Hey folks!
I've got a Dark Angels buddy who has been struggling with
40k. He's a bit of a skiddish guy at times, and often forgets some of his very important rules (like forgetting that his Nephalim flyer's missiles only scatter 1d6" instead of
2d6"). But his real problem is that he is making a lot of strategic and tactical errors. Like putting his Chapter Master AND Librarian with Devastators (who are all armed with different weapons) up on a building in the table corner when that leaves The Relic out of view, and about 3" out of range! In a 1500 point game, doing this effectively had me play with a 300-400 points advantage.
(at the end, he even said "man, Chaos Space Marines sure seem strong!"... poor guy was becoming delusional)
It's not that it wasn't a fun game; actually, it was a ton of fun! However, at the end he even said "It was a great game as always, but I'd sure like to win one some day." And that hurts, because I know that it's that kind of disheartening feeling that can pull you out of a game. You need to feel like a winner sometimes, and I want to help my buddy out.
I don't want to just point out all of his mistakes, because then you get the sense that your opponent is playing your army for you. At first I thought "maybe we should switch armies" so he could see that it's him and not his army (Dark Angels) that's the problem. Then I realized that this is just insulting him... not actually helping him. I think that eventually he'll learn, but the learning process is going to be very painful. Any suggestions on how I can help him learn tactics and strategy? I know pretty thoroughly where his list and his strategy/tactics went wrong, but I need some help in teaching him how to learn from these mistakes and not repeat them. Almost all the mistakes he's made are the same ones he's made in other games.
Here's a battle report I did, with lists:
http://darkshard.ca/darkshard/viewtopic.php?f=25&t=4590