Actinium wrote: Even taking historical precedents into account you still have the new canoptek spyder scarab hive rule which returns swarms to a unit up to starting strength with no mention of 1 wound or full wounds, the same as RP, and spyders have never created anything but full wound scarab bases.
They have never once forgotten to mention the 1 wound stipulation in the 15 years they have had the rule across 5 editions, and continue to use it for other models with resurrection rules like apothecaries. They omitted it now with clear purpose.
False, as has been shown in this thread numerous times.
The status quo of this thread still hasn't changed.
Charistoph still has yet to present a valid argument. His current argument breaks all the Core Rules and is dismissed as absurd.
Orknado still has a valid argument with Rules As Written support.
Doctortom has still failed to provide any rules support for his critiques of Orknado's argument (meaning he has been unable to counter Orknado's rule supported claim that slain models are not in units so they don't have datasheet or a wound characteristic)
Ghaz is still in confusion about what counts as a rules source.
So that means that Destroyers reanimate with 3 wounds.
Charistoph wrote: Has anyone actually tried them both ways in several games? How many multi-Wound units did you run, and which one did they feel best priced at?
Destroyers are already too expensive to take much as is. Have RP only bring them back with a single wound and they'll be shelved en mass.
That doesn't actually answer the question. Have you actually played them with both concepts?
A) that was not an attempt to answer, that was me just making a comment about what would happen if you give an average unit a handicap.
Of what you perceive to be a handicap. Play time would better determine balance vs handicap.
skoffs wrote:B) no, I have not, nor do I know anyone else who has. That one video is the only instance I am aware of someone playing them that way.
Well, hopefully someone's willing.
Actinium wrote:Even taking historical precedents into account you still have the new canoptek spyder scarab hive rule which returns swarms to a unit up to starting strength with no mention of 1 wound or full wounds, the same as RP, and spyders have never created anything but full wound scarab bases.
They have never once forgotten to mention the 1 wound stipulation in the 15 years they have had the rule across 5 editions, and continue to use it for other models with resurrection rules like apothecaries. They omitted it now with clear purpose.
I don't think anyone has properly quoted that rule, just referenced it. Would you be willing to provide it?
Just leave it for the FAQ and decide with your opponents. Neither of you is going to convince the other and everything is just repeating at this point.
col_impact wrote: The status quo of this thread still hasn't changed.
Charistoph still has yet to present a valid argument. His current argument breaks all the Core Rules and is dismissed as absurd.
Orknado still has a valid argument with Rules As Written support.
Doctortom has still failed to provide any rules support for his critiques of Orknado's argument (meaning he has been unable to counter Orknado's rule supported claim that slain models are not in units so they don't have datasheet or a wound characteristic)
Ghaz is still in confusion about what counts as a rules source.
So that means that Destroyers reanimate with 3 wounds.
And Orknado and Col impact have ignored that they are making assumptions in order to try to justify saying that RAW they come back with full woujnds. You need to stup the cut and paste of your summary, col - saying "I have still failed to provide any rules support for my critique" is a misleading statement when my argument is that there is not rules support for the other argument. This means you are being obtuse (provide rules support for a stand saying there isn't rules support for something), and/or you are deliberately misreprenting my position. You have already had a history of that in this thread alone, when you were setting up strawman arguments claiming that I was saying the model comes back with 1 wound when I never said that. I merely said there is not rules support to establish by RAW any set of wounds (and I have shown the flaws in your argument - you just choose to not accept it), and therefore needs a FAQ. If people want to house rule it comes back with full wounds, that's okay. It appears we have dueling videos from designers showing either 1 wound or full wounds, so that means RAI is also muddled. It's obvious we need a FAQ, and it's just as obvious to anyone besides you and Orknado that it isn't "clearly settled", as your side has claimed. I would suggest that you stop spreading misleading statements and falsehoods.
Automatically Appended Next Post:
SideshowLucifer wrote: Just leave it for the FAQ and decide with your opponents. Neither of you is going to convince the other and everything is just repeating at this point.
I agree that you need to agree with opponents beforehand and leave it for the FAQ.. We see this often with col impact (and, apparently, his clone twin also), so this isn't going to go anywhere with them. Discussion with others here may be more fruitful.
Impact, highlighting the words "IN" and "FROM" are never going to form a basis for rules. I love what GW has done with this iteration of 40k. I love that the rules have been streamlined. And I love the general new direction the company is taking.
None of those are ever going to make me think that two juxtaposed words are going to prove a FAQ-able issue one way or the other. GW is not nearly, nor will they ever be, that nuanced in their rules writing
Good points. Thanks for coming in on the discussion. I also like overall what they've done with the direction of 40k here overall. Of course, there's still some teething pains like with this rule that need to be worked out. I also supsect you're right (in your later post) that they might have meant for the model to come back at full wounds, but since they didn't state it in the rule they've left a cloudy area that needs to be addressed.
col_impact wrote: The status quo of this thread still hasn't changed.
Charistoph still has yet to present a valid argument. His current argument breaks all the Core Rules and is dismissed as absurd.
Orknado still has a valid argument with Rules As Written support.
Doctortom has still failed to provide any rules support for his critiques of Orknado's argument (meaning he has been unable to counter Orknado's rule supported claim that slain models are not in units so they don't have datasheet or a wound characteristic)
Ghaz is still in confusion about what counts as a rules source.
So that means that Destroyers reanimate with 3 wounds.
And Orknado and Col impact have ignored that they are making assumptions in order to try to justify saying that RAW they come back with full woujnds. You need to stup the cut and paste of your summary, col - saying "I have still failed to provide any rules support for my critique" is a misleading statement when my argument is that there is not rules support for the other argument. This means you are being obtuse (provide rules support for a stand saying there isn't rules support for something), and/or you are deliberately misreprenting my position. You have already had a history of that in this thread alone, when you were setting up strawman arguments claiming that I was saying the model comes back with 1 wound when I never said that. I merely said there is not rules support to establish by RAW any set of wounds (and I have shown the flaws in your argument - you just choose to not accept it), and therefore needs a FAQ. If people want to house rule it comes back with full wounds, that's okay. It appears we have dueling videos from designers showing either 1 wound or full wounds, so that means RAI is also muddled. It's obvious we need a FAQ, and it's just as obvious to anyone besides you and Orknado that it isn't "clearly settled", as your side has claimed. I would suggest that you stop spreading misleading statements and falsehoods.
That is hilarious that he would present such a list.
The col is obviously projecting or lying. He is confused as to what is a rules source, so he accuses Ghaz of it. He can't find rules to support his or Orknado's assertions, so he accuses DoctorTom and myself of saying we can't provide rules to support our statement of "no rules". When we ask for actual written rules to support a thesis, that is apparently "not provid{ing} any rules support for {our} critiques".
To bring it up once or twice is a possible indication of a lack of knowledge, but to repeat it ad nauseum either indicates a willful ignorance of what the other writes or a deliberate attempt to mislead the reader (aka lying). He has been shown to prefer the moniker of liar before, for other readers out there.
col_impact wrote: The status quo of this thread still hasn't changed.
Charistoph still has yet to present a valid argument. His current argument breaks all the Core Rules and is dismissed as absurd.
Orknado still has a valid argument with Rules As Written support.
Doctortom has still failed to provide any rules support for his critiques of Orknado's argument (meaning he has been unable to counter Orknado's rule supported claim that slain models are not in units so they don't have datasheet or a wound characteristic)
Ghaz is still in confusion about what counts as a rules source.
So that means that Destroyers reanimate with 3 wounds.
And Orknado and Col impact have ignored that they are making assumptions in order to try to justify saying that RAW they come back with full woujnds. You need to stup the cut and paste of your summary, col - saying "I have still failed to provide any rules support for my critique" is a misleading statement when my argument is that there is not rules support for the other argument. This means you are being obtuse (provide rules support for a stand saying there isn't rules support for something), and/or you are deliberately misreprenting my position. You have already had a history of that in this thread alone, when you were setting up strawman arguments claiming that I was saying the model comes back with 1 wound when I never said that. I merely said there is not rules support to establish by RAW any set of wounds (and I have shown the flaws in your argument - you just choose to not accept it), and therefore needs a FAQ. If people want to house rule it comes back with full wounds, that's okay. It appears we have dueling videos from designers showing either 1 wound or full wounds, so that means RAI is also muddled. It's obvious we need a FAQ, and it's just as obvious to anyone besides you and Orknado that it isn't "clearly settled", as your side has claimed. I would suggest that you stop spreading misleading statements and falsehoods.
You didn't read what I wrote.
Orknado presented RAW support for his argument.
The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule indicate that slain models are not in units and that slain models lose their profile.
You attempted to counter his rules support by saying that profiles were permanently affixed to the model but it was pointed out that there is no rule to support your claim that profiles are permanently affixed.
Therefore you have failed to provide rules support for for your critiques and Orknado's rule-supported argument remains unchallenged.
Orknado is the only one with a valid rule-supported argument in this thread.
That is hilarious that he would present such a list.
The col is obviously projecting or lying. He is confused as to what is a rules source, so he accuses Ghaz of it. He can't find rules to support his or Orknado's assertions, so he accuses DoctorTom and myself of saying we can't provide rules to support our statement of "no rules". When we ask for actual written rules to support a thesis, that is apparently "not provid{ing} any rules support for {our} critiques".
To bring it up once or twice is a possible indication of a lack of knowledge, but to repeat it ad nauseum either indicates a willful ignorance of what the other writes or a deliberate attempt to mislead the reader (aka lying). He has been shown to prefer the moniker of liar before, for other readers out there.
I am not confused about what is a rules source. Orknado is able to justify his argument with the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule both of which are rules in official GW publications.
Spoiler:
Reanimation Protocols
"Roll a D6 for each slain model FROM this unit (unless the whole unit has been completely destroyed) at the beginning of your turn. On a 5+, the model's reanimation protocols activate and it is RETURNED to this unit, otherwise they remain inactive (although you can roll again at the start of each of your subsequent turns). When a model's reanimation protocols activate, set it up model in unit coherency with any model from this unit that not returned to the unit as a result of reanimation protocols this turn, and more than 1" from enemy models. If you cannot do this because there is no room to place the model, do not set it up."
1) We know from the Reanimation Protocol rule that slain models are FROM the unit and NOT IN the unit. We also know that slain models are RETURNED to the unit when reanimation protocols are activated. Reanimation Protocols reanimates slain models FROM the unit, not slain models IN the unit.
"Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models IN that unit"
2) We know from the Core Rule definition of a Datasheet that only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles.
3) When models are slain they are considered FROM the unit and no longer IN the unit (Reanimation Protocol rule).
4) Slain models that are no longer IN the unit no longer have permission to have a datasheet or a profile (Core Rules: Datasheet rule).
5) The wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model (Datasheet rule).
6) When the model is slain it is no longer IN the unit so it loses the permission to have the profile and so loses the profile entirely that contains the wound characteristic (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
7) When a slain model is 'returned to the unit' it will at that point in time be considered IN the unit and granted a profile from the datasheet (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
8) The profile that the newly reanimated model receives will have the amount of wounds indicated on the datasheet (Datasheet rule).
Orknado has been able to show rules support for his argument and no one has been able to counter his rules support.
Ghaz has tried to offer up GW Twitch videos as rules but that is in violation of the rules of YMDC and any definition of what a rule. Until he can show official recognition by GW that Twitch videos are considered rule sources Ghaz or anyone making that claim has no argument to speak of.
You aren't going to fool anyone in this thread with your accusations of lying or projecting.
The one who is projecting here is you.
Instead of making ad hominem personal attacks, I suggest you focus on producing a valid counter argument to Orknado's rule supported argument which remains unchallenged.
col_impact wrote: I am not confused about what is a rules source. Orknado is able to justify his argument with the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule both of which are rules in official GW publications.
But orknado has yet to provide actual written rules to support:
col_impact wrote: 1) We know from the Reanimation Protocol rule that slain models are FROM the unit and NOT IN the unit. We also know that slain models are RETURNED to the unit when reanimation protocols are activated. Reanimation Protocols reanimates slain models FROM the unit, not slain models IN the unit.
... the models are out of the unit. We have asked for written rules that specifically state this, but he has refused to provide written words from the rulebook to support this. All we have is logical supposition which relies on "returned" being from "outside" the unit. The only instructions the model had followed before Reanimation Protocols works has been given to the model before this is to be "removed from play". As written, the model is out of play, not out of unit.
col_impact wrote: "Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models IN that unit"
2) We know from the Core Rule definition of a Datasheet that only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles.
... there is no "only" in the quoted statement. Even if they were, proof of #1 would still be required in order to make this supposition of any relevance.
col_impact wrote: 3) When models are slain they are considered FROM the unit and no longer IN the unit (Reanimation Protocol rule).
... this is a repeat of #1, with no rule actually providing evidence that the model was not in the unit when Reanimation Protocols is called in to play.
col_impact wrote: 4) Slain models that are no longer IN the unit no longer have permission to have a datasheet or a profile (Core Rules: Datasheet rule).
... no rules quote has stated this. This is all supposition based on an interpretation without anything further to back it up.
col_impact wrote: 5) The wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model (Datasheet rule).
... the datasheet rule does not state this whatsoever. If this was the case, the model could never be slain.
col_impact wrote: 6) When the model is slain it is no longer IN the unit so it loses the permission to have the profile and so loses the profile entirely that contains the wound characteristic (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
... neither of the quoted rules specifically or implicitly states that the model is out of the unit when taking other rules in to account. These actions would be defined elsewhere if they existed.
col_impact wrote: 7) When a slain model is 'returned to the unit' it will at that point in time be considered IN the unit and granted a profile from the datasheet (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
8) The profile that the newly reanimated model receives will have the amount of wounds indicated on the datasheet (Datasheet rule).
Faulty premises based on suppositions without any actual written words to support it.
He has been challenged on this ever since he brought it up and never once presented a rule that stated that a model removed from play is removed from the unit. He has used statements such as, "logically conclude", rather than, "it is written here".
col_impact wrote: Orknado has been able to show rules support for his argument and no one has been able to counter his rules support.
So, no, he has not provided any written rule to support his argument is RAW. If that's HHWPI, I honestly do not care. But there is nothing actually written in the books to support this statement.
col_impact wrote: Ghaz has tried to offer up GW Twitch videos as rules but that is in violation of the rules of YMDC and any definition of what a rule. Until he can show official recognition by GW that Twitch videos are considered rule sources Ghaz or anyone making that claim has no argument to speak of.
No, it isn't. He presented it as a way of How They Played It, not as rules. He repeated this several times. Stating something as HYWPI (or in this case How They Would Play It), is not against the Tenets. Reread Tenet #4.
col_impact wrote: You aren't going to fool anyone in this thread with your accusations of lying or projecting.
When someone tells you one thing, and you accuse them of saying another, after being repeatedly corrected, you are either projecting or lying.
There has been a couple times during the IC debates when I told you to quit misstating my position or be called a liar, and you kept doing it, thus demonstrating that you preferred to be known as a liar. I made the same warning to orknado twice in this thread as well. Any application of such a title was of your own choice. If it was because you didn't listen, it was still of your own choice.
col_impact wrote: Instead of making ad hominem personal attacks, I suggest you focus on producing a valid counter argument to Orknado's rule supported argument which remains unchallenged.
I have, but you either choose to not listen or deliberately seek to lie about others' statements, such as now. Reanimation Protocols never stated "Wounds", and nothing in the general rules provides any evidence of what orknado has talked about.
Feel free to try and quote the RP rule, highlighting the terms "Wound", "out", or "datasheet" which is needed to support orknado's position. Feel free to try and quote orknado's quote of the datasheet rule and highlight where it states "out" or "only".
Without any of those terms, any statements of RAW supporting orknado's position are either a grievous mistake on what RAW means or a deliberate attempt to deceive, aka lying. I wonder if you have bothered to read YMDC's definition of RAW and HYWPI that I quoted.
col_impact wrote: I am not confused about what is a rules source. Orknado is able to justify his argument with the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule both of which are rules in official GW publications.
But orknado has yet to provide actual written rules to support:
Incorrect. He has provided rules support and you even mention it.
col_impact wrote: 1) We know from the Reanimation Protocol rule that slain models are FROM the unit and NOT IN the unit. We also know that slain models are RETURNED to the unit when reanimation protocols are activated. Reanimation Protocols reanimates slain models FROM the unit, not slain models IN the unit.
... the models are out of the unit. We have asked for written rules that specifically state this, but he has refused to provide written words from the rulebook to support this. All we have is logical supposition which relies on "returned" being from "outside" the unit. The only instructions the model had followed before Reanimation Protocols works has been given to the model before this is to be "removed from play". As written, the model is out of play, not out of unit.
If a model is not out of the unit then it cannot be "returned to this unit". Reanimation Protocols does not say 'returned to play', it says 'returned to this unit' meaning that it was out of the unit. You cannot argue against this. The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates without a doubt that slain models are not in the unit.
We also know this because all of the Core Rules break if slain models are in units. YMDC has a tenet that your premise must BREAK NO RULE. Your premise that slain models are in units breaks all the rules and must make up 5 or 6 house rules to repair the damage to the game caused by your premise. Your argument is disingenuous, absurd, against the rules of the forum, logically implausible, and invalid. Try again.
col_impact wrote: "Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models IN that unit"
2) We know from the Core Rule definition of a Datasheet that only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles.
... there is no "only" in the quoted statement. Even if they were, proof of #1 would still be required in order to make this supposition of any relevance.
Nope. Due to the logic of permission in a permissive dataset, only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles. There is no general rule granting datasheets to all models. Again, you have no argument of merit here.
col_impact wrote: 3) When models are slain they are considered FROM the unit and no longer IN the unit (Reanimation Protocol rule).
... this is a repeat of #1, with no rule actually providing evidence that the model was not in the unit when Reanimation Protocols is called in to play.
Incorrect. Reanimation Protocols is a rule and it indicates that slain models are not IN units. They are FROM units and when they are reanimated they are 'returned to this unit' which is only possible if they were not IN the unit. Again, your argument has no merit here.
quick question, sorry if I missed it in an earlier post while skimming.
So according to the wording of the rules a reanimation protocol is used on models that have been slain.
When models that are removed from a unit due to a failed leadership test are said to have fleed and removed.
My buddy and I cannot figure out what it means when it says no where about them being slain from that failed leadership test, they fleed but were not slain. Thus, no reanimation protocol is allowed?
col_impact wrote: 4) Slain models that are no longer IN the unit no longer have permission to have a datasheet or a profile (Core Rules: Datasheet rule).
... no rules quote has stated this. This is all supposition based on an interpretation without anything further to back it up.
Incorrect. The rules have proved that slain models are not in units. And only models that are in units have permission to have profiles. Therefore, a slain model no longer has permission to have a profile. Again, your argument has no merit here.
col_impact wrote: 5) The wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model (Datasheet rule).
... the datasheet rule does not state this whatsoever. If this was the case, the model could never be slain.
You are confused here.
"Wounds (W): Wounds show how much damage a model can sustain before it succumbs to its injuries."
The wound characteristic is decremented when a wound is suffered. That's the only method the rules allow for keeping track of wounds. If the wound characteristic stays static then it makes models invulnerable. But orknado is saying that the wound characteristic indicates how many wounds are left on the model, which is by definition. Again, you have no argument of merit.
col_impact wrote: 6) When the model is slain it is no longer IN the unit so it loses the permission to have the profile and so loses the profile entirely that contains the wound characteristic (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
... neither of the quoted rules specifically or implicitly states that the model is out of the unit when taking other rules in to account. These actions would be defined elsewhere if they existed.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that slain models are FROM units, not IN units and that when reanimated they are 'returned to this unit' meaning without a doubt that they were not IN the unit.
Further, we know that slain models are not in units because that premise breaks all the rules and such a premise is in violation of the rules of the forum (Break No Rule), is logically implausible, and wholly invalid. If slain models are in units then you must fabricate 5 or 6 house rules in order to even play the game. Once again, your argument has no merit.
col_impact wrote: 7) When a slain model is 'returned to the unit' it will at that point in time be considered IN the unit and granted a profile from the datasheet (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
8) The profile that the newly reanimated model receives will have the amount of wounds indicated on the datasheet (Datasheet rule).
Faulty premises based on suppositions without any actual written words to support it.
He has been challenged on this ever since he brought it up and never once presented a rule that stated that a model removed from play is removed from the unit. He has used statements such as, "logically conclude", rather than, "it is written here".
The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule are both written rules and they both fully justify his argument. Once again, your argument has no merit here.
col_impact wrote: Orknado has been able to show rules support for his argument and no one has been able to counter his rules support.
So, no, he has not provided any written rule to support his argument is RAW. If that's HHWPI, I honestly do not care. But there is nothing actually written in the books to support this statement.
The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule are both written rules and they completely justify his argument. Once again, your argument has no merit here.
col_impact wrote: Ghaz has tried to offer up GW Twitch videos as rules but that is in violation of the rules of YMDC and any definition of what a rule. Until he can show official recognition by GW that Twitch videos are considered rule sources Ghaz or anyone making that claim has no argument to speak of.
No, it isn't. He presented it as a way of How They Played It, not as rules. He repeated this several times. Stating something as HYWPI (or in this case How They Would Play It), is not against the Tenets. Reread Tenet #4.
Then it's about as relevant as using a Horoscope to decide the debate. He is welcome to post his House Rules in the Proposed Rules section of DakkaDakka. At any rate, the Twitch Videos are not rules and have zero status in a YMDC discussion. So we are in agreement then that his comments were entirely off-topic and non-relevant to the discussion.
col_impact wrote: You aren't going to fool anyone in this thread with your accusations of lying or projecting.
When someone tells you one thing, and you accuse them of saying another, after being repeatedly corrected, you are either projecting or lying.
There has been a couple times during the IC debates when I told you to quit misstating my position or be called a liar, and you kept doing it, thus demonstrating that you preferred to be known as a liar. I made the same warning to orknado twice in this thread as well. Any application of such a title was of your own choice. If it was because you didn't listen, it was still of your own choice.
Your memory is faulty here. You were banned from DakkaDakka 2 or 3 times for falsely accusing me of lying. You were unable to provide proof of me lying back then and you are unable to provide proof of me lying now. This should not be a surprise because it's ridiculous to accuse people of lying on DakkaDakka and yet you have some insecure need to do just that. Making accusations of lying are ad hominem attacks and in direct violation of the rules of this forum.
col_impact wrote: Instead of making ad hominem personal attacks, I suggest you focus on producing a valid counter argument to Orknado's rule supported argument which remains unchallenged.
I have, but you either choose to not listen or deliberately seek to lie about others' statements, such as now. Reanimation Protocols never stated "Wounds", and nothing in the general rules provides any evidence of what orknado has talked about.
Feel free to try and quote the RP rule, highlighting the terms "Wound", "out", or "datasheet" which is needed to support orknado's position. Feel free to try and quote orknado's quote of the datasheet rule and highlight where it states "out" or "only".
Without any of those terms, any statements of RAW supporting orknado's position are either a grievous mistake on what RAW means or a deliberate attempt to deceive, aka lying. I wonder if you have bothered to read YMDC's definition of RAW and HYWPI that I quoted.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet are both written rules and they both indicate without a doubt that slain models are not IN units and that only models that are in units have permission to have profiles. Therefore, a Destroyer model is reanimated with 3 wounds.
Ghen1899 wrote: quick question, sorry if I missed it in an earlier post while skimming.
So according to the wording of the rules a reanimation protocol is used on models that have been slain.
When models that are removed from a unit due to a failed leadership test are said to have fleed and removed.
My buddy and I cannot figure out what it means when it says no where about them being slain from that failed leadership test, they fleed but were not slain. Thus, no reanimation protocol is allowed?
If going by RAW, then yes, there is a difference that exists.
col_impact wrote: I am not confused about what is a rules source. Orknado is able to justify his argument with the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule both of which are rules in official GW publications.
But orknado has yet to provide actual written rules to support:
Incorrect. He has provided rules support and you even mention it.
He has not because neither you nor he have yet to provide it. Let me demonstrate.
col_impact wrote: 1) We know from the Reanimation Protocol rule that slain models are FROM the unit and NOT IN the unit. We also know that slain models are RETURNED to the unit when reanimation protocols are activated. Reanimation Protocols reanimates slain models FROM the unit, not slain models IN the unit.
... the models are out of the unit. We have asked for written rules that specifically state this, but he has refused to provide written words from the rulebook to support this. All we have is logical supposition which relies on "returned" being from "outside" the unit. The only instructions the model had followed before Reanimation Protocols works has been given to the model before this is to be "removed from play". As written, the model is out of play, not out of unit.
If a model is not out of the unit then it cannot be "returned to this unit". Reanimation Protocols does not say 'returned to play', it says 'returned to this unit' meaning that it was out of the unit. You cannot argue against this. The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates without a doubt that slain models are not in the unit.
We also know this because all of the Core Rules break if slain models are in units. YMDC has a tenet that your premise must BREAK NO RULE. Your premise that slain models are in units breaks all the rules and must make up 5 or 6 house rules to repair the damage to the game caused by your premise. Your argument is disingenuous, absurd, against the rules of the forum, logically implausible, and invalid. Try again.
But where is the actual rules quote that states the model is out of the unit? You are relying on a supposition that the model is returning to the unit from out of the unit rather than returning to the play of the unit. This isn't about HIWPI, this is about RAW, so keep my HIWPI (which I actually have not stated regarding the Wounds) out of your judgements.
What is the number for the YMDC tenet that a premise must break no rule, even if it is a RAW interpretation?
col_impact wrote: "Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models IN that unit"
2) We know from the Core Rule definition of a Datasheet that only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles.
... there is no "only" in the quoted statement. Even if they were, proof of #1 would still be required in order to make this supposition of any relevance.
Nope. Due to the logic of permission in a permissive dataset, only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles. There is no general rule granting datasheets to all models. Again, you have no argument of merit here.
No written statement means no RAW. Without the "only" in the quoted statement, it is only orknado's guess at what was intended. The model is linked to the datasheet's profile with the list building. Where is the written rule statement that the model's link to the datasheet is disconnected?
Prevailing on logic to fill the holes is not RAW. RAW is "playing by the strict letter of the rules, which can lead to odd or counterintuitive situations."
col_impact wrote: 3) When models are slain they are considered FROM the unit and no longer IN the unit (Reanimation Protocol rule).
... this is a repeat of #1, with no rule actually providing evidence that the model was not in the unit when Reanimation Protocols is called in to play.
Incorrect. Reanimation Protocols is a rule and it indicates that slain models are not IN units. They are FROM units and when they are reanimated they are 'returned to this unit' which is only possible if they were not IN the unit. Again, your argument has no merit here.
Reanimation Protocols has no written statement that slain models are "not in units" or "outside of the unit". Without a written statement, this is not RAW. One does not have to be "out" to be returning, one can be "away", just like if something was "removed".
Now, orknado never addressed this, will you? Where does Reanimation Protocols state that the model is returning from?
col_impact wrote: 4) Slain models that are no longer IN the unit no longer have permission to have a datasheet or a profile (Core Rules: Datasheet rule).
... no rules quote has stated this. This is all supposition based on an interpretation without anything further to back it up.
Incorrect. The rules have proved that slain models are not in units. And only models that are in units have permission to have profiles. Therefore, a slain model no longer has permission to have a profile. Again, your argument has no merit here.
The statement on datasheets provides no written statement on what happens when a model is removed from play. No written statement has been provided which states a model that has been removed from play has been removed from the unit.
col_impact wrote: 5) The wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model (Datasheet rule).
... the datasheet rule does not state this whatsoever. If this was the case, the model could never be slain.
You are confused here.
"Wounds (W): Wounds show how much damage a model can sustain before it succumbs to its injuries."
The wound characteristic is decremented when a wound is suffered. That's the only method the rules allow for keeping track of wounds. If the wound characteristic stays static then it makes models invulnerable. But orknado is saying that the wound characteristic indicates how many wounds are left on the model, which is by definition. Again, you have no argument of merit.
No, I'm not. It's called reducto ad absurdum. It's taking the concept to its logical, absurd extent. The Wounds characteristic on the profile never actually changes. By assuming it is back at the profile point because "the wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model" (your statement), and the fact that it never literally changes, it would lead models which cannot be slain.
In addition, the quote provided by you and orknado on this in the spoiler has no written statement on this whatsoever. That makes it an assumption.
In order for it to be RAW, the mechanics which deprive the model of Wounds must be performed in reverse in order for the Wounds to be restored. Where is this process actually written in Reanimation Protocols or any general rule?
col_impact wrote: 6) When the model is slain it is no longer IN the unit so it loses the permission to have the profile and so loses the profile entirely that contains the wound characteristic (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
... neither of the quoted rules specifically or implicitly states that the model is out of the unit when taking other rules in to account. These actions would be defined elsewhere if they existed.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that slain models are FROM units, not IN units and that when reanimated they are 'returned to this unit' meaning without a doubt that they were not IN the unit.
Reanimation Protocols has no written statement that the models are "not IN units". You have stated such yourself. As such, any assumption that the model is "not IN the unit" is a pure fabrication not based on RAW.
col_impact wrote:Further, we know that slain models are not in units because that premise breaks all the rules and such a premise is in violation of the rules of the forum (Break No Rule), is logically implausible, and wholly invalid. If slain models are in units then you must fabricate 5 or 6 house rules in order to even play the game. Once again, your argument has no merit.
Then you are confused at what argument and DoctorTom are presenting. We are not presenting a HWWPI in which we care to not break the rule, we are stating that the rule come to us broken. You are telling that there are actual written statements which do specifically state this things, and then never quote a rule and use phrases such as "logically deduce". The "Break No Rule" is not actually a YMDC Tenet. Learn to properly reference.
As it is, I don't have to break any rules to come to the base conclusion that a model can be in the unit while not in play. "In play" offers many different concepts which can logically be deduced without resorting to adherence to statements which are not written in the rules whatsoever.
col_impact wrote: 7) When a slain model is 'returned to the unit' it will at that point in time be considered IN the unit and granted a profile from the datasheet (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
8) The profile that the newly reanimated model receives will have the amount of wounds indicated on the datasheet (Datasheet rule).
Faulty premises based on suppositions without any actual written words to support it.
He has been challenged on this ever since he brought it up and never once presented a rule that stated that a model removed from play is removed from the unit. He has used statements such as, "logically conclude", rather than, "it is written here".
The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule are both written rules and they both fully justify his argument. Once again, your argument has no merit here.
Review every answer to your quotes and note how many times "no written statement" comes up. Without actually providing any written rules statement to back up an interpretation, it violates the YMDC's definition of RAW. By trying to push such assumptions, no matter how "logically derived", you are in violation of Tenet #4.
col_impact wrote: Ghaz has tried to offer up GW Twitch videos as rules but that is in violation of the rules of YMDC and any definition of what a rule. Until he can show official recognition by GW that Twitch videos are considered rule sources Ghaz or anyone making that claim has no argument to speak of.
No, it isn't. He presented it as a way of How They Played It, not as rules. He repeated this several times. Stating something as HYWPI (or in this case How They Would Play It), is not against the Tenets. Reread Tenet #4.
Then it's about as relevant as using a Horoscope to decide the debate. He is welcome to post his House Rules in the Proposed Rules section of DakkaDakka. At any rate, the Twitch Videos are not rules and have zero status in a YMDC discussion. So we are in agreement then that his comments were entirely off-topic and non-relevant to the discussion.
That's funny considering how hard you fought to treat FAQs as official errata. And FYI, so long as mentioning it as HYWPI, it is not in violation of Tenet #4.
col_impact wrote: You aren't going to fool anyone in this thread with your accusations of lying or projecting.
When someone tells you one thing, and you accuse them of saying another, after being repeatedly corrected, you are either projecting or lying.
There has been a couple times during the IC debates when I told you to quit misstating my position or be called a liar, and you kept doing it, thus demonstrating that you preferred to be known as a liar. I made the same warning to orknado twice in this thread as well. Any application of such a title was of your own choice. If it was because you didn't listen, it was still of your own choice.
Your memory is faulty here. You were banned from DakkaDakka 2 or 3 times for falsely accusing me of lying. You were unable to provide proof of me lying back then and you are unable to provide proof of me lying now. This should not be a surprise because it's ridiculous to accuse people of lying on DakkaDakka and yet you have some insecure need to do just that. Making accusations of lying are ad hominem attacks and in direct violation of the rules of this forum.
I was never actually banned. I was put on probation AFTER calling you a liar without warning. I was not put on probation during those events I just described. I am well aware of each time I was put on probation. And I would say that someone who deliberately and consistently misrepresents another person after being just as deliberately and consistently corrected, is nothing but a liar. In fact, you'd find that a pretty consistent standard around the world. And its not like you weren't warned many times.
Those posts where I warned you happened some time ago, so tracking them down is a challenge as both of us were both quite post-heavy in them.
col_impact wrote: Instead of making ad hominem personal attacks, I suggest you focus on producing a valid counter argument to Orknado's rule supported argument which remains unchallenged.
I have, but you either choose to not listen or deliberately seek to lie about others' statements, such as now. Reanimation Protocols never stated "Wounds", and nothing in the general rules provides any evidence of what orknado has talked about.
Feel free to try and quote the RP rule, highlighting the terms "Wound", "out", or "datasheet" which is needed to support orknado's position. Feel free to try and quote orknado's quote of the datasheet rule and highlight where it states "out" or "only".
Without any of those terms, any statements of RAW supporting orknado's position are either a grievous mistake on what RAW means or a deliberate attempt to deceive, aka lying. I wonder if you have bothered to read YMDC's definition of RAW and HYWPI that I quoted.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet are both written rules and they both indicate without a doubt that slain models are not IN units and that only models that are in units have permission to have profiles. Therefore, a Destroyer model is reanimated with 3 wounds.
And you failed in the exercise to demonstrate RAW based on orknado's premise (and he hasn't done this, either). Since you have not done it, you either are lazy, tacitly admitting my point and just kicking against the pricks, or you are deliberately lying. That is hardly having an intelligent debate.
Remember, without an actual written statement specifically stating the instructions to do something, there is no "strict letter" to work with, so there is no way that orknado's premise is 100% ironclad RAW.
If a model is not out of the unit then it cannot be "returned to this unit". Reanimation Protocols does not say 'returned to play', it says 'returned to this unit' meaning that it was out of the unit. You cannot argue against this. The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates without a doubt that slain models are not in the unit.
We also know this because all of the Core Rules break if slain models are in units. YMDC has a tenet that your premise must BREAK NO RULE. Your premise that slain models are in units breaks all the rules and must make up 5 or 6 house rules to repair the damage to the game caused by your premise. Your argument is disingenuous, absurd, against the rules of the forum, logically implausible, and invalid. Try again.
But where is the actual rules quote that states the model is out of the unit? You are relying on a supposition that the model is returning to the unit from out of the unit rather than returning to the play of the unit. This isn't about HIWPI, this is about RAW, so keep my HIWPI (which I actually have not stated regarding the Wounds) out of your judgements.
What is the number for the YMDC tenet that a premise must break no rule, even if it is a RAW interpretation?
No supposition. We refer directly to the written word of the Reanimation Protocols rule. A slain models cannot be 'returned to this unit' if it is already in the unit. The RAW of the Reanimation Protocols rule directly supports that slain models are not IN units.
col_impact wrote:
Nope. Due to the logic of permission in a permissive dataset, only models that are IN units have datasheets and their attending profiles. There is no general rule granting datasheets to all models. Again, you have no argument of merit here.
No written statement means no RAW. Without the "only" in the quoted statement, it is only orknado's guess at what was intended. The model is linked to the datasheet's profile with the list building. Where is the written rule statement that the model's link to the datasheet is disconnected?
Prevailing on logic to fill the holes is not RAW. RAW is "playing by the strict letter of the rules, which can lead to odd or counterintuitive situations."
Nope. Per the strict letter of the rules, only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles. That is literally what the rule says. There is no rule granting general permission for models not in units to have datasheets. Sorry but that is what the rules say.
col_impact wrote: 3) When models are slain they are considered FROM the unit and no longer IN the unit (Reanimation Protocol rule).
... this is a repeat of #1, with no rule actually providing evidence that the model was not in the unit when Reanimation Protocols is called in to play.
Incorrect. Reanimation Protocols is a rule and it indicates that slain models are not IN units. They are FROM units and when they are reanimated they are 'returned to this unit' which is only possible if they were not IN the unit. Again, your argument has no merit here.
Reanimation Protocols has no written statement that slain models are "not in units" or "outside of the unit". Without a written statement, this is not RAW. One does not have to be "out" to be returning, one can be "away", just like if something was "removed".
Now, orknado never addressed this, will you? Where does Reanimation Protocols state that the model is returning from?
Nope. Reanimation Protocols indicates that slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit' meaning without a doubt that they were not in the unit while they were slain. There is no other way to construe it. The rule says 'returned to this unit' and not 'returned to play'. Since it says the former and not the latter we know that slain models are not in units.
col_impact wrote: 4) Slain models that are no longer IN the unit no longer have permission to have a datasheet or a profile (Core Rules: Datasheet rule).
... no rules quote has stated this. This is all supposition based on an interpretation without anything further to back it up.
Incorrect. The rules have proved that slain models are not in units. And only models that are in units have permission to have profiles. Therefore, a slain model no longer has permission to have a profile. Again, your argument has no merit here.
The statement on datasheets provides no written statement on what happens when a model is removed from play. No written statement has been provided which states a model that has been removed from play has been removed from the unit.
Are you seeing the trend?
We know based on the letter of the Datasheet rule that models that are not in units do not have datasheets. The trend I am seeing is your inability to read plainly stated rules.
col_impact wrote: 5) The wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model (Datasheet rule).
... the datasheet rule does not state this whatsoever. If this was the case, the model could never be slain.
You are confused here.
"Wounds (W): Wounds show how much damage a model can sustain before it succumbs to its injuries."
The wound characteristic is decremented when a wound is suffered. That's the only method the rules allow for keeping track of wounds. If the wound characteristic stays static then it makes models invulnerable. But orknado is saying that the wound characteristic indicates how many wounds are left on the model, which is by definition. Again, you have no argument of merit.
No, I'm not. It's called reducto ad absurdum. It's taking the concept to its logical, absurd extent. The Wounds characteristic on the profile never actually changes. By assuming it is back at the profile point because "the wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model" (your statement), and the fact that it never literally changes, it would lead models which cannot be slain.
In addition, the quote provided by you and orknado on this in the spoiler has no written statement on this whatsoever. That makes it an assumption.
In order for it to be RAW, the mechanics which deprive the model of Wounds must be performed in reverse in order for the Wounds to be restored. Where is this process actually written in Reanimation Protocols or any general rule?
"the wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model" This is not my statement. That's the definition in the book. By definition the wound characteristic MUST change when a wound is suffered to accurately reflect how many wounds are left on the model. It would be helpful if you kept track of rules statements. When I quote something it is a rules statement.
When a model is slain it is no longer in a unit and so will lose its profile and the value for its wound characteristic. This is literally what the RAW of the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule tell us.
Also I am a bit confused. In another thread you agree with the argument I am making and disprove the argument you are making in this thread.
In Shooting, we are told that, "A model loses one wound for each point of damage it suffers." So we have an instruction to modify the Wounds characteristic for that model as listed on the profile. That is sufficiently direct of an instruction for me, at any rate.
So I guess you prove yourself wrong. How about that!
col_impact wrote: 6) When the model is slain it is no longer IN the unit so it loses the permission to have the profile and so loses the profile entirely that contains the wound characteristic (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
... neither of the quoted rules specifically or implicitly states that the model is out of the unit when taking other rules in to account. These actions would be defined elsewhere if they existed.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that slain models are FROM units, not IN units and that when reanimated they are 'returned to this unit' meaning without a doubt that they were not IN the unit.
Reanimation Protocols has no written statement that the models are "not IN units". You have stated such yourself. As such, any assumption that the model is "not IN the unit" is a pure fabrication not based on RAW.
The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts the logical inverse of IN which is one of a binary condition (IN/OUT). The rule indicates that slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they had to already have been not IN the unit. Simple logic derived directly from the Rules As Written is still Rules As Written. There is literally no other conclusion that you can have except that slain models are not IN units.
col_impact wrote:Further, we know that slain models are not in units because that premise breaks all the rules and such a premise is in violation of the rules of the forum (Break No Rule), is logically implausible, and wholly invalid. If slain models are in units then you must fabricate 5 or 6 house rules in order to even play the game. Once again, your argument has no merit.
Then you are confused at what argument and DoctorTom are presenting. We are not presenting a HWWPI in which we care to not break the rule, we are stating that the rule come to us broken. You are telling that there are actual written statements which do specifically state this things, and then never quote a rule and use phrases such as "logically deduce". The "Break No Rule" is not actually a YMDC Tenet. Learn to properly reference.
As it is, I don't have to break any rules to come to the base conclusion that a model can be in the unit while not in play. "In play" offers many different concepts which can logically be deduced without resorting to adherence to statements which are not written in the rules whatsoever.
Nope. Only if you adhere to your premise that slain models are IN units do the rules come to you broken. If slain models are not IN units then everything works out fine. Orknado provided a helpful comparison between yours and his arugment.
Spoiler:
Let's summarize the differences between my argument and Charistoph's argument.
The key difference between our arguments is the main underlying premise for the argument.
My main premise:
Models that are slain are not in units.
Charistoph's main premise:
Models that are slain are in units.
That's it. That's the main difference between our arguments.
There is no rule in the Core Rules which tells us explicitly whether slain models are in units or not so each of us has to find support for our main premise.
I support my main premise from the wording of the Reanimation Protocols rule which indicates that slain models are FROM units, not IN units, and that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they could not have already been IN the unit. I also support my premise by virtue of reductio ad absurdum since treating slain models as IN units breaks all the rules in the game and thus can be thrown out as absurd. Reductio ad absurdum here is equivalent to the 'Break No Rule' tenet of YMDC so I am justified directly by the guidelines of YMDC to have that premise.
Charistoph support's his main premise by noting that the slain models were IN units prior to being slain and no rule explicitly takes that status away when the slain model dies. Fair enough. The problem with his premise is that he breaks almost all of the Core Rules by doing so (and he doesn't find logical problems with his premise or care that he violates a YMDC tenet to Break No rule). He must then make up rules to fix the damage slain models being in units does to the rules of the game.
1) First, he must define 'play' as all Core Rules except rules that specifically target the 'removed from play' zone (e.g. Kill points, Reanimation Protocols) which is an entirely made up category on his part.
2) Further, he must define 'removed from play' as meaning that slain models do not participate in rules categorized as 'play' by the former rule. Which is another entirely made up rule.
3) Third, he must make a special exception for the Datasheet rule. He makes up that the datasheet rule still finds models that are 'removed from play' even though the datasheet rule doesn't specifically address the 'removed from play' zone and will maintain a profile for them. So the Datasheet rule gets a special made up exception to his 2 already made up definitions.
4) Fourth, at the end of all of this he still has to make up a rule to fix Reanimation Protocols which is inexplicably broken. So he makes up a rule that reanimates Destroyers with 1 wound or 3 wounds depending on how much he favors Necrons at that time.
So, Charistoph's argument leads to a lot of broken rules that he then needs to fix with made up rules. And at the end of it all he has to come up with some rule to fix Reanimation Protocols which is hopelessly and unfathomably broken according to his premise. He shakes his head and can only attribute such an oversight to terrible QA from the playtesters.
My premise leads to a completely elegant and clean argument since no rules are broken by asserting that slain models are not IN units. When slain models are not IN units then they naturally exclude themselves from the Core Rules that would otherwise be all broken. And since we know that only models in units have permission to have datasheets and profiles then we know that slain models lose their profile with the wound value on it. A slain models gets back a profile when it is reanimated and 'returned to this unit' which means I get a functioning Reanimation Protocols rule for free without having to make up a rule to fix it.
My premise doesn't lead to any made up rules since it doesn't break any rules. By sorting out the one bug everything falls into place. I don't have to make up any rules to fix anything since my premise doesn't break anything. In fact, my premise fixes for free the Reanimation Protocols rule without have to specifically address that rule.
Charistoph's premise leads him to make up many rules since his premise breaks just about every rule in the Core Rules. By fixing the wrong bug in the rules, he introduces a whole bunch of bugs and he has to generate a whole mess of made up rules to fix those bugs.
Considering that my argument has RAW support and obeys the tenets of YMDC (Break No Rule) I have in my opinion a superior argument to Charistoph's who violates a tenet of YMDC by breaking almost all of the Core Rules and who then has to make up a host of rules to fix the damage to the ruleset that his premise causes.
YMDC wrote:
Conflicts With Another Rule
If you've provided a set of premises that support your argument, but they are in conflict with another rule, your argument will not hold. It's important to remember to "Break No Rule".
For example, in 40K (4th edition) units that arrive on the table via deep strike "may not move or assault on the turn they arrive". However, if that unit has the 'Fleet' Universal Special Rule they are allowed to move D6" during the shooting phase in a turn they don't shoot. In this case there are two viable rule that clash; one stating that the unit cannot move that turn and the other saying the unit is indeed allowed to move if it doesn't shoot, so which one takes precedence? Because we must always strive to "Break no Rule" and moving at all during the turn a unit arrives via Deep Strike would break a rule we must play that the unit arriving via Deep Strike cannot 'Fleet' on the same turn.
So YMDC by its own guidelines considers Charistoph's argument to be invalid. My argument, on the other hand, adheres to the 'Break No Rule' tenet and so would be considered valid by YMDC.
Your premise breaks all the Core Rules and is therefore logically implausible and invalid.
On top of that, your premise is disproved by the written word of the Reanimation Protocols rule which indicates that slain models are not IN units.
col_impact wrote: 7) When a slain model is 'returned to the unit' it will at that point in time be considered IN the unit and granted a profile from the datasheet (Reanimation Protocol rule, Datasheet rule).
8) The profile that the newly reanimated model receives will have the amount of wounds indicated on the datasheet (Datasheet rule).
Faulty premises based on suppositions without any actual written words to support it.
He has been challenged on this ever since he brought it up and never once presented a rule that stated that a model removed from play is removed from the unit. He has used statements such as, "logically conclude", rather than, "it is written here".
The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule are both written rules and they both fully justify his argument. Once again, your argument has no merit here.
Review every answer to your quotes and note how many times "no written statement" comes up. Without actually providing any written rules statement to back up an interpretation, it violates the YMDC's definition of RAW. By trying to push such assumptions, no matter how "logically derived", you are in violation of Tenet #4.
Nope. The written word of the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule directly support our argument, as we have repeatedly shown. Per the direct wording of the Reanimation Protocols rule we can come to no other conclusion than that slain models are not IN units.
col_impact wrote: Ghaz has tried to offer up GW Twitch videos as rules but that is in violation of the rules of YMDC and any definition of what a rule. Until he can show official recognition by GW that Twitch videos are considered rule sources Ghaz or anyone making that claim has no argument to speak of.
No, it isn't. He presented it as a way of How They Played It, not as rules. He repeated this several times. Stating something as HYWPI (or in this case How They Would Play It), is not against the Tenets. Reread Tenet #4.
Then it's about as relevant as using a Horoscope to decide the debate. He is welcome to post his House Rules in the Proposed Rules section of DakkaDakka. At any rate, the Twitch Videos are not rules and have zero status in a YMDC discussion. So we are in agreement then that his comments were entirely off-topic and non-relevant to the discussion.
That's funny considering how hard you fought to treat FAQs as official errata. And FYI, so long as mentioning it as HYWPI, it is not in violation of Tenet #4.
FAQs are officially recognized rules sources. By no stretch of the imagination are FAQs house rules.
Providing something as a house rule is meaningless to a debate about what the rules say. Tenet #4 just tells you to mark your statements HYWPI so we can set them aside as inconsequential to a rules debate.
Any person's house rule is just as valid as anyone elses, so there is absolutely no point debating house rules.
col_impact wrote: You aren't going to fool anyone in this thread with your accusations of lying or projecting.
When someone tells you one thing, and you accuse them of saying another, after being repeatedly corrected, you are either projecting or lying.
There has been a couple times during the IC debates when I told you to quit misstating my position or be called a liar, and you kept doing it, thus demonstrating that you preferred to be known as a liar. I made the same warning to orknado twice in this thread as well. Any application of such a title was of your own choice. If it was because you didn't listen, it was still of your own choice.
Your memory is faulty here. You were banned from DakkaDakka 2 or 3 times for falsely accusing me of lying. You were unable to provide proof of me lying back then and you are unable to provide proof of me lying now. This should not be a surprise because it's ridiculous to accuse people of lying on DakkaDakka and yet you have some insecure need to do just that. Making accusations of lying are ad hominem attacks and in direct violation of the rules of this forum.
I was never actually banned. I was put on probation AFTER calling you a liar without warning. I was not put on probation during those events I just described. I am well aware of each time I was put on probation. And I would say that someone who deliberately and consistently misrepresents another person after being just as deliberately and consistently corrected, is nothing but a liar. In fact, you'd find that a pretty consistent standard around the world. And its not like you weren't warned many times.
Those posts where I warned you happened some time ago, so tracking them down is a challenge as both of us were both quite post-heavy in them.
Pardon me. Not banned, you were put on PROBATION 3 times for calling me a liar. Apparently you have not learned your lesson. You are still making a personal attack and calling me a liar. It is ridiculous to call someone a liar in a rules debate. If someone misrepresents something you simply correct them. Calling them a liar is a personal attack plain and simple and you seem to have a problem with personally attacking others. Resorting to personal attacks is a sure sign that someone has lost the argument and only has recourse to personal attacks.
col_impact wrote: Instead of making ad hominem personal attacks, I suggest you focus on producing a valid counter argument to Orknado's rule supported argument which remains unchallenged.
I have, but you either choose to not listen or deliberately seek to lie about others' statements, such as now. Reanimation Protocols never stated "Wounds", and nothing in the general rules provides any evidence of what orknado has talked about.
Feel free to try and quote the RP rule, highlighting the terms "Wound", "out", or "datasheet" which is needed to support orknado's position. Feel free to try and quote orknado's quote of the datasheet rule and highlight where it states "out" or "only".
Without any of those terms, any statements of RAW supporting orknado's position are either a grievous mistake on what RAW means or a deliberate attempt to deceive, aka lying. I wonder if you have bothered to read YMDC's definition of RAW and HYWPI that I quoted.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet are both written rules and they both indicate without a doubt that slain models are not IN units and that only models that are in units have permission to have profiles. Therefore, a Destroyer model is reanimated with 3 wounds.
And you failed in the exercise to demonstrate RAW based on orknado's premise (and he hasn't done this, either). Since you have not done it, you either are lazy, tacitly admitting my point and just kicking against the pricks, or you are deliberately lying. That is hardly having an intelligent debate.
Remember, without an actual written statement specifically stating the instructions to do something, there is no "strict letter" to work with, so there is no way that orknado's premise is 100% ironclad RAW.
I have provided RAW support repeatedly. You are just too entrenched in your failed argument to accept it. As I have already presented above, the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule directly support that slain models are not IN units and that slain models lose their profiles. Therefore, Destroyer models reanimate with 3 wounds.
I suggest you stop with all your ridiculous personal attacks (calling me a liar or casting aspersions on orknado's education and employment as a professor) and focus instead on providing a valid argument. All the arguments you have presented break all the Core Rules and are therefore absurd and invalid.
No more comments about others "lying" or their character in this thread! To be honest, I have no idea about the rules discussion here, but I know you can discuss it politely.
No more personal attacks. Discuss the rules, NOT the other poster! You can also agree to disagree, or if all else fails use the Ignore feature, by you cannot attack other posters on this site.
Guys - there is no default number of wounds models return with after being brought back into the game. Typically there is a dice roll to determine or it is 1 wound. There is no code to be broken here - the rule is simply incomplete and requires a rules clarification/rewrite.
You know, if the people involved in getting this thread up to 11 pages spent half as much effort trying to get an answer from GW by "frequently asking questions", we might have an official response by now...
skoffs wrote: You know, if the people involved in getting this thread up to 11 pages spent half as much effort trying to get an answer from GW by "frequently asking questions", we might have an official response by now...
Get real - this is GW we are talking about. I listened to the FTN podcast with the games rules writer. The dude claims it took him 2 years to write the indexes (which are full of unclear rules and typos and glaring point discrepancies between power leveland actual power levels). It's pretty sad. Still better than 7th by a long shot though. My game group and I could have put together something better in a month I am sure.
Ghen1899 wrote: quick question, sorry if I missed it in an earlier post while skimming.
So according to the wording of the rules a reanimation protocol is used on models that have been slain.
When models that are removed from a unit due to a failed leadership test are said to have fleed and removed.
My buddy and I cannot figure out what it means when it says no where about them being slain from that failed leadership test, they fleed but were not slain. Thus, no reanimation protocol is allowed?
There is no difference. They are slain and then will get a chance to RP.
Ghen1899 wrote: quick question, sorry if I missed it in an earlier post while skimming.
So according to the wording of the rules a reanimation protocol is used on models that have been slain.
When models that are removed from a unit due to a failed leadership test are said to have fleed and removed.
My buddy and I cannot figure out what it means when it says no where about them being slain from that failed leadership test, they fleed but were not slain. Thus, no reanimation protocol is allowed?
As Charistoph said, that is correct. By RAW, Reanimation Protocols does not say it works on models that are said to have fleed and removed. For that matter, the inflict damage step states "If a model's wounds are reduced to 0, it is either slain or destroyed and removed from play." RP only mentions bringing a model back into play from one of those conditions (slain). It wouldn't come back from destroyed. And, another sentence in the section says"If a model loses several wounds from a single attack and is destroyed, any excess damage inflicted...", so multiple wounds can destroy a model. If you're going to get into really silly RAW, when you reduce a model to 0 wounds you can choose to have it either killed or destroyed, with RP never being able to be used. (there's the part of the very silly RAW where in order to use RP, they would have to prove that the model was slain and not destroyed). But, most people will overlook that silly RAW along with the silly RAW that the model comes back with 0 wounds since by RAW there is no statement specifying that it comes back any different than how it left (get with your group and agree how to play it - if different groups of developers of 40k played it differently in different videos, then it obviously isn't clear).
I imagine though that GW meant for every condition to be treated as slain when removed from play.
Has there been another GW video where they played Necrons with multi wound models?
So far there's only been the one that I'm aware of where multi wound models came back with only a single wound.
Somebody said there was a different one with other game developers playing where they played it with full wounds, but I haven't seen that one. If it is out there, then it only means that the situation is more muddled than we thought initially as to how GW intended it to be played.
There's was a GW game (not sure if it was this one, it's locked for subscribers only) where they apparently had multi wound models come back with only a single wound-
https://www.twitch.tv/videos/151318982
And there was a FLG (official playtesters/tournament organizers) game where multi wound models came back with full wounds-
https://www.twitch.tv/videos/153493944
There hasn't been anything from GW, but the FLG guys actually responded to a question about it and said that was the way it was supposed to be played (it's still not an official FAQ, but these guys run ITC, so if you're planning on entering any tournaments that use their format, that will most likely be how they'll rule it).
Has there seriously not been another GW video featuring Necrons with multi wound models? Could ask on the stream and maybe get an answer from them (though even if they did confirm one way or the other, there would STILL be people who refuse to acknowledge anything other than an officially published FAQ).
At this point it really doesnt matter. Both sides have stood their ground and neither will budge until a FAQ comes out from GW. Playtesters have no credibility as far a rules go.
Fragile wrote: Playtesters have no credibility as far a rules go.
But these playtesters are also major tournament organizers. Not that that means everyone has to go by what they say, but like I said above, if someone is attending an event that uses the ITC format, be aware that they'll probably rule it in line with what they responded with: "full wounds".
col_impact wrote: No supposition. We refer directly to the written word of the Reanimation Protocols rule. A slain models cannot be 'returned to this unit' if it is already in the unit. The RAW of the Reanimation Protocols rule directly supports that slain models are not IN units.
One can return from many places. In order to return from outside the unit, one must be outside in the unit. Where is the instruction to remove the model from the unit? This is something that neither you nor orknado have addressed.
1) It is referenced by Tenet #1, it is not listed as part of #1.
2) Here is the portion you are referencing:
Appendix B: What to Do When the Rules Don't Cover It?
At this point we are in uncharted territory, and there may in fact be no definitive answer. But since we are playing a game, we'll need an answer that provides us with enough functionality to actually play the game. So we must strive for a solution, but we must also realize that the solution we find does not have the weight of the rules behind it.
When the rules don't actually give us an answer, you can't create a deductive, rules based argument on how something should be played. In this case, strive to follow the ideal of "Break No Rule". Find a way of playing out the situation that doesn't actually break any rules. This may require doing something the rules don't specifically outline, but if the game will stop without taking some action, then this is probably the best course of action.
But what if this can't be done? What if you can't follow all the rules because they conflict on a point? In this case, you must simply strive to find a solution that makes the most sense and causes the least amount of disagreement. Thankfully, these cases are rare, and can usually be resolved either by mutual agreement, or by rolling a D6 and playing on.
We are only to consider the "Break No Rule" concept if the GW hasn't said how to do it. By saying the rule is broken by being incomplete, we are not violating this stricture, indeed, we start invoking it at this point.
Then there is the concept of Rules Ethics:
Appendix C: On Rules Ethics
When we discuss rules, it may not always be clear which argument has weight. If you have any question, or you have any doubt in a claim, there is a simple system to follow to ensure you get yourself into the least amount of trouble and make the least amount of people unhappy:
If there is equal weight, choosing the option that gives the action taker less advantage is the more ethical choice.
So if the rules may or may not allow you to take a specific action that has an impact on the game, don't take it. But it's important that this is only reserved for situations where there is a legitimate grey area. Simply because some people might not see or understand an argument doesn't make that argument false, so you must choose carefully when this applies. And remember, the onus is on the person taking the action. If you don't stop your opponent from taking advantage of a shaky rule, or at least discuss it, then you're just letting yourself be taken advantage of. But if he's got a good argument, be prepared to let him take the action.
Orknado asked why should we consider the benefits of the situation, and this is why. When we are not instructed on how to do something, we should consider how it may make the opponent feel. Some people consider a Reanimating model coming back with full wounds to be overpowered, while some consider it coming back with 1 Wound under-powered. The fact that it comes back at all is pretty powerful in and of itself. So, we do need to consider balanced options when we are discussing how we would play it.
col_impact wrote: Nope. Per the strict letter of the rules, only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles. That is literally what the rule says. There is no rule granting general permission for models not in units to have datasheets. Sorry but that is what the rules say.
In order for it to be "only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles", the quoted statement would have to have "only" in it. It does not. A connection to the datasheet and profile is established when you build the army list. An instruction must be provided to do so. Where is the instruction to separate the model from its datasheet and profile when it is removed from play?
col_impact wrote: Nope. Reanimation Protocols indicates that slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit' meaning without a doubt that they were not in the unit while they were slain. There is no other way to construe it. The rule says 'returned to this unit' and not 'returned to play'. Since it says the former and not the latter we know that slain models are not in units.
Yes, it does say "returned to this unit", but where was the model in the first place? Where is the instruction telling you that the model was out and separated from the unit?
There are indeed other ways to construe this if we consider all the rules provided so far. We are instructed to remove the model from play, and then to return it to the unit. Where was the model? Out of play. In a way, there is a closer analogy that can be made to a hockey player being in the penalty box, then being a dead soldier in a ditty bag. The player (model) is removed from the play of the game, when he returns to the team, he is still on the same team (unit) in the same position within that team (unit). While the model is removed from play, it is still in the unit (organizationally), but removed from interactions involved with Movement, Shooting, Charging, Fighting, etc. This is not breaking the rules of the game, but using the instructions we have so far, in the order they are given, to put them in proper perspective.
col_impact wrote: 5) The wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model (Datasheet rule).
... the datasheet rule does not state this whatsoever. If this was the case, the model could never be slain.
You are confused here.
"Wounds (W): Wounds show how much damage a model can sustain before it succumbs to its injuries."
The wound characteristic is decremented when a wound is suffered. That's the only method the rules allow for keeping track of wounds. If the wound characteristic stays static then it makes models invulnerable. But orknado is saying that the wound characteristic indicates how many wounds are left on the model, which is by definition. Again, you have no argument of merit.
No, I'm not. It's called reducto ad absurdum. It's taking the concept to its logical, absurd extent. The Wounds characteristic on the profile never actually changes. By assuming it is back at the profile point because "the wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model" (your statement), and the fact that it never literally changes, it would lead models which cannot be slain.
In addition, the quote provided by you and orknado on this in the spoiler has no written statement on this whatsoever. That makes it an assumption.
In order for it to be RAW, the mechanics which deprive the model of Wounds must be performed in reverse in order for the Wounds to be restored. Where is this process actually written in Reanimation Protocols or any general rule?
"the wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model" This is not my statement. That's the definition in the book. By definition the wound characteristic MUST change when a wound is suffered to accurately reflect how many wounds are left on the model. It would be helpful if you kept track of rules statements. When I quote something it is a rules statement.
But you were attributing it to something else, the datasheet quote provided by orknado's list and you represented as your own which stated that models were in the unit, not the actual definition. The way you and orknado were presenting it was that it could never be modified. Well, it has been modified once to remove the model from play, where does it tell us to modify it back?
col_impact wrote: Also I am a bit confused. In another thread you agree with the argument I am making and disprove the argument you are making in this thread.
In Shooting, we are told that, "A model loses one wound for each point of damage it suffers." So we have an instruction to modify the Wounds characteristic for that model as listed on the profile. That is sufficiently direct of an instruction for me, at any rate.
So I guess you prove yourself wrong. How about that!
Not entirely. In order for the model to be restored in pristine condition, we must consider the datasheet profile to be completely inviolate and unchanging. However, we do have instructions to modify the profile, which is what I was pointing out. I then stated that in order for them to be restored, it must be done in reverse order, in other words, with an instruction specifically detailing the number of Wounds being restored.
But sure, taking things out of context makes it easy to knock down strawmen.
col_impact wrote: The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts the logical inverse of IN which is one of a binary condition (IN/OUT). The rule indicates that slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they had to already have been not IN the unit. Simple logic derived directly from the Rules As Written is still Rules As Written. There is literally no other conclusion that you can have except that slain models are not IN units.
It asserts no such thing in and of itself. It would only be asserting this if we already had instructions for the model to be out, or if it said "return the model in to the unit". The rules do not operate in a vacuum, and we must be aware of previous instructions before making any assumptions on how to interpret the rules. This is a concept called "context". The only thing the model could be returning from is "out of play", since that is the only thing we have been literally instructed to do.
col_impact wrote: Let's summarize the differences between my argument and Charistoph's argument.
The key difference between our arguments is the main underlying premise for the argument.
My main premise:
Models that are slain are not in units.
Charistoph's main premise:
Models that are slain are in units.
That's it. That's the main difference between our arguments.
There is no rule in the Core Rules which tells us explicitly whether slain models are in units or not so each of us has to find support for our main premise.
Where should I start with the errors?
Col's main premise:
Models that are slain are removed from the unit.
Charistoph's main premise:
Models that are slain are removed from play.
Which one do the Core Rules actually state, again?
col_impact wrote: 1) First, he must define 'play' as all Core Rules except rules that specifically target the 'removed from play' zone (e.g. Kill points, Reanimation Protocols) which is an entirely made up category on his part.
I have never stated that there was a "removed from play" zone. That is your manufacturing. However, 'play' must be defined as we are instructed to remove the model from play. When you 'play' with a model, you are moving it, shooting with it (hopefully), Charging with it (maybe), and fighting with it (maybe). When it is removed from play, you are not moving it, shooting with it, Charging with it, or fighting with it, no matter how much you would like to complicate this concept.
col_impact wrote: 2) Further, he must define 'removed from play' as meaning that slain models do not participate in rules categorized as 'play' by the former rule. Which is another entirely made up rule.
Because that is the instruction which we are given, not to remove the model from the unit.
As opposed to 'removed from play' meaning:
* remove the model from the unit.
* clear all previous actions on the model.
* disconnect the model from its datasheet and profile.
Did I miss anything?
col_impact wrote: 3) Third, he must make a special exception for the Datasheet rule. He makes up that the datasheet rule still finds models that are 'removed from play' even though the datasheet rule doesn't specifically address the 'removed from play' zone and will maintain a profile for them. So the Datasheet rule gets a special made up exception to his 2 already made up definitions.
I do not need to make an exception for the datasheet rule whatsoever. The models are still in the unit, even if we were to consider the unsupported claim that models removed from a unit lose their connection to the datasheet. The unit is an organizational feature, not a box. So, physical placement is not connected to such a concept.
col_impact wrote: 4) Fourth, at the end of all of this he still has to make up a rule to fix Reanimation Protocols which is inexplicably broken. So he makes up a rule that reanimates Destroyers with 1 wound or 3 wounds depending on how much he favors Necrons at that time.
Actually, it's not me, as I have no Necron models. That's an assumption. Considering that it is RAW that the number of Wounds a model returns with is undefined, that is a perfectly viable statement to make depending on the agreement of the game masters as to what they feel is proper and fair.
Charistoph wrote: That's funny considering how hard you fought to treat FAQs as official errata. And FYI, so long as mentioning it as HYWPI, it is not in violation of Tenet #4.
FAQs are officially recognized rules sources. By no stretch of the imagination are FAQs house rules.
But not errata. This was an official stream put on by the company. Just as a official.
col_impact wrote: Providing something as a house rule is meaningless to a debate about what the rules say. Tenet #4 just tells you to mark your statements HYWPI so we can set them aside as inconsequential to a rules debate.
Which is what he was saying. Remember, HYWPI is find when the rules do not say what to do. It says that in the same place as it says to not break a rule.
col_impact wrote: I have provided RAW support repeatedly. You are just too entrenched in your failed argument to accept it. As I have already presented above, the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule directly support that slain models are not IN units and that slain models lose their profiles.
In order to have RAW support, you must properly address these challenges:
* Quote the RP rule, highlighting the terms "Wound", "out", or "datasheet".
* Quote of the datasheet rule and highlight where it states "out" or "only".
So simple enough question then as it pertains to this.
If I have a 30 model unit of Orc Boys, and I lose 10 to shooting what is my leadership value for the subsequent moral test?
The mob rule allows me to substitute the Boyz Ld value (Of 6) for the number of models in the unit (In this case 30) or which ever is higher.
If we presume that models count as part of a unit even after they suffer fatal wounds (and are removed from the table/playing field) then the Ld value should be 30 even if one boy remains.
However, if we presume that once a model suffers a fatal wound they are removed from the unit (Thus no longer part of it, but having come from it), then having 20 boy left out of 30 nets us a Ld value of 20 (as those Boyz lost to shooting no longer count s being "in" the unit).
col_impact wrote: No supposition. We refer directly to the written word of the Reanimation Protocols rule. A slain models cannot be 'returned to this unit' if it is already in the unit. The RAW of the Reanimation Protocols rule directly supports that slain models are not IN units.
One can return from many places. In order to return from outside the unit, one must be outside in the unit. Where is the instruction to remove the model from the unit? This is something that neither you nor orknado have addressed.
We don't need to address this. The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts with its very wording that the slain models 'must be outside in the unit' as you note. We have no choice but to follow the RAW on this, and take the Reanimation Protocols rule at its word. If you don't take the Reanimation Protocols rule at its word then you are violating plainly stated RAW.
col_impact wrote: Nope. Per the strict letter of the rules, only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles. That is literally what the rule says. There is no rule granting general permission for models not in units to have datasheets. Sorry but that is what the rules say.
In order for it to be "only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles", the quoted statement would have to have "only" in it. It does not. A connection to the datasheet and profile is established when you build the army list. An instruction must be provided to do so. Where is the instruction to separate the model from its datasheet and profile when it is removed from play?
Models only have permission to have datasheets/profiles while they are in units. You have to show a rule that permanently affixes a profile to a model in order to overcome the loss of the profile when the model no longer has permission to have the profile. Remember the rule says "each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models in that unit". A model that is no longer in the unit, is no longer being 'listed' by the datasheet.
The burden of proof is on you here to provide a rule that affixes profiles to models such that the datasheet will list them when they are not in the unit.
col_impact wrote: Nope. Reanimation Protocols indicates that slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit' meaning without a doubt that they were not in the unit while they were slain. There is no other way to construe it. The rule says 'returned to this unit' and not 'returned to play'. Since it says the former and not the latter we know that slain models are not in units.
Yes, it does say "returned to this unit", but where was the model in the first place? Where is the instruction telling you that the model was out and separated from the unit?
There are indeed other ways to construe this if we consider all the rules provided so far. We are instructed to remove the model from play, and then to return it to the unit. Where was the model? Out of play. In a way, there is a closer analogy that can be made to a hockey player being in the penalty box, then being a dead soldier in a ditty bag. The player (model) is removed from the play of the game, when he returns to the team, he is still on the same team (unit) in the same position within that team (unit). While the model is removed from play, it is still in the unit (organizationally), but removed from interactions involved with Movement, Shooting, Charging, Fighting, etc. This is not breaking the rules of the game, but using the instructions we have so far, in the order they are given, to put them in proper perspective.
Your own analogy proves my argument.
A player who is in the penalty box is still on the team so its not the same thing as what Reanimation Protocols rule is telling us.
The RP rule tells us that slain models are not in the unit. Unit is an organizational definition so slain models are not part of the unit organization.
While slain models are not part of the unit organization, datasheets will not list their characteristics as per the Datasheet rule.
col_impact wrote:]"the wound characteristic on the profile is what is used to indicate how many wounds are left on the model" This is not my statement. That's the definition in the book. By definition the wound characteristic MUST change when a wound is suffered to accurately reflect how many wounds are left on the model. It would be helpful if you kept track of rules statements. When I quote something it is a rules statement.
But you were attributing it to something else, the datasheet quote provided by orknado's list and you represented as your own which stated that models were in the unit, not the actual definition. The way you and orknado were presenting it was that it could never be modified. Well, it has been modified once to remove the model from play, where does it tell us to modify it back?
Yup. The profile is modified and when slain the slain model is no longer in the unit. When the slain model is not in the unit, the datasheet no longer lists the characteristics the model. That's the RAW.
col_impact wrote: Also I am a bit confused. In another thread you agree with the argument I am making and disprove the argument you are making in this thread.
In Shooting, we are told that, "A model loses one wound for each point of damage it suffers." So we have an instruction to modify the Wounds characteristic for that model as listed on the profile. That is sufficiently direct of an instruction for me, at any rate.
So I guess you prove yourself wrong. How about that!
Not entirely. In order for the model to be restored in pristine condition, we must consider the datasheet profile to be completely inviolate and unchanging. However, we do have instructions to modify the profile, which is what I was pointing out. I then stated that in order for them to be restored, it must be done in reverse order, in other words, with an instruction specifically detailing the number of Wounds being restored.
But sure, taking things out of context makes it easy to knock down strawmen.
So the profile is modified. The model is reduced to zero wounds and the slain models is no longer in the unit. When the model is not in the unit, the datasheet will no longer list the Wound characteristic. When the slain model is reanimated and the model is 'returned to this unit' then at that point the datasheet will list the Wound characteristic, which will be 3 in the case of a Destroyer model.
col_impact wrote: The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts the logical inverse of IN which is one of a binary condition (IN/OUT). The rule indicates that slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they had to already have been not IN the unit. Simple logic derived directly from the Rules As Written is still Rules As Written. There is literally no other conclusion that you can have except that slain models are not IN units.
It asserts no such thing in and of itself. It would only be asserting this if we already had instructions for the model to be out, or if it said "return the model in to the unit". The rules do not operate in a vacuum, and we must be aware of previous instructions before making any assumptions on how to interpret the rules. This is a concept called "context". The only thing the model could be returning from is "out of play", since that is the only thing we have been literally instructed to do.
Nope. The Reanimation Protocols rule indeed asserts in and of itself that slain models are not in units when it indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit'. It is logically impossible to construe another way without breaking the semantic logic of what the rule is saying. The RP rule is a rule in the book and so we have to adhere to what it is telling us.
col_impact wrote: 1) First, he must define 'play' as all Core Rules except rules that specifically target the 'removed from play' zone (e.g. Kill points, Reanimation Protocols) which is an entirely made up category on his part.
I have never stated that there was a "removed from play" zone. That is your manufacturing. However, 'play' must be defined as we are instructed to remove the model from play. When you 'play' with a model, you are moving it, shooting with it (hopefully), Charging with it (maybe), and fighting with it (maybe). When it is removed from play, you are not moving it, shooting with it, Charging with it, or fighting with it, no matter how much you would like to complicate this concept.
You are making up this definition of 'play'. There is no such definition in the rules. So once again it is an example of a house rule that you must invent in order to fix the rules that you radically break with your premise that 'slain models are in units'. This is one of the reasons why your premise is invalid.
BLADERIKER wrote: So simple enough question then as it pertains to this.
If I have a 30 model unit of Orc Boys, and I lose 10 to shooting what is my leadership value for the subsequent moral test?
The mob rule allows me to substitute the Boyz Ld value (Of 6) for the number of models in the unit (In this case 30) or which ever is higher.
If we presume that models count as part of a unit even after they suffer fatal wounds (and are removed from the table/playing field) then the Ld value should be 30 even if one boy remains.
However, if we presume that once a model suffers a fatal wound they are removed from the unit (Thus no longer part of it, but having come from it), then having 20 boy left out of 30 nets us a Ld value of 20 (as those Boyz lost to shooting no longer count s being "in" the unit).
The issue is where are we instructed to actually remove the model from the unit without relying on making up instructions?
Leadership rolls could be a case where it is relying on models in play as much as in the unit. We presumably cannot call on them for Leadership any more than we can call on them for Shooting or checking to see if they are Coherency.
BLADERIKER wrote: So simple enough question then as it pertains to this.
If I have a 30 model unit of Orc Boys, and I lose 10 to shooting what is my leadership value for the subsequent moral test?
The mob rule allows me to substitute the Boyz Ld value (Of 6) for the number of models in the unit (In this case 30) or which ever is higher.
If we presume that models count as part of a unit even after they suffer fatal wounds (and are removed from the table/playing field) then the Ld value should be 30 even if one boy remains.
However, if we presume that once a model suffers a fatal wound they are removed from the unit (Thus no longer part of it, but having come from it), then having 20 boy left out of 30 nets us a Ld value of 20 (as those Boyz lost to shooting no longer count s being "in" the unit).
Exactly. Charistoph has been wholly unable to present a valid argument that doesn't break all the Core Rules.
BLADERIKER wrote: So simple enough question then as it pertains to this.
If I have a 30 model unit of Orc Boys, and I lose 10 to shooting what is my leadership value for the subsequent moral test?
The mob rule allows me to substitute the Boyz Ld value (Of 6) for the number of models in the unit (In this case 30) or which ever is higher.
If we presume that models count as part of a unit even after they suffer fatal wounds (and are removed from the table/playing field) then the Ld value should be 30 even if one boy remains.
However, if we presume that once a model suffers a fatal wound they are removed from the unit (Thus no longer part of it, but having come from it), then having 20 boy left out of 30 nets us a Ld value of 20 (as those Boyz lost to shooting no longer count s being "in" the unit).
The issue is where are we instructed to actually remove the model from the unit without relying on making up instructions?
Leadership rolls could be a case where it is relying on models in play as much as in the unit. We presumably cannot call on them for Leadership any more than we can call on them for Shooting or checking to see if they are Coherency.
Are we supposed to take your ad hoc rationale here seriously (highlighted in red)?
I think you have just proven to your thread that you are forced to resort to a dozen or so House Rules to fix the mountain of rules that your premise that 'slain models are in units' break.
Your argument is ridiculously invalid.
This leaves orknado and myself with the only valid rule supported argument.
One can return from many places. In order to return from outside the unit, one must be outside in the unit. Where is the instruction to remove the model from the unit? This is something that neither you nor orknado have addressed.
We don't need to address this. The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts with its very wording that the slain models 'must be outside in the unit' as you note. We have no choice but to follow the RAW on this, and take the Reanimation Protocols rule at its word. If you don't take the Reanimation Protocols rule at its word then you are violating plainly stated RAW.
Reanimation Protocols says absolutely nothing about a model being "out" or "in". As such, any consideration of the model being "out" is a fabrication in your own mind, and not an assertion of the rule. Any consideration of "out" would have to be written before Reanimation Protocols is stated. Without the actual written terms, you have no RAW.
In order for it to be "only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles", the quoted statement would have to have "only" in it. It does not. A connection to the datasheet and profile is established when you build the army list. An instruction must be provided to do so. Where is the instruction to separate the model from its datasheet and profile when it is removed from play?
Models only have permission to have datasheets/profiles while they are in units. You have to show a rule that permanently affixes a profile to a model in order to overcome the loss of the profile when the model no longer has permission to have the profile. Remember the rule says "each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models in that unit". A model that is no longer in the unit, is no longer being 'listed' by the datasheet.
The burden of proof is on you here to provide a rule that affixes profiles to models such that the datasheet will list them when they are not in the unit.
I can demonstrate that the word "only" does not exist in the datasheet quote that orknado provided. Without that, there would need to be instruction to disconnect that connection between model and profile datasheet. I need no burden of proof to state that your opinion on this matter is made up. Any perusal of the Primer will find none of these instructions. You and orknado have a burden of proof that the model is removed from the unit, and having done so, loses all connection to its datasheet and profile. So, where is it besides your own heads?
Yes, it does say "returned to this unit", but where was the model in the first place? Where is the instruction telling you that the model was out and separated from the unit?
There are indeed other ways to construe this if we consider all the rules provided so far. We are instructed to remove the model from play, and then to return it to the unit. Where was the model? Out of play. In a way, there is a closer analogy that can be made to a hockey player being in the penalty box, then being a dead soldier in a ditty bag. The player (model) is removed from the play of the game, when he returns to the team, he is still on the same team (unit) in the same position within that team (unit). While the model is removed from play, it is still in the unit (organizationally), but removed from interactions involved with Movement, Shooting, Charging, Fighting, etc. This is not breaking the rules of the game, but using the instructions we have so far, in the order they are given, to put them in proper perspective.
Your own analogy proves my argument.
A player who is in the penalty box is still on the team so its not the same thing as what Reanimation Protocols rule is telling us.
The RP rule tells us that slain models are not in the unit. Unit is an organizational definition so slain models are not part of the unit organization.
While slain models are not part of the unit organization, datasheets will not list their characteristics as per the Datasheet rule.
The RP rule states nothing about the model not being in the unit. That is pure fabrication.
We have no instructions removing slain models from the unit organization. That is pure fabrication.
We have no instructions that state when models are no longer part of a unit, datasheets will no longer apply to them. That is pure fabrication.
Charistoph wrote: But you were attributing it to something else, the datasheet quote provided by orknado's list and you represented as your own which stated that models were in the unit, not the actual definition. The way you and orknado were presenting it was that it could never be modified. Well, it has been modified once to remove the model from play, where does it tell us to modify it back?
Yup. The profile is modified and when slain the slain model is no longer in the unit. When the slain model is not in the unit, the datasheet no longer lists the characteristics the model. That's the RAW.
Again, where do the rules tell us to modify the Wounds back?
Where does it tell us that the slain model is no longer in the unit?
Where does it state that a datasheet no longer lists the characteristics of a slain model?
Charistoph wrote: Not entirely. In order for the model to be restored in pristine condition, we must consider the datasheet profile to be completely inviolate and unchanging. However, we do have instructions to modify the profile, which is what I was pointing out. I then stated that in order for them to be restored, it must be done in reverse order, in other words, with an instruction specifically detailing the number of Wounds being restored.
But sure, taking things out of context makes it easy to knock down strawmen.
So the profile is modified. The model is reduced to zero wounds and the slain models is no longer in the unit. When the model is not in the unit, the datasheet will no longer list the Wound characteristic. When the slain model is reanimated and the model is 'returned to this unit' then at that point the datasheet will list the Wound characteristic, which will be 3 in the case of a Destroyer model.
Where are the rules quotes to support the highlighted?
Charistoph wrote: It asserts no such thing in and of itself. It would only be asserting this if we already had instructions for the model to be out, or if it said "return the model in to the unit". The rules do not operate in a vacuum, and we must be aware of previous instructions before making any assumptions on how to interpret the rules. This is a concept called "context". The only thing the model could be returning from is "out of play", since that is the only thing we have been literally instructed to do.
Nope. The Reanimation Protocols rule indeed asserts in and of itself that slain models are not in units when it indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit'. It is logically impossible to construe another way without breaking the semantic logic of what the rule is saying. The RP rule is a rule in the book and so we have to adhere to what it is telling us.
Reanimation Protocols cannot assert that the model is out of the unit because it never states it. You and orknado are asserting it.
There is no semantic logic that connects to anything you are saying because it would require written phrases to process in semantics. And it is quite logically to logically construe other associations with it, as I demonstrated with the penalty box analogy. The hockey player is removed from the play of the game. A slain model is removed from the play of the game. Reanimation Protocols then returns the model to the unit for the play of the game.
col_impact wrote: 1) First, he must define 'play' as all Core Rules except rules that specifically target the 'removed from play' zone (e.g. Kill points, Reanimation Protocols) which is an entirely made up category on his part.
I have never stated that there was a "removed from play" zone. That is your manufacturing. However, 'play' must be defined as we are instructed to remove the model from play. When you 'play' with a model, you are moving it, shooting with it (hopefully), Charging with it (maybe), and fighting with it (maybe). When it is removed from play, you are not moving it, shooting with it, Charging with it, or fighting with it, no matter how much you would like to complicate this concept.
You are making up this definition of 'play'. There is no such definition in the rules. So once again it is an example of a house rule that you must invent in order to fix the rules that you radically break with your premise that 'slain models are in units'. This is one of the reasons why your premise is invalid.
I never stated this was a definition. I was stating that is what people do with the model when it is in play, and what people don't do with it when it has been removed from play.
Can you provide any actual core rules which actually state we do otherwise?
Automatically Appended Next Post:
col_impact wrote: Exactly. Charistoph has been wholly unable to present a valid argument that doesn't break all the Core Rules.
Just because you don't like it, doesn't mean it hasn't been done. There is a difference. The main differences is that I acknowledge that most of this indication of 'play' is how players play it, not written statements.
charistoph wrote:The issue is where are we instructed to actually remove the model from the unit without relying on making up instructions?
Leadership rolls could be a case where it is relying on models in play as much as in the unit. We presumably cannot call on them for Leadership any more than we can call on them for Shooting or checking to see if they are Coherency.
Are we supposed to take your ad hoc rationale here seriously (highlighted in red)?
Are we supposed to take your statements of RAW seriously when you add words to the rules?
You still have yet to properly answer the questions provided, nor answer the challenges requested to demonstrate the RAW validity of your and orknado's stance:
* Quote Reanimation Protocols and highlight where it states "out", "not in", "Wound", or "datasheet".
* Quote the core rule that states a model is removed from the unit.
* Quote the datasheet rule that states only models within a unit have access to the datasheet and highlight the word "only".
One can return from many places. In order to return from outside the unit, one must be outside in the unit. Where is the instruction to remove the model from the unit? This is something that neither you nor orknado have addressed.
We don't need to address this. The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts with its very wording that the slain models 'must be outside in the unit' as you note. We have no choice but to follow the RAW on this, and take the Reanimation Protocols rule at its word. If you don't take the Reanimation Protocols rule at its word then you are violating plainly stated RAW.
Reanimation Protocols says absolutely nothing about a model being "out" or "in". As such, any consideration of the model being "out" is a fabrication in your own mind, and not an assertion of the rule. Any consideration of "out" would have to be written before Reanimation Protocols is stated. Without the actual written terms, you have no RAW.
Incorrect. The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts with its own wording that slain models are not IN units because slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit'. 'Unit' is an organizational term in 8th edition, so slain models must not be part of the unit organization. There is absolutely no other way of construing it.
In order for it to be "only models that are in units have datasheets and profiles", the quoted statement would have to have "only" in it. It does not. A connection to the datasheet and profile is established when you build the army list. An instruction must be provided to do so. Where is the instruction to separate the model from its datasheet and profile when it is removed from play?
Models only have permission to have datasheets/profiles while they are in units. You have to show a rule that permanently affixes a profile to a model in order to overcome the loss of the profile when the model no longer has permission to have the profile. Remember the rule says "each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models in that unit". A model that is no longer in the unit, is no longer being 'listed' by the datasheet.
The burden of proof is on you here to provide a rule that affixes profiles to models such that the datasheet will list them when they are not in the unit.
I can demonstrate that the word "only" does not exist in the datasheet quote that orknado provided. Without that, there would need to be instruction to disconnect that connection between model and profile datasheet. I need no burden of proof to state that your opinion on this matter is made up. Any perusal of the Primer will find none of these instructions. You and orknado have a burden of proof that the model is removed from the unit, and having done so, loses all connection to its datasheet and profile. So, where is it besides your own heads?
Per the Datasheet rule, datasheets list the characteristics of models in the unit. When slain models are not in the unit, the datasheet will not list them. The rule directly supports my argument. The burden of proof is on you to show some rule that affixes the profile to the model since the datasheet does not list characteristics for models that are not in units.
Yes, it does say "returned to this unit", but where was the model in the first place? Where is the instruction telling you that the model was out and separated from the unit?
There are indeed other ways to construe this if we consider all the rules provided so far. We are instructed to remove the model from play, and then to return it to the unit. Where was the model? Out of play. In a way, there is a closer analogy that can be made to a hockey player being in the penalty box, then being a dead soldier in a ditty bag. The player (model) is removed from the play of the game, when he returns to the team, he is still on the same team (unit) in the same position within that team (unit). While the model is removed from play, it is still in the unit (organizationally), but removed from interactions involved with Movement, Shooting, Charging, Fighting, etc. This is not breaking the rules of the game, but using the instructions we have so far, in the order they are given, to put them in proper perspective.
Your own analogy proves my argument.
A player who is in the penalty box is still on the team so its not the same thing as what Reanimation Protocols rule is telling us.
The RP rule tells us that slain models are not in the unit. Unit is an organizational definition so slain models are not part of the unit organization.
While slain models are not part of the unit organization, datasheets will not list their characteristics as per the Datasheet rule.
The RP rule states nothing about the model not being in the unit. That is pure fabrication.
We have no instructions removing slain models from the unit organization. That is pure fabrication.
We have no instructions that state when models are no longer part of a unit, datasheets will no longer apply to them. That is pure fabrication.
Fabrication is fine for HYWPI, but not for RAW.
Nope. Not fabrication at all. By its very wording, the Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit'. This can only mean that prior to reanimation they were not IN the unit. The rules directly support my argument.
Further, the Datasheet rule directly states it lists the characteristics for models in the unit. When a model is slain and not in the unit, the datasheet will not list its characteristics. The rules directly support our argument.
Charistoph wrote: But you were attributing it to something else, the datasheet quote provided by orknado's list and you represented as your own which stated that models were in the unit, not the actual definition. The way you and orknado were presenting it was that it could never be modified. Well, it has been modified once to remove the model from play, where does it tell us to modify it back?
Yup. The profile is modified and when slain the slain model is no longer in the unit. When the slain model is not in the unit, the datasheet no longer lists the characteristics the model. That's the RAW.
Again, where do the rules tell us to modify the Wounds back?
Where does it tell us that the slain model is no longer in the unit?
Where does it state that a datasheet no longer lists the characteristics of a slain model?
Core Rules for the latter two, please.
The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates by its wording that without a doubt slain models are not in units. Slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit' which means that prior they were not in the unit.
The Datasheet rule lists the characteristics for models that are in units. The RP rule tells us slain models are not in units. Both of these rules combined directly indicate that datasheets do not list the characteristics of slain models.
I am not required to support my argument with Core Rules. The Necron index has rules of equal authority in this argument. Don't task me with requirements I do not have.
Charistoph wrote: It asserts no such thing in and of itself. It would only be asserting this if we already had instructions for the model to be out, or if it said "return the model in to the unit". The rules do not operate in a vacuum, and we must be aware of previous instructions before making any assumptions on how to interpret the rules. This is a concept called "context". The only thing the model could be returning from is "out of play", since that is the only thing we have been literally instructed to do.
Nope. The Reanimation Protocols rule indeed asserts in and of itself that slain models are not in units when it indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit'. It is logically impossible to construe another way without breaking the semantic logic of what the rule is saying. The RP rule is a rule in the book and so we have to adhere to what it is telling us.
Reanimation Protocols cannot assert that the model is out of the unit because it never states it. You and orknado are asserting it.
There is no semantic logic that connects to anything you are saying because it would require written phrases to process in semantics. And it is quite logically to logically construe other associations with it, as I demonstrated with the penalty box analogy. The hockey player is removed from the play of the game. A slain model is removed from the play of the game. Reanimation Protocols then returns the model to the unit for the play of the game.
Your analogy once again dismantles your case. The rule would say 'returned to play' if it meant 'returned to play'. The rules says 'return to this unit' since it meant 'return to this unit'. That's the RAW. The burden of proof is on you to show a rule that Reanimation Protocols meant something different than 'return to unit' when it said 'return to unit'. Otherwise we obey what the rule says. That's the RAW.
col_impact wrote: 1) First, he must define 'play' as all Core Rules except rules that specifically target the 'removed from play' zone (e.g. Kill points, Reanimation Protocols) which is an entirely made up category on his part.
I have never stated that there was a "removed from play" zone. That is your manufacturing. However, 'play' must be defined as we are instructed to remove the model from play. When you 'play' with a model, you are moving it, shooting with it (hopefully), Charging with it (maybe), and fighting with it (maybe). When it is removed from play, you are not moving it, shooting with it, Charging with it, or fighting with it, no matter how much you would like to complicate this concept.
You are making up this definition of 'play'. There is no such definition in the rules. So once again it is an example of a house rule that you must invent in order to fix the rules that you radically break with your premise that 'slain models are in units'. This is one of the reasons why your premise is invalid.
I never stated this was a definition. I was stating that is what people do with the model when it is in play, and what people don't do with it when it has been removed from play.
Can you provide any actual core rules which actually state we do otherwise?
Right. So it's a house rule that you are inventing in order to repair the game you profoundly broke with your premise that 'slain models are in units'.
You have only presented ridiculously invalid arguments so far. You require 6+ house rules to prop up your premise.
Alternatively, we can accept the RAW that slain models are not in units and slain models are automatically exempt from all the Core Rules your premise breaks. Our argument requires no house rules.
col_impact wrote: Exactly. Charistoph has been wholly unable to present a valid argument that doesn't break all the Core Rules.
Just because you don't like it, doesn't mean it hasn't been done. There is a difference. The main differences is that I acknowledge that most of this indication of 'play' is how players play it, not written statements.
So you break the Core Rules with your premise and then fabricate 6+ house rules out of thin air to repair the broken mess your premise caused. Let me know when you have a valid argument for consideration.
charistoph wrote:The issue is where are we instructed to actually remove the model from the unit without relying on making up instructions?
Leadership rolls could be a case where it is relying on models in play as much as in the unit. We presumably cannot call on them for Leadership any more than we can call on them for Shooting or checking to see if they are Coherency.
Are we supposed to take your ad hoc rationale here seriously (highlighted in red)?
Are we supposed to take your statements of RAW seriously when you add words to the rules?
You still have yet to properly answer the questions provided, nor answer the challenges requested to demonstrate the RAW validity of your and orknado's stance:
* Quote Reanimation Protocols and highlight where it states "out", "not in", "Wound", or "datasheet".
* Quote the core rule that states a model is removed from the unit.
* Quote the datasheet rule that states only models within a unit have access to the datasheet and highlight the word "only".
Tenet #1, You say it is written, prove it.
I have repeatedly demonstrated my rules support.
The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that prior they were not in the unit. That is direct rules support.
The Datasheet rule by definition lists the characteristics for models in units. The datasheet does not list characteristics for models not in the unit.
Combined the RP rule and the Datasheet rule prove that a slain model has no wound characteristic and is reanimated per the number of wounds on its datasheet.
I am not required to quote only Core Rules to support my argument. The RP rule is in the Necron codex and is equally a rule as any rule in the Core Rules.
BLADERIKER wrote: So simple enough question then as it pertains to this.
If I have a 30 model unit of Orc Boys, and I lose 10 to shooting what is my leadership value for the subsequent moral test?
The mob rule allows me to substitute the Boyz Ld value (Of 6) for the number of models in the unit (In this case 30) or which ever is higher.
If we presume that models count as part of a unit even after they suffer fatal wounds (and are removed from the table/playing field) then the Ld value should be 30 even if one boy remains.
However, if we presume that once a model suffers a fatal wound they are removed from the unit (Thus no longer part of it, but having come from it), then having 20 boy left out of 30 nets us a Ld value of 20 (as those Boyz lost to shooting no longer count s being "in" the unit).
This is an excellent example that proves that Charistoph's argument is implausible.
col_impact wrote: The Reanimation Protocols rule asserts with its own wording that slain models are not IN units because slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit'. 'Unit' is an organizational term in 8th edition, so slain models must not be part of the unit organization. There is absolutely no other way of construing it.
You need to learn to differentiate the difference between imply and assert. You are actually asserting the rule is implying it, but have yet to demonstrate that it is asserting it. Look up the difference between the words.
* Quote Reanimation Protocols and highlight where it states "out", "not in", "Wound", or "datasheet".
col_impact wrote: Per the Datasheet rule, datasheets list the characteristics of models in the unit. When slain models are not in the unit, the datasheet will not list them. The rule directly supports my argument. The burden of proof is on you to show some rule that affixes the profile to the model since the datasheet does not list characteristics for models that are not in units.
* Quote the core rule that states a model is removed from the unit.
* Quote the datasheet rule that states only models within a unit have access to the datasheet and highlight the word "only".
* Quote the core rule that states that when a model is removed from a unit, it loses its connection to the datasheet.
col_impact wrote: By its very wording, the Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit'. This can only mean that prior to reanimation they were not IN the unit. The rules directly support my argument.
No, Reanimation Protocols STATES the slain model is 'returned to this unit'. To demonstrate that the returning model was not IN the unit, we must demonstrate that it was out before hand.
* Quote the core rule that states a model is removed from the unit.
col_impact wrote: Further, the Datasheet rule directly states it lists the characteristics for models in the unit. When a model is slain and not in the unit, the datasheet will not list its characteristics. The rules directly support our argument.
* Quote the datasheet rule that states only models within a unit have access to the datasheet and highlight the word "only".
* Quote the core rule that states that when a model is removed from a unit, it loses its connection to the datasheet.
col_impact wrote: The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates by its wording that without a doubt slain models are not in units. Slain models that are reanimated are 'returned to this unit' which means that prior they were not in the unit.
The Datasheet rule lists the characteristics for models that are in units. The RP rule tells us slain models are not in units. Both of these rules combined directly indicate that datasheets do not list the characteristics of slain models.
I am not required to support my argument with Core Rules. The Necron index has rules of equal authority in this argument. Don't task me with requirements I do not have.
* Quote Reanimation Protocols and highlight where it states "out", "not in", "Wound", or "datasheet".
col_impact wrote: Your analogy once again dismantles your case. The rule would say 'returned to play' if it meant 'returned to play'. The rules says 'return to this unit' since it meant 'return to this unit'. That's the RAW. The burden of proof is on you to show a rule that Reanimation Protocols meant something different than 'return to unit' when it said 'return to unit'. Otherwise we obey what the rule says. That's the RAW.
Umm, why should I demonstrate something as RAW, which I am not stating as RAW? Why should I accept your definition of RAW when you have not properly demonstrated the written rules to support your points? Why should I accept your definition of RAW when you cannot even recognize when I am speaking HIWPI?
Very specifically, we are instructed to have the model "removed from play", not "removed from unit". One can return without ever being out. That was the point of the analogy.
col_impact wrote: Right. So it's a house rule that you are inventing in order to repair the game you profoundly broke with your premise that 'slain models are in units'.
You have only presented ridiculously invalid arguments so far. You require 6+ house rules to prop up your premise.
Alternatively, we can accept the RAW that slain models are not in units and slain models are automatically exempt from all the Core Rules your premise breaks. Our argument requires no house rules.
When a model is slain, what is the instruction?
* Quote Reanimation Protocols and highlight where it states "out", "not in", "Wound", or "datasheet".
* Quote the core rule that states a model is removed from the unit.
* Quote the datasheet rule that states only models within a unit have access to the datasheet and highlight the word "only".
col_impact wrote: So you break the Core Rules with your premise and then fabricate 6+ house rules out of thin air to repair the broken mess your premise caused. Let me know when you have a valid argument for consideration.
Do not misrepresent. I only need to add 2 house rules to get this work: The definition of "Play" in reference to "removed from play"; The number of Wounds RP restores.
I do not need to add the house rules of:
> A model removed from play is removed from the unit.
> Adding "only" to the definition of datasheets.
> Removing the connection between the model and the datasheet when the model is removed from play.
> All actions, aside from removing from play, are removed from the model when it is removed from play.
col_impact wrote: I have repeatedly demonstrated my rules support.
The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that prior they were not in the unit. That is direct rules support.
To demonstrate that it is direct rules support, we must first indicate the model is out of the unit when it is removed from play. To support this you need:
* Quote Reanimation Protocols and highlight where it states "out", "not in", "Wound", or "datasheet".
* Quote the core rule that states a model is removed from the unit.
col_impact wrote: The Datasheet rule by definition lists the characteristics for models in units. The datasheet does not list characteristics for models not in the unit.
* Quote the core rule that instructs us to sever a model's connection to the datasheet when it is removed from the unit. OR
* Quote the datasheet rule that states only models within a unit have access to the datasheet and highlight the word "only".
col_impact wrote: I am not required to quote only Core Rules to support my argument. The RP rule is in the Necron codex and is equally a rule as any rule in the Core Rules.
In order for a statement to be RAW, it must be written. In order to demonstrate that a rule is written, it should be quoted. If you cannot quote the rule and highlight the specific passages, it is not RAW, but assumption or HYWPI. Tenet #1: Don't make a statement without backing it up. Tenet #4: Rules as Written are not How You Would Play It. Please clearly state which one you are talking about during a rules debate, and do not argue a RAW point against a HYWPI point (or vice-versa). Rules As Written (RAW) - This refers to playing by the strict letter of the rules, which can lead to odd or counterintuitive situations. How You Would Play It (HYWPI) - This refers to taking small liberties with the rules to smooth out the odd or counterintuitive situations listed above.
If you want to change your stance to this being HYWPI, fine by me, that's been the whole point of my interaction against orknado's comments and yours. Both you and he have been claiming RAW without providing written proof. When asked for the written proof, both you and he go of on it being logically deduced and not quoting where it actually states it, which is HHWPI not RAW. Neither of you have even properly identified when I was speaking between HIWPI and RAW. Both you and orknado have been assuming all I have presented is RAW and treating it as such.
Roll a D6 for each slain model FROM this unit (unless the whole unit has been completely destroyed) at the beginning of your turn. On a 5+, the model's reanimation protocols activate and it is RETURNED to this unit, otherwise they remain inactive (although you can roll again at the start of each of your subsequent turns). When a model's reanimation protocols activate, set it up model in unit coherency with any model from this unit that not returned to the unit as a result of reanimation protocols this turn, and more than 1" from enemy models. If you cannot do this because there is no room to place the model, do not set it up.
Spoiler:
Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models IN that unit.
The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that prior to that they were without a doubt not in the unit. That is direct unequivocal rules support.
The Datasheet rule by definition lists the characteristics for models in units. The datasheet does not list characteristics for models not in the unit. If a model ever leaves the unit the datasheet by definition will no longer list it. The datasheet is the entity that actively lists the characteristics for models in the unit. Models do not list their own characteristics. The belief that models list their own characteristics is a misconception on your part that is supported by no rule in 8th edition. There is no rule that indicates a model 'carries' a profile with it or has a profile 'affixed' to it. Datasheets do the listing for models in the unit, and the datasheet does not list the characteristics for those models that are not in the unit.
Combined, the RP rule and the Datasheet rule prove that a slain model that is not in a unit has no wound characteristic listed. With that wound characteristic no longer listed, a slain model is reanimated per the number of wounds on its datasheet. In the case of a Destroyer model that number will be 3 wounds.
You are tasking me with requirements that I am not required to meet to claim a RAW argument. I am not required to quote only Core Rules to support my argument. The RP rule is in the Necron codex and is equally a rule as any rule in the Core Rules. Together, the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule justify my RAW argument.
Roll a D6 for each slain model FROM this unit (unless the whole unit has been completely destroyed) at the beginning of your turn. On a 5+, the model's reanimation protocols activate and it is RETURNED to this unit, otherwise they remain inactive (although you can roll again at the start of each of your subsequent turns). When a model's reanimation protocols activate, set it up model in unit coherency with any model from this unit that not returned to the unit as a result of reanimation protocols this turn, and more than 1" from enemy models. If you cannot do this because there is no room to place the model, do not set it up.
Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models IN that unit.
No highlighting. You really do not wish to properly support your statement.
col_impact wrote: The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that prior to that they were without a doubt not in the unit. That is direct unequivocal rules support.
The Reanimation Protocols STATE that reanimated slain models are returned to this unit. I am correcting you on this because "indicate" is a weak word for this, while "state" is a stronger and more accurate term.
Returned can mean several things. Coming from outside something is not the exclusive definition of this word. Indeed, you will be hard pressed to find a definition of "return" which states an exclusive association with "out". The definitions "return" has state it is going back to something. One can return from inside a house just as easily as one returns from outside the house. The relationship of "return" to the subject is dependent on where it was previously. In order to have an association with "out", one needs to demonstrate an "out" versus "in" relationship before hand.
So, where are we told the model is "out of the unit"?
col_impact wrote: The Datasheet rule by definition lists the characteristics for models in units. The datasheet does not list characteristics for models not in the unit. If a model ever leaves the unit the datasheet by definition will no longer list it. The datasheet is the entity that actively lists the characteristics for models in the unit. Models do not list their own characteristics. The belief that models list their own characteristics is a misconception on your part that is supported by no rule in 8th edition. There is no rule that indicates a model 'carries' a profile with it or has a profile 'affixed' to it. Datasheets do the listing for models in the unit, and the datasheet does not list the characteristics for those models that are not in the unit.
The association a model has with a datasheet is established at some point while it is in a unit (its how we know it interacts with the world). In order to demonstrate an exclusive association, the exclusivity must be engaged. Having a term of "only" in the description would do that. Failing that, an instruction to separate the model from the datasheet would be required. There may be no rule that a model carries a profile with it or has a profile affixed to it, but there is no instruction to separate it from the model when it is removed from play. Even more importantly, an actual statement of removing a model from the unit would be required to in order to associate this removal from your definition of the datasheet in the first place.
Where does it it state this exclusive relationship of the model with the datasheet?
Failing that, where is the relationship of the model with the datasheet stated to be terminated?
col_impact wrote: You are tasking me with requirements that I am not required to meet to claim a RAW argument. I am not required to quote only Core Rules to support my argument. The RP rule is in the Necron codex and is equally a rule as any rule in the Core Rules. Together, the Reanimation Protocols rule and the Datasheet rule justify my RAW argument.
I am tasking you with requirements to demonstrate a RAW argument. If you cannot quote and highlight the relevant portions of a rule, there is no specific lettering. If you have no specific lettering, you are not practicing RAW.
So, yes, I am tasking you with requirements that are required to support your statements to claim RAW, because you have yet to actually do it. If someone is asking questions about your interpretation, and asking you to provide the written statements which actually state what you are proposing, then obviously they are not believing your assumptions you are basing your reading on.
col_impact wrote: The Reanimation Protocols rule indicates that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that prior to that they were without a doubt not in the unit. That is direct unequivocal rules support.
The Reanimation Protocols STATE that reanimated slain models are returned to this unit. I am correcting you on this because "indicate" is a weak word for this, while "state" is a stronger and more accurate term.
Returned can mean several things. Coming from outside something is not the exclusive definition of this word. Indeed, you will be hard pressed to find a definition of "return" which states an exclusive association with "out". The definitions "return" has state it is going back to something. One can return from inside a house just as easily as one returns from outside the house. The relationship of "return" to the subject is dependent on where it was previously. In order to have an association with "out", one needs to demonstrate an "out" versus "in" relationship before hand.
So, where are we told the model is "out of the unit"?
As you have stated, "unit" is an organizational term in the rules. You are either in the organization called unit or not in the organization called unit. You cannot 'return to this unit' if you are already in the organization called unit. This is direct unequivocal rules support. You can't use 'hockey' or 'house' metaphors to disprove my argument. You must show how in the case of the organizational term 'unit' that the 40k rules use that some other option is logically plausible than that slain models are not in the organization called 'unit' when they are reanimated to 'return to this unit'. You won't be able to because that is logically impossible based on the direct wording of the rule.
col_impact wrote: The Datasheet rule by definition lists the characteristics for models in units. The datasheet does not list characteristics for models not in the unit. If a model ever leaves the unit the datasheet by definition will no longer list it. The datasheet is the entity that actively lists the characteristics for models in the unit. Models do not list their own characteristics. The belief that models list their own characteristics is a misconception on your part that is supported by no rule in 8th edition. There is no rule that indicates a model 'carries' a profile with it or has a profile 'affixed' to it. Datasheets do the listing for models in the unit, and the datasheet does not list the characteristics for those models that are not in the unit.
The association a model has with a datasheet is established at some point while it is in a unit (its how we know it interacts with the world). In order to demonstrate an exclusive association, the exclusivity must be engaged. Having a term of "only" in the description would do that. Failing that, an instruction to separate the model from the datasheet would be required. There may be no rule that a model carries a profile with it or has a profile affixed to it, but there is no instruction to separate it from the model when it is removed from play. Even more importantly, an actual statement of removing a model from the unit would be required to in order to associate this removal from your definition of the datasheet in the first place.
Where does it it state this exclusive relationship of the model with the datasheet?
Failing that, where is the relationship of the model with the datasheet stated to be terminated?
Your understanding of how datasheets work is confused and not supported by the rules. Models have no established connection to a datasheet. A datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. So the datasheet is the active entity here that maintains a list, not the model. The datasheet as a listing simply no longer lists the characteristics of a model if the model ceases to be in the unit. That is literally how the rules are written. If you are treating datasheets as permanently affixed to models then you are playing by some set of rules that you have imagined in your head and not by the rules in the book.
Out of curiosity, col, why do you choose to post in such a manner as to to disjoint your response, and possibly lose proper context? In other words, why do you post a response, but only a portion of the post you are responding to, then repost responding to another portion, and so on?
col_impact wrote: As you have stated, "unit" is an organizational term in the rules. You are either in the organization called unit or not in the organization called unit. You cannot 'return to this unit' if you are already in the organization called unit. This is direct unequivocal rules support. You can't use 'hockey' or 'house' metaphors to disprove my argument. You must show how in the case of the organizational term 'unit' that the 40k rules use that some other option is logically plausible than that slain models are not in the organization called 'unit' when they are reanimated to 'return to this unit'. You won't be able to because that is logically impossible based on the direct wording of the rule.
One can be away from an organization without being out of it. I can use them to demonstrate how the term works.For another case of common use of "return" in regards to an organization, some sports players get hurt or are suspended. When they are able to take the field again, announcers will often state that the player is returning to the team after the injury/suspension. Their contract was not terminated, they were not outside the team, so why would they be using that phrase if "return" was exclusively connected to being out of something?
What is important to note, is that "return" is a term that is dependent on context. Without an actual sentence stating that a model is out of a unit, return is not applying to it being "out of a unit". The only instruction the model has had prior to this is being removed from play. Now, "removed" does indicate an action of placing something out of something, but what we are removing the model from in this phrase is not "a unit", but "play". If RP said "the slain model returns in to the unit", there would be a case of implying that it was out.
So, we are told the model is "out of play", but where are we told the model is "out of the unit"?
col_impact wrote: Your understanding of how datasheets work is confused and not supported by the rules. Models have no established connection to a datasheet. A datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. So the datasheet is the active entity here that maintains a list, not the model. The datasheet as a listing simply no longer lists the characteristics of a model if the model ceases to be in the unit. That is literally how the rules are written. If you are treating datasheets as permanently affixed to models then you are playing by some set of rules that you have imagined in your head and not by the rules in the book.
You have provided no rules supporting your interpretation so far before now. What has been quoted is one non-exclusive statement that you have reworded in to being exclusive.
Where does it state that the datasheet is an active entity? I understand a datasheet to be a reference document defining a unit and the models within it. After all, that is the only statement we are actually given in regards to it, right?
If a model does not have a connection to a datasheet and profile before it is removed from play, then there is no way for them to move (we are told to look up the characteristic on its datasheet) or be Wounded ("Wounds show how much damage a model can sustain before it succumbs to its injuries", "If a model's wounds are reduced to 0, it is either slain or destroyed and removed from play"). So, a model has an established connection in order to play the game.
Now that a connection has been established, we need permission to sever the connection. Just because we are told that datasheets define for models in a unit, it is no exclusive statement for when they are away from the unit. An exclusive term must be used to indicate this, such as "only". You have not provided this term, so this consideration is pure HYWPI, not RAW.
Since it is not exclusive and we need to have permission to sever the connection, where is the instruction to do so?
col_impact wrote: As you have stated, "unit" is an organizational term in the rules. You are either in the organization called unit or not in the organization called unit. You cannot 'return to this unit' if you are already in the organization called unit. This is direct unequivocal rules support. You can't use 'hockey' or 'house' metaphors to disprove my argument. You must show how in the case of the organizational term 'unit' that the 40k rules use that some other option is logically plausible than that slain models are not in the organization called 'unit' when they are reanimated to 'return to this unit'. You won't be able to because that is logically impossible based on the direct wording of the rule.
One can be away from an organization without being out of it. I can use them to demonstrate how the term works.For another case of common use of "return" in regards to an organization, some sports players get hurt or are suspended. When they are able to take the field again, announcers will often state that the player is returning to the team after the injury/suspension. Their contract was not terminated, they were not outside the team, so why would they be using that phrase if "return" was exclusively connected to being out of something?
What is important to note, is that "return" is a term that is dependent on context. Without an actual sentence stating that a model is out of a unit, return is not applying to it being "out of a unit". The only instruction the model has had prior to this is being removed from play. Now, "removed" does indicate an action of placing something out of something, but what we are removing the model from in this phrase is not "a unit", but "play". If RP said "the slain model returns in to the unit", there would be a case of implying that it was out.
So, we are told the model is "out of play", but where are we told the model is "out of the unit"?
An announcer that says that a player is returning to the team is announcing that the player will once again be considered part of the team for the purposes of the game, where prior the player was not part of the team for purposes of the game. You have just proven my point for me with your example. Unit is an organizational term. You are either considered in the organization or not in the organization for some purpose. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already considered in the unit. Unit is strictly an organizational term in 8th edition so you must adhere to that context.
col_impact wrote: Your understanding of how datasheets work is confused and not supported by the rules. Models have no established connection to a datasheet. A datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. So the datasheet is the active entity here that maintains a list, not the model. The datasheet as a listing simply no longer lists the characteristics of a model if the model ceases to be in the unit. That is literally how the rules are written. If you are treating datasheets as permanently affixed to models then you are playing by some set of rules that you have imagined in your head and not by the rules in the book.
You have provided no rules supporting your interpretation so far before now. What has been quoted is one non-exclusive statement that you have reworded in to being exclusive.
Where does it state that the datasheet is an active entity? I understand a datasheet to be a reference document defining a unit and the models within it. After all, that is the only statement we are actually given in regards to it, right?
If a model does not have a connection to a datasheet and profile before it is removed from play, then there is no way for them to move (we are told to look up the characteristic on its datasheet) or be Wounded ("Wounds show how much damage a model can sustain before it succumbs to its injuries", "If a model's wounds are reduced to 0, it is either slain or destroyed and removed from play"). So, a model has an established connection in order to play the game.
Now that a connection has been established, we need permission to sever the connection. Just because we are told that datasheets define for models in a unit, it is no exclusive statement for when they are away from the unit. An exclusive term must be used to indicate this, such as "only". You have not provided this term, so this consideration is pure HYWPI, not RAW.
Since it is not exclusive and we need to have permission to sever the connection, where is the instruction to do so?
The datasheet is the entity that lists the characteristics of models in the unit. A model does not list the characteristics for itself. There is no independent connection between a model and its characteristics that is separate from the datasheet actively listing them. Once the model is no longer in the unit, the datasheet will no longer list the characteristics of the model, per the definition of datasheets.
You keep trying to ascribe permanent characteristics to a model when no rule says this. The fabrications you have in your head do not count as rules.
I have repeatedly provided rules support for my argument. My argument is RAW. It does not care about the fabricated rules that you have in your head and that do not exist as actual rules. Let me know when you have some actual rules to present.
col_impact wrote: An announcer that says that a player is returning to the team is announcing that the player will once again be considered part of the team for the purposes of the game, where prior the player was not part of the team for purposes of the game. You have just proven my point for me with your example. Unit is an organizational term. You are either considered in the organization or not in the organization for some purpose. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already considered in the unit. Unit is strictly an organizational term in 8th edition so you must adhere to that context.
And yet, the player is never officially out of the team until the proper forms are signed. If the player is out of the team, he is not paid and anyone else can make a contract with him.
Again, you miss the point of the reference. "Return" is a verb that requires context in order to define where it is returning from. Where is the provision for a model being removed from play to be removed from the unit? Specific instructions are required for RAW. Not an allusion that may or may not be provided by another term.
col_impact wrote: The datasheet is the entity that lists the characteristics of models in the unit. A model does not list the characteristics for itself. There is no independent connection between a model and its characteristics that is separate from the datasheet actively listing them. Once the model is no longer in the unit, the datasheet will no longer list the characteristics of the model, per the definition of datasheets.
Again, where is the datasheet defined as an entity? I see it being defined as a reference, nothing more. If you consider a reference an entity, then the rulebook would also be an entity, as would an encyclopedia
I am not saying that there is an independent connection between a model and its characteristics separate from the datasheet. I am saying a connection is established, now where is the instruction to separate them? When it is removed from the unit? Again, where is this instruction? Tenet #1, quote the rule, please.
col_impact wrote: You keep trying to ascribe permanent characteristics to a model when no rule says this. The fabrications you have in your head do not count as rules.
False. I have stated nothing about anything being permanent. I am asking where is the instruction to sever a connection that has been made. You are refusing to support your claim with rules, but only assertions on how you think "return" is associated with "out" and misrepresenting a word in a sentence.
col_impact wrote: I have repeatedly provided rules support for my argument. My argument is RAW. It does not care about the fabricated rules that you have in your head and that do not exist as actual rules. Let me know when you have some actual rules to present.
You have quoted rules, but you have not provided the proper support of terms within those rules to validate your stance as RAW. When asked to provide the validation, you ignore it, claim that you do not have to, or make wild claims about another's position. So, which is it? Is your claim RAW and you can quote and highlight the exact terminology that has been requested for at least 6 pages now (if not more), or will you continue to refuse to do so, thus demonstrating in action that it is only HYWPI?
col_impact wrote: An announcer that says that a player is returning to the team is announcing that the player will once again be considered part of the team for the purposes of the game, where prior the player was not part of the team for purposes of the game. You have just proven my point for me with your example. Unit is an organizational term. You are either considered in the organization or not in the organization for some purpose. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already considered in the unit. Unit is strictly an organizational term in 8th edition so you must adhere to that context.
And yet, the player is never officially out of the team until the proper forms are signed. If the player is out of the team, he is not paid and anyone else can make a contract with him.
Again, you miss the point of the reference. "Return" is a verb that requires context in order to define where it is returning from. Where is the provision for a model being removed from play to be removed from the unit? Specific instructions are required for RAW. Not an allusion that may or may not be provided by another term.
You don't understand your own example. A player in the penalty is removed from the team in the context of the game so indeed he is out of the team.
For the game of 40k, unit is strictly an organizational term in the game and you must adhere to that context. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already in the unit. Therefore, it can be unequivocally stated that slain models are not in units. That's the Reanimation Protocols rule as it is written and we must adhere to that rule.
col_impact wrote: The datasheet is the entity that lists the characteristics of models in the unit. A model does not list the characteristics for itself. There is no independent connection between a model and its characteristics that is separate from the datasheet actively listing them. Once the model is no longer in the unit, the datasheet will no longer list the characteristics of the model, per the definition of datasheets.
Again, where is the datasheet defined as an entity? I see it being defined as a reference, nothing more. If you consider a reference an entity, then the rulebook would also be an entity, as would an encyclopedia
I am not saying that there is an independent connection between a model and its characteristics separate from the datasheet. I am saying a connection is established, now where is the instruction to separate them? When it is removed from the unit? Again, where is this instruction? Tenet #1, quote the rule, please.
Spoiler:
Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models in that unit
The datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. If a model is in the unit, the datasheet by definition will list the model's characteristics. If a model is not in the unit, the datasheet by definition will not list the model's characteristics. Datasheets will not list the characteristics for any slain models since slain models are not in units. It couldn't be any more straightforward. I am not sure why you are struggling with this. Do you similarly struggle with 1+1=2? Everything I am claiming is proceeding directly from the very definition of the Datasheet.
col_impact wrote: You keep trying to ascribe permanent characteristics to a model when no rule says this. The fabrications you have in your head do not count as rules.
False. I have stated nothing about anything being permanent. I am asking where is the instruction to sever a connection that has been made. You are refusing to support your claim with rules, but only assertions on how you think "return" is associated with "out" and misrepresenting a word in a sentence.
The datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. Slain models are not in units. So the datasheet will not list the characteristics of slain models. This is all by definition. If you claim that a datasheets lists the characteristics of models that are not in units then you are directly contradicting the definition you are provided.
col_impact wrote: I have repeatedly provided rules support for my argument. My argument is RAW. It does not care about the fabricated rules that you have in your head and that do not exist as actual rules. Let me know when you have some actual rules to present.
You have quoted rules, but you have not provided the proper support of terms within those rules to validate your stance as RAW. When asked to provide the validation, you ignore it, claim that you do not have to, or make wild claims about another's position. So, which is it? Is your claim RAW and you can quote and highlight the exact terminology that has been requested for at least 6 pages now (if not more), or will you continue to refuse to do so, thus demonstrating in action that it is only HYWPI?
I have repeatedly demonstrated my RAW support. Reanimation Protocols returns slain models to units meaning that they were not already in units. Datasheets list the characteristics of models in units. Slain models are not in units so a datasheet by definition will not list the characteristics for slain models. When a slain model is reanimated and returned to the unit, the datasheet will then list its wound characteristic, which in the case of a Destroyer will be 3 wounds.
You are providing examples that ironically prove my point. You are fabricating rules in your head that have nothing to with the rules in the book. You are also proposing things that directly contradict the definitions provided by the rule book. At this point you are simply being obtuse and don't want to admit defeat.
col_impact wrote: An announcer that says that a player is returning to the team is announcing that the player will once again be considered part of the team for the purposes of the game, where prior the player was not part of the team for purposes of the game. You have just proven my point for me with your example. Unit is an organizational term. You are either considered in the organization or not in the organization for some purpose. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already considered in the unit. Unit is strictly an organizational term in 8th edition so you must adhere to that context.
And yet, the player is never officially out of the team until the proper forms are signed. If the player is out of the team, he is not paid and anyone else can make a contract with him.
Again, you miss the point of the reference. "Return" is a verb that requires context in order to define where it is returning from. Where is the provision for a model being removed from play to be removed from the unit? Specific instructions are required for RAW. Not an allusion that may or may not be provided by another term.
You don't understand your own example. A player in the penalty is removed from the team in the context of the game so indeed he is out of the team.
If a player in the penalty box was out of the team, then the team could bring another player on to the ice. In actual fact, they cannot bring another player on to the ice because he is still part of the team.
A team with a player on suspension cannot hire a new player to take his spot if there are rules limiting pay rate or the number of players a team may have on the roster. Why? Because he is not off the team.
In order for a model to be removed from a unit, we must have instructions to remove the model from the unit. You have not presented such, even after numerous requests to provide them. RP may imply it to you when you are reading it, but that is not the same as a specific written instruction telling you to remove the model from the unit.
col_impact wrote: For the game of 40k, unit is strictly an organizational term in the game and you must adhere to that context. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already in the unit. Therefore, it can be unequivocally stated that slain models are not in units. That's the Reanimation Protocols rule as it is written and we must adhere to that rule.
I agree that you must adhere to the context. The problem here is you are not providing the rules which establish the context in which you are seeking to apply.
The instructions are such that when a model is slain, it is removed from play. Then, at the beginning of their next turn, a unit with slain models can then roll a die to return the model to the unit. The context of "return" is being applied to the "remove from play" unless we have another set of instructions in between. Where is that set of instructions which turns "remove from play" to "remove from unit"?
col_impact wrote: The datasheet is the entity that lists the characteristics of models in the unit. A model does not list the characteristics for itself. There is no independent connection between a model and its characteristics that is separate from the datasheet actively listing them. Once the model is no longer in the unit, the datasheet will no longer list the characteristics of the model, per the definition of datasheets.
Again, where is the datasheet defined as an entity? I see it being defined as a reference, nothing more. If you consider a reference an entity, then the rulebook would also be an entity, as would an encyclopedia
I am not saying that there is an independent connection between a model and its characteristics separate from the datasheet. I am saying a connection is established, now where is the instruction to separate them? When it is removed from the unit? Again, where is this instruction? Tenet #1, quote the rule, please.
Spoiler:
Each unit has a datasheet that lists the characteristics, wargear and abilities of the models in that unit
The datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. If a model is in the unit, the datasheet by definition will list the model's characteristics. If a model is not in the unit, the datasheet by definition will not list the model's characteristics. Datasheets will not list the characteristics for any slain models since slain models are not in units. It couldn't be any more straightforward. I am not sure why you are struggling with this. Do you similarly struggle with 1+1=2? Everything I am claiming is proceeding directly from the very definition of the Datasheet.
No statement provided that the datasheet is an entity, much less an active entity.
No statement provided that slain models are not in units.
No statement provided that the connection between datasheet and model is disconnected.
This is pure HYWPI, not RAW and a failure to adhere to Tenet #1 and Tenet #4.
col_impact wrote: You keep trying to ascribe permanent characteristics to a model when no rule says this. The fabrications you have in your head do not count as rules.
False. I have stated nothing about anything being permanent. I am asking where is the instruction to sever a connection that has been made. You are refusing to support your claim with rules, but only assertions on how you think "return" is associated with "out" and misrepresenting a word in a sentence.
The datasheet by definition lists the characteristics of models in the unit. Slain models are not in units. So the datasheet will not list the characteristics of slain models. This is all by definition. If you claim that a datasheets lists the characteristics of models that are not in units then you are directly contradicting the definition you are provided.
No statement provided that slain models are not in the unit.
No statement provided that the relationship between model and datasheet only occurs so long as a model is within a unit.
No statement provided that slain models lose their connection to the datasheet.
Without proper written statements, this is pure HYWPI, not RAW, and a failure to adhere to Tenet #1 and Tenet #4.
col_impact wrote: I have repeatedly provided rules support for my argument. My argument is RAW. It does not care about the fabricated rules that you have in your head and that do not exist as actual rules. Let me know when you have some actual rules to present.
You have quoted rules, but you have not provided the proper support of terms within those rules to validate your stance as RAW. When asked to provide the validation, you ignore it, claim that you do not have to, or make wild claims about another's position. So, which is it? Is your claim RAW and you can quote and highlight the exact terminology that has been requested for at least 6 pages now (if not more), or will you continue to refuse to do so, thus demonstrating in action that it is only HYWPI?
I have repeatedly demonstrated my RAW support. Reanimation Protocols returns slain models to units meaning that they were not already in units. Datasheets list the characteristics of models in units. Slain models are not in units so a datasheet by definition will not list the characteristics for slain models. When a slain model is reanimated and returned to the unit, the datasheet will then list its wound characteristic, which in the case of a Destroyer will be 3 wounds.
You are providing examples that ironically prove my point. You are fabricating rules in your head that have nothing to with the rules in the book. You are also proposing things that directly contradict the definitions provided by the rule book. At this point you are simply being obtuse and don't want to admit defeat.
Failure to address any requests for written proof as requested numerous times. Only statements of "trust me" and "you are making things up", with implications of accusations of lying.
You are pushing a HYWPI as RAW, violating Tenets #1, #1a, and #4 while doing so. Enjoy your kicking at the pricks. I will not participate in this with you any more.
In order for a model to be removed from a unit, we must have instructions to remove the model from the unit. You have not presented such, even after numerous requests to provide them. RP may imply it to you when you are reading it, but that is not the same as a specific written instruction telling you to remove the model from the unit.
RP states that slain models are returned to this unit, meaning without a doubt that the slain models were not already in the unit. We have no choice but to adhere to the written rule and treat slain models as not already in the unit when we are reanimating them. The rule offers no choice. Since slain models are not already in the unit per the RP rule then that means the Datasheet rule by definition will not be listing the characteristics for slain models.
That's the Rules As Written. My argument is directly supported by the RP rule and the Datasheet rule. If I treat slain models as already in units or datasheets as listing models not in the units I am directly violating the Rules As Written.
The direct consequence of these combined rules is that the a Destroyer model will be reanimated with 3 wounds. Datasheets by definition do not list wound characteristics for models that are not in units so the zero wound characteristic is lost when a model is slain.
col_impact wrote: As you have stated, "unit" is an organizational term in the rules. You are either in the organization called unit or not in the organization called unit. You cannot 'return to this unit' if you are already in the organization called unit. This is direct unequivocal rules support. You can't use 'hockey' or 'house' metaphors to disprove my argument. You must show how in the case of the organizational term 'unit' that the 40k rules use that some other option is logically plausible than that slain models are not in the organization called 'unit' when they are reanimated to 'return to this unit'. You won't be able to because that is logically impossible based on the direct wording of the rule.
One can be away from an organization without being out of it. I can use them to demonstrate how the term works.For another case of common use of "return" in regards to an organization, some sports players get hurt or are suspended. When they are able to take the field again, announcers will often state that the player is returning to the team after the injury/suspension. Their contract was not terminated, they were not outside the team, so why would they be using that phrase if "return" was exclusively connected to being out of something?
What is important to note, is that "return" is a term that is dependent on context. Without an actual sentence stating that a model is out of a unit, return is not applying to it being "out of a unit". The only instruction the model has had prior to this is being removed from play. Now, "removed" does indicate an action of placing something out of something, but what we are removing the model from in this phrase is not "a unit", but "play". If RP said "the slain model returns in to the unit", there would be a case of implying that it was out.
So, we are told the model is "out of play", but where are we told the model is "out of the unit"?
An announcer that says that a player is returning to the team is announcing that the player will once again be considered part of the team for the purposes of the game, where prior the player was not part of the team for purposes of the game. You have just proven my point for me with your example. Unit is an organizational term. You are either considered in the organization or not in the organization for some purpose. The Reanimation Protocols rule states that reanimated slain models are 'returned to this unit' meaning that they were not already considered in the unit. Unit is strictly an organizational term in 8th edition so you must adhere to that context..
You have this fundamentally wrong, color, and it's telling that you later accuse Christoph of not understanding his own example. The player is part of the organization still while not in the game, and for purposes of the game is still part of the organization. When he returns to the game from the penalty box, the player's statistics are the same as they are when he went into the penalty box. This example in no way at all proves your point, so you really should not claim it does, unless you suddenly changed your mind and now think a model comes back into the game with the same stats it has when it left.
You still have not offered any rules proof that shows that during a game, characteristics bestowed on the character are lost during the game. Without a statement to modify the profile they had or that they lost their profile, they still have whatever statistics they had when last in play as there is no rule to allow you to assume otherwise. Normally it doesn't matter because normally they don't come back in the same game, but here it does. And the video showing them coming back with 1 wound may not be strict RAW, but does help expose that the assumptions you make are not valid, since they wouldn'the play like that if they were. RAW, they did not indicate what wound level to come back with. You do not get to assume it's 3 wounds when the only RAW suggests they come back with what they left. Work out a house rule with the people you play with, but do not presume to sell a stack of hypotheses and assumptions as actual RAW.
You still have not offered any rules proof that shows that during a game, characteristics bestowed on the character are lost during the game. Without a statement to modify the profile they had or that they lost their profile, they still have whatever statistics they had when last in play as there is no rule to allow you to assume otherwise. Normally it doesn't matter because normally they don't come back in the same game, but here it does. And the video showing them coming back with 1 wound may not be strict RAW, but does help expose that the assumptions you make are not valid, since they wouldn'the play like that if they were. RAW, they did not indicate what wound level to come back with. You do not get to assume it's 3 wounds when the only RAW suggests they come back with what they left. Work out a house rule with the people you play with, but do not presume to sell a stack of hypotheses and assumptions as actual RAW.
Datasheets by definition list the characteristics of models in the unit. If your datasheets are listing characteristics of models not in the unit then you are violating plainly stated rules. That's the Rules as they Are Written.
doctortom wrote: Without a statement to modify the profile they had or that they lost their profile, they still have whatever statistics they had when last in play as there is no rule to allow you to assume otherwise. Normally it doesn't matter because normally they don't come back in the same game, but here it does. And the video showing them coming back with 1 wound may not be strict RAW, but does help expose that the assumptions you make are not valid, since they wouldn'the play like that if they were. RAW, they did not indicate what wound level to come back with. You do not get to assume it's 3 wounds when the only RAW suggests they come back with what they left.
Are you suggesting the rules writers intended for players to keep track of how many wounds each individual model had left before it was removed from the table?
That would be incredibly convoluted for an edition that wants to "streamline" play.
Example.
Models A, B, and C are in a unit. They each have 3 wounds with RP.
Turn one,
Model A takes 3 damage and is removed.
Model B takes 2 damage, has 1 wound remaining.
Model C takes 0 damage.
Turn two,
Model A fails RP, does not come back.
Model B takes 1 damage and is removed.
Model C takes 0 damage.
Turn three,
Model A and B both pass their RP.
Model A had left the table with 3 wounds so comes back with 3 wounds.
Model B had left the table with 1 wound so comes back with 1 wound.
...
If they're trying to simplify playtime this edition, having an extra time consuming book keeping mechanic like this seems much more counter intuitive than just "bring them back the same way they come on normally"
And Datasheets by definition list the characteristics of models in units.
If your datasheets are listing the values of characteristics for models that are not in units then you are breaking from the rules as written for the datasheet.
Col, nobody cares about the ad nauseum in/out-datasheet raw vomit that's been going on for the past however many pages except for you three who are keeping it going.
For the majority of us, we already figure we know how it was meant, RAI (the way ITC is ruling it), so that's how we're going to be playing it until a FAQ says otherwise.
I simply saw doctortom post something I wanted some clarification from him on.
doctortom wrote: Without a statement to modify the profile they had or that they lost their profile, they still have whatever statistics they had when last in play as there is no rule to allow you to assume otherwise. Normally it doesn't matter because normally they don't come back in the same game, but here it does. And the video showing them coming back with 1 wound may not be strict RAW, but does help expose that the assumptions you make are not valid, since they wouldn'the play like that if they were. RAW, they did not indicate what wound level to come back with. You do not get to assume it's 3 wounds when the only RAW suggests they come back with what they left.
Are you suggesting the rules writers intended for players to keep track of how many wounds each individual model had left before it was removed from the table?
That would be incredibly convoluted for an edition that wants to "streamline" play.
Example.
Models A, B, and C are in a unit. They each have 3 wounds with RP.
Turn one,
Model A takes 3 damage and is removed.
Model B takes 2 damage, has 1 wound remaining.
Model C takes 0 damage.
Turn two,
Model A fails RP, does not come back.
Model B takes 1 damage and is removed.
Model C takes 0 damage.
Turn three,
Model A and B both pass their RP.
Model A had left the table with 3 wounds so comes back with 3 wounds.
Model B had left the table with 1 wound so comes back with 1 wound.
...
If they're trying to simplify playtime this edition, having an extra time consuming book keeping mechanic like this seems much more counter intuitive than just "bring them back the same way they come on normally"
I don't think he suggesting that at all. If we consider that Reanimation Protocols only applies to slain models, then the situation would always be zero. After all, that's what caused them to be removed from play. The only ones that we need to worry about are those models who are removed from play without being slain (for example, from the Morale Phase), but still have a chance to come back.
We also should consider that GW has never seriously considered Warhammer to be a competitive game, but a game that people can get together and play over beer and pretzels (or root beer in my case), and that we are intelligent and mature enough to make the changes or additions we choose. That is but one of the reasons why making a distinction between RAW and HYWPI is important in these discussions.
I don't think he suggesting that at all. If we consider that Reanimation Protocols only applies to slain models, then the situation would always be zero. After all, that's what caused them to be removed from play. The only ones that we need to worry about are those models who are removed from play without being slain (for example, from the Morale Phase), but still have a chance to come back.
We also should consider that GW has never seriously consider Warhammer to be a competitive game, but a game that people can get together and play over beer and pretzels (or root beer in my case), and that we are intelligent and mature enough to make the changes or additions we choose. That is but one of the reasons why making a distinction between RAW and HYWPI is important in these discussions.
You are simply confused in your understanding.
By RAW, slain models are not in units and Datasheets by definition list characteristics for models in units.
If you are allowing Datasheets to list characteristics for models that are not in units you are breaking a plainly stated rule.
NECRONS
Q. How many wounds do Necron models have when they return to a unit using Reanimation Protocols?
A. They are returned with their full complement of wounds.
THANK GOD
We can finally end this shameful display that's gone on for far too long
NECRONS
Q. How many wounds do Necron models have when they return to a unit using Reanimation Protocols?
A. They are returned with their full complement of wounds.
THANK GOD
We can finally end this shameful display that's gone on for far too long
So once again, "Most obvious answer to normal people" is the right answer!
Q. What about rules that add models to existing units; do I
need to pay reinforcement points for those models?
A. No (unless the rule itself says otherwise).
Q. What about rules that add models to existing units; do I
need to pay reinforcement points for those models?
A. No (unless the rule itself says otherwise).
Not sure how this applies to anything Necron.
All their stuff can only "bring things back", not "add to".
XvReaperXv wrote: WOW, you mean common sense won over people trying to game rules with stupid arguements? Who woulda thought!
There was a also some people who were stating the same result with some even more stupid arguments, so this statement is not very polite.
And there was no actual common sense answer to the situation, there was just the answer people wanted to put in to the system.
You just weren't reading the Rules As Written correctly. It happens. You had an absurd premise that 'slain models are in units' that broke all of the Core Rules. That is what 'game rules with stupid arguements [sic]' refers to.
Question has been answered. Also, I have like 20 mod alerts to work tonight, so I'm not going to ding anyone in this thread, but some of you need to go enjoy the summer weather.