Switch Theme:

Legality of Creating a fully Proxied Army  [RSS] Share on facebook Share on Twitter Submit to Reddit
»
Poll
Would you play against an opponent who is fielding a fully proxied army if he clearly defined what unit is what, and used the correct scaled bases/weapons/vehicle dimensions?
Yes, as long as I know exactly what each unit represent and they are modelled correctly
Maybe, but I may find it confusing/distracting
No, never! Pick an army and stick to it! Proxied armies make me sick!

View results
Author Message
Advert


Forum adverts like this one are shown to any user who is not logged in. Join us by filling out a tiny 3 field form and you will get your own, free, dakka user account which gives a good range of benefits to you:
  • No adverts like this in the forums anymore.
  • Times and dates in your local timezone.
  • Full tracking of what you have read so you can skip to your first unread post, easily see what has changed since you last logged in, and easily see what is new at a glance.
  • Email notifications for threads you want to watch closely.
  • Being a part of the oldest wargaming community on the net.
If you are already a member then feel free to login now.




Made in us
Hooded Inquisitorial Interrogator




New York, USA

Hello everyone,

I hope this is the correct forum for this:

I have been considering starting a brand new Ork force but have been put off by the sheer amount of models I would need to paint for a 2000K army, as well as the general ork tactics/codex strength.

The Ork codex appeals to using massed amounts of models which die quickly instead of tough MEQ units. While strength in numbers and lots of disposable units are the epitome of orkiness, I would like to see a more resilient set of rules for the green-skins that allows them to be tougher and fielded in smaller numbers, something along the lines of the space marine codices. I have been considering using another 40K codex, and proxying the ork model range for the marine model range.

My question is: What is the legality of using a fully proxied army with a different codex? (For example playing codex space marines with ork models) If I were to make clear designations which ork unit corresponds to which marine unit, modeled them with the correct bases/weapons/vehicle dimensions and otherwise treated them like a marine force, would they be considered tournament legal, and would they be accepted in gaming circles?

My current group has agreed to let me field such an army but I want to know what the implications of gaming outside the group would be.

I am planning on using space marine "looted vehicles" to avoid dimension and tactical advantage disputes. I also plan on using nobz as tactical marines, stormboyz as assault squads, MANZ as terminators (All armed with appropriate looking weapons)etc. Of course, any unit not in codex space marines will not be used, and I will not be using any rules from the ork codex.

In other words this is a question entirely on the esthetics of the force.

Please let me know your thoughts, thank you!
   
Made in us
Stealthy Warhound Titan Princeps




Phoenix, AZ, USA

I have a friend that runs a fully modeled and awesomely painted Thunderwolf Cav army of Orks on Boars. They have plate armor, are WYSIWYG, and a blast to play against. I say oh for it, both you and your opponent will be entertained.

SJ

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world.”
- Ephesians 6:12
 
   
Made in gb
Ultramarine Chaplain with Hate to Spare





Rule of cool. If everything is obvious and you've done it to look cool and it looks cool then I'll be OK with it.

Take the Magic: The Gathering 'What Color Are You?' Quiz.

Yes my Colour is Black but not for the reasons stated mainly just because it's slimming... http://imperiusdominatus.blogspot.com 
   
Made in us
Slaanesh Chosen Marine Riding a Fiend



Maine

You could even use Fantasy Black Orks who are loaded in armor to give off the appearance of Power Armor as well, just paint it up differently :p Even strap Power Packs to them if you really wanted XD
   
Made in gb
Longtime Dakkanaut





UK

So long as your opponent agrees to it you should be fine. I proxy models before I commit to buying them anyway

YMDC = nightmare 
   
Made in us
Insect-Infested Nurgle Chaos Lord





Oregon, USA

I'd have no issue, as long as you explained what codex you were using and what each unit represented.

I have an urge to ressurrect the Squats using the Space Wolf codex, but i haven't the funds, as yet.

The Viletide: Daemons of Nurgle/Deathguard: 7400 pts
Disclples of the Dragon - Ad Mech - about 2000 pts
GSC - about 2000 Pts
Rhulic Mercs - um...many...
Circle Oroboros - 300 Pts or so
Menoth - 300+ pts
 
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut




Minneapolis, MN

 FlingitNow wrote:
Rule of cool. If everything is obvious and you've done it to look cool and it looks cool then I'll be OK with it.

The golden rule of tabletop. If we only cared about the game, then we'd play with plastic tokens or cardboard chits. Custom modeling and proxies can negatively impact gameplay somewhat (they can hinder the opponent's ability to visually identify models), but they also increase the Cool Factor of the game significantly.
   
Made in us
Shas'la with Pulse Carbine





If it looks cool its good to go.

Down with Allies, Solo 2016! 
   
Made in us
Badass "Sister Sin"






Camas, WA

Technically, since you're making an effort for the models to match the wargear/profiles of the rules, it is 'Counts As' and not 'Proxy'.

Proxy is when you say 'This Solo cup is a Drop Pod' or 'For this game, this Lascannon is a Missile Launcher' with no effort to establish actual correct modelling.

Looking for great deals on miniatures or have a large pile you are looking to sell off? Checkout Mindtaker Miniatures.
Live in the Pacific NW? Check out http://ordofanaticus.com
 
   
Made in us
Gargantuan Gargant





New Bedford, MA USA

A Necron army made entirely of Ork models


Seriously though, if it's obvious what everything is suppossed to be, I don't see an issue with it.

   
Made in ca
Furious Fire Dragon





Proxieing in a squad or two, or converting like those necrons above is 100% fine, but I personally wouldn't be okay with like an Ork Boy squad proxied for terminators or anything like that, throws off the game look to me.
   
Made in us
Gore-Soaked Lunatic Witchhunter







If you're consistent about it (everything needs to be about the right size and shape, guns need to be visually distinct from each other and consistently represent the same thing) there's no problem. If you want to represent Terminators with regular infantry models, or you change what a gun means from model to model, then we start to run into problems.

Balanced Game: Noun. A game in which all options and choices are worth using.
Homebrew oldhammer project: https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/790996.page#10896267
Meridian: Necromunda-based 40k skirmish: https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/795374.page 
   
Made in us
Rampaging Carnifex





South Florida

The 'legality' is entirely dependent on where and with whom you play your games.

   
Made in us
Mutilatin' Mad Dok






 adamsouza wrote:
A Necron army made entirely of Ork models


Seriously though, if it's obvious what everything is suppossed to be, I don't see an issue with it.


That's amazing.

   
Made in us
Dark Angels Librarian with Book of Secrets






 AnomanderRake wrote:
If you're consistent about it (everything needs to be about the right size and shape, guns need to be visually distinct from each other and consistently represent the same thing) there's no problem. If you want to represent Terminators with regular infantry models, or you change what a gun means from model to model, then we start to run into problems.


This. As long as Meltas are obviously distinguished from Bolters and Captains from regular guys, go for it. Also, as long as you're not Modeling for Advantage or homebrewing/mixing rules, I'm totally cool with it.

~1.5k
Successful Trades: Ashrog (1), Iron35 (1), Rathryan (3), Leth (1), Eshm (1), Zeke48 (1), Gorkamorka12345 (1),
Melevolence (2), Ascalam (1), Swanny318, (1) ScootyPuffJunior, (1) LValx (1), Jim Solo (1), xSoulgrinderx (1), Reese (1), Pretre (1) 
   
Made in us
Guarding Guardian



New York

For me, it would depend on the reasons why anyone is using proxies. If it is to try out something prior to buying it then I'm all for it, if it is on the scale of an entire army, I would at least like to see some effort put into buying models for the new force. That being said I would most certainly play against said proxied army.

 
   
Made in us
Hooded Inquisitorial Interrogator




New York, USA

Thanks for all the input guys!

As to why I am doing this, it's because I am split between loving the orky look and hating their play-style, and loving the space marine play-style and not being a fan of the look. I'm also looking for a modelling challenge as I've been building GW kits for years now and feel my skills are at a level where I can go above obvious conversion work and actually try to match art style, proportions and details.

I'm happy to hear this idea is pretty common. In terms of modelling I was thinking of the following rules:

1) All models come on bases originally meant for space marine models regardless of base size in ork range.
2) I will only use bigger/more expensive models like nobs to represent tacticals and MANZ to represent terminators. It will actually cost more to complete than a real marine force would but it's all about the look for me. (No using grots as marines, no sir)
3) All vehicles will be "looted" from the SM range so there are no arguments on advantages, firing arks etc.
4) All weapons of one type will be the same across the range. For examples, Nob shootas and big shootas will be all bolters. Power Klaws are power fists, I'll put melta tips on orky guns so they are clearly visible as meltas, same with las cannons, same with plasma, grav weapons etc.
5) I will model units to be reminiscent of their space marine counterpart models. (I.e. if a terminator has a thunderhammer and storm shield, I will make an orky hammer and a slab of rusty metal, or vehicle armor to for him to carry. If a space marine librarian has a staff, so would his orky doppelganger.)

I am thinking of making up and printing a sheet that has a nice key printed on it with pictures which shows a picture of an ork shoota = bolter, etc. which will also have pictures of the units and their counterparts. That way my opponent gets to look at this throughout the game, and all confusion is avoided.


Thanks for your input guys!

PS That is an amazing looking Necron force


This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2015/03/04 21:49:17


 
   
Made in us
Badass "Sister Sin"






Camas, WA

 Hive City Dweller wrote:
4) All weapons of one type will be the same across the range. For examples, Nob shootas and big shootas will be all bolters. Power Klaws are power fists, I'll put melta tips on orky guns so they are clearly visible as meltas, same with las cannons, same with plasma, grav weapons etc.

I would swap the shootas and big shootas for bolters personally, but as long as it is consistent, it will be fine.

I am thinking of making up and printing a sheet that has a nice key printed on it with pictures which shows a picture of an ork shoota = bolter, etc. which will also have pictures of the units and their counterparts. That way my opponent gets to look at this throughout the game, and all confusion is avoided.

This is the best way to handle a significantly counts-as'd force.

Looking for great deals on miniatures or have a large pile you are looking to sell off? Checkout Mindtaker Miniatures.
Live in the Pacific NW? Check out http://ordofanaticus.com
 
   
 
Forum Index » 40K You Make Da Call
Go to: