunderous One was made to wade into the enemy&#039;s front line and deal indiscriminate damage. Unfortunately, these bolts of lightning can and will deal friendly fire to your units. This can make it somewhat challenging to support its charge with infantry or cavalry, though allied single entity monsters typically won&#039;t mind the stray blast.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Engine of the Gods Ancient Stegadon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Is all the gold armor embedded into your ancient stegadon not quite flashy enough for you? Just give it the ability to call down an orbital bombardment to glass swarms of warmbloods in the name of the Great Plan. The Stegadon itself is, functionally, an Ancient Stegadon. It behaves identically like one and has the exact same statline, but once you get to its abilities, things start to get interesting. It has two supporting abilities, Arcane Configuration (Winds of Magic Power Recharge rate boost) and the Portent of Warding (a 5% Ward Save for all allied units within 40m). These effects make EotG Stegadons fantastic supporting units simply from their presence alone. And yes, this applies to EotG Stegadon Mounts, so your Skink Priests have access to their own personal WoM batteries. The third, and debatably the main reason you&#039;re considering this ornate beast, is the Burning Alignment active ability. Though limited to only two uses, the Engine of the Gods can deal devastating damage to infantry focused lists if the Burning Alignment is used at just the right moment. It&#039;s particularly effective when fired into choke points or along your enemy&#039;s frontline ranks when they&#039;re tied up with your forces. Thankfully, the Burning Alignment ability is extremely accurate for (what is functionally) a wind spell; so long as you aim carefully and don&#039;t wander your lizardmen into it&#039;s path, you can drop it right in front of your forces with little fear.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Salamander (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A single giant salamander, tempered with age, experience and able to melt opponents with extra spicy hellfire. Ancient salamanders are more durable than their lesser hunting pack kin and are more reliably able to survive the occasional melee scuffle, though it generally shouldn&#039;t participate in it. Instead, the ancient salamander truly shines when paired with fire slann, salamander hunting packs, fireleech bolas terradons, or solar engine bastilidons thanks to its ability to render enemy units flammable with its own fireballs. This flammable effect greatly improves the damage dealt by flaming attacks and when executed properly and will burn through most infantry-focused armies with terrifying efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - An offensive machine, the apex predator of Lustria (you know, conventionally) and a signature monster of the lizardmen, the carnosaur is a ferocious beast that specializes in hunting other monsters, skaven weapon teams, and artillery due to their innate anti-large bonuses and armor-piercing capabilities. They&#039;re considerably frailer than stegadons and bastilidons defensively, though they are much swifter and tear through most enemies far more quickly due to their much higher attack. When funds are too tight to take a Saurus Scar-Vet or Old Blood on a carnosaur, a feral version with proper support won&#039;t steer you wrong. Just make sure you keep a leader or hero with Cold-Blooded on standby in case they get a little carried away.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - The blessed carnosaur. Formerly the pinnacle of lizardmen might (the dread saurian says hi), blessed carnosaurs have all the anti-large, armor-piercing wrath of the regular carnosaur supplemented by a much more rounded defensive statline. Additional health and magic resistance makes the blessed carnosaur surprisingly survivable against a myriad of generic threats and allows it to commit to fights that regular carnosaurs would hesitate towards. They are still just as vulnerable as any other carnosaur to getting mobbed or picked apart from regular armor-piercing weapons and absolutely will rampage in a bind, so don&#039;t get reckless with your charges.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Geltblöm’s Terror (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Carnosaur that never rampages and is blessed with both Vanguard deployment and the Strider ability, enabling it to keep up to speed in any terrain. Vanguard deployment and rampage immunity is a fantastic combination for a Lizardmen monster designed to fight other monsters, but don&#039;t get reckless.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Troglodon (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Troglodon without a Skink Oracle to keep it in check. Troglodons are in essence a hybrid between an Ancient Salamander and Carnosaur in that they&#039;re able to burp up potent poisonous spit that&#039;s extremely effective against large targets. Troglodons are quite possibly the first real &amp;quot;skirmisher&amp;quot; single entity monster introduced: though they&#039;re quick for ground-bound dinosaurs, they should generally only engage in melee as a last resort or with &#039;&#039;heavy&#039;&#039; support because they are not designed to put up much of a fight. In a direct melee engagement against most other combat monsters, Troglodons tend to lose pretty handily. Their low leadership also tends to cause them to rampage quickly when caught up in a brawl. However, if they focus on kiting and sniping their targets rather than charging them, they can do frankly sickening amounts of damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Pale Death (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Troglodon that can buff itself and nearby allies in melee whenever it uses it&#039;s Primeval Roar, giving them a rather substantial Melee Attack bonus for a short while. Though a buff of 24 Melee Attack is certainly an eyebrow raiser, it only recharges when the Pale Death is actively engaged in melee combat. For 60 seconds. On a creature that&#039;s prone to rampaging at the drop of a hat, this is a very risky commitment without a Lord/Hero nearby to keep it in check.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, dread saurians are nigh uncontested in raw damage output and are more than capable of killing every other unit in the game in a straight fight. Unfortunately for you, your opponent will be able to field &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more units than your dread saurian will be able to deal with at once and most of said units will likely be picking it off at range. As a massive, lumbering behemoth, dodging even slow moving projectiles is well and truly beyond the dread saurian and it will take tremendous damage on the approach. Even once it arrives in melee, the sheer volume of bodies capable of surrounding it and poking it with anti-armor/anti-large sticks will wear it down quite quickly. Their size also provides another source of jank whenever they get bogged down by hordes; they&#039;ll struggle to properly path their way through the crowds (it doesn&#039;t help that the Dread Saurian also has relatively low mass considering it&#039;s literal size) and their attacks, while lethally brutal, also tend to miss depending on the terrain it&#039;s fighting on. They are also prohibitively expensive and will eat up a significant portion of your funds, meaning the rest of your army will be extremely limited in number. Ensure you have a proper supporting mage (a life slann is essential) if you&#039;re bringing one.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, now wearing a howdah filled to the brim with skinks. A modest price bump from the already exorbitant feral variant will grant the regular dread saurian a higher leadership, ranged attacks and poison. There&#039;s little reason not to go ahead and splurge for these upgrades, feral or not the dread saurian will be the centerpiece of your army which you&#039;ll do everything to keep alive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Shredder of Lustria (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single most expensive beast you could ever field, and boy does he do work. In addition to all that a dread saurian can bring to bear, the Shredder of Lustria is stacked with the full complement of veterinary stat buffs and a leadership debuff for all enemies surrounding it, a perk that, when combined with the innate fear and terror dread saurians cause, will make most enemy infantry run the &#039;&#039;fuck&#039;&#039; away very fast. If that weren&#039;t enough, the Shredder of Lustria also encourages all nearby allied troops, buffing their leadership. After all, who wouldn&#039;t be inspired by seeing the apex of lizardmen might devouring any and all who oppose the Great Plan? Speaking of the Great Plan, you&#039;re going to need one: considering how much money you&#039;re sinking into this puppy, you&#039;re going to need to really budget the rest of your army carefully.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Coatl (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Previously a relic of a long lost bit of Lizardmen lore, the Coatl makes a rather striking return as the premier Lizardmen flying monster. The Coatl, though packing two casts of Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and one cast of Lesser Chain Lighting as bound spells, is designed more as a source of support for ground-bound allies. Infact, the main draw to the Coatl isn&#039;t its combat capabilities (which are mediocre at best), but for the fact that it grants all allied units under its wings Stalk. Yes, everything from that unit of Red-Crested Skinks to that Dread Saurian doomstack becomes invisible and untargetable until they&#039;re either far too close to do anything about or the Coatl &amp;quot;lands&amp;quot; or dies. As a faction desperately starved of long range missile units, this is a massive boon for protecting your high-value targets on the approach. Once the Coatl has safely delivered it&#039;s charges into battle, it still can serve as an excellent disruptor of backline units, Snipe artillery or single entity monsters with thunderbolt or punish a large blob with lesser chain lighting. Just be careful: even your Terradons move faster than this thing and its size does it no favors when trying to dodge missile fire.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Spirit of Tepok (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Coatl that has Banishment and Shield of Thorns as bound spells instead. The option to lean more heavily into a support role does suit the Coatl quite well, though this largely depends on what lord choice and focus your army has. If you brought a life slann or a skink priest, a regular Coatl might get you more mileage.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen are a very versatile faction when viewed over the entire campaign, however there will be times when your army composition and thus tactics are limited depending on the progress you&#039;ve made in developing your empire. Your greatest limiting factor will be money; be it in single-player or multiplayer, many mid-high tier units will cost a fortune and you will invariably have a lower unit count compared to other armies. You will need to carefully consider the faction you&#039;re currently facing when forming your armies.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
So, you want to show the world a Great Plan, and TED talks aren&#039;t getting it done? You might think of the Lizardmen as just another &#039;big monster&#039; faction in multiplayer, but you&#039;re limiting yourself if you think that way. The scalies have a surprising amount of options within their roster. From super wide infantry builds to kite builds built around chameleon skinks, to more mobile cavalry-centric strategies, the Lizardmen can be quite a versatile opponent. The thing you&#039;re pretty much going to universally struggle against however is factions that are heavy on the ranged play. You need to think carefully about your army comp and lord choices, then bring the Great Plan to the four corners of the Earth (or multiplayer lobby, or whatever).&lt;br /&gt;
====Faction Counterplay====&lt;br /&gt;
A list of all the other factions in the game, along side their various strengths, weaknesses and best strategies you have to combat them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - Highly mobile and capable of dishing out impressive damage, the Beastmen are among the fastest armies in the game (only rivaled by the Wood Elves and Slaanesh). This can be difficult to deal with, as the only infantry you possess that can potentially keep up with them are your Skinks. Skinks...generally aren&#039;t a great pick against Beastmen. They&#039;re slower still than a significant portion of the Beastmen roster and will die quite quickly due to their lack of armor and defensive stats. Skink Skirmishers/Chameleon Skinks are a minor exception, as between their poisonous missiles and the Beastmen&#039;s lack of armor, they&#039;ll actually deal respectable damage to them. Otherwise, the stalwart Saurus (Spears) will be your best frontline unit; solid charge defenses, shields and anti-large bonuses will stop any rush in its tracks and the Beastmen&#039;s complete lack of armor means that they&#039;ll take the full brunt of their attacks. Your monsters USED to be fantastic here, but with the addition of the anti-large regenerating Ghorgon, they are a much more risky proposition. Seriously, this thing will beat the pants off of pretty much any monster you bring to the table, and its surprising mobility means that your slow-moving infantry will have a hard time tarpitting it. Shredder of Lustria builds and monster mash builds which used to be hilariously effective against the Beastie Boys are now quite dangerous to bring. Without being able to overly rely on your monsters, it&#039;s going to be up to your characters and magic to be the game-changer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039; - The end-all, be-all cavalry faction, Brettonia has access to some of the strongest mounted soldiers in the game. Their peasantry, though feeble, isn&#039;t to be underestimated in sufficient numbers and can still do notable damage through their archers and pikemen. That said, your Skink Cohorts can easily best any peasants they (effortlessly) pin down and a unit or two of kroxigors will &#039;&#039;evicerate&#039;&#039; any foot soldier unfortunate enough to meet them in combat. Bretonnians will also struggle to hold their lines together from the sheer amount of fear/terror your monsters can cause. However, their cavalry (particularly Grail Knights) won&#039;t falter from fear alone and are renowned for their devastating charges. Brace units of temple guard (or saurus spears, if you&#039;re cheap) to mitigate their damage and box them in before they have a chance to pull back. A light slann with the Net of Amyntok can shut down Brettonian cavalry &#039;&#039;hard&#039;&#039; and should heavily be considered as your lord for this matchup.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - The general battle plan here can best be summarized with &amp;quot;Grab a bunch of ranged and 2 Solar Engines and defend them at all costs because otherwise you have no way to deal with Dark Rider Crossbow and Scourgerunner spam.&amp;quot; Seriously, those damn Anti Large missile chariots were pretty much designed to fight you. A pure melee monster rush isn&#039;t going to work otherwise you will just get kited into oblivion. Have the solar engines shoot them from afar and see if you can get you Chameleon skins to slow them down so your Cold One riders can catch up to them. Your dino cav is better than their dino cav, take advantage of that. Mazdamundi is also great for nets to lock down cavalry and get them ready for a pounding. If you can get rid of all that mobile ranged, the infantry fight should fall in your favor in no time.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039; - Dwarfs tend to form nigh impenetrable walls of armorclad infantry and are one of the few factions capable of holding the line better than you. AP weaponry is a must, so mixing Red-Crested Skinks among your Saurus can help chew through thicker formations. Kroxigors, particularly Sacred Kroxigors, will be your best infantry can openers in this fight. Despite their innate spell resistance, your offensive magics can still work wonders against most dwarfen infantry, so a heavens skink priest or fire slann wouldn&#039;t be amiss in your army here. Beware of their Giant Slayers; though fragile, they will deal terrible damage to any armored cavalry or monsters they can get their grubby dawi mitts on. Skink skirmishers/chameleon skinks can easily outpace slayer units and whittle them down with their poisoned missiles, though they&#039;ll do absolutely nothing against any of the armored infantry. Terradon riders are virtually untouchable to their ground bound forces with a special shout-out for the Fireleech Bolas variant, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to take down any Gyrocopters contesting the skies if you want to get your money&#039;s worth. Lastly, you&#039;ll want to destroy any artillery they bring before turning your attention to the rest of their forces; Ripperdactyls can easily flank and shred such devices, though you&#039;ll need to draw away any screening units if you want them to survive the aftermath. Lastly, this is one of the few matchups where Razordons are a more attractive mid-ranged option than your Salamanders.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039; - Karl Franz brings a relatively balanced roster to the table, with plenty of long ranged anti-armor firepower and cavalry that&#039;ll run circles around yours. With the sheer volume of AP [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units and artillery, this is a faction you&#039;ll generally want to leave the Saurus at home for. Skink Cohorts with shields are for once a rather reliable pick for your frontline, with Red-Crested Skinks and/or Kroxigors diving in once you&#039;ve tied down the missile units that otherwise threaten them. Additionally, your Terradon Riders can actually be quite effective in this matchup, particularly in shutting down Grenade Launcher Outriders. A Skink Priest of Heavens with Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and/or Comet of Cassandora is a rather cost-efficient answer to units such as the Steam Tank and Artillery Platforms, though regular Stegadons can punch holes through them if you can keep them safe. A Slann Priest with Light Magic and the Net of Amyntok coupled with a squad or two of Salamander Hunting Packs makes for an excellent cavalry deleting squad, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to shield them with your own cavalry or at the very least some shielded Saurus Spears.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039; - Go fast and hard into cathay&#039;s lines. Cathay brings a good amount of options against single-entity units with accurate grand cannons and iron hail gunners amongst others. The largest you should go is an ark of sotek or two to mass-poison damage cathay&#039;s entire packed formation. Go full offensive with saurus and try to briefly contest the skies to disrupt the artillery and missiles on the charge. in general it&#039;s a poor matchup as while the other &#039;monster race&#039; in the ogres is great against cathay it&#039;s simply a matter of price. ogres can beat cathay with a lot cheaper units than you can bring with kroxigors filling the same role as ogre bulls but 2.5 times the price. Unless your units get major discounts in multiplayer for immortal empires it&#039;s not a good time&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hordes of expendable Goblins and Ork Boyz make up the rank and file of the Greenskins. Despite having a particular focus towards mobbing you in melee combat, the Greenskins have a fairly diverse roster capable of performing decently well at ranged combat or skirmishing with their relatively diverse cavalry options. As the coup-de-grace, Greenskins also have access to several monstrous units between their selection of (river) trolls and Arachnarok Spiders that can mulch their weight in infantry. However, there are two major weaknesses to the Greenskin roster: they typically have &#039;&#039;terrible&#039;&#039; leadership (especially their expendable Goblin and Troll units) and a majority of their roster is unarmored. Saurus units will typically stand firm on the front lines while your Skink skirmishers will actually do some solid work while easily outpacing the sluggish Ork Boyz, but you will &#039;&#039;need&#039;&#039; to watch out for their Cavalry. Fireleech Bolas Terradons and Salamanders will have a field day against their infantry as well, especially against the fire-weak troll units who will crumble rapidly in the face of their flammability and terrible leadership. On the note of leadership; your pantheon of Jurassic beasties will have the time of their lives against the Greenskins. Their lack of charge defense, anti-large, and low leadership means that a Carnosaur or two will bowl through their ranks largely uncontested. However, keep an eye out for Black Orcs; they&#039;re one of the few armored infantry units in the Ork roster, are armor piercing and are immune to Fear/Terror. Red-Crested Skinks are a decent budget option to deal with them, though you may prefer to kite them with Razordon Hunting Packs instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Lizardmen will have some trouble countering High Elf flying monsters, particularly phoenixes. Your ranged units aren&#039;t going to get the chance to take them down in the air, so you have to rely on catching them when they drop down to attack and that can be tricky if you&#039;re running an all-dino army. At the same time, if you&#039;re using saurus then you will take some heavy losses from archers and cavalry if you commit them all to tarpitting the phoenix. Chameleon Skinks are an excellent pick against archer heavy builds; their lose formation coupled with their innate missile resistance will make them extremely hard to take down at range while their chameleon skin will let them dip in and out of combat with relative ease. Sisters of Averlorn are a priority target if present on the field; a Skink Priest of Beasts may be considered if only to summon manticores to tie them down. Additionally, the Legion of Chaqua should strongly be considered as a core part of your frontline; the ability to grant multiple units around it a 44% missile resistance is too valuable to ignore.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039; - Don&#039;t bring Skinks to this matchup. Barring Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers if you want to be cheap, all of your Skink Infantry will do little more than feed their skulls to Khorne&#039;s throne before they get an opportunity to do anything meaningful. A pricy saurus front line is definitely worth it here, potentially supported by Kroxigors. For once the &#039;engine of the gods&#039; stegadon&#039;s death-beam will actually be useful as the stegadon itself can knock about units and the death-beam being magic and AP will counter any infantry khorne can bring. Bring saurus, bring magic and your anti-large carnosaur. A very good matchup in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kislev is a relatively fearless foe for you, a nice change of pace for mere mortal men. Their higher tier infantry is generally able to out-trade yours, Tzar Guard (especially the Great Weapon variety) can and will gradually carve their way through regular Saurus lines while Streltsi and Ice Guard will prove quite competent at dealing with your forces at range. Fortunately, your sheer versatility means you aren&#039;t wanting for options. Even if they&#039;re a bit slower, your Cavalry will generally outclass Kislev&#039;s, barring any War Bear Riders they may have brought. Even regular Cold One Riders will make a fantastic hammer to the anvil that is your Saurus and even a losing matchup against their stronger Tzar Guard will quickly turn in your favor with a rear charge or two. Of course, aside their War Bear Riders, Kislev&#039;s monsters can&#039;t hold a candle to yours. Once you shut down some of the ranged AP Missiles, your dinos can wreak terrible havoc upon the enemy lines. Razordons are particularly effective right now, though Salamanders can be used to efficiently deal with the more monstrous enemy units. Terradons are almost always a never-pick however as since in essence every single kislev unit has a ranged attack that is more than capable of dealing with them terradons are free kills for even kossars.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - This...should be a no brainer in concept, though countering opposing lizardmen can be somewhat difficult to execute. Anti-large units in some shape or form are an inarguable must; cold one spear-riders accompanied by saurus spears can surround and pin down enemy monsters in a relatively cost-effective manner. Red-crested skinks are an ideal infantry choice due to their poison and armor piercing bonus coming into play against a majority of the lizardman roster. Salamander hunting packs and ancient salamanders are fantastic all-rounders that can deal terrifying damage across the entire board. Your main objective should be to focus down any slann mage-priest or skink priests present on the field, followed by any other lord/hero keeping potential rampages in check. If there is an opposing slann, avoid clumping up your infantry to reduce the threat of a banishment and/or any other vortex spell devastating your frontlines. Regular stegadons are fantastic monster snipers who should focus fire on major threats like carnosaurs or dread saurians before anything else.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are pretty much Warriors of Chaos with a little bit of [[Space Wolf|wolf]] thrown in. Like the Warriors of Chaos, they have a relative lack of missile units but unlike the Warriors of Chaos, are considerably less armored as a whole. However, they more than make up for it with their mobility and plentiful sources of anti-large, which can be seriously dangerous for one of your central strategies. Saurus Warriors as such are substantially better at holding off the bulk of their front lines while Temple Guard are a fantastic answer to their Skin Wolves and Trolls. You need to be on top of your positioning however, as Skin Wolves and Ice Wolves can run circles around your plodding infantry. Skink Skirmishers are also fantastic for dealing chip damage and applying poison while staying well out of arm&#039;s reach for a majority of their forces. (Ancient) Salamanders are also a superb choice, as are Fireleech Bolas Terradons as general damage dealers. Stegadons and Carnosaurs will likely be your go-to monsters, as a pair of Carnosaurs can typically take down a War Mammoth, at least in theory. Caution should be exercised against War Mammoths in particular, as they are one of the best monster units in the game. Considering the fact that half your list is made of monsters, that&#039;s saying something. No Norscan worth his salt will allow you to freely target down the crown jewel of his army, so make sure you commit well and truly to the fight.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039; -Nurgle has no anti-large, bad armour piercing, relies on outlasting his enemies, has almost no ranged firepower worth mentioning, has incredibly poor armour, is ridiculously slow, hates fire damage, and is mediocre in the air-game. Basically, everything Nurgle hates is something you have plenty of while Nurgle has precisely zero counters to your playstyle. You almost can&#039;t lose this match-up it&#039;s so one-sided.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is a fairly balanced matchup depending on what you bring. Saurus spears are the obvious pick here and try to avoid skink units entirely unless you want to give the gorgers free food. Carnosaurs with their anti-large are an obvious pick here and going for a stegadon with or without a hero on the back is great for counterplay against leadbelchers.The scariest thing ogres can bring are rhinoxes or their artillery. Essentially settle in for a large-on-large slugfest.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039; - An iconic matchup, the skaven are everything the lizardmen aren&#039;t. Massive hordes of cheap, cowardly cannon fodder will fill the ranks of many skaven lists purely to get in the way of your Jurassic might and their rickety engines of war. Aside delaying the inevitable through piles of bodies, the ratmen have precious little in the way of durable front line units and will typically fall apart when thrown in the grinder. Rather, Skaven will rely on their wide array of artillery and arcane firearms to rain warpfire upon the hapless masses (friend and foe alike). Ratling Gunners are notorious for their ability to rapidly shred infantry, cavalry and monsters alike while their jezzails excel at picking apart single entity monsters, lords and heroes from halfway across the battlefield. Any frontline infantry you have you&#039;ll want shielded. In general, skaven are modestly quick on their feet, so you&#039;ll want a selection of cavalry or skinks to catch up to and tie down their missile infantry. Chameleon Skinks are generally a strong pick against skaven due to their missile resistance and for once can do respectable damage due to the relative lack of armor in the skaven roster. Skink Cohorts will typically win in a straight fight against Skaven Slaves or Clanrats, though against anything more elite you&#039;ll want saurus or kroxigors to deal with them. Your monsters will also have virtually free reign should they manage to make it into melee, though you&#039;ll want to ensure any artillery or missile infantry are well and truly tied down before you let them loose.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039; - Much like the Dark Elves, this matchup falls considerably in their favor. Speedy infantry, cavalry and chariots &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; packing AP damage makes a front line of Saurus undesirable. However, unlike the Dark Elves, Slaanesh [[/d/|comes]] up short in the ranged game; your Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers and even both Terradon Riders will prove quite valuable at whittling away Slaaneshi daemons, though exquisite care will be needed for your skink infantry; even with poison debuffs, Slaaneshi units are &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; fast and will still be able to chase down and tie up your Skinks without screening support. Other options include your trademark dinosaurs; despite packing AP damage, Slaanesh is not generally kitted with a diverse Anti-Large roster and may struggle trying to hold back your high-mass monsters from tearing through their ranks. When it comes to your Terradons, take a care. Slaanesh will usually pack some Furies to help defend the skies and though Furies won&#039;t win against any of your other monsters, your Terradons aren&#039;t most other monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039; - There&#039;s not a lot a basic skeleton army can do to lizardmen. Unit for unit, saurus are just better and skinks will be more maneuverable. An all-dino army can destroy ushabti and higher-tier units with ease, provided you&#039;ve picked the right dinos (stegadons). However, this is not a reason to be complacent - the Tomb Kings roster has some very deadly Anti-Large AP units on their roster that will make very short work of your dinos. Of particular note are the Ushabti Greatbows and Necrosphinx; the former are dedicated monster snipers and the latter is absolute murder against other single-entity monsters. Try to mob these units with your infantry or try to make them irrelevant with magic, because the high innate armor and mass these units naturally have will mean they can and will be able to move around the battlefield with impunity.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039; - The key against Tzeentch is to get into melee quick and hold their units in place; Tzeentch daemons, even with their Protoss-like shields, aren&#039;t built for combat and will either try to do all their work at range (something you &#039;&#039;desperately&#039;&#039; will not want to combat them at) or by cycle charging before you get a chance to crack their shields. This is one of the rare matchups your Cold One Riders can actually excel at; they&#039;re rather decent in combat and can engage the enemy far sooner than your standard Saurus or Skinks can (and will likely/hopefully suffer less casualties for it). Additionally, Chameleon Stalkers can safely sneak up to vulnerable flanks; open up with a rather explosive burst of their own and start chewing through Horrors before they get much opportunity to return fire. Try not to contest the skies if you can, though Ripperdactyls will likely best most of the units they&#039;d be fighting in the skies... they&#039;ll be outnumbered substantially &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; move much more slowly. They&#039;ll be lit up far before they can ever catch up to anything.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039; - In terms of punching through these undeads&#039; lines they&#039;re even easier than their Vampire Counts brothers with very little in the way of durable infantry to hold back your Saurus killing machines. Where you will have to watch out is their ranged units - they have one of the cheapest gunlines in the game and it&#039;s even harder to break open their protectors because they&#039;re all undead and can&#039;t run. Their monsters will tarpit your dinos but rarely kill them, but without proper maneuvering you will be munching on polearm zombies all day while their undead musketeers and cannons fuck you up. Abuse magic hard and don&#039;t let them bog down your dinos, keep them constantly rolling through the zombies until you can trample over their gunners. Be very wary about Necrofex Colossi, not only can they kite your dinos but they can also put substantial hurt on them if not checked quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039; - If there&#039;s any faction in the game more stunted in the range-game, it&#039;s the Vampire Counts. Hordes upon hordes of meat-shields often form the rank and file of many undead lists while the lords and heroes do all the heavy lifting. You&#039;ll want to avoid clumping your units up or getting bogged down by the fodder, as a single Winds of Death can delete your entire frontline if you allow it. Kroxigors will make short work of any infantry the Vampire Counts send your way and Sacred Kroxigors in particular are extremely valuable against the ethereal units that might otherwise threaten your physical forces. Additionally, Skink Skirmishers will prove a frustrating thorn in your opponents side as they kite any non-cav across the field and back. Typically you&#039;ll want to focus on bringing down any characters the Vampire Counts field, as they quite literally hold the army together. Without their leadership and magic support, many of the undead will quickly crumble against the might of your superior soldiers. Fire damage is particularly useful in this regard, so Salamander Hunting Packs, Ancient Salamanders, Solar Engines and Fire Slann can quickly incinerate many of these lords and heroes (in the case of the Slann, they are also fantastic at dealing with ethereal heroes).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemons of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Expect to see a roster comprising mostly of Slaanesh and Tzeentch daemons. If this is the case, you&#039;re in for a rough one. If your opponent decided to focus on Khorne or Nurgle forces... well, hopefully you enjoy the borderline free win. Regardless, this can be a tricky matchup to properly plan for, so just try to take a balanced list. With a slight focus against Tzeentch/Slaanesh, of course.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another faction almost devoid of ranged options, the Warriors of Chaos is almost dedicated to advancing a wall of steel and meat from one end of the map to the other. Many of their units are armored and/or shielded and as such, armor-piercing units will be your friend against them. Take a few units of Saurus (Spears) to hold their units in place while you have some Red-Crested Skinks chip away at them. Spears are strongly suggested due to the relative abundance of large/monstrous units within their roster; they might not win against them, but your spears will go down fighting much harder than your regular warriors would. Take a unit or two of Ripperdactyls to shut down any Hellcannons they might&#039;ve brought to the table. Take no half-measures with them either; they&#039;re unbreakable so you &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; need to completely wipe them out if you don&#039;t want to be bombarded the entire match. Otherwise, some (Sacred) Kroxigors, Razordons and Stegadons are fantastic damage dealers and a Skink Priest of Heavens or a Fire Slann can delete large chunks of their infantry at a time with proper placement and timing.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Wood Elves are a flighty foe and one of the hardest for your army to actually pin down. Their relatively cheap access to long-ranged anti-armor missile infantry will pose a massive pain in the ass and their basic frontline infantry, the Eternal Guard, can hold their own surprisingly well against your monsters courtesy of their spears. In a rare twist, a front line of skink cohorts will prove more effective than your saurus against wood elves; they&#039;re quicker still than many elven infantry options and can further hinder their combat effectiveness thanks to their poison. Chameleon skinks will prove invaluable at harassing enemy archers and can kite a majority of their infantry with relative ease. Now when it comes to dealing with their tree units, I have one word for you. Fire. (Ancient) Salamanders can deal with dryads, tree kin and treemen with laughable ease and will prove just as effective at dealing with the rest of the wood elf roster, though you&#039;ll absolutely want a contingent or two of saurus spears to screen against Wild Riders. Wood Elves are also a rare instance of being a faction with &#039;&#039;less&#039;&#039; artillery than you (hint, they have none). Solar Engine bastilidons can heavily discourage their archers from setting up and will do bonus damage to any tree units they shoot. Lastly, many Wood Elf units are capable of vanguard deployment; keep an eye on your surroundings once the battle starts to ensure you aren&#039;t caught unawares.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;S/S-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Though you aren&#039;t the undisputed king of Domination, Lizardmen are absolutely positioned as one of the top factions for this game mode currently. A very flexible faction with many options, you have excellent early game presence in the form of skinks. Your quick-footed infantry chaff will easily contest objectives due to their higher capture weight compared to the expendable chaff infantry other factions might field and will have a much easier time getting to them shortly after the game begins. Particularly any of the skirmishing variety that you vanguard deployed. Speaking of, Chameleon Stalkers/Skinks are still excellent skirmishers and harassers who can dive in and disrupt outlying forces, making objective contesting a painful nuisance for ill-equipped foes. When it comes to holding the line, your Saurus infantry is as durable as ever. When supported by regular skinks, it will take a concentrated effort if not a full hard counter in order to shift your forces off of an objective. This is made even more challenging due to your rather plentiful healing options; Life Slann, Skink Oracles and even Revivification Bastilidons are fantastic for keeping your forces in the fight. Even more so if further supported by any Slann&#039;s Ward save nope-bubble that they can plant down on any objective to thoroughly lock it down. This isn&#039;t even really getting into your single entity beat-sticks; Kroq-Gar can prove the equal of lords such as Be&#039;lakor with the right support and Lord Kroak can still Deliver Itza hard enough to evaporate enemy blobs with frightening ease.&lt;br /&gt;
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At the end of the day, your sheer versatility affords you &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more flexibility in dealing with the highly varied factions you&#039;ll be facing while still being able to focus on defending objectives. Yes, there are still some factions you&#039;ll generally struggle to deal with, but you will at least have a couple tools to handle them while you hold your ground. This is something some of the other factions (like the Dwarfs or Vampire Coast) cannot quite claim.&lt;br /&gt;
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A particular note, if you&#039;re going up against one of the other top-tier factions in this game mode, such as Nurgle or Vampire Counts, bring fire. A Salamander Hunting Pack or two, a Fire Slann and &#039;&#039;maybe&#039;&#039; a Fireleech Bolas Terradon Rider can more efficiently stymie those factions regenerative strengths while further exploiting their innate flammability. A Burning Head or Firestorm will incinerate most of their blobs while dealing moderately little to your armored Saurus lines while Salamanders will also prove quite potent against the larger monsters/chariots supporting them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, be it the Vortex or Mortal Empires, the biggest concern lizardmen have is obtaining a consistent source of income; skinks will only carry you so far in the early game and sacking settlements will only provide a quick short-term boost to your treasury. Your economy generally lacks bonuses, especially compared to other Warhammer 2 factions, though you won&#039;t be as constrained as, say, Wood Elves or Beastmen, and expanding the Geomantic Web and getting upkeep reduction skills will go a long, long way. As such, if you aren&#039;t playing as Hexoatl it is imperative to get the city as soon as possible for its landmark, which reduces upkeep on the lizardmen&#039;s most powerful units. Most other landmark buildings add some bonus to several unit chains, such as additional damage for skinks or more defense for saurus warriors.&lt;br /&gt;
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Lizardmen research is locked behind building completion; many important technologies cannot be accessed until a specific, often mediocre in mid-early game, building is built in one of your settlements. Generally speaking, it is better to unlock research to start improving your weaker units rather than focus on your economy in the early- to mid-game. You simply won&#039;t be generating much revenue from economy buildings until the Geomantic Web is expanded and upkeep is reduced. However, that also means you need to be smart about what buildings to construct in your limited settlements; depending on how much money you have coming in through battles and sacking, it may be worth it to construct something just to unlock research and then destroy it to make room for something you genuinely need.&lt;br /&gt;
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Despite skinks being largely cannon fodder after turn 75, the skink Spawning Pool building should be built in every minor settlement so that you can hire as many Skink Chief heroes as possible. Not only are they the faction assassins, which help lizardmen remove otherwise troublesome heroes that would be difficult to snipe on the battlefield, they can all get stegadon or ancient stegadon mounts. These are functionally equivalent to the generic version but come with extended range and bonuses to damage. It is possible to have two full armies of just Skink Chiefs by the Chaos invasion, if you so wish, and it is even more OP than the standard dinostack. Skink Priests also have access to these mounts, but increasing their recruiting slots is much more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
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Once you start becoming established and have a few provinces under your belt, it is imperative to begin constructing Star Chambers in every province you can afford to do so. Each Star Chamber boosts the starting rank of all newly recruited Slann Mage-Priests by 3 levels and all new heroes by 2. Yes, this stacks all the way up so that you can recruit max level Slann every 10 turns. Each Star Chamber also offers a small but lucrative bonus to all income for the whole Province, which helps to address your stone-age economy and extends enemy sieges by an extra 3 turns, potentially granting you just enough time to save the city should it fall under attack.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Mortal Empires/Vortex===&lt;br /&gt;
With the advent of Immortal Empires in the third game, this will admittedly feel like a lackluster experience compared to it. Having said that, if you feel like sticking to the &amp;quot;OG&amp;quot; experience or don&#039;t quite want to pick up game III yet, here are some tips and tricks. In general, if you&#039;re starting as one of the factions starting on your home turf of Lustria, you&#039;re going to feel quite cramped.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;City of the Sun&#039;&#039;&#039; - Big boss Mazdamundi starts with a couple nice things going for him; As the proud owner of Hexoatl, late game Dino-Doomstacks can become particularly affordable. Additionally, he can expand south relatively freely due to a province&#039;s worth of abandoned settlements ripe for the plundering/taking. Not everything is as bright as his city&#039;s namesake suggests; A permanent -10 diplomatic penalty to all Non-Lizardmen factions can make diplomacy somewhat problematic. This is exacerbated by the fact that Mazda starts directly south of the Dark Elves and has a cluster of aggressive Vampire Coast and lizard-hating Empire colonists barring his access to the rest of Lustria. After you secure your initial holdings, you should weigh your options carefully then commit to eradicating one threat at a time if you can help it. Wiping out Morathi&#039;s Dark Elves is the more challenging prospect; their abundance of Armor Piercing weaponry (melee and ranged) can make early game excursions north particularly brutal. This is made worse by the climate incompatibilities, where growth and replenishment are dramatically hindered. On the other hand, Morathi&#039;s capital city does provide some rather significant bonuses to your research, income and public order (reduction of penalties from corruption). Should you choose to go south, you&#039;ll have a much easier time and will be able to meet up with several other Lizardmen factions you can trade/confederate with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Last Defender&#039;&#039;&#039; - Starting in the ass-crack of the southeast, Kroq-Gar has a bit of a rough start. His only legendary lord neighbor, Tiktaq&#039;to, is still a veritable hike through Vampire/Tomb King infested deserts and Skaven/Ork-filled mountains. You do have two other generic Lizardmen factions nearby, but they often get wiped out within the first 20 turns by either Vampires, Tomb Kings or Malus Darkblade, if you don&#039;t do the job for them. To get to the rest of your Lizard brethren (who actually matter), you&#039;re going to have to carve a path of bloody carnage across the literal length of the map. There are a couple of ways to go about it, however. If you focus your efforts, you can shove off the coast above your capital city and take the Dragon Isles province directly to the north. If you head north quickly, you can snag a veritable batch of handy Legendary Lord traits that&#039;ll turn Kroq-Gar into a particularly potent duelist and secure a number of relatively isolated, defendable provinces before you press westward. If you&#039;d rather focus on pressing west initially... prepare for the long haul. You&#039;ll want to keep a banner army stationed either in Charnel Valley (where Clan Mors starts) or in Devil&#039;s Backbone (where the Court of Lybaras starts) to help defend against Ork or potential Dark Elf incursions.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lllllet&#039;s get ready to RUMBLE!&#039;&#039;&#039; - Brace yourself, you&#039;re deep in the Lustria-Bowl. Tehenhauin has the roughest start of all your lords, even including Horde-faction Nakai; though he has one potential ally to his immediate south, he has Vampire Coast, Dark Elves, Skaven and expansionist Empire folk surrounding him on all sides. Worse, you&#039;re effectively stuck with Skinks for infantry until you can make progress on your Skaven genocide quest. To this end, you&#039;re going to want to either focus on pumping out a flood of Skinks or focus on building your Beast Lairs to try to pump out some monstrous units to compensate for your lack of early-game muscle. Taking out the Vampire Coast first is strongly recommended, as not only do they spread vampiric corruption, but all of their settlements will provide you with valuable ports. From there, you can put the screws to the Dark Elves and Skaven to the south and claim some valuable land and sacrifices for Sotek.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tiktaq&#039;to====&lt;br /&gt;
* Perhaps the most... bland campaign, Tiktaq&#039;to just kind of exists in the middle of the Southlands, caught between some Tomb Kings, a random Empire faction and a fair few crusading Bretonnians. If you want, you can focus on allying with the Tomb Kings initially. They can provide a reasonable source of Trade income and provide a buffer against the burgeoning Greenskin-tide while you clean up the Bretonnians and Empire. Additionally, if you focus on sweeping east, you can get a solid point of entry into Lustria.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Gor-Rok==== &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The world is your Itza&#039;&#039;&#039; - Despite being solidly in the Lustria-Bowl and being a Saurus-dedicated, exclusive footlord, Gor-Rok is basically guaranteed supremecy due to beginning the game with Lord Kroak &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; starting with Itza as his capitol. Tehenhauin will often end up confederating with you pretty early and without much fuss due to the various Lustria-Bowl contenders beating the piss out of him. You&#039;ll likely want to focus your initial expansion down south to clear out the Skaven and secure the various resources found on the southeast coastline before pushing north to clear out the Vampires. Once you control the majority of Lustria, you effectively have free reign to set your sights anywhere you feel like conquering.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Nakai====&lt;br /&gt;
* Formerly the most wayward of the Children of the Old Ones, Nakai&#039;s start in Albion effectively tries to throw you against the forces of Norsca for a majority of your early-mid game. After some research, he&#039;s admittedly geared for it; natural Snow and Chaos Attrition immunity courtesy of your unique tech tree grants Nakai a lot more flexibility for engaging the northern Chaos factions and despite not controlling any of the settlements he captures, the Defenders of the Great Plan generate a &#039;&#039;ton&#039;&#039; of Untainted corruption. Though this won&#039;t really benefit you personally much, your allies (or fellow players on Co-Op campaigns) will find traversing the north considerably less threatening. Having said that, due to being a Horde faction, you&#039;re perfectly free to just abandon Albion entirely and find new stomping grounds to start your Campaign in.&lt;br /&gt;
In immortal empires he&#039;s even more lost starting in fucking cathay. But he does get a proper stegadon as a starting unit so that&#039;s a big bonus&lt;br /&gt;
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====Oxyotl====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Deep in enemy territory&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Nakai and &#039;&#039;potentially&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, Oxyotl has the most unique (and arguably best) Campaign. His initial start is a bit rough, being awkwardly sandwiched in the far north between the rapidly confederating Dark Elves to the west and the pugnacious Norscans to the east. Though his universal climate habitability is a (necessary) godsend, he&#039;ll find it somewhat difficult to defend and expand his home territory. If you can, try to focus down the Dark Elves once you secure your home province. Oxyotl&#039;s particular playstyle actually counters Dark Elves to a degree and if you can nip Malekith in the bud before he confederates the rest of his misbegotten kind, you can spare yourself a late-game headache and get a hell of an infrastructure set up with all the unique building chains found in Naggarond. Just make sure you keep a couple standing armies in the region for the Chaos Invasion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t neglect your missions&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is because, unless you want to get constant debuffs, buff random enemy armies into the stratosphere or cause the Chaos Invasion to happen way ahead of schedule, Oxyotl&#039;s army is going to be consistently busy warping around the map doing missions rather than naturally expanding your home territory. He can warp back to the capitol and any one Silent Sanctum of your choosing freely (which you can establish in any settlement you&#039;ve laid eyes upon at least once), but only once per turn and he does not regain any of the movement/actions spent prior to the warp. However, many of the missions Oxyotl needs to undertake often involves him razing or capturing enemy settlements, so you&#039;ll often find yourself with various holdouts sprinkled across the map. Just make sure that you get a banner army or two to defend your capitol if you can help it; things get &#039;&#039;extremely&#039;&#039; messy once the Chaos Invasion starts.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Your Silent Sanctums&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your other unique mechanic is a game-changer for the Lizardmen. Functionally, they&#039;re similar to Skaven Undercities; you can construct unique buildings to benefit any of your forces within the Region it was established, as well as any other regions neighboring it. This can include granting your forces permanent vision on everything within those regions, a flat 20% upkeep reduction for all of your forces within the area or even a random chance to deal damage to enemy forces happening by. Whenever you amass 8 gems, you can construct a Silent Sanctum in any settlement any of your characters have personally seen. One key function truly unique to Oxyotl is that you can actually construct a building that allows Oxyotl&#039;s army to teleport there at will. You can literally teleport a full Stegadon doomstack right next to an enemy faction&#039;s capitol city if you so desire. Suffice to say, Silent Sanctums are extremely useful and worth investing in.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Take Albion!&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you can afford the excursion, send Oxyotl or a generic banner army south to Albion and claim it. Several unique buildings in Konquata provide rather substantial financial boons and, especially when coupled with a specially kitted out Silent Sanctum, can serve as a rapid recruitment center for your efforts in the Old World. You&#039;re the only Lizardmen faction within a reasonable distance who can actually make use of these unique buildings and an early capture can prove to be a rather profitable investment for your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Immortal Empires===&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s here, the biggest Total War map to date, spanning effectively the entire Old World and then some (only a few less than fleshed out regions such as Nippon are excluded). The Lustriabowl has for the most part calmed down, a majority of the non-lizardmen factions have set sail for greener pastures and with the inclusion of the entire southern half of the continent, what factions that remain now have some breathing room. Having said that, this season, it&#039;s time for the Southlands Thunderdome to kick off! While Gor-Rok and Tehenhauin can breathe a sigh of relief, Kroq-Gar and Tiktaq&#039;to are now sandwiched in with factions from damn near every walk of (un)life; Vampire Counts, Tomb Kings, Daemons of Khorne and Tzeentch, Dwarfs, Orks, Skaven, High Elves, Empire, Bretonnians, the list goes ON.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re playing as Gor-Rok, Tehenhauin or even Mazdamundi, don&#039;t get too comfortable in Lustria however. Dark Elves in the form of Rakarth have set up shop on the western coast of Lustria, Clan Pestilins has borderline free reign of the south-eastern coastline, Markus Wulfhart continues his colonial ways in northern Lustria alongside his new-found Bretonnian buddy Alberic. The Vampire Coast is, in fact, still infested with the Vampire Coast and a few rogue factions of daemons muck about in central Lustria. Though it won&#039;t be &#039;&#039;quite&#039;&#039; as chaotic as before, given the extra breathing room, you&#039;ll still need to remain vigilant if you want to kick all the warm-bloods out of your homeland.&lt;br /&gt;
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One notable change is the Rite of Awakening; it no longer costs any gold to use, so once you unlock it, there&#039;s &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; reason to not immediately use it to spawn in a Slann for your recruitment pool. Enact that shit every single time it pops off cooldown.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scar-Veteran Doomstack Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;: Kroq-Gar probably got the biggest buff/change transitioning from Mortal Empires to Immortal Empires among lizardmen. The first notable perk is that his faction has been &#039;&#039;heavily&#039;&#039; re-tooled to focus on Saurus; specifically Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans. Faction wide, Saurus Spawning pools now grant additional perks beyond the ability to recruit Saurus units and, at 4th tier, will grant an additional +2 recruit rank for Scar-Veterans. This stacks with both the Humble trait and Star Chambers (which now, unfortunately, can only be constructed in province capitals), letting you &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; quickly start cranking out high-ranking Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs. If that weren&#039;t enough, all Scar-Veterans and Old-Bloods gain a 30% boost to experience gain and get an extra 1% Weapon Strength per rank they have (capping out at a [[/d/|+50% weapon strength buff at max level]]). The Last Defenders did lose their universal -10% upkeep discounts, but it&#039;s slightly made up for since Old-Bloods gain a -15% Upkeep reduction for their banner armies, encouraging you to run them as Lords for your more expensive doomstacks. Though by no means should you forsake taking a Slann here and there.&lt;br /&gt;
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:Kroq-Gar himself downgraded some of his personal buffs, comparatively. Gone are the leadership and armor buffs for Stegadons, Bastiladons, Terradons and Carnosaurs. Instead, Saurus and Cold-One Riders gain a 25% experience gain buff and his former -50% upkeep reduction for Saurus and Cold One units has simply dropped down to the fairly standard -15% universal upkeep reduction all his Old-Blood units get. Much more versatile than before, though.&lt;br /&gt;
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:Speaking of the scaly lizard, he starts on the eastern coast of the Southlands, smack dab above Teclis (for now). Teclis makes for a decent defensive ally if you so wish and a valuable buffer against the southern Chaos forces such as Kairos. Almost invariably, you&#039;re going to be forced upwards in your wars; smaller Skaven infest the Kingdom of Beasts province and Khalida is often prone to declaring war against you once you work your way north. Immediately following Khalida, you&#039;ll likely draw the ire of Clan Mors and be drawn straight into the Karak Eight-Peaks race, oddly enough.&lt;br /&gt;
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:Should you sail northeast, you can evict Ku&#039;gath from the Dragon Isles for a nice footstep into southern Grand Cathay and the Darklands. Anyone who&#039;s played enough of Mortal Empires might be so inspired for a fresh change of scenery.&lt;br /&gt;
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:Heading directly west to meet up with your lizard brethren is also far more tenable, now that you don&#039;t need to fight your way through an entire desert&#039;s worth of Tomb Kings. You&#039;ll still need to secure your starting province, but as the Golden Tower now stands as a convenient mountain pass, you can meet and greet Tiktaq&#039;to extremely early in the campaign. His starting region offers a nice launching point into your ancestral home, where you can ideally encounter Tehenhauin clinging to life on the bottom cape of Lustria. Should you wish to actually expand there for all the unique buildings and legendary lords ripe for confederation, you&#039;ll need to make sure you don&#039;t neglect your Southlands homelands.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039; - Probably the biggest change from TWWH2 is the expansion of Lustria and the separation of North and South &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;America&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Lustria. Warhammer Mexico has been tweaked a little bit, with Skeggi and the coast being their own province. Skeggi is more challenging now since they can spam Marauder Champions, meaning you&#039;ll be tied up with them a bit more than before.&lt;br /&gt;
**Cylostra is now further north, next to Alith Anar, but you&#039;ll still have to deal with Rakarth, Wulfhart, Bordelaux, and of course, the Awakened. Most of these guys, and especially Rakarth, are packing lots of anti-Large, so you&#039;ll want to plan your armies ahead: Carnosaurs and Temple Guard can deal with Rakarth, but you&#039;ll want some artillery to deal with Wulfhart.&lt;br /&gt;
**North of Hexoatl is still the same clusterfuck, and you&#039;ll want to appease the Sisters of Twilight so that you&#039;re not dealing with a war on two fronts; their AI is stupidly annoying, and they will break non-aggression pacts with you if your relations hover even slightly above neutral. This anon recommends trading any settlements that you capture from Morathi to them in exchange for a fee, which can net you 7-8k in gold and some goodwill. Any settlement north of the Fallen Gates is useless to you anyway, and because Wood Elves have terrible settlement defense, as soon as Morathi takes them back, you can do it all over again and farm gold, allegiance, and positive relations.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
The Cult of Sotek got a minor buff with the reworking of their sacrificial pyramid. Regiments of Renown now unlock normally, while sacrifices can be spent to acquire powerful Blessed units. In addition, the updated character UI makes swapping Tehenhauin&#039;s unique banners and ancillaries very convenient and a little more useful.&lt;br /&gt;
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Tehenhauin starts in the southwest corner of Lustria and will need to move fast to prevent Rakarth and Lord Skrolk from getting too established. Generally, Skrolk will expand further and faster, taking most of southern Lustria from the minor faction to your east. Rakarth will have few targets for expansion and will declare war on you fairly early, whereas Skrolk will ignore you until he completes his conquest. However, Skrolk is likely to be easier to defeat early on and taking his territories will give Tehenhauin some safe territory to develop since Gor-Rok will be to your north and there&#039;s little to no chance the AI will cross the ocean from the Southlands. Then you can build up the resources you need to defeat Rakarth armies of darkshards and spearmen, which are far more difficult for Tehenhauin&#039;s early-game armies to deal with. Humble heroes and skink chiefs on stegadons can be very useful at that point.&lt;br /&gt;
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Once these two threats are dealt with, it&#039;s up to you whether you&#039;ll finish off the remaining minor factions in Lustria (Spine of Sotek Dwarfs, Tower of Dusk, Bordeleaux Errants, Luthor Harkon) or ally with them to get some unit variety. If you head north, Markus Wulfhart still can&#039;t be negotiated with and you&#039;ll have to destroy him if you want to reach Hexoatl. You may find it more interesting to head east and reach &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;the Southlands&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Mordor, where Tiktaqto and Kroq-gar should be clinging to life as the Vermintide bears down on them. But be wary; heading to the Southlands means you&#039;ll likely meet Kairos and will need to deal with Changing of the Ways if you don&#039;t finish him off. Luckily, his defeat trait is useful for Tehenhauin.&lt;br /&gt;
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Alternatively, using the new sea lanes will bring you to Grand Cathay and Nakai the Wanderer. Most of the territory available will be yellow, whereas Lustrian and Southlands territories are green, but the areas of Cathay you can conquer/confederate will be almost completely secure from future attack as long as you maintain good relations with Zhao Ming and Meow Ying. Nakai tends to be fairly easy to confederate once you&#039;ve gotten 3 or more armies, and while he&#039;s not a stellar legendary lord he is one of the best fighters available to the lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
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Tehenhauin can meet Oxyotl very early in the campaign, however all of Oxyotl&#039;s territory will be red. It&#039;s probably better to leave him independent rather than confederate him, as the AI cheats will allow him to defeat all the Chaos factions in the Southern Chaos Wastes far more easily than the player can, and none of that territory is worth anything to the Cult of Sotek. Of course, this could all be a moot point considering how hard it is to confederate Lizardmen in general.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen&amp;diff=505149</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Lizardmen</title>
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		<updated>2023-06-18T20:48:47Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Pros */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Sar Sotek!|Game battle chant for Lizardmen}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactics page for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why play Lizardmen==&lt;br /&gt;
*You love the parts of Jurassic Park where the dinosaurs eat everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
*They&#039;re [[awesome|aztec dinosaurs riding dinosaurs]] into battle. Some of those dinosaurs also have magical lasers strapped to them.&lt;br /&gt;
*You want to be a master of the arcane, but you don&#039;t want to wear [[High Elves|foppish headgear]] or have a racial lifespan only in the [[The Empire (Warhammer Fantasy)|double digits]].&lt;br /&gt;
*You&#039;ll have a nearly fearless army that&#039;s more likely to fight to the death before they turn tail and run.&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMwpC70di2w Do you want to see what one of these does to your enemies?]&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;A Multitude of Monsters&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Lizardmen have the largest diversity of massive monsters in the game at their disposal. Between the various Bastilidons, Stegadons and Carnosaurs you can field, you won&#039;t be wanting for big beasties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Intimidating Presence&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unsurprisingly, the average man will struggle to keep calm and collected when facing down a stampede of hungry carnivorous dinosaurs many times his size. Virtually every monster and cavalry unit in this army inspires fear and terror in the mortal hearts of men; a few well timed Carnosaur charges can break and rout forces not outright immune to psychology. Conversely, this also renders your monsters immune to fear/terror effects as well.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Resilient Frontline&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus Warriors, even unshielded, are among the most durable baseline infantry units in the game. Though their damage output is rather low, their good armor and leadership will ensure they&#039;ll hold the line. Most non-AP grindfests will tend to work out in your favor on virtue of that alone. Of course this isn&#039;t even mentioning how tanky higher tier units like the Temple Guard or Kroxigors are.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mastery of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039; - With the notable exception of High Elves, Lizardmen have reliable access to more schools of magic than any other race. Slann and the mighty Lord Kroak offer not only some of the most reliable casting in the game, but have consistent access to the otherwise elusive Greater Arcane Conduit skill. Your skink priests are no push overs in magical matters either and are very cost effective options for when slann [[heresy|just aren&#039;t your thing]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexible Artillery&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where most other factions have to slowly wheel siege engines into place and are vulnerable to attacks in melee, Lizardmen give no fucks. Due to their Solar Engines and Ballistae being strapped on the backs of mighty Bastilidons/Stegadons, they can easily reposition themselves and hold their own in melee combat. Additionally, were the actual artillery models of other races can actually be destroyed, the Ballistae and Solar Engines will remain fully intact so long as the creature bearing it remains standing.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cavalcade of Cavalry&#039;&#039;&#039; - Cold Ones, Horned Ones, Terradons and Ripperdactyls, oh my! Though not as fast or as effective as some other faction&#039;s cavalry, you have a very diverse selection of fast-moving dinosaurs that can outflank enemies and flexibly adapt to the variety of terrain you may find yourself in. Just don&#039;t expect your cav to top any particular charts when compared against any faction that specializes in them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - As your army consists heavily of predatory animals that excel at sniffing out prey, your enemies will be hard pressed to remain hidden from them. Enemies that rely on stealthy abilities like Stalk are revealed to you far more quickly than others, giving you far more time to react to (in battle) ambushes than other factions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of the weapons wielded by your Skinks are poisonous, inhibiting the mobility/combat performance of enemies afflicted by their noxious attacks. Despite poison no longer dealing constant damage like on the tabletop, their debuffs are still useful for weakening the enemy for your frontline troops. Thank to the recent update that removes any form of poison debuffs that can apply to the player units through friendly fire, Skink&#039;s poison darts are even better.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Aplenty&#039;&#039;&#039; - You are tied with the Skaven for the honor of having the most DLC. You also have two FLC lords on top of all this, so between a grand total of 7 legendary lords and three DLC lord packs, you are the most supported main game faction in Total War: Warhammer II.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessings of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Many of your units have &amp;quot;Blessed&amp;quot; variants available in casual multiplayer matches or the campaign. Blessed units are effectively pseudo-Regiments of Renown and every single one is given a buffed health pool and, where applicable, an increased model count per unit. Additionally, many of these blessed units receive additional passive abilities or upgraded stats to further their combat potential. What&#039;s better is, unlike Regiments of Renown, you can technically have as many blessed units as you want. The only downside (admittedly a big one) is that in order to acquire blessed units in the campaign, you must complete randomly generated quests that issue a set quantity of a random blessed unit upon completion. If you want an army of blessed Carnosaurs, you&#039;re going to have to earn it. This is a complete non-issue in causal multiplayer matches, where blessed units are freely available for a very minor upcharge in cost compared to regular variants. Blessed units are unavailable in competitive games.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slow&#039;&#039;&#039; - A majority of the Lizardmen list, namely Saurus infantry, take their sweet time to cross the field. Though there are exceptions to this, such as the various cavalry and skink units available to you, this particular weakness is exacerbated by...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vulnerable to Range&#039;&#039;&#039; - ...their dearth of viable missile units. The only ranged infantry available to you are Skinks; particularly squishy infantry that, though nimble, have pitiful range and DPS against anything shielded and/or armored. Your more potent offensive options, namely Salamanders or Stegadons/Bastilodons, cannot fire while moving and are rather easy to tie down in melee. Defensively, though your Saurus are quite tanky and often come with shields, they are very vulnerable to being kited by ranged cavalry/infantry due to their rather slow movement speed. Additionally, all your units save for Gor-Rok are stuck with Bronze Shields (35% block chance), meaning that even when they&#039;re in a position to use them, you&#039;ll still be soaking a significant portion of the incoming shots all the same. The same can also be said about most of your monsters, with some minor exceptions.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Generic Character Usefulness&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a big one. Other than your magic characters (i.e. Slann and Skink Oracles which are pretty much good because they have magic), your other generic lords/heroes just don&#039;t stack up. When you compare them to the other factions&#039; characters, they fall short in their respective roles, whether that&#039;s melee prowess, support utility, campaign map usefulness, you name it. Best to rely on your monstrous units and magic to fulfill their roles!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sub-par Air-Force&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though you have fliers, a luxury many other factions lack, they&#039;re among the weakest/slowest of them. Terradons, Ripperdactyls, and Coatls aren&#039;t &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039;, per se, but they will lose if faced with the flying cavalry/monsters in their weight class from the likes of Bretonnia or High/Wood Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive Roster&#039;&#039;&#039; - As you can imagine, breeding and training massive dinosaurs and mounting arcane instruments of war onto them isn&#039;t cheap. All of your high tier units can get crazy expensive both in initial cost and upkeep. Even the bog standard Saurus Warriors come at a premium compared to some other factions options, though this is only particularly notable in competitive multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rampage&#039;&#039;&#039; - This was a much bigger problem in Game 2, where pretty much everything except for Skinks and Slaan would lose control and mindlessly charge the closest thing they could see. Game 3 has more or less restricted this issue to your feral monsters, letting your infantry keep their cool and do their jobs. That said, it&#039;s still a problem if your Carnosaur suddenly bolts into that nearby unit of halberds while your lords/heroes are otherwise occupied.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bland Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Oxyotl and &#039;&#039;possibly&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, the Lizardmen have the most boring campaign mechanics of any of the game II races (including some of the game I ones). Their unique mechanic, the Geomantic Web, is a very passive and basic provincial buff that takes a lot of resources and time to properly build up to a level you&#039;ll actually notice the effects of and offer no benefit to provinces you don&#039;t &#039;&#039;completely&#039;&#039; control. Yes, losing that one minor settlement causes the provincial capital to shut off its Geomantic Pylon until you reclaim it. Additionally, without mod support, Lizardmen are among the most stubborn and oppositional to confederation. Fortunately, though it isn&#039;t a top priority for them, CA is aware that Lizardmen need their campaign mechanics updated to bring them up to modern standards. Hopefully that update comes soon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC Locked Content&#039;&#039;&#039; - Though a con for virtually every other faction in the game, this is a particularly notable one for Lizardmen. Many, if not most of the Lizardmen&#039;s better units are locked behind DLC lord packs. You&#039;ll need the Prophet and the Warlock for all units marked with DLC 1, the Hunter and the Beast for everything marked with DLC 2 and the Silence and the Fury for everything marked DLC 3.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
There are a couple of perks and abilities shared across a significant portion of the lizardmen unit roster, which will be mentioned here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Primal Instincts&#039;&#039;&#039; - A perk found on a majority of the lizardman roster (exempting lords/heroes and skinks), primal instincts will cause a unit with this ability to rampage out of control should their health drop to 20% or less. This can be a bit of a mixed blessing, as the rampaging unit will receive a +15% Charge Bonus and a +8 Melee Attack bonus and continue to fight nearby opponents in situations that any other unit would turn tail and rout. The bad news is that your opponent has more control over the rampaging unit than you do; rampaging units will single-mindedly charge at the nearest enemy unit, which your opponent can take to his advantage by using faster infantry/cavalry to kite the rampaging unit while his ranged infantry/artillery finishes it off. Of course, this is also factoring in that by the time these bonuses kick in, your Saurus unit or Carnosaur is typically on its last legs and won&#039;t last much longer anyways. Should the rampage end &#039;&#039;before&#039;&#039; the unit dies, they&#039;ll usually begin to rout from the field and will often be too far out of position for you to properly recover them.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; buffs Primal Instincts for Saurus Units; no longer causing rampage (thank god) while triggering much sooner (Triggering at 50% health as opposed to TWWII&#039;s 20%). When active, it gives Saurus units a +15% Charge Bonus, +10 Melee Attack and +5% Physical Resist buffs that remain active indefinitely so long as the Primal Instinct threshold has been crossed. This applies even to Saurus cavalry and since you can actually &#039;&#039;control&#039;&#039; them when Primal Instincts pops now, you can be far more surgical when taking advantage of these buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold Blooded&#039;&#039;&#039; - A targetable ability found on most lizardmen lords and heroes, Cold Blooded helps to counter the innate weakness in the lizardmen faction; their tendency to rampage. When used, Cold Blooded will snap a single unit out of a rampage (if they are currently doing so) and will temporarily buff their leadership. This ability can be used pre/post rampage as well, as the leadership buff can potentially prevent a rampage from occurring or can help prevent a tattered unit from routing once their rampage expires. As this ability has a somewhat lengthy cooldown an is only found on lords/heroes, care should be taken on when it is used and what it is used on. It can also be used on units that were forced to rampage by an ability or spell from enemy units, providing a unique bit of counterplay against such tactics that other factions lack.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Predatory Senses&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all non-Slann/Skink units in your roster, this allows your units to detect hidden or stealthed units far sooner and from farther away than other armies (around 160 meters). This also disregards any faction/unit/terrain modifiers that enhance stealth, with the only exception being the &#039;&#039;Unspottable&#039;&#039; trait. With proper coverage, this can make ambushing or outflanking your forces extremely challenging to do discreetly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Aquatic&#039;&#039;&#039; - An ability found on all Skink infantry, Kroxigors (though their stat card doesn&#039;t mention the trait, they still receive the Aquatic bonus) and your Salamander/Razordon hunting packs, this not only allows them to ignore the usual penalties for fighting in water-logged environments, but gives them a 20% bonus to melee attack/defense when they do so. Considering non-aquatic infantry suffers a 20% malus to those stats when slogging around in the water, this can become a rather substantial combat buff for a significant portion of your roster (keep your Saurus dry). Potentially losing matchups will suddenly swing into your favor and that&#039;s not even factoring in your abundant poisoned weaponry and robust catalog of supportive magics to widen that gap further. As amazing as all that sounds... marsh and shallow water environments are rather few and far in between. Additionally, for the maps that &#039;&#039;do&#039;&#039; have swamped areas, coercing your opponent to willingly splash around with you is a battle all its own, one you&#039;re not likely to succeed in without careful planning.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Quick Learners&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another Skink-exclusive ability, this greatly increases the rate that your Skinks gain ranks. This helps distinguish skinks against comparable chaff infantry since they&#039;ll benefit from rank-boosted stats much more quickly and, as such, makes them surprisingly effective early-mid game infantry. This perk also applies to units such as Terradon Riders due to having Skink Riders.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Campaign Mechanics==&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Geomantic Web&#039;&#039;&#039;: Pretty much the only unique thing every Lizardmen faction (except Nakai) has, and it&#039;s a bit lackluster. Lizardmen have access to a special view of the global map that displays the Geomantic Web, with every region capital acting as a nexus point. Once you control an entire region, you can build up Geomantic Pylons in order to strengthen the Geomantic Web, which in turn offers gradually stronger perks (like an increasing percentage to building income, higher ranked recruitment, etc) the more you increase it. At the beginning of the game, these bonuses are quite small, but as you expand and enhance the Geomantic Web over the course of the campaign, these benefits can make a genuine impact on your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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There are a few problems with this mechanic, however. The first major one is that you receive &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; bonuses if you don&#039;t control the entire region. Obviously, this isn&#039;t a problem when you&#039;re surrounded by factions you were planning on killing off, but this becomes complicated if an ally suddenly captures that last settlement in a region before you could. If it was another Lizardmen faction, you could maybe play the long game and eventually confederate them, but otherwise you&#039;d be forced to attack them in order to claim the region so that you can actually activate the Geomantic Web benefits. Warhammer III and mods have offered ways to purchase or trade settlements, but in many cases the AI tends to value each settlement they own far more than anything else you could offer them. This often leads to lengthy wars against what could&#039;ve otherwise been a valuable trading partner and buffer against foreign elements that you&#039;d otherwise have to deal with yourself. The second major problem with the Geomantic Web is that even if you build up a regional capitol to tier V and build the appropriate pylon, it does &#039;&#039;nothing&#039;&#039; without an adjacent region &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; having a tier V capitol and pylon. That&#039;s right, the strength of the Geomantic Web is reliant on multiple regions being entirely under your control and also having them fully built up. This can be a time and gold consuming process that forces the Lizardmen player to take it slow; Lizardmen economy tends to be on the low side of the spectrum, made worse by their fairly expensive unit roster and lengthy build/research timeframes. And of course, if an enemy army rolls in and claims one of your minor settlements, the Geomantic Web benefits for that entire region are shut off entirely, further stemming your growth rates. The third issue with the Geomantic Web; it&#039;s a very basic and uninteractive mechanic. Aside the baked in map-painter that is the (Im)Mortal Empires campaign, there&#039;s not much incentive or direction to build up the Geomantic Web besides using it to squeeze every last bit of gold or growth you can to boost your dismal economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Rites&#039;&#039;&#039;: Much like most of the Warhammer II races, Lizardmen have access to special rites that, generally, grant them temporary buffs for the cost of some gold. While every faction has one or two unique rites, every Lizardmen faction has access to and must perform the &#039;&#039;Rite of Awakening&#039;&#039; in order to recruit new Slann lords. Fluffy.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacrifices to Sotek (Tehenhauin)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tehenhauin&#039;s unique focus, in addition to the Geomantic Web, is his crusade against all of Skaven kind. By gathering captives from battles, you can sacrifice them to Sotek to gain empire-wide boosts to growth or to recruit the Blessed variants of the Lizardmen roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Dedication to the Old Ones (Nakai)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Nakai&#039;s main mechanic as a Horde faction. By capturing settlements and dedicating them to one of three Old Ones, Nakai can unlock faction-wide buffs to his hordes. He can also spend the accumulated Favor of the Old Ones to recruit Blessed Units or activate temporary buffs or bonuses for use in battle.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Visions of the Old Ones (Oxyotl)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Oxyotl&#039;s special perk, Oxyotl can teleport across the entire Warhammer Fantasy world to specific targets once per turn in order to accomplish an issued mission for rewards. By completing these missions, he can be given several rewards (such as Blessed Spawnings, increased favor from fellow Lizardmen factions or temporary buffs for certain units), but the most prominent and consistent reward are special gems used to purchase Silent Sanctums. Silent Sanctums act much like Skaven Undercities in that they are built under any settlement across the map. Doing so gives Oxyotl vision of the province that settlement is located in (and can be upgraded to give him vision of all adjacent provinces as well) as well as two building slots that can give him anything from upkeep reduction to increased ammunition and missile damage. Additionally, one such sanctum can be upgraded to act as a teleport node, allowing Oxyotl&#039;s army to warp to that Silent Sanctum at any time (much like Oxyotl&#039;s capitol).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
The scaly faces of the Lizardmen. With the exception of the Slann Mage-Priest, which outperforms even most Legendary Lords, the Lizardmen aren&#039;t exactly a character-centric faction. Their LL&#039;s are very pointy. Most of them are great on the battlefield (with either melee or magic prowess), but their army buffs vary in usefulness and their factionwide buffs are nearly non-existant, with only a couple lords like Kroq-Gar providing any whatsoever. It&#039;s very difficult to justify taking even Legendary Lords (let alone your generic lords, which are frankly terrible) over any flavor of slann mage-priest due to the sheer versatility the latter bring to your army, especially since you are not hurting for giant, single entity beatsticks to ram into enemy formations. Slaan benefit from star chambers in campaign, other don&#039;t, no contest, only use slaan if stacking chambers (which you really should).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mazdamundi&#039;&#039;&#039; - The last second generation Slann (lore-wise), Mazdamundi uses magic primarily from the Lore of Light to act as a hybrid support/offensive caster. The two main selling points of Mazdamundi over a generic Slann Mage-Priest are his stegadon mount Zlaaq and his signature spell &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;. Zlaaq allows Mazdamundi to actually engage in melee, something no other Slann can safely do, and makes him substantially more durable against most forms of attack. &#039;&#039;Ruination of Cities&#039;&#039;, especially when combined with &#039;&#039;Banishment&#039;&#039;, makes Mazdamundi an excellent AoE caster capable of tearing infantry focused armies to shreds with ease without chewing through your Winds of Magic reserve. These spells are limited however, being bounded spells, so make sure you wait until the right moment to utilize them. Additionally, don&#039;t put too much faith in them; as their movement patterns are random, these spells (particularly Ruination of Cities) can just as easily do nothing or even devastate your own forces as they can your enemies if you aren&#039;t careful.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; brings a few buffs to his toolkit; the barrier mechanic normally reserved for Tzeentch armies is now also granted to all Slann as well, helping mitigate the first few attacks against him. Additionally, to better represent the almighty toad&#039;s arcane prowess, Mazdamundi receives a 50% increase in range to all spells he casts. This turns him into a sort of magical artillery engine, as he&#039;ll have virtually no issues slapping that Banishment or Comet of Cassandora cast pretty much wherever he damn well pleases.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroq-Gar&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your dedicated duelist, Kroq-Gar is an offensive powerhouse that shines when seated atop Grimloq, his faithful Carnosaur mount. Though expensive, Kroq-Gar/Grimloq can engage virtually any enemy type in the game effectively and is able to duel against many enemy lords and come out on top. Though a monstrous force on his own merits, Kroq-Gar is something of a glass cannon however and as a larger target is prone to getting mobbed by multiple units or getting focused down by ranged infantry/artillery. Another notable shortcoming is that he provides limited support for the rest of your army (a bit of a problem for all Saurus Oldbloods), and as such is not recommended for dino-heavy army builds, his bonuses to armor and leadership being less important than the healing abilities of Life Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tehenhauin (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only Skink-Priest lord choice, Tehenhauin is something of a niche pick. He can deal solid enough damage against footlords/cavalry lords in a fight (particularly if on a Ripperdactyl) and is also capable of dealing notable damage to swarms of infantry (with his Lore of Beasts and/or with his Engine of the Gods), but he&#039;s extremely frail for a Lizardmen lord when unmounted. Never get the Fanatic skill in his skill tree; it only benefits skink units and they are pretty trash after the mid-game.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tiktaq&#039;to (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another somewhat niche pick, Tiktaq&#039;to is a dedicated flier who excels in lists built with Terradons, Ripperdactyls and Coatls as the focus. Though mounted on Zwuup, Tiktaq&#039;to is your squishiest (legendary) lord and lacks the support/damage options available to the others, but he&#039;s inarguably the swiftest of the bunch (which doesn&#039;t mean much compared to other flying lords and heroes). Under no circumstances is he a direct combat lord; against any duelist or large/monstrous lord he will lose handily. The only targets he can safely engage are dedicated casters, artillery and dedicated ranged infantry. Because of this, playing him requires far more finesse than what is required for virtually every other lord; even against targets he &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; engage effectively, prolonged combat will invariably whittle him down and may the Old Ones help you if he&#039;s surrounded while grounded. Keep a squad or two of Ripperdactyls close by to make up the difference in combat ability and to take advantage of Tiktaq&#039;to&#039;s buffs. Also, his unique Epic weapon doesn&#039;t work if he is attacking a ground target in melee because its attack bonuses are only in effect when flying, so he&#039;s weaker than a Skink Terradon Rider when attacking ground targets UNLESS you swap out his weapon. When used in campaign, much of his value comes from his rather insane and stackable upkeep discount for flier units. Even on higher difficulties, it is extraordinarily easy to stack enough upkeep cost reductions to have a full Coatl doomstack damn near for free (until the Supply Lines penalties become particularly swollen, at least). Additionally, his unique rite gives all of his armies the ability to easily chase down fleeing armies or attack multiple settlements a turn which can be &#039;&#039;devastating&#039;&#039; to an enemy faction if used at the right moment.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nakai (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The largest and oldest of the Kroxigor Ancients, Nakai is an infantry mulcher who (thanks to his enthusiastic animations) will literally sweep his way through the thickest blobs of infantry. Nakai possesses a few notable traits over his competitors; his ability to grant perfect vigour to nearby allies ensures they&#039;re in peak form throughout the entire battle while his Miasma of Dispair can cripple enemies within his presence; a potentially nasty combo that can ensure your forces slowly but steadily chew through enemy frontlines. Unfortunately, Nakai has a few major weaknesses: As a large entity, he&#039;s vulnerable to anti-large weaponry (which does abound among baseline infantry) and is an easy, defenseless target for ranged units to snipe. He also struggles to properly duel opposing heroes/lords due to his size and janky animations making him lunge about haphazardly while they continue to poke him to death. Because of this, he tends to work best as a force multiplier for infantry builds.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gor-Rok (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where Kroq-Gar is the spear, Gor-Rok stands as the shield. Gor-Rok is a dedicated footlord, among the slowest of them, but makes up for it through sheer, unbreaking resilience. As the only unit in the entire Lizardmen roster with a silver shield (55% missile block chance), Gor-Rok is able to shoulder his way through the kind of firepower that would fell a lesser Old-Blood on the approach. Gor-Rok can also stand neck-deep among hordes of angry infantry and walk out seemingly unscathed. When equipped with the &#039;&#039;Mace of Ulumak&#039;&#039;, Gor-Rok can also prove a competent duelist in his own right, even if it&#039;s only in temporary bursts. Gor-Rok does falter against mounted/monstrous heroes/lords and is vulnerable to duelists with good AP values, though the Twisted and the Twilight patch has helped address the issue of him being staggered to hell and back. Never the less, Gor-Rok is a relatively cost effective legendary lord who can and will hold the line until the bitter end. His campaign starts with Lord Kroak fully unlocked and active, which makes his campaign among the easiest in the entire game, even on higher difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
**Gor-Rok&#039;s rite will be changed in Immortal Empires, giving his units Barrier and immunity to certain debuffs, like Poison. Unlike Tzeentch, his version of barrier probably won&#039;t be as game-breaking because of how slow Saurus and that they do their best stuck-in.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Oxyotl (DLC 3) &#039;&#039;&#039; - The legendary daemon-slaying chameleon skink of Oyxl is the last legendary lord for the faction (at least for TWW2). As to be expected from any shape or form of a Chameleon Skink, Oxyotl is a rather cheap, stealthy character hunter who behaves somewhat like a Wood Elf Waystalker. Unlike Waystalkers, Oxyotl has a particularly nasty trick in the form of Master Predator; a toggle-able skill that reduces his movement speed in exchange for an increase in range, Snipe and the ability to remain undetectable unless the enemy gets extremely close to his position. Combined with his modestly powerful armor piercing missiles, this can quickly wear down most armored lords and heroes rather quickly if left to his own devices. Of course, as a reasonably cost effective LL, the drawbacks have to come in somewhere and for Oxyotl, that drawback is melee combat. While he has acceptable melee attack and defense, Oxyotl has no armor or damage mitigation tools at his disposal. Any combat lord or hero worth his or her salt can and will kill him in a hand-to-hand duel. Fortunately, he&#039;s fast enough that virtually no footlord can catch up to him unless you willfully allow it. He also struggles to deal with the rank and file and lacks any notable support abilities for his own forces, but that&#039;s fairly typical of the niche Oxyotl fills.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
Your generic lords aren&#039;t amazing in campaign compared to other factions, but can really shine in competitive multiplayer. In the campaign, you&#039;ll generally never want to get non-slann lords after turn 20(ish) because lizardmen Star Chamber buildings give 3 bonus levels to your slann lords, meaning they quickly outpace any other lord available. Any need for a melee lord can be filled by one of the many lizardmen heroes, who can also be easily recruited at higher starting level than the melee lords. You may still find the need to recruit cheaper stand in lords in case of an emergency, as the Rite of Awakening&#039;s cooldown is a notable hitch in acquiring more slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slann Mage-Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your almighty magic toads, slann are dedicated mages who don&#039;t participate in fights directly, but wreak havoc upon your enemies from afar with their magics or supplement your forces with defensive/healing energies. Slann are among the precious few generic lords in the game who have access to the &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; ability which, when combined with their reliable casting, can allow savvy players to call upon vast reserves of the Winds of Magic long after lesser mages have tapped out of theirs. In addition to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039;, each slann has access to Banishment as a bound spell as well as the &#039;&#039;Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;; a large AoE defensive buff that applies a 22% damage resistance modifier to all allied units within it&#039;s bubble. Understandably, for all their arcane might, slann are practically helpless if caught in a fight. They are the single slowest unit in your entire army and are quite chunky, making them easy targets up close or at range. To this end, you&#039;ll almost always want a screening unit of Temple Guard (or at least shielded saurus) to keep enemies from ganking them. Outside of that, there are four varieties of Slann Mage-Priests, each dedicated to a specific lore of magic:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Fire Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - When you want to burn the [[HERESY|heretic]] in holy fire for the Old Ones. Combined with their bound Banishment, fire slann are capable of mulching clumps of infantry wholesale and can even churn out respectable single target damage with their Fireball and Piercing Bolts of Burning spells. Fire damage is particularly useful against the myriad of enemies with regeneration, and practically mandatory when facing undead crises in campaign. Being able to buff an entire line of saurus with an upcast Flaming Sword/Cloak of Flame can turn the game in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Life Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are the MVP in any monster heavy list; though you have a few other options for healing (such as the Revivification Bastilidon, high slann and the newly added Skink Oracle), life slann are still the uncontested kings at it. If you want an army built on the back of beasts, a life slann is essential to keeping them in the fight. With a life slann, you can wipe away any damage your stack of monsters take during the routing phase of a battle, making them both tactically and strategically important. Pair one with a Revivification Bastilidon to very rapidly resurrect slain models in any infantry unit and bring back even the most tattered units to full fighting strength. Additionally, should you encounter blobs of infantry that pose a notable danger to your larger beasties, Life slann are able to slap down Dwellers Below to deal frankly startling amounts of damage to practically every non-flying unit caught within its radius.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Light Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Light slann are fantastic supports for an infantry-heavy army namely due to two spells: Net of Amyntok and Birona&#039;s Timewarp. Like every other army, Net of Amyntok is an excellent tool for pinning down faster cavalry from the likes of Bretonnia or the Dark Elves so that your &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; slower saurus can catch up and engage them in melee (or to keep them still while your Salamanders incinerate them wholesale). Birona&#039;s Timewarp can turn the tide in a key engagement when used properly. Offensively, being able to cast Banishment much more frequently can also deal devastating damage to enemy infantry. That said, even your Greater Arcane Conduit will struggle to keep you topped off; the Lore of Light can consume your Winds of Magic quite quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;High Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Similarly to light slann, high slann are a hybrid offensive/support caster. Unlike the Lore of Light, you do have access to minor magical healing through Apotheosis and have access to an excellent anti-flier vortex spell in Tempest (Net of Amyntok is superior in most cases, however). High slann offensively specialize in single target damage and can deal devastating amounts of it between the Arcane Unforging and Soul Quench spells, giving them a solid niche against duelist lords/heroes and larger monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Heavens Slann&#039;&#039;&#039; - Multiplayer only, the Heavens Slann is unfortunately the worst slann of the bunch. It&#039;s not that the Heavens lore is lacking nor is it the slann himself, but the fact that he faces strict competition against your Skink Priests of all things. A Skink Priest of Heavens, though lacking the Greater Arcane Conduit, is a much faster/smaller target by default and has access to several mount options that make him much more flexible offensively or defensively. Additionally, as a hero, you can take a more offensively focused melee lord or a slann attuned to a different lore for more magical variety. Even if you&#039;re only running one with nothing but the crest on his skinky-head, the cheaper price alone makes the Heavens slann a hard sell comparatively.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039;: All Slann become a bit more defensible with the boon of their own personal barriers, a &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed buff to these fat frog&#039;s personal defenses. Of course, barriers will do little to assuage prolonged and unsupported melee combat, but it will help protect them from the stray blast or occasional skirmish.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: A minor nerf to the Slann, Star Chambers can now only ever be constructed in Province capitals, &#039;&#039;severely&#039;&#039; curbing how quickly you can recruit high-level Slann right out the gate. They can still be abused, though you now need to capture &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; more territories before you can crank out Slann on par with their Mortal Empires power level. The good news is, the Rite of Awakening is now free to use once unlocked and can be spammed on cooldown to try farming for second/third generation Slann.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Old-Blood&#039;&#039;&#039; - Offensive duelists through and through, saurus old-bloods are flexible masters of combat who can lead on foot, on the back of a cold one, or atop a mighty carnosaur (you&#039;ll usually want one on a carnosaur). Compared to the kroxigor ancient, saurus old-bloods are less powerful in melee combat but can be much faster and have marginally better faction support skills. For the purposes of both Multiplayer and Campaign, you&#039;ll want to avoid taking Old-Bloods as your lord (unless you have &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; DLC content). Their role can easily be filled by Saurus Scar Veterans, who &#039;&#039;don&#039;t&#039;&#039; take up your only Lord slot for the army (and are, for all intents and purposes, identical sans Campaign skill trees). If you insist on taking an Old-Blood, take Kroq-Gar. Otherwise, a Slann or Kroxigor Ancient would be better suited for your needs.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Saurus Old-Bloods get some new life pumped into their battle-tested bones in Immortal Empires, at least when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s banner. Universal 15% Upkeep discounts for all armies led by Saurus Old-Bloods and an additional +1% Weapon Strength boost for each level your Old-Blood gains make these guys your go-to beatsticks. Their discounted upkeep costs also make it easier to field &#039;&#039;more&#039;&#039; armies which, especially in the mid-late game, is particularly valuable as your empire&#039;s borders outpace your glacial economy&#039;s ability to upgrade settlement infrastructure in a timely manner. Slann are, of course, still quite valuable, though with Sacred Spawning Caverns and Temple Guard Barracks providing increased starting ranks to Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans, it&#039;s hard to say no to these guys. At least when riding with Kroq-Gar.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skink Chief (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your discount Lord and the one you&#039;ll want to take if you want to reserve as much money for your big beasties as possible. Of course, you could splurge a little to put him atop an ancient stegadon to scorch swaths of infantry with the Engine of the Gods (though if you&#039;re going to do that, you may as well spring for Tehenhauin so that you at least have access to the Lore of Beasts as well). The RCSC is a competent combatant equipped with poisonous, armor-piercing attacks that can make him surprisingly dangerous in a fight, though like everything skinky, he&#039;s a particularly squishy lord when unmounted. The best use you can put him to is boosting your heroes in a &#039;Pompous&#039; trait-stacking lizardman hero army, which makes an already broken strategy even stronger.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigor Ancient (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Baby Nakais for those who don&#039;t quite feel up for splurging on the big boy himself. Kroxigor ancients are quite literally just watered down versions of Nakai; though they won&#039;t grant perfect vigour to all friendly forces near them, they will still wade through most infantry due to their size and mass and put out such raw damage that most non-elite infantry will falter swiftly against them. However, just like Nakai, they are completely helpless at range, are vulnerable to AP and anti-large weapons and are &#039;&#039;slow&#039;&#039;. In competitive multiplayer, though they are still a bit of a niche pick, they are much more attractive than Nakai due to their cheaper price and because they have access to the Amulet of Itzl, which grants the Kroxigor Ancient 66% damage resistance for a short time. This can give them enough of an edge to eek out against enemy duelists or to survive long enough for reinforcements to arrive.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
As said, the Lizardmen characters can be a little sub-par compared to other factions (with the exception of the Skink Oracle, see below), but their selection is surprisingly versatile, and the Lizardmen have some of the best &#039;&#039;mounts&#039;&#039; in the game, which really helps push their characters battlefield potential. The Lizardmen also have one of the strongest Legendary Heroes in the game: Lord Kroak. These guys are capable of dealing immense damage to your enemies and &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; of them (except Kroak) can be mounted on one of your massive dinosaurs.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Hero===&lt;br /&gt;
You&#039;ve only got the one, but he&#039;s all you&#039;ll need. Lord Kroak is your expensive but powerful offensive caster and forms the center of many army formations.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lord Kroak (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The first of the Slann doesn&#039;t let something as trivial as death inconvenience him, or keep him from kicking warmblood ass to the Old World and back. Lord Kroak is one of a very select few heroes in the game with access to &#039;&#039;Greater Arcane Conduit&#039;&#039; (which can be paired with another Slann&#039;s Greater Arcane Conduit), making him a fantastic force multiplier in a caster-heavy list just from being present. For better or worse, Kroak doesn&#039;t have access to any lore of magic and only has two notable abilities. But &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; can those abilities turn the tide of battle. His only bound ability (other than the universal Cold-Blooded) is the &#039;&#039;Supreme Shield of the Old Ones&#039;&#039;, an upgraded version of the regular Shield of the Old Ones that grants allies a 44% damage resistance while within it (and stacks with the regular version if you&#039;re really in a bind). The only spell(s) he has access to is his signature Deliverance of Itza (and its three varying strengths). Deliverance of Itza, &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason you&#039;re bringing him, can virtually delete entire units from existence with an efficiency only known to the Winds of Death spell, but it has a few major drawbacks. First, it is intensely mana hungry: you&#039;ll typically only get one or two DoI (III) casts per battle before you run dangerously low on magic. By relying on DoI I or II, you won&#039;t consume as much magic per cast, but the difference in damage dealt becomes very apparent. Secondly, there is a very lengthy and obvious tell for when the spell is cast; most competent opponents will be able to move their forces away from the blast before it goes off unless you manage to pin them down with supporting spells like the Net of Amyntok or simply bodyblocking them from all sides. Thirdly, this spell is virtually useless against single entities such as Lords/Heroes and giant monsters, meaning he&#039;ll do little towards more elite doomstack lists. Despite all these cons working against him, a well timed Deliverance of Itza can and will win you battles if you plan accordingly. The best part, it deals absolutely no friendly fire damage. [[Meme|You may fire when ready]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Heroes===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, all Lizardmen heroes benefit from the &#039;Humble&#039; trait, which appears on Lords and Heroes at random. This lets you recruit them at 2 additional ranks higher than their default rank, with unlimited stacking potential, making them stronger and more versatile earlier in the game than heroes of other factions. In the late-game, you can disband Humble heroes as you build more Slann Star-Chambers, however these are expensive buildings for non-Hexoatl factions; for the 6000 gold needed for 1 Star-Chamber, you can hire at least 4 Humble heroes for 8 bonus levels. Of course, those extra heroes each take up their respective hero slots and will take a modest sum out of your income every turn and as such are less efficient in the long run compared to Star Chambers.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Scar-Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039; - A step down from the Old-Blood, Scar-Veterans behave in much the same manner as your generic saurus lords. Vicious and powerful combatants, Scar-Veterans are built to brazenly charge into combat and deal bloody death to all who stand in their way. The real reason you&#039;ll want to take any Scar-Vets isn&#039;t for the saurus himself, however badass he may be, but for the carnosaur mount you can put him on. Though a more expensive version of the feral carnosaur, Scar-Vets are immune to rampaging (and can indeed stop others from rampaging thanks to their Cold Blooded ability) and have a slightly stronger statline, making them excellent all-round threats to whatever your opponent might be packing. These Scar-Vets are ideal choices for armies led by slann-mage priests; they won&#039;t be competing for Winds of Magic like the skink priests and will more than make up for the slann&#039;s melee deficiency. If you want to keep him cheaper, you can take one on foot to lead fellow saurus infantry into battle, or stick in on a Cold One to ride with the rest of your cavalry. A modestly popular tactic in Multiplayer is to take two of these guys on Cold Ones to act as hero/lord hunters.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scar-Veterans, though still quite capable in every other Lizardmen subfaction, truly shine when fighting under Kroq-Gar&#039;s flag. +30% experience gain and +1% weapon strength per earned rank (max buff of 50%) can make these guys quite vicious very quickly. Since the Humble trait, the Star Chamber and Temple Guard Barracks rank boost effects stack, you can also recruit highly ranked Scar-Veterans &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; early on in the campaign (relatively, that is). It&#039;s to such a degree that you could very easily start cranking out freshly recruited Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs with a bonus 18% or higher Weapon Strength buff right out of the gate. Put in an army lead by a Saurus Old-Blood for that 15% upkeep reduction and you have yourself a solidly cost effective doomstack that, post level 20, will just respawn back home if they ever bite off more than they can chew.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink priests are your humble, mortal casters. Cheap and nimble, these guys can easily outrun most footslogging infantry and are fantastically flexible mages that can fill any offensive or defensive holes your army might have. If mounted on a terradon, their speed will be unparalleled (for Lizardmen); they&#039;ll be able to rain magical death anywhere on the battlefield with ease and can quickly deliver support to your forces no matter how spread out they may be. Alternatively, you may mount them on stegadons or ancient stegadons to make them terrifying all-rounders, though their price tag will quickly reflect that. probably want to stick with the regular stegadon, great hybrid artillery and melee monster&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Heavens)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Heavens discipline is among the better offensive lores of magic in the game for the instant raw damage output it&#039;s capable of. Wind Blast and Chain Lightning will be your go-to offensive spells. Comet of Cassandora, though powerful, should generally be avoided due to how long its casting time is. Harmonic Convergence and Curse of the Midnight Wind are staples of support sets and can turn your saurus infantry into immovable walls of tooth and claw.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Priest (Beasts)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Formerly your worst discipline, the Lore of Beasts has recently received a bit of a tweaking to make it considerably more attractive and usable. It&#039;s still among the least potent of your available magics, but it is among the most flexible in utility. Wyssan&#039;s Wild Form and Pann&#039;s Impenetrable Pelt provide rather significant combat buffs (particularly when stacked) while Curse of Anraheir debilitates your enemies. Offensively, Flock of Doom is a fantastic and cheap chaff cleaner that affects any units that have at least one model within its 30m range. For your single target needs, The Amber Spear allows your caster to act as impromptu artillery should the need arise. Formerly &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; reason to take a Beasts caster was for the Transformation of Kadon; being able to summon up to two Manticores to flank enemy formations or dive into backlines can have a massive impact on the flow of battle, but a bump up to &#039;&#039;20&#039;&#039; Winds of Magic per summon makes it challenging to make much use of your other spells in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Chief&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your skirmishing duelist, skink chiefs cripple enemy forces with their poisonous darts so that your army can face weaker resistance. Skink chiefs are a force to be feared when mounted on a stegadon, allowing them to easily face down many enemy heroes/lords in a one-on-one fight. In the campaign, the ability to build skink chief capacity-increasing buildings in minor settlements means you can spam them across the map or stack up to 19 of them into an army, which can be hilariously broken depending on the traits and items you equip them with.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Oracle (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - By far the best Hero for the Lizardmen, the Skink Oracle brings a cavalcade of well rounded offensive and supportive magic to the field atop a mighty Troglodon. And only on a Troglodon, so he&#039;s very much an &amp;quot;all or nothing&amp;quot; type of unit. The first major reason the Skink Oracle makes for a popular pick is the fact that he&#039;s your only non-Slann source of magical healing, potentially freeing up your Lord choice for a more offensive beat stick like Kroq-Gar or even a Kroxigor Ancient. Secondly, as a hero, not only does your Skink Oracle provide a use of Cold-Blooded for the rest of your forces, but his own Troglodon will never rampage. Magical prowess aside, this alone is worth considering the rather steep price-tag. Speaking of, the Troglodon allows the Skink Oracle to function as a mid-range anti-Monster skirmisher. Combined with a potential Fireball cast here or there, the Skink Oracle &#039;&#039;excels&#039;&#039; at chunking opposing Lords/Heroes, especially if they&#039;re atop a mount or naturally monstrous in size. Just don&#039;t have him brazenly lead the charge into melee combat, as he won&#039;t last terribly long in it. If your army would like to use a non-Lore of Life Slann or any non-Slann Lord for that matter (effectively any LL banner army), a Skink Oracle and a Revivification Bastilodon or two are excellent tools to keep your forces in tip-top shape so that they can keep doing what they do best.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
Many lizardmen units are available in standard and &#039;blessed&#039; variants. Blessed units are only made available in the campaign by completing random timed missions, such as getting 1000 kills or winning 4 battles, but make up for their randomness and limited quantity by being free to recruit at any time in any army and by having at least one extra ability or superior stat over their contemporary counterparts. They aren&#039;t to be confused with Regiments of Renown, unique units recruited at max rank and limited to one instance per. In casual multiplayer matches with Unit Caps turned off, Blessed Units are recruitable for only a modest bump in price over their generic counterparts.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
Infantry provide the foundation of every army in Total War: Warhammer, and the Lizardmen are no different. Indeed, even the humble skinks have their place.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Melee Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls and shields, skink cohorts are cheap chaff units primarily used to fill out rosters or to support your more expensive infantry actually doing the killing. Despite being shielded, these guys will die by the score due to their pitiful defensive statline if they face any frontline infantry head on and are one of the few lizardmen units prone to routing from leadership issues. Having said that, skink cohorts are among the fastest cheap infantry units in the game and are still rather decent combatants when fighting similar unarmored units and tend to win such engagements (namely against chaff or low tier infantry like Bretonnian peasantry or Vampire Count zombies). Indeed, their speed is invaluable for flanking enemies tied up by your saurus warriors and chasing routing enemies off the map. When pinching pennies, you can&#039;t argue with that. In campaign these guys can be skipped entirely for the javelin version instead as the missile attack for 10 extra upkeep per turn is leagues better than just having the club.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Red-Crested Skinks (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. Red-Crested Skinks provide an invaluable source of early game/cheap melee AP damage and poison, though they&#039;re less effective against unarmored targets as a whole compared to regular Skink Cohorts. They lack both shields and armor and as they are simply skinks, they will die in droves unless they&#039;re taking refuge among the far burlier saurus warriors. On that note, RC skinks synergize excellently with saurus warriors, as they can simultaneously chew through armored units the saurus tend to bounce off of and further cripple these enemies with poison, allowing your much slower saurus to both catch up to and butcher them with greater ease. Just like skink cohorts, these guys are at home in watery environments and are easily able to outflank many slower infantry units.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Sotek (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Unbreakable angry skinks wielding poisonous, armor-piercing warhammers. These guys have a unique ability, &#039;&#039;Refuse to Die&#039;&#039;. When active, no skink models can die (they can still take damage, however), which can maximize their damage output when taking sudden burst damage or ensure that they hold the enemy in place for a precious few more seconds. The fact that they&#039;re unbreakable really synergizes well with this perk, as it means that your opponent is going to have to commit to completely eradicating the unit (which, admittedly, isn&#039;t really &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; tall an ask all things considered). This can buy some of your other forces some precious moments to regroup should the tide be against your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
:::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign Note&#039;&#039;&#039;: Auto-Resolve tends to value every flavor of Red-Crested Skink just slightly more than the dirt they stand on, so unless you are ok with them taking massive casualties or outright getting wiped out every time you click that auto-resolve button, you&#039;ll either need to fight your battles manually or pick up regular Skink Cohorts if you need chaff infantry to pad out your forces.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Saurus warriors are probably the first thing that comes to mind when one mentions the lizardmen, and for good reason. Resilient, determined and natural fighters, saurus warriors are one of the most durable base line infantry units in the game due to their high HP and armor and can hold their own even against the more elite infantry options of other factions (Note: they can fight a unit of chaos warriors to stalemate). Should they find themselves in a losing matchup, their naturally high leadership will keep them standing firm against the enemy far longer than their equivalents in other factions would, even if they lose control and rampage towards their inevitable deaths (in game II. They&#039;ve since become far more disciplined in game III). To compensate, saurus are slow and are prone to being kited, so skink skirmishers/cohorts should be utilized to help pin down the enemy line until the saurus make it into combat. Saurus warriors are available in both standard and shielded variants, but the only reason to not get the shielded version is if you need every last gold coin you can rub together for your bigger monsters on a tight, competitive budget.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Shielded saurus warriors with an even higher base health and [[awesome|perfect vigour]]. These guys make fantastically cost efficient walls that will never tire no matter how hard they&#039;re pushed. In the campaign, they are one of the better frontline choices you can give your non-doomstack armies that can find a place even into the late game, so long as they manage to survive and rank up. Gor-Rok, if chosen as your initial legendary lord, can use his rite to grant further defensive bonuses and &#039;&#039;unbreakable&#039;&#039; to them (in game II. Game III replaces unbreakable with the barrier ability and immunity to hostile effects like Poison instead); they will never yield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Warriors equipped with anti-large spears for engaging cavalry and monsters. They&#039;re nearly identical to regular saurus warriors in every other way, though they do slightly less damage against regular infantry in exchange for their anti-large speciality. Like the warriors, they come in unshielded or, for a slight premium, shielded variants.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Saurus Spears&#039;&#039;&#039; - Buffed up saurus spears with shields, the blessed variant of these saurus are dramatically inferior to their standard cousins since they lack perfect vigour. Instead, the bonus ability granted to them is Forest Strider, a perk that grants additional melee attack and defense buffs to them while fighting in forests. If you can lure cavalry and large monsters into forests, where they&#039;ll suffer additional penalties simply due to how forests interact with them, you can deal impressive sustained damage to them in short order. Unfortunately, this ability does nothing for them outside of forests and &#039;&#039;many&#039;&#039; battlefields will have a dearth of forest patches that you can fight in. Additionally, uncooperative opponents will generally avoid trying to engage your forces inside forests and trying to convince them otherwise may prove too time consuming for what it&#039;s worth. Regardless, they still have more health than the regular saurus spears. That&#039;s always a plus.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Legion of Chaqua (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Legion of Chaqua, thanks to their special ability, are able to provide themselves and all nearby allied units a surprising 44% missile resistance for a limited time upon activation. This is an invaluable skill to have on the approach, as many of your unshielded infantry and larger monsters are vulnerable to being focused down by the much superior ranged infantry found in other armies and can be further supplemented by a Slann&#039;s Shield of the Old Ones if necessary. Otherwise, these guys simply behave exactly as Saurus Spears are expected to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - The fearsome Temple Guards, renowned for their devotion to their Slann masters, stand ready to slaughter all who&#039;d bring harm to their otherwise vulnerable charges. Temple Guard are the only &amp;quot;elite&amp;quot; infantry within the lizardmen roster, which is more a testament to how strong regular saurus are compared to the melee infantry of other armies. Speaking of how strong regular saurus are, Temple Guard fall short of them against unarmored infantry on the whole. This isn&#039;t to say Temple Guard aren&#039;t impressive; their heightened statline makes them less likely to budge than regular saurus are while their charge defense and bonus damage against large foes and predominantly armor-piercing weaponry lets them effectively face down a majority of late-game/elite cavalry, monsters and even armored infantry much more effectively than regular saurus. Unfortunately, this general prowess reflects heavily in their price tag and you&#039;ll struggle to field multiple units of these without heavily cutting into your other options.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Temple Guards&#039;&#039;&#039; - Recolored Temple Guards, these guys are a slightly more offensive version of their default variants thanks to an increased charge bonus. This makes them significantly more well rounded and will allow you to more flexibly choose how you engage your enemies; do you brace and negate an incoming charge, or is the foe squishy enough where a counter charge would be more punishing? All in all a nice upgrade if only for the usual buff to their health blessed units receive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Star-Chamber Guardians (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Take Temple Guard and make their weapons also deal magical damage: you now have &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; most elite infantry unit available to the Lizardmen. Having magical attacks allows the SCG to engage many undead/demonic forces that utilize high physical resistance and cut them down with ease. SCG also serve as excellent bodyguards for lords (particularly Slann) due to their Guardian ability and when properly supported with healing magic, these guys will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; die. Their only major weakness of note is prolonged anti-armor ranged firepower and artillery, but as they are armored and shielded and have a frankly gargantuan health pool, it will take a long time to fully whittle them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Missile Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Cohort with Javelins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks armed with little macuahuitls, shields and three javelins each. For pennies over a regular skink cohort, you can give them limited ranged support with poisonous javelins; a fantastic way to soften up an enemy unit for your front line infantry on the charge. With their speed, they can also easily circle about and pepper an opposing unit&#039;s backsides before charging in to cut off their escape while your saurus chew through them. Once they throw all their javelins, they&#039;re identical to the default skink cohort in virtually every way. Generally, if you&#039;re planning on taking skink cohorts at all, you should almost always pick these guys up over the standard versions (unless you &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; need every gold coin you can possibly scrape together for a specific competitive multiplayer build).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts, and your first dedicated missile infantry. Skink skirmishers lack the sheer range available to most other factions and struggle to do damage against armored opponents. Instead, they should be used exclusively as harassers; their speed, ability to fire while moving and vanguard deployment options allow them to easily get into flanking positions and kite enemy infantry while inflicting poison onto them for when the rest of your army catches up. These guys will melt quickly if caught in the crosshairs of opposing archers/gunners and are pitiful in a fistfight, so you should only get one or two of these units at most, and only if you absolutely cannot afford taking chameleon skinks instead.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Skink Skirmishers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Skink skirmishers with more health and an innate magic spell resistance. This extra durability is nice, but the spell resistance in particular isn&#039;t going to see much use due to these guys rather high mobility and any targetable spell an opponent &#039;&#039;could&#039;&#039; cast on them would be served much better against... literally anything else in your army. There&#039;s virtually no reason to bring these in Multiplayer (even if Blessed units are allowed for the match) and the only reason you&#039;ll want to recruit them in any of your Campaigns would be if you&#039;re in desperate need of reinforcements for a beat-up army you simply cannot afford to lose and you just &#039;&#039;happen&#039;&#039; to have some Blessed Skink Skirmishers to burn. The moment you are in a position where you can recruit/replace other units, these guys should be the first to go.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ninja skinks equipped with little blowpipes and poisonous darts. Though fewer in number than basic skink skirmishers, chameleon skinks are considerably more durable thanks to their flat 40% missile resistance and have a much easier time sneaking around enemies thanks to their Chameleon ability. This, along with their loose formation, can make them surprisingly effective at countering enemy archers. They otherwise fulfill the exact same harassment role your regular skink skirmishers do and deal a disappointingly low amount of damage against armored targets. Also, like skink skirmishers, they are unable to curve their shots well meaning they&#039;re less effective in siege battles than the archers of other races.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Chameleon Skinks&#039;&#039;&#039; - Slightly swole Chameleon Skinks with twice the charge bonus (which is barely anything, especially combined with their rather tragic melee statline) and a few extra darts per skink. More ammunition is always welcome in a firefight, but it&#039;s hardly a game changer. Regardless, better stats do open up options and if you have a choice between these and regular Chameleon Skinks, may as well pick these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
:::Oxyotl&#039;s banner army in the campaign should almost entirely consist of these guys. Between the AP bonus damage, variant ammunitions he can grant them in addition to giving them perks like Snipe, there&#039;s almost no force these guys can&#039;t just shoot to death with relative ease. Siege Battles or battles featuring multiple enemy banner armies might become tricky, but that&#039;s why you always have at least a couple Skink Oracles or Skink Chiefs with Stalk to clean up shop.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chameleon Stalkers (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Angry ninja skinks with little blowpipes and [[what|explosive darts]]. Chameleon Stalkers fill the rather niche role of shock infantry for the Lizardmen. Each skink is equipped with two Precursor blowpipe shots that deal rather impressive burst damage against unarmored targets either on the charge or when falling back from a melee engagement. As they possess the same Chameleon ability their standard Chameleon Skink kin have, they do have a lot of wiggle room to get into an optimal charging position and can quickly fade away from the fray when things go south. Speaking of things going south, though Stalkers are reasonably decent at combat due to their poisoned attacks and mediocre stats, they still tend to lose against medium tier and above infantry or anything with armor. That said, even against armored infantry, much of the Stalker&#039;s value comes from the heavy formation disruption their Precursor Rounds cause, slowing down their targets and interrupting their charge so that you can take the initiative in the ensuing engagement. They can also deal decent burst damage against single entity units in a pinch, but this is generally an inefficient use of them.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Monstrous Infantry====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors, as to be expected from 9-foot tall crocodile men, are beastly armor-piercing anti-infantry blenders who can carve through lower tier units like butter and are sturdy enough to hold back more elite units for your more capable specialists. Though quite tanky and reasonably quick (compared to your saurus), they are still large (with the weaknesses all that entails) and very vulnerable to getting shot to hell and back or getting slammed by larger cavalry/monsters. While Kroxigors do hit damn hard, their total damage is divided between three subcatagories: Base, Anti-Infantry and Armor-Piercing. As such, they only really get the most bang for their buck when thrown against armored infantry. While they are able to tie up units that fall outside of those categories, they become dramatically less effective and &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; lose the grindfest if they aren&#039;t supported. Just like in the tabletop, they pair fantastically with supporting skinks to flank and tie up enemy forces or debuff them with poison to make them even more vulnerable to the kroxigors.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Kroxigors&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you thought regular kroxigors were thick, you haven&#039;t seen these thunder-thighs strut their stuff. Though the standard health increase is all well and good, blessed kroxigors received a substantial buff to their charge bonus. This can make them surprisingly deadly cycle-chargers which, combined with their anti-infantry/armor niche, will let them crack massive holes in front lines.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sacred Kroxigors (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kroxigors with [[power fists]]. These magical boxing gloves turn your kroxigors into all-purpose ass pounders who punch holes in armored foes effortlessly and tear through things with low magic resistance like so much wet paper. Much like regular kroxigors, sacred kroxigors get the most bang for their buck when supported by skinks (ideal) or saurus (when you don&#039;t want to move from that spot). Unlike standard Kroxigors, Sacred Kroxigors are much more well rounded offensively and will perform much more efficiently against opponents regular Kroxigors tend to struggle or stalemate against. Additionally, as the only non-RoR/Lord unit in your roster with Magical Attacks, these guys are your go-to melee force to deal with Ethereal units, Treemen and other high-physical resistance targets. Additionally, as Magic Resist is slated to change to only affect damage caused by Spells, Sacred Kroxigors will be very well suited to deal with the forces of the Dwarfs and Khorne going forward.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Cohort of Huatl (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sacred kroxigors with much higher physical resistance and straight up sunder enemy armor, allowing units like your saurus warriors to deal more damage to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen cavalry are slow, for cavalry. They will never catch horse-mounted cavalry of other races, and it is risky to use them as a distraction if your enemy is using anything more than basic cavalry archers. Expect lizardmen cavalry to take heavy losses in prolonged combat, and learn to cycle-charge with them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - A pack of clever girls, with no saurus riders. Feral cold ones are extremely speedy units (by lizardmen standards) that effectively function as light cavalry built for chasing down skirmishers, ranged back lines and artillery pieces. Their ability to cause fear also comes in handy for landing rear charges against a foe tied up in combat with your frontline infantry, as well as ensuring routed enemies leave the battlefield permanently. Unfortunately, their raw damage output is rather low and they themselves are particularly frail and prone to rampaging, which means a bad engagement will result in a swift end for them. They&#039;re cheap as chips though, so you can&#039;t complain too much over losing &#039;em.&lt;br /&gt;
**Being able to summon them after performing the Rite of Primeval Glory is really handy when facing off against Skaven artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Standard cold one riders are your first full-blooded cavalry option. Though significantly swifter than your infantry, cold one riders lag behind their competition in other factions and are particularly vulnerable to anti-large cavalry units because of this. In an ideal setting, cold one riders will serve as the hammer to the anvil that is your saurus frontline; decisive charges into the rear of enemy formations can deal heavy damage and can completely lock down ranged infantry or artillery. Being both armored and shielded gives them respectable staying power as well and allows them to remain in extended combat should the need arise. That said, like most cavalry, they truly shine when they&#039;re able to freely cycle charge to maximize their damage output and heavily abuse enemy morale.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - The name says it all; these are cold one riders with spears. This turns them into a dedicated anti-large cavalry unit that can deal not inconsequential damage to opposing cavalry, artillery and monsters. Unfortunately, in cav v. cav engagements, cold one spear riders will often fall short due to their below average speed letting many opposing options run circles around them. As such, they tend to work best when used defensively. When opposing cavalry buckles down to charge into your flanks, counter charge them with your spear-riders to either intercept or divert them from your more vulnerable elements. They do deal decent armor-piercing damage on their own right, but they&#039;ll often lose against more elite cavalry options and their strength quickly diminishes in prolonged engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Cold One Spear-Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed cold one spears are extremely similar to the Pok-Hopak Cohort in the sense that they both don&#039;t run the risk of rampaging. This is a very valuable perk on a unit that will often find itself separated from your main army, especially when combined with their heightened durability. If you have a need for cold one spears and have access to these, there&#039;s literally no reason not to take them.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pok-Hopak Cohort (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Fearless and focused spear-riders, these guys are both immune to psychology &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; lack primal instincts, meaning you&#039;ll never need to worry about them rampaging or fleeing from enemy monsters. Additionally, the Pok-Hopak cohort is able to utilize vanguard deployment, giving them a tactical edge over their generic counterparts that cannot be underestimated. If you&#039;re thinking about taking a unit of spear-riders, there&#039;s literally no reason to not just take these guys instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only elite cavalry, horned ones are simply buffed up cold one riders, plain and simple. They are significantly faster than all of your cold one riders and as such are on par with the cavalry options found in many other factions. They pack a meaty punch with a rather chunky charge bonus to boot, letting them simply smash through frontline infantry as both hammer and anvil. You&#039;ll be paying for that swollen statline though, as they are one of your most expensive non-monster units out of your entire roster (they&#039;re even more expensive than some of your monsters).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Horned Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; - Just like the blessed cold one spears, blessed horned ones won&#039;t rampage when caught unawares. Considering these are your elite cav units, you will &#039;&#039;always&#039;&#039; want to make sure they can get out of a bad engagement whenever you need them to.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Javelin skinks riding Terradons and carrying stone bombs. While relatively fast for the lizardmen, terradon riders are among the slowest flying cavalry in the game, and are a fairly niche choice in battle. This niche can best be summed up as aerial harriers, ideal for sniping out artillery, mages or unarmored infantry or monsters (which is admittedly a bit of a rarity). Their attacks also apply Poison, which makes them a little more useful than their raw stats make them seem on paper and helps further support other units in your army. Additionally, they are quite micro-friendly since they are able to fire and move with their javelins and, with proper positioning, can drop a once-per-battle set of stone bombs to deal massive damage to clustered up infantry beneath their wings. That said, as fairly large, unarmored and slow moving targets with fairly pitiful melee stats, these guys can be very easy to snipe out of the air by decent missile infantry and are &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; vulnerable to pretty much anything else that is also in the air with them. In a pinch, they can also be used as rear-chargers to help route enemies or tie down missile infantry, but Old Ones help them if something points an extra long stick at them. If you&#039;re facing an infantry heavy army, Fireleech Bolas Terradons tend to net you better value.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pahuax Sentinels (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - These special edition terradon riders are particularly nimble and have an innate resistance to melee and missile attacks that gives them &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more staying power than any of your other flying cavalry. If only to serve as a distraction, these guys can be used in lieu of skink priests/chiefs in an attempt to waste your opponent&#039;s missile infantry/artillery ammo. Otherwise, use them to harass enemy units with poisoned missiles and to escort routing foes off the battlefield.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Fireleech Bolas Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - These are far better Terradon Riders than the base variant. While they no longer inflict Poison on enemy units, their fireleech bolas deal explosive fire damage, inflicting greater damage overall against infantry formations and fire-weak entities while dealing higher leadership penalties in the process. Like regular Terradon Riders, they also can fire and move, letting them more or less function as prehistoric bombers. They still carry stone bombs, which can be devastatingly effective when used in concert with a line of saurus warriors pinning enemy melee units or shutting down artillery, but just like regular Terradon Riders, they are fairly useless in melee and are terribly vulnerable to other fliers and ranged missile fire. If you&#039;re dealing with smaller, physically larger units (monstrous infantry or single-entity monsters) with low armor, Terradon Riders are more efficient against them. &lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Terradon Riders&#039;&#039;&#039; - Blessed Terradon Riders, aside the traditional increase in health, only received one minor adjustment over their basic counterparts; speed. At a speed stat of 110 as opposed to the standard 90, Blessed Terradon Riders can manuever across the battlefield notably more quickly than any other unit in your entire army. Nice, for a unit designed to harass and waste/dodge enemy missile fire, but ultimately a rather minor selling point on an admittedly mediocre and situational unit.&lt;br /&gt;
**Fireleech Bolas can be used to game the AI, especially when you&#039;re facing off against the Chaos Invasion. Even having just three of these guys bombard the Chaos Hellcannons can save you a lot of grief, and you&#039;re not really going to miss them if they got shot down. They&#039;re also really helpful against Vampire Coast, as they&#039;re one of the few skirmishers you have that can raise hell against a zombie gunline/artillery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ripperdactyl Riders (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The obsidian knife of lizardmen flyers. Ripperdactyls are your flying can-openers with a minor bonus against infantry and a &#039;&#039;massive&#039;&#039; AP bonus. Combined with their solid melee attack stat and Frenzy bonus, these guys utterly shred armored foot soldiers. Unfortunately, their non-existent armor, low melee defense, low model count and large size makes these guys terribly susceptible to counterattack. If they get boxed in, much less by anything with an anti-large bonus, you will be impressed by how quickly they die. Because of this, and the fact much of their damage is dedicated against armored targets, Ripperdactyls tend to be a bit of a niche choice in army lists not built around Tiktaq&#039;to. None-the-less, they are much more effective than Terradon Riders at shutting down missile infantry formations and artillery platforms. Just make sure you are constantly aware of the tactical situation and only call them down when you can support them or escape before enemy reinforcements manage to pin them down.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Colossadon Hunters (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Bigger, hungrier ripperdactyls with a penchant for bigger prey; an additional anti-large bonus can turn them into cavalry buzzsaws and can let them deal sickening damage to mounted enemy lords or cavalry and are the best/only option for fighting flying enemy lords/heroes on semi-even ground. Suffice to say, they&#039;re still very weak to anti-large weaponry themselves and will seldom win against combat dedicated lords/heroes in a &amp;quot;1&amp;quot;v1 fight. As such, they&#039;ll need support through terradon riders (for the poison) as well as additional ripperdactyls to stand an honest shot against such a foe, though they&#039;re still not guaranteed a victory. Should they lose, they&#039;ll still leave a hell of a mark on whatever cavalry/monster they were fighting and such scars could prove pivotal to bringing them down with the rest of your army.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Hunting Packs===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Salamander Hunting Pack (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; needed addition to the Lizardmen&#039;s borderline vacant missile unit roster, Salamander Hunting Packs are a fantastic general use ranged unit and are among the better missile cavalry options in the game. Though they can&#039;t fire while moving like other missile cavalry options, they deal a rather frightening amount of flaming explosive damage per volley with not inconsequential AP and rather notable anti-large bonuses to top it off. Much like your other non-single entity heavy hitters, Salamanders can do some damage in melee, but they really should avoid it unless absolutely necessary. Terrible defensive values will make Salamander Hunting Packs feel every blow that hits their unarmored hides. If you want to keep them in the fight, make sure you have a few Saurus Spears or Spear Cold One Riders to counter enemy cavalry. They can fire over units and obstacles.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Umbral Tide (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Sneaky salamander hunting packs with perfect vigour and stalk, the Umbral Tide is able to covertly cross a majority of the battlefields you may find yourself on and can easily set up an ambush against unsuspecting opponents. Even after running from one end of the battle to the other and loosing every last fireball from their collective gullets, the Umbral Tide will still have a spring to their step should they join the melee fray. If you can only afford a single Salamander Pack, try to budget for these guys.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Razordon Hunting Pack (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons are your anti-armor missile cavalry. Unlike the Salamanders, who burp up one flaming projectile apiece, Razordons lob three spikes at a time when they attack. Though the damage per individual projectile is... well, pitiful, combined they can deal a rather staggering amount of AP damage that can either be divided among dense clusters of armored infantry formations or a single armored target. Additionally, Razordons are much more adept at lobbing their shots, giving them a bit of an edge over Salamanders in uneven terrain. Unfortunately, that&#039;s about where the good news ends. With a shorter firing range than Salamanders and utterly abysmal base damage on their projectiles ([[What|Chameleon Skinks have stronger missiles against unarmored foes than these guys]]) and no additional bonuses to speak of (fire damage, explosive damage, anti-large/infantry, nothing), there&#039;s generally no reason to take Razordons over Salamanders in general lists. Against the heavily armored forces of the Warriors of Chaos, Dwarfs or even other Lizardmen, Razordons might find a more valuable niche.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer III&#039;&#039;&#039; Not only have these guys gained a better firing arc, enabling them to better fire spikes at targets over terrain/allied units, but the projectiles themselves now pierce through multiple entities. Currently, they&#039;re particularly powerful and can quickly mulch armored infantry with as few as two or three volleys.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Amaxon Barbs (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Razordons with poisonous spikes and a flat 15% missile resistance, these guys aren&#039;t much to write home about. Yes, poison is nice, but you don&#039;t exactly need to dig very deep for alternative ways to access it. The missile resistance is a nice, if moderately more situational perk, but it&#039;s not a particularly notable resistance and it does nothing for potential melee engagements. In the event you need a razordon hunting pack for anti-armor firepower, you may as well pick these guys up, but only if you have the extra gold once you&#039;ve established your core army roster.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
The big beasts and the creatures most opponents expect to face when fighting the lizardmen. Potent and powerful monsters, you have a dinosaur for every occasion; you&#039;ll simply need to choose the right ones. Beware of enemy tarpits if you don&#039;t have a high-level mage in your army; dinosaurs will take additional damage from their flanks and rear if they are surrounded and that can quickly wear them down.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral [[Bastilidon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your cheapest single entity dinosaur as well as your sturdiest. Feral bastilidons are effectively just a [[DISTRACTION CARNIFEX]] that you throw into enemy frontlines to stir up some chaos, cause some fear and just generally soak damage while the rest of your army dismantles the enemy. These guys can still earn you some crazy value against armies that field a lot of chaff infantry, like Skaven, Beastmen or Bretonnia.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Campaign&#039;&#039;&#039;: These guys are your entry-level monsters, being recruitable basically from the start of the game. As tanky anti-infantry monsters, these guys can net you some crazy value against the early-game armies of other factions for cheap-as-chips prices.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your first, cheaper artillery option. Solar Engines fire off a single missile that simultaneously blinds and burns enemy units, reducing their combat effectiveness and dealing bonus damage against anything that regenerates health naturally. These laser bolts have a lower maximum range, are relatively slow moving and are much easier to dodge than the smaller, faster, harder to see bolts fired by the stegadon, but they have slightly higher damage per shot and a larger splash radius when targeting groups of infantry. In another contrast to the stegadon, the beams fired by the solar engine deal flat magical damage, meaning enemies with high magical resistance will largely shrug off the damage dealt by the solar engine itself. The only &#039;&#039;major&#039;&#039; drawback of the solar engine is that the Beam of Chotek, though an armor-piercing missile (its unit toolbar does not show the armor-piercing icon), deals relatively low bonus damage against armored units and as such will become less efficient compared to the stegadon when targeting heavily armored monsters over formations of armored infantry. At the end of the day, when all else fails, there&#039;s still a fully grown bastilidon underneath that laser crystal. Keep in mind, like every ranged unit, firing their missiles depletes their vigour and should be taken into account if you&#039;re planning on sending it into combat.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Solar Engine Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Perfect vigour&#039;s value cannot be overstated on a melee capable monster that would otherwise tire itself out just from holding a laser cannon in place. The greater defensive value of the bastilidon compliments the increased health quite nicely and will allow the blessed variant to stay in the thick of it considerably longer than others of its kind.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Revivification Crystal Bastilidon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your only non-magical source of healing, revivification crystals are one of the few healing options in the game that not only restores a unit&#039;s health but also actually revives dead models; a perk that&#039;s particularly valuable on your elite units like kroxigors or temple guard. A revivification crystal pairs excellently with a Life Slann in infantry heavy lists as you can very rapidly bring a unit back from the brink to near pristine (or whatever their healing cap is, depending on how used and abused they are), or for ensuring crucial monsters (like carnosaurs and dread saurians) become virtually unkillable. They are of limited use in a dinosaur army if your lord isn&#039;t a Life Slann, as their minor healing ability is short-ranged and can only target a single unit with a relatively lengthy cooldown between uses. Additionally, and this is notable hitch, models don&#039;t start coming back to life until all the still living models have been fully healed up. This, consequently, makes it difficult to rebuild your forces if they&#039;re in active combat or taking damage from other sources. Having said that, they&#039;re still one of two sources of healing non-slann lords have access to and the only healing option that doesn&#039;t impose on your Winds of Magic reserve (which is still a plus, as other armies don&#039;t have such a luxury). As a bastilidon variant, it can also throw itself into combat with little fear. Pro tip: Don&#039;t click that &amp;quot;end battle&amp;quot; button; instead, use it to revive what you can and win the fight with fewer casualties.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ark of Sotek Bastilodon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Functionally just a regular bastilidon, but with the ability to unleash an AoE burst of poison on all enemies surrounding it. As it&#039;s only a minor increase in cost over the feral version, the Ark of Sotek may be worth getting for the very minor amount of damage and extra poison it can apply to the invariable mosh pits bastilidons often find themselves in. Alternatively, you can get much more utility from the other two non-feral variants, and rely on your skinks to supply poison or your mages to deal burst damage to tarpits of infantry. In Campaign these boys are one of your mainstay units until tier 4 stegadons, with the lizardmens low growth and poor early-game economy the low-cost high reward of these guys can easily melt through tons of early game infantry, a must-get.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - A wild stegadon, pure and simple. A living battering ram, stegadons are fantastic line breakers and are well rounded enough to survive the ensuing melee while dealing respectable damage in turn. Like all feral dinosaur variants, its only major weakness is a vulnerability to rampaging courtesy of its lower leadership. This is a forgivable flaw, considering how cheap they are and the fact that you can simply use Cold Blooded to snap them out of it definitely lessens the severity of an occasional rampage.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Stegadon]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - A stegadon with a long-range ballista and skink handlers mounted upon its back. Stegadons serve as the second of your two artillery options and are arguably the best at dealing raw damage: the ballista is unerringly accurate and can easily snipe opposing artillery pieces, usually destroying the cannon/catapult models in question before they can get much usage. What&#039;s more is that, as it&#039;s connected to a single entity monster itself, the ballista is not vulnerable to these same tactics. Like Cygors or Steam Tanks, Stegadons compensate for the lack of firepower volume traditional artillery pieces can put out by retaining its long ranged assaults until it is either out of ammunition or has been killed. The stegadon&#039;s ranged attack generally struggles to deal significant damage to infantry formations due to the narrow projectiles and low splash damage (despite the bonus anti-infantry modifiers it gets). Regardless, the shot still deals incredible damage to heavily armored, single entity monsters (particularly a majority of mounted lords/heroes) due to their immense bonus AP damage. Even should you run out of ammunition or should your opponent try to tie it down in melee... it&#039;s still a stegadon. With skinks firing poisoned darts at everything surrounding its legs, it will put up just as much of a fight as its feral counterpart and then some. The only downside to the ballista is that firing it will drain the stegadon&#039;s vigour (even if it&#039;s standing perfectly still), meaning it&#039;ll likely perform less efficiently in any ensuing melee if it doesn&#039;t get a break between firing and fighting.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hoh boy, now we&#039;re talking. A massive buff to the stegadon&#039;s health will allow him to take significantly more punishment over the rest of his variants, but that&#039;s not really the main selling point here. The blessed stegadon is also gifted with perfect vigour; a massive boon to the offensive prowess of this beast. Being able to act as full blown artillery then rush into glorious melee combat to tear enemies a new asshole at peak performance is something no other faction can achieve remotely as effectively as these guys can. If a quest pops up in the campaign with these as a reward, you should do your damndest to accomplish it. They&#039;re well worth it.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; - Where the stegadon does its best work from afar, the ancient stegadon needs to get up close and personal to do business. The howdah, though packed with significantly more ammo, is much shorter ranged and is primarily meant to soften up nearby targets for a follow up charge into melee. Ancient stegadons are somewhat tankier than other stegadon variants, though their limited range debatably renders them less effective offensively. In general, you should either spring for the Engine of the Gods or stick with a regular stegadon..&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Thunderous One (RoR, DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A beefed up ancient stegadon that calls down bolts of lighting every 20 seconds, the Thunderous One was made to wade into the enemy&#039;s front line and deal indiscriminate damage. Unfortunately, these bolts of lightning can and will deal friendly fire to your units. This can make it somewhat challenging to support its charge with infantry or cavalry, though allied single entity monsters typically won&#039;t mind the stray blast.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Engine of the Gods Ancient Stegadon (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Is all the gold armor embedded into your ancient stegadon not quite flashy enough for you? Just give it the ability to call down an orbital bombardment to glass swarms of warmbloods in the name of the Great Plan. The Stegadon itself is, functionally, an Ancient Stegadon. It behaves identically like one and has the exact same statline, but once you get to its abilities, things start to get interesting. It has two supporting abilities, Arcane Configuration (Winds of Magic Power Recharge rate boost) and the Portent of Warding (a 5% Ward Save for all allied units within 40m). These effects make EotG Stegadons fantastic supporting units simply from their presence alone. And yes, this applies to EotG Stegadon Mounts, so your Skink Priests have access to their own personal WoM batteries. The third, and debatably the main reason you&#039;re considering this ornate beast, is the Burning Alignment active ability. Though limited to only two uses, the Engine of the Gods can deal devastating damage to infantry focused lists if the Burning Alignment is used at just the right moment. It&#039;s particularly effective when fired into choke points or along your enemy&#039;s frontline ranks when they&#039;re tied up with your forces. Thankfully, the Burning Alignment ability is extremely accurate for (what is functionally) a wind spell; so long as you aim carefully and don&#039;t wander your lizardmen into it&#039;s path, you can drop it right in front of your forces with little fear.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ancient Salamander (DLC 1)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A single giant salamander, tempered with age, experience and able to melt opponents with extra spicy hellfire. Ancient salamanders are more durable than their lesser hunting pack kin and are more reliably able to survive the occasional melee scuffle, though it generally shouldn&#039;t participate in it. Instead, the ancient salamander truly shines when paired with fire slann, salamander hunting packs, fireleech bolas terradons, or solar engine bastilidons thanks to its ability to render enemy units flammable with its own fireballs. This flammable effect greatly improves the damage dealt by flaming attacks and when executed properly and will burn through most infantry-focused armies with terrifying efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - An offensive machine, the apex predator of Lustria (you know, conventionally) and a signature monster of the lizardmen, the carnosaur is a ferocious beast that specializes in hunting other monsters, skaven weapon teams, and artillery due to their innate anti-large bonuses and armor-piercing capabilities. They&#039;re considerably frailer than stegadons and bastilidons defensively, though they are much swifter and tear through most enemies far more quickly due to their much higher attack. When funds are too tight to take a Saurus Scar-Vet or Old Blood on a carnosaur, a feral version with proper support won&#039;t steer you wrong. Just make sure you keep a leader or hero with Cold-Blooded on standby in case they get a little carried away.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blessed Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; - The blessed carnosaur. Formerly the pinnacle of lizardmen might (the dread saurian says hi), blessed carnosaurs have all the anti-large, armor-piercing wrath of the regular carnosaur supplemented by a much more rounded defensive statline. Additional health and magic resistance makes the blessed carnosaur surprisingly survivable against a myriad of generic threats and allows it to commit to fights that regular carnosaurs would hesitate towards. They are still just as vulnerable as any other carnosaur to getting mobbed or picked apart from regular armor-piercing weapons and absolutely will rampage in a bind, so don&#039;t get reckless with your charges.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Geltblöm’s Terror (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Carnosaur that never rampages and is blessed with both Vanguard deployment and the Strider ability, enabling it to keep up to speed in any terrain. Vanguard deployment and rampage immunity is a fantastic combination for a Lizardmen monster designed to fight other monsters, but don&#039;t get reckless.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Troglodon (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Troglodon without a Skink Oracle to keep it in check. Troglodons are in essence a hybrid between an Ancient Salamander and Carnosaur in that they&#039;re able to burp up potent poisonous spit that&#039;s extremely effective against large targets. Troglodons are quite possibly the first real &amp;quot;skirmisher&amp;quot; single entity monster introduced: though they&#039;re quick for ground-bound dinosaurs, they should generally only engage in melee as a last resort or with &#039;&#039;heavy&#039;&#039; support because they are not designed to put up much of a fight. In a direct melee engagement against most other combat monsters, Troglodons tend to lose pretty handily. Their low leadership also tends to cause them to rampage quickly when caught up in a brawl. However, if they focus on kiting and sniping their targets rather than charging them, they can do frankly sickening amounts of damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Pale Death (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Feral Troglodon that can buff itself and nearby allies in melee whenever it uses it&#039;s Primeval Roar, giving them a rather substantial Melee Attack bonus for a short while. Though a buff of 24 Melee Attack is certainly an eyebrow raiser, it only recharges when the Pale Death is actively engaged in melee combat. For 60 seconds. On a creature that&#039;s prone to rampaging at the drop of a hat, this is a very risky commitment without a Lord/Hero nearby to keep it in check.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, dread saurians are nigh uncontested in raw damage output and are more than capable of killing every other unit in the game in a straight fight. Unfortunately for you, your opponent will be able to field &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more units than your dread saurian will be able to deal with at once and most of said units will likely be picking it off at range. As a massive, lumbering behemoth, dodging even slow moving projectiles is well and truly beyond the dread saurian and it will take tremendous damage on the approach. Even once it arrives in melee, the sheer volume of bodies capable of surrounding it and poking it with anti-armor/anti-large sticks will wear it down quite quickly. Their size also provides another source of jank whenever they get bogged down by hordes; they&#039;ll struggle to properly path their way through the crowds (it doesn&#039;t help that the Dread Saurian also has relatively low mass considering it&#039;s literal size) and their attacks, while lethally brutal, also tend to miss depending on the terrain it&#039;s fighting on. They are also prohibitively expensive and will eat up a significant portion of your funds, meaning the rest of your army will be extremely limited in number. Ensure you have a proper supporting mage (a life slann is essential) if you&#039;re bringing one.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Saurian (DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single largest monster in the game, now wearing a howdah filled to the brim with skinks. A modest price bump from the already exorbitant feral variant will grant the regular dread saurian a higher leadership, ranged attacks and poison. There&#039;s little reason not to go ahead and splurge for these upgrades, feral or not the dread saurian will be the centerpiece of your army which you&#039;ll do everything to keep alive.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Shredder of Lustria (RoR, DLC 2)&#039;&#039;&#039; - The single most expensive beast you could ever field, and boy does he do work. In addition to all that a dread saurian can bring to bear, the Shredder of Lustria is stacked with the full complement of veterinary stat buffs and a leadership debuff for all enemies surrounding it, a perk that, when combined with the innate fear and terror dread saurians cause, will make most enemy infantry run the &#039;&#039;fuck&#039;&#039; away very fast. If that weren&#039;t enough, the Shredder of Lustria also encourages all nearby allied troops, buffing their leadership. After all, who wouldn&#039;t be inspired by seeing the apex of lizardmen might devouring any and all who oppose the Great Plan? Speaking of the Great Plan, you&#039;re going to need one: considering how much money you&#039;re sinking into this puppy, you&#039;re going to need to really budget the rest of your army carefully.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Coatl (DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - Previously a relic of a long lost bit of Lizardmen lore, the Coatl makes a rather striking return as the premier Lizardmen flying monster. The Coatl, though packing two casts of Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and one cast of Lesser Chain Lighting as bound spells, is designed more as a source of support for ground-bound allies. Infact, the main draw to the Coatl isn&#039;t its combat capabilities (which are mediocre at best), but for the fact that it grants all allied units under its wings Stalk. Yes, everything from that unit of Red-Crested Skinks to that Dread Saurian doomstack becomes invisible and untargetable until they&#039;re either far too close to do anything about or the Coatl &amp;quot;lands&amp;quot; or dies. As a faction desperately starved of long range missile units, this is a massive boon for protecting your high-value targets on the approach. Once the Coatl has safely delivered it&#039;s charges into battle, it still can serve as an excellent disruptor of backline units, Snipe artillery or single entity monsters with thunderbolt or punish a large blob with lesser chain lighting. Just be careful: even your Terradons move faster than this thing and its size does it no favors when trying to dodge missile fire.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Spirit of Tepok (RoR, DLC 3)&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Coatl that has Banishment and Shield of Thorns as bound spells instead. The option to lean more heavily into a support role does suit the Coatl quite well, though this largely depends on what lord choice and focus your army has. If you brought a life slann or a skink priest, a regular Coatl might get you more mileage.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
Lizardmen are a very versatile faction when viewed over the entire campaign, however there will be times when your army composition and thus tactics are limited depending on the progress you&#039;ve made in developing your empire. Your greatest limiting factor will be money; be it in single-player or multiplayer, many mid-high tier units will cost a fortune and you will invariably have a lower unit count compared to other armies. You will need to carefully consider the faction you&#039;re currently facing when forming your armies.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
So, you want to show the world a Great Plan, and TED talks aren&#039;t getting it done? You might think of the Lizardmen as just another &#039;big monster&#039; faction in multiplayer, but you&#039;re limiting yourself if you think that way. The scalies have a surprising amount of options within their roster. From super wide infantry builds to kite builds built around chameleon skinks, to more mobile cavalry-centric strategies, the Lizardmen can be quite a versatile opponent. The thing you&#039;re pretty much going to universally struggle against however is factions that are heavy on the ranged play. You need to think carefully about your army comp and lord choices, then bring the Great Plan to the four corners of the Earth (or multiplayer lobby, or whatever).&lt;br /&gt;
====Faction Counterplay====&lt;br /&gt;
A list of all the other factions in the game, along side their various strengths, weaknesses and best strategies you have to combat them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - Highly mobile and capable of dishing out impressive damage, the Beastmen are among the fastest armies in the game (only rivaled by the Wood Elves and Slaanesh). This can be difficult to deal with, as the only infantry you possess that can potentially keep up with them are your Skinks. Skinks...generally aren&#039;t a great pick against Beastmen. They&#039;re slower still than a significant portion of the Beastmen roster and will die quite quickly due to their lack of armor and defensive stats. Skink Skirmishers/Chameleon Skinks are a minor exception, as between their poisonous missiles and the Beastmen&#039;s lack of armor, they&#039;ll actually deal respectable damage to them. Otherwise, the stalwart Saurus (Spears) will be your best frontline unit; solid charge defenses, shields and anti-large bonuses will stop any rush in its tracks and the Beastmen&#039;s complete lack of armor means that they&#039;ll take the full brunt of their attacks. Your monsters USED to be fantastic here, but with the addition of the anti-large regenerating Ghorgon, they are a much more risky proposition. Seriously, this thing will beat the pants off of pretty much any monster you bring to the table, and its surprising mobility means that your slow-moving infantry will have a hard time tarpitting it. Shredder of Lustria builds and monster mash builds which used to be hilariously effective against the Beastie Boys are now quite dangerous to bring. Without being able to overly rely on your monsters, it&#039;s going to be up to your characters and magic to be the game-changer.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039; - The end-all, be-all cavalry faction, Brettonia has access to some of the strongest mounted soldiers in the game. Their peasantry, though feeble, isn&#039;t to be underestimated in sufficient numbers and can still do notable damage through their archers and pikemen. That said, your Skink Cohorts can easily best any peasants they (effortlessly) pin down and a unit or two of kroxigors will &#039;&#039;evicerate&#039;&#039; any foot soldier unfortunate enough to meet them in combat. Bretonnians will also struggle to hold their lines together from the sheer amount of fear/terror your monsters can cause. However, their cavalry (particularly Grail Knights) won&#039;t falter from fear alone and are renowned for their devastating charges. Brace units of temple guard (or saurus spears, if you&#039;re cheap) to mitigate their damage and box them in before they have a chance to pull back. A light slann with the Net of Amyntok can shut down Brettonian cavalry &#039;&#039;hard&#039;&#039; and should heavily be considered as your lord for this matchup.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - The general battle plan here can best be summarized with &amp;quot;Grab a bunch of ranged and 2 Solar Engines and defend them at all costs because otherwise you have no way to deal with Dark Rider Crossbow and Scourgerunner spam.&amp;quot; Seriously, those damn Anti Large missile chariots were pretty much designed to fight you. A pure melee monster rush isn&#039;t going to work otherwise you will just get kited into oblivion. Have the solar engines shoot them from afar and see if you can get you Chameleon skins to slow them down so your Cold One riders can catch up to them. Your dino cav is better than their dino cav, take advantage of that. Mazdamundi is also great for nets to lock down cavalry and get them ready for a pounding. If you can get rid of all that mobile ranged, the infantry fight should fall in your favor in no time.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039; - Dwarfs tend to form nigh impenetrable walls of armorclad infantry and are one of the few factions capable of holding the line better than you. AP weaponry is a must, so mixing Red-Crested Skinks among your Saurus can help chew through thicker formations. Kroxigors, particularly Sacred Kroxigors, will be your best infantry can openers in this fight. Despite their innate spell resistance, your offensive magics can still work wonders against most dwarfen infantry, so a heavens skink priest or fire slann wouldn&#039;t be amiss in your army here. Beware of their Giant Slayers; though fragile, they will deal terrible damage to any armored cavalry or monsters they can get their grubby dawi mitts on. Skink skirmishers/chameleon skinks can easily outpace slayer units and whittle them down with their poisoned missiles, though they&#039;ll do absolutely nothing against any of the armored infantry. Terradon riders are virtually untouchable to their ground bound forces with a special shout-out for the Fireleech Bolas variant, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to take down any Gyrocopters contesting the skies if you want to get your money&#039;s worth. Lastly, you&#039;ll want to destroy any artillery they bring before turning your attention to the rest of their forces; Ripperdactyls can easily flank and shred such devices, though you&#039;ll need to draw away any screening units if you want them to survive the aftermath. Lastly, this is one of the few matchups where Razordons are a more attractive mid-ranged option than your Salamanders.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039; - Karl Franz brings a relatively balanced roster to the table, with plenty of long ranged anti-armor firepower and cavalry that&#039;ll run circles around yours. With the sheer volume of AP [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units and artillery, this is a faction you&#039;ll generally want to leave the Saurus at home for. Skink Cohorts with shields are for once a rather reliable pick for your frontline, with Red-Crested Skinks and/or Kroxigors diving in once you&#039;ve tied down the missile units that otherwise threaten them. Additionally, your Terradon Riders can actually be quite effective in this matchup, particularly in shutting down Grenade Launcher Outriders. A Skink Priest of Heavens with Urannon&#039;s Thunderbolt and/or Comet of Cassandora is a rather cost-efficient answer to units such as the Steam Tank and Artillery Platforms, though regular Stegadons can punch holes through them if you can keep them safe. A Slann Priest with Light Magic and the Net of Amyntok coupled with a squad or two of Salamander Hunting Packs makes for an excellent cavalry deleting squad, but you&#039;ll absolutely need to shield them with your own cavalry or at the very least some shielded Saurus Spears.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039; - Go fast and hard into cathay&#039;s lines. Cathay brings a good amount of options against single-entity units with accurate grand cannons and iron hail gunners amongst others. The largest you should go is an ark of sotek or two to mass-poison damage cathay&#039;s entire packed formation. Go full offensive with saurus and try to briefly contest the skies to disrupt the artillery and missiles on the charge. in general it&#039;s a poor matchup as while the other &#039;monster race&#039; in the ogres is great against cathay it&#039;s simply a matter of price. ogres can beat cathay with a lot cheaper units than you can bring with kroxigors filling the same role as ogre bulls but 2.5 times the price. Unless your units get major discounts in multiplayer for immortal empires it&#039;s not a good time&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hordes of expendable Goblins and Ork Boyz make up the rank and file of the Greenskins. Despite having a particular focus towards mobbing you in melee combat, the Greenskins have a fairly diverse roster capable of performing decently well at ranged combat or skirmishing with their relatively diverse cavalry options. As the coup-de-grace, Greenskins also have access to several monstrous units between their selection of (river) trolls and Arachnarok Spiders that can mulch their weight in infantry. However, there are two major weaknesses to the Greenskin roster: they typically have &#039;&#039;terrible&#039;&#039; leadership (especially their expendable Goblin and Troll units) and a majority of their roster is unarmored. Saurus units will typically stand firm on the front lines while your Skink skirmishers will actually do some solid work while easily outpacing the sluggish Ork Boyz, but you will &#039;&#039;need&#039;&#039; to watch out for their Cavalry. Fireleech Bolas Terradons and Salamanders will have a field day against their infantry as well, especially against the fire-weak troll units who will crumble rapidly in the face of their flammability and terrible leadership. On the note of leadership; your pantheon of Jurassic beasties will have the time of their lives against the Greenskins. Their lack of charge defense, anti-large, and low leadership means that a Carnosaur or two will bowl through their ranks largely uncontested. However, keep an eye out for Black Orcs; they&#039;re one of the few armored infantry units in the Ork roster, are armor piercing and are immune to Fear/Terror. Red-Crested Skinks are a decent budget option to deal with them, though you may prefer to kite them with Razordon Hunting Packs instead.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Lizardmen will have some trouble countering High Elf flying monsters, particularly phoenixes. Your ranged units aren&#039;t going to get the chance to take them down in the air, so you have to rely on catching them when they drop down to attack and that can be tricky if you&#039;re running an all-dino army. At the same time, if you&#039;re using saurus then you will take some heavy losses from archers and cavalry if you commit them all to tarpitting the phoenix. Chameleon Skinks are an excellent pick against archer heavy builds; their lose formation coupled with their innate missile resistance will make them extremely hard to take down at range while their chameleon skin will let them dip in and out of combat with relative ease. Sisters of Averlorn are a priority target if present on the field; a Skink Priest of Beasts may be considered if only to summon manticores to tie them down. Additionally, the Legion of Chaqua should strongly be considered as a core part of your frontline; the ability to grant multiple units around it a 44% missile resistance is too valuable to ignore.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039; - Don&#039;t bring Skinks to this matchup. Barring Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers if you want to be cheap, all of your Skink Infantry will do little more than feed their skulls to Khorne&#039;s throne before they get an opportunity to do anything meaningful. A pricy saurus front line is definitely worth it here, potentially supported by Kroxigors. For once the &#039;engine of the gods&#039; stegadon&#039;s death-beam will actually be useful as the stegadon itself can knock about units and the death-beam being magic and AP will counter any infantry khorne can bring. Bring saurus, bring magic and your anti-large carnosaur. A very good matchup in your favor.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039; - Kislev is a relatively fearless foe for you, a nice change of pace for mere mortal men. Their higher tier infantry is generally able to out-trade yours, Tzar Guard (especially the Great Weapon variety) can and will gradually carve their way through regular Saurus lines while Streltsi and Ice Guard will prove quite competent at dealing with your forces at range. Fortunately, your sheer versatility means you aren&#039;t wanting for options. Even if they&#039;re a bit slower, your Cavalry will generally outclass Kislev&#039;s, barring any War Bear Riders they may have brought. Even regular Cold One Riders will make a fantastic hammer to the anvil that is your Saurus and even a losing matchup against their stronger Tzar Guard will quickly turn in your favor with a rear charge or two. Of course, aside their War Bear Riders, Kislev&#039;s monsters can&#039;t hold a candle to yours. Once you shut down some of the ranged AP Missiles, your dinos can wreak terrible havoc upon the enemy lines. Razordons are particularly effective right now, though Salamanders can be used to efficiently deal with the more monstrous enemy units. Terradons are almost always a never-pick however as since in essence every single kislev unit has a ranged attack that is more than capable of dealing with them terradons are free kills for even kossars.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039; - This...should be a no brainer in concept, though countering opposing lizardmen can be somewhat difficult to execute. Anti-large units in some shape or form are an inarguable must; cold one spear-riders accompanied by saurus spears can surround and pin down enemy monsters in a relatively cost-effective manner. Red-crested skinks are an ideal infantry choice due to their poison and armor piercing bonus coming into play against a majority of the lizardman roster. Salamander hunting packs and ancient salamanders are fantastic all-rounders that can deal terrifying damage across the entire board. Your main objective should be to focus down any slann mage-priest or skink priests present on the field, followed by any other lord/hero keeping potential rampages in check. If there is an opposing slann, avoid clumping up your infantry to reduce the threat of a banishment and/or any other vortex spell devastating your frontlines. Regular stegadons are fantastic monster snipers who should focus fire on major threats like carnosaurs or dread saurians before anything else.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are pretty much Warriors of Chaos with a little bit of [[Space Wolf|wolf]] thrown in. Like the Warriors of Chaos, they have a relative lack of missile units but unlike the Warriors of Chaos, are considerably less armored as a whole. However, they more than make up for it with their mobility and plentiful sources of anti-large, which can be seriously dangerous for one of your central strategies. Saurus Warriors as such are substantially better at holding off the bulk of their front lines while Temple Guard are a fantastic answer to their Skin Wolves and Trolls. You need to be on top of your positioning however, as Skin Wolves and Ice Wolves can run circles around your plodding infantry. Skink Skirmishers are also fantastic for dealing chip damage and applying poison while staying well out of arm&#039;s reach for a majority of their forces. (Ancient) Salamanders are also a superb choice, as are Fireleech Bolas Terradons as general damage dealers. Stegadons and Carnosaurs will likely be your go-to monsters, as a pair of Carnosaurs can typically take down a War Mammoth, at least in theory. Caution should be exercised against War Mammoths in particular, as they are one of the best monster units in the game. Considering the fact that half your list is made of monsters, that&#039;s saying something. No Norscan worth his salt will allow you to freely target down the crown jewel of his army, so make sure you commit well and truly to the fight.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039; -Nurgle has no anti-large, bad armour piercing, relies on outlasting his enemies, has almost no ranged firepower worth mentioning, has incredibly poor armour, is ridiculously slow, hates fire damage, and is mediocre in the air-game. Basically, everything Nurgle hates is something you have plenty of while Nurgle has precisely zero counters to your playstyle. You almost can&#039;t lose this match-up it&#039;s so one-sided.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is a fairly balanced matchup depending on what you bring. Saurus spears are the obvious pick here and try to avoid skink units entirely unless you want to give the gorgers free food. Carnosaurs with their anti-large are an obvious pick here and going for a stegadon with or without a hero on the back is great for counterplay against leadbelchers.The scariest thing ogres can bring are rhinoxes or their artillery. Essentially settle in for a large-on-large slugfest.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039; - An iconic matchup, the skaven are everything the lizardmen aren&#039;t. Massive hordes of cheap, cowardly cannon fodder will fill the ranks of many skaven lists purely to get in the way of your Jurassic might and their rickety engines of war. Aside delaying the inevitable through piles of bodies, the ratmen have precious little in the way of durable front line units and will typically fall apart when thrown in the grinder. Rather, Skaven will rely on their wide array of artillery and arcane firearms to rain warpfire upon the hapless masses (friend and foe alike). Ratling Gunners are notorious for their ability to rapidly shred infantry, cavalry and monsters alike while their jezzails excel at picking apart single entity monsters, lords and heroes from halfway across the battlefield. Any frontline infantry you have you&#039;ll want shielded. In general, skaven are modestly quick on their feet, so you&#039;ll want a selection of cavalry or skinks to catch up to and tie down their missile infantry. Chameleon Skinks are generally a strong pick against skaven due to their missile resistance and for once can do respectable damage due to the relative lack of armor in the skaven roster. Skink Cohorts will typically win in a straight fight against Skaven Slaves or Clanrats, though against anything more elite you&#039;ll want saurus or kroxigors to deal with them. Your monsters will also have virtually free reign should they manage to make it into melee, though you&#039;ll want to ensure any artillery or missile infantry are well and truly tied down before you let them loose.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039; - Much like the Dark Elves, this matchup falls considerably in their favor. Speedy infantry, cavalry and chariots &#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039; packing AP damage makes a front line of Saurus undesirable. However, unlike the Dark Elves, Slaanesh [[/d/|comes]] up short in the ranged game; your Chameleon Skinks, Skink Skirmishers and even both Terradon Riders will prove quite valuable at whittling away Slaaneshi daemons, though exquisite care will be needed for your skink infantry; even with poison debuffs, Slaaneshi units are &#039;&#039;damn&#039;&#039; fast and will still be able to chase down and tie up your Skinks without screening support. Other options include your trademark dinosaurs; despite packing AP damage, Slaanesh is not generally kitted with a diverse Anti-Large roster and may struggle trying to hold back your high-mass monsters from tearing through their ranks. When it comes to your Terradons, take a care. Slaanesh will usually pack some Furies to help defend the skies and though Furies won&#039;t win against any of your other monsters, your Terradons aren&#039;t most other monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039; - There&#039;s not a lot a basic skeleton army can do to lizardmen. Unit for unit, saurus are just better and skinks will be more maneuverable. An all-dino army can destroy ushabti and higher-tier units with ease, provided you&#039;ve picked the right dinos (stegadons). However, this is not a reason to be complacent - the Tomb Kings roster has some very deadly Anti-Large AP units on their roster that will make very short work of your dinos. Of particular note are the Ushabti Greatbows and Necrosphinx; the former are dedicated monster snipers and the latter is absolute murder against other single-entity monsters. Try to mob these units with your infantry or try to make them irrelevant with magic, because the high innate armor and mass these units naturally have will mean they can and will be able to move around the battlefield with impunity.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039; - The key against Tzeentch is to get into melee quick and hold their units in place; Tzeentch daemons, even with their Protoss-like shields, aren&#039;t built for combat and will either try to do all their work at range (something you &#039;&#039;desperately&#039;&#039; will not want to combat them at) or by cycle charging before you get a chance to crack their shields. This is one of the rare matchups your Cold One Riders can actually excel at; they&#039;re rather decent in combat and can engage the enemy far sooner than your standard Saurus or Skinks can (and will likely/hopefully suffer less casualties for it). Additionally, Chameleon Stalkers can safely sneak up to vulnerable flanks; open up with a rather explosive burst of their own and start chewing through Horrors before they get much opportunity to return fire. Try not to contest the skies if you can, though Ripperdactyls will likely best most of the units they&#039;d be fighting in the skies... they&#039;ll be outnumbered substantially &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; move much more slowly. They&#039;ll be lit up far before they can ever catch up to anything.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039; - In terms of punching through these undeads&#039; lines they&#039;re even easier than their Vampire Counts brothers with very little in the way of durable infantry to hold back your Saurus killing machines. Where you will have to watch out is their ranged units - they have one of the cheapest gunlines in the game and it&#039;s even harder to break open their protectors because they&#039;re all undead and can&#039;t run. Their monsters will tarpit your dinos but rarely kill them, but without proper maneuvering you will be munching on polearm zombies all day while their undead musketeers and cannons fuck you up. Abuse magic hard and don&#039;t let them bog down your dinos, keep them constantly rolling through the zombies until you can trample over their gunners. Be very wary about Necrofex Colossi, not only can they kite your dinos but they can also put substantial hurt on them if not checked quickly.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039; - If there&#039;s any faction in the game more stunted in the range-game, it&#039;s the Vampire Counts. Hordes upon hordes of meat-shields often form the rank and file of many undead lists while the lords and heroes do all the heavy lifting. You&#039;ll want to avoid clumping your units up or getting bogged down by the fodder, as a single Winds of Death can delete your entire frontline if you allow it. Kroxigors will make short work of any infantry the Vampire Counts send your way and Sacred Kroxigors in particular are extremely valuable against the ethereal units that might otherwise threaten your physical forces. Additionally, Skink Skirmishers will prove a frustrating thorn in your opponents side as they kite any non-cav across the field and back. Typically you&#039;ll want to focus on bringing down any characters the Vampire Counts field, as they quite literally hold the army together. Without their leadership and magic support, many of the undead will quickly crumble against the might of your superior soldiers. Fire damage is particularly useful in this regard, so Salamander Hunting Packs, Ancient Salamanders, Solar Engines and Fire Slann can quickly incinerate many of these lords and heroes (in the case of the Slann, they are also fantastic at dealing with ethereal heroes).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemons of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Expect to see a roster comprising mostly of Slaanesh and Tzeentch daemons. If this is the case, you&#039;re in for a rough one. If your opponent decided to focus on Khorne or Nurgle forces... well, hopefully you enjoy the borderline free win. Regardless, this can be a tricky matchup to properly plan for, so just try to take a balanced list. With a slight focus against Tzeentch/Slaanesh, of course.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039; - Another faction almost devoid of ranged options, the Warriors of Chaos is almost dedicated to advancing a wall of steel and meat from one end of the map to the other. Many of their units are armored and/or shielded and as such, armor-piercing units will be your friend against them. Take a few units of Saurus (Spears) to hold their units in place while you have some Red-Crested Skinks chip away at them. Spears are strongly suggested due to the relative abundance of large/monstrous units within their roster; they might not win against them, but your spears will go down fighting much harder than your regular warriors would. Take a unit or two of Ripperdactyls to shut down any Hellcannons they might&#039;ve brought to the table. Take no half-measures with them either; they&#039;re unbreakable so you &#039;&#039;will&#039;&#039; need to completely wipe them out if you don&#039;t want to be bombarded the entire match. Otherwise, some (Sacred) Kroxigors, Razordons and Stegadons are fantastic damage dealers and a Skink Priest of Heavens or a Fire Slann can delete large chunks of their infantry at a time with proper placement and timing.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039; - Wood Elves are a flighty foe and one of the hardest for your army to actually pin down. Their relatively cheap access to long-ranged anti-armor missile infantry will pose a massive pain in the ass and their basic frontline infantry, the Eternal Guard, can hold their own surprisingly well against your monsters courtesy of their spears. In a rare twist, a front line of skink cohorts will prove more effective than your saurus against wood elves; they&#039;re quicker still than many elven infantry options and can further hinder their combat effectiveness thanks to their poison. Chameleon skinks will prove invaluable at harassing enemy archers and can kite a majority of their infantry with relative ease. Now when it comes to dealing with their tree units, I have one word for you. Fire. (Ancient) Salamanders can deal with dryads, tree kin and treemen with laughable ease and will prove just as effective at dealing with the rest of the wood elf roster, though you&#039;ll absolutely want a contingent or two of saurus spears to screen against Wild Riders. Wood Elves are also a rare instance of being a faction with &#039;&#039;less&#039;&#039; artillery than you (hint, they have none). Solar Engine bastilidons can heavily discourage their archers from setting up and will do bonus damage to any tree units they shoot. Lastly, many Wood Elf units are capable of vanguard deployment; keep an eye on your surroundings once the battle starts to ensure you aren&#039;t caught unawares.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;S/S-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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Though you aren&#039;t the undisputed king of Domination, Lizardmen are absolutely positioned as one of the top factions for this game mode currently. A very flexible faction with many options, you have excellent early game presence in the form of skinks. Your quick-footed infantry chaff will easily contest objectives due to their higher capture weight compared to the expendable chaff infantry other factions might field and will have a much easier time getting to them shortly after the game begins. Particularly any of the skirmishing variety that you vanguard deployed. Speaking of, Chameleon Stalkers/Skinks are still excellent skirmishers and harassers who can dive in and disrupt outlying forces, making objective contesting a painful nuisance for ill-equipped foes. When it comes to holding the line, your Saurus infantry is as durable as ever. When supported by regular skinks, it will take a concentrated effort if not a full hard counter in order to shift your forces off of an objective. This is made even more challenging due to your rather plentiful healing options; Life Slann, Skink Oracles and even Revivification Bastilidons are fantastic for keeping your forces in the fight. Even more so if further supported by any Slann&#039;s Ward save nope-bubble that they can plant down on any objective to thoroughly lock it down. This isn&#039;t even really getting into your single entity beat-sticks; Kroq-Gar can prove the equal of lords such as Be&#039;lakor with the right support and Lord Kroak can still Deliver Itza hard enough to evaporate enemy blobs with frightening ease.&lt;br /&gt;
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At the end of the day, your sheer versatility affords you &#039;&#039;far&#039;&#039; more flexibility in dealing with the highly varied factions you&#039;ll be facing while still being able to focus on defending objectives. Yes, there are still some factions you&#039;ll generally struggle to deal with, but you will at least have a couple tools to handle them while you hold your ground. This is something some of the other factions (like the Dwarfs or Vampire Coast) cannot quite claim.&lt;br /&gt;
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A particular note, if you&#039;re going up against one of the other top-tier factions in this game mode, such as Nurgle or Vampire Counts, bring fire. A Salamander Hunting Pack or two, a Fire Slann and &#039;&#039;maybe&#039;&#039; a Fireleech Bolas Terradon Rider can more efficiently stymie those factions regenerative strengths while further exploiting their innate flammability. A Burning Head or Firestorm will incinerate most of their blobs while dealing moderately little to your armored Saurus lines while Salamanders will also prove quite potent against the larger monsters/chariots supporting them.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
In the campaign, be it the Vortex or Mortal Empires, the biggest concern lizardmen have is obtaining a consistent source of income; skinks will only carry you so far in the early game and sacking settlements will only provide a quick short-term boost to your treasury. Your economy generally lacks bonuses, especially compared to other Warhammer 2 factions, though you won&#039;t be as constrained as, say, Wood Elves or Beastmen, and expanding the Geomantic Web and getting upkeep reduction skills will go a long, long way. As such, if you aren&#039;t playing as Hexoatl it is imperative to get the city as soon as possible for its landmark, which reduces upkeep on the lizardmen&#039;s most powerful units. Most other landmark buildings add some bonus to several unit chains, such as additional damage for skinks or more defense for saurus warriors.&lt;br /&gt;
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Lizardmen research is locked behind building completion; many important technologies cannot be accessed until a specific, often mediocre in mid-early game, building is built in one of your settlements. Generally speaking, it is better to unlock research to start improving your weaker units rather than focus on your economy in the early- to mid-game. You simply won&#039;t be generating much revenue from economy buildings until the Geomantic Web is expanded and upkeep is reduced. However, that also means you need to be smart about what buildings to construct in your limited settlements; depending on how much money you have coming in through battles and sacking, it may be worth it to construct something just to unlock research and then destroy it to make room for something you genuinely need.&lt;br /&gt;
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Despite skinks being largely cannon fodder after turn 75, the skink Spawning Pool building should be built in every minor settlement so that you can hire as many Skink Chief heroes as possible. Not only are they the faction assassins, which help lizardmen remove otherwise troublesome heroes that would be difficult to snipe on the battlefield, they can all get stegadon or ancient stegadon mounts. These are functionally equivalent to the generic version but come with extended range and bonuses to damage. It is possible to have two full armies of just Skink Chiefs by the Chaos invasion, if you so wish, and it is even more OP than the standard dinostack. Skink Priests also have access to these mounts, but increasing their recruiting slots is much more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
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Once you start becoming established and have a few provinces under your belt, it is imperative to begin constructing Star Chambers in every province you can afford to do so. Each Star Chamber boosts the starting rank of all newly recruited Slann Mage-Priests by 3 levels and all new heroes by 2. Yes, this stacks all the way up so that you can recruit max level Slann every 10 turns. Each Star Chamber also offers a small but lucrative bonus to all income for the whole Province, which helps to address your stone-age economy and extends enemy sieges by an extra 3 turns, potentially granting you just enough time to save the city should it fall under attack.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Mortal Empires/Vortex===&lt;br /&gt;
With the advent of Immortal Empires in the third game, this will admittedly feel like a lackluster experience compared to it. Having said that, if you feel like sticking to the &amp;quot;OG&amp;quot; experience or don&#039;t quite want to pick up game III yet, here are some tips and tricks. In general, if you&#039;re starting as one of the factions starting on your home turf of Lustria, you&#039;re going to feel quite cramped.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;City of the Sun&#039;&#039;&#039; - Big boss Mazdamundi starts with a couple nice things going for him; As the proud owner of Hexoatl, late game Dino-Doomstacks can become particularly affordable. Additionally, he can expand south relatively freely due to a province&#039;s worth of abandoned settlements ripe for the plundering/taking. Not everything is as bright as his city&#039;s namesake suggests; A permanent -10 diplomatic penalty to all Non-Lizardmen factions can make diplomacy somewhat problematic. This is exacerbated by the fact that Mazda starts directly south of the Dark Elves and has a cluster of aggressive Vampire Coast and lizard-hating Empire colonists barring his access to the rest of Lustria. After you secure your initial holdings, you should weigh your options carefully then commit to eradicating one threat at a time if you can help it. Wiping out Morathi&#039;s Dark Elves is the more challenging prospect; their abundance of Armor Piercing weaponry (melee and ranged) can make early game excursions north particularly brutal. This is made worse by the climate incompatibilities, where growth and replenishment are dramatically hindered. On the other hand, Morathi&#039;s capital city does provide some rather significant bonuses to your research, income and public order (reduction of penalties from corruption). Should you choose to go south, you&#039;ll have a much easier time and will be able to meet up with several other Lizardmen factions you can trade/confederate with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Last Defender&#039;&#039;&#039; - Starting in the ass-crack of the southeast, Kroq-Gar has a bit of a rough start. His only legendary lord neighbor, Tiktaq&#039;to, is still a veritable hike through Vampire/Tomb King infested deserts and Skaven/Ork-filled mountains. You do have two other generic Lizardmen factions nearby, but they often get wiped out within the first 20 turns by either Vampires, Tomb Kings or Malus Darkblade, if you don&#039;t do the job for them. To get to the rest of your Lizard brethren (who actually matter), you&#039;re going to have to carve a path of bloody carnage across the literal length of the map. There are a couple of ways to go about it, however. If you focus your efforts, you can shove off the coast above your capital city and take the Dragon Isles province directly to the north. If you head north quickly, you can snag a veritable batch of handy Legendary Lord traits that&#039;ll turn Kroq-Gar into a particularly potent duelist and secure a number of relatively isolated, defendable provinces before you press westward. If you&#039;d rather focus on pressing west initially... prepare for the long haul. You&#039;ll want to keep a banner army stationed either in Charnel Valley (where Clan Mors starts) or in Devil&#039;s Backbone (where the Court of Lybaras starts) to help defend against Ork or potential Dark Elf incursions.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lllllet&#039;s get ready to RUMBLE!&#039;&#039;&#039; - Brace yourself, you&#039;re deep in the Lustria-Bowl. Tehenhauin has the roughest start of all your lords, even including Horde-faction Nakai; though he has one potential ally to his immediate south, he has Vampire Coast, Dark Elves, Skaven and expansionist Empire folk surrounding him on all sides. Worse, you&#039;re effectively stuck with Skinks for infantry until you can make progress on your Skaven genocide quest. To this end, you&#039;re going to want to either focus on pumping out a flood of Skinks or focus on building your Beast Lairs to try to pump out some monstrous units to compensate for your lack of early-game muscle. Taking out the Vampire Coast first is strongly recommended, as not only do they spread vampiric corruption, but all of their settlements will provide you with valuable ports. From there, you can put the screws to the Dark Elves and Skaven to the south and claim some valuable land and sacrifices for Sotek.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Tiktaq&#039;to====&lt;br /&gt;
* Perhaps the most... bland campaign, Tiktaq&#039;to just kind of exists in the middle of the Southlands, caught between some Tomb Kings, a random Empire faction and a fair few crusading Bretonnians. If you want, you can focus on allying with the Tomb Kings initially. They can provide a reasonable source of Trade income and provide a buffer against the burgeoning Greenskin-tide while you clean up the Bretonnians and Empire. Additionally, if you focus on sweeping east, you can get a solid point of entry into Lustria.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Gor-Rok==== &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The world is your Itza&#039;&#039;&#039; - Despite being solidly in the Lustria-Bowl and being a Saurus-dedicated, exclusive footlord, Gor-Rok is basically guaranteed supremecy due to beginning the game with Lord Kroak &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; starting with Itza as his capitol. Tehenhauin will often end up confederating with you pretty early and without much fuss due to the various Lustria-Bowl contenders beating the piss out of him. You&#039;ll likely want to focus your initial expansion down south to clear out the Skaven and secure the various resources found on the southeast coastline before pushing north to clear out the Vampires. Once you control the majority of Lustria, you effectively have free reign to set your sights anywhere you feel like conquering.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Nakai====&lt;br /&gt;
* Formerly the most wayward of the Children of the Old Ones, Nakai&#039;s start in Albion effectively tries to throw you against the forces of Norsca for a majority of your early-mid game. After some research, he&#039;s admittedly geared for it; natural Snow and Chaos Attrition immunity courtesy of your unique tech tree grants Nakai a lot more flexibility for engaging the northern Chaos factions and despite not controlling any of the settlements he captures, the Defenders of the Great Plan generate a &#039;&#039;ton&#039;&#039; of Untainted corruption. Though this won&#039;t really benefit you personally much, your allies (or fellow players on Co-Op campaigns) will find traversing the north considerably less threatening. Having said that, due to being a Horde faction, you&#039;re perfectly free to just abandon Albion entirely and find new stomping grounds to start your Campaign in.&lt;br /&gt;
In immortal empires he&#039;s even more lost starting in fucking cathay. But he does get a proper stegadon as a starting unit so that&#039;s a big bonus&lt;br /&gt;
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====Oxyotl====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Deep in enemy territory&#039;&#039;&#039; - Aside Nakai and &#039;&#039;potentially&#039;&#039; Tehenhauin, Oxyotl has the most unique (and arguably best) Campaign. His initial start is a bit rough, being awkwardly sandwiched in the far north between the rapidly confederating Dark Elves to the west and the pugnacious Norscans to the east. Though his universal climate habitability is a (necessary) godsend, he&#039;ll find it somewhat difficult to defend and expand his home territory. If you can, try to focus down the Dark Elves once you secure your home province. Oxyotl&#039;s particular playstyle actually counters Dark Elves to a degree and if you can nip Malekith in the bud before he confederates the rest of his misbegotten kind, you can spare yourself a late-game headache and get a hell of an infrastructure set up with all the unique building chains found in Naggarond. Just make sure you keep a couple standing armies in the region for the Chaos Invasion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t neglect your missions&#039;&#039;&#039; - This is because, unless you want to get constant debuffs, buff random enemy armies into the stratosphere or cause the Chaos Invasion to happen way ahead of schedule, Oxyotl&#039;s army is going to be consistently busy warping around the map doing missions rather than naturally expanding your home territory. He can warp back to the capitol and any one Silent Sanctum of your choosing freely (which you can establish in any settlement you&#039;ve laid eyes upon at least once), but only once per turn and he does not regain any of the movement/actions spent prior to the warp. However, many of the missions Oxyotl needs to undertake often involves him razing or capturing enemy settlements, so you&#039;ll often find yourself with various holdouts sprinkled across the map. Just make sure that you get a banner army or two to defend your capitol if you can help it; things get &#039;&#039;extremely&#039;&#039; messy once the Chaos Invasion starts.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Your Silent Sanctums&#039;&#039;&#039; - Your other unique mechanic is a game-changer for the Lizardmen. Functionally, they&#039;re similar to Skaven Undercities; you can construct unique buildings to benefit any of your forces within the Region it was established, as well as any other regions neighboring it. This can include granting your forces permanent vision on everything within those regions, a flat 20% upkeep reduction for all of your forces within the area or even a random chance to deal damage to enemy forces happening by. Whenever you amass 8 gems, you can construct a Silent Sanctum in any settlement any of your characters have personally seen. One key function truly unique to Oxyotl is that you can actually construct a building that allows Oxyotl&#039;s army to teleport there at will. You can literally teleport a full Stegadon doomstack right next to an enemy faction&#039;s capitol city if you so desire. Suffice to say, Silent Sanctums are extremely useful and worth investing in.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Take Albion!&#039;&#039;&#039; - If you can afford the excursion, send Oxyotl or a generic banner army south to Albion and claim it. Several unique buildings in Konquata provide rather substantial financial boons and, especially when coupled with a specially kitted out Silent Sanctum, can serve as a rapid recruitment center for your efforts in the Old World. You&#039;re the only Lizardmen faction within a reasonable distance who can actually make use of these unique buildings and an early capture can prove to be a rather profitable investment for your economy.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Immortal Empires===&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s here, the biggest Total War map to date, spanning effectively the entire Old World and then some (only a few less than fleshed out regions such as Nippon are excluded). The Lustriabowl has for the most part calmed down, a majority of the non-lizardmen factions have set sail for greener pastures and with the inclusion of the entire southern half of the continent, what factions that remain now have some breathing room. Having said that, this season, it&#039;s time for the Southlands Thunderdome to kick off! While Gor-Rok and Tehenhauin can breathe a sigh of relief, Kroq-Gar and Tiktaq&#039;to are now sandwiched in with factions from damn near every walk of (un)life; Vampire Counts, Tomb Kings, Daemons of Khorne and Tzeentch, Dwarfs, Orks, Skaven, High Elves, Empire, Bretonnians, the list goes ON.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re playing as Gor-Rok, Tehenhauin or even Mazdamundi, don&#039;t get too comfortable in Lustria however. Dark Elves in the form of Rakarth have set up shop on the western coast of Lustria, Clan Pestilins has borderline free reign of the south-eastern coastline, Markus Wulfhart continues his colonial ways in northern Lustria alongside his new-found Bretonnian buddy Alberic. The Vampire Coast is, in fact, still infested with the Vampire Coast and a few rogue factions of daemons muck about in central Lustria. Though it won&#039;t be &#039;&#039;quite&#039;&#039; as chaotic as before, given the extra breathing room, you&#039;ll still need to remain vigilant if you want to kick all the warm-bloods out of your homeland.&lt;br /&gt;
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One notable change is the Rite of Awakening; it no longer costs any gold to use, so once you unlock it, there&#039;s &#039;&#039;no&#039;&#039; reason to not immediately use it to spawn in a Slann for your recruitment pool. Enact that shit every single time it pops off cooldown.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Kroq-Gar====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scar-Veteran Doomstack Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;: Kroq-Gar probably got the biggest buff/change transitioning from Mortal Empires to Immortal Empires among lizardmen. The first notable perk is that his faction has been &#039;&#039;heavily&#039;&#039; re-tooled to focus on Saurus; specifically Old-Bloods and Scar-Veterans. Faction wide, Saurus Spawning pools now grant additional perks beyond the ability to recruit Saurus units and, at 4th tier, will grant an additional +2 recruit rank for Scar-Veterans. This stacks with both the Humble trait and Star Chambers (which now, unfortunately, can only be constructed in province capitals), letting you &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; quickly start cranking out high-ranking Scar-Veterans on Carnosaurs. If that weren&#039;t enough, all Scar-Veterans and Old-Bloods gain a 30% boost to experience gain and get an extra 1% Weapon Strength per rank they have (capping out at a [[/d/|+50% weapon strength buff at max level]]). The Last Defenders did lose their universal -10% upkeep discounts, but it&#039;s slightly made up for since Old-Bloods gain a -15% Upkeep reduction for their banner armies, encouraging you to run them as Lords for your more expensive doomstacks. Though by no means should you forsake taking a Slann here and there.&lt;br /&gt;
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:Kroq-Gar himself downgraded some of his personal buffs, comparatively. Gone are the leadership and armor buffs for Stegadons, Bastiladons, Terradons and Carnosaurs. Instead, Saurus and Cold-One Riders gain a 25% experience gain buff and his former -50% upkeep reduction for Saurus and Cold One units has simply dropped down to the fairly standard -15% universal upkeep reduction all his Old-Blood units get. Much more versatile than before, though.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Speaking of the scaly lizard, he starts on the eastern coast of the Southlands, smack dab above Teclis (for now). Teclis makes for a decent defensive ally if you so wish and a valuable buffer against the southern Chaos forces such as Kairos. Almost invariably, you&#039;re going to be forced upwards in your wars; smaller Skaven infest the Kingdom of Beasts province and Khalida is often prone to declaring war against you once you work your way north. Immediately following Khalida, you&#039;ll likely draw the ire of Clan Mors and be drawn straight into the Karak Eight-Peaks race, oddly enough.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Should you sail northeast, you can evict Ku&#039;gath from the Dragon Isles for a nice footstep into southern Grand Cathay and the Darklands. Anyone who&#039;s played enough of Mortal Empires might be so inspired for a fresh change of scenery.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
:Heading directly west to meet up with your lizard brethren is also far more tenable, now that you don&#039;t need to fight your way through an entire desert&#039;s worth of Tomb Kings. You&#039;ll still need to secure your starting province, but as the Golden Tower now stands as a convenient mountain pass, you can meet and greet Tiktaq&#039;to extremely early in the campaign. His starting region offers a nice launching point into your ancestral home, where you can ideally encounter Tehenhauin clinging to life on the bottom cape of Lustria. Should you wish to actually expand there for all the unique buildings and legendary lords ripe for confederation, you&#039;ll need to make sure you don&#039;t neglect your Southlands homelands.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Mazdamundi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortal Empires&#039;&#039;&#039; - Probably the biggest change from TWWH2 is the expansion of Lustria and the separation of North and South &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;America&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Lustria. Warhammer Mexico has been tweaked a little bit, with Skeggi and the coast being their own province. Skeggi is more challenging now since they can spam Marauder Champions, meaning you&#039;ll be tied up with them a bit more than before.&lt;br /&gt;
**Cylostra is now further north, next to Alith Anar, but you&#039;ll still have to deal with Rakarth, Wulfhart, Bordelaux, and of course, the Awakened. Most of these guys, and especially Rakarth, are packing lots of anti-Large, so you&#039;ll want to plan your armies ahead: Carnosaurs and Temple Guard can deal with Rakarth, but you&#039;ll want some artillery to deal with Wulfhart.&lt;br /&gt;
**North of Hexoatl is still the same clusterfuck, and you&#039;ll want to appease the Sisters of Twilight so that you&#039;re not dealing with a war on two fronts; their AI is stupidly annoying, and they will break non-aggression pacts with you if your relations hover even slightly above neutral. This anon recommends trading any settlements that you capture from Morathi to them in exchange for a fee, which can net you 7-8k in gold and some goodwill. Any settlement north of the Fallen Gates is useless to you anyway, and because Wood Elves have terrible settlement defense, as soon as Morathi takes them back, you can do it all over again and farm gold, allegiance, and positive relations.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Tehenhauin====&lt;br /&gt;
The Cult of Sotek got a minor buff with the reworking of their sacrificial pyramid. Regiments of Renown now unlock normally, while sacrifices can be spent to acquire powerful Blessed units. In addition, the updated character UI makes swapping Tehenhauin&#039;s unique banners and ancillaries very convenient and a little more useful.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin starts in the southwest corner of Lustria and will need to move fast to prevent Rakarth and Lord Skrolk from getting too established. Generally, Skrolk will expand further and faster, taking most of southern Lustria from the minor faction to your east. Rakarth will have few targets for expansion and will declare war on you fairly early, whereas Skrolk will ignore you until he completes his conquest. However, Skrolk is likely to be easier to defeat early on and taking his territories will give Tehenhauin some safe territory to develop since Gor-Rok will be to your north and there&#039;s little to no chance the AI will cross the ocean from the Southlands. Then you can build up the resources you need to defeat Rakarth armies of darkshards and spearmen, which are far more difficult for Tehenhauin&#039;s early-game armies to deal with. Humble heroes and skink chiefs on stegadons can be very useful at that point.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Once these two threats are dealt with, it&#039;s up to you whether you&#039;ll finish off the remaining minor factions in Lustria (Spine of Sotek Dwarfs, Tower of Dusk, Bordeleaux Errants, Luthor Harkon) or ally with them to get some unit variety. If you head north, Markus Wulfhart still can&#039;t be negotiated with and you&#039;ll have to destroy him if you want to reach Hexoatl. You may find it more interesting to head east and reach &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;the Southlands&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Mordor, where Tiktaqto and Kroq-gar should be clinging to life as the Vermintide bears down on them. But be wary; heading to the Southlands means you&#039;ll likely meet Kairos and will need to deal with Changing of the Ways if you don&#039;t finish him off. Luckily, his defeat trait is useful for Tehenhauin.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Alternatively, using the new sea lanes will bring you to Grand Cathay and Nakai the Wanderer. Most of the territory available will be yellow, whereas Lustrian and Southlands territories are green, but the areas of Cathay you can conquer/confederate will be almost completely secure from future attack as long as you maintain good relations with Zhao Ming and Meow Ying. Nakai tends to be fairly easy to confederate once you&#039;ve gotten 3 or more armies, and while he&#039;s not a stellar legendary lord he is one of the best fighters available to the lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Tehenhauin can meet Oxyotl very early in the campaign, however all of Oxyotl&#039;s territory will be red. It&#039;s probably better to leave him independent rather than confederate him, as the AI cheats will allow him to defeat all the Chaos factions in the Southern Chaos Wastes far more easily than the player can, and none of that territory is worth anything to the Cult of Sotek. Of course, this could all be a moot point considering how hard it is to confederate Lizardmen in general.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=502744</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=502744"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:43:22Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Rakarth */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. Assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory. Don&#039;t Bother with Slave Markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the Dark Elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong Legendary Lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like Bleakswords and Darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with Lore of Shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other Druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitch, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a Dark Elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 Dread Knights are running over Red Crested Skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf deathstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts Cold One Knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another Dark Elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. However, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true Druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503063</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503063"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:42:16Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Malus Darkblade */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. Assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory. Don&#039;t Bother with Slave Markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the Dark Elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong Legendary Lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like Bleakswords and Darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with Lore of Shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other Druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitch, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a Dark Elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 Dread Knights are running over Red Crested Skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf deathstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts Cold One Knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another Dark Elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503062</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503062"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:40:39Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Lokhir */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. Assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory. Don&#039;t Bother with Slave Markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the Dark Elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong Legendary Lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like Bleakswords and Darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with Lore of Shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other Druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitch, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a Dark Elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 Dread Knights are running over Red Crested Skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf deathstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503061</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503061"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:37:08Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Hellebron */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. Assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory. Don&#039;t Bother with Slave Markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the Dark Elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong Legendary Lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like Bleakswords and Darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with Lore of Shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other Druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503060</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503060"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:36:04Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Morathi */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. Assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory. Don&#039;t Bother with Slave Markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the Dark Elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong Legendary Lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like Bleakswords and Darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with Lore of Shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503059</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503059"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:30:43Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Campaign Strategies */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. Assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory. Don&#039;t Bother with Slave Markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the Dark Elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong legendary lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like bleakswords and darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with lore of shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503058</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503058"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T20:21:17Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Campaign Strategies */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 Masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in Immortal Empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory.&lt;br /&gt;
Don&#039;t Bother with Slave markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the dark elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong legendary lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like bleakswords and darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with lore of shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503057</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503057"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T18:09:43Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Domination */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the Druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that Lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in immortal empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory.&lt;br /&gt;
Don&#039;t Bother with Slave markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the dark elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong legendary lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like bleakswords and darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with lore of shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503056</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503056"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T18:08:22Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Multiplayer Strategies */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Warriors of Chaos now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast flyers, like Doom Knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide using Hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart Druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Warriors of Chaos and Slaanesh. Bring a couple Executioners, Bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to Cold One Knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by Demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with Pistoliers and Outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the Greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with Doom Divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad Nasty Skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your Crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of Spider Riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of AP ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their Martial Prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use Murderous Prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the Druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You’re more than matchup in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your Bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of AP to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plaguebearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a Beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the Ogres, especially when Murderous Prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox Ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a Reaper Bolt Thrower or some Dark Riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The Skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 Manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the Skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have AP out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that AP effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from Furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your AP missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or AP volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in Zombies and summons, so make sure you have a Fire Sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on Zombie Dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their Fell Bats and Dire Wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your AP. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your Dark Riders/Chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in immortal empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory.&lt;br /&gt;
Don&#039;t Bother with Slave markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the dark elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong legendary lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like bleakswords and darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with lore of shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503055</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503055"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T17:24:07Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Multiplayer Strategies */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier, they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider Crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor Raiders and the inherent speed of the Beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the Druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and AP, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as Dreadspears, Bleakswords, Witch Elves, and Sisters of Slaughter will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with Bull Centaurs and Wolf Riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with Bull Centaurs and K&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Chaos Warriors now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast fliers, like doom knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide use hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/ Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Chaos Warriors and Slaanesh. Bring a couple executioners, bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to cold one knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with pistoliers and outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with doom divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad nasty skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of spider riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of ap ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their martial prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use murderous prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You more than match up in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of ap to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plague-bearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the ogres, especially when murderous prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a bolt thrower or some dark riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have ap out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that ap effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your ap missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or ap volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in zombies and summons, so make sure you have a fire sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on zombie dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their bats and wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your ap. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your dark riders/chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in immortal empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory.&lt;br /&gt;
Don&#039;t Bother with Slave markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the dark elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong legendary lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like bleakswords and darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with lore of shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503054</id>
		<title>Total War Warhammer/Tactics/Dark Elves</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Dark_Elves&amp;diff=503054"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T17:17:34Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Monsters */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Skulls for Khaine! Blood for Khaine!|Game battle chant for the Dark Elves. [[Khorne|Why does it sound familiar...]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Sa&#039;anishar! (Shields and spears!)|Slightly more original game battle chant for the Dark Elves.}}&lt;br /&gt;
This is the tactica for the [[Total War: Warhammer]] version of the Dark Elves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Why Play Dark Elves==&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you&#039;d like your elves to take their arrogance to the next level and just start murdering people for the crime of not being elves.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you believe that everything looks roughly 1000 times better when covered in spikes.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because you enjoy the inherent power fantasy that comes from playing a big spiky asshole out to conquer and enslave.&lt;br /&gt;
*You like a versatile unit roster with some serious killing power.&lt;br /&gt;
*Because being the good guy is just so boring sometimes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Pros===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Flexibility&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the Druchii&#039;s biggest strengths that really can&#039;t be understated. While a lot of other factions are forced into a single tactic, the Druchii have more battlefield options than pretty much any other faction in the game, even the High Elves. While they are best at offense thanks to Murderous Prowess, their wide selection of unique units and powerful characters means they can also play defense, kite, use a heavy monster focus, combined arms, and all-around whatever tactic you can think of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;AP for Days&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you&#039;re playing Dark Elves and having a hard time with armoured troops, you&#039;re playing them wrong. A large chunk of the roster has majority AP damage, so armor should be the least of your concerns.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Solid Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you may not be the shootiest of factions, the Dark Elves are more than capable. They are fully capable of melting enemy units before they close to melee with the right build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anti-large&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Druchii are renowned for their beast-hunting prowess, and it shows in the game. Most of your unit archetypes have at least one solid anti-large option, whether it be monsters, infantry, or chariots.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mobility&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re not as good at it as the Asrai, but Dark Elves have some of the best light cav and missile chariots in the game, if not &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best. Combine that with infantry like Witch Elves and Sisters of Slaughter, and you are able to get around the battlefield pretty damn fast. Light Cav tactics are a favorite among Dark Elf players.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powerful Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: When it comes to lord options, you are spoiled for choice. Most of their lords are at the very least decent and some like Malekith can carry an entire army to victory if given the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Heroes&#039;&#039;&#039;: While you aren&#039;t quite the Vampire Counts when it comes to character prowess, your heroes are still very, very good. Death Hags and Masters in particular provide great utility on the battlefield on top of powerful melee stats, and Sorceresses, like all elven casters, are a hero you really can&#039;t go wrong with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Strong Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your economy is god-tier, and this is even before you bring in trade. Raking in high numbers of slaves all but guarantees that your cash flow reaches insane levels which you can further boost by abusing the Master hero who reduces slave decay to the point that they literally cannot decay anymore. Combine this with the extremely generous discounts on Black Arks and your pockets will never be empty again.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Naval Supremacy&#039;&#039;&#039;: An often overlooked, but still important feature is that your Black Arks can dominate the oceans of the world and keeping your homeland secure from any threats. The only faction that rivals your naval power are (big surprise here) the Vampire Coast.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cons===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Frail&#039;&#039;&#039;: Okay, so you don&#039;t have it as bad as the Wood Elves, since many of your units are bringing actual armor to the fight, but you&#039;re still a glass cannon rush faction. Running into a faction that can simply outlast your burst of melee damage once Murderous Prowess proccs, can and will give you a lot of trouble. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Limited Range&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their ranged units aren&#039;t bad, in fact, Darkshards and Shades are extremely good, but they don&#039;t shoot very far. Even some [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] units will outrange you, and most factions will get one or two shots off before you get in position.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lack of Healing&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re the only Elven faction with no multi-target healing. The only thing you have is Soul Stealer, which only heals the caster. Combine this with your low health pools, and your units will die a lot faster than their tanky statline might lead you to believe.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Expensive&#039;&#039;&#039;: Not as much as High Elves, but still pretty pricey. Expect to be outnumbered most of the time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Poor Public Order&#039;&#039;&#039;: Being the quarrelsome lot that they are, Dark Elves suffer from a multitude of public order penalties (especially once you have a lot of slaves) and don&#039;t have a lot of tools to counter them; managing it can quickly devolve into a frantic nightmare, particularly on high difficulties.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;No Encampments&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you are away from your territory, you can&#039;t recruit new guys while encamping. This can be offset somewhat with Black Arks, though that&#039;s not an option in regions far from the coast.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Temperamental Economy&#039;&#039;&#039;: You make a ton of money when your slave count is high, but your income will nosedive if you go a couple turns without winning battles. This problem is exacerbated in Immortal Empires where slave decline is % based across your entire empire. True to lore, your economy will crumble the moment you run out of enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Powercreep&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Elves really haven&#039;t had the best transition from game 2 to 3. The rework to your slavery system made it way less interactive and a ton of different campaigns got bumped up in difficulty. Building Black Arks is still fun but they require a huge investment. They&#039;re certainly one of the factions on the radar for a potential update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;DLC&#039;&#039;&#039;: Scourgerunners and Supreme Sorceresses are some of your best units. They also cost extra. As with most Non DLC factions, you will need to pay extra money to be consistent in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Universal Traits==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;&#039;: A passive, army-wide ability that gives all units on the map considerable offensive bonuses after you hit a certain threshold of kills (usually around 30-50% of the enemy force). Hard to time right and difficult to control, but extremely effective regardless. Seeing your Corsairs, Shades, and whatnot go into overdrive for 90 seconds is a scary and satisfying spectacle to behold. For a few units, the effect lasts 120 seconds instead of 90. Good in WH2, but terrifying in WH3 where Murderous Prowess also regenerates 1% vigor per second. Watch your entire army get a second wind and go from exhausted to fresh when it triggers.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaves&#039;&#039;&#039;: You get slaves by raiding, winning battles, and looting/sacking settlements. Slaves go to your cities to do the crapwork and are gradually worked to death turn by turn. The Druchii can make a hell of a lot of money by capturing slaves. However the more slaves you&#039;ve got the harder it is to control them, which leads to unrest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks&#039;&#039;&#039;: A special kind of campaign unit that acts as one of the two true &amp;quot;navies&amp;quot; in the entire game, Black Arks can only exist on the water but they are essentially floating garrisoned cities that can also let your other armies recruit and exchange from them. A powerful incentive for any Druchii player to adopt the raiding lifestyle and an excellent tool for mobile defence across Naggaroth&#039;s extensive coastline.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Lords==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Legendary Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malekith]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Warhammer&#039;s rendition of Darth Vader with severe mummy issues arrived on the scene, and he doesn&#039;t mess around. This dude is among &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; best Legendary Lords in the game bar none. A monster of a Hybrid LL, he is everything the likes of Azhag the Slaughterer and Arkhan the Black wish they could be. He punches hard, gets a Dragon relatively early on and his spellcasting doesn&#039;t disappoint either. His economy buffs are ridiculously strong, boosting an already ridiculous economy. His buffs to Black Guard and Dragons are also very useful. You can hardly go wrong with Malekith.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Morathi]]&#039;&#039;&#039; : Morathi is a &#039;&#039;very&#039;&#039; weird animal (There&#039;s gotta be a sex joke in here somewhere). Unlike many other Legendary Lords, her skill tree is the only one in the game where you actually get to make meaningful choices, as she can alternate between ridiculously powerful spellcasting and good backline harasser, both paths are viable. What sets her apart from other Caster Lords as her spellcasting is concerned is that, like Teclis, she doesn&#039;t specialize in single Lore and her pool of spells draws from the Lores of Dark, Death, and Shadows and favors all-out offensive spells from all of them. Arguably the second-best Caster Lord in the game, just behind Teclis. Unfortunately her campaign mechanics are badly broken, she has to spread corruption but doesn&#039;t get public order benefits from it, only downsides. This makes her campaign more difficult than you&#039;d expect simply due to serous public order issues. They even nerfed the building in Quintex that made the public order manageable for no apparent reason. With Immortal Empire&#039;s she now spreads Slaanesh corruption and her public order issues have been fixed, she can also recruit both regular and Exalted Demonettes from her public order building. which is a nice step in the right direction. They forgot to make them affected by her red skill/techs as usual though. Honestly she is just begging for a dedicated rework to make her into a hybrid faction at this point, it would be awesome to see a true cult of Slaanesh faction. I don&#039;t know why they didn&#039;t give her the cultist of Slaanesh hero given that they are literally Dark Elf cultists. They did unfortunately significantly nerf her enchanting beauty and her weapons debuff abilities so she can’t tank melee stats into the ground just by existing anymore, despite other lords like demon princes having aura&#039;s of similar power in campaign. Bizarrely they also removed her -50% upkeep for hero&#039;s, I guess someone was convinced her faction was too good, despite none of it being super strong or unique (vampires get -50% hero upkeep and way more from bloodlines).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hellebron]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Hellebron exists in her own little niche. Barely armored like Witch Elves, but really, really bloody fast and a buffmachine for your already busted murdermachine frontline. She excels in prolonged combat, preferably against lightly armored chaff and will rack a high kill count very quickly but will cave against elite units and other single entity monsters or characters.&lt;br /&gt;
: Get a unique campaign mechanic of her vitality slowly draining way and have to progressively sacrifice more slaves during the Death Night to keep the faction buffed instead of Debuffed, but also create a new stack of frenzied elves to attack [[Ulthwe]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Lokhir Fellheart]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Lord of the [[Black Ark]]s. He is a cheaper blender lord in comparison to Hellebron, being a well-armored Infantry blender while on foot like a Vlad von Carstein without magic. CA also gave him his own Dragon mount which only makes him better than a Dread Lord on dragon when he pops his attack buffs.&lt;br /&gt;
: The Druchii pirate lord starts in the thunder dome that is Lustria but can have a lot of freedom by starting with a middle settlement that is a Black Ark. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Malus Darkblade]] (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: An unremarkable lord until he lets the daemon take over, and then he is a melee powerhouse. Using Malus in combat is like burning a candle wick, his Tz&#039;arkan form and abilities are powerful but drain his hit points so know when he should be in daemon or Malus mode. He does have Resistance and Healing in combat so he won&#039;t burn out as fast in a fight. Switching to daemon mode restores all his health and vigor and makes him unbreakable so it&#039;s best to wait until the last moment before switching.&lt;br /&gt;
: In campaign his battle with his inner daemon is a game mechanic, with having a possession meter, giving you greater campaign bonuses while Malus is mostly in control, but as Tz&#039;arkan slowly takes over, he gains greater battle prowess but at the cost of large penalties to your empire. You control the possession by drinking a potion that gets progressively more expensive until you finish his storyline to make it free. Tz&#039;arkan will also offer an additional quest to increase the possession but with very good payoffs. For your start position, you get a Black Ark in the Southern Land, in addition, have your traditional Druchii hold, [[Hag Graef]], that you can sell for a lot of money but have to listen to [[Malekith]] (which will be an AI) or make it harder by having to run and protect the damn place yourself while also declaring on the big cheese. -disappointingly he is actually more effective if you confederate him then if you play as him, confederated he gets the benefits of full possession with no downsides, making him insanely tanky. His faction benefits are actually more of a hassle than they are helpful. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Rakarth the Beastlord]] (FLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; Your man you pick if you want to go for a full monster build. He comes with heavy armor and Anti Large to deal with enemy big monsters while also providing buffs to his own beasties. He will also have a Scourgerunner for skirmishing, a Manticore and a Dragon for a straight up brawl. He serves as your best counter to mounters, with his whip being able to strip Fear and Terror from monsters (leaving said monsters susceptible to fear and terror) and armor that gives him buffs as enemy monsters are around him. He&#039;s also being voiced by [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Ramsay Bolton]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Generic Lords===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Lord (Melee &amp;amp; Ranged)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your two generic lord with one focused on melee and has a shield while the other is a hybrid that focuses on shooting. In multiplayer, their ability change to help them buff their respective areas, Sword &amp;amp; Shield having buffs to melee attacks and debuffing enemy damage, while Sword &amp;amp; Crossbow supports other crossbows unit while also being a sniper, and gives a burst bonus to Ld. Note that the lords have almost identical melee stats once you put them on a black dragon and the melee lord looses her shield when mounted on one while the ranged lord keeps his ranged weapon. at high levels i cant see much reason to use the melee version instead but she will be better in melee until they get the dragon.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Supreme Sorceress (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Makes a Sorceress as a lord for money-saving cost. Somewhat feeble in combat until she levels up enough to get a black dragon mount, after which she fights better than many dedicated melee lords. Student of the Dark Tower is an amazing skill, providing lower cooldowns, reserves, and miscast reduction all in one. These girls are pretty much your best generic lord in a faction with already pretty strong lords.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Beastmaster (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your monster hunter Lord. Though he looks like a chronic masturbator, he can fill a surprising amount of battlefield roles. Not as tanky in melee as a Dread Lord but deals a good amount of anti-large damage in addition to his burst of additional weapon strength. Also is supportive by giving a single unit a big buff as they charge into melee (don&#039;t yet specify anything except can&#039;t be used on characters, so go crazy on an Executioners charge). Can come on a Scourgerunner Chariot (roll through everyone while armed with a ballast) or ride a Manticore which has proven to be cost-effective flying monsters. Can give a big boost to Cold Ones and monsters in campaign as well as recruiting them faster. If running cavalry or monster stacks, likely your best option. The big MA/MD/ and charge boost they give Colds Ones really makes them perform better.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Heroes==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Death Hag&#039;&#039;&#039; : Single-entity Witch Elves dialed up to 11. Death Hags excel as extremely vicious infantry blenders with a lot of speed of behind them and, as an added bonus, a variety of buff abilities that make them even deadlier. They tend to get the shorter end of the stick against dedicated duelist characters and their only mount option consists of the Cauldron of Blood, which, to be frank, is a waste, since it sacrifices offensive power and speed for more durability, something that Death Hags with their high Melee Defense don&#039;t really need. - I’m not sure what the above was talking about, death hags kinda suck on foot like most foot heroes, the mount is good vs infantry and makes them actually pretty tough plus buffs nearby units. Always mount in campaign, foot may have more use in multiplayer I guess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sorceress&#039;&#039;&#039; : Caster bitches in the flavours of Death, Dark, Shadows, Beasts, and Fire. Better than most other caster types, and Morathi has some great factionwide buffs for them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khainite Assassin&#039;&#039;&#039; : Good on campaign map, terrible in an actual fight. To expand, Khainite Assassins get high assassination chance, and are really useful at deleting enemy characters from the game. This is exacerbated by some good hero action buffs from techs, and from a few lord skills. Their passive ability increases the amount of slave income in the province they are in, which sounds useful on paper, but isn&#039;t really needed since Dark Elves make all the money they could ever want after a while. Their &#039;scavenge&#039; ability can help armies pick up more money in the early game as well. In battle, they&#039;re a dedicated character duelist meant to sneak around the back line with their vanguard and stalk, and kill enemy high-value stuff with a powerful short-ranged missile attack and pretty good melee stats. Honestly though, in melee they kind of underperform vs other duelists, and they&#039;re pretty squishy on top of it all. Their ranged attack is... fine, I guess? But it&#039;s super slow to reload and very short ranged. This is on top of the fact that they DON&#039;T GET A MOUNT which really limits their mobility, and therefore their usefulness in battle. Seriously, these guys are tailor made to be flying around on manticores or something! Even a freaking horse would increase their usefulness incredibly. As it is, they&#039;ll probably get surrounded and killed off pretty quickly. Death Hags and Masters are really, really good heroes, and will fill every battlefield role that you could want, while Sorceresses and your regular missile units can provide crazy ranged utility. Keep these guys for killing off enemy heroes and scouting other provinces on the campaign map.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Master (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Tyrants in Training who never graduate in game to Dreadlords. Masters are your tanky Dark Elf hero. You can’t really overuse these, they are amazing. Ap anti large heavily armored high stat combat monsters with great mount options, the guardian skill, easy recruitment from a tier 3 building, the ability to reduce slave decline to zero if stacked, access to martial names of power granting incredibly powerful bonuses, easy to recruit at level 9 and up in any 4 city province. A doom stack of these with the regeneration or hunger/frenzy skill name of power and access to the extra melee attack army wide or leadership reduction traits is probably the campaigns deadliest hero doomstack, rivaling or beating Isabella vampire stacks or lizardmen hero spam. Really, really good heroes. And easier to spam than any comparable hero. Recommend cold one for ground duty (extra armor and ap) or Pegasus for flying (fast and flying with good charge but no shield). Foot is ok too but generally mounts are more than worth it for mobility alone. Immortal Empires removed their role in the slave mechanic but they are still extremely stong melee hero&#039;s, probably use them in your armies exclusively now.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Units==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dreadspears&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your most basic spearmen unit in the DE roster. They&#039;re... alright? They lack an offensive punch and High Elf Spearman performs better at the job they are supposed to be doing, being to hold the line to stop enemy cavalry punching through to your precious archers. They work fine in the early game, as well as being cheap, but don&#039;t rely on them for too long. Their stats are even better with Immortal Empires now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Hellebronai (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dreadspears that are a bit better in general with poison attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bleakswords&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to Dreadspears. With the release of Immortal Empires they are now surprisingly very solid and killy basic infantry, there&#039;s a lot more reason to use them over spears now and they are going to be a very cost effective chaff unit in both multiplayer and campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; : ...These guys. Oh, these guys. Frail as all hell, but worth it. Corsairs should make up the majority of melee troops of your midgame armies as soon as they become available. Their raw damage output as well as their armour (having a value of 90, putting them on the same level as Dwarf Warriors!) makes them a solid frontline and they will cut down all basic infantry used against them with ease and surprising speed. Their easy availability combined with a reasonable price makes sure they are always a good choice, especially against horde-centric factions. One glaring weakness is their lack of AP damage. - Whoever wrote the above likes Corsairs way too much, they’re good but non synergistic with usual Dark Elf campaign strategies of crossbow spam. And they aren’t worth using after the early game. You can honestly never use them and just go Dreadspears/Bleakswords and Darkshards and usually do better in the early campaign. I hear they are nice in multiplayer, but campaign wise meh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Witch Elves]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Talk about glass cannons, Witch Elves are a really weird bunch. They have no armour, but (try to) compensates this with 20% physical resistance and a 5% ward save after you research technologies. In exchange, they excel in melee attack and apply debuffs to enemy forces attacked by them. The debuff in itself is very unique, as it not only debuffs enemy melee stats but also sends them on a rampage; causing them to stay way longer in a fight which they otherwise would be comfortable with. This is especially useful against all elven factions, since you can lure their expensive specialized elite tropps in matchups that they are not equipped to deal with (i.e. Swordmasters against a Hydra or a Dragon) and &#039;&#039;reliably keep them there&#039;&#039;. Well at least as long as your Witch Elves survive the encounter, which, given that their only defense is a meager 28 melee defense and a 5% ward save, might not be that long. no real reason to use them unless you just need/want the rampage ability. Sisters of Slaughter are much better.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Singing Doom (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Schizo Witch Elves with slightly improved melee stats, a steep cost markup, and fear/terror. Generally not worth it, they still cause rampage on hit which is the last thing you want when you&#039;re trying to scare a unit away. Save some money and bring vanilla Witch Elves if you want to rampage enemies or a Manticore if you want to terror bomb them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of Slaughter (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: They wear even less clothes than Witch Elves do, yet are more resilient. Their extremely high melee defense and their 20% physical resistance make them surprisingly tough. As one of the few resilient Dark Elven melee units, their job is to hold the line and grind down other infantry where their poisoned attacks, melee defense, and bonus vs. infantry lets them reliably come out on top. In addition, they have a unique passive that boosts their melee defense and physical resist even more if they are losing their current encounter, which makes them surprisingly viable as a tarpit against enemies like Black Orks who would otherwise dumpster them. Competes with Black Guard as your best frontline infantry. Keep in mind that their high melee defense doesn&#039;t protect them from missiles or impact damage from enemies on the charge. Back them up with Dreadspears or Black Guard so they don&#039;t become the red paintjob on an enemy chariot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Executioners&#039;&#039;&#039;: The offensive counterpart to the Black Guards, your ol&#039; reliable murderers of heavy armoured elite troops and anything in between. They won&#039;t last long, but kill everything in their path. Frail, especially against missiles, but as a Dark Elf player, you&#039;re used to that. I don’t recommend these, they’re fragile, slow and they have weirdly low melee stats compacted to your other elite units. You can replace these with Cold One Dread Knights even. Seriously with the change to primal instincts Dread Knights have massively higher stats especially with Beast Master lords skills. And otherwise fill the exact same role but do it better and faster. They got a slight buff and immune to psych so that&#039;s something. If you insist on using them, the Name of power Khaine mark gives them 15% ward save and reduced upkeep, which is actually very solid.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Blades of the Blood Queen (RoR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Gets frenzy + an aura that gives physical resistance to nearby heroes + lords. Very skippable since their stats are low for an elite infantry unit and your lord will probably be on a mobile mount instead of hiding with the infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Guard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Extremely beefy, these are your dedicated elite line holders and monster slayers. Remember murderous prowess makes them into an absolute force of destruction. And they have very good stats, the only downside is knowing that they’ll never be as awesome as Phoenix guard. Even if they can be offensively much deadlier the survivability of Phoenix guard is insane. they received stat buffs and murderous mastery with Immortal Empires so are even better now.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign. basically way better Witch Elves for the same cost, but not effected by red skills or techs because they always forget to do that.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Exalted Daemonettes&#039;&#039;&#039;: Also exclusive to Morathi&#039;s campaign, actually a really good option, they are like way better Executioners with no armor, hold the line with Sisters of Slaughter and flanking with these will be potentially extremely strong. Throw in Morathi&#039;s debuffs and a Bloodwrack shrine and you should destroy any infantry in the game frightfully quickly. Really you can argue that the Dark Elves much more well-rounded roster actually uses Exalted Daemonettes better than the Slaanesh factions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Missile Infantry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Darkshards&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basic Dark Elf ranged unit and all and all pretty darn good for the entire game. Indirect fire with pretty good AP makes them very useful, especially when focusing on firing key targets into oblivion. For a little extra, you can get these guys with shields which makes them excellent in an arrow exchange, which is important given [[High Elves|who one of your biggest foes is]] always go shields.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bolt-Fiends (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : The cool thing about these guys is that they degrade and nullify shields.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Ark Corsairs (Repeater Handbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A mixed bag, making up for the relative lack of skirmish units in the Dark Elf roster. Surprisingly mobile and difficult to catch, their biggest strength is easily their flexibility. Nice vs Skaven early on.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shades&#039;&#039;&#039;: Don&#039;t let the low model count discourage you, Shades rank among the best missile troops in the game. The high rate of fire, high damage output, and even decent in melee, especially with greatswords. Actually not really that much better than Dark Shards if you just use them as archers, much more expensive for only slightly better ranged performance. However if combined with a shadowdart name of power lord can be as good or better than Sisters of Avelorn. 210 or more range, crazy ap, and better in melee than the sisters by a large margin due to AP and anti infantry. Even with all that taken into account you need a specific name of power, some later technologies, and the red skill tree to make them as good/slightly better than the sisters. And they cost 50% more upkeep with greatswords than sisters do. Which really just shows how op sisters are in campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Cavalry===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders&#039;&#039;&#039;: Your extremely quick light cavalry, comparable to most other units of their class. One key feature is that they are actually fast enough to chase down most other missile cavalry. If your micromanagement skills hold up, Dark Riders can terrorize the enemy backline very efficiently and do so at the highest speed any base game cavalry unit offers, but they get vaporized the instant their charge bonus wears off, so will need to keep the cycle charges going. One of those units you should probably not use in campaign but can be good in multiplayer.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Riders (Crossbows)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ranged harassment cavalry that uses repeater crossbows, they fire two shots of primarily AP damage. Is always useful to annoyingly poke an enemy to death but also those higher armor units that are normally resistant to those shenanigans (most other factions only get close-range hand axes or more squisher handguns).&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Raven Heralds (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rather distinct from their vanilla Dark Riders, these guys ride Dark Pegusii and can fly around the battlefield. Usually passed up for vanilla crossbow Dark Riders since the Raven Heralds have fewer models and vanilla Dark Riders already have the speed to stay out of trouble.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Doomfire Warlocks (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Really, really weird hybrid unit. In melee they have actually pretty good attack with magic and poison and charge, plus an AoE melee attack animation. They also have 40% physical resist to help keep them alive. One key advantage they have over comparable light to medium cavalry is their ability to fling around the Doombolt spell from the Lore of Dark and Soulblight from the Lord of Death as bound spells. A unit of these is pretty much always useful if nothing else, plus they look great. They lose access to their bound spells if they drop below 50% HP, so fire them off early so you don&#039;t lose them later.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;s Harvesters (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Doomfire Warlocks with a slightly increased statline that replaces Doombolt with Soulstealer to drain the HP from single entities. While they&#039;re usable in campaign, they&#039;re completely unusable in multiplayer where they&#039;re more expensive than Grail Knights and Demigryphs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: they were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Dread Knights&#039;&#039;&#039;: They were considered bad because of rampage but primal instincts was reworked later in Total War Warhammer 2 so that it only triggered at 20% health and then again for the third game its been changed and the rampage is gone completely, now primal instincts gives buffs to combat stats at low leadership. They are actually cost effective now. Took a long time to come into their own but it was worth the wait. The dread knights aren&#039;t going to be the go-to over the regular ones but they are a solid unit now.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Knights of the Ebon Claw (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Chariots===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cold One Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : A chariot pulled by dinosaurs. They&#039;re pretty much meant to be your anti-infantry melee chariot, and they have ap and an ok charge bonus which is nice. They also have a small ranged attack, but don&#039;t go using them as a missile chariot, that&#039;s what Sourgerunners are for. These guys are overshadowed by Scourgerunners due to the sheer amount of utility and killing power the former brings to the table, but as a melee chariot they can be decent especially in Malekith&#039;s army.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Scourgerunner Chariot&#039;&#039;&#039; : One of the best units in your roster, Scourgerunner Chariots are your jack of all trades chariot, that has a special boon in being on the very few ranged units in the game that get a bonus vs. large on their ranged attacks. Their key advantage is that they also move at Dark Rider speed, which makes them extremely difficult to catch or even hit, and in a pinch, they can even reliably dispatch basic missile troops and infantry, thanks to a bonus vs. infantry. Bring 3-4 of these guys and have them work as a team, and they can swing battles for you.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ravagers of Rakarth (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : A Scourgerunner Chariot with poisoned attacks and a persistent AoE ability that slows down all enemies around it. Get one if you plan to use multiple Scourgerunner Chariots to delete isolated monsters/infantry.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Artillery===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Reaper Bolt Thrower&#039;&#039;&#039;: Essentially identical to the High Elf counterpart (in spite of the significantly more badass name), the Reaper is likewise probably not going to be winning any prizes for the best artillery piece. Alright, it does hit a bit harder and has a smidge less range, but this is not something people would notice much in most situations. Nevertheless, it remains a useful and versatile addition to a Dark Elf army. Just don&#039;t go in expecting a WMD. Like the repeater, they possess two firing modes and can be particularly useful for sniping enemy artillery. In short a decent, if not exactly exceptional, artillery unit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Shrine (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: A Bloodwrack Medusa with a Go-Cart. Despite being described as a chariot don&#039;t use it as such, it&#039;s too slow to pass through a unit. Use it more like a Mortis Engine or Grail Relique, and you&#039;ll find it&#039;s a surprisingly versatile unit with support ability, decent melee stats, and even a ranged attack. Provides +7 MA and -7 MD to nearby allies/enemies respectively. Similar in purpose to the High Elf Frost Phoenix but offensive. Quite effective if you want your melee units buffed. Plus ok ranged damage from the Medusa herself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Monsters===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Harpies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Harpies fulfill essentially the same role as war hound and fell bat units. They&#039;re intended to be fast-moving harassers best used to hunt down or disrupt enemy missile units and artillery crews. When used in their intended capacity they can get some work done, just don&#039;t expect them to do much against anything with actual staying power. Even some of the sturdier archer units can prove a bit too much for them. If you&#039;re up against an opponent with a heavy focus on ranged firepower they can be a valuable addition. However, sending them in unsupported against basically anything else is a good way to end up with a whole lot of dead bat-ladies. Rakarth makes then a lot better, giving them bonus Melee Attack as well as a smidge of AP damage.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Crows of Khaine (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Basically Harpies with Fear and the ability to regenerate when fighting. Surprisingly tanky because of it, just watch out for units that counter them.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Manticore&#039;&#039;&#039;: Surprisingly good backline harasser. Manticores make Harpies pretty much obsolete and make for great mid-tier carnage against everything that doesn&#039;t have a bonus against large. They are very susceptible to Rampage, so take care of them. Manticores are best taken in groups of 2-4 in order to kill targets fast enough that they don’t die themselves. Paired with a flying master they can make a fast deadly Air Force for cheap which can act as a single unit killing gank squad. Can usually staggerlock foot heroes. And usually outfight other aerial units short of dragons or heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;War Hydra&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of your standout units, there are lots of nasty surprises with the Hydra, which acts as your standard frontline melee monster. One of its core features is its flexibility; it&#039;s effective against a lot of targets and can reliably hunt down infantry thanks to its speed and breath attack. It tends to get the short end of the stick against other monsters and anti large. In campaign you can get these 25% cheaper from a klar karond building. Super cheap and easy to spam regenerating monster.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Chill of Sontar (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same regenerating monstery goodness as a normal Hydra, though it replaces its flaming breath in exchange for one that slows down whatever it hits.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kharibdyss (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039; : OMNOMNOMNOM. A Hydra on steroids, trades the regeneration factor and flaming breath for poisoned attacks, anti-large, and lots of AP goodness. Works best against armoured monsters, so if the enemy brings big scary beasts it can go toe to toe. If you want to blend infantry though, you’re better off with the Hydra.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bloodwrack Medusa (DLC)&#039;&#039;&#039;: Combination monster and short rate direct fire artillery. Can delete chunks of elite infantry very quickly. These snake waifus have really great utility, but need to be micro&#039;d well to reap the rewards. They aren&#039;t like most monsters in the game, so don&#039;t send them into melee and forget about them. Their speed, powerful ranged attack, mass and charge bonus means that you should be using them almost like a chariot. Have them blast infantry from range, charge into melee for a short time, and then escape to do it all over again. Got a pretty decent buff to their melee stats in Immortal Empires to make them a more well rounded pick.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Siren of Red Ruin (ROR)&#039;&#039;&#039; : Same as a normal Medusa, but gains a AoE ability that causes moderate damage to all enemies around her.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Dragon&#039;&#039;&#039; : Evil Dragonny Goodness. Roughly equivalent to a Moon Dragon in terms of killyness and retains the devastating breath attack, high mass, and good mobility that other dragons have. More difficult to use than High/Wood Elf dragons, Dark Elves don&#039;t have the lores of magic to heal it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Rakarth Campaign Units===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Cold Ones&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Explosive Squig&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Giant Wolves&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sabretusk Pack&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Bears&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Mammoth&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Stegadon&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Feral Carnosaur&#039;&#039;&#039; :&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Tactics==&lt;br /&gt;
===Multiplayer Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Long, Long ago in the distant times of 2017 Dark Elves where one of the top factions in the game with their massive amount of AP, powerful Lords and flexible army. Unfortunately after years of being beaten with the Nerf Bat they have fallen from grace. As of the Twisted and the Twilight patch they are considered low tier they really only have one viable tactic, relying on Scourgerunners and Crossbow Dark Riders. Now just because they are considered low tier doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t win with them as they still have some favorable match ups. As of right now, you are a bit of a one trick pony so you may have to get creative.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: Fighting a bunch of naked goats calls your AP specialty into question, but you have quite a few ways to make this matchup work if you&#039;re clever. Witch Elves will trade well into any infantry the beastie boys bring, and while they won&#039;t beat Bestigors, making them rampage into your lines where they can&#039;t sustain themselves can give you quite an advantage. Dark rider crossbows, usually an auto-include in most Dark Elf builds, are much more risky here due to Ungor raiders and the inherent speed of the beastmen army. You&#039;ll have a harder time getting value out of them. On the other hand, Scourgerunners throw a big middle finger to any monsters the Beastmen are foolish enough to bring (the one notable exception being the Cygor, which can be quite difficult to deal with if you don&#039;t shut it down early), so bringing some of your own monsters can be good way to clear out the remaining support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bretonnia&#039;&#039;&#039;: Their cavalry and airforce outclass yours, and that&#039;s where all their funds are going to be, so you&#039;ll be stuck playing the battle on their terms. Witch Elves to rampage those expensive cav options are going to be a good idea, and this is one of the few times where spending a bit extra for some Black Guard can be super valuable. Masters and Beastmasters can be great against cavalry as well, and are worth considering.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Daemons&#039;&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Total_War_Warhammer/Tactics/Chaos_Dwarves| Chaos Dwarfs]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Dark Dwarves vs. Dark Elves. To show the stunties who the superior edgy splinter faction is, you&#039;re going to have to deal with their ranged prowess. At the time of this writing, Chaos Dwarves have only been out for a little while, so the following is subject to change as new strategies come out, but at the moment this seems like a quite interesting matchup, though I&#039;d say the druchii have a slight edge. Both factions rely on momentum, have armor and ap, and great character choices. However, broadly speaking, they have the ranged advantage while you have the melee and mobility advantage. You&#039;ll win the chaff fight laughably, as dreadspears, bleakswords, witch elves, and sisters will run rampant over their nasty skulkers and orc/goblin fodder, but with blunderbusses, the ironsworn bombs, and their great artillery, on top of lore of Hashut which is great at blob destroying, your infantry is gonna get shot to hell even with good micro. *If* you micro them well and avoid ranged fire as much as possible, Dark Rider Crossbows can do a lot here. They are always a great tool in your arsenal, but here they can provide a ton of utility with their mobility and ability to target big monsters as well as armored up infantry, and even cycle charge artillery crews in a pinch. Now, a good player will know this and be looking to swarm you with bull centaurs and wolf riders, so make sure you have units to screen. The oft-maligned Cold One Knights w/ lances (STILL in need of a buff imo) will trade very well with bull centaurs and k&#039;daai, and they have some ranged protection as well making them a good niche pick. In terms of characters, Malus is probably going to be your lord of choice here as frankly he has been a monster since the advent of Warhammer 3, and can take any lord the Dawi&#039;Zharr can offer in a melee fight. Lore of Shadows or Dark is also a useful tool for dealing armor piercing damage and grinding down ironsworn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Warriors&#039;&#039;&#039;: What used to be a stomp in your favor is now a bit more balanced with the IE update. Dark Elves of course are specialists in dealing with slow-moving heavily armored factions, but the Chaos Warriors now have a few tools you need to watch out for. Some fast fliers, like doom knights, might give you a hard time since they&#039;re difficult to shoot and pack quite a punch. Valkia and Azazel don&#039;t have much in the way of utility, but are small hitboxes flying around the screen and are great at dueling even your awesome spiky lords. They can also try going super wide use hellstriders and low-armor infantry to keep you on your toes, while backing up with elite stuff. To counter this strategy, remember that you&#039;re one of the very few factions that can meet the Warriors on their own terms and win. Forget the skirmish and ranged stuff and just go full tin-can opener with Executioners and Witch Elves/ Sisters. This matchup is tougher now, but make no mistake, it&#039;s still well in hand for a smart druchii player.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dark Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: This mirror-match can actually get pretty interesting. I wouldn&#039;t bother too much with Scourgerunners here. Both players probably aren&#039;t going to be relying on their big threats to win the day, and even if they do, your ap missiles can give even a Hydra a hard time. Victory is probably going to come down to smart ranged play and good use of elite infantry. Harpies are a good choice to tie down Darkshards, and use your Dark Rider Crossbows to take out and Black Guard or Executioners on the field. Dark Riders with lances or shields can also be a good choice to get into that terrifying crossbow line.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Dwarfs&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sure, you could try your usual skirmish tactics, you have the heavy AP to pierce your opponent&#039;s stunties. Unfortunately, they have the firepower to shut down a lot of your ranged units before you can get close enough to return the favor, and rune of slowness can be disastrous, tarpitting key units at really inconvenient times. What is a much more interesting build that doesn&#039;t play into the Dawi&#039;s strengths is a heavy metal melee rush. You&#039;re one of the VERY few factions that can reliably cut through all that armor with ease, along with Chaos Warriors and Slaanesh. Bring a couple executioners, bleakswords (Blades of the Blood Queen RoR can be a powerhouse if used right), and maybe a Master, and spread yourself out so they can&#039;t take advantage of their range advantage. Bring a couple skirmishers and Cold One Chariots to shut down their artillery, but don&#039;t focus too much on ranged power or monsters. As for lord choice, Lokhir on foot is a good option for dueling any single entities if you want to go cheap, Malus or Malekith if you want a more useful and expensive lord. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;: In campaign, this is a highly interesting and very fun matchup since both armies have such flexible rosters. In multiplayer though... you got your work cut out for you. Even with some slight improvements to cold one knights, they just won&#039;t stand up to Empire heavy cav, and you&#039;ll have a hell of a time trying to lean on your infantry while they&#039;re being cycle-charged by demigryphs. They can also keep up in the skirmish department, with pistoliers and outriders doing their job competently. Harpies can deal with them, but require some micro. Putting your money into a hero goon squad, and perhaps relying on magic to get some ranged damage in, either with Morathi or a sorceress hero, can be an unexpected tactic that might pay some dividends. You&#039;ll rip them apart in melee, but the approach is really what will determine the battle.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Cathay&#039;&#039;&#039;: To take some Chinese peasant slaves, you&#039;ll want to bring a rush-centric army. Similar to the Dwarfs, Cathay likes to box up and lean on it&#039;s artillery while jerking off to each other&#039;s harmony bonuses, making their box surprisingly tough to crack. Don&#039;t run around like a pansy too much skirmishing, cause that artillery is no joke. Instead, bring a more rush-focused army, and invest in a monster or two. Sisters of Slaughter can be a powerhouse against all infantry except Celestial Dragon Guard, and you&#039;ll want their speed, melee defense, and missile dodge chance. If you can micro them well, a few units of Harpies (maybe even the Crows of Khaine RoR for some extra tankiness) can get a lot done here, falling on Sky Lanterns/Junks, and tying down Cathay&#039;s more mobile artillery elements. You will have to watch out for Longma Riders in the sky with their 105(!) speed, and most Cathay players will bring at least one, but they&#039;re much more expensive than your 600 gold Harpies. Magic is probably the best way to grind those Longma down, they should be some primary targets to get off the field. You have fantastic monsters, but they&#039;re expensive, and you&#039;ll be hard pressed to bring more than one. Hydra is amazing here. Super survivable with it&#039;s regen and missile resist, and Cathay has absolutely nothing in the way of fire damage to exploit it (Except for that one Lore of Yin spell which imbues fire damage). Malekith on Seraphon is probably the way to go for your lord. With some support from Soulstealer and your missile units, he can fight Zhao Ming or Miao Ying on equal terms, and help out with any Terracotta Sentinels that might be brought.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Greenskins&#039;&#039;&#039;: Flex rosters? Benefit from prolonged melee combat? Aggressive infantry and magic? Fast movers and skirmishers? Yup, these two armies share quite a few competencies. While the greenskins are more resilient, they&#039;re also lower leadership, and much worse at taking out large threats. This is one of the matchups where an infantry grind won&#039;t automatically go in your favor. Executioners might trade well with even Black Orcs, but bringing elite infantry here is just asking for them to get blown up with doom divers and Rogue Idol shots, or bad nasty skulker trades. Their monsters usually have a ridiculous amount of hp, but you&#039;re one of the best factions in the game at shredding through it with your crossbows and Scourgerunners. Just remember they have good skirmish power too, and you don&#039;t want to waste your ammo on a bunch of spider riders. In a pinch, a Kharybdiss can also help quite a bit at dueling lords and monsters, and the boyz lack a lot in the way of ap ranged or anti-large to shut them down. You might further consider bringing a monster or Lore of Fire to counter Trolls who with their missile and magic resist are hard to shut down.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Asur cling to tradition! This is a pretty balanced matchup that will test both sides&#039; knowledge and micro. You will destroy them in the infantry grind, especially because by the time Murderous Prowess pops, most of their units will be damaged enough to lose their martial prowess. Furthermore, Scourgerunners will kite any dragons or other monsters they bring into the End Times (but watch out for Bolt Throwers!). What you&#039;re really going to have to worry about is their heavy cav, since Dragon Princes will flatten your forces without good Scourgerunner play, and archers which outrange yours. Light cavalry is the best way to zone out the archers, and ap volleys and skirmishers are a good way to lessen the impact of their heavy cav. If you&#039;re confident in your anti-large capability and shutting down any Sisters of Avelorn, a Hydra can really do a lot for you with it&#039;s missile resist and regen. Play to your strengths, use murderous prowess well, and Malekith will be chilling with his feet up on the Phoenix Throne in no time!&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khorne&#039;&#039;&#039;: Just shove a spiky arrow up Skarbrand&#039;s ass and call it a day. Fighting slow, heavily armored factions is well within the druchii wheelhouse, and while Khorne isn&#039;t exactly plodding in pace, you&#039;re faster than them by a mile. What you&#039;re going to have to watch out for is War Hounds that are super fast and can tarpit your stuff. The Dark Elves can be quite a threat in melee if they choose, but Khorne can out-fight even your best troops, so don&#039;t challenge them on their own terms, just lean into your skirmish and missile potential and you can carry the day.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kislev&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;ll need to win and win quickly, since Kislev&#039;s best shot at winning is simply outlasting you. You more than match up in the infantry department at least stat-wise, Kossars and Streltsi won&#039;t be able to outfight your bleakswords in a vacuum but By Our Blood makes them a surprisingly hard nut to crack, and trades that seem favorable might end up going the other way. You actually out-range most of their ranged troops as well, except when it comes to Ice Guard. If they&#039;re dumb enough to bring an Elemental Bear or other big threats, you have plenty of ap to challenge them. Ice magic can slow your skirmishers down, only for their own skirmishers to make up the difference. They are one of the few factions that can actually stand up to you in the kite game, so you want to lean into the rush element of your army, and make good use of Murderous Prowess.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lizardmen&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is one of the matchups in which you shine. All their armored dinosaurs are extremely vulnerable to your wide selection of AP troops, with a special shoutout to Dark Shards and Shades. Lizardmen lack missile infantry beyond their rather frail Skink Skirmishers, though their Chameleon Skinks will prove particularly annoying due to their missile resist and loose formations. Scourgerunner Chariots will run circles around the Lizardmen and, with proper positioning, can easily slip around their screening units to chunk the bigger Artillery Stegadons/Bastilodons that could potentially retaliate against your ranged forces. Try to kite them as much as you can, whittle down their frontline before sending in your Executioners and Blackguard to clean up.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Norsca&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hmmm, look at that, another quasi-rush faction with big monsters, killy infantry, and a lot of anti-large? Unfortunately for the Norscans, the Elves are the superior race and they&#039;ll have a hard time proving otherwise. You&#039;re spoiled for choice when it comes to killing their big monsters, so most Norscan players who know what they&#039;re doing probably won&#039;t bring them. Rakarth is quite expensive, but on Bracchus or even a chariot, he can do a ton against their monstrous infantry and single entities, though he&#039;ll have a hard time out-dueling Wulfrik or Throgg. Flaming Sword of Rhuin is another great boon to dismantle Skin Wolves and Trolls. Your infantry is quite evenly-matched, but your advantage comes in with Murderous Prowess and Witch Elves that can rampage key threats when it procs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle&#039;&#039;&#039;: While this may seem initially easy, given your excellence against slower factions, don&#039;t get cocky. If you aren&#039;t smart with your matchups and blow your load with Murderous Prowess too soon, Nurgle will just outlast you. The only infantry you have that will be able to take out Plague-bearers quickly are Executioners, and you probably don&#039;t want to be bringing elite infantry against Nurgle anyway. Fire sorceress is absolutely essential here, since your units&#039; low base weapon strength and Nurgle&#039;s lack of armor means that you won&#039;t be as damaging as you usually are against other factions. Scourgerunners will still do very well against Great Unclean Ones, Pox toads, or any other large threat, while the Hydra can be fantastic for clearing out infantry with it&#039;s flaming damage and breath attack. Also, with their limited range and slow movement, this can be quite a good matchup for a Bloodwrack Medusa or the Siren of Red Ruin. Malus or Morathi are probably your go-to lords here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ogre Kingdoms&#039;&#039;&#039;: This is a matchup that your sadistic legions dream of, i.e. a one-sided slaughter in your favor. Rakarth on a chariot or on Bracchus really shines with his absurd anti-large capabilities, and him or a beastmaster can really do work for you with a bit of micro. Malus is also great at punishing monstrous infantry. Your elite infantry gets a rare spotlight here, since halberd/spear spam lends itself extremely well to trading with the ogres, especially when murderous prowess pops. Even Dreadspears will do some serious pushing above their pay grade, with Black Guard of Naggarond turning things up to 11. Scourgerunners are also a huge boon against low-model count large hitbox ogres. They might try to bring some scrap launchers to put pressure on you, so a bolt thrower or some dark riders can deal with that. Honestly, your Dreadspears and Darkshards will have a field day killing anything they can get their hands on, you can pretty much take a nap until the Ogres get an update.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;: Those filthy rats! This is definitely a matchup in your favor, but don&#039;t get complacent! The skaven are one of the few factions to have as many AP ranged options as you do (in an equally wide roster), but where you rely on elite infantry and SEM&#039;s to make up the difference, the Skaven rely on drowning you in numbers and using their summons and magic to force the battle in their favor. You&#039;re fast enough and killy enough to buzzsaw your way through whatever the Skaven throw at you, but a savvy Skaven player will know this, and will try to take advantage of your squishiness instead. Rat Ogres and Brood Horrors can be quite a threat if you&#039;re not careful, and their summons can tie down your archers during valuable moments. For an unorthodox build, try bringing Morathi on Sulephet, 2 manticores, and some Witch Elves, maybe even Sisters of the Singing Doom, to terror-bomb important units. Your hero core is fast enough to get to their ranged threats, and Morathi&#039;s combination of magic is everything the skaven hate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Slaanesh&#039;&#039;&#039;: Under Malekith, the Dark Elves have been fighting Slaanesh cults for centuries, and here you finally get a chance to show it. Both factions have ap out the ass, and both will find it difficult to apply that ap effectively, but your ranged and infantry options are far more flexible when it comes to taking on lower-armor threats. Also, your anti-large will be able to easily take down their chariots. Your flying lords and heroes should have no problems, and this is also a great matchup to bring the Raven Heralds RoR, since they can mostly just sit there and rack up points on anything valuable as long as you keep it away from furies. The one thing they really have going for them is speed. Make sure your ranged stuff is well protected and screened by your infantry, and you should have no trouble. Unfortunately, your strategy is somewhat reliant on gaps in their roster, so as Slaanesh gets more DLC and updates, your advantage in this matchup is likely to fray.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings&#039;&#039;&#039;: Tomb Kings have a large flexible roster, but they don&#039;t excel greatly at any one strategy. Instead of your usual missile cavalry, consider relying a bit more on your missile infantry like Darkshards or even Shades to poke holes into their constructs. The Tomb Kings skirmishers are a living (undead?) joke most of the time, but they can be annoying here since you need to be selective about where you&#039;re sending those ap volleys. A Reaper Bolt Thrower or 2 can be quite good to zone out any Bone Giants or Great Bow Ushabti, two staples of the TK roster. Remember though, when it comes to artillery, you&#039;re definitely outclassed. I&#039;d recommend against bringing a monster, since yours are pretty slow and vulnerable to getting shot up by Sepulchral Stalkers. If you want one though, Kharybdiss is probably the best choice as it&#039;s the only monster that can give the mobile anti-large contingents of Necropolis Knights, or even the Necrosphinx a run for it&#039;s money. Lore of Fire of course is a must here, which leaves your lord choices a bit limited. Supreme Sorceress on a Manticore or Malus can be good picks, but it really depends on how you want to build.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tzeentch&#039;&#039;&#039;: You&#039;re fast enough to keep up with Tzeentch, and you&#039;ll need that speed to get into melee. First up, this is not the matchup to bring anything but your most basic infantry. Magical attacks will make your Witch Elves very sad, and Black Guard + Executioners don&#039;t have shields and will get shot up like it&#039;s a Detroit street corner. Your ap missiles would be great here, if your opponent has no brain and brings heavy infantry (which they probably won&#039;t do), but Tzeentch&#039;s barrier makes things a little difficult. You don&#039;t have tons of ammo, and every shot going into their Protoss shields instead of their health bar is value you&#039;ll sorely miss. However, your fast units may be able to put the team on their back, and tie down stuff for your Darkshards to shoot. A bunch of Dark Riders with Shields are fast threats, great for charging Horrors, and are as fast as Marauder Horsemen. This is a matchup where a unit of Cold One Knights (maybe the Ebon Claw RoR) might be useful just for the mobile killing power (though they don&#039;t really stand a chance against Chaos Knights, so micro them well). Bring Harpies to stuff up things like Burning Chariots, and act as meat shields in the air so you can grind Doom Knights down with magic or ap volleys. Scourgerunners are a fantastic pick against Soul Grinders and Chaos Knights as long as you keep them moving. If you can sustain your fire and keep the pressure on Tzeentch will melt, but their mobility and barrier can make it a challenging proposition.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Coast&#039;&#039;&#039;: There&#039;s no other way to say it, you&#039;ll just have to rush super hard. The Coast monsters will get shot up by your skirmish power, but if you can&#039;t get into melee without getting shot half to hell, it won&#039;t matter. They&#039;ll try to drown you in zombies and summons, so make sure you have a fire sorceress for that wave-clearing potential. Corsairs (melee or handbow variant) can be pretty useful here as well, with their speed and high armor. Death Hags on foot can be a standout hero choice here as well, as she is fast, fantastic at grinding through infantry, and (if she can get into melee) can deal with any Coast hero except maybe a Mournghoul Haunter (which you should be filling up with your ap arrows anyway).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vampire Counts&#039;&#039;&#039;: You can definitely make full kite work here, and it probably is the most meta tactic, but it can be risky. The Counts are very fast and deadly with their cavalry and lord options, plus kiting all day isn&#039;t the most fun matchup ever. For a slightly less powerful, but much more fun matchup, consider a monster mash to make things work. The Hydra can be extremely survivable here with it&#039;s regeneration and fire damage, while the Kharybdiss is great for dueling any Varghulfs or lords on zombie dragons. Hellebron on a cauldron can be great for mulching infantry and dueling the Vampire counts&#039; slower threats. You&#039;ll win the infantry grind with 0 effort, and you have plenty of dueling options, but their cavalry and fast movers are the true threat of the night lords. If you can screen your Darkshards well enough, getting them tarpitted with Dreadspears and shooting them might work, but it&#039;s tough with their bats and wolves moving as fast as they do. If you&#039;re confident in your micro, rampaging them with Witch Elves is also an option, but tricky to pull off. Scourgerunners are also great here. Lore of Shadows caster + Malus Darkblade can be a potent combination as well, nuking any Blood Knights or ethereal units caught out of position with Pit of Shades while Malus is a melee monster who has a chance to take on even Vlad in combat with just a tiny bit of support.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wood Elves&#039;&#039;&#039;: What do you get when you cross two glass cannon factions? A lot of broken glass I guess. Unfortunately their shooters and cav are just way better than yours, and they&#039;re fast enough to keep away from all but your speediest threats. If the opponent has any braincells, they won&#039;t be bringing any tree spirits, seeing as they&#039;ll be turned into paper by your ap. No, you&#039;ll be dealing with full Vietnam, and the only way to stand a chance is with your fast movers. Witch Elves, Sisters of Slaughter, Corsairs, these should be the core of your infantry, with some Dreadspears to protect them with their shields. Morathi on Sulephet is a great small target if you avoid the fire arcs of their ranged threats, and your light cavalry will have to put in some serious work. Doomfire Warlocks would be quite good if the Wood Elves didn&#039;t have so much magic damage, but as it is it&#039;ll be up to your dark riders/chariots to win their key engagements.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Domination===&lt;br /&gt;
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General Tier Rank: &#039;&#039;&#039;B-&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
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They can actually be quite strong in domination, but they need a skillful player to take the game. Scourgerunners are highly mobile and can get good trades, good AP and monsters is always valuable, they have plenty of cheap, cost effective infantry, and of course their lord choices are almost all excellent. However, unlike other fast factions (e.g. Vampire Counts) the druchii tend to run out of steam in this game mode without a real way to sustain themselves. Also, Murderous Prowess is awful, as it procs way too quickly to be useful in a longer fight (actually, CA has patched this, Murderous Prowess now has a higher threshold, so it procs at an appropriate time. It still isn&#039;t the big force it is in land battles, but at least it doesn&#039;t proc in the first 5 seconds of the battle). They&#039;re still very squishy, and tend to get run over by other factions heavy cav and monsters if you aren&#039;t on top of your game. With some practice though, they can be a very fun pick. One additional note is that lore of Dark Magic is awesome in this game mode, with special mention going to Soul Stealer, a great way to punish blobs on points.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Strategies===&lt;br /&gt;
Focus on economy in a few good provinces with 4 cities (Hag Graef, Naggarond, Ghrond, Quintex, Har Ganeth, etc) put income, slave pens, and then black roads or special resources on every city/town. Then put all slaves here. Add 3 or 4 masters to reduce slave decline to zero and you have the strongest, easiest, and fastest to grow economy in the game bar none. Can field near unlimited armies of doom stacks. There you go, you win.&lt;br /&gt;
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Actually, the most prosperous slave province for the Dark Elves is Yvresse owing to the unique Tower of the Warden building which generates 50 gold per 100 slaves. With a maximum slaveholding capacity of 15500 slaves, combined with the multiplicative effect of slaves on base province income and the ability to stack slave income multipliers through heroes that are essentially unlimited, it surpasses any Druchii province in gold-generating potential. Proving, once again, that Naggarond sucks. This wealth is also why it is viable for certain Dark Elf factions to abandon their starting capitals and conquer Ulthuan instead.- while that may be more profitable technically, it’s irrelevant. Any proper slave strategy give’s effectively unlimited money even in just the dark elf lands. Conquer Ulthuan first or not, either way you won’t need for money with even a little strategy.&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately they heavily nerfed the Slave system in immortal empires, the jury is out still on how good their economy is after the massive nerf, you now have to spend slaves as a global resource on your economic buildings and commandment. Will update as we find out how bad the nerf is but its already clear its going to be dramatically weaker than before. After playing 80 turns I can confirm the economy is still strong as long as you rapidly expand and keep fighting but slaves decline possibly too fast from buildings, and slave pens aren&#039;t that useful, all they do is increase capacity and give a tiny 5 slave per turn income, whereas a leveled economy building consumes 40 per turn, so only constant fighting and sacking will be able to keep your slave population up. The public order penalties for slaves are basically gone now. assassins can now generate 10 slaves per turn by staying in your provinces instead of boosting slave income, but that is a waste of them. In general all the buildings or skills which give slaves per turn are completely useless, they are way too weak to keep up with the cost of buildings, you either have to constantly sack other countries or be continuously conquering territory.&lt;br /&gt;
Don&#039;t Bother with Slave markets or any building that give slaves per turn, the rate of gain can never keep up with the consumption and increasing slave capacity is useless. Having a large stockpile of slaves is actually more or less pointless, you only need 150 slaves to trigger the bonus income at the end of your turn and you don&#039;t get any meaningful bonuses for having lots of slaves. you can have a slave consumption of 1000-2000 per turn and all you need to do is get above 150 remaining after the decline before the end of each turn and there is no downside. So slave markets and any special buildings that increase capacity or give a few slaves per turn should just be skipped, this is bad design by CA but it at least frees up your building slots. overall the dark elf income is still extremely strong it just not as strong as before. Unfortunately once your empire gets large enough it will become almost impossible to trigger the bonus income because you can easily end up with -4000-5000 slaves per turn which will be impossible to keep up each turn. Fundamentally as your empire grows amounts of slaves decline per turn increase quickly but your ability to capture slaves remains largely fixed, unless you can simultaneous sack 4-5 provinces a turn (every single turn) it will be impossible to keep up slaves late game, and the slave buildings do nothing to help this. Unfortunately I feel like they failed to playtest the new mechanic adequately as it becomes almost completely useless late game.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Campaign Specific===&lt;br /&gt;
I wrote this section a while back, before the release of Immortal Empires, so much of this information is outdated. For example Malekith appears to be a much more difficult campaign with Valkia&#039;s new start that&#039;s right on top of him, Morathi isn&#039;t very viable in melee anymore, and Malus&#039;, Lokhir&#039;s, and Rakarth&#039;s campaigns all have new starts. I&#039;ll update this section eventually (though if someone else feels inclined to update, go for it), but in the meantime, take the advice here with a grain of salt as most of it is applicable to Mortal Empires only.&lt;br /&gt;
====Malekith====&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Beware Hellebron&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith&#039;s campaign is generally pretty easy (and very fun!), but it can really depend on what Hellebron does at the start. Usually you can get pretty powerful early, build up diplomatic relations and just confederate her, but it&#039;s not unknown for her to just straight up declare war on you, which can really send your campaign down shit swamp. Furthermore, she can actually out-recruit you, making it next to impossible to confederate her. One strategy is to just rush to Har Ganeth immediately after securing Naggarond, while another is trying to out-recruit her in turn. Just ignoring her CAN be fine, but Har Ganeth is a good early game province, and you don&#039;t want to risk a civil war with her.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Don&#039;t spend too long in Naggaroth&#039;&#039;&#039;: Look, I get it, Naggarond&#039;s a great place with fine tourist attractions, but conquering Ulthuan as Malekith can and should be done fairly early in the game, because it takes a loooonnnggg time to take over all those provinces settlement-by-settlement. You definitely want to get Ulthuan conquered before the chaos invasion rolls in, as they basically spawn right on top of Naggarond, and constantly fighting them until someone knocks off Archaon on the other side of the map can be a huge pain.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyrant is the way to go&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malekith has OPTIONS and almost all of them are good, but if it&#039;s your first campaign, Tyrant can really bring your slave economy to the next level. More money -&amp;gt; more stacks -&amp;gt; Druchii supremacy, baby!&lt;br /&gt;
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====Morathi====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The start. Oh god, the start&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeahhh, there&#039;s no getting around it. Morathi&#039;s start is a bitch and a half (kind of like Morathi herself!). She&#039;s surrounded by enemies who hate her guts, and one mistake here can spell doom for your campaign. Here&#039;s the thing though: she actually has all the tools she needs to deal with it (She&#039;s an incredibly strong legendary lord, and tier 1 Dark Elf units like bleakswords and darkshards are awesome even into the late game), it can just be tough learning the first few times around. You need to be EXTREMELY aggressive in consolidating your starting province, as the Ss&#039;ildra Tor can just out-recruit you if you leave them alone long enough. Once you do that and deal with Alith Anar though, everything gets easier so have faith!&lt;br /&gt;
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This is valid for Mortal Empires, your start in Immortal Empires is actually pretty chill. You may even have the chance to ally with Mazdamundi pretty early on if you fight the minor Skavens on the west and gift the frog some cities. Alith Anar also fucked off up north so you can consolidate your starting provinces and build up easily before starting to rape Ulthuan.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;You can use her in melee!&#039;&#039;&#039; A mistake I see a lot of players make is using Morathi as you&#039;d use a typical caster lord, i.e. keeping them at a distance and shying away from any fight. If you do this though, you aren&#039;t getting her full value. Her unique weapon combined with one of her unique skills (Enchanting Beauty) can lower enemy melee attack by 18 and defence by 9 JUST FOR BEING NEAR HER. She can basically use her darksword as a strap-on to peg enemy melee stats. Be careful how you use her, because of course she isnt going to outduel dedicated melee combatant characters, but these passive abilities combined with lore of shadows make her great for absolutely dumpstering enemies that your units are having a tough time dealing with.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Hellebron====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unpaid interns&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hellebron requires a constant influx of slaves to keep active, which means that you are going to have to be ultra aggressive throughout your campaign, more so than other druchii factions who can just sit back and let their slaves do all their work for them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Malekith&#039;&#039;&#039;: It&#039;s harder (though not impossible!) to confederate Naggarond than vice-versa, and pissing off Malekith can really become a problem, since he usually skyrockets to strength rank 1 after turn 20 or 30. One strategy is just to leave for Ulthuan right away, but this can be very challenging. Rushing Naggarond is also an option, but you can also ally with them, which is what I&#039;d recommend for less experienced players.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Blood Fleets suckkkk&#039;&#039;&#039;: Remember how the Greenskins WAAGGHH worked before their update? Theoretically it was a way to encourage aggressiveness and movement on the campaign map. How it actually worked was that they&#039;d spawn AI controlled armies that would allahu-akbar themselves upon the nearest settlement. Wellll, Hellebron&#039;s voyages basically have the same idea and it&#039;s honestly worse because you can&#039;t choose where they spawn. Just don&#039;t rely on them to do any heavy lifting.&lt;br /&gt;
====Lokhir====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pillaging the East:&#039;&#039;&#039; In Immortal Empires, Lokhir now starts on the Cathayan edge of the map, just south of Villitc, seperated by an impassable (to you of all people) river, and the Great Bastion (and &#039;&#039;&#039;Eshin&#039;&#039;&#039;) to the West. The entire Eastern half of Cathay is full of rivers and deltas so you can raid deeper into Cathay.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are &amp;quot;free:&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&#039; Lokhir doesn&#039;t need to sacrifice to Mathlann to start a Black Ark in IE, so combine that with their absolute loyalty, cheap upkeep, and the many rivers of Cathay, you&#039;ll be taking a few of these.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Blender King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ah, Lustria. Let&#039;s see, the lizards hate you because they don&#039;t want a dark elf caravan on their land. Teclis hates you because he doesn&#039;t like your stupid face, the Dwarfs still bear a grudge, and Harkon hates you for... stealing all his treasure, I guess? Packing up and leaving for Ulthuan on turn 1 can actually be a pretty viable strategy here. Lustria-bowl honestly sucks for you, but if you&#039;re intent on doing it, allying with the rats can secure your western border, and allow you to focus on Teclis at the start, which takes one of the major pressures off your campaign.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Black Ark King&#039;&#039;&#039;: Black Arks are awesome and should be your main method of recruiting units to your armies, especially in the early game. BUILD THE GROWTH BUILDING FIRST! You&#039;ll get to those higher tiers so much faster, and can laugh over the corpses of your enemies when your tier 5 dread knights are running over red-crested skinks.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;What to do with Karond Kar?&#039;&#039;&#039;: Lokhir&#039;s campaign is pretty weird, because his unique item requires taking over the city of Karond Kar which is wayyyy in the middle of assfuck nowhere compared to where you start. You don&#039;t really want to manage a split empire in Warhammer 2, so taking Karond Kar by force isn&#039;t really advisable. Luckily, he now has a quest line that allows him to confederate Karond Kar remotely. I&#039;d recommend confederating with them, and then just selling all the buildings and abandoning the province. Keeping it generally means dealing with High Elf DEATHstacks every two turns, along with Wood Elves and Taurox if he&#039;s still alive which will really make you want to deepthroat a cactus.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Malus Darkblade====&lt;br /&gt;
Malus is a fan-favorite character, and CA honestly did him pretty dirty, which is kind of upsetting. His campaign is very difficult especially at the start, and he slightly boosts cold one knights, a notoriously cost-inefficient unit. He is a monster on the battlefield, but &#039;&#039;it&#039;s pretty much always better to play as another dark elf faction and confederate him&#039;&#039;, since he gets all his battlefield strengths and none of the weaknesses. If you insist on playing his campaign though, keep these tips in mind:&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;SNIKCH MUST DIE!&#039;&#039;&#039;: Snikch must die unless you like having 30 million filthy rats coming over the border to take your land and deflower your sorceresses (oh, who are we kidding? There’s no such thing as a virgin sorceress, they literally worship the goddess of massive orgies). Sometimes you can even make a non-aggression pact with Imrik to focus on Snikch which I definitely recommend. After killing him, you can slow down a little, and pick off your enemies one-by-one, but it&#039;s an absolute miserable campaign experience if you allow Snikch to get his shit together.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Black Arks are essential&#039;&#039;&#039;: You start with a Black Ark and you NEED it to get past Malus&#039; cancerous early game. You probably aren&#039;t going to have the money to spend on potions at the start, which means your troops will replenish at the speed of a glacier. A Black Ark can help a lot with this problem, and can provide a good base to recruit from.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Keep your alliance with Malekith going&#039;&#039;&#039;: Keeping your alliance with Malekith alive allows you to cheese the &#039;Tz&#039;arkans whispers&#039; mechanic a little bit, since the unique quests might be to declare war on a faction you don&#039;t care about halfway across the map. The rewards from these missions can be quite powerful, so complete as many as you can.&lt;br /&gt;
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====Rakarth====&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ulthuan&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rakarth&#039;s starting place in Albion offers him a variety of options in theory. however, you&#039;re kind of forced into attacking Ulthuan which sucks. Once they discover you (which happens very early in the game), they will start sending stack after stack after you, and trying to expand eastward or southward just becomes unviable. Sure, Morathi can sometimes get super aggressive and start conquering Ulthuan early taking some of the pressure off you, but it&#039;s a gamble that sometimes doesn&#039;t pay off.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Rakarth only for beastpen armies&#039;&#039;&#039;: Beast pens areeee... interesting? The thing is, the only boosts to monstrous units from the beast pens come from Rakarth&#039;s army skills. For your generic lords, it&#039;s better to stick to your tried and true druchii units, unless you&#039;re in an emergency and need units fast.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Total Warhammer]] {{Total War Warhammer Tactics}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Vermintide_2&amp;diff=523486</id>
		<title>Vermintide 2</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Vermintide_2&amp;diff=523486"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T15:32:12Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Bardin Goreksson */&lt;/p&gt;
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[[File:DPuLc-pX4AA3ba3.png|745px|center|thumb|&amp;lt;span style=&#039;color:green;font-size:100%&#039;&amp;gt;HAHA! ASININE MORTALS!! TIME TO EMBRACE THE TRUE LOVE FROM OUR [[Nurgle|FATHER]]!!&amp;lt;/span&amp;gt;  [[Skaven|YES-YES, WEAK MAN-THINGS DIE FROM VERMIN POX-DISEASE, YES!]]]]&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Vermintide 2&#039;&#039;&#039;, also known as [[Board-tans/vg|ratclick 2]], is the sequel to [[The End Times: Vermintide]], made possibly due to the fact that the first game surpassed expectations and did pretty fucking well for a relatively niche title (2 million fucking copies sold!). Fatshark sensibly shortened the name from &amp;quot;Warhammer The End Times: Vermintide 2&amp;quot; to avoid sounding like a Japanese light novel, much to the joy of nerds who [[skub|hate]] The End Times (pretty much everyone).&lt;br /&gt;
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On October 10th, 2018, Vermintide 2 was announced, bringing a host of new additions. Most notably the Warriors of Chaos are being added as an enemy type. [[Nurgle|Specifically the jolly ones that don&#039;t mind being pox bloated messes]]. Along with the new enemy race, the Skaven also have a few new additions, such as the Stormfiends and Warpfire Throwers. Around a year after release, [[Beastmen|everyone&#039;s favorite non-Welsh sheep shaggers]] were added as well.&lt;br /&gt;
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The game was released on March 8, 2018, and quickly surpassed its prequel&#039;s success with 1 million sales in its first month alone.&lt;br /&gt;
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The game became truly playable after a patch was released on April 12, 2018 to which [https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/steamcommunity/public/images/clans/30503110/c2428ecfc6ae3dbbb902a008f702bcf510ebb399.png brought back Saltzpyre&#039;s signature voiceline] (&#039;&#039;actual&#039;&#039; [https://steamcommunity.com/games/552500/announcements/detail/1654386143023879919 patch notes banner]). &lt;br /&gt;
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It is [[Awesome]].&lt;br /&gt;
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== Setting ==&lt;br /&gt;
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Vermintide 2 is set during the End Times, an indeterminate amount of time since the ending of the previous game. After falling into Rasknitt&#039;s trap (and thus letting Ubersreik fall), the Ubersreik Five (or Four, doesn&#039;t matter)  have ended up in their own castle and banded together again to face the Skaven forces of [[Clan Fester]], along with their new allies: a Chaos Warband dedicated to [[Nurgle]] known as The Rotbloods. Both forces came together as the Pactsworn, their eyes gazed on the fortress town of Helmgart (the border town Bretonnia always conquers within the first 10 turns of an Empire [[Total War: WARHAMMER]] campaign).&lt;br /&gt;
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Lohner has dialogue indicating [[Anal Circumference|the timeline is smack dab in the middle of the End Times as Louen Leoncouer is already dead]] (Please have mercy [[Matt Ward]])! Due to the presence of a Nurgle-aligned warband, it is possible that the game is set during/after the Fall of Marienburg. The Skaven are up to their usual hijinks (Pillaging, slaughter, slavery... You know, a normal day in Warhammer). Their main objective is trying to build something called the Skittergate [https://youtu.be/uOd7HQoKxcU?t=45| (it&#039;s different from that movie which they have never seen, so how would they copy it?)], a portal between Norsca and Helmgart, explaining how the Skaven and their new allies overran the region. The Rotbloods are here to help the Skaven with murder-fucking everyone in the Reikland and bringing great death-death to poor Helmgart. Clan Fester&#039;s also out for blood as payback for Ubersreik, even though Ubersreik apparently fell anyway. &lt;br /&gt;
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There are a total of thirteen maps in the base campaign. These span: the town of Helmgart itself, where the heroes create a diversion at the Temple of Sigmar before the Hammerman himself purges it of vikings and rats; an Elven temple ruin in the woods where the gang uses a slow-moving puzzle to raise a magic shield; Ussingen, a farming town where the heroes rescue prisoners and later blow up a Chaos supply cache; a Nurgle-blighted canyon with a fortified Chaos Lord&#039;s tomb, which the gang destroys to stop the Rotbloods from harvesting his energy; a dense swamp, where the heroes assault the Rotbloods&#039; main war camp and slay their leader, a Nurgle Champion; and quite a lot more besides, culminating in a double assault on the Skittergate and the Rotblood hometown in Norsca, obliterating both of them and saving Helmgart, or what&#039;s left of it. The gang is so badass that the shitty army left at Ubersreik was enough to take over while a Skaven-Rotblood alliance couldn&#039;t do jack to them. Such is life as a video game protagonist.&lt;br /&gt;
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The &#039;&#039;Shadows Over Bögenhafen&#039;&#039; DLC has the gang end up in the titular town where they wipe out the Pactsworn a second time and keep a scary daemon sword out of Nurgle&#039;s grubby hands over three more maps. &#039;&#039;Back To Ubersreik&#039;&#039; has them enter a magic simulation of Ubersreik being run by Olesya to try to locate some mysterious runes of power in the &#039;&#039;real&#039;&#039; Ubersreik, re-defeating the Skaven in it because she&#039;s trying to keep it as &amp;quot;believable&amp;quot; as possible (and also the Rotbloods, who either found a way to break into the simulation or are part of the simulation because Olesya likes messing with our heroes), with three levels from the previous game and a secret fourth you can try out after finding runes from the past levels through a series of tedious puzzles. In the Winds of Magic DLC the Beastmen get involved because the increasingly fucked Reikland now has a meteor crash onto it, and the angry goats surge out of the woods to make a herdstone out of it. Then there&#039;s the roguelike &#039;&#039;Chaos Wastes&#039;&#039;, given for free to everyone who got the game, wherein Saltzpyre sets up a pilgrimage through the wastes to assuage his waning faith.&lt;br /&gt;
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An event for the 1 year anniversary (March 2019) gave us &amp;quot;A Quiet Drink,&amp;quot; in which the party decides they&#039;ve done a very good job so far, and deserve a night on the town! Worth playing just for the many custom voice lines for the utterly sloshed characters. (&amp;quot;Queen Kerillian demands MORE ALE!&amp;quot;) (&amp;quot;It wouldn&#039;t be the same! It wouldn&#039;t have the whistle!&amp;quot;) While the map was only available on the official realm during the event, it can still be played [https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=1694820325 through a mod].&lt;br /&gt;
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Where the storyline doesn&#039;t advance as much through the game, more details can be found on the main site&#039;s dev blogs by way of the &amp;quot;Franz Lohner Chronicles&amp;quot;, where the old bartender writes down his musings about current events.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Gameplay ==&lt;br /&gt;
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The good old Vermintide core gameplay remains intact, which means that the game still has a robust and surprisingly skill-based melee system at its core. Rather than fuck with anything that was already functional, Vermintide 2 focuses instead on adding more content to play around with. Light attacks, heavy attacks, blocking, dodging, pushing, etc., are all still here. All weapons also now have a &amp;quot;push attack&amp;quot; which is performed by holding down the attack button while blocking, causing an attack after you push. &lt;br /&gt;
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Aside from the new enemy types, there are a couple of other new features, such as specializations for the classes (referred to as &amp;quot;careers&amp;quot;), each representing different possible paths the heroes took after Ubersreik. For example, the Dwarf can be a Slayer or an Ironbreaker, or the Wood Elf can be a Shade or Handmaiden of Isha, each one with diffferent passive abilities and active &amp;quot;Career Skill&amp;quot;. This comes packaged along with a talent tree for each character and new weapons to go around for everyone. Each talent tree also comes with talents for granting temporary health (Health that&#039;s both easily lost and generated, basically allowing you to endure until the next heal) and stagger bonuses (damage bonuses against enemies you get off-balance). Alternatively, you can heal others when you use a potion on yourself, or gain more power to replace these talents.&lt;br /&gt;
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The loot system got an overhaul too, with the devs acknowledging the first game&#039;s system was kind of bullshit. We now have [[rage|lootboxes]] like every other dev under the sun, but entirely earned through gameplay and they come unlocked, so it&#039;s basically just normal random loot drops with a loot box skin slapped on. A &amp;quot;Heroic Deeds&amp;quot; system has also been implemented, consisting of consumable quests that mix gameplay up by dramatically changing objectives, mix of enemies faced or limiting your own tools (many combinations of which are pure [[Anal Circumference]]), along with a Challenge system that&#039;s basically an alternative achievements system, rewarding you when you finish missions or sets of missions with certain difficulties, different heroes and/or harder conditions, tracking other milestones and more. These give you more chests, skins, frames for your portraits, and other goodies.&lt;br /&gt;
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Aside from those additions,and quality of life improvements it seems to mostly be the same game, which is okay since most people just wanted it to be the first one with more stuff to begin with. For the cherry on top, the game also supports modding to the point that the devs maintain a list of &amp;quot;Sanctioned Mods&amp;quot; which can be safely used with the base game, a lot of which are pretty sweet. There&#039;s also entirely separate &amp;quot;Realms&amp;quot; for the base game and modded games. On the negative side, there&#039;s no dedicated server, instead relying on peer-to-peer connection. Better hope your host has good internet...&lt;br /&gt;
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Three DLC campaigns, and a free game mode, are currently out. The first one, &#039;&#039;&#039;Shadows over Bögenhafen&#039;&#039;&#039;, has the heroes searching for a runesword in the titular city, while &#039;&#039;&#039;Back to Ubersreik&#039;&#039;&#039; features remade versions of some of the original Vermintide missions along with new melee weapons as the Heroes of Ubersreik head off to an illusionary copy of the city to find a hidden set of runes for Olesya. The third DLC, &#039;&#039;&#039;Winds of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039;, added Beastmen, a higher level cap and difficulty level, and a set of endgame challenges in the &amp;quot;Winds of Magic&amp;quot; mode. The fourth, &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Wastes&#039;&#039;&#039; (released for free) added another game mode which has the Ubersreik &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Five&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Four&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; It Doesn&#039;t Matter go on expedition into the titular wastes, choosing to go through a number of randomized locations with roguelike elements, allowing players to exchange or power up their equipment and get special boons while going through areas cursed with various dangers and debuffs. This will itself be further expanded by the fifth (also free) update, &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Be&#039;lakor]]&#039;&#039;&#039;, which will task players to find the Daemon Prince&#039;s Temple of Shadows to end his schemes in the Chaos Wastes, adding new areas and dangers as well as new rewards. Then there&#039;s the &#039;&#039;&#039;Trail to Treachery&#039;&#039;&#039;, which involves Sienna&#039;s sister Sofia and finally brings everything about her past to a (burning) head.&lt;br /&gt;
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A fourth DLC campaign, &#039;&#039;&#039;Karak Azgaraz&#039;&#039;&#039; was announced during Warhammer Skulls 2023, with a plot set on exploring a lost Dwarf hold. Released on June 13th, it was almost the same three maps than from the previous tide game, but this time 7 years have passed since the Five of Ubersreik visited the Karak in the year 2530 of the Imperial Calendar...[[What|which is 2 years after the end of the world in the End Times in 2528 I.C.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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==The Ubersreik Five and Careers==&lt;br /&gt;
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Each character now has three different Careers, which affect their weapon choices, abilities, and talent trees, allowing a great deal of customization for each one. Lore-wise, the three careers are based on how each of the heroes might have reacted to the fall of Ubersreik: Either they barely changed at all and simply became the elite version of their old jobs (the starter career, canonically their choice), were inspired for a higher calling, or became traumatized and jaded. The exception is Markus, whose three careers all end up being good for him.&lt;br /&gt;
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A fourth career, canonically advanced to from the starter career after the events of the previous DLC from when each is released, is on the way for each character, though it&#039;s locked behind DLC. So far, Markus, Bardin, Kerillian and Victor have their fourth class, with Sienna on the way.&lt;br /&gt;
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It&#039;s later revealed that the career switching in between missions is canon. How? As Lohner writes, [https://www.vermintide.com/news/franz-lohners-chronicle-the-changer-of-ways Tzeentch has taken a gander at the team], changing their histories and lives and nobody notices because &amp;quot;that&#039;s how it&#039;s always been&amp;quot;. It takes a conscious effort for everyone to notice and dispel the illusion. Now, whether that was actually Tzeentch or Olesya [[Troll|fucking with everyone]] is anyone&#039;s guess...&lt;br /&gt;
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===[[Victor Saltzpyre]] (aka Grand Lector Saltzpyre)===&lt;br /&gt;
The Witch-Hunteriest Witch Hunter continues to hunt... More Skaven and Rotbloods than witches, but he hunts all the same. After the Ubersreik campaign, the Order of the Silver Hammer still [[Derp| stupidly tried to deny the existence of the ratmen]], spinning the invasion as a myth. How &amp;quot;Salty&amp;quot; he was in his reaction formed the crux of his future: Either he gained more political power in the chaos, allowing him to secretly fight the ratmen (The canonical choice), spoke out against the stupidity and abandoned the order to become a bounty hunter, or he lost faith in humanity entirely and relished in fanatical worship of Sigmar. As the events of the game go on however, even this faith in Sigmar is shaken, and he organizes a pilgrimage to the Chaos Wastes to assuage his fears. Journals reveal that he&#039;s coming on more to preaching and thinking on the Eternal Flame... After the Chaos Waste pilgrimage, he rededicated himself to Sigmar and became a Warrior Priest, somehow managing to become even more of a fanatic in the process.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Hunter Captain&#039;&#039;&#039;: The deaths of several Captains over the course of the End Times has allowed Victor to rise in rank, but he has had to accept that the Witch Hunters won’t recognize the fact that there’s an entire fucking empire of ratmen just below their cities; Saltzpyre now uses his new political position to fight the menace in secret. In addition to a fancier hat, Victor as a Witch Hunter Captain can do everything he could in the first game and also gets some abilities that help him support his allies.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Witch Hunt&#039;&#039;- Enemies pinged by Victor take extra damage&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Eternal Guard&#039;&#039;- Blocking light frontal attacks does not consume stamina&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Killing Shot&#039;&#039;- Crit headshots, melee or ranged, instantly kill human-sized enemies (i.e. any non-boss enemy smaller than a Chaos Warrior)&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Animosity&#039;&#039;- Victor screams lets out his [[RAGE]]. All nearby allies have their critical rate enhanced for 6 seconds, and nearby enemies are knocked back.  Can be upgraded to give yourself guaranteed crits, refund 40% cooldown if the shout hits ten enemies, or ping everyone hit by it with Witch Hunt.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bounty Hunter&#039;&#039;&#039;: When his order attempted to cover up what happened at Ubersreik, Salty removed his heraldry to fight the Skaven himself, taking odd-jobs on the side to pay for his endeavors. While officially he&#039;s still a witch hunter, he doesn&#039;t associate much with other witch hunters anymore after the threats they made in response to Saltzpyre snapping and speaking his mind about the Skaven. He&#039;s less of a religious fanatic and more pragmatic as a result. As a Bounty Hunter, Victor focuses on ranged weaponry to blast away Skaven and Chaos Warriors alike. He also dressed in a similar appearance with [[C.L.Werner|Brunner]], a canon bounty hunter. &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Blessed Shots&#039;&#039;- Guaranteed ranged critical every 10 seconds&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ammo Pouches&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Quick Release&#039;&#039;- Improved reload rate&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Locked and Loaded&#039;&#039;- Fires a powerful shot that pierces multiple enemies...and potentially allies too, so everyone involved really should try to be careful with the Bounty Hunter around. Can be upgraded to have massive cooldown reduction on headshot, get more pellets on the next shot based on the number hit on the current shot, or have ranged crits reduce the cooldown by 20%.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zealot&#039;&#039;&#039;: The horrors of Ubersreik and the Witch Hunters&#039; refusal to admit the threat the Skaven pose have caused Victor to give up on earthly organizations entirely and place his trust in Sigmar alone, with the rest of the world fit only to be cleansed in righteous fire. Victor as a Zealot favors vicious melee combat, and not only is his armor some of the best in the game even without the Flagellant talent (which is mandatory while playing the class), a heaping helping of faith and holy rage makes him even more dangerous as he loses health - after all, the end is upon us, why not shed as much blood as possible before it goes? As a nice bonus, picking up grimoires will count towards his health-based attack boosts. &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Fiery Faith&#039;&#039;- Attack power increased by 5% for every 25 health lost (up to 20%)&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Unswerving Strikes&#039;&#039;- Heavy attacks cannot be interrupted by enemy attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Heart of Iron&#039;&#039;- Ignores death upon taking lethal damage (long cooldown)&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Holy Fervor&#039;&#039;- Charge forward and gain 25% attack speed boost for 5 seconds. Can be upgraded to be unkillable during the skill, or gain stacks that either reduce cooldown or increase attack power.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warrior Priest&#039;&#039;&#039;: His tenure as Witch Hunter Captain came only as a process of elimination to Victor. His faith was deeply shaken by the sheer depths of incompetence that his supposedly inviolable comrades in the Templar Witch Hunters, the officially sanctioned Witch Hunter Order of the Empire and the Cult of Sigmar, could show. After the risky pilgrimage he persuaded the others to go along to the Chaos Wastes, he found his faith again and became a Warrior Priest of Sigmar, divine power flowing through his veins. Nominally retaining his Witch Hunter Captaincy, he simply stopped bothering with the bureaucracy and found his true calling in applying hammers to heretic skulls while preaching. While he loses access to his ranged weapons, he does get exclusive access to the Flail and Shield, the Skull-Splitter and Shield, and the Skull-Splitter and Blessed Tome weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Righteous Fury&#039;&#039;- Gain Fury when nearby enemies die. When Fury reaches 100%, attacks Smite the enemy for 20% of weapon damage. Fury depletes outside of battle. &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Enemy of Chaos&#039;&#039;- 30% bonus power against Chaos Warriors and Beastmen Standard Bearers&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Incorruptible&#039;&#039;- 100% curse resistance &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Implacable&#039;&#039;- Damage taken is reduced by 20%, with a further 20% of incoming damage being dealt over 3 seconds (this damage cannot kill). &lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Shield of Faith&#039;&#039;- Saltzpyre generates a barrier on himself or his allies, making them invincible for 5 seconds. The shield explodes when it expires, dealing damage to nearby enemies. Can be upgraded to affect both Victor and someone else simultaneously, extend its duration to 8 seconds while granting the ability to trample weaker enemies, or provide a revival and healing effect.&lt;br /&gt;
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===[[Markus Kruber]] (aka Markus de Mandelot)===&lt;br /&gt;
[[This Guy|Faithful, dependable Markus]], always willing to help out, continues to serve against the Ratmen for both coin and conscience. The universe seems to have rewarded him for being a nice, simple guy because none of his careers turn out badly for him. Either he gets deeper into merc life (the canon choice), he takes some time off to breathe as a Huntsman, or he&#039;s recognized for his achievements and gets inducted into the Order of the Reikhammer as a Foot Knight. Later in the story, his ancient bloodline is revealed and he becomes an official Grail Knight of Bretonnia. This means he somehow made the journey to Bretonnia, fought all manner of beasts and monsters (while drunk) and even [[Awesome|proved himself to]] [[The Green Knight]] before finally sipping some &amp;lt;strike&amp;gt;[[Lileath|elven goddess]]&amp;lt;/strike&amp;gt;[[Lady of the Lake|Lake Lady]] bathwater, gaining the requisite powers, stupid French accent, and... [[Troll|&amp;quot;chivalric&amp;quot; manner]]. Let&#039;s just hope his good luck continues to hold, eh?&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mercenary&#039;&#039;&#039;: The life of a mercenary has suited Markus well, in no small part due to not having to answer to incompetent leaders like he used to. Being a Mercenary allows Markus a good degree of versatility, with medium armor that grants protection without losing maneuverability and a focus on using sweeping attacks to clear out hordes.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Paced Strikes&#039;&#039;- Hitting 3 enemies in 1 swing boosts attack speed by 10% for 6 seconds&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Hitting the Sweet Spot&#039;&#039;- 25% more cleave (attacks hit more enemies at once) &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;No More Laughin&#039; Now&#039;&#039;- Critical hit rate improved by +5%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Morale Boost&#039;&#039;- Staggers nearby enemies and grants nearby allies temporary bonus health. Can be upgraded to give a defense buff for all alies, reduce the cooldown or immediately revive allies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Huntsman&#039;&#039;&#039;: After Ubersreik, Markus found a degree of inner peace by devoting himself to Taal and Rhya, the gods of nature (though not devoted enough such that [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] weaponry is disallowed on him). As a Huntsman, Markus trades away his access to heavier armor for greater proficiency with ranged weapons of all kinds. He also gets to use a bow, a ranged weapon unique to the Huntsman career that, while much slower than Kerillian&#039;s, holds a lot of ammunition and does considerable damage. Had a hilarious bug that [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKoqArJjYIo pretty much gave him an AK-47] and absolutely melted bosses. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Waste Not, Want Not&#039;&#039;- Ranged headshots return 1 ammo&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Poacher&#039;s Mark&#039;&#039;- Effective range for ranged weapons doubled&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Call Out Weakness&#039;&#039; - Aura that boosts critical rate by +5%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Deep Pockets&#039;&#039; - +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Hunter&#039;s Prowl&#039;&#039;: Become invisible for a short time; automatically reloads ranged weapon for no ammo cost, improves reload speed, and adds 1.5x damage multiplier to ranged attacks while invisible. Can be upgraded to reduce the cooldown, increase the duration or have ranged attacks not break stealth.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Foot Knight&#039;&#039;&#039;: For his part in the defense of Ubersreik, Markus was made a Knight of the Order of the Reikshammer. Markus may not have been aiming for the position, but his heavy armor, protective aura, and highly disruptive ultimate make him an excellent tank as a Foot Knight. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive ability: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Protective Presence&#039;&#039;- Aura that reduces damage taken by 15%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Taal&#039;s Fortitude&#039;&#039; - Extra stamina shield&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;No Guts, No Glory&#039;&#039; - Reduces damage taken by 10%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Valiant Charge&#039;&#039;- Charges forward, knocking back any enemies hit by the charge. Also interrupts and stuns bosses and specials. Can be upgraded to make Kruber temporarily invincible, have increased size and the ability to knock over greater enemies, or grant increased attack speed for every enemy hit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grail Knight&#039;&#039;&#039;: MOTHERFUCKING GRAIL KNIGHT!!! The first unique class introduced and locked behind a DLC wall. It was revealed one day Kruber found out his Bretonnian lineage after he received a mysterious letter that was addressed to him with the &#039;&#039;&#039;de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039; surname.  According to Lohner, he used his huge information network to trace back Kruber&#039;s bloodline and found out his father was actually a Bretonnian! but not just any Bretonnian: &#039;&#039;&#039;Foricarl de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039;! who used to be a well-known grail knight in Parravon after he saved the city from a dragon with style! He was widely worshiped since then with arts, music, and clothes referencing him. It wasn&#039;t until the duke&#039;s son, an arsehole by the name &#039;&#039;Willibald&#039;&#039; who is jealous of the hero&#039;s deed that he killed his father, the duke of Parravon, and framed Foricarl for it. The lady had to intervene herself and turned the fucktard into a frog but it was all too late, for Foricarl had already self-exiled in shame. Despite that, he continued to slay beasts and killing chaos shit like a badass until he finally settled at &#039;&#039;&#039;Ubersreik Hills&#039;&#039;&#039; and impregnated Kruber&#039;s mama, only to leave her before Kruber was even born. With the lady&#039;s blessing, Kruber is now &#039;&#039;&#039;Markus de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039;! And he now has [[troll|the privilege call his teammates peasants, acting cockier and mightier than even Kerilian, while Bretonnian dancing all the way to the waystone, one-shotting any foe he came across with his magical sword ability]] (a voiceline while waiting to start on a Chaos Wastes expedition &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; has him imply he&#039;s been talking down to Saltzpyre after becoming a Grail Knight just to be a troll). Just like Slayer Bardin Markus can&#039;t use ranged weapons in this career (because peasant weapon dislike and chivalry bullshit), and he doesn&#039;t even have the option of throwing axes like Slayer Bardin does (again, see above), but his special buffs, move speed and ability make him a fantastic boss killer and crowd controller.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive ability: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;The Lady&#039;s Duty&#039;&#039;- Get 2 random quests that grant buffs to the party when completed, lasting until the mission is over. Can be upgraded to have a third quest, stronger buffs, or a repeatable quest that grants a potion of strength each time it&#039;s completed.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Knight&#039;s Challenge&#039;&#039; - 25% extra damage to the first enemy hit.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Thirst for Glory&#039;&#039; - 10% move speed increase.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Bastion of Bretonnia&#039;&#039; - Your shields can now block Warpfire.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Blessed Blade&#039;&#039;- Smite a target with a holy blade. Can be upgraded to deal even more single target damage with a slash and stab, change into a horizontal crowd cleaver or stay the same and increase movement speed upon kill.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Kerillian]]===&lt;br /&gt;
The elf continues to be a standoffish, if slightly nicer, jerk, though her sensitivity masks hidden scars. Her faith forms the crux of her careers, whether remaining a faithful, if conflicted, Waywatcher promoted to Waystalker (this is canon), a Handmaiden more devoted to Isha and protecting others, or losing herself to bloodlust and becoming a Shade of [[Khaine]]. The Drachenfels DLC reveals that Kerillian basically has the biggest impact on the story out of the whole party, with consequences reaching to the rest of Warhammer. She received a vision about how Ubersreik MIGHT have to do with the fall of Athel Loren. With pride and without any thought, she ambushed two regiments of soldiers from Nuln meant to reinforce the city, leaving it undefended... From the Skaven. That&#039;s right, [[Fail|because of her pride, she&#039;s responsible for ALL of the slaughter and death caused by the Vermintide, and contributed more than a fair bit to bringing about the End Times]]. This explains her biting behavior, a shield to her own failures. The pilgrimage to the Chaos Wastes broke her resolve and caused her to question her faith, giving up her regrets to Isha and becoming a Sister of the Thorn, losing part of herself and becoming more cynical than ever.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Waystalker&#039;&#039;&#039;: Frustrated with the clumsiness of her companions, Kerillian has resolved to further hone her skills to compensate further for the &amp;quot;lumberfoots&amp;quot;. As a Waystalker, Kerillian further specializes in her longbow, both for precision sniping and for raining arrows on enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Amaranthe&#039;&#039;- Automatically regenerate health (3 health per 10 seconds, up to a maximum of half your total hit points)&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Arrow-Storm&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Waywatcher&#039;s Bow&#039;&#039;- Effective range for ranged weapons is doubled&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Trueflight Volley&#039;&#039;- Fires a volley of homing arrows. Can be upgraded to fire one more arrow, refund ammunition when killing specials, or turn into a single piercing arrow that deals massive damage and has no cooldown when you get a headshot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Handmaiden&#039;&#039;&#039;: Through the subtle guidance of the Everqueen, Kerillian came across a long-lost shrine to Isha and gave herself up to serve her. Kerillian&#039;s Handmaiden Career focuses primarily on dancing around enemies in direct melee combat, and is her most durable career option through both maximum health, stamina, and mobility. The career for players that are allergic to standing still.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;The Dance of Seasons&#039;&#039;- 15% longer dodge distance&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Aura of Renewal&#039;&#039;- Aura that increases stamina regeneration speed by 100%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ariel&#039;s Benison&#039;&#039;- Cannot be interrupted when reviving allies&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Dash&#039;&#039;- Quickly dash forward through enemies, stunning enemies that are hit and causing them to bleed. Has a hilariously low cooldown, the lowest of all of the game&#039;s abilities. Can be upgraded to become invisible after the dash, make anyone you hit bleed or gain crit chance based on how many enemies you hit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shade&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of Kerillian&#039;s dreams spoke of an ancestor of hers who dwelled in Clar Karond, and with it came the voice of [[Khaine]] urging her to reclaim the mantle of her ancestor. Kerillian as a Shade is an assassin, focused on rapidly killing elite, special, and boss enemies. She also gains access to the volley crossbow in this career. This is the class to play if you really like killing the absolute shit out of Chaos Warriors and bosses.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;- 50% damage bonus when attacking enemies from behind&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Assassin&#039;s Blade&#039;&#039;- Critical hit backstabs instantly kill man-sized enemies&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Infiltrate&#039;&#039;- Become invisible and intangible for 10 seconds, or until performing an attack. Also has a unlisted effect where any melee  attack that ends Infiltrate gets a massive damage boost; depending on the weapon this can increase the power of Kerillian&#039;s melee attacks to the point where they 1-hit kill a Chaos Warrior on Legendary difficulty, and can even reach the maximum damage value possible for a single attack. Can be upgraded to have less cooldown and grant more crit chance after it ends at the cost of losing the damage bonus, cause her to blink forward while damaging enemies, or allowing her to attack without breaking stealth exactly one time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of the Thorn&#039;&#039;&#039;: The 3rd microtransaction DLC career. In truth, Kerillian has been losing faith in her goddess Lileath for some times, and it finally reached a critical point after the &#039;&#039;&#039;Citadel of Eternity&#039;&#039;&#039; shenanigan where the said goddess did not answer her. Hoping to rededicate herself to the weaves once more, she began courting other goddesses (even [[Ereth Khial]], the kind of goddess only the mentally ill elf would worship). She ended up going back to Athel Loran to seek answers, and offered up her uncertainty and regrets to the forest. Doing so allowed her to become a &#039;&#039;&#039;Sister of the Thorn&#039;&#039;&#039; , a handmaiden of Isha who can raise up a thorn bush wall to block enemies (or just turn them into a deadly thorn spike that bleeds anyone it targets) as well as providing extra healing to her teammates, leeching extra temporary health from them in exchange. She now also calls her teammates &amp;quot;meat&amp;quot;, as if [[Ferrus Manus|flesh is weaker]] compared to her, a superior plant fused being. She also gains access to the Deepwood Staff, a weapon with similar mechanics to Sienna&#039;s staffs that can make enemies levitate, temporarily disabling them. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Cluster of Radiants&#039;&#039;- Gain a radiance charge that allows free use of your active every 60 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Murder of Sprites&#039;&#039;- Deals more damage to wounded units depending on their remaining health, up to 50%.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Sustenance of Leeches&#039;&#039;- Gain temp health if a party member gains temp health when they&#039;re at full health.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;An Attendance of Munificents&#039;&#039;- +25% healing for everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Thornwake&#039;&#039;- Raise a thornwall that blocks movement. Can be upgraded to last longer, deal more damage and apply bleed at the cost of duration or explode with poison when it expires, increasing damage dealt to enemies caught.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Bardin Goreksson]]===&lt;br /&gt;
Short, stout and sure to stomp your arse, Bardin is here to help out his Dawis and slaughter some rakis (and anything else that comes in the way). Either he continued his quest for Karak Zorn as a Ranger Veteran (Which is canon), returned to his roots as an Ironbreaker, or forsook life in pursuit of honorable death as a [[Slayer]]. After the trip to Drachenfels however, the regrets that surfaced made him look to his old passions of becoming an Engineer, and thus, became an Outcast Engineer. Life STILL isn&#039;t smooth sailing for him, as  Lohner&#039;s journals reveal that his daughter has gone missing. Whether she&#039;ll be found is anyone&#039;s guess...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ranger Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039;: Karak Zorn is yet to be found, but the defense of Reikland currently comes first for Bardin. Bardin the Ranger Veteran favors the use of ranged weaponry to punish foes from a distance, but he&#039;s more than able to hold his own in melee if a hail of crossbow bolts doesn&#039;t do the trick. Cousin Okri would be proud. While this used to be the least powerful of the range-focused careers due to lacking a consistent means of generating ammo for itself, recent balance updates have made it into an extremely versatile and powerful support class. Of particular note is a talent that gives a chance for every special enemy you kill to drop a bomb, which is just hilariously strong.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Survivalist&#039;&#039;- Special enemies drop ammo on death&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Loaded for Battle&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Fast Hands&#039;&#039;- Increased reload speed&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ingenious Improvisation&#039;&#039; - 10% chance to not consume health items, potions, or bombs on use&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Disengage&#039;&#039;- Drops a smoke bomb that staggers enemies and turns Bardin invisible as long as he remains within the cloud. Lasts ten seconds. While invisible, Bardin gains increased ranged attack power.  Can be upgraded to remain stealthed even outside the cloud, grant everyone attack speed and temp health while in it, or basically allowing you a free bomb throw.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ironbreaker&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin used to be an Ironbreaker in Kazak Norn, and following the defense of Ubersreik he took up his old oaths and gromril armor once more. The heavy armor and shield of the Ironbreaker makes Bardin a superb tank that can take whatever the enemy can dish out, and then return it in kind. In addition, he gains access to a drakegun and drakefire pistols, which let him spew out gouts of flame. Like in the first game, they do not use ammo and instead use a heat meter, like Sienna. Be mindful that this also means that they&#039;ll kill you if the heat gauge maxes out.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Gromril Armor&#039;&#039;- Negates all damage from 1 hit every 20 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Dwarf-Forged&#039;&#039;- Reduces damage taken by 30%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Doughty&#039;&#039;- Grants an extra stamina shield&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Resilient&#039;&#039;- Decreases stun duration after getting hit by an attack by 50% &lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Impenetrable&#039;&#039;- Briefly staggers nearby enemies, then forces all man-sized enemies among them to attack Bardin exclusively. Bardin also takes no stamina damage while blocking for the duration, and can block normally unblockable attacks. Can be upgraded to give everyone a power increase, increase its range and duration, or the ability to affect even monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Slayer]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin had been carrying a secret burden in his heart even before Ubersreik, and by the time the Skaven came to Helmgart he had taken up the Slayer&#039;s Oath in the hopes of an honorable death. As a Slayer, Bardin can&#039;t use ranged weapons at all but becomes a melee powerhouse, with exclusive access to the Dual Axes weapon and the ability to take a second melee weapon to replace his ranged weapon slot. Despite his deceptively low base health, he&#039;s one of the tankiest things in the game due to his Oblivious to Pain talent, which is practically mandatory while playing the class. He even has another talent that can increase his base health, as if this weren&#039;t enough. With the addition of the generally-superior Grail Knight and Warrior Priest classes and the comparatively situational nature of the classes&#039; key abilities however, Slayer is often considered the most underpowered class in the game - hopefully a rework will bring it back into the light. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Trophy Hunter&#039;&#039;- Stacking damage buff gained upon hitting an enemy&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Path of Carnage&#039;&#039;- +7.5% attack speed&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Leap&#039;&#039;- Leap forward, stunning enemies and gaining a temporary boost to attack speed.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Outcast Engineer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin&#039;s fourth unique DLC locked class (chronologically the 2nd paid class DLC). Ever since he returned from castle [[Drachenfels]], Bardin has been busy locking himself alone studying machinery. According to Lohner, his uncle &#039;&#039;&#039;Drakki Dagsson&#039;&#039;&#039; used to be an engineer whom Bardin looked up to, much to the dismay of his traditionalist dad &#039;&#039;&#039;Gorrek Dagsson&#039;&#039;&#039; who shuns technology and often came to disagreements with his brother Drakki. Upon learning Bardin was going to become an apprentice engineer, Dagsson went to disengage pneumatic supports at the mine out of anger and caused an earthquake, which also happened at the same time when Bardin was about to receive his apprenticeship. Dagsson managed to get most of the Dwarf to safety before the debris and stones swallowed him alive with the remaining Dwarfs. This forced Bardin to quit his passion to follow in his father&#039;s footsteps, becoming an Ironbreaker, and good ol&#039; Drakki took the blame for the mining accident and became a slayer out of guilt (because of how heroic Dagsson was) and died in a troll cave. Still, tragedy did not end there for Bardin for he would later fail to defend his home, his family and his beardling son just because he wasn&#039;t strong enough to fight off a gutter runner, even led his entire team of sentry dying saving him in the process. Filled with grief, Bardin decided to leave his hold and search for Karak Zorn as an excuse to exile himself (because seeker sounds better than exile) but ended up joining Victor&#039;s anti-ratman crusade at Ubersreik instead. The demon living in castle [[Drachenfels]] read everyone like an open book, including a magic resistant Dwarf, and it sarcastically mocked Bardin of his old shame. Having realized maybe he should never have followed his father&#039;s path and perhaps he was never suited for being an Ironbreaker, he went back to his old tinkering passion. With Lohner&#039;s help, Bardin acquired materials and minerals needed for his various tools of destruction like his signature crank gun (read: [[Awesome|handheld Gatling gun, or handheld super repeater handgun because Richard Jordan Gatling doesn&#039;t exist in the Warhammer world]]) and is now out to destroy all those Thaggrakis and Dumals with it!... Unfortunately, despite the sheer and undeniable cool factor of the class, the Outcast Engineer often stands rock-bottom of Vermintide career tier lists; he is very squishy (despite his appearance) and has no options to buy himself some space so he will go down quickly if he&#039;s in the hands of a player who doesn&#039;t know exactly what they are doing, nor does he have any abilities that synergize with and support his teammates (unlike the Ranger Veteran). Outcast Engineer can be a decent boss killer and do OK in support of a ranged-focused party if the player behind him is good, but there are better options out there.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Build Pressure&#039;&#039;- Holding reload with the crank gun equipped builds pressure, gradually restoring the ability bar. Stacks are lost when you fire.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Gunsmith&#039;&#039;- +50% Max ammo.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Spotter&#039;&#039;- +10% Ranged Power to nearby allies.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Utility Belt&#039;&#039;- Allows you to carry three different bombs, cycling through them with the bomb key.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Steam-Assisted Crank Gun (mk2)&#039;&#039;- An interesting active ability that&#039;s more like a third weapon, activating Bardin&#039;s special gun. Switching to the gun doesn&#039;t use up the bar, nor does it build up automatically. You &amp;quot;Reload&amp;quot; the gun in order to fill up your ability bar over time, and you can fire it as long as you have &amp;quot;ammo&amp;quot; in it. Can be upgraded to fire slower but stronger slugs, immediately start out firing at full speed, or have a longer ability bar that temporarily isn&#039;t used when you kill a special.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Sienna Fuegonasus]]===&lt;br /&gt;
As fiery and feisty as ever, the U5&#039;s witch is here to blaze a trail through rat and rot alike. How she does it forms the basis of her paths in life: She either made an attempt to discipline herself as a Battle Wizard (Canon), split between freedom and control as a Pyromancer or lost herself to the flame as an Unchained. It&#039;s eventually revealed in Lohner&#039;s journals that Sienna &amp;quot;had&amp;quot; a sister named Sofia. They weren&#039;t on the best terms, but they were family, so when Sofia was accused of being a [[Necromancer]], Sienna burned the town responsible for accusing her. [[Fail|And then it turns out she WAS a necromancer, so Sienna burned her too]]. Note the quotation marks, as Lohner recently got a letter from someone claiming to be Sofia, blackmailing him to do her a favor or else some of his unsavory secrets would be revealed. This fiasco finally blew up in everyone&#039;s faces (which fits Sienna) when Sofia finally made her appearance known in the Trails to Treachery, and now the 5 have to deal with whatever madness she has.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Battle Wizard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ubersreik taught Sienna the value of self-control, and while she was reluctant to do so she has learned to control the flame for the first time. The greater degree of self-discipline Sienna has as a Battle Wizard allows her to focus on perfecting her spellcasting, letting her cast spells more quickly, more often, and for more damage.&lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Tranquility&#039;&#039;- Passively vents overcharge after 6 seconds of not casting spells&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Reckless Haste&#039;&#039;- Overcharge increases spell charge rate&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Pyromantic Surge&#039;&#039;- 10% increased ranged damage&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Fire Walk&#039;&#039;- Quickly teleport forward, leaving a trail of fire behind you. Can be upgraded to have lower cooldown, a bigger and stronger explosion with no more fire trail, or the ability to double-cast within 10 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pyromancer&#039;&#039;&#039;: While far from having the control of a proper Battle Wizard, Sienna has enough self-awareness to restrain herself from the most ostentatious of fire magic. Sienna the Pyromancer trades in the consistency of her Battle Wizard career for more explosive moments of burst damage. Of special note is a talent which lets her activated ability also instantly clear all overcharge.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Critical Mass&#039;&#039;- Critical chance increases based on overcharge level&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Searing Focus&#039;&#039;- 10% increased ranged damage&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;The Burning Head&#039;&#039;- A powerful fire blast that initially travels directly forward, but after a short time it will attempt to home in on the closest enemy; holding the active ability key down allows the user to designate a target for the fire blast to home in on instead. It will jump from foe to foe, killing until it runs out of power. Anything not killed by the blast is staggered, including bosses. Can be upgraded to refund cooldown on crit, vent her overcharge on cast or give her temporary health.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unchained&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sienna&#039;s addiction to magic has finally overwhelmed her, and now she lives only from one magical high to the next. As an Unchained, Sienna favors magically-boosted melee, with a focus on generating as much overcharge as possible before moving in for the kill.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Blood Magic&#039;&#039;- 50% of damage received is converted to overcharge. Do not get hit while at high levels of overcharge, lest you accidentally [[Fail|explode yourself like a dunce]].&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Slave to Aqshy&#039;&#039;- No overcharge slowdown&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Unstable Strength&#039;&#039;- High overcharge increases melee attack power up to 60%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Living Bomb&#039;&#039;- Expends all overcharge to produce a massive explosion centered on Sienna, dealing heavy damage to all nearby enemies. Fortunately, this can be done even while beginning to explode from too much overcharge. Can be upgraded to increase power based on how many you hit, gain a scorching aura after it&#039;s finished or give everyone temp health.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unknown Fifth Class&#039;&#039;&#039;: Revealed during the announcement of the Karak Azgaraz DLC, it seems like it&#039;s finally time for the pyro-witch to get her paid DLC class, with a release date of Fall 2023. From what little the trailer showed, it looks like she had fallen in with some other form of magic if the multi-colored flames had anything to say about it, and according to her dialogue it might very well piss the rest of the Ubersreik Five something fierce. Some guesses before were Magister Vigilant, Myrmidia Priest, or some other kind of Pyromancy user like  Unchained was...but after the teaser, many propose that Black Magister (magic users that gamble on using the Dark Arts, or just trying to use more than one Wind dangerously), could be the more probable option for Sienna 4th. It would not be the most lore-friendly option, but it would not be lore breaking unlike her just switching to another Wind of Magic just because. But alas, noone is a soothsayer so we cant guess what Fatshark will make. we can only wait until it releases.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Other Characters ==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Franz Lohner&#039;&#039;&#039;: The bartender of the Red Moon Inn, transferring over to the Taal&#039;s Horn Keep. You guys do the heavy lifting, he does most of the behind the scenes stuff: Keeping your home nice and cozy, getting intel, stocking up on supplies, you get the drill. Unfortunately, he also runs the Emporium of Wonders, aka, [[Rage|the microtransaction shop]]. Seemingly knows everything and everyone, including any secrets your own characters have. Talking to him has him rattle off various nods to the lore of Warhammer and more specifically, [[The End Times]]. The devs also use him to write journals and story bits about the game through the &amp;quot;Franz Lohner Chronicles&amp;quot;, which are tidbits for his journal. Journal entries and random conversations heavily imply that he&#039;s [[Warhammer: Shadow of the Horned Rat|Morgan Bernhardt from Shadow of the Horned Rat and Dark Omen.]]&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Olesya Pimenova&#039;&#039;&#039;: The carriage handler from the first game turned out to be a Gray Witch. Whod&#039;ve thunk? As usual, your ride in and out of your jobs, this time using a Bridge of Shadows teleporter instead of horses. Helps make plans along with Lohner while occasionally working alongside you on your missions, secretly doing magic stuff while you not-so-secretly kill everything. Heavily implied to be the true form of the Grey Wizard Christoph Engel from the first game. She also has the hots for Kruber, a fact which he&#039;s unfortunately aware of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Catrinne of Aldenstein&#039;&#039;&#039;: The artist making some the paintings you can decorate the keep with once you find three pieces of Ravaged Art in a mission. You never see her, but you can sometimes hear her. She&#039;s haunted by visions which inspire her paintings, but Lohner&#039;s wary of how ominous she describes them. She apparently has a crush on Saltzpyre (A fact which Salty himself doesn&#039;t know, but hilariously enough, Kruber does), and she sometimes has to fight off Bardin from eating her brushes because he finds them delicious.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Cousin Okri&#039;&#039;&#039;: In the vein of Left 4 Dead 2&#039;s Keith, Okri is oft-mentioned by Bardin and rather implied by him to be the most-asskickingest Dwarf since [[Gotrek]], yet he is never actually seen and understandably is doubted to even exist by a number of fans and even the U5 at times (though Lohner has insisted in written lore excerpts that he&#039;s actually read letters from Okri and is in written contact with him). You will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; be as good as Cousin Okri.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Enemies ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Bosses&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Grey Seer Rasknitt:&#039;&#039;&#039; The same asshole in charge of invading Ubersreik is back, and he&#039;s the final boss of the main campaign. Having captured the heroes in the first game, he attempts to sacrifice them to fuel the Skittergate, a portal contraption capable of bringing in huge armies in a flash. With it, he and the Rotbloods swarmed Helmgart and the countryside, though as is typical of technology made by mice, it breaks in the prologue. It&#039;s fixed soon after though, and much of the game is dedicated to destroying it. During the final showdown, he sent his precious Stormfiend called Deathrattler (who uses dual-ratling guns instead of the flamethrowers) against you, only to call it a worthless piece of junk after the heroes killed it. He then attacks the heroes with his Skaven magic, teleports around at lightning speed while summoning special Skaven of all types, then is blown the fuck up once the rat bastard&#039;s health is at its end. You then get his helmet as a trophy for the Keep, and the fact that it has voices whispering into it explains MUCH about how insane this rat-bastard is.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Champion B&amp;amp;ouml;dvarr Ribspreader:&#039;&#039;&#039; Here to spread ribs and smiles in Papa Nurgle&#039;s name, Ribspreader is a Champion of Chaos and the scary dude on the box cover. The leader of the Rotbloods, who are said to be insane even by Chaos Warbands&#039; standards, he&#039;s here to slaughter and destroy, and has allied himself with Rasknitt for that purpose. He berates the Grey Seer for the portal&#039;s failure, but interestingly enough &#039;&#039;doesn&#039;t&#039;&#039; spread&#039;s his ribs for it, though it&#039;s probably because Rasknitt is more powerful than he is. Figures mainly into Act 3, where the gang messes with everything he has. After hitting a breaking point as the heroes foil his plans and kill his men and free his slaves, he sends out most of his army to scout for and attack the Keep, but thanks to Olesya reading the script, they learn about this, attack his under-staffed camp, and kill him in his own arena. Despite claiming that he can take care of the heroes all by himself, he displays cowardice, [[Carron|ranting and bawwing about the precious slaves and loots he lost to the Ubersreik Five/Four/Doesn&#039;t Matter]] when he starts losing and calls his warriors for aid, with a horde attacking as he loses health. Interesting to note that despite being a Nurgle worshipper, he has a magic axe (which the axe itself is alive, noted by the growing eye skull on the axe) that he can call back to him if he ever throws it out against the players. Saltzpyre would often refer to it as &amp;quot;flying axe witch&amp;quot; whenever it was thrown. You gain this axe as a trophy for the keep, and study of it reveals that Ribby is just one of many, many Chaos Warriors who wielded the thing.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Burblespue Halescourge:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Nurgle sorcerer lord that the Skaven met back at Stromdorf, and the boss of Act 1. Has a good manner like papa Nurgle himself and he can do everything that the Nurgle sorcerer can do in the game (AKA life drain &amp;amp; Nurgle Vortex) only tougher and more AOE green plague in the oxygen, with a couple of unique abilities like summoning a swarm of flies to chase and stun one of the players, summon green images of himself to attack the players as well as erect an even bigger green vortex in the center of the battlefield.  He will absolutely make you fucking rage with his lack of visual cues for his attacks, his billion and one hit points, and his habit of teleporting around like a fucking asshole whenever someone so much as sneezes on the fucker. Has a large number of very angry nicknames from the fandom, several of which have even made it into official patch notes (e.g. &amp;quot;Bunglesnatch Humbledink&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Vorpalblade Noobhurl&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Hailstorm Barbeque&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Bubbly-Spurge&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Bubblespit Halleberry&amp;quot;, among many others). You get his staff and tome from killing him, and you find out the latter was made from human skin and inked in blood. Lovely.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Skarrik Spinemanglr:&#039;&#039;&#039; The &amp;quot;Scary&amp;quot; Skaven Warlord in charge, and the boss of Act 2. Seem to be heavily inspired by Queek Headtaker in both his looks, size, and unskavenly bravery, although he uses a more traditional halberd alongside dual shortswords. Just like Queek, he is the largest non-monster Skaven of them all, towering over the players. He will regularly summon Stormvermin and Skavenslaves, if you don&#039;t take care of them quickly it can snowball into a horde no player could ever hope to kill. He is also fully armored like Ribspreader, but unlike him, Skarrik is much faster, forcing the player to have a frustrating time of chipping his health away with their seemly ineffective charge attack. Also, he calls you [[What|cat fondlers]] and is responsible for Saltzpyre&#039;s lost eye. After he dies, civil war and general chaos erupts throughout the Skaven underground, decreasing the amount of forces guarding the Skittergate. You also get his armor and spears for the keep.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgloth the Eternal:&#039;&#039;&#039; A new boss for the new Drachenfels DLC map and another one of Nurgle&#039;s stinky boy. He used to be the chief rival of shitstorm sorcerer from above, and has been trying to take over his rival&#039;s throne. Like every dumbass heretical sorcerer, he went after old Drachenfels&#039; castle in search of his old research about demons and other crazy shit to make himself even more powerful, which he did and was possessed or at least is in contract with a demon, but was driven mad after he glimpsed the realm of chaos. Still, it allows him to see a bit of future sight as well as gaining much higher power than before. After our heroes defeated the two walking-toilets above, he began his no-good operation in Drachenfels&#039; castle and started to sacrifice captured villagers from nearby for his ritual. His little scheme didn&#039;t go unnoticed under Lohner&#039;s ear and was dealt with by our heroes after a trilogy of missions. In combat, he wields a giant scythe for slicing while he hovers (only the last phase), shoots flies that explode and snare the player, summons his rotblood minions, and using a magic attack that resembles an AoE ability from a typical MOBA game. Currently the hardest boss due to the amount of health he has and the bullshit last phase where he seeks out players and knocks them to his magic fart zone with his rotblood minions still roaming around him. He also explodes when you kill him, and you acquire his scythe and armor for your victory.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gatekeeper Nagfahr:&#039;&#039;&#039; A Ribspreader look-alike, even shares the same axe design....until the recent patch came and changed its entire outlook. He now only uses a normal axe with his head exposed: [[Eliphas the Inheritor| pale bald head]], probably the only chaos warriors that showed his face in the game. Responsible for guarding the skittergate key staff. Was [[chaos|blessed]] during the battle and turned into...[[Chaos Spawn|It-Which-Must-Not-Be-Named]]. Far easier than Ribspreader, being a level&#039;s mid-boss to build up to the final battle with Rasknitt.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Baron Justus Francke:&#039;&#039;&#039; Not an enemy you fight but nonetheless important to the plot. Besides the Skaven having a portal underneath Helmgart, Fucko Francke is the other reason Ussingen and the countryside were overrun so quickly. It&#039;s revealed he made some kind of deal with the Rotbloods and Clan Fester, and like a lot of shitty nobles, might&#039;ve been in league with the Chaos Gods even before the invasion. His fortified mansion, the only undamaged building in Ussingen, is blown up accordingly by the heroes. His fate is unknown.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sofia Fuegonasus&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sienna&#039;s sister. They weren&#039;t the closest, but they were close enough that when Sofia was accused of being a necromancer, Sienna immediately burned the accusers... Then Sofia because as it turns out, [[Fail|she was one]]. Being a necromancer, she didn&#039;t quite stay dead. She first made her &amp;quot;appearance&amp;quot; in Franz Lohner&#039;s Chronicles and tried to blackmail him into having a talk with Sienna. He didn&#039;t take the bait, but it all came to a head as she became the main antagonist of the &amp;quot;Trails to Treachery&amp;quot;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Clan Fester&#039;s back, and they&#039;re pissed. Sore after getting thwarted at Ubersreik, they want revenge. They almost managed to get it by capturing the heroes and finally managing to capture Ubersreik, and with the Rotblood alliance for constructing a Skittergate portal to Norsca, things seem to be in the bag... Until [[Fail|it malfunctions and frees Kruber, leading him to free everyone else]]. Still, they&#039;re stronger now, with Clan Pestilens rats joining their ranks and being just as determined as ever to spread the power of the warp and stave off their extinction.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Skavenslaves:&#039;&#039;&#039; Still the most piss-poor enemies in the game. Even though they come in huge swarms they&#039;re only dangerous if they blindside you or if you&#039;re too busy dealing with actual threats.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Clanrats:&#039;&#039;&#039; Rank and file of clan Fester, only slightly better than slaves. Now come with a shield and hand weapon variant that could hopefully block one or two hits from the front and make dealing with the horde slightly more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Plague Monks:&#039;&#039;&#039; A more durable Skaven with fast attacks designed to exhaust the player&#039;s stamina. Weak to ranged fire but hit like a freight train and knock you back. They let out a loud howl when they charge, but can be hard to spot in a swarm. Usually, spawn in triplets and tend to focus a single target just to make sure even 7+ stamina would not be enough to withstand their attack.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormvermin&#039;&#039;&#039; - The most common breed of Special Skaven, Stormvermin will spawn at random among the crowds of Clanrats seeded throughout the various levels. Unlike the rest of their ratty brethren, the Stormvermin have actual armor, actual weapons, and actual training, making them a serious threat. Their halberds do more damage than the standard Clanrat improvised weaponry, and hits against them that don&#039;t aim for the head (or have the Armor Piercing trait) will glance off their armor. Even blocking their attacks is difficult, since they do significant Stamina damage and therefore have a high chance of breaking your block and putting you into stun, making you an easy kill. At higher difficulties, they become one of the most significant threats in the game, and require careful combat to take down safely or make ranged weapons good at taking them down quick very desirable.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormvermin&#039;&#039;&#039; (Sword &amp;amp; Shield): Elite troops who still sound vaguely like Bane, except some of them now have swords and shields that give them multiple attacks and near-immunity to frontal hits (but mercifully deals less damage than the halberd wielders), plus their shields are metal and can&#039;t be broken. All around assholes, and a definite reason to consider having a handgun on the team since it&#039;s one of the only ranged weapons capable of easily handling them from the front.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Stormvermin Patrol&#039;&#039;&#039; - Once or twice per map, if you&#039;re listening carefully, you&#039;ll hear the sound of rats shouting out a ratty little marching drill. And if you&#039;re smart, you&#039;ll hide. If you&#039;re not smart, you&#039;ll die, because the Patrol is a massive mob of Stormvermin that all aggro at once if they spot any of the heroes, and will never back down from a fight. Their numbers are slightly randomized, but rule of thumb is for +5 rats for each difficulty level, so at Legendary difficulty you&#039;re facing patrol sizes that wouldn&#039;t be out of place in an actual game of Warhammer Fantasy Battles. Yeah. [[Anal Circumference|Have fun with that]].&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gutter Runner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Representing Clan Eshin, we have these stabby little ninja rats with warp-dust coated knives strapped to their hands. They lurk in the shadows, trying to find a hero that&#039;s cut off from the rest of the group or waiting for you to be otherwise distracted, then pounce and pin one hero to the ground while they stab and stab and stab until the puny man-thing stops moving. Once you&#039;re pinned (but you &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; hope to dodge their jumps at you by dodging to a side), you&#039;re helpless. It&#039;s up to the rest of the team to save you. So if you hear that strange whispering in the distance, make sure to stay close to your team.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Packmaster&#039;&#039;&#039; - Clan Moulder&#039;s representatives, the Packmasters have taken up capturing humans for slaving. To this end, they cart around giant spiked collars on poles; if they get close enough, they&#039;ll snap that collar shut around your neck, disabling you like the Gutter Runner. The good news is that the collar doesn&#039;t hurt nearly as much as the knives and you can dodge it if you time it right. The &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039; news is that the Packmaster will drag you off into the distance, probably through a mob of Clanrats, and then hang you up to die - or at least for the rest of their companions to stab while you wriggle helplessly.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Wind Globadier&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Skryre-rat in a gas mask, with a miniature plague factory on its back. At a distance, it will constantly lob spheres full of gas so poisonous that it eats into the skin like acid, covering the battlefield in green clouds of death. The good news is that these are as poisonous to the other Skaven as they are to our heroes. The bad news is that you&#039;ll still die like a bitch if you stand in one. And if you get too close, they&#039;ll rig the tanks on their backs to explode, taking you with them in one final kamikaze assault.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Ratling Gunner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Clan Skryre is pulling overtime here. This rat&#039;s got a miniaturized, one-man version of the tabletop Ratling Gun strapped to its back, and the rest of its body is covered in heavy armor. When it finds a good firing line, it&#039;ll wind up that gun and then unleash a hellstorm of warp-shot onto one of the heroes, tracking them as best as it can. The good news is that it&#039;s not very accurate, kills Skaven who enter its firing line, and tends to jam after a while. The bad news is that it&#039;s firing so many bullets that it&#039;s probably going to hit you anyway, and while it&#039;s not as powerful as a full-sized &amp;quot;kill both knight and his horse with a single bullet&amp;quot; ratling gun it still hurts a lot. Got a significant buff compared to the original game by taking body amour and revving up his gun quite a bit faster.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Warpfire Thrower:&#039;&#039;&#039; Another Skryre-rat, now with a flamethrower strapped to its back, which it uses to spew out gouts of green fire at anything in range. The good news is that it has a shorter range compared to the Ratling Gunner and gives even less fucks about torching other Skaven and Rotbloods in its path. Bad news is it hurts even more than the Ratling Gunner, knocks you back, and blocks your vision as well - not a Special you&#039;d want to see while you&#039;re out of ammo. The warpstone crystal on its back is its weak spot, but it violently explodes if said weak spot is hit, leaving a sizeable puddle of the flaming warpstone on the ground. While it can take out a lot of enemies with the explosion, it also makes engaging it in melee even more suicidal, especially if you use wide-sweeping weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Barrel Rat:&#039;&#039;&#039; Special Skaven enemy type that exists only in special game modes like the Weave or in Weekly Events. Their role is simple: SUICIDE BOMBER! Try to shoot them down before they reach you! A bane to melee only characters like Bardin&#039;s Slayer (without the throwing axe) and Kruber&#039;s Grail Knight.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Rat Ogre&#039;&#039;&#039; - The triumph of Clan Moulder&#039;s scientific prowess. The Rat Ogre, like the Stormvermin Patrol, is a once-a-map event, barring special mission rules, and is always announced by a throat-peeling bellow of rage. It&#039;s a giant, hulking brute that rampages across the battlefield, pummeling and punching its way through any heroes it can find. It &#039;&#039;is&#039;&#039; possible to kite the Ogre, but the problem is that it&#039;s rarely alone; the true difficulty arises in managing the Ogre and the accompanying Clanrats at the same time, since they limit your mobility just by existing.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormfiend:&#039;&#039;&#039; If you thought the Rat Ogres were a huge pain in the ass, say hello to their upgraded cousins, the masterwork of Clan Moulder and Clan Skyre! They are clad in heavy armor from the front and wield twin warp-fire throwers attached to their arms. Unlike the warpfire throwers on regular Skaven, these ones leave a burning trail on the ground for quite a time, turning a battlefield into a maze of green fire if you let it disengage and rain fire on you from distance - it&#039;s worth it to backtrack to more open areas if you come across a Stormfield because of this. Their major weakness is the smaller Skaven acting as a second brain that&#039;s stuck on their backs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sack Rat&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Skaven with a big sack full of loot. Pretty rare to spawn. It doesn&#039;t attack on its own, [[Fail|but kills teams anyway as the people in it tunnel vision on it before being killed by all the other enemies in the level]] (seriously, a loading screen tip jokingly tells you to do this). If you can kill it before it runs off you&#039;ll get to claim its stuff. One of its notable dialogues is &#039;&#039;&#039;MINE! MINE! MINE!&#039;&#039;&#039; whenever it walks, so it&#039;s easy to spot it from such obvious dialogue.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The Rotbloods, a Nurgle Warband so fanatical to the Rot-Father that they make typical fanatics look tame. They&#039;re in league with Clan Fester to work on the Skittergate while plundering Reikland&#039;s countryside. They&#039;re generally tougher and hit harder compared to Skaven, but come in smaller groups, are slower on flat ground, even slower at climbing vertical obstacles, and most importantly spawn from the same points rather than crawling out from every nook and cranny including those on the ceiling.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle Cultists:&#039;&#039;&#039; Your typical cannon fodder of Nurgle about as tough as a Clanrat. Fill the same role as Skaven slaves in the Chaos horde, though they might last an extra hit compared to slaves.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Marauders:&#039;&#039;&#039; Plague-ridden warriors that come in four flavors:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Raiders&#039;&#039;&#039; (hand weapon) and &#039;&#039;&#039;Bulwarks&#039;&#039;&#039; (hand weapon and shield) are the basic units for the Chaos Forces and fulfill a similar role to Clanrats, but they are significantly more durable than the former.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Savages(Frothers)&#039;&#039;&#039; (dual-wielding weapons) are pretty much carbon copies of Plague Monks and work exactly the same except its attacks aren&#039;t as fast.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Maulers&#039;&#039;&#039; (great weapons) huge guys with huge axes and huge horned helmets. Fill the niche of a Stormvermin in the Chaos horde, leading packs of marauders and acting as a primary threat in them, except they hit even harder, depleting all the stamina in one hit, are only armored on the head and &#039;&#039;heavily so&#039;&#039; (seriously, it&#039;s not worth shooting them there with non-guns), and have more health.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Warriors:&#039;&#039;&#039; ASININE MORTALS!! The great axe variant. The toughest non-boss enemy in the game. Has nearly three times as much health as a Stormvermin, and their armor is so thick that even headshots from guns hardly faze them. They can down you in a hit or two from full health but are very slow targets, and they&#039;ll trash talk one of you to let you know who they&#039;re aiming for. For extra fun, they sometimes spawn two or three at a time.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Patrol:&#039;&#039;&#039; when you thought Stormvermin patrol was bad, these guys come in with their chaosy march song... Include at least &#039;&#039;&#039;SIX&#039;&#039;&#039; Warriors and Maulers even at the lowest difficulty with the rest filled with Raiders and Bulwarks. A tougher patrol by far compared to the Stormvermin&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Sorcerers of Nurgle:&#039;&#039;&#039; Come in two variants - the Lifeleech (also known as &amp;quot;[[/d/|Chester the molester]]&amp;quot; by many players), who teleports around and attempt to bind a character to leech their health, and the Blightstormer, who casts a Nurgle-flavored green vortex spell that sucks in both the enemies and player characters, damaging and preventing them from moving. (The Blightstormer also likes to talk about how Papa blessed them with sniffles and brings forth much joy.)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Bile Trolls:&#039;&#039;&#039; Chaos Trolls of Nurgle. Wield huge blunt weapons and spew acidic bile that slows you and drains your stamina as long as you&#039;re exposed to it, much like Stormfields it&#039;s absolutely worth turning around to a more open part of the map to be able to better avoid the puke. They can also attempt to heal themselves over time, both as a passive effect and as an ability they channel when their health is low. When this happens, they fall to their knees and gain a temp health bar. You and everyone else better start [[Rape|dogpiling the FUCK out of it]] to empty it and prevent full health regen, or life will only suck harder.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Chaos Spawn|The Unnameable Beasts]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Tough boss monsters that like to chew you to regain their health. They are also probably the worst thing to face with pubbies, as they devour you, smack you into other players damaging and potentially downing them, and each snack they grab heals them. You will definitely want to use your bombs and any other knockback abilities you have to stop their chow time. Oh and they are about one of the fastest boss enemies just like the rat ogres with the exception being their head isn&#039;t as noticeable, therefore harder to deal big damage with headshots. Have fun with that.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The Cloven Ones are an enemy faction that premiered in the &amp;quot;Winds of Magic&amp;quot; expansion pack. They are the true children of Chaos, born amidst the collapse of the Polar Warp Gates and the subsequent release of Chaos energy into the world. As such, they serve the Chaos Gods without question, as their souls are forfeit to Chaos at the moment of their conception. Although the Beastmen vary in appearance, as true to their Chaos heritage, they are mainly comprised of humanoid mutants and abominations with bestial features such as cloven hooves, horns, and goatlike heads. Warpstone meteor falling into Reikland got their attention, and now they seek to claim it as a Herdstone. Afterwards, they have a chance to appear in any mission.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Ungors:&#039;&#039;&#039; Ungors are the weakest and most humanlike of the Beastmen, with most possessing diminutive horns or no horns at all. However, they are no less hateful and repulsive than their larger cousins. They use spears and bows, making them the first common enemy type to have a ranged attack.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039; Ungor Raiders:&#039;&#039;&#039; The weakest specials in the game, they look similar to regular Ungors but have much darker skin and white body paint across their upper body. Despite falling over in a stiff breeze, their arrows do lowish damage and they have an average rate of fire. The real threat is when you&#039;re caught out of cover by large packs of 8~10+ Ungor Raiders who will sustain fire their arrows so there&#039;s no safe opening to close the gap, and being exposed leads to a lot of damage quickly. Since they often shoot from far away at an area where melee can&#039;t reach them like a balcony or a cliff, they must be taken out with ranged weapons, which is a required waste of ammunition for some characters, unless the player is an Ironbreaker armed with a drakepistol, Bardin with a throwing axe, a Huntsman Kruber with a knack for headshots, or Sienna.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gors:&#039;&#039;&#039; The most common of the Beastmen, Gors form the backbone of the Beastmen Brayherd. Each Gor is recognized for their resplendent rack of horns, with larger horns denoting higher status within the Beastmen hierarchy. Prerelease screenshots and artwork show Gors wielding Man-cleavers and two-handed axes, although more variations are possible.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Bestigors:&#039;&#039;&#039; Bestigors are the elite of the Brayherd as their name would imply. They can use a charge attack to knock down players and are heavily armored (not as much as chaos warriors despite being chaos and is more akin to Stormvermin armor), though this charge attack can be interrupted by a good hit/shot to them while charging to trip them or dodged.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Standard Bearers:&#039;&#039;&#039; Beastmen who carry foul standards into battle to increase the Brayherds morale. They can place their magical standards to buff their comrades with a buffer of temporary health on top of their max health, and regeneration of their base health which can make fights take longer if players don&#039;t finish off enemies. Best to fight your way to the flag and smash it before things get harder.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen Patrol&#039;&#039;&#039; - The patrol for the Beastmen. Unlike the previous two patrols, it contains some Ungor Raiders for ranged fire support and two standard-bearers with the rest filled with Bestigors.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Minotaurs:&#039;&#039;&#039; A new monster-boss enemy, Minotaurs are the most Beastmen-like of Beastmen: extremely strong, extremely ferocious, and extremely dumb. Minotaurs are more aggressive than any other boss type, beelining for the nearest hero and attacking them relentlessly. They have a charge ability like the Stormfiend and can deal serious damage to players and enemies alike in their path. One of the nastier differences is that Minotaurs get the healing benefits of Battle Standards, but not the bonus health. This isn&#039;t too noticeable on Recruit or Veteran, but Champion and above the health regeneration makes it the hardest boss when both enemies are present together. Oh, and they&#039;re bigger than the other regular bosses, meaning more reach and having to aim higher for the head. Have fun.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Gameplay Tips (aka How To Avoid Dying Like An Asshole) ==&lt;br /&gt;
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1. Don&#039;t be That Guy who wanders off alone and dies due to getting incapacitated due to the half-dozen or so methods an enemy can do such a thing.  I don&#039;t care how badass you think you are, nothing actually makes you immune to being pounced by a Gutter Runner, hooked by a Packmaster, yote by a Blightstormer, et cetera.  Seriously, wandering off alone is one of the certain ways you can get kicked from a match, along with going AFK during horde or boss attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
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2. If someone starts grabbing Tomes and Grimoires, fucking follow them and hope they know where to show you where the others are.  Because if you are not grabbing them, you&#039;re not optimizing your loot and XP gain, thus you are shit and should uninstall this game (and/or kill  yourself). Or don&#039;t, whatever, I&#039;m not [[Asmodai]]. &lt;br /&gt;
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3. If you play Sienna and overheat more than twice in a match, don&#039;t be butthurt when you get kicked.  Learn to manage your overheat, or learn to play anything else.  (Same goes for playing an Ironbreaker with drakefire guns.)&lt;br /&gt;
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4. The game is actually really great about audio clues for your enemies; if you hear something suspicious, start looking around for the source of the sound.  Nine times out of ten, you can spot a Gutter Runner or other special enemy fast enough to kill it.  The other tenth time?  Hope your buddies didn&#039;t rush forward and leave you for dead.&lt;br /&gt;
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5. Consider taking weapons with Shield Breaking and/or Armor Piercing if you&#039;re consistently getting fucked up by the heavier enemies.  Instead of having to charge up a heavy attack, you just make regular attacks as fast as you can and watch enemies like Stormvermin and Chaos Warriors get fucked up.&lt;br /&gt;
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6. Mix in side-dodges and pushes with your melee swings in order to defend yourself. The different weapons each have optimal attack/push/dodge patterns unique to them. Learn yours. Blind offense is a good way to get yourself killed by stray hits from trash mobs. Side-dodging repeatedly also has the benefit of helping you not get surrounded as the hordes have to relocate to you.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
8. Trying to outrace other players for DPS is only going to get everyone killed, which means nobody gets loot and very little XP.  Don&#039;t be that asshole who tries to &amp;quot;prove&amp;quot; something to the others by trying to outperform them. The only stat that matters is how much damage you took. Kills will happen eventually. Focus on keeping yourself alive and healthy first and foremost.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
9. This is a fucking co-op game.  Heal other people, leave stuff they need behind, try to watch their backs.  If you can&#039;t handle this concept, then you really need to try a different game; &amp;quot;lone wolf&amp;quot; types are wasting both their time and everyone else&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
10. When the coast isn&#039;t clear, don&#039;t make forward progress in the map. You don&#039;t want to trigger a boss fight while knee deep in a horde. While dealing with shit and you have to move around, go backwards, not forwards.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
11. Don&#039;t be afraid to use those bombs and potions the moment things are beginning to look dicey. One thing (horde, patrol, special) can be handled without too much trouble, but the multiples are what kills teams. Also, Strength potions oddly enough do affect ranged weapons and bombs.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
12. Dash abilities (such as Foot Knight&#039;s or Zealot&#039;s abilities) can be canceled part of the way by blocking, allowing you to gain value from them while not charging away from your group if you&#039;re already with them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
13. You can block-cancel other things too, depending on your weapon. Attacks, pushes and other actions can be stopped with a block either for defense or speeding up your combos.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Gallery ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ranger Veteran.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ironbreaker.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Slayer.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Vermintide 2 fat nurgle worshipper.png|[[Glottkin|HELLO I&#039;M FUCKING FAT TOO]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Vermintide 2 fat nurgle worshipper2.png|[[Ogre|WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN MY SWAMP???]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Lumberfoots only by a20t43c.png|How Kerillian came to live in a tent.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Links ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* [http://www.vermintide.com/ Website]&lt;br /&gt;
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AovSuioMM2w&amp;amp;t=105s Announcement Trailer plus a little bit of gameplay]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Warhammer Fantasy]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Vermintide_2&amp;diff=523812</id>
		<title>Vermintide 2</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Vermintide_2&amp;diff=523812"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T15:23:33Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Kerillian */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{/vg/}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:DPuLc-pX4AA3ba3.png|745px|center|thumb|&amp;lt;span style=&#039;color:green;font-size:100%&#039;&amp;gt;HAHA! ASININE MORTALS!! TIME TO EMBRACE THE TRUE LOVE FROM OUR [[Nurgle|FATHER]]!!&amp;lt;/span&amp;gt;  [[Skaven|YES-YES, WEAK MAN-THINGS DIE FROM VERMIN POX-DISEASE, YES!]]]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Vermintide 2&#039;&#039;&#039;, also known as [[Board-tans/vg|ratclick 2]], is the sequel to [[The End Times: Vermintide]], made possibly due to the fact that the first game surpassed expectations and did pretty fucking well for a relatively niche title (2 million fucking copies sold!). Fatshark sensibly shortened the name from &amp;quot;Warhammer The End Times: Vermintide 2&amp;quot; to avoid sounding like a Japanese light novel, much to the joy of nerds who [[skub|hate]] The End Times (pretty much everyone).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
On October 10th, 2018, Vermintide 2 was announced, bringing a host of new additions. Most notably the Warriors of Chaos are being added as an enemy type. [[Nurgle|Specifically the jolly ones that don&#039;t mind being pox bloated messes]]. Along with the new enemy race, the Skaven also have a few new additions, such as the Stormfiends and Warpfire Throwers. Around a year after release, [[Beastmen|everyone&#039;s favorite non-Welsh sheep shaggers]] were added as well.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The game was released on March 8, 2018, and quickly surpassed its prequel&#039;s success with 1 million sales in its first month alone.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The game became truly playable after a patch was released on April 12, 2018 to which [https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/steamcommunity/public/images/clans/30503110/c2428ecfc6ae3dbbb902a008f702bcf510ebb399.png brought back Saltzpyre&#039;s signature voiceline] (&#039;&#039;actual&#039;&#039; [https://steamcommunity.com/games/552500/announcements/detail/1654386143023879919 patch notes banner]). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It is [[Awesome]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Setting ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Vermintide 2 is set during the End Times, an indeterminate amount of time since the ending of the previous game. After falling into Rasknitt&#039;s trap (and thus letting Ubersreik fall), the Ubersreik Five (or Four, doesn&#039;t matter)  have ended up in their own castle and banded together again to face the Skaven forces of [[Clan Fester]], along with their new allies: a Chaos Warband dedicated to [[Nurgle]] known as The Rotbloods. Both forces came together as the Pactsworn, their eyes gazed on the fortress town of Helmgart (the border town Bretonnia always conquers within the first 10 turns of an Empire [[Total War: WARHAMMER]] campaign).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Lohner has dialogue indicating [[Anal Circumference|the timeline is smack dab in the middle of the End Times as Louen Leoncouer is already dead]] (Please have mercy [[Matt Ward]])! Due to the presence of a Nurgle-aligned warband, it is possible that the game is set during/after the Fall of Marienburg. The Skaven are up to their usual hijinks (Pillaging, slaughter, slavery... You know, a normal day in Warhammer). Their main objective is trying to build something called the Skittergate [https://youtu.be/uOd7HQoKxcU?t=45| (it&#039;s different from that movie which they have never seen, so how would they copy it?)], a portal between Norsca and Helmgart, explaining how the Skaven and their new allies overran the region. The Rotbloods are here to help the Skaven with murder-fucking everyone in the Reikland and bringing great death-death to poor Helmgart. Clan Fester&#039;s also out for blood as payback for Ubersreik, even though Ubersreik apparently fell anyway. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a total of thirteen maps in the base campaign. These span: the town of Helmgart itself, where the heroes create a diversion at the Temple of Sigmar before the Hammerman himself purges it of vikings and rats; an Elven temple ruin in the woods where the gang uses a slow-moving puzzle to raise a magic shield; Ussingen, a farming town where the heroes rescue prisoners and later blow up a Chaos supply cache; a Nurgle-blighted canyon with a fortified Chaos Lord&#039;s tomb, which the gang destroys to stop the Rotbloods from harvesting his energy; a dense swamp, where the heroes assault the Rotbloods&#039; main war camp and slay their leader, a Nurgle Champion; and quite a lot more besides, culminating in a double assault on the Skittergate and the Rotblood hometown in Norsca, obliterating both of them and saving Helmgart, or what&#039;s left of it. The gang is so badass that the shitty army left at Ubersreik was enough to take over while a Skaven-Rotblood alliance couldn&#039;t do jack to them. Such is life as a video game protagonist.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;Shadows Over Bögenhafen&#039;&#039; DLC has the gang end up in the titular town where they wipe out the Pactsworn a second time and keep a scary daemon sword out of Nurgle&#039;s grubby hands over three more maps. &#039;&#039;Back To Ubersreik&#039;&#039; has them enter a magic simulation of Ubersreik being run by Olesya to try to locate some mysterious runes of power in the &#039;&#039;real&#039;&#039; Ubersreik, re-defeating the Skaven in it because she&#039;s trying to keep it as &amp;quot;believable&amp;quot; as possible (and also the Rotbloods, who either found a way to break into the simulation or are part of the simulation because Olesya likes messing with our heroes), with three levels from the previous game and a secret fourth you can try out after finding runes from the past levels through a series of tedious puzzles. In the Winds of Magic DLC the Beastmen get involved because the increasingly fucked Reikland now has a meteor crash onto it, and the angry goats surge out of the woods to make a herdstone out of it. Then there&#039;s the roguelike &#039;&#039;Chaos Wastes&#039;&#039;, given for free to everyone who got the game, wherein Saltzpyre sets up a pilgrimage through the wastes to assuage his waning faith.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
An event for the 1 year anniversary (March 2019) gave us &amp;quot;A Quiet Drink,&amp;quot; in which the party decides they&#039;ve done a very good job so far, and deserve a night on the town! Worth playing just for the many custom voice lines for the utterly sloshed characters. (&amp;quot;Queen Kerillian demands MORE ALE!&amp;quot;) (&amp;quot;It wouldn&#039;t be the same! It wouldn&#039;t have the whistle!&amp;quot;) While the map was only available on the official realm during the event, it can still be played [https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=1694820325 through a mod].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Where the storyline doesn&#039;t advance as much through the game, more details can be found on the main site&#039;s dev blogs by way of the &amp;quot;Franz Lohner Chronicles&amp;quot;, where the old bartender writes down his musings about current events.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Gameplay ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The good old Vermintide core gameplay remains intact, which means that the game still has a robust and surprisingly skill-based melee system at its core. Rather than fuck with anything that was already functional, Vermintide 2 focuses instead on adding more content to play around with. Light attacks, heavy attacks, blocking, dodging, pushing, etc., are all still here. All weapons also now have a &amp;quot;push attack&amp;quot; which is performed by holding down the attack button while blocking, causing an attack after you push. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Aside from the new enemy types, there are a couple of other new features, such as specializations for the classes (referred to as &amp;quot;careers&amp;quot;), each representing different possible paths the heroes took after Ubersreik. For example, the Dwarf can be a Slayer or an Ironbreaker, or the Wood Elf can be a Shade or Handmaiden of Isha, each one with diffferent passive abilities and active &amp;quot;Career Skill&amp;quot;. This comes packaged along with a talent tree for each character and new weapons to go around for everyone. Each talent tree also comes with talents for granting temporary health (Health that&#039;s both easily lost and generated, basically allowing you to endure until the next heal) and stagger bonuses (damage bonuses against enemies you get off-balance). Alternatively, you can heal others when you use a potion on yourself, or gain more power to replace these talents.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The loot system got an overhaul too, with the devs acknowledging the first game&#039;s system was kind of bullshit. We now have [[rage|lootboxes]] like every other dev under the sun, but entirely earned through gameplay and they come unlocked, so it&#039;s basically just normal random loot drops with a loot box skin slapped on. A &amp;quot;Heroic Deeds&amp;quot; system has also been implemented, consisting of consumable quests that mix gameplay up by dramatically changing objectives, mix of enemies faced or limiting your own tools (many combinations of which are pure [[Anal Circumference]]), along with a Challenge system that&#039;s basically an alternative achievements system, rewarding you when you finish missions or sets of missions with certain difficulties, different heroes and/or harder conditions, tracking other milestones and more. These give you more chests, skins, frames for your portraits, and other goodies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Aside from those additions,and quality of life improvements it seems to mostly be the same game, which is okay since most people just wanted it to be the first one with more stuff to begin with. For the cherry on top, the game also supports modding to the point that the devs maintain a list of &amp;quot;Sanctioned Mods&amp;quot; which can be safely used with the base game, a lot of which are pretty sweet. There&#039;s also entirely separate &amp;quot;Realms&amp;quot; for the base game and modded games. On the negative side, there&#039;s no dedicated server, instead relying on peer-to-peer connection. Better hope your host has good internet...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Three DLC campaigns, and a free game mode, are currently out. The first one, &#039;&#039;&#039;Shadows over Bögenhafen&#039;&#039;&#039;, has the heroes searching for a runesword in the titular city, while &#039;&#039;&#039;Back to Ubersreik&#039;&#039;&#039; features remade versions of some of the original Vermintide missions along with new melee weapons as the Heroes of Ubersreik head off to an illusionary copy of the city to find a hidden set of runes for Olesya. The third DLC, &#039;&#039;&#039;Winds of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039;, added Beastmen, a higher level cap and difficulty level, and a set of endgame challenges in the &amp;quot;Winds of Magic&amp;quot; mode. The fourth, &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Wastes&#039;&#039;&#039; (released for free) added another game mode which has the Ubersreik &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Five&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Four&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; It Doesn&#039;t Matter go on expedition into the titular wastes, choosing to go through a number of randomized locations with roguelike elements, allowing players to exchange or power up their equipment and get special boons while going through areas cursed with various dangers and debuffs. This will itself be further expanded by the fifth (also free) update, &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Be&#039;lakor]]&#039;&#039;&#039;, which will task players to find the Daemon Prince&#039;s Temple of Shadows to end his schemes in the Chaos Wastes, adding new areas and dangers as well as new rewards. Then there&#039;s the &#039;&#039;&#039;Trail to Treachery&#039;&#039;&#039;, which involves Sienna&#039;s sister Sofia and finally brings everything about her past to a (burning) head.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A fourth DLC campaign, &#039;&#039;&#039;Karak Azgaraz&#039;&#039;&#039; was announced during Warhammer Skulls 2023, with a plot set on exploring a lost Dwarf hold. Released on June 13th, it was almost the same three maps than from the previous tide game, but this time 7 years have passed since the Five of Ubersreik visited the Karak in the year 2530 of the Imperial Calendar...[[What|which is 2 years after the end of the world in the End Times in 2528 I.C.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==The Ubersreik Five and Careers==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Each character now has three different Careers, which affect their weapon choices, abilities, and talent trees, allowing a great deal of customization for each one. Lore-wise, the three careers are based on how each of the heroes might have reacted to the fall of Ubersreik: Either they barely changed at all and simply became the elite version of their old jobs (the starter career, canonically their choice), were inspired for a higher calling, or became traumatized and jaded. The exception is Markus, whose three careers all end up being good for him.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A fourth career, canonically advanced to from the starter career after the events of the previous DLC from when each is released, is on the way for each character, though it&#039;s locked behind DLC. So far, Markus, Bardin, Kerillian and Victor have their fourth class, with Sienna on the way.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s later revealed that the career switching in between missions is canon. How? As Lohner writes, [https://www.vermintide.com/news/franz-lohners-chronicle-the-changer-of-ways Tzeentch has taken a gander at the team], changing their histories and lives and nobody notices because &amp;quot;that&#039;s how it&#039;s always been&amp;quot;. It takes a conscious effort for everyone to notice and dispel the illusion. Now, whether that was actually Tzeentch or Olesya [[Troll|fucking with everyone]] is anyone&#039;s guess...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Victor Saltzpyre]] (aka Grand Lector Saltzpyre)===&lt;br /&gt;
The Witch-Hunteriest Witch Hunter continues to hunt... More Skaven and Rotbloods than witches, but he hunts all the same. After the Ubersreik campaign, the Order of the Silver Hammer still [[Derp| stupidly tried to deny the existence of the ratmen]], spinning the invasion as a myth. How &amp;quot;Salty&amp;quot; he was in his reaction formed the crux of his future: Either he gained more political power in the chaos, allowing him to secretly fight the ratmen (The canonical choice), spoke out against the stupidity and abandoned the order to become a bounty hunter, or he lost faith in humanity entirely and relished in fanatical worship of Sigmar. As the events of the game go on however, even this faith in Sigmar is shaken, and he organizes a pilgrimage to the Chaos Wastes to assuage his fears. Journals reveal that he&#039;s coming on more to preaching and thinking on the Eternal Flame... After the Chaos Waste pilgrimage, he rededicated himself to Sigmar and became a Warrior Priest, somehow managing to become even more of a fanatic in the process.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Hunter Captain&#039;&#039;&#039;: The deaths of several Captains over the course of the End Times has allowed Victor to rise in rank, but he has had to accept that the Witch Hunters won’t recognize the fact that there’s an entire fucking empire of ratmen just below their cities; Saltzpyre now uses his new political position to fight the menace in secret. In addition to a fancier hat, Victor as a Witch Hunter Captain can do everything he could in the first game and also gets some abilities that help him support his allies.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Witch Hunt&#039;&#039;- Enemies pinged by Victor take extra damage&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Eternal Guard&#039;&#039;- Blocking light frontal attacks does not consume stamina&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Killing Shot&#039;&#039;- Crit headshots, melee or ranged, instantly kill human-sized enemies (i.e. any non-boss enemy smaller than a Chaos Warrior)&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Animosity&#039;&#039;- Victor screams lets out his [[RAGE]]. All nearby allies have their critical rate enhanced for 6 seconds, and nearby enemies are knocked back.  Can be upgraded to give yourself guaranteed crits, refund 40% cooldown if the shout hits ten enemies, or ping everyone hit by it with Witch Hunt.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bounty Hunter&#039;&#039;&#039;: When his order attempted to cover up what happened at Ubersreik, Salty removed his heraldry to fight the Skaven himself, taking odd-jobs on the side to pay for his endeavors. While officially he&#039;s still a witch hunter, he doesn&#039;t associate much with other witch hunters anymore after the threats they made in response to Saltzpyre snapping and speaking his mind about the Skaven. He&#039;s less of a religious fanatic and more pragmatic as a result. As a Bounty Hunter, Victor focuses on ranged weaponry to blast away Skaven and Chaos Warriors alike. He also dressed in a similar appearance with [[C.L.Werner|Brunner]], a canon bounty hunter. &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Blessed Shots&#039;&#039;- Guaranteed ranged critical every 10 seconds&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ammo Pouches&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Quick Release&#039;&#039;- Improved reload rate&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Locked and Loaded&#039;&#039;- Fires a powerful shot that pierces multiple enemies...and potentially allies too, so everyone involved really should try to be careful with the Bounty Hunter around. Can be upgraded to have massive cooldown reduction on headshot, get more pellets on the next shot based on the number hit on the current shot, or have ranged crits reduce the cooldown by 20%.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zealot&#039;&#039;&#039;: The horrors of Ubersreik and the Witch Hunters&#039; refusal to admit the threat the Skaven pose have caused Victor to give up on earthly organizations entirely and place his trust in Sigmar alone, with the rest of the world fit only to be cleansed in righteous fire. Victor as a Zealot favors vicious melee combat, and not only is his armor some of the best in the game even without the Flagellant talent (which is mandatory while playing the class), a heaping helping of faith and holy rage makes him even more dangerous as he loses health - after all, the end is upon us, why not shed as much blood as possible before it goes? As a nice bonus, picking up grimoires will count towards his health-based attack boosts. &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Fiery Faith&#039;&#039;- Attack power increased by 5% for every 25 health lost (up to 20%)&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Unswerving Strikes&#039;&#039;- Heavy attacks cannot be interrupted by enemy attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Heart of Iron&#039;&#039;- Ignores death upon taking lethal damage (long cooldown)&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Holy Fervor&#039;&#039;- Charge forward and gain 25% attack speed boost for 5 seconds. Can be upgraded to be unkillable during the skill, or gain stacks that either reduce cooldown or increase attack power.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warrior Priest&#039;&#039;&#039;: His tenure as Witch Hunter Captain came only as a process of elimination to Victor. His faith was deeply shaken by the sheer depths of incompetence that his supposedly inviolable comrades in the Templar Witch Hunters, the officially sanctioned Witch Hunter Order of the Empire and the Cult of Sigmar, could show. After the risky pilgrimage he persuaded the others to go along to the Chaos Wastes, he found his faith again and became a Warrior Priest of Sigmar, divine power flowing through his veins. Nominally retaining his Witch Hunter Captaincy, he simply stopped bothering with the bureaucracy and found his true calling in applying hammers to heretic skulls while preaching. While he loses access to his ranged weapons, he does get exclusive access to the Flail and Shield, the Skull-Splitter and Shield, and the Skull-Splitter and Blessed Tome weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Righteous Fury&#039;&#039;- Gain Fury when nearby enemies die. When Fury reaches 100%, attacks Smite the enemy for 20% of weapon damage. Fury depletes outside of battle. &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Enemy of Chaos&#039;&#039;- 30% bonus power against Chaos Warriors and Beastmen Standard Bearers&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Incorruptible&#039;&#039;- 100% curse resistance &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Implacable&#039;&#039;- Damage taken is reduced by 20%, with a further 20% of incoming damage being dealt over 3 seconds (this damage cannot kill). &lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Shield of Faith&#039;&#039;- Saltzpyre generates a barrier on himself or his allies, making them invincible for 5 seconds. The shield explodes when it expires, dealing damage to nearby enemies. Can be upgraded to affect both Victor and someone else simultaneously, extend its duration to 8 seconds while granting the ability to trample weaker enemies, or provide a revival and healing effect.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Markus Kruber]] (aka Markus de Mandelot)===&lt;br /&gt;
[[This Guy|Faithful, dependable Markus]], always willing to help out, continues to serve against the Ratmen for both coin and conscience. The universe seems to have rewarded him for being a nice, simple guy because none of his careers turn out badly for him. Either he gets deeper into merc life (the canon choice), he takes some time off to breathe as a Huntsman, or he&#039;s recognized for his achievements and gets inducted into the Order of the Reikhammer as a Foot Knight. Later in the story, his ancient bloodline is revealed and he becomes an official Grail Knight of Bretonnia. This means he somehow made the journey to Bretonnia, fought all manner of beasts and monsters (while drunk) and even [[Awesome|proved himself to]] [[The Green Knight]] before finally sipping some &amp;lt;strike&amp;gt;[[Lileath|elven goddess]]&amp;lt;/strike&amp;gt;[[Lady of the Lake|Lake Lady]] bathwater, gaining the requisite powers, stupid French accent, and... [[Troll|&amp;quot;chivalric&amp;quot; manner]]. Let&#039;s just hope his good luck continues to hold, eh?&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mercenary&#039;&#039;&#039;: The life of a mercenary has suited Markus well, in no small part due to not having to answer to incompetent leaders like he used to. Being a Mercenary allows Markus a good degree of versatility, with medium armor that grants protection without losing maneuverability and a focus on using sweeping attacks to clear out hordes.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Paced Strikes&#039;&#039;- Hitting 3 enemies in 1 swing boosts attack speed by 10% for 6 seconds&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Hitting the Sweet Spot&#039;&#039;- 25% more cleave (attacks hit more enemies at once) &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;No More Laughin&#039; Now&#039;&#039;- Critical hit rate improved by +5%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Morale Boost&#039;&#039;- Staggers nearby enemies and grants nearby allies temporary bonus health. Can be upgraded to give a defense buff for all alies, reduce the cooldown or immediately revive allies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Huntsman&#039;&#039;&#039;: After Ubersreik, Markus found a degree of inner peace by devoting himself to Taal and Rhya, the gods of nature (though not devoted enough such that [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] weaponry is disallowed on him). As a Huntsman, Markus trades away his access to heavier armor for greater proficiency with ranged weapons of all kinds. He also gets to use a bow, a ranged weapon unique to the Huntsman career that, while much slower than Kerillian&#039;s, holds a lot of ammunition and does considerable damage. Had a hilarious bug that [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKoqArJjYIo pretty much gave him an AK-47] and absolutely melted bosses. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Waste Not, Want Not&#039;&#039;- Ranged headshots return 1 ammo&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Poacher&#039;s Mark&#039;&#039;- Effective range for ranged weapons doubled&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Call Out Weakness&#039;&#039; - Aura that boosts critical rate by +5%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Deep Pockets&#039;&#039; - +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Hunter&#039;s Prowl&#039;&#039;: Become invisible for a short time; automatically reloads ranged weapon for no ammo cost, improves reload speed, and adds 1.5x damage multiplier to ranged attacks while invisible. Can be upgraded to reduce the cooldown, increase the duration or have ranged attacks not break stealth.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Foot Knight&#039;&#039;&#039;: For his part in the defense of Ubersreik, Markus was made a Knight of the Order of the Reikshammer. Markus may not have been aiming for the position, but his heavy armor, protective aura, and highly disruptive ultimate make him an excellent tank as a Foot Knight. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive ability: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Protective Presence&#039;&#039;- Aura that reduces damage taken by 15%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Taal&#039;s Fortitude&#039;&#039; - Extra stamina shield&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;No Guts, No Glory&#039;&#039; - Reduces damage taken by 10%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Valiant Charge&#039;&#039;- Charges forward, knocking back any enemies hit by the charge. Also interrupts and stuns bosses and specials. Can be upgraded to make Kruber temporarily invincible, have increased size and the ability to knock over greater enemies, or grant increased attack speed for every enemy hit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grail Knight&#039;&#039;&#039;: MOTHERFUCKING GRAIL KNIGHT!!! The first unique class introduced and locked behind a DLC wall. It was revealed one day Kruber found out his Bretonnian lineage after he received a mysterious letter that was addressed to him with the &#039;&#039;&#039;de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039; surname.  According to Lohner, he used his huge information network to trace back Kruber&#039;s bloodline and found out his father was actually a Bretonnian! but not just any Bretonnian: &#039;&#039;&#039;Foricarl de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039;! who used to be a well-known grail knight in Parravon after he saved the city from a dragon with style! He was widely worshiped since then with arts, music, and clothes referencing him. It wasn&#039;t until the duke&#039;s son, an arsehole by the name &#039;&#039;Willibald&#039;&#039; who is jealous of the hero&#039;s deed that he killed his father, the duke of Parravon, and framed Foricarl for it. The lady had to intervene herself and turned the fucktard into a frog but it was all too late, for Foricarl had already self-exiled in shame. Despite that, he continued to slay beasts and killing chaos shit like a badass until he finally settled at &#039;&#039;&#039;Ubersreik Hills&#039;&#039;&#039; and impregnated Kruber&#039;s mama, only to leave her before Kruber was even born. With the lady&#039;s blessing, Kruber is now &#039;&#039;&#039;Markus de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039;! And he now has [[troll|the privilege call his teammates peasants, acting cockier and mightier than even Kerilian, while Bretonnian dancing all the way to the waystone, one-shotting any foe he came across with his magical sword ability]] (a voiceline while waiting to start on a Chaos Wastes expedition &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; has him imply he&#039;s been talking down to Saltzpyre after becoming a Grail Knight just to be a troll). Just like Slayer Bardin Markus can&#039;t use ranged weapons in this career (because peasant weapon dislike and chivalry bullshit), and he doesn&#039;t even have the option of throwing axes like Slayer Bardin does (again, see above), but his special buffs, move speed and ability make him a fantastic boss killer and crowd controller.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive ability: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;The Lady&#039;s Duty&#039;&#039;- Get 2 random quests that grant buffs to the party when completed, lasting until the mission is over. Can be upgraded to have a third quest, stronger buffs, or a repeatable quest that grants a potion of strength each time it&#039;s completed.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Knight&#039;s Challenge&#039;&#039; - 25% extra damage to the first enemy hit.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Thirst for Glory&#039;&#039; - 10% move speed increase.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Bastion of Bretonnia&#039;&#039; - Your shields can now block Warpfire.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Blessed Blade&#039;&#039;- Smite a target with a holy blade. Can be upgraded to deal even more single target damage with a slash and stab, change into a horizontal crowd cleaver or stay the same and increase movement speed upon kill.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Kerillian]]===&lt;br /&gt;
The elf continues to be a standoffish, if slightly nicer, jerk, though her sensitivity masks hidden scars. Her faith forms the crux of her careers, whether remaining a faithful, if conflicted, Waywatcher promoted to Waystalker (this is canon), a Handmaiden more devoted to Isha and protecting others, or losing herself to bloodlust and becoming a Shade of [[Khaine]]. The Drachenfels DLC reveals that Kerillian basically has the biggest impact on the story out of the whole party, with consequences reaching to the rest of Warhammer. She received a vision about how Ubersreik MIGHT have to do with the fall of Athel Loren. With pride and without any thought, she ambushed two regiments of soldiers from Nuln meant to reinforce the city, leaving it undefended... From the Skaven. That&#039;s right, [[Fail|because of her pride, she&#039;s responsible for ALL of the slaughter and death caused by the Vermintide, and contributed more than a fair bit to bringing about the End Times]]. This explains her biting behavior, a shield to her own failures. The pilgrimage to the Chaos Wastes broke her resolve and caused her to question her faith, giving up her regrets to Isha and becoming a Sister of the Thorn, losing part of herself and becoming more cynical than ever.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Waystalker&#039;&#039;&#039;: Frustrated with the clumsiness of her companions, Kerillian has resolved to further hone her skills to compensate further for the &amp;quot;lumberfoots&amp;quot;. As a Waystalker, Kerillian further specializes in her longbow, both for precision sniping and for raining arrows on enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Amaranthe&#039;&#039;- Automatically regenerate health (3 health per 10 seconds, up to a maximum of half your total hit points)&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Arrow-Storm&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Waywatcher&#039;s Bow&#039;&#039;- Effective range for ranged weapons is doubled&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Trueflight Volley&#039;&#039;- Fires a volley of homing arrows. Can be upgraded to fire one more arrow, refund ammunition when killing specials, or turn into a single piercing arrow that deals massive damage and has no cooldown when you get a headshot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Handmaiden&#039;&#039;&#039;: Through the subtle guidance of the Everqueen, Kerillian came across a long-lost shrine to Isha and gave herself up to serve her. Kerillian&#039;s Handmaiden Career focuses primarily on dancing around enemies in direct melee combat, and is her most durable career option through both maximum health, stamina, and mobility. The career for players that are allergic to standing still.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;The Dance of Seasons&#039;&#039;- 15% longer dodge distance&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Aura of Renewal&#039;&#039;- Aura that increases stamina regeneration speed by 100%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ariel&#039;s Benison&#039;&#039;- Cannot be interrupted when reviving allies&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Dash&#039;&#039;- Quickly dash forward through enemies, stunning enemies that are hit and causing them to bleed. Has a hilariously low cooldown, the lowest of all of the game&#039;s abilities. Can be upgraded to become invisible after the dash, make anyone you hit bleed or gain crit chance based on how many enemies you hit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shade&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of Kerillian&#039;s dreams spoke of an ancestor of hers who dwelled in Clar Karond, and with it came the voice of [[Khaine]] urging her to reclaim the mantle of her ancestor. Kerillian as a Shade is an assassin, focused on rapidly killing elite, special, and boss enemies. She also gains access to the volley crossbow in this career. This is the class to play if you really like killing the absolute shit out of Chaos Warriors and bosses.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;- 50% damage bonus when attacking enemies from behind&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Assassin&#039;s Blade&#039;&#039;- Critical hit backstabs instantly kill man-sized enemies&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Infiltrate&#039;&#039;- Become invisible and intangible for 10 seconds, or until performing an attack. Also has a unlisted effect where any melee  attack that ends Infiltrate gets a massive damage boost; depending on the weapon this can increase the power of Kerillian&#039;s melee attacks to the point where they 1-hit kill a Chaos Warrior on Legendary difficulty, and can even reach the maximum damage value possible for a single attack. Can be upgraded to have less cooldown and grant more crit chance after it ends at the cost of losing the damage bonus, cause her to blink forward while damaging enemies, or allowing her to attack without breaking stealth exactly one time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of the Thorn&#039;&#039;&#039;: The 3rd microtransaction DLC career. In truth, Kerillian has been losing faith in her goddess Lileath for some times, and it finally reached a critical point after the &#039;&#039;&#039;Citadel of Eternity&#039;&#039;&#039; shenanigan where the said goddess did not answer her. Hoping to rededicate herself to the weaves once more, she began courting other goddesses (even [[Ereth Khial]], the kind of goddess only the mentally ill elf would worship). She ended up going back to Athel Loran to seek answers, and offered up her uncertainty and regrets to the forest. Doing so allowed her to become a &#039;&#039;&#039;Sister of the Thorn&#039;&#039;&#039; , a handmaiden of Isha who can raise up a thorn bush wall to block enemies (or just turn them into a deadly thorn spike that bleeds anyone it targets) as well as providing extra healing to her teammates, leeching extra temporary health from them in exchange. She now also calls her teammates &amp;quot;meat&amp;quot;, as if [[Ferrus Manus|flesh is weaker]] compared to her, a superior plant fused being. She also gains access to the Deepwood Staff, a weapon with similar mechanics to Sienna&#039;s staffs that can make enemies levitate, temporarily disabling them. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Cluster of Radiants&#039;&#039;- Gain a radiance charge that allows free use of your active every 60 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Murder of Sprites&#039;&#039;- Deals more damage to wounded units depending on their remaining health, up to 50%.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Sustenance of Leeches&#039;&#039;- Gain temp health if a party member gains temp health when they&#039;re at full health.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;An Attendance of Munificents&#039;&#039;- +25% healing for everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Thornwake&#039;&#039;- Raise a thornwall that blocks movement. Can be upgraded to last longer, deal more damage and apply bleed at the cost of duration or explode with poison when it expires, increasing damage dealt to enemies caught.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Bardin Goreksson]]===&lt;br /&gt;
Short, stout and sure to stomp your arse, Bardin is here to help out his dawris and slaughter some rakis (and anything else that comes in the way). Either he continued his quest for Karak Zorn as a Ranger Veteran (Which is canon), returned to his roots as an Ironbreaker, or forsook life in pursuit of honorable death as a [[Slayer]]. After the trip to Drachenfels however, the regrets that surfaced made him look to his old passions of becoming an Engineer, and thus, became an Outcast Engineer. Life STILL isn&#039;t smooth sailing for him, as  Lohner&#039;s journals reveal that his daughter has gone missing. Whether she&#039;ll be found is anyone&#039;s guess...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ranger Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039;: Karak Zorn is yet to be found, but the defense of Reikland currently comes first for Bardin. Bardin the Ranger Veteran favors the use of ranged weaponry to punish foes from a distance, but he&#039;s more than able to hold his own in melee if a hail of crossbow bolts doesn&#039;t do the trick. Cousin Okri would be proud. While this used to be the least powerful of the range-focused careers due to lacking a consistent means of generating ammo for itself, recent balance updates have made it into an extremely versatile and powerful support class. Of particular note is a talent that gives a chance for every special enemy you kill to drop a bomb, which is just hilariously strong.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Survivalist&#039;&#039;- Special enemies drop ammo on death&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Loaded for Battle&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Fast Hands&#039;&#039;- Increased reload speed&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ingenious Improvisation&#039;&#039; - 10% chance to not consume health items, potions, or bombs on use&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Disengage&#039;&#039;- Drops a smoke bomb that staggers enemies and turns Bardin invisible as long as he remains within the cloud. Lasts ten seconds. While invisible, Bardin gains increased ranged attack power.  Can be upgraded to remain stealthed even outside the cloud, grant everyone attack speed and temp health while in it, or basically allowing you a free bomb throw.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ironbreaker&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin used to be an Ironbreaker in Kazak Norn, and following the defense of Ubersreik he took up his old oaths and gromril armor once more. The heavy armor and shield of the Ironbreaker makes Bardin a superb tank that can take whatever the enemy can dish out, and then return it in kind. In addition, he gains access to a drakegun and drakefire pistols, which let him spew out gouts of flame. Like in the first game, they do not use ammo and instead use a heat meter, like Sienna. Be mindful that this also means that they&#039;ll kill you if the heat gauge maxes out.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Gromril Armor&#039;&#039;- Negates all damage from 1 hit every 20 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Dwarf-Forged&#039;&#039;- Reduces damage taken by 30%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Doughty&#039;&#039;- Grants an extra stamina shield&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Resilient&#039;&#039;- Decreases stun duration after getting hit by an attack by 50% &lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Impenetrable&#039;&#039;- Briefly staggers nearby enemies, then forces all man-sized enemies among them to attack Bardin exclusively. Bardin also takes no stamina damage while blocking for the duration, and can block normally unblockable attacks. Can be upgraded to give everyone a power increase, increase its range and duration, or the ability to affect even monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Slayer]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin had been carrying a secret burden in his heart even before Ubersreik, and by the time the Skaven came to Helmgart he had taken up the Slayer&#039;s Oath in the hopes of an honorable death. As a Slayer, Bardin can&#039;t use ranged weapons at all but becomes a melee powerhouse, with exclusive access to the Dual Axes weapon and the ability to take a second melee weapon to replace his ranged weapon slot. Despite his deceptively low base health, he&#039;s one of the tankiest things in the game due to his Oblivious to Pain talent, which is practically mandatory while playing the class. He even has another talent that can increase his base health, as if this weren&#039;t enough. With the addition of the generally-superior Grail Knight and Warrior Priest classes and the comparatively situational nature of the classes&#039; key abilities however, Slayer is often considered the most underpowered class in the game - hopefully a rework will bring it back into the light. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Trophy Hunter&#039;&#039;- Stacking damage buff gained upon hitting an enemy&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Path of Carnage&#039;&#039;- +7.5% attack speed&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Leap&#039;&#039;- Leap forward, stunning enemies and gaining a temporary boost to attack speed.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Outcast Engineer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin&#039;s fourth unique DLC locked class (chronologically the 2nd paid class DLC). Ever since he returned from castle [[Drachenfels]], Bardin has been busy locking himself alone studying machinery. According to Lohner, his uncle &#039;&#039;&#039;Drakki Dagsson&#039;&#039;&#039; used to be an engineer whom Bardin looked up to, much to the dismay of his traditionalist dad &#039;&#039;&#039;Gorrek Dagsson&#039;&#039;&#039; who shuns technology and often came to disagreements with his brother Drakki. Upon learning Bardin was going to become an apprentice engineer, Dagsson went to disengage pneumatic supports at the mine out of anger and caused an earthquake, which also happened at the same time when Bardin was about to receive his apprenticeship. Dagsson managed to get most of the Dwarf to safety before the debris and stones swallowed him alive with the remaining Dwarfs. This forced Bardin to quit his passion to follow in his father&#039;s footsteps, becoming an Ironbreaker, and good ol&#039; Drakki took the blame for the mining accident and became a slayer out of guilt (because of how heroic Dagsson was) and died in a troll cave. Still, tragedy did not end there for Bardin for he would later fail to defend his home, his family and his beardling son just because he wasn&#039;t strong enough to fight off a gutter runner, even led his entire team of sentry died saving him in the process. Filled with grief, Bardin decided to leave his hold and search for Karak Zorn as an excuse to exile himself (because seeker sounds better than exile) but ended up joining Victor&#039;s anti-ratman crusade at Ubersreik instead. The demon living in castle [[Drachenfels]] read everyone like an open book, including a magic resistant Dwarf, and it sarcastically mocked Bardin of his old shame. Having realized maybe he should never have followed his father&#039;s path and perhapes he was never suited for being an Ironbreaker, he went back to his old tinkering passion. With Lohner&#039;s help, Bardin acquired materials, minerals needed for his various tools of destruction like his signature crank gun (read: [[Awesome|handheld Gatling gun, or handheld super repeater handgun because Richard Jordan Gatling doesn&#039;t exist in the Warhammer world]]) and is now out to destroy all those Thaggrakis and Dumals with it!... Unfortunately, despite the sheer and undeniable cool factor of the class, the Outcast Engineer often stands rock-bottom of Vermintide career tier lists; he is very squishy (despite his appearance) and has no options to buy himself some space so he will go down quickly if he&#039;s in the hands of a player who doesn&#039;t know exactly what they are doing, nor does he have any abilities that synergize with and support his teammates (unlike the Ranger Veteran). Outcast Engineer can be a decent boss killer and do OK in support of a ranged-focused party if the player behind him is good, but there are better options out there.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Build Pressure&#039;&#039;- Holding reload with the crank gun equipped builds pressure, gradually restoring the ability bar. Stacks are lost when you fire.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Gunsmith&#039;&#039;- +50% Max ammo.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Spotter&#039;&#039;- +10% Ranged Power to nearby allies.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Utility Belt&#039;&#039;- Allows you to carry three different bombs, cycling through them with the bomb key.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Steam-Assisted Crank Gun (mk2)&#039;&#039;- An interesting active ability that&#039;s more like a third weapon, activating Bardin&#039;s special gun. Switching to the gun doesn&#039;t use up the bar, nor does it build up automatically. You &amp;quot;Reload&amp;quot; the gun in order to fill up your ability bar over time, and you can fire it as long as you have &amp;quot;ammo&amp;quot; in it. Can be upgraded to fire slower but stronger slugs, immediately start out firing at full speed, or have a longer ability bar that temporarily isn&#039;t used when you kill a special.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Sienna Fuegonasus]]===&lt;br /&gt;
As fiery and feisty as ever, the U5&#039;s witch is here to blaze a trail through rat and rot alike. How she does it forms the basis of her paths in life: She either made an attempt to discipline herself as a Battle Wizard (Canon), split between freedom and control as a Pyromancer or lost herself to the flame as an Unchained. It&#039;s eventually revealed in Lohner&#039;s journals that Sienna &amp;quot;had&amp;quot; a sister named Sofia. They weren&#039;t on the best terms, but they were family, so when Sofia was accused of being a [[Necromancer]], Sienna burned the town responsible for accusing her. [[Fail|And then it turns out she WAS a necromancer, so Sienna burned her too]]. Note the quotation marks, as Lohner recently got a letter from someone claiming to be Sofia, blackmailing him to do her a favor or else some of his unsavory secrets would be revealed. This fiasco finally blew up in everyone&#039;s faces (which fits Sienna) when Sofia finally made her appearance known in the Trails to Treachery, and now the 5 have to deal with whatever madness she has.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Battle Wizard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ubersreik taught Sienna the value of self-control, and while she was reluctant to do so she has learned to control the flame for the first time. The greater degree of self-discipline Sienna has as a Battle Wizard allows her to focus on perfecting her spellcasting, letting her cast spells more quickly, more often, and for more damage.&lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Tranquility&#039;&#039;- Passively vents overcharge after 6 seconds of not casting spells&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Reckless Haste&#039;&#039;- Overcharge increases spell charge rate&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Pyromantic Surge&#039;&#039;- 10% increased ranged damage&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Fire Walk&#039;&#039;- Quickly teleport forward, leaving a trail of fire behind you. Can be upgraded to have lower cooldown, a bigger and stronger explosion with no more fire trail, or the ability to double-cast within 10 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pyromancer&#039;&#039;&#039;: While far from having the control of a proper Battle Wizard, Sienna has enough self-awareness to restrain herself from the most ostentatious of fire magic. Sienna the Pyromancer trades in the consistency of her Battle Wizard career for more explosive moments of burst damage. Of special note is a talent which lets her activated ability also instantly clear all overcharge.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Critical Mass&#039;&#039;- Critical chance increases based on overcharge level&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Searing Focus&#039;&#039;- 10% increased ranged damage&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;The Burning Head&#039;&#039;- A powerful fire blast that initially travels directly forward, but after a short time it will attempt to home in on the closest enemy; holding the active ability key down allows the user to designate a target for the fire blast to home in on instead. It will jump from foe to foe, killing until it runs out of power. Anything not killed by the blast is staggered, including bosses. Can be upgraded to refund cooldown on crit, vent her overcharge on cast or give her temporary health.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unchained&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sienna&#039;s addiction to magic has finally overwhelmed her, and now she lives only from one magical high to the next. As an Unchained, Sienna favors magically-boosted melee, with a focus on generating as much overcharge as possible before moving in for the kill.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Blood Magic&#039;&#039;- 50% of damage received is converted to overcharge. Do not get hit while at high levels of overcharge, lest you accidentally [[Fail|explode yourself like a dunce]].&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Slave to Aqshy&#039;&#039;- No overcharge slowdown&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Unstable Strength&#039;&#039;- High overcharge increases melee attack power up to 60%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Living Bomb&#039;&#039;- Expends all overcharge to produce a massive explosion centered on Sienna, dealing heavy damage to all nearby enemies. Fortunately, this can be done even while beginning to explode from too much overcharge. Can be upgraded to increase power based on how many you hit, gain a scorching aura after it&#039;s finished or give everyone temp health.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unknown Fifth Class&#039;&#039;&#039;: Revealed during the announcement of the Karak Azgaraz DLC, it seems like it&#039;s finally time for the pyro-witch to get her paid DLC class, with a release date of Fall 2023. From what little the trailer showed, it looks like she had fallen in with some other form of magic if the multi-colored flames had anything to say about it, and according to her dialogue it might very well piss the rest of the Ubersreik Five something fierce. Some guesses before were Magister Vigilant, Myrmidia Priest, or some other kind of Pyromancy user like  Unchained was...but after the teaser, many propose that Black Magister (magic users that gamble on using the Dark Arts, or just trying to use more than one Wind dangerously), could be the more probable option for Sienna 4th. It would not be the most lore-friendly option, but it would not be lore breaking unlike her just switching to another Wind of Magic just because. But alas, noone is a soothsayer so we cant guess what Fatshark will make. we can only wait until it releases.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Other Characters ==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Franz Lohner&#039;&#039;&#039;: The bartender of the Red Moon Inn, transferring over to the Taal&#039;s Horn Keep. You guys do the heavy lifting, he does most of the behind the scenes stuff: Keeping your home nice and cozy, getting intel, stocking up on supplies, you get the drill. Unfortunately, he also runs the Emporium of Wonders, aka, [[Rage|the microtransaction shop]]. Seemingly knows everything and everyone, including any secrets your own characters have. Talking to him has him rattle off various nods to the lore of Warhammer and more specifically, [[The End Times]]. The devs also use him to write journals and story bits about the game through the &amp;quot;Franz Lohner Chronicles&amp;quot;, which are tidbits for his journal. Journal entries and random conversations heavily imply that he&#039;s [[Warhammer: Shadow of the Horned Rat|Morgan Bernhardt from Shadow of the Horned Rat and Dark Omen.]]&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Olesya Pimenova&#039;&#039;&#039;: The carriage handler from the first game turned out to be a Gray Witch. Whod&#039;ve thunk? As usual, your ride in and out of your jobs, this time using a Bridge of Shadows teleporter instead of horses. Helps make plans along with Lohner while occasionally working alongside you on your missions, secretly doing magic stuff while you not-so-secretly kill everything. Heavily implied to be the true form of the Grey Wizard Christoph Engel from the first game. She also has the hots for Kruber, a fact which he&#039;s unfortunately aware of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Catrinne of Aldenstein&#039;&#039;&#039;: The artist making some the paintings you can decorate the keep with once you find three pieces of Ravaged Art in a mission. You never see her, but you can sometimes hear her. She&#039;s haunted by visions which inspire her paintings, but Lohner&#039;s wary of how ominous she describes them. She apparently has a crush on Saltzpyre (A fact which Salty himself doesn&#039;t know, but hilariously enough, Kruber does), and she sometimes has to fight off Bardin from eating her brushes because he finds them delicious.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Cousin Okri&#039;&#039;&#039;: In the vein of Left 4 Dead 2&#039;s Keith, Okri is oft-mentioned by Bardin and rather implied by him to be the most-asskickingest Dwarf since [[Gotrek]], yet he is never actually seen and understandably is doubted to even exist by a number of fans and even the U5 at times (though Lohner has insisted in written lore excerpts that he&#039;s actually read letters from Okri and is in written contact with him). You will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; be as good as Cousin Okri.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Enemies ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Bosses&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Grey Seer Rasknitt:&#039;&#039;&#039; The same asshole in charge of invading Ubersreik is back, and he&#039;s the final boss of the main campaign. Having captured the heroes in the first game, he attempts to sacrifice them to fuel the Skittergate, a portal contraption capable of bringing in huge armies in a flash. With it, he and the Rotbloods swarmed Helmgart and the countryside, though as is typical of technology made by mice, it breaks in the prologue. It&#039;s fixed soon after though, and much of the game is dedicated to destroying it. During the final showdown, he sent his precious Stormfiend called Deathrattler (who uses dual-ratling guns instead of the flamethrowers) against you, only to call it a worthless piece of junk after the heroes killed it. He then attacks the heroes with his Skaven magic, teleports around at lightning speed while summoning special Skaven of all types, then is blown the fuck up once the rat bastard&#039;s health is at its end. You then get his helmet as a trophy for the Keep, and the fact that it has voices whispering into it explains MUCH about how insane this rat-bastard is.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Champion B&amp;amp;ouml;dvarr Ribspreader:&#039;&#039;&#039; Here to spread ribs and smiles in Papa Nurgle&#039;s name, Ribspreader is a Champion of Chaos and the scary dude on the box cover. The leader of the Rotbloods, who are said to be insane even by Chaos Warbands&#039; standards, he&#039;s here to slaughter and destroy, and has allied himself with Rasknitt for that purpose. He berates the Grey Seer for the portal&#039;s failure, but interestingly enough &#039;&#039;doesn&#039;t&#039;&#039; spread&#039;s his ribs for it, though it&#039;s probably because Rasknitt is more powerful than he is. Figures mainly into Act 3, where the gang messes with everything he has. After hitting a breaking point as the heroes foil his plans and kill his men and free his slaves, he sends out most of his army to scout for and attack the Keep, but thanks to Olesya reading the script, they learn about this, attack his under-staffed camp, and kill him in his own arena. Despite claiming that he can take care of the heroes all by himself, he displays cowardice, [[Carron|ranting and bawwing about the precious slaves and loots he lost to the Ubersreik Five/Four/Doesn&#039;t Matter]] when he starts losing and calls his warriors for aid, with a horde attacking as he loses health. Interesting to note that despite being a Nurgle worshipper, he has a magic axe (which the axe itself is alive, noted by the growing eye skull on the axe) that he can call back to him if he ever throws it out against the players. Saltzpyre would often refer to it as &amp;quot;flying axe witch&amp;quot; whenever it was thrown. You gain this axe as a trophy for the keep, and study of it reveals that Ribby is just one of many, many Chaos Warriors who wielded the thing.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Burblespue Halescourge:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Nurgle sorcerer lord that the Skaven met back at Stromdorf, and the boss of Act 1. Has a good manner like papa Nurgle himself and he can do everything that the Nurgle sorcerer can do in the game (AKA life drain &amp;amp; Nurgle Vortex) only tougher and more AOE green plague in the oxygen, with a couple of unique abilities like summoning a swarm of flies to chase and stun one of the players, summon green images of himself to attack the players as well as erect an even bigger green vortex in the center of the battlefield.  He will absolutely make you fucking rage with his lack of visual cues for his attacks, his billion and one hit points, and his habit of teleporting around like a fucking asshole whenever someone so much as sneezes on the fucker. Has a large number of very angry nicknames from the fandom, several of which have even made it into official patch notes (e.g. &amp;quot;Bunglesnatch Humbledink&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Vorpalblade Noobhurl&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Hailstorm Barbeque&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Bubbly-Spurge&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Bubblespit Halleberry&amp;quot;, among many others). You get his staff and tome from killing him, and you find out the latter was made from human skin and inked in blood. Lovely.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Skarrik Spinemanglr:&#039;&#039;&#039; The &amp;quot;Scary&amp;quot; Skaven Warlord in charge, and the boss of Act 2. Seem to be heavily inspired by Queek Headtaker in both his looks, size, and unskavenly bravery, although he uses a more traditional halberd alongside dual shortswords. Just like Queek, he is the largest non-monster Skaven of them all, towering over the players. He will regularly summon Stormvermin and Skavenslaves, if you don&#039;t take care of them quickly it can snowball into a horde no player could ever hope to kill. He is also fully armored like Ribspreader, but unlike him, Skarrik is much faster, forcing the player to have a frustrating time of chipping his health away with their seemly ineffective charge attack. Also, he calls you [[What|cat fondlers]] and is responsible for Saltzpyre&#039;s lost eye. After he dies, civil war and general chaos erupts throughout the Skaven underground, decreasing the amount of forces guarding the Skittergate. You also get his armor and spears for the keep.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgloth the Eternal:&#039;&#039;&#039; A new boss for the new Drachenfels DLC map and another one of Nurgle&#039;s stinky boy. He used to be the chief rival of shitstorm sorcerer from above, and has been trying to take over his rival&#039;s throne. Like every dumbass heretical sorcerer, he went after old Drachenfels&#039; castle in search of his old research about demons and other crazy shit to make himself even more powerful, which he did and was possessed or at least is in contract with a demon, but was driven mad after he glimpsed the realm of chaos. Still, it allows him to see a bit of future sight as well as gaining much higher power than before. After our heroes defeated the two walking-toilets above, he began his no-good operation in Drachenfels&#039; castle and started to sacrifice captured villagers from nearby for his ritual. His little scheme didn&#039;t go unnoticed under Lohner&#039;s ear and was dealt with by our heroes after a trilogy of missions. In combat, he wields a giant scythe for slicing while he hovers (only the last phase), shoots flies that explode and snare the player, summons his rotblood minions, and using a magic attack that resembles an AoE ability from a typical MOBA game. Currently the hardest boss due to the amount of health he has and the bullshit last phase where he seeks out players and knocks them to his magic fart zone with his rotblood minions still roaming around him. He also explodes when you kill him, and you acquire his scythe and armor for your victory.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gatekeeper Nagfahr:&#039;&#039;&#039; A Ribspreader look-alike, even shares the same axe design....until the recent patch came and changed its entire outlook. He now only uses a normal axe with his head exposed: [[Eliphas the Inheritor| pale bald head]], probably the only chaos warriors that showed his face in the game. Responsible for guarding the skittergate key staff. Was [[chaos|blessed]] during the battle and turned into...[[Chaos Spawn|It-Which-Must-Not-Be-Named]]. Far easier than Ribspreader, being a level&#039;s mid-boss to build up to the final battle with Rasknitt.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Baron Justus Francke:&#039;&#039;&#039; Not an enemy you fight but nonetheless important to the plot. Besides the Skaven having a portal underneath Helmgart, Fucko Francke is the other reason Ussingen and the countryside were overrun so quickly. It&#039;s revealed he made some kind of deal with the Rotbloods and Clan Fester, and like a lot of shitty nobles, might&#039;ve been in league with the Chaos Gods even before the invasion. His fortified mansion, the only undamaged building in Ussingen, is blown up accordingly by the heroes. His fate is unknown.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sofia Fuegonasus&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sienna&#039;s sister. They weren&#039;t the closest, but they were close enough that when Sofia was accused of being a necromancer, Sienna immediately burned the accusers... Then Sofia because as it turns out, [[Fail|she was one]]. Being a necromancer, she didn&#039;t quite stay dead. She first made her &amp;quot;appearance&amp;quot; in Franz Lohner&#039;s Chronicles and tried to blackmail him into having a talk with Sienna. He didn&#039;t take the bait, but it all came to a head as she became the main antagonist of the &amp;quot;Trails to Treachery&amp;quot;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Clan Fester&#039;s back, and they&#039;re pissed. Sore after getting thwarted at Ubersreik, they want revenge. They almost managed to get it by capturing the heroes and finally managing to capture Ubersreik, and with the Rotblood alliance for constructing a Skittergate portal to Norsca, things seem to be in the bag... Until [[Fail|it malfunctions and frees Kruber, leading him to free everyone else]]. Still, they&#039;re stronger now, with Clan Pestilens rats joining their ranks and being just as determined as ever to spread the power of the warp and stave off their extinction.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Skavenslaves:&#039;&#039;&#039; Still the most piss-poor enemies in the game. Even though they come in huge swarms they&#039;re only dangerous if they blindside you or if you&#039;re too busy dealing with actual threats.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Clanrats:&#039;&#039;&#039; Rank and file of clan Fester, only slightly better than slaves. Now come with a shield and hand weapon variant that could hopefully block one or two hits from the front and make dealing with the horde slightly more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Plague Monks:&#039;&#039;&#039; A more durable Skaven with fast attacks designed to exhaust the player&#039;s stamina. Weak to ranged fire but hit like a freight train and knock you back. They let out a loud howl when they charge, but can be hard to spot in a swarm. Usually, spawn in triplets and tend to focus a single target just to make sure even 7+ stamina would not be enough to withstand their attack.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormvermin&#039;&#039;&#039; - The most common breed of Special Skaven, Stormvermin will spawn at random among the crowds of Clanrats seeded throughout the various levels. Unlike the rest of their ratty brethren, the Stormvermin have actual armor, actual weapons, and actual training, making them a serious threat. Their halberds do more damage than the standard Clanrat improvised weaponry, and hits against them that don&#039;t aim for the head (or have the Armor Piercing trait) will glance off their armor. Even blocking their attacks is difficult, since they do significant Stamina damage and therefore have a high chance of breaking your block and putting you into stun, making you an easy kill. At higher difficulties, they become one of the most significant threats in the game, and require careful combat to take down safely or make ranged weapons good at taking them down quick very desirable.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormvermin&#039;&#039;&#039; (Sword &amp;amp; Shield): Elite troops who still sound vaguely like Bane, except some of them now have swords and shields that give them multiple attacks and near-immunity to frontal hits (but mercifully deals less damage than the halberd wielders), plus their shields are metal and can&#039;t be broken. All around assholes, and a definite reason to consider having a handgun on the team since it&#039;s one of the only ranged weapons capable of easily handling them from the front.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Stormvermin Patrol&#039;&#039;&#039; - Once or twice per map, if you&#039;re listening carefully, you&#039;ll hear the sound of rats shouting out a ratty little marching drill. And if you&#039;re smart, you&#039;ll hide. If you&#039;re not smart, you&#039;ll die, because the Patrol is a massive mob of Stormvermin that all aggro at once if they spot any of the heroes, and will never back down from a fight. Their numbers are slightly randomized, but rule of thumb is for +5 rats for each difficulty level, so at Legendary difficulty you&#039;re facing patrol sizes that wouldn&#039;t be out of place in an actual game of Warhammer Fantasy Battles. Yeah. [[Anal Circumference|Have fun with that]].&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gutter Runner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Representing Clan Eshin, we have these stabby little ninja rats with warp-dust coated knives strapped to their hands. They lurk in the shadows, trying to find a hero that&#039;s cut off from the rest of the group or waiting for you to be otherwise distracted, then pounce and pin one hero to the ground while they stab and stab and stab until the puny man-thing stops moving. Once you&#039;re pinned (but you &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; hope to dodge their jumps at you by dodging to a side), you&#039;re helpless. It&#039;s up to the rest of the team to save you. So if you hear that strange whispering in the distance, make sure to stay close to your team.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Packmaster&#039;&#039;&#039; - Clan Moulder&#039;s representatives, the Packmasters have taken up capturing humans for slaving. To this end, they cart around giant spiked collars on poles; if they get close enough, they&#039;ll snap that collar shut around your neck, disabling you like the Gutter Runner. The good news is that the collar doesn&#039;t hurt nearly as much as the knives and you can dodge it if you time it right. The &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039; news is that the Packmaster will drag you off into the distance, probably through a mob of Clanrats, and then hang you up to die - or at least for the rest of their companions to stab while you wriggle helplessly.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Wind Globadier&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Skryre-rat in a gas mask, with a miniature plague factory on its back. At a distance, it will constantly lob spheres full of gas so poisonous that it eats into the skin like acid, covering the battlefield in green clouds of death. The good news is that these are as poisonous to the other Skaven as they are to our heroes. The bad news is that you&#039;ll still die like a bitch if you stand in one. And if you get too close, they&#039;ll rig the tanks on their backs to explode, taking you with them in one final kamikaze assault.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Ratling Gunner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Clan Skryre is pulling overtime here. This rat&#039;s got a miniaturized, one-man version of the tabletop Ratling Gun strapped to its back, and the rest of its body is covered in heavy armor. When it finds a good firing line, it&#039;ll wind up that gun and then unleash a hellstorm of warp-shot onto one of the heroes, tracking them as best as it can. The good news is that it&#039;s not very accurate, kills Skaven who enter its firing line, and tends to jam after a while. The bad news is that it&#039;s firing so many bullets that it&#039;s probably going to hit you anyway, and while it&#039;s not as powerful as a full-sized &amp;quot;kill both knight and his horse with a single bullet&amp;quot; ratling gun it still hurts a lot. Got a significant buff compared to the original game by taking body amour and revving up his gun quite a bit faster.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Warpfire Thrower:&#039;&#039;&#039; Another Skryre-rat, now with a flamethrower strapped to its back, which it uses to spew out gouts of green fire at anything in range. The good news is that it has a shorter range compared to the Ratling Gunner and gives even less fucks about torching other Skaven and Rotbloods in its path. Bad news is it hurts even more than the Ratling Gunner, knocks you back, and blocks your vision as well - not a Special you&#039;d want to see while you&#039;re out of ammo. The warpstone crystal on its back is its weak spot, but it violently explodes if said weak spot is hit, leaving a sizeable puddle of the flaming warpstone on the ground. While it can take out a lot of enemies with the explosion, it also makes engaging it in melee even more suicidal, especially if you use wide-sweeping weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Barrel Rat:&#039;&#039;&#039; Special Skaven enemy type that exists only in special game modes like the Weave or in Weekly Events. Their role is simple: SUICIDE BOMBER! Try to shoot them down before they reach you! A bane to melee only characters like Bardin&#039;s Slayer (without the throwing axe) and Kruber&#039;s Grail Knight.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Rat Ogre&#039;&#039;&#039; - The triumph of Clan Moulder&#039;s scientific prowess. The Rat Ogre, like the Stormvermin Patrol, is a once-a-map event, barring special mission rules, and is always announced by a throat-peeling bellow of rage. It&#039;s a giant, hulking brute that rampages across the battlefield, pummeling and punching its way through any heroes it can find. It &#039;&#039;is&#039;&#039; possible to kite the Ogre, but the problem is that it&#039;s rarely alone; the true difficulty arises in managing the Ogre and the accompanying Clanrats at the same time, since they limit your mobility just by existing.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormfiend:&#039;&#039;&#039; If you thought the Rat Ogres were a huge pain in the ass, say hello to their upgraded cousins, the masterwork of Clan Moulder and Clan Skyre! They are clad in heavy armor from the front and wield twin warp-fire throwers attached to their arms. Unlike the warpfire throwers on regular Skaven, these ones leave a burning trail on the ground for quite a time, turning a battlefield into a maze of green fire if you let it disengage and rain fire on you from distance - it&#039;s worth it to backtrack to more open areas if you come across a Stormfield because of this. Their major weakness is the smaller Skaven acting as a second brain that&#039;s stuck on their backs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sack Rat&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Skaven with a big sack full of loot. Pretty rare to spawn. It doesn&#039;t attack on its own, [[Fail|but kills teams anyway as the people in it tunnel vision on it before being killed by all the other enemies in the level]] (seriously, a loading screen tip jokingly tells you to do this). If you can kill it before it runs off you&#039;ll get to claim its stuff. One of its notable dialogues is &#039;&#039;&#039;MINE! MINE! MINE!&#039;&#039;&#039; whenever it walks, so it&#039;s easy to spot it from such obvious dialogue.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The Rotbloods, a Nurgle Warband so fanatical to the Rot-Father that they make typical fanatics look tame. They&#039;re in league with Clan Fester to work on the Skittergate while plundering Reikland&#039;s countryside. They&#039;re generally tougher and hit harder compared to Skaven, but come in smaller groups, are slower on flat ground, even slower at climbing vertical obstacles, and most importantly spawn from the same points rather than crawling out from every nook and cranny including those on the ceiling.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle Cultists:&#039;&#039;&#039; Your typical cannon fodder of Nurgle about as tough as a Clanrat. Fill the same role as Skaven slaves in the Chaos horde, though they might last an extra hit compared to slaves.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Marauders:&#039;&#039;&#039; Plague-ridden warriors that come in four flavors:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Raiders&#039;&#039;&#039; (hand weapon) and &#039;&#039;&#039;Bulwarks&#039;&#039;&#039; (hand weapon and shield) are the basic units for the Chaos Forces and fulfill a similar role to Clanrats, but they are significantly more durable than the former.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Savages(Frothers)&#039;&#039;&#039; (dual-wielding weapons) are pretty much carbon copies of Plague Monks and work exactly the same except its attacks aren&#039;t as fast.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Maulers&#039;&#039;&#039; (great weapons) huge guys with huge axes and huge horned helmets. Fill the niche of a Stormvermin in the Chaos horde, leading packs of marauders and acting as a primary threat in them, except they hit even harder, depleting all the stamina in one hit, are only armored on the head and &#039;&#039;heavily so&#039;&#039; (seriously, it&#039;s not worth shooting them there with non-guns), and have more health.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Warriors:&#039;&#039;&#039; ASININE MORTALS!! The great axe variant. The toughest non-boss enemy in the game. Has nearly three times as much health as a Stormvermin, and their armor is so thick that even headshots from guns hardly faze them. They can down you in a hit or two from full health but are very slow targets, and they&#039;ll trash talk one of you to let you know who they&#039;re aiming for. For extra fun, they sometimes spawn two or three at a time.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Patrol:&#039;&#039;&#039; when you thought Stormvermin patrol was bad, these guys come in with their chaosy march song... Include at least &#039;&#039;&#039;SIX&#039;&#039;&#039; Warriors and Maulers even at the lowest difficulty with the rest filled with Raiders and Bulwarks. A tougher patrol by far compared to the Stormvermin&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Sorcerers of Nurgle:&#039;&#039;&#039; Come in two variants - the Lifeleech (also known as &amp;quot;[[/d/|Chester the molester]]&amp;quot; by many players), who teleports around and attempt to bind a character to leech their health, and the Blightstormer, who casts a Nurgle-flavored green vortex spell that sucks in both the enemies and player characters, damaging and preventing them from moving. (The Blightstormer also likes to talk about how Papa blessed them with sniffles and brings forth much joy.)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Bile Trolls:&#039;&#039;&#039; Chaos Trolls of Nurgle. Wield huge blunt weapons and spew acidic bile that slows you and drains your stamina as long as you&#039;re exposed to it, much like Stormfields it&#039;s absolutely worth turning around to a more open part of the map to be able to better avoid the puke. They can also attempt to heal themselves over time, both as a passive effect and as an ability they channel when their health is low. When this happens, they fall to their knees and gain a temp health bar. You and everyone else better start [[Rape|dogpiling the FUCK out of it]] to empty it and prevent full health regen, or life will only suck harder.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Chaos Spawn|The Unnameable Beasts]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Tough boss monsters that like to chew you to regain their health. They are also probably the worst thing to face with pubbies, as they devour you, smack you into other players damaging and potentially downing them, and each snack they grab heals them. You will definitely want to use your bombs and any other knockback abilities you have to stop their chow time. Oh and they are about one of the fastest boss enemies just like the rat ogres with the exception being their head isn&#039;t as noticeable, therefore harder to deal big damage with headshots. Have fun with that.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The Cloven Ones are an enemy faction that premiered in the &amp;quot;Winds of Magic&amp;quot; expansion pack. They are the true children of Chaos, born amidst the collapse of the Polar Warp Gates and the subsequent release of Chaos energy into the world. As such, they serve the Chaos Gods without question, as their souls are forfeit to Chaos at the moment of their conception. Although the Beastmen vary in appearance, as true to their Chaos heritage, they are mainly comprised of humanoid mutants and abominations with bestial features such as cloven hooves, horns, and goatlike heads. Warpstone meteor falling into Reikland got their attention, and now they seek to claim it as a Herdstone. Afterwards, they have a chance to appear in any mission.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Ungors:&#039;&#039;&#039; Ungors are the weakest and most humanlike of the Beastmen, with most possessing diminutive horns or no horns at all. However, they are no less hateful and repulsive than their larger cousins. They use spears and bows, making them the first common enemy type to have a ranged attack.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039; Ungor Raiders:&#039;&#039;&#039; The weakest specials in the game, they look similar to regular Ungors but have much darker skin and white body paint across their upper body. Despite falling over in a stiff breeze, their arrows do lowish damage and they have an average rate of fire. The real threat is when you&#039;re caught out of cover by large packs of 8~10+ Ungor Raiders who will sustain fire their arrows so there&#039;s no safe opening to close the gap, and being exposed leads to a lot of damage quickly. Since they often shoot from far away at an area where melee can&#039;t reach them like a balcony or a cliff, they must be taken out with ranged weapons, which is a required waste of ammunition for some characters, unless the player is an Ironbreaker armed with a drakepistol, Bardin with a throwing axe, a Huntsman Kruber with a knack for headshots, or Sienna.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gors:&#039;&#039;&#039; The most common of the Beastmen, Gors form the backbone of the Beastmen Brayherd. Each Gor is recognized for their resplendent rack of horns, with larger horns denoting higher status within the Beastmen hierarchy. Prerelease screenshots and artwork show Gors wielding Man-cleavers and two-handed axes, although more variations are possible.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Bestigors:&#039;&#039;&#039; Bestigors are the elite of the Brayherd as their name would imply. They can use a charge attack to knock down players and are heavily armored (not as much as chaos warriors despite being chaos and is more akin to Stormvermin armor), though this charge attack can be interrupted by a good hit/shot to them while charging to trip them or dodged.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Standard Bearers:&#039;&#039;&#039; Beastmen who carry foul standards into battle to increase the Brayherds morale. They can place their magical standards to buff their comrades with a buffer of temporary health on top of their max health, and regeneration of their base health which can make fights take longer if players don&#039;t finish off enemies. Best to fight your way to the flag and smash it before things get harder.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen Patrol&#039;&#039;&#039; - The patrol for the Beastmen. Unlike the previous two patrols, it contains some Ungor Raiders for ranged fire support and two standard-bearers with the rest filled with Bestigors.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Minotaurs:&#039;&#039;&#039; A new monster-boss enemy, Minotaurs are the most Beastmen-like of Beastmen: extremely strong, extremely ferocious, and extremely dumb. Minotaurs are more aggressive than any other boss type, beelining for the nearest hero and attacking them relentlessly. They have a charge ability like the Stormfiend and can deal serious damage to players and enemies alike in their path. One of the nastier differences is that Minotaurs get the healing benefits of Battle Standards, but not the bonus health. This isn&#039;t too noticeable on Recruit or Veteran, but Champion and above the health regeneration makes it the hardest boss when both enemies are present together. Oh, and they&#039;re bigger than the other regular bosses, meaning more reach and having to aim higher for the head. Have fun.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Gameplay Tips (aka How To Avoid Dying Like An Asshole) ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
1. Don&#039;t be That Guy who wanders off alone and dies due to getting incapacitated due to the half-dozen or so methods an enemy can do such a thing.  I don&#039;t care how badass you think you are, nothing actually makes you immune to being pounced by a Gutter Runner, hooked by a Packmaster, yote by a Blightstormer, et cetera.  Seriously, wandering off alone is one of the certain ways you can get kicked from a match, along with going AFK during horde or boss attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
2. If someone starts grabbing Tomes and Grimoires, fucking follow them and hope they know where to show you where the others are.  Because if you are not grabbing them, you&#039;re not optimizing your loot and XP gain, thus you are shit and should uninstall this game (and/or kill  yourself). Or don&#039;t, whatever, I&#039;m not [[Asmodai]]. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
3. If you play Sienna and overheat more than twice in a match, don&#039;t be butthurt when you get kicked.  Learn to manage your overheat, or learn to play anything else.  (Same goes for playing an Ironbreaker with drakefire guns.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
4. The game is actually really great about audio clues for your enemies; if you hear something suspicious, start looking around for the source of the sound.  Nine times out of ten, you can spot a Gutter Runner or other special enemy fast enough to kill it.  The other tenth time?  Hope your buddies didn&#039;t rush forward and leave you for dead.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
5. Consider taking weapons with Shield Breaking and/or Armor Piercing if you&#039;re consistently getting fucked up by the heavier enemies.  Instead of having to charge up a heavy attack, you just make regular attacks as fast as you can and watch enemies like Stormvermin and Chaos Warriors get fucked up.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
6. Mix in side-dodges and pushes with your melee swings in order to defend yourself. The different weapons each have optimal attack/push/dodge patterns unique to them. Learn yours. Blind offense is a good way to get yourself killed by stray hits from trash mobs. Side-dodging repeatedly also has the benefit of helping you not get surrounded as the hordes have to relocate to you.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
8. Trying to outrace other players for DPS is only going to get everyone killed, which means nobody gets loot and very little XP.  Don&#039;t be that asshole who tries to &amp;quot;prove&amp;quot; something to the others by trying to outperform them. The only stat that matters is how much damage you took. Kills will happen eventually. Focus on keeping yourself alive and healthy first and foremost.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
9. This is a fucking co-op game.  Heal other people, leave stuff they need behind, try to watch their backs.  If you can&#039;t handle this concept, then you really need to try a different game; &amp;quot;lone wolf&amp;quot; types are wasting both their time and everyone else&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
10. When the coast isn&#039;t clear, don&#039;t make forward progress in the map. You don&#039;t want to trigger a boss fight while knee deep in a horde. While dealing with shit and you have to move around, go backwards, not forwards.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
11. Don&#039;t be afraid to use those bombs and potions the moment things are beginning to look dicey. One thing (horde, patrol, special) can be handled without too much trouble, but the multiples are what kills teams. Also, Strength potions oddly enough do affect ranged weapons and bombs.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
12. Dash abilities (such as Foot Knight&#039;s or Zealot&#039;s abilities) can be canceled part of the way by blocking, allowing you to gain value from them while not charging away from your group if you&#039;re already with them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
13. You can block-cancel other things too, depending on your weapon. Attacks, pushes and other actions can be stopped with a block either for defense or speeding up your combos.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Gallery ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ranger Veteran.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ironbreaker.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Slayer.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Vermintide 2 fat nurgle worshipper.png|[[Glottkin|HELLO I&#039;M FUCKING FAT TOO]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Vermintide 2 fat nurgle worshipper2.png|[[Ogre|WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN MY SWAMP???]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Lumberfoots only by a20t43c.png|How Kerillian came to live in a tent.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Links ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* [http://www.vermintide.com/ Website]&lt;br /&gt;
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AovSuioMM2w&amp;amp;t=105s Announcement Trailer plus a little bit of gameplay]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Warhammer Fantasy]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Vermintide_2&amp;diff=523811</id>
		<title>Vermintide 2</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Vermintide_2&amp;diff=523811"/>
		<updated>2023-06-18T15:21:00Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6: /* Markus Kruber (aka Markus de Mandelot) */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{/vg/}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:DPuLc-pX4AA3ba3.png|745px|center|thumb|&amp;lt;span style=&#039;color:green;font-size:100%&#039;&amp;gt;HAHA! ASININE MORTALS!! TIME TO EMBRACE THE TRUE LOVE FROM OUR [[Nurgle|FATHER]]!!&amp;lt;/span&amp;gt;  [[Skaven|YES-YES, WEAK MAN-THINGS DIE FROM VERMIN POX-DISEASE, YES!]]]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Vermintide 2&#039;&#039;&#039;, also known as [[Board-tans/vg|ratclick 2]], is the sequel to [[The End Times: Vermintide]], made possibly due to the fact that the first game surpassed expectations and did pretty fucking well for a relatively niche title (2 million fucking copies sold!). Fatshark sensibly shortened the name from &amp;quot;Warhammer The End Times: Vermintide 2&amp;quot; to avoid sounding like a Japanese light novel, much to the joy of nerds who [[skub|hate]] The End Times (pretty much everyone).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
On October 10th, 2018, Vermintide 2 was announced, bringing a host of new additions. Most notably the Warriors of Chaos are being added as an enemy type. [[Nurgle|Specifically the jolly ones that don&#039;t mind being pox bloated messes]]. Along with the new enemy race, the Skaven also have a few new additions, such as the Stormfiends and Warpfire Throwers. Around a year after release, [[Beastmen|everyone&#039;s favorite non-Welsh sheep shaggers]] were added as well.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The game was released on March 8, 2018, and quickly surpassed its prequel&#039;s success with 1 million sales in its first month alone.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The game became truly playable after a patch was released on April 12, 2018 to which [https://steamcdn-a.akamaihd.net/steamcommunity/public/images/clans/30503110/c2428ecfc6ae3dbbb902a008f702bcf510ebb399.png brought back Saltzpyre&#039;s signature voiceline] (&#039;&#039;actual&#039;&#039; [https://steamcommunity.com/games/552500/announcements/detail/1654386143023879919 patch notes banner]). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It is [[Awesome]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Setting ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Vermintide 2 is set during the End Times, an indeterminate amount of time since the ending of the previous game. After falling into Rasknitt&#039;s trap (and thus letting Ubersreik fall), the Ubersreik Five (or Four, doesn&#039;t matter)  have ended up in their own castle and banded together again to face the Skaven forces of [[Clan Fester]], along with their new allies: a Chaos Warband dedicated to [[Nurgle]] known as The Rotbloods. Both forces came together as the Pactsworn, their eyes gazed on the fortress town of Helmgart (the border town Bretonnia always conquers within the first 10 turns of an Empire [[Total War: WARHAMMER]] campaign).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Lohner has dialogue indicating [[Anal Circumference|the timeline is smack dab in the middle of the End Times as Louen Leoncouer is already dead]] (Please have mercy [[Matt Ward]])! Due to the presence of a Nurgle-aligned warband, it is possible that the game is set during/after the Fall of Marienburg. The Skaven are up to their usual hijinks (Pillaging, slaughter, slavery... You know, a normal day in Warhammer). Their main objective is trying to build something called the Skittergate [https://youtu.be/uOd7HQoKxcU?t=45| (it&#039;s different from that movie which they have never seen, so how would they copy it?)], a portal between Norsca and Helmgart, explaining how the Skaven and their new allies overran the region. The Rotbloods are here to help the Skaven with murder-fucking everyone in the Reikland and bringing great death-death to poor Helmgart. Clan Fester&#039;s also out for blood as payback for Ubersreik, even though Ubersreik apparently fell anyway. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a total of thirteen maps in the base campaign. These span: the town of Helmgart itself, where the heroes create a diversion at the Temple of Sigmar before the Hammerman himself purges it of vikings and rats; an Elven temple ruin in the woods where the gang uses a slow-moving puzzle to raise a magic shield; Ussingen, a farming town where the heroes rescue prisoners and later blow up a Chaos supply cache; a Nurgle-blighted canyon with a fortified Chaos Lord&#039;s tomb, which the gang destroys to stop the Rotbloods from harvesting his energy; a dense swamp, where the heroes assault the Rotbloods&#039; main war camp and slay their leader, a Nurgle Champion; and quite a lot more besides, culminating in a double assault on the Skittergate and the Rotblood hometown in Norsca, obliterating both of them and saving Helmgart, or what&#039;s left of it. The gang is so badass that the shitty army left at Ubersreik was enough to take over while a Skaven-Rotblood alliance couldn&#039;t do jack to them. Such is life as a video game protagonist.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;Shadows Over Bögenhafen&#039;&#039; DLC has the gang end up in the titular town where they wipe out the Pactsworn a second time and keep a scary daemon sword out of Nurgle&#039;s grubby hands over three more maps. &#039;&#039;Back To Ubersreik&#039;&#039; has them enter a magic simulation of Ubersreik being run by Olesya to try to locate some mysterious runes of power in the &#039;&#039;real&#039;&#039; Ubersreik, re-defeating the Skaven in it because she&#039;s trying to keep it as &amp;quot;believable&amp;quot; as possible (and also the Rotbloods, who either found a way to break into the simulation or are part of the simulation because Olesya likes messing with our heroes), with three levels from the previous game and a secret fourth you can try out after finding runes from the past levels through a series of tedious puzzles. In the Winds of Magic DLC the Beastmen get involved because the increasingly fucked Reikland now has a meteor crash onto it, and the angry goats surge out of the woods to make a herdstone out of it. Then there&#039;s the roguelike &#039;&#039;Chaos Wastes&#039;&#039;, given for free to everyone who got the game, wherein Saltzpyre sets up a pilgrimage through the wastes to assuage his waning faith.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
An event for the 1 year anniversary (March 2019) gave us &amp;quot;A Quiet Drink,&amp;quot; in which the party decides they&#039;ve done a very good job so far, and deserve a night on the town! Worth playing just for the many custom voice lines for the utterly sloshed characters. (&amp;quot;Queen Kerillian demands MORE ALE!&amp;quot;) (&amp;quot;It wouldn&#039;t be the same! It wouldn&#039;t have the whistle!&amp;quot;) While the map was only available on the official realm during the event, it can still be played [https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=1694820325 through a mod].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Where the storyline doesn&#039;t advance as much through the game, more details can be found on the main site&#039;s dev blogs by way of the &amp;quot;Franz Lohner Chronicles&amp;quot;, where the old bartender writes down his musings about current events.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Gameplay ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The good old Vermintide core gameplay remains intact, which means that the game still has a robust and surprisingly skill-based melee system at its core. Rather than fuck with anything that was already functional, Vermintide 2 focuses instead on adding more content to play around with. Light attacks, heavy attacks, blocking, dodging, pushing, etc., are all still here. All weapons also now have a &amp;quot;push attack&amp;quot; which is performed by holding down the attack button while blocking, causing an attack after you push. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Aside from the new enemy types, there are a couple of other new features, such as specializations for the classes (referred to as &amp;quot;careers&amp;quot;), each representing different possible paths the heroes took after Ubersreik. For example, the Dwarf can be a Slayer or an Ironbreaker, or the Wood Elf can be a Shade or Handmaiden of Isha, each one with diffferent passive abilities and active &amp;quot;Career Skill&amp;quot;. This comes packaged along with a talent tree for each character and new weapons to go around for everyone. Each talent tree also comes with talents for granting temporary health (Health that&#039;s both easily lost and generated, basically allowing you to endure until the next heal) and stagger bonuses (damage bonuses against enemies you get off-balance). Alternatively, you can heal others when you use a potion on yourself, or gain more power to replace these talents.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The loot system got an overhaul too, with the devs acknowledging the first game&#039;s system was kind of bullshit. We now have [[rage|lootboxes]] like every other dev under the sun, but entirely earned through gameplay and they come unlocked, so it&#039;s basically just normal random loot drops with a loot box skin slapped on. A &amp;quot;Heroic Deeds&amp;quot; system has also been implemented, consisting of consumable quests that mix gameplay up by dramatically changing objectives, mix of enemies faced or limiting your own tools (many combinations of which are pure [[Anal Circumference]]), along with a Challenge system that&#039;s basically an alternative achievements system, rewarding you when you finish missions or sets of missions with certain difficulties, different heroes and/or harder conditions, tracking other milestones and more. These give you more chests, skins, frames for your portraits, and other goodies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Aside from those additions,and quality of life improvements it seems to mostly be the same game, which is okay since most people just wanted it to be the first one with more stuff to begin with. For the cherry on top, the game also supports modding to the point that the devs maintain a list of &amp;quot;Sanctioned Mods&amp;quot; which can be safely used with the base game, a lot of which are pretty sweet. There&#039;s also entirely separate &amp;quot;Realms&amp;quot; for the base game and modded games. On the negative side, there&#039;s no dedicated server, instead relying on peer-to-peer connection. Better hope your host has good internet...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Three DLC campaigns, and a free game mode, are currently out. The first one, &#039;&#039;&#039;Shadows over Bögenhafen&#039;&#039;&#039;, has the heroes searching for a runesword in the titular city, while &#039;&#039;&#039;Back to Ubersreik&#039;&#039;&#039; features remade versions of some of the original Vermintide missions along with new melee weapons as the Heroes of Ubersreik head off to an illusionary copy of the city to find a hidden set of runes for Olesya. The third DLC, &#039;&#039;&#039;Winds of Magic&#039;&#039;&#039;, added Beastmen, a higher level cap and difficulty level, and a set of endgame challenges in the &amp;quot;Winds of Magic&amp;quot; mode. The fourth, &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Wastes&#039;&#039;&#039; (released for free) added another game mode which has the Ubersreik &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Five&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Four&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; It Doesn&#039;t Matter go on expedition into the titular wastes, choosing to go through a number of randomized locations with roguelike elements, allowing players to exchange or power up their equipment and get special boons while going through areas cursed with various dangers and debuffs. This will itself be further expanded by the fifth (also free) update, &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Be&#039;lakor]]&#039;&#039;&#039;, which will task players to find the Daemon Prince&#039;s Temple of Shadows to end his schemes in the Chaos Wastes, adding new areas and dangers as well as new rewards. Then there&#039;s the &#039;&#039;&#039;Trail to Treachery&#039;&#039;&#039;, which involves Sienna&#039;s sister Sofia and finally brings everything about her past to a (burning) head.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A fourth DLC campaign, &#039;&#039;&#039;Karak Azgaraz&#039;&#039;&#039; was announced during Warhammer Skulls 2023, with a plot set on exploring a lost Dwarf hold. Released on June 13th, it was almost the same three maps than from the previous tide game, but this time 7 years have passed since the Five of Ubersreik visited the Karak in the year 2530 of the Imperial Calendar...[[What|which is 2 years after the end of the world in the End Times in 2528 I.C.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==The Ubersreik Five and Careers==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Each character now has three different Careers, which affect their weapon choices, abilities, and talent trees, allowing a great deal of customization for each one. Lore-wise, the three careers are based on how each of the heroes might have reacted to the fall of Ubersreik: Either they barely changed at all and simply became the elite version of their old jobs (the starter career, canonically their choice), were inspired for a higher calling, or became traumatized and jaded. The exception is Markus, whose three careers all end up being good for him.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A fourth career, canonically advanced to from the starter career after the events of the previous DLC from when each is released, is on the way for each character, though it&#039;s locked behind DLC. So far, Markus, Bardin, Kerillian and Victor have their fourth class, with Sienna on the way.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s later revealed that the career switching in between missions is canon. How? As Lohner writes, [https://www.vermintide.com/news/franz-lohners-chronicle-the-changer-of-ways Tzeentch has taken a gander at the team], changing their histories and lives and nobody notices because &amp;quot;that&#039;s how it&#039;s always been&amp;quot;. It takes a conscious effort for everyone to notice and dispel the illusion. Now, whether that was actually Tzeentch or Olesya [[Troll|fucking with everyone]] is anyone&#039;s guess...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Victor Saltzpyre]] (aka Grand Lector Saltzpyre)===&lt;br /&gt;
The Witch-Hunteriest Witch Hunter continues to hunt... More Skaven and Rotbloods than witches, but he hunts all the same. After the Ubersreik campaign, the Order of the Silver Hammer still [[Derp| stupidly tried to deny the existence of the ratmen]], spinning the invasion as a myth. How &amp;quot;Salty&amp;quot; he was in his reaction formed the crux of his future: Either he gained more political power in the chaos, allowing him to secretly fight the ratmen (The canonical choice), spoke out against the stupidity and abandoned the order to become a bounty hunter, or he lost faith in humanity entirely and relished in fanatical worship of Sigmar. As the events of the game go on however, even this faith in Sigmar is shaken, and he organizes a pilgrimage to the Chaos Wastes to assuage his fears. Journals reveal that he&#039;s coming on more to preaching and thinking on the Eternal Flame... After the Chaos Waste pilgrimage, he rededicated himself to Sigmar and became a Warrior Priest, somehow managing to become even more of a fanatic in the process.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Hunter Captain&#039;&#039;&#039;: The deaths of several Captains over the course of the End Times has allowed Victor to rise in rank, but he has had to accept that the Witch Hunters won’t recognize the fact that there’s an entire fucking empire of ratmen just below their cities; Saltzpyre now uses his new political position to fight the menace in secret. In addition to a fancier hat, Victor as a Witch Hunter Captain can do everything he could in the first game and also gets some abilities that help him support his allies.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Witch Hunt&#039;&#039;- Enemies pinged by Victor take extra damage&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Eternal Guard&#039;&#039;- Blocking light frontal attacks does not consume stamina&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Killing Shot&#039;&#039;- Crit headshots, melee or ranged, instantly kill human-sized enemies (i.e. any non-boss enemy smaller than a Chaos Warrior)&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Animosity&#039;&#039;- Victor screams lets out his [[RAGE]]. All nearby allies have their critical rate enhanced for 6 seconds, and nearby enemies are knocked back.  Can be upgraded to give yourself guaranteed crits, refund 40% cooldown if the shout hits ten enemies, or ping everyone hit by it with Witch Hunt.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Bounty Hunter&#039;&#039;&#039;: When his order attempted to cover up what happened at Ubersreik, Salty removed his heraldry to fight the Skaven himself, taking odd-jobs on the side to pay for his endeavors. While officially he&#039;s still a witch hunter, he doesn&#039;t associate much with other witch hunters anymore after the threats they made in response to Saltzpyre snapping and speaking his mind about the Skaven. He&#039;s less of a religious fanatic and more pragmatic as a result. As a Bounty Hunter, Victor focuses on ranged weaponry to blast away Skaven and Chaos Warriors alike. He also dressed in a similar appearance with [[C.L.Werner|Brunner]], a canon bounty hunter. &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Blessed Shots&#039;&#039;- Guaranteed ranged critical every 10 seconds&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ammo Pouches&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Quick Release&#039;&#039;- Improved reload rate&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Locked and Loaded&#039;&#039;- Fires a powerful shot that pierces multiple enemies...and potentially allies too, so everyone involved really should try to be careful with the Bounty Hunter around. Can be upgraded to have massive cooldown reduction on headshot, get more pellets on the next shot based on the number hit on the current shot, or have ranged crits reduce the cooldown by 20%.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zealot&#039;&#039;&#039;: The horrors of Ubersreik and the Witch Hunters&#039; refusal to admit the threat the Skaven pose have caused Victor to give up on earthly organizations entirely and place his trust in Sigmar alone, with the rest of the world fit only to be cleansed in righteous fire. Victor as a Zealot favors vicious melee combat, and not only is his armor some of the best in the game even without the Flagellant talent (which is mandatory while playing the class), a heaping helping of faith and holy rage makes him even more dangerous as he loses health - after all, the end is upon us, why not shed as much blood as possible before it goes? As a nice bonus, picking up grimoires will count towards his health-based attack boosts. &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Fiery Faith&#039;&#039;- Attack power increased by 5% for every 25 health lost (up to 20%)&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Unswerving Strikes&#039;&#039;- Heavy attacks cannot be interrupted by enemy attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Heart of Iron&#039;&#039;- Ignores death upon taking lethal damage (long cooldown)&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Holy Fervor&#039;&#039;- Charge forward and gain 25% attack speed boost for 5 seconds. Can be upgraded to be unkillable during the skill, or gain stacks that either reduce cooldown or increase attack power.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Warrior Priest&#039;&#039;&#039;: His tenure as Witch Hunter Captain came only as a process of elimination to Victor. His faith was deeply shaken by the sheer depths of incompetence that his supposedly inviolable comrades in the Templar Witch Hunters, the officially sanctioned Witch Hunter Order of the Empire and the Cult of Sigmar, could show. After the risky pilgrimage he persuaded the others to go along to the Chaos Wastes, he found his faith again and became a Warrior Priest of Sigmar, divine power flowing through his veins. Nominally retaining his Witch Hunter Captaincy, he simply stopped bothering with the bureaucracy and found his true calling in applying hammers to heretic skulls while preaching. While he loses access to his ranged weapons, he does get exclusive access to the Flail and Shield, the Skull-Splitter and Shield, and the Skull-Splitter and Blessed Tome weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Righteous Fury&#039;&#039;- Gain Fury when nearby enemies die. When Fury reaches 100%, attacks Smite the enemy for 20% of weapon damage. Fury depletes outside of battle. &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Enemy of Chaos&#039;&#039;- 30% bonus power against Chaos Warriors and Beastmen Standard Bearers&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Incorruptible&#039;&#039;- 100% curse resistance &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Implacable&#039;&#039;- Damage taken is reduced by 20%, with a further 20% of incoming damage being dealt over 3 seconds (this damage cannot kill). &lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Shield of Faith&#039;&#039;- Saltzpyre generates a barrier on himself or his allies, making them invincible for 5 seconds. The shield explodes when it expires, dealing damage to nearby enemies. Can be upgraded to affect both Victor and someone else simultaneously, extend its duration to 8 seconds while granting the ability to trample weaker enemies, or provide a revival and healing effect.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Markus Kruber]] (aka Markus de Mandelot)===&lt;br /&gt;
[[This Guy|Faithful, dependable Markus]], always willing to help out, continues to serve against the Ratmen for both coin and conscience. The universe seems to have rewarded him for being a nice, simple guy because none of his careers turn out badly for him. Either he gets deeper into merc life (the canon choice), he takes some time off to breathe as a Huntsman, or he&#039;s recognized for his achievements and gets inducted into the Order of the Reikhammer as a Foot Knight. Later in the story, his ancient bloodline is revealed and he becomes an official Grail Knight of Bretonnia. This means he somehow made the journey to Bretonnia, fought all manner of beasts and monsters (while drunk) and even [[Awesome|proved himself to]] [[The Green Knight]] before finally sipping some &amp;lt;strike&amp;gt;[[Lileath|elven goddess]]&amp;lt;/strike&amp;gt;[[Lady of the Lake|Lake Lady]] bathwater, gaining the requisite powers, stupid French accent, and... [[Troll|&amp;quot;chivalric&amp;quot; manner]]. Let&#039;s just hope his good luck continues to hold, eh?&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mercenary&#039;&#039;&#039;: The life of a mercenary has suited Markus well, in no small part due to not having to answer to incompetent leaders like he used to. Being a Mercenary allows Markus a good degree of versatility, with medium armor that grants protection without losing maneuverability and a focus on using sweeping attacks to clear out hordes.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Paced Strikes&#039;&#039;- Hitting 3 enemies in 1 swing boosts attack speed by 10% for 6 seconds&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Hitting the Sweet Spot&#039;&#039;- 25% more cleave (attacks hit more enemies at once) &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;No More Laughin&#039; Now&#039;&#039;- Critical hit rate improved by +5%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Morale Boost&#039;&#039;- Staggers nearby enemies and grants nearby allies temporary bonus health. Can be upgraded to give a defense buff for all alies, reduce the cooldown or immediately revive allies.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Huntsman&#039;&#039;&#039;: After Ubersreik, Markus found a degree of inner peace by devoting himself to Taal and Rhya, the gods of nature (though not devoted enough such that [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] weaponry is disallowed on him). As a Huntsman, Markus trades away his access to heavier armor for greater proficiency with ranged weapons of all kinds. He also gets to use a bow, a ranged weapon unique to the Huntsman career that, while much slower than Kerillian&#039;s, holds a lot of ammunition and does considerable damage. Had a hilarious bug that [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKoqArJjYIo pretty much gave him an AK-47] and absolutely melted bosses. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Waste Not, Want Not&#039;&#039;- Ranged headshots return 1 ammo&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Poacher&#039;s Mark&#039;&#039;- Effective range for ranged weapons doubled&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Call Out Weakness&#039;&#039; - Aura that boosts critical rate by +5%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Deep Pockets&#039;&#039; - +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Hunter&#039;s Prowl&#039;&#039;: Become invisible for a short time; automatically reloads ranged weapon for no ammo cost, improves reload speed, and adds 1.5x damage multiplier to ranged attacks while invisible. Can be upgraded to reduce the cooldown, increase the duration or have ranged attacks not break stealth.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Foot Knight&#039;&#039;&#039;: For his part in the defense of Ubersreik, Markus was made a Knight of the Order of the Reikshammer. Markus may not have been aiming for the position, but his heavy armor, protective aura, and highly disruptive ultimate make him an excellent tank as a Foot Knight. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive ability: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Protective Presence&#039;&#039;- Aura that reduces damage taken by 15%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Taal&#039;s Fortitude&#039;&#039; - Extra stamina shield&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;No Guts, No Glory&#039;&#039; - Reduces damage taken by 10%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Valiant Charge&#039;&#039;- Charges forward, knocking back any enemies hit by the charge. Also interrupts and stuns bosses and specials. Can be upgraded to make Kruber temporarily invincible, have increased size and the ability to knock over greater enemies, or grant increased attack speed for every enemy hit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grail Knight&#039;&#039;&#039;: MOTHERFUCKING GRAIL KNIGHT!!! The first unique class introduced and locked behind a DLC wall. It was revealed one day Kruber found out his Bretonnian lineage after he received a mysterious letter that was addressed to him with the &#039;&#039;&#039;de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039; surname.  According to Lohner, he used his huge information network to trace back Kruber&#039;s bloodline and found out his father was actually a Bretonnian! but not just any Bretonnian: &#039;&#039;&#039;Foricarl de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039;! who used to be a well-known grail knight in Parravon after he saved the city from a dragon with style! He was widely worshiped since then with arts, music, and clothes referencing him. It wasn&#039;t until the duke&#039;s son, an arsehole by the name &#039;&#039;Willibald&#039;&#039; who is jealous of the hero&#039;s deed that he killed his father, the duke of Parravon, and framed Foricarl for it. The lady had to intervene herself and turned the fucktard into a frog but it was all too late, for Foricarl had already self-exiled in shame. Despite that, he continued to slay beasts and killing chaos shit like a badass until he finally settled at &#039;&#039;&#039;Ubersreik Hills&#039;&#039;&#039; and impregnated Kruber&#039;s mama, only to leave her before Kruber was even born. With the lady&#039;s blessing, Kruber is now &#039;&#039;&#039;Markus de Mandelot&#039;&#039;&#039;! And he now has [[troll|the privilege call his teammates peasants, acting cockier and mightier than even Kerilian, while Bretonnian dancing all the way to the waystone, one-shotting any foe he came across with his magical sword ability]] (a voiceline while waiting to start on a Chaos Wastes expedition &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; has him imply he&#039;s been talking down to Saltzpyre after becoming a Grail Knight just to be a troll). Just like Slayer Bardin Markus can&#039;t use ranged weapons in this career (because peasant weapon dislike and chivalry bullshit), and he doesn&#039;t even have the option of throwing axes like Slayer Bardin does (again, see above), but his special buffs, move speed and ability make him a fantastic boss killer and crowd controller.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive ability: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;The Lady&#039;s Duty&#039;&#039;- Get 2 random quests that grant buffs to the party when completed, lasting until the mission is over. Can be upgraded to have a third quest, stronger buffs, or a repeatable quest that grants a potion of strength each time it&#039;s completed.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Knight&#039;s Challenge&#039;&#039; - 25% extra damage to the first enemy hit.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Thirst for Glory&#039;&#039; - 10% move speed increase.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Bastion of Bretonnia&#039;&#039; - Your shields can now block Warpfire.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Blessed Blade&#039;&#039;- Smite a target with a holy blade. Can be upgraded to deal even more single target damage with a slash and stab, change into a horizontal crowd cleaver or stay the same and increase movement speed upon kill.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Kerillian]]===&lt;br /&gt;
The elf continues to be a standoffish, if slightly nicer, jerk, though her sensitivity masks hidden scars. Her faith forms the crux of her careers, whether remaining a faithful, if conflicted, Waywatcher promoted to Waystalker (This is canon), a Handmaiden more devoted to Isha and protecting others, or losing herself to bloodlust and becoming a Shade of [[Khaine]]. The Drachenfels DLC reveals that Kerillian basically has the biggest impact on the story out of the whole party, with consequences reaching to the rest of Warhammer. She received a vision about how Ubersreik MIGHT have to do with the fall of Athel Loren. With pride and without any thought, she ambushed two regiments of soldiers from Nuln meant to reinforce the city, leaving it undefended... From the Skaven. That&#039;s right, [[Fail|because of her pride, she&#039;s responsible for ALL of the slaughter and death caused by the Vermintide, and contributed more than a fair bit to bringing about the End Times]].This explains her biting behavior, a shield to her own failures. The pilgrimage to the Chaos Wastes broke her resolve and caused her to question her faith, giving up her regrets to Isha and becoming a Sister of the Thorn, losing part of herself and becoming more cynical than ever.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Waystalker&#039;&#039;&#039;: Frustrated with the clumsiness of her companions, Kerillian has resolved to further hone her skills to compensate further for the &amp;quot;lumberfoots&amp;quot;. As a Waystalker, Kerillian further specializes in her longbow, both for precision sniping and for raining arrows on enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Amaranthe&#039;&#039;- Automatically regenerate health (3 health per 10 seconds, up to a maximum of half your total hit points)&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Arrow-Storm&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Waywatcher&#039;s Bow&#039;&#039;- Effective range for ranged weapons is doubled&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Trueflight Volley&#039;&#039;- Fires a volley of homing arrows. Can be upgraded to fire one more arrow, refund ammunition when killing specials, or turn into a single piercing arrow that deals massive damage and has no cooldown when you get a headshot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Handmaiden&#039;&#039;&#039;: Through the subtle guidance of the Everqueen, Kerillian came across a long-lost shrine to Isha and gave herself up to serve her. Kerillian&#039;s Handmaiden Career focuses primarily on dancing around enemies in direct melee combat, and is her most durable career option through both maximum health, stamina, and mobility. The career for players that are allergic to standing still.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;The Dance of Seasons&#039;&#039;- 15% longer dodge distance&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Aura of Renewal&#039;&#039;- Aura that increases stamina regeneration speed by 100%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ariel&#039;s Benison&#039;&#039;- Cannot be interrupted when reviving allies&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Dash&#039;&#039;- Quickly dash forward through enemies, stunning enemies that are hit and causing them to bleed. Has a hilariously low cooldown, the lowest of all of the game&#039;s abilities. Can be upgraded to become invisible after the dash, make anyone you hit bleed or gain crit chance based on how many enemies you hit.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Shade&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of Kerillian&#039;s dreams spoke of an ancestor of hers who dwelled in Clar Karond, and with it came the voice of [[Khaine]] urging her to reclaim the mantle of her ancestor. Kerillian as a Shade is an assassin, focused on rapidly killing elite, special, and boss enemies. She also gains access to the volley crossbow in this career. This is the class to play if you really like killing the absolute shit out of Chaos Warriors and bosses.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Murderous Prowess&#039;&#039;- 50% damage bonus when attacking enemies from behind&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Assassin&#039;s Blade&#039;&#039;- Critical hit backstabs instantly kill man-sized enemies&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Infiltrate&#039;&#039;- Become invisible and intangible for 10 seconds, or until performing an attack. Also has a unlisted effect where any melee  attack that ends Infiltrate gets a massive damage boost; depending on the weapon this can increase the power of Kerillian&#039;s melee attacks to the point where they 1-hit kill a Chaos Warrior on Legendary difficulty, and can even reach the maximum damage value possible for a single attack. Can be upgraded to have less cooldown and grant more crit chance after it ends at the cost of losing the damage bonus, cause her to blink forward while damaging enemies, or allowing her to attack without breaking stealth exactly one time.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sisters of the Thorn&#039;&#039;&#039;: The 3rd microtransaction DLC career. In truth, Kerillian has been losing faith in her goddess Lileath for some times, and it finally reached a critical point after the &#039;&#039;&#039;Citadel of Eternity&#039;&#039;&#039; shenanigan where the said goddess did not answer her. Hoping to rededicate herself to the weaves once more, she began courting other goddesses (even [[Ereth Khial]], the kind of goddess only the mentally ill elf would worship). She ended up going back to Athel Loran to seek answers, and offered up her uncertainty and regrets to the forest. Doing so allowed her to become a &#039;&#039;&#039;Sister of the Thorn&#039;&#039;&#039; , a handmaiden of Isha who can raise up a thorn bush wall to block enemies (or just turn them into a deadly thorn spike that bleeds anyone it targets) as well as providing extra healing to her teammates, leeching extra temporary health from them in exchange. She now also calls her teammates &amp;quot;meat&amp;quot;, as if [[Ferrus Manus|flesh is weaker]] compared to her, a superior plant fused being. She also gains access to the Deepwood Staff, a weapon with similar mechanics to Sienna&#039;s staffs that can make enemies levitate, temporarily disabling them. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Cluster of Radiants&#039;&#039;- Gain a radiance charge that allows free use of your active every 60 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Murder of Sprites&#039;&#039;- Deals more damage to wounded units depending on their remaining health, up to 50%.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;A Sustenance of Leeches&#039;&#039;- Gain temp health if a party member gains temp health when they&#039;re at full health.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;An Attendance of Munificents&#039;&#039;- +25% healing for everyone.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Thornwake&#039;&#039;- Raise a thornwall that blocks movement. Can be upgraded to last longer, deal more damage and apply bleed at the cost of duration or explode with poison when it expires, increasing damage dealt to enemies caught.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Bardin Goreksson]]===&lt;br /&gt;
Short, stout and sure to stomp your arse, Bardin is here to help out his dawris and slaughter some rakis (and anything else that comes in the way). Either he continued his quest for Karak Zorn as a Ranger Veteran (Which is canon), returned to his roots as an Ironbreaker, or forsook life in pursuit of honorable death as a [[Slayer]]. After the trip to Drachenfels however, the regrets that surfaced made him look to his old passions of becoming an Engineer, and thus, became an Outcast Engineer. Life STILL isn&#039;t smooth sailing for him, as  Lohner&#039;s journals reveal that his daughter has gone missing. Whether she&#039;ll be found is anyone&#039;s guess...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ranger Veteran&#039;&#039;&#039;: Karak Zorn is yet to be found, but the defense of Reikland currently comes first for Bardin. Bardin the Ranger Veteran favors the use of ranged weaponry to punish foes from a distance, but he&#039;s more than able to hold his own in melee if a hail of crossbow bolts doesn&#039;t do the trick. Cousin Okri would be proud. While this used to be the least powerful of the range-focused careers due to lacking a consistent means of generating ammo for itself, recent balance updates have made it into an extremely versatile and powerful support class. Of particular note is a talent that gives a chance for every special enemy you kill to drop a bomb, which is just hilariously strong.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Survivalist&#039;&#039;- Special enemies drop ammo on death&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Loaded for Battle&#039;&#039;- +50% ammo capacity&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Fast Hands&#039;&#039;- Increased reload speed&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Ingenious Improvisation&#039;&#039; - 10% chance to not consume health items, potions, or bombs on use&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Disengage&#039;&#039;- Drops a smoke bomb that staggers enemies and turns Bardin invisible as long as he remains within the cloud. Lasts ten seconds. While invisible, Bardin gains increased ranged attack power.  Can be upgraded to remain stealthed even outside the cloud, grant everyone attack speed and temp health while in it, or basically allowing you a free bomb throw.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ironbreaker&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin used to be an Ironbreaker in Kazak Norn, and following the defense of Ubersreik he took up his old oaths and gromril armor once more. The heavy armor and shield of the Ironbreaker makes Bardin a superb tank that can take whatever the enemy can dish out, and then return it in kind. In addition, he gains access to a drakegun and drakefire pistols, which let him spew out gouts of flame. Like in the first game, they do not use ammo and instead use a heat meter, like Sienna. Be mindful that this also means that they&#039;ll kill you if the heat gauge maxes out.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Gromril Armor&#039;&#039;- Negates all damage from 1 hit every 20 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Dwarf-Forged&#039;&#039;- Reduces damage taken by 30%&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Doughty&#039;&#039;- Grants an extra stamina shield&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Resilient&#039;&#039;- Decreases stun duration after getting hit by an attack by 50% &lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Impenetrable&#039;&#039;- Briefly staggers nearby enemies, then forces all man-sized enemies among them to attack Bardin exclusively. Bardin also takes no stamina damage while blocking for the duration, and can block normally unblockable attacks. Can be upgraded to give everyone a power increase, increase its range and duration, or the ability to affect even monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Slayer]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin had been carrying a secret burden in his heart even before Ubersreik, and by the time the Skaven came to Helmgart he had taken up the Slayer&#039;s Oath in the hopes of an honorable death. As a Slayer, Bardin can&#039;t use ranged weapons at all but becomes a melee powerhouse, with exclusive access to the Dual Axes weapon and the ability to take a second melee weapon to replace his ranged weapon slot. Despite his deceptively low base health, he&#039;s one of the tankiest things in the game due to his Oblivious to Pain talent, which is practically mandatory while playing the class. He even has another talent that can increase his base health, as if this weren&#039;t enough. With the addition of the generally-superior Grail Knight and Warrior Priest classes and the comparatively situational nature of the classes&#039; key abilities however, Slayer is often considered the most underpowered class in the game - hopefully a rework will bring it back into the light. &lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 125&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Trophy Hunter&#039;&#039;- Stacking damage buff gained upon hitting an enemy&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Path of Carnage&#039;&#039;- +7.5% attack speed&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Leap&#039;&#039;- Leap forward, stunning enemies and gaining a temporary boost to attack speed.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Outcast Engineer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Bardin&#039;s fourth unique DLC locked class (chronologically the 2nd paid class DLC). Ever since he returned from castle [[Drachenfels]], Bardin has been busy locking himself alone studying machinery. According to Lohner, his uncle &#039;&#039;&#039;Drakki Dagsson&#039;&#039;&#039; used to be an engineer whom Bardin looked up to, much to the dismay of his traditionalist dad &#039;&#039;&#039;Gorrek Dagsson&#039;&#039;&#039; who shuns technology and often came to disagreements with his brother Drakki. Upon learning Bardin was going to become an apprentice engineer, Dagsson went to disengage pneumatic supports at the mine out of anger and caused an earthquake, which also happened at the same time when Bardin was about to receive his apprenticeship. Dagsson managed to get most of the Dwarf to safety before the debris and stones swallowed him alive with the remaining Dwarfs. This forced Bardin to quit his passion to follow in his father&#039;s footsteps, becoming an Ironbreaker, and good ol&#039; Drakki took the blame for the mining accident and became a slayer out of guilt (because of how heroic Dagsson was) and died in a troll cave. Still, tragedy did not end there for Bardin for he would later fail to defend his home, his family and his beardling son just because he wasn&#039;t strong enough to fight off a gutter runner, even led his entire team of sentry died saving him in the process. Filled with grief, Bardin decided to leave his hold and search for Karak Zorn as an excuse to exile himself (because seeker sounds better than exile) but ended up joining Victor&#039;s anti-ratman crusade at Ubersreik instead. The demon living in castle [[Drachenfels]] read everyone like an open book, including a magic resistant Dwarf, and it sarcastically mocked Bardin of his old shame. Having realized maybe he should never have followed his father&#039;s path and perhapes he was never suited for being an Ironbreaker, he went back to his old tinkering passion. With Lohner&#039;s help, Bardin acquired materials, minerals needed for his various tools of destruction like his signature crank gun (read: [[Awesome|handheld Gatling gun, or handheld super repeater handgun because Richard Jordan Gatling doesn&#039;t exist in the Warhammer world]]) and is now out to destroy all those Thaggrakis and Dumals with it!... Unfortunately, despite the sheer and undeniable cool factor of the class, the Outcast Engineer often stands rock-bottom of Vermintide career tier lists; he is very squishy (despite his appearance) and has no options to buy himself some space so he will go down quickly if he&#039;s in the hands of a player who doesn&#039;t know exactly what they are doing, nor does he have any abilities that synergize with and support his teammates (unlike the Ranger Veteran). Outcast Engineer can be a decent boss killer and do OK in support of a ranged-focused party if the player behind him is good, but there are better options out there.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Build Pressure&#039;&#039;- Holding reload with the crank gun equipped builds pressure, gradually restoring the ability bar. Stacks are lost when you fire.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Gunsmith&#039;&#039;- +50% Max ammo.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Spotter&#039;&#039;- +10% Ranged Power to nearby allies.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Utility Belt&#039;&#039;- Allows you to carry three different bombs, cycling through them with the bomb key.&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Steam-Assisted Crank Gun (mk2)&#039;&#039;- An interesting active ability that&#039;s more like a third weapon, activating Bardin&#039;s special gun. Switching to the gun doesn&#039;t use up the bar, nor does it build up automatically. You &amp;quot;Reload&amp;quot; the gun in order to fill up your ability bar over time, and you can fire it as long as you have &amp;quot;ammo&amp;quot; in it. Can be upgraded to fire slower but stronger slugs, immediately start out firing at full speed, or have a longer ability bar that temporarily isn&#039;t used when you kill a special.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===[[Sienna Fuegonasus]]===&lt;br /&gt;
As fiery and feisty as ever, the U5&#039;s witch is here to blaze a trail through rat and rot alike. How she does it forms the basis of her paths in life: She either made an attempt to discipline herself as a Battle Wizard (Canon), split between freedom and control as a Pyromancer or lost herself to the flame as an Unchained. It&#039;s eventually revealed in Lohner&#039;s journals that Sienna &amp;quot;had&amp;quot; a sister named Sofia. They weren&#039;t on the best terms, but they were family, so when Sofia was accused of being a [[Necromancer]], Sienna burned the town responsible for accusing her. [[Fail|And then it turns out she WAS a necromancer, so Sienna burned her too]]. Note the quotation marks, as Lohner recently got a letter from someone claiming to be Sofia, blackmailing him to do her a favor or else some of his unsavory secrets would be revealed. This fiasco finally blew up in everyone&#039;s faces (which fits Sienna) when Sofia finally made her appearance known in the Trails to Treachery, and now the 5 have to deal with whatever madness she has.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Battle Wizard&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ubersreik taught Sienna the value of self-control, and while she was reluctant to do so she has learned to control the flame for the first time. The greater degree of self-discipline Sienna has as a Battle Wizard allows her to focus on perfecting her spellcasting, letting her cast spells more quickly, more often, and for more damage.&lt;br /&gt;
** Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Tranquility&#039;&#039;- Passively vents overcharge after 6 seconds of not casting spells&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Reckless Haste&#039;&#039;- Overcharge increases spell charge rate&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Pyromantic Surge&#039;&#039;- 10% increased ranged damage&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Fire Walk&#039;&#039;- Quickly teleport forward, leaving a trail of fire behind you. Can be upgraded to have lower cooldown, a bigger and stronger explosion with no more fire trail, or the ability to double-cast within 10 seconds.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pyromancer&#039;&#039;&#039;: While far from having the control of a proper Battle Wizard, Sienna has enough self-awareness to restrain herself from the most ostentatious of fire magic. Sienna the Pyromancer trades in the consistency of her Battle Wizard career for more explosive moments of burst damage. Of special note is a talent which lets her activated ability also instantly clear all overcharge.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 100&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities:&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Critical Mass&#039;&#039;- Critical chance increases based on overcharge level&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Searing Focus&#039;&#039;- 10% increased ranged damage&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;The Burning Head&#039;&#039;- A powerful fire blast that initially travels directly forward, but after a short time it will attempt to home in on the closest enemy; holding the active ability key down allows the user to designate a target for the fire blast to home in on instead. It will jump from foe to foe, killing until it runs out of power. Anything not killed by the blast is staggered, including bosses. Can be upgraded to refund cooldown on crit, vent her overcharge on cast or give her temporary health.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unchained&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sienna&#039;s addiction to magic has finally overwhelmed her, and now she lives only from one magical high to the next. As an Unchained, Sienna favors magically-boosted melee, with a focus on generating as much overcharge as possible before moving in for the kill.&lt;br /&gt;
**Base Health: 150&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique passive abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Blood Magic&#039;&#039;- 50% of damage received is converted to overcharge. Do not get hit while at high levels of overcharge, lest you accidentally [[Fail|explode yourself like a dunce]].&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Slave to Aqshy&#039;&#039;- No overcharge slowdown&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;Unstable Strength&#039;&#039;- High overcharge increases melee attack power up to 60%&lt;br /&gt;
**Unique active ability: &#039;&#039;Living Bomb&#039;&#039;- Expends all overcharge to produce a massive explosion centered on Sienna, dealing heavy damage to all nearby enemies. Fortunately, this can be done even while beginning to explode from too much overcharge. Can be upgraded to increase power based on how many you hit, gain a scorching aura after it&#039;s finished or give everyone temp health.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unknown Fifth Class&#039;&#039;&#039;: Revealed during the announcement of the Karak Azgaraz DLC, it seems like it&#039;s finally time for the pyro-witch to get her paid DLC class, with a release date of Fall 2023. From what little the trailer showed, it looks like she had fallen in with some other form of magic if the multi-colored flames had anything to say about it, and according to her dialogue it might very well piss the rest of the Ubersreik Five something fierce. Some guesses before were Magister Vigilant, Myrmidia Priest, or some other kind of Pyromancy user like  Unchained was...but after the teaser, many propose that Black Magister (magic users that gamble on using the Dark Arts, or just trying to use more than one Wind dangerously), could be the more probable option for Sienna 4th. It would not be the most lore-friendly option, but it would not be lore breaking unlike her just switching to another Wind of Magic just because. But alas, noone is a soothsayer so we cant guess what Fatshark will make. we can only wait until it releases.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Other Characters ==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Franz Lohner&#039;&#039;&#039;: The bartender of the Red Moon Inn, transferring over to the Taal&#039;s Horn Keep. You guys do the heavy lifting, he does most of the behind the scenes stuff: Keeping your home nice and cozy, getting intel, stocking up on supplies, you get the drill. Unfortunately, he also runs the Emporium of Wonders, aka, [[Rage|the microtransaction shop]]. Seemingly knows everything and everyone, including any secrets your own characters have. Talking to him has him rattle off various nods to the lore of Warhammer and more specifically, [[The End Times]]. The devs also use him to write journals and story bits about the game through the &amp;quot;Franz Lohner Chronicles&amp;quot;, which are tidbits for his journal. Journal entries and random conversations heavily imply that he&#039;s [[Warhammer: Shadow of the Horned Rat|Morgan Bernhardt from Shadow of the Horned Rat and Dark Omen.]]&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Olesya Pimenova&#039;&#039;&#039;: The carriage handler from the first game turned out to be a Gray Witch. Whod&#039;ve thunk? As usual, your ride in and out of your jobs, this time using a Bridge of Shadows teleporter instead of horses. Helps make plans along with Lohner while occasionally working alongside you on your missions, secretly doing magic stuff while you not-so-secretly kill everything. Heavily implied to be the true form of the Grey Wizard Christoph Engel from the first game. She also has the hots for Kruber, a fact which he&#039;s unfortunately aware of.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Catrinne of Aldenstein&#039;&#039;&#039;: The artist making some the paintings you can decorate the keep with once you find three pieces of Ravaged Art in a mission. You never see her, but you can sometimes hear her. She&#039;s haunted by visions which inspire her paintings, but Lohner&#039;s wary of how ominous she describes them. She apparently has a crush on Saltzpyre (A fact which Salty himself doesn&#039;t know, but hilariously enough, Kruber does), and she sometimes has to fight off Bardin from eating her brushes because he finds them delicious.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Cousin Okri&#039;&#039;&#039;: In the vein of Left 4 Dead 2&#039;s Keith, Okri is oft-mentioned by Bardin and rather implied by him to be the most-asskickingest Dwarf since [[Gotrek]], yet he is never actually seen and understandably is doubted to even exist by a number of fans and even the U5 at times (though Lohner has insisted in written lore excerpts that he&#039;s actually read letters from Okri and is in written contact with him). You will &#039;&#039;never&#039;&#039; be as good as Cousin Okri.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Enemies ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Bosses&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Grey Seer Rasknitt:&#039;&#039;&#039; The same asshole in charge of invading Ubersreik is back, and he&#039;s the final boss of the main campaign. Having captured the heroes in the first game, he attempts to sacrifice them to fuel the Skittergate, a portal contraption capable of bringing in huge armies in a flash. With it, he and the Rotbloods swarmed Helmgart and the countryside, though as is typical of technology made by mice, it breaks in the prologue. It&#039;s fixed soon after though, and much of the game is dedicated to destroying it. During the final showdown, he sent his precious Stormfiend called Deathrattler (who uses dual-ratling guns instead of the flamethrowers) against you, only to call it a worthless piece of junk after the heroes killed it. He then attacks the heroes with his Skaven magic, teleports around at lightning speed while summoning special Skaven of all types, then is blown the fuck up once the rat bastard&#039;s health is at its end. You then get his helmet as a trophy for the Keep, and the fact that it has voices whispering into it explains MUCH about how insane this rat-bastard is.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Champion B&amp;amp;ouml;dvarr Ribspreader:&#039;&#039;&#039; Here to spread ribs and smiles in Papa Nurgle&#039;s name, Ribspreader is a Champion of Chaos and the scary dude on the box cover. The leader of the Rotbloods, who are said to be insane even by Chaos Warbands&#039; standards, he&#039;s here to slaughter and destroy, and has allied himself with Rasknitt for that purpose. He berates the Grey Seer for the portal&#039;s failure, but interestingly enough &#039;&#039;doesn&#039;t&#039;&#039; spread&#039;s his ribs for it, though it&#039;s probably because Rasknitt is more powerful than he is. Figures mainly into Act 3, where the gang messes with everything he has. After hitting a breaking point as the heroes foil his plans and kill his men and free his slaves, he sends out most of his army to scout for and attack the Keep, but thanks to Olesya reading the script, they learn about this, attack his under-staffed camp, and kill him in his own arena. Despite claiming that he can take care of the heroes all by himself, he displays cowardice, [[Carron|ranting and bawwing about the precious slaves and loots he lost to the Ubersreik Five/Four/Doesn&#039;t Matter]] when he starts losing and calls his warriors for aid, with a horde attacking as he loses health. Interesting to note that despite being a Nurgle worshipper, he has a magic axe (which the axe itself is alive, noted by the growing eye skull on the axe) that he can call back to him if he ever throws it out against the players. Saltzpyre would often refer to it as &amp;quot;flying axe witch&amp;quot; whenever it was thrown. You gain this axe as a trophy for the keep, and study of it reveals that Ribby is just one of many, many Chaos Warriors who wielded the thing.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Burblespue Halescourge:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Nurgle sorcerer lord that the Skaven met back at Stromdorf, and the boss of Act 1. Has a good manner like papa Nurgle himself and he can do everything that the Nurgle sorcerer can do in the game (AKA life drain &amp;amp; Nurgle Vortex) only tougher and more AOE green plague in the oxygen, with a couple of unique abilities like summoning a swarm of flies to chase and stun one of the players, summon green images of himself to attack the players as well as erect an even bigger green vortex in the center of the battlefield.  He will absolutely make you fucking rage with his lack of visual cues for his attacks, his billion and one hit points, and his habit of teleporting around like a fucking asshole whenever someone so much as sneezes on the fucker. Has a large number of very angry nicknames from the fandom, several of which have even made it into official patch notes (e.g. &amp;quot;Bunglesnatch Humbledink&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Vorpalblade Noobhurl&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Hailstorm Barbeque&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Bubbly-Spurge&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Bubblespit Halleberry&amp;quot;, among many others). You get his staff and tome from killing him, and you find out the latter was made from human skin and inked in blood. Lovely.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Skarrik Spinemanglr:&#039;&#039;&#039; The &amp;quot;Scary&amp;quot; Skaven Warlord in charge, and the boss of Act 2. Seem to be heavily inspired by Queek Headtaker in both his looks, size, and unskavenly bravery, although he uses a more traditional halberd alongside dual shortswords. Just like Queek, he is the largest non-monster Skaven of them all, towering over the players. He will regularly summon Stormvermin and Skavenslaves, if you don&#039;t take care of them quickly it can snowball into a horde no player could ever hope to kill. He is also fully armored like Ribspreader, but unlike him, Skarrik is much faster, forcing the player to have a frustrating time of chipping his health away with their seemly ineffective charge attack. Also, he calls you [[What|cat fondlers]] and is responsible for Saltzpyre&#039;s lost eye. After he dies, civil war and general chaos erupts throughout the Skaven underground, decreasing the amount of forces guarding the Skittergate. You also get his armor and spears for the keep.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgloth the Eternal:&#039;&#039;&#039; A new boss for the new Drachenfels DLC map and another one of Nurgle&#039;s stinky boy. He used to be the chief rival of shitstorm sorcerer from above, and has been trying to take over his rival&#039;s throne. Like every dumbass heretical sorcerer, he went after old Drachenfels&#039; castle in search of his old research about demons and other crazy shit to make himself even more powerful, which he did and was possessed or at least is in contract with a demon, but was driven mad after he glimpsed the realm of chaos. Still, it allows him to see a bit of future sight as well as gaining much higher power than before. After our heroes defeated the two walking-toilets above, he began his no-good operation in Drachenfels&#039; castle and started to sacrifice captured villagers from nearby for his ritual. His little scheme didn&#039;t go unnoticed under Lohner&#039;s ear and was dealt with by our heroes after a trilogy of missions. In combat, he wields a giant scythe for slicing while he hovers (only the last phase), shoots flies that explode and snare the player, summons his rotblood minions, and using a magic attack that resembles an AoE ability from a typical MOBA game. Currently the hardest boss due to the amount of health he has and the bullshit last phase where he seeks out players and knocks them to his magic fart zone with his rotblood minions still roaming around him. He also explodes when you kill him, and you acquire his scythe and armor for your victory.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gatekeeper Nagfahr:&#039;&#039;&#039; A Ribspreader look-alike, even shares the same axe design....until the recent patch came and changed its entire outlook. He now only uses a normal axe with his head exposed: [[Eliphas the Inheritor| pale bald head]], probably the only chaos warriors that showed his face in the game. Responsible for guarding the skittergate key staff. Was [[chaos|blessed]] during the battle and turned into...[[Chaos Spawn|It-Which-Must-Not-Be-Named]]. Far easier than Ribspreader, being a level&#039;s mid-boss to build up to the final battle with Rasknitt.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Baron Justus Francke:&#039;&#039;&#039; Not an enemy you fight but nonetheless important to the plot. Besides the Skaven having a portal underneath Helmgart, Fucko Francke is the other reason Ussingen and the countryside were overrun so quickly. It&#039;s revealed he made some kind of deal with the Rotbloods and Clan Fester, and like a lot of shitty nobles, might&#039;ve been in league with the Chaos Gods even before the invasion. His fortified mansion, the only undamaged building in Ussingen, is blown up accordingly by the heroes. His fate is unknown.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sofia Fuegonasus&#039;&#039;&#039;: Sienna&#039;s sister. They weren&#039;t the closest, but they were close enough that when Sofia was accused of being a necromancer, Sienna immediately burned the accusers... Then Sofia because as it turns out, [[Fail|she was one]]. Being a necromancer, she didn&#039;t quite stay dead. She first made her &amp;quot;appearance&amp;quot; in Franz Lohner&#039;s Chronicles and tried to blackmail him into having a talk with Sienna. He didn&#039;t take the bait, but it all came to a head as she became the main antagonist of the &amp;quot;Trails to Treachery&amp;quot;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Skaven&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Clan Fester&#039;s back, and they&#039;re pissed. Sore after getting thwarted at Ubersreik, they want revenge. They almost managed to get it by capturing the heroes and finally managing to capture Ubersreik, and with the Rotblood alliance for constructing a Skittergate portal to Norsca, things seem to be in the bag... Until [[Fail|it malfunctions and frees Kruber, leading him to free everyone else]]. Still, they&#039;re stronger now, with Clan Pestilens rats joining their ranks and being just as determined as ever to spread the power of the warp and stave off their extinction.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Skavenslaves:&#039;&#039;&#039; Still the most piss-poor enemies in the game. Even though they come in huge swarms they&#039;re only dangerous if they blindside you or if you&#039;re too busy dealing with actual threats.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Clanrats:&#039;&#039;&#039; Rank and file of clan Fester, only slightly better than slaves. Now come with a shield and hand weapon variant that could hopefully block one or two hits from the front and make dealing with the horde slightly more difficult.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Plague Monks:&#039;&#039;&#039; A more durable Skaven with fast attacks designed to exhaust the player&#039;s stamina. Weak to ranged fire but hit like a freight train and knock you back. They let out a loud howl when they charge, but can be hard to spot in a swarm. Usually, spawn in triplets and tend to focus a single target just to make sure even 7+ stamina would not be enough to withstand their attack.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormvermin&#039;&#039;&#039; - The most common breed of Special Skaven, Stormvermin will spawn at random among the crowds of Clanrats seeded throughout the various levels. Unlike the rest of their ratty brethren, the Stormvermin have actual armor, actual weapons, and actual training, making them a serious threat. Their halberds do more damage than the standard Clanrat improvised weaponry, and hits against them that don&#039;t aim for the head (or have the Armor Piercing trait) will glance off their armor. Even blocking their attacks is difficult, since they do significant Stamina damage and therefore have a high chance of breaking your block and putting you into stun, making you an easy kill. At higher difficulties, they become one of the most significant threats in the game, and require careful combat to take down safely or make ranged weapons good at taking them down quick very desirable.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormvermin&#039;&#039;&#039; (Sword &amp;amp; Shield): Elite troops who still sound vaguely like Bane, except some of them now have swords and shields that give them multiple attacks and near-immunity to frontal hits (but mercifully deals less damage than the halberd wielders), plus their shields are metal and can&#039;t be broken. All around assholes, and a definite reason to consider having a handgun on the team since it&#039;s one of the only ranged weapons capable of easily handling them from the front.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Stormvermin Patrol&#039;&#039;&#039; - Once or twice per map, if you&#039;re listening carefully, you&#039;ll hear the sound of rats shouting out a ratty little marching drill. And if you&#039;re smart, you&#039;ll hide. If you&#039;re not smart, you&#039;ll die, because the Patrol is a massive mob of Stormvermin that all aggro at once if they spot any of the heroes, and will never back down from a fight. Their numbers are slightly randomized, but rule of thumb is for +5 rats for each difficulty level, so at Legendary difficulty you&#039;re facing patrol sizes that wouldn&#039;t be out of place in an actual game of Warhammer Fantasy Battles. Yeah. [[Anal Circumference|Have fun with that]].&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gutter Runner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Representing Clan Eshin, we have these stabby little ninja rats with warp-dust coated knives strapped to their hands. They lurk in the shadows, trying to find a hero that&#039;s cut off from the rest of the group or waiting for you to be otherwise distracted, then pounce and pin one hero to the ground while they stab and stab and stab until the puny man-thing stops moving. Once you&#039;re pinned (but you &#039;&#039;can&#039;&#039; hope to dodge their jumps at you by dodging to a side), you&#039;re helpless. It&#039;s up to the rest of the team to save you. So if you hear that strange whispering in the distance, make sure to stay close to your team.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Packmaster&#039;&#039;&#039; - Clan Moulder&#039;s representatives, the Packmasters have taken up capturing humans for slaving. To this end, they cart around giant spiked collars on poles; if they get close enough, they&#039;ll snap that collar shut around your neck, disabling you like the Gutter Runner. The good news is that the collar doesn&#039;t hurt nearly as much as the knives and you can dodge it if you time it right. The &#039;&#039;bad&#039;&#039; news is that the Packmaster will drag you off into the distance, probably through a mob of Clanrats, and then hang you up to die - or at least for the rest of their companions to stab while you wriggle helplessly.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Poison Wind Globadier&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Skryre-rat in a gas mask, with a miniature plague factory on its back. At a distance, it will constantly lob spheres full of gas so poisonous that it eats into the skin like acid, covering the battlefield in green clouds of death. The good news is that these are as poisonous to the other Skaven as they are to our heroes. The bad news is that you&#039;ll still die like a bitch if you stand in one. And if you get too close, they&#039;ll rig the tanks on their backs to explode, taking you with them in one final kamikaze assault.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Ratling Gunner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Clan Skryre is pulling overtime here. This rat&#039;s got a miniaturized, one-man version of the tabletop Ratling Gun strapped to its back, and the rest of its body is covered in heavy armor. When it finds a good firing line, it&#039;ll wind up that gun and then unleash a hellstorm of warp-shot onto one of the heroes, tracking them as best as it can. The good news is that it&#039;s not very accurate, kills Skaven who enter its firing line, and tends to jam after a while. The bad news is that it&#039;s firing so many bullets that it&#039;s probably going to hit you anyway, and while it&#039;s not as powerful as a full-sized &amp;quot;kill both knight and his horse with a single bullet&amp;quot; ratling gun it still hurts a lot. Got a significant buff compared to the original game by taking body amour and revving up his gun quite a bit faster.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Warpfire Thrower:&#039;&#039;&#039; Another Skryre-rat, now with a flamethrower strapped to its back, which it uses to spew out gouts of green fire at anything in range. The good news is that it has a shorter range compared to the Ratling Gunner and gives even less fucks about torching other Skaven and Rotbloods in its path. Bad news is it hurts even more than the Ratling Gunner, knocks you back, and blocks your vision as well - not a Special you&#039;d want to see while you&#039;re out of ammo. The warpstone crystal on its back is its weak spot, but it violently explodes if said weak spot is hit, leaving a sizeable puddle of the flaming warpstone on the ground. While it can take out a lot of enemies with the explosion, it also makes engaging it in melee even more suicidal, especially if you use wide-sweeping weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Barrel Rat:&#039;&#039;&#039; Special Skaven enemy type that exists only in special game modes like the Weave or in Weekly Events. Their role is simple: SUICIDE BOMBER! Try to shoot them down before they reach you! A bane to melee only characters like Bardin&#039;s Slayer (without the throwing axe) and Kruber&#039;s Grail Knight.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Rat Ogre&#039;&#039;&#039; - The triumph of Clan Moulder&#039;s scientific prowess. The Rat Ogre, like the Stormvermin Patrol, is a once-a-map event, barring special mission rules, and is always announced by a throat-peeling bellow of rage. It&#039;s a giant, hulking brute that rampages across the battlefield, pummeling and punching its way through any heroes it can find. It &#039;&#039;is&#039;&#039; possible to kite the Ogre, but the problem is that it&#039;s rarely alone; the true difficulty arises in managing the Ogre and the accompanying Clanrats at the same time, since they limit your mobility just by existing.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Stormfiend:&#039;&#039;&#039; If you thought the Rat Ogres were a huge pain in the ass, say hello to their upgraded cousins, the masterwork of Clan Moulder and Clan Skyre! They are clad in heavy armor from the front and wield twin warp-fire throwers attached to their arms. Unlike the warpfire throwers on regular Skaven, these ones leave a burning trail on the ground for quite a time, turning a battlefield into a maze of green fire if you let it disengage and rain fire on you from distance - it&#039;s worth it to backtrack to more open areas if you come across a Stormfield because of this. Their major weakness is the smaller Skaven acting as a second brain that&#039;s stuck on their backs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sack Rat&#039;&#039;&#039; - A Skaven with a big sack full of loot. Pretty rare to spawn. It doesn&#039;t attack on its own, [[Fail|but kills teams anyway as the people in it tunnel vision on it before being killed by all the other enemies in the level]] (seriously, a loading screen tip jokingly tells you to do this). If you can kill it before it runs off you&#039;ll get to claim its stuff. One of its notable dialogues is &#039;&#039;&#039;MINE! MINE! MINE!&#039;&#039;&#039; whenever it walks, so it&#039;s easy to spot it from such obvious dialogue.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Warriors of Chaos&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The Rotbloods, a Nurgle Warband so fanatical to the Rot-Father that they make typical fanatics look tame. They&#039;re in league with Clan Fester to work on the Skittergate while plundering Reikland&#039;s countryside. They&#039;re generally tougher and hit harder compared to Skaven, but come in smaller groups, are slower on flat ground, even slower at climbing vertical obstacles, and most importantly spawn from the same points rather than crawling out from every nook and cranny including those on the ceiling.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Nurgle Cultists:&#039;&#039;&#039; Your typical cannon fodder of Nurgle about as tough as a Clanrat. Fill the same role as Skaven slaves in the Chaos horde, though they might last an extra hit compared to slaves.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Marauders:&#039;&#039;&#039; Plague-ridden warriors that come in four flavors:&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Raiders&#039;&#039;&#039; (hand weapon) and &#039;&#039;&#039;Bulwarks&#039;&#039;&#039; (hand weapon and shield) are the basic units for the Chaos Forces and fulfill a similar role to Clanrats, but they are significantly more durable than the former.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Savages(Frothers)&#039;&#039;&#039; (dual-wielding weapons) are pretty much carbon copies of Plague Monks and work exactly the same except its attacks aren&#039;t as fast.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Maulers&#039;&#039;&#039; (great weapons) huge guys with huge axes and huge horned helmets. Fill the niche of a Stormvermin in the Chaos horde, leading packs of marauders and acting as a primary threat in them, except they hit even harder, depleting all the stamina in one hit, are only armored on the head and &#039;&#039;heavily so&#039;&#039; (seriously, it&#039;s not worth shooting them there with non-guns), and have more health.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Warriors:&#039;&#039;&#039; ASININE MORTALS!! The great axe variant. The toughest non-boss enemy in the game. Has nearly three times as much health as a Stormvermin, and their armor is so thick that even headshots from guns hardly faze them. They can down you in a hit or two from full health but are very slow targets, and they&#039;ll trash talk one of you to let you know who they&#039;re aiming for. For extra fun, they sometimes spawn two or three at a time.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Patrol:&#039;&#039;&#039; when you thought Stormvermin patrol was bad, these guys come in with their chaosy march song... Include at least &#039;&#039;&#039;SIX&#039;&#039;&#039; Warriors and Maulers even at the lowest difficulty with the rest filled with Raiders and Bulwarks. A tougher patrol by far compared to the Stormvermin&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos Sorcerers of Nurgle:&#039;&#039;&#039; Come in two variants - the Lifeleech (also known as &amp;quot;[[/d/|Chester the molester]]&amp;quot; by many players), who teleports around and attempt to bind a character to leech their health, and the Blightstormer, who casts a Nurgle-flavored green vortex spell that sucks in both the enemies and player characters, damaging and preventing them from moving. (The Blightstormer also likes to talk about how Papa blessed them with sniffles and brings forth much joy.)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Bile Trolls:&#039;&#039;&#039; Chaos Trolls of Nurgle. Wield huge blunt weapons and spew acidic bile that slows you and drains your stamina as long as you&#039;re exposed to it, much like Stormfields it&#039;s absolutely worth turning around to a more open part of the map to be able to better avoid the puke. They can also attempt to heal themselves over time, both as a passive effect and as an ability they channel when their health is low. When this happens, they fall to their knees and gain a temp health bar. You and everyone else better start [[Rape|dogpiling the FUCK out of it]] to empty it and prevent full health regen, or life will only suck harder.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Chaos Spawn|The Unnameable Beasts]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Tough boss monsters that like to chew you to regain their health. They are also probably the worst thing to face with pubbies, as they devour you, smack you into other players damaging and potentially downing them, and each snack they grab heals them. You will definitely want to use your bombs and any other knockback abilities you have to stop their chow time. Oh and they are about one of the fastest boss enemies just like the rat ogres with the exception being their head isn&#039;t as noticeable, therefore harder to deal big damage with headshots. Have fun with that.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The Cloven Ones are an enemy faction that premiered in the &amp;quot;Winds of Magic&amp;quot; expansion pack. They are the true children of Chaos, born amidst the collapse of the Polar Warp Gates and the subsequent release of Chaos energy into the world. As such, they serve the Chaos Gods without question, as their souls are forfeit to Chaos at the moment of their conception. Although the Beastmen vary in appearance, as true to their Chaos heritage, they are mainly comprised of humanoid mutants and abominations with bestial features such as cloven hooves, horns, and goatlike heads. Warpstone meteor falling into Reikland got their attention, and now they seek to claim it as a Herdstone. Afterwards, they have a chance to appear in any mission.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Ungors:&#039;&#039;&#039; Ungors are the weakest and most humanlike of the Beastmen, with most possessing diminutive horns or no horns at all. However, they are no less hateful and repulsive than their larger cousins. They use spears and bows, making them the first common enemy type to have a ranged attack.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039; Ungor Raiders:&#039;&#039;&#039; The weakest specials in the game, they look similar to regular Ungors but have much darker skin and white body paint across their upper body. Despite falling over in a stiff breeze, their arrows do lowish damage and they have an average rate of fire. The real threat is when you&#039;re caught out of cover by large packs of 8~10+ Ungor Raiders who will sustain fire their arrows so there&#039;s no safe opening to close the gap, and being exposed leads to a lot of damage quickly. Since they often shoot from far away at an area where melee can&#039;t reach them like a balcony or a cliff, they must be taken out with ranged weapons, which is a required waste of ammunition for some characters, unless the player is an Ironbreaker armed with a drakepistol, Bardin with a throwing axe, a Huntsman Kruber with a knack for headshots, or Sienna.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Gors:&#039;&#039;&#039; The most common of the Beastmen, Gors form the backbone of the Beastmen Brayherd. Each Gor is recognized for their resplendent rack of horns, with larger horns denoting higher status within the Beastmen hierarchy. Prerelease screenshots and artwork show Gors wielding Man-cleavers and two-handed axes, although more variations are possible.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Bestigors:&#039;&#039;&#039; Bestigors are the elite of the Brayherd as their name would imply. They can use a charge attack to knock down players and are heavily armored (not as much as chaos warriors despite being chaos and is more akin to Stormvermin armor), though this charge attack can be interrupted by a good hit/shot to them while charging to trip them or dodged.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Standard Bearers:&#039;&#039;&#039; Beastmen who carry foul standards into battle to increase the Brayherds morale. They can place their magical standards to buff their comrades with a buffer of temporary health on top of their max health, and regeneration of their base health which can make fights take longer if players don&#039;t finish off enemies. Best to fight your way to the flag and smash it before things get harder.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen Patrol&#039;&#039;&#039; - The patrol for the Beastmen. Unlike the previous two patrols, it contains some Ungor Raiders for ranged fire support and two standard-bearers with the rest filled with Bestigors.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Minotaurs:&#039;&#039;&#039; A new monster-boss enemy, Minotaurs are the most Beastmen-like of Beastmen: extremely strong, extremely ferocious, and extremely dumb. Minotaurs are more aggressive than any other boss type, beelining for the nearest hero and attacking them relentlessly. They have a charge ability like the Stormfiend and can deal serious damage to players and enemies alike in their path. One of the nastier differences is that Minotaurs get the healing benefits of Battle Standards, but not the bonus health. This isn&#039;t too noticeable on Recruit or Veteran, but Champion and above the health regeneration makes it the hardest boss when both enemies are present together. Oh, and they&#039;re bigger than the other regular bosses, meaning more reach and having to aim higher for the head. Have fun.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Gameplay Tips (aka How To Avoid Dying Like An Asshole) ==&lt;br /&gt;
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1. Don&#039;t be That Guy who wanders off alone and dies due to getting incapacitated due to the half-dozen or so methods an enemy can do such a thing.  I don&#039;t care how badass you think you are, nothing actually makes you immune to being pounced by a Gutter Runner, hooked by a Packmaster, yote by a Blightstormer, et cetera.  Seriously, wandering off alone is one of the certain ways you can get kicked from a match, along with going AFK during horde or boss attacks.&lt;br /&gt;
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2. If someone starts grabbing Tomes and Grimoires, fucking follow them and hope they know where to show you where the others are.  Because if you are not grabbing them, you&#039;re not optimizing your loot and XP gain, thus you are shit and should uninstall this game (and/or kill  yourself). Or don&#039;t, whatever, I&#039;m not [[Asmodai]]. &lt;br /&gt;
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3. If you play Sienna and overheat more than twice in a match, don&#039;t be butthurt when you get kicked.  Learn to manage your overheat, or learn to play anything else.  (Same goes for playing an Ironbreaker with drakefire guns.)&lt;br /&gt;
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4. The game is actually really great about audio clues for your enemies; if you hear something suspicious, start looking around for the source of the sound.  Nine times out of ten, you can spot a Gutter Runner or other special enemy fast enough to kill it.  The other tenth time?  Hope your buddies didn&#039;t rush forward and leave you for dead.&lt;br /&gt;
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5. Consider taking weapons with Shield Breaking and/or Armor Piercing if you&#039;re consistently getting fucked up by the heavier enemies.  Instead of having to charge up a heavy attack, you just make regular attacks as fast as you can and watch enemies like Stormvermin and Chaos Warriors get fucked up.&lt;br /&gt;
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6. Mix in side-dodges and pushes with your melee swings in order to defend yourself. The different weapons each have optimal attack/push/dodge patterns unique to them. Learn yours. Blind offense is a good way to get yourself killed by stray hits from trash mobs. Side-dodging repeatedly also has the benefit of helping you not get surrounded as the hordes have to relocate to you.&lt;br /&gt;
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8. Trying to outrace other players for DPS is only going to get everyone killed, which means nobody gets loot and very little XP.  Don&#039;t be that asshole who tries to &amp;quot;prove&amp;quot; something to the others by trying to outperform them. The only stat that matters is how much damage you took. Kills will happen eventually. Focus on keeping yourself alive and healthy first and foremost.&lt;br /&gt;
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9. This is a fucking co-op game.  Heal other people, leave stuff they need behind, try to watch their backs.  If you can&#039;t handle this concept, then you really need to try a different game; &amp;quot;lone wolf&amp;quot; types are wasting both their time and everyone else&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
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10. When the coast isn&#039;t clear, don&#039;t make forward progress in the map. You don&#039;t want to trigger a boss fight while knee deep in a horde. While dealing with shit and you have to move around, go backwards, not forwards.&lt;br /&gt;
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11. Don&#039;t be afraid to use those bombs and potions the moment things are beginning to look dicey. One thing (horde, patrol, special) can be handled without too much trouble, but the multiples are what kills teams. Also, Strength potions oddly enough do affect ranged weapons and bombs.&lt;br /&gt;
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12. Dash abilities (such as Foot Knight&#039;s or Zealot&#039;s abilities) can be canceled part of the way by blocking, allowing you to gain value from them while not charging away from your group if you&#039;re already with them.&lt;br /&gt;
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13. You can block-cancel other things too, depending on your weapon. Attacks, pushes and other actions can be stopped with a block either for defense or speeding up your combos.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Gallery ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ranger Veteran.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ironbreaker.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Slayer.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Vermintide 2 fat nurgle worshipper.png|[[Glottkin|HELLO I&#039;M FUCKING FAT TOO]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Vermintide 2 fat nurgle worshipper2.png|[[Ogre|WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN MY SWAMP???]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Lumberfoots only by a20t43c.png|How Kerillian came to live in a tent.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
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== Links ==&lt;br /&gt;
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* [http://www.vermintide.com/ Website]&lt;br /&gt;
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AovSuioMM2w&amp;amp;t=105s Announcement Trailer plus a little bit of gameplay]&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Warhammer Fantasy]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2A02:1810:4E2C:A900:E568:E67B:BF8C:96C6</name></author>
	</entry>
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