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Made in us
Been Around the Block




Hello internet!

So I wanted to share my analysis of 9th edition so far and of Tyranids in particular as we explore the new edition. I think 9th has some real improvements over 8th edition and is a lot of fun. Still, nothing is perfect and there are some areas of opportunity.

My Meta: No review is complete without understanding the meta or local competition someone plays in. My meta is composed primarily of about a dozen professionals (attorneys, software engineers, business owners, etc.) in their 30s through 50s. They are fairly competitively minded, and about a third of the group has both the money and inclination to meta chase hard, routinely dropping a thousand or more in a weekend on an army or set of units when a new fotm shows up. Because of this, even when there are few events (like right now), you can generally count on facing some pretty tuned lists and players that are good natured but smart and will utterly destroy you if given an opening.

We also have a couple high school/college age kids (the children of some of the others) who generally poorhammer it up with one or two armies with much less optimized lists and unit choices. Playing against them it is important to soften lists up a little bit so that both people have fun. They don't really impact the overall meta, but it has been interesting to see how they fare overall.

Loyalist marines dominate the group (salamanders, white scars, space wolves, blood angles, iron hands, fists) but we also have two players who run custodes sometimes, a tau player, an admech/knights player, a harlequin player and a death guard die hard.
As a group I believe we have several hundred games of 9th edition played (most of us have pretty nice tables and gaming areas set up in our homes). I specifically have played more than 40 games, mostly with tyranids, and that experience is what informs my analysis. I have also played in one local RTT against people outside of the group.

9th edition: So first off, 9th is fun and the games are typically much closer than in 8th. Also, the focus on scoring rather than killing really changes things up in a good way. That said, at this point 9th edition feels like a solved problem. This mostly is due to the limitations in the grand tournament pack. Through many ruthless games a clear "best" strategy has emerged in my meta, and almost every game at this point is the same. The easiest secondaries to score well on are engage on all fronts/behind enemy lines and deploy scramblers.

The third secondary will change based on matchup and mission. Many mission secondaries are easy to score well on, so they will be the third choice. Some army compositions are punished by the secondary system and so if offered you can take bring it down, thin their ranks, abhor the witch etc. to take advantage of an army GW doesn't like. Pretty quickly people started to design armies that don't give these up. Finally, if your opponent doesn't give up a specific kill secondary, and the mission secondary is not good (minimize losses?? really?) then normally the third secondary is while we stand we fight or grind them down, depending on how elite your army is.

Your typical game therefore is probably against an opponent with engage, scramblers and wwswf. With this set up you are likely to score at least 10 on all of these even in a loss, and perhaps up to 40. With an average primary score in the group of around 35 points per game, you are looking at scoring 65 (+10 paint = 75) in a loss and probably close to 90-100 in a win. Taking any other secondaries just drops your overall score in a win or a loss except in extreme situations and is probably best avoided. Also, people who take the other secondaries might snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, because if you can score upwards of 60 points while being tabled, and they crush primary and struggle on secondary, you are still going to win. Again, it feels like a solved problem.

First turn: no discussion of the current 9th format is complete without addressing the elephant in the room, first turn. First turn is incredibly powerful and we find close to 75% of our games are now decided by who gets first turn. We have experimented with both heavy terrain and light terrain setups, and it makes very little difference.

Heavy terrain hurts armies that rely on long range shooting damage and castles. However, these sorts of armies often score very poorly to begin with and can mostly be ignored. This sort of army will have a chance at winning if getting first turn on a board with light terrain, but otherwise normally just can't score enough primaries to compete. If you find gunline castles are still doing well in your group, I would recommend adding terrain.

However, no amount of terrain really helps with the "ultimate strategy". A first turn charge to pin someone in their deployment zone. Whether this is something fast like white scars bikes, or the much more common infiltrate wars (nurglings, infiltrators, scouts, ghost keels, etc.) getting charged in your deployment zone often loses the game on the top of round 1. Because you can't fall back and shoot, or fall back and cast, your front line often gets stuck by garbage units. Do you disembark your squishy, hard hitting hand to hand troops from their transports in your own zone just to clear the weak melee threat? Even tying up a weak screen with an early charge can end the game if the screen itself took up too much board space.

When facing the all powerful early charge heavy terrain becomes a huge problem because there are fewer movement paths, and if you didn't invest heavily in fly you can get bogged down with no path out of your deployment zone. To be clear early charges are not devastating because they kill stuff, that is very rare. They are powerful because of their ability to pin an enemy in their own area, unable to break out and get onto objectives until later turns. One of my worst defeats was my tyranids against a blood angles player. He used forlorn fury and upon wings of fire to throw two units into my lines turn 1, and then every turn after that he just kept throwing waves into the meat grinder. I badly killed his army (the end of the game he had 150 points left on the board and I had more than 1200), but by sacrificing his whole army to keep me pinned I wasn't able to really get out of my own deployment zone till turn 4, so only scored primaries on turn 5. Killing doesn't matter, scoring matters. Tabling an opponent and not scoring does nothing.

A lot of the strategies, therefore, that have developed revolve around ensuring that first turn pinning charge or defending against it.

Focus on scoring: It is almost a meme in our group at this point that the person who killed more lost the game. Killing to impact scoring is all that matters, and normally the person who focuses more on killing tends to let a scoring opportunity slip. This has led to some crazy meta evolutions. For example, our tau player started off running triptide with shield drones. These days he has crazy things in his list like two dirt cheap FSE commanders in a patrol just to move super fast and control space/engage, stealth suits and a ghost keel to charge his opponents turn 1 and keep them pinned, and a bunch of transports filled with obsec and drones to take objectives. He normally kills very little, but by changing his list to scoring he can be a very difficult matchup. But his list today is almost the opposite of what he ran in 8th under ITC.

Tyranids - the things that didn't work: So there are a few meta builds I tried early that each did not work. As you might imagine getting to my current list was a long process of trial and error.

The least effective was gaunt carpet. I routinely run against lists rocking 12 aggressors, and they just hard counter this kind of list. If my meta had less volume of fire I could see this working, and it can still catch a lot of less skilled players by surprise with just how few run to morale even when you leave synapse. Also this kind of list just bleeds thin their ranks, so you basically start 15 points down. The giant blobs are vulnerable to taking up too much space (so if you get charged in your own dz now your whole army can't move) and even with heavy use of metabolic overdrive marines, which are most of my meta, just eat this kind of army for lunch.

The next one that didn't work was nidzilla, carnifex spam. They are cheap for the statline, and it can be fun to take 9+ of these boys and a few hive tyrants. However, this list bleeds bring it down, and eradicators are a thing. This list is actually quite a bit squishier than gaunt carpet, and can be vulnerable to both heavy shooting and also dedicated hth armies. I just couldn't make it work.

The final one I'm on the edge of because it almost worked, and a better player than me might be able to take it over the edge. That is swarmlord plus heavy genestealers. This does have the advantage of the first turn charge, however in my games it just never had the toughness to hold the opponent up for enough turns, and it was so many points that I often didn't have enough left to score. This list was also exceptionally weak if going second in my experience. Also, the stupid barrel of monkeys arms on the stealers makes getting within half an inch of half an inch a real pain, and it is tough and time consuming to try and position the unit correctly and in coherency to even get most of your attacks. I think this list might still have legs, but I couldn't make it work. Like the gaunt carpet I really struggled with someone rocking a large number of aggressors with this list, and right now most of my meta feels like gravis marines.

My list: (I've done very, very well with the below list)
BATTALION - leviathan - 9 starting cp
Broodlord - resonance barb, catalyst
neurothrope - psychic scream, warlord
3x rippers
3x rippers
5x warriors, deathspitters, lash whip and bone sword, 1 vc, adaptive - enhanced resistance
lictor
lictor
5x zoanthropes - onslaught
5x zoanthropes - horror
mawloc
mawloc
PATROL - kronos
neurothrope - symbiostorm
3x rippers
6x hive guard
exocrine, adaptive - dermic symbiosis
exocrine

Note on strats - the MOST IMPORTANT STRAT in the entire tyranid book is metabolic overdrive in my experience. I routinely am using it 4 turns in a 5 turn game, and it is super important to control scoring. Firing twice is fun, going in strategic reserve as needed, counting exocrines as standing still, a psychic reroll, all of these are good. But the strat I encourage you to consider every single turn is matabolic overdrive.

Overall this as a list is really doing quite well against the hordes of marines. I'll go through each choice.

Broodlord - This unit is only OK, but the main reason to include him is so that I can take wwswf and still throw away the mawlocs (same points cost). By including the broodlord I can take him and two exocrines for wwswf when that secondary makes sense as I evaluate the matchup. Normally this guy hangs back with the main force as a counter charge threat and pretty reliably casts smite with +1 to cast and normally reroll 1s from the neurothrope. If wwswf wasn't such a clutch secondary in some matchups I would drop him down for a third neurothrope. I also tried a malanthrope in this spot, but with lots of dense terrain and needing as many spells as I could get I found the malanthrope had much less of an impact on the list than it did in 8th.

Neurothrope - super important, super cheap. The reroll 1s in psychic is clutch especially when you are casting 8+ powers a turn, and drastically reduces your chances of getting a perils. Once in a blue moon I'll also heal a zoanthrope, but I find I often forget the rule in the heat of battle.

Rippers - these are fantastic troop choices. I often deepstrike all three units I have in the list, but if I think the matchup won't favor that strategy they can still be used to screen. They won't kill anything, it's christmas if they do a wound. But they are a good number of wounds per point, so clearing them takes more effort than any opponent wants to throw at them.

Warriors - these are very good with enhanced resistance and the -1 damage strat. I've experimented a lot with warriors, trying a unit of 9, two units of 9, two units of 5, and where I landed on was 1 unit of 5. Their big weakness in large numbers is distressingly common.... high ap d3 shot weapons. Plasma cannons, thermal spears, neutron lasers, etc. these things start getting max shots and just blowing through the warriors too fast. A bunch of deathspitter shots helps to clear screens, with onslaught they can advance and charge, and having some medium tough obsec you can slingshot around is clutch. They won't survive a focused attack, but they are another unit that takes more effort than your opponent wants to spend to remove. Also, I tried boneswords for the extra attack and lashwips for fight when they die, and I found lashwhips to make a difference in a game more often. Any time I free up points elsewhere in the list one of the first thing I'm looking to add is more warriors.

Lictors - the absolute best unit in my list. Two lictors basically makes deploy scramblers impossible for my opponent to defend against, so this seventy-ish points of love is worth 10 vp out of 90 to be earned. That is return on investment folks. In addition, they are very likely to ALSO be scoring you extra points for engage/behind enemy lines. Two lictors alone might easily score you 15+ points in a game. I found one could sometimes be neutralized, and 3 was overkill as I couldn't increase my scoring enough with the third one. Its hard to get so much score out of so few points for most armies. Bonus points if you don't need the second, and you can throw it in denying overwatch to a key enemy shooting unit, but most games they don't get to do anything fun, they just score my points.

Zoanthropes - this is a very good unit, and works especially well against the more elite armies I find myself facing. They seem expensive for not many toughness 4 wounds with basically no shooting or hth ability, and only kicking out about 4 mortal wounds a turn each. And yet, and yet, these guys are all-stars all the time. The 6+++ from leviathan means that it takes normally 3 unsaved 3 damage attacks just to kill 2. They are very tanky, and can hold up to a lot of dedicated charges if needed (ever had a unit of thunderhammer termies or vanguard vets just bounce off your screen? It can happen with these guys). They are an interesting rock/paper/scissors with marines as they hard counter eradicators, but are themselves hard countered by aggressors. So there is a real positioning/screening game you engage in with your marine enemies as soon as these guys hit the field against gravis spam that is so common.

In other non-marine matchups they are better, as without volume of fire they rarely die. They are key to my army basically hard-countering harlequins (I ignore haywire and he just can't hold up under the mortal wound output) and early in 9th I had lots of fun smiting down riptides. Our tau player no longer even takes riptides.

These guys are weak to mass low strength fire and to getting tied up as they can't fall back and cast. That said, they can advance and cast just fine, and are often a key metabolic overdrive target to get them in position and take an objective.

Mawlocs - these guys are are second in importance only to the lictors.... the lictors normally score more points and can perform actions. The ability to reverse the field on an opponent, challenge a key backfield objective, etc. makes these guys golden. Let's be honest right upfront, a mawloc is not going to kill anything, basically ever. And they don't hold up against any dedicated fire.... but your opponent may have to waste fire they don't want to to deal with them.

But mawlocs SCORE. They are almost impossible to screen out. I find it very common that somewhere, maybe two places on the field will be held by single units.... a transport, a plagueburst crawler, an invictor warsuit, something the opponent doesn't need in the midboard at the moment. If you can come up on an objective and take your opponent from holding 2/holding more (for 15 points) down to just holding 1 for 5 points, that's a 10 point swing for a measly 100 points and change investment. Run them cheap. In addition, say they drop in with a lictor, and you are likely easily getting your engage/linebreaker even if pinned in your own deployment zone.

They also take just enough to take down that they are a pain for some armies. Midboard bullies like space wolves or blood angels.... even plague marines are often too slow to afford to turn around and defend their own backfield. These units put an opponent in a bind, as they either have to keep more back than they want to on back objectives to defend.... which weakens their fight on the midboard, or they just have to basically give you their own backfield. On some mission's secondaries like priority targets a pair of mawlocs and a pair of lictors might end up scoring you close to half your points for the entire match.

I normally drop one lictor/ripper/mawloc set on turn 2 and another one on turn 3, but it of course depends on secondaries, what openings your opponent left you, etc.

The third mawloc never worked for me. They can't come up close to each other, and especially in missions with just 4 objectives you quickly run out of spots where they can score you points. I've found two to be my own personal sweet spot to control scoring, but I think a better player could probably get away with one and free up some points to be spent elsewhere. And remember, while these help immensely with the scoring, they are wasted points as far as dealing damage is concerned. You only take these units for their potential to score you some of that precious 90 potential vp.

One final note on board control. The third tyranid piece in my opinion that goes in the board control column with lictors and mawlocs is the biovore. Ultimately I struggled with biovores because too many of my opponents evolved lists that were heavy on fly and just ignored them (impulsors, all harlequins, all tau, etc.) and obviously you don't take biovores for wound output. And don't even get me started on space wolf 6" heroic intervention nonsense. I found lictors and mawlocs could consistently impact the score and give me board presence, where as biovores just helped me to win harder against a weak opponent, but never let me win a game against a competent opponent.

Hive Guard
- these guys are money, and I think you always want to include one unit. If you feed them cp and psychic powers they are super capable at clearing off one opponent objective per turn to deny primaries. I've tried dropping the exocrines to run two units of 6, and I didn't like it as well. Much like lictors or mawlocs, more points in these units didn't get me the same level of return. Also, dropping the exocrines takes away some of my best anti-gravis shooting and makes it so I don't have the option to take wwswf against a melee army (scars, blood angles, wolves, harlies, etc.). I think one unit is about where you want to be.

Strangely as a shooting unit these guys are more and more valuable the more terrain there is. On a board with heavy terrain the hive guard might single handedly win you the game and will seriously outperform the exocrines. On a board with light terrain they will struggle, and the exocrines will do a lot better. The only time I would seriously consider running 12 again is if I knew I was going into a situation with a terrain heavy board.

Exocrines - These guys are in an interesting spot. Their ability to kick out flat 2/3 damage is SUPER important to threaten certain firing arcs against marines and make them pay for going in the wrong spot. But even with one with a 5++ invuln and the other deepstriking, they can just be toast against outflanking eradicators. It is an interesting cat and mouse game because they can generally clear the eradicators if they shoot first, but will die if the eradicators shoot first.

Like many other things in the list, more was not better, and I often run with just 1 exocrine if I have something else in the list I feel comfortable marking for wwswf (maybe upgrading a neurothrope to a hive tyrant for instance, then your wwswf is a tyrant, exocrine and broodlord, and that can work out). 3 exocrines will work wonders against weaker opponents, as along with the hive guard it can be an extreme amount of anti-marine firepower you are kicking out. But that ends up being like 900+ points in your back shooting castle, and taking a list like that starts to struggle to score against better opponents. I find a third of your army is normally the absolute limit of what you want to devote to backline shooting, but ymmv.

While facing marines, and especially gravis spam I think at least one exocrine is a must just for the flat 3 damage and high ap at range. They obviously struggle against knights and will lose a duel against other t8 anti tank because of the low strength. These are elite killers and there are a lot of elites in my meta.

The other issue with exocrines is the 6" movement. On boards with heavy terrain you probably want both in strategic reserve just so that they can get on the board with decent firing arcs. I've had clever opponents mostly neutralize them just with good positioning and use of terrain. And these guys aren't scoring you points in a lot of games, mostly this is an option in the list to kill and control a lane. Also against a lot of deep striking gravis, you probably want to reserve both, have the one with the invuln come in t2 and the weak one come in t3.


Conclusion: In conclusion, I find the above list to do very well against our current marine/elite overlords. It is active in every phase of the game, although a little weak at dealing damage in hth. And even in a loss, which is thankfully rare, you are likely still posting 60-70 points on the board. Your opponent will really have to work for it, and I've had a good number of wins where I was outkilled but my opponent just couldn't find ways to score against me to pull the w in the final total. I am curious what others think of my analysis and experience, and how the rest of the hive mind is finding 9th edition.


Edit: I have gotten a lot of questions on this so put together a very simple battle report that you can read to see the list in action. You can find it here:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Tyranids/comments/isi6as/tyranids_vs_custodes_9th_edition_battle_report/

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/09/14 10:25:39


 
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut




Annandale, VA

Generally tracks well with my experience. As a Kraken player my worst defeat was a Space Wolves list pulling the same infiltrate -> T1 charge shenanigans. I've seen Tyranid players report early success; but as Marine players are retooling to play to the mission rather than just killing the enemy they're resuming their previous stature. Krakenstealer shenanigans got hit hard by the combination of midboard objectives and points increases; a unit of Genestealers with the Swarmlord might be handy to get that turn 1 charge but I wouldn't base my entire army around it. Shooting with Hive Guard and Exocrines definitely feels like a solid plan.

Gaunt carpet losing to 12+ Aggressors and Nidzilla losing to 9 Eradicators isn't necessarily a fault of your list composition; those are bs units that hard-counter you for little cost.

I definitely have noticed the same thing about first-turn advantage, and how armies can get tabled and still win. I've wondered if the objective structure might work better if primaries were scored based on the current turn count (eg instead of each hold 2/hold 3/hold more condition being worth a flat 10VP, make it 6VP turn 2, 8VP turn 3, 10VP turn 4, 12VP turn 5), to make it harder to rack up an unassailable advantage early-game.

The game does need some revision to the secondaries as there are some clear winners and losers. At the very least there ought to be a secondary that works against elite armies (score points for killing multiwound models, maybe?), and toning down some of the easier ones
(eg Abhor the Witch is a no-brainer against anyone with psykers).

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/08/31 14:02:21


   
Made in us
Been Around the Block




I especially agree on the secondaries. Going against someone with less games of experience and watching them choose psychic ritual or rtb or teleport homer is just painful, I feel bad for them.

It took a while for the best secondaries to rise to the top, but once they did it's all anyone takes now. Unless someone builds a list that just gives up one of the kill ones easily, always take advantage of that.

Although even there, I don't know that is good secondary design. Why punish some army builds through score more than others? But I'll leave that to the designers.

Thank you for your thoughts and feedback!

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/08/31 15:30:47


 
   
Made in it
Longtime Dakkanaut





Your experience with Lictors and with the metabolic overdrive align with mine.
   
Made in us
Dakka Veteran




Illinois

I agree on secondary objectives as well. Engage is a no brainer. If you are making a play for primary (which you should) you will be getting at least 2 points per turn from engage.

People in my meta have gone all in on APC heavy lists so bring it down is usually one of my three.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/08/31 16:10:39


 
   
Made in pl
Fixture of Dakka




Insightful and interesting, even when I don't play tyranids, good article and thank you mr Random.

If you have to kill, then kill in the best manner. If you slaughter, then slaughter in the best manner. Let one of you sharpen his knife so his animal feels no pain. 
   
Made in ca
Longtime Dakkanaut





I've played only a fraction of the games you have, but yes, that definitely seems to be the way of it. My GSC list is winning games right now because it just dies in the right spots, while usually killing less than 50% of my opponent's army. Sadly, this just isn't as fun. I feel like an NPC with this army.

 Galef wrote:
If you refuse to use rock, you will never beat scissors.
 
   
Made in us
Swift Swooping Hawk





Really, really good points on the Lictors and Mawlocs. I want both of those things to pack more punch so I don't often bring them because they don't go ham on enemies like I'd like (from a fluff perspective), but you're exactly right about their scoring potential. Really great post, thanks for the writeup!
   
Made in us
Ultramarine Chaplain with Hate to Spare






Great writeup. I wish I could play.

But I'm inspired to finish painting my Mawlocs and Exocrine, so that's something.

And They Shall Not Fit Through Doors!!!

Tyranid Army Progress -- With Classic Warriors!:
https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/0/743240.page#9671598 
   
Made in gb
Fixture of Dakka







Interesting write-up, even though I don't play Nids.

Having said that, please, for the love of the Emperor - Angels, not Angles...

2021-4 Plog - Here we go again... - my fifth attempt at a Dakka PLOG

My Pile of Potential - updates ongoing...

Gamgee on Tau Players wrote:we all kill cats and sell our own families to the devil and eat live puppies.


 Kanluwen wrote:
This is, emphatically, why I will continue suggesting nuking Guard and starting over again. It's a legacy army that needs to be rebooted with a new focal point.

Confirmation of why no-one should listen to Kanluwen when it comes to the IG - he doesn't want the IG, he want's Kan's New Model Army...

tneva82 wrote:
You aren't even trying ty pretend for honest arqument. Open bad faith trolling.
- No reason to keep this here, unless people want to use it for something... 
   
Made in au
Dakka Veteran





Excellent write up, excellent list. Great approach to the game and clearly built off a lot of experience.

I’m gonna try make Carnifex spam work in the face of Eradicators. They can only really kill a single fex per Eradicators unit, fexes are our cheapest MCs, and a unit of Eradicators does NOT wanna get charged by one, so ima try it nonetheless. Eradicators are barstards tho
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut




Interesting read. Good to see! Here is my 2 cents for what its worth lol.

I have had around 50/50 win / loss so far with nids in 9th. Nids really depend on the mission and terrain and secondaries to win.

Engage on all fronts is an easy and obvious pic but i typically prefer linebreaker. Putting 2 ravaner squads and 3 lictors in my opponents do turn 2 and 3 for 8vp is pretty easy to achieve. I have also found running 2 mawlocks, while they wont kill anything, will score points.

Deploy scramblers is a reliable 10vp as well, but you could also go ballsy and do teleport homers. It requires those 3 lictors surviving from t3 to t4 but if successful its 12vp. And you can always have 1 more try again to max out to 15vp. Down side is if there isn't a good place to hide terrain wise or you don't see yourself being able to force a good hiding hole in your opponents back line by t3 then yeah go deploy scramblers.

The problem I always find myself in is the final secondary, in all of my games i have found it comes to the missions specific secondary / domination / bring it down. While we stand we fight i always find as not a good option, our expensive stuff is very valuable to nids and we can't afford to give up vp by making them bigger targets. If the mission has an easy 2ndary i typically go there. If not i look to see if there are 5 objectives. If so domination becomes more valuable as not only does it get me 3vp for that but it means I am definitely getting the 15 primary so its even better for catching me up or putting me ahead further.

If those are no gos then we are looking at bring it down. Its much better than thin their ranks (really? 1vp for every 10 and if a vehicle has more than 10w it counts as 10 models? Vs flat 2 or 3vp per vehicle?!). Other ones just are not a viable option, maybe assassinate if things look good but not normally in my group.


In case it matters I run normally Jormungandr. I take 2 flying double scythe hive tyrants and a ground double rending claw tyrant in almost all my lists, as well as 10 warriors with the +2 to saving throws while in cover adaptation. Warriors with 2+ saves are just very effective and hard to shift. I know the ground tyrant isn't a popular option, but at 155 my "queen" always puts in some work. Last game she killed an invictor warsuit in cc then turned around and dropped a 2nd warsuit to 1w. Thats bang for buck. I also almost always take a maleceptor. His strat to reduce str of guns firing at nids units within 6" by 1 is money! Watching guardsmen realize their wounding warriors with their las guns on 6's, or marines wounding the hive tyrant on 6's with their bolters....

After that its sometimes 6 zonathropes, sometimes 6 biovores, sometimes 2 tyranofexs with rupture cannons. Again maleceptor can really help keep them alive. T8 and reduce str by 1? I suddenly have hope I will survive some of those las cannons pointing my way. . . Point is its just a case of what I feel like and how I want things to go that determines the list. I have had success with ravaners too, their speed and cc efficiency can't be denied.

1 unit I no longer enjoy using are termagaunts. They seem too expensive with devourers now. And if you put them in trygon that's even more of an investment. I dont mind hormagaunts (never leave home without at least 30) even though they also die very quickly. People seem afraid of them.... lol.


   
Made in bg
Dakka Veteran




Very good read.
Thank you for sharing your experience.
   
Made in us
Been Around the Block




 Gene St. Ealer wrote:
Really, really good points on the Lictors and Mawlocs. I want both of those things to pack more punch so I don't often bring them because they don't go ham on enemies like I'd like (from a fluff perspective), but you're exactly right about their scoring potential. Really great post, thanks for the writeup!


Thank you very much! Yes, never count on a lictor or a mawloc killing anything. But with a pair of each you are only dedicating about 300 points to units that are a serious scoring threat, allowing most of your army to still be in the thick of it fighting. All the deep strike in this army is cheap, throw away stuff and that is part of what makes it so valuable. Even with the small board sizes it is really difficult for anyone to control the whole board.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Nitro Zeus wrote:
Excellent write up, excellent list. Great approach to the game and clearly built off a lot of experience.

I’m gonna try make Carnifex spam work in the face of Eradicators. They can only really kill a single fex per Eradicators unit, fexes are our cheapest MCs, and a unit of Eradicators does NOT wanna get charged by one, so ima try it nonetheless. Eradicators are barstards tho


Thank you, I really appreciate the feedback. I wish you the best of luck on the carnifex list and you will have to let people know how it goes.

I don't pretend to be a top tyranids player and just because I couldn't make something work doesn't mean that it is bad or can't work. And even with all that I wrote above, I suspect a different player trying to copy my list would have to play it for a few games to really get the list to "click" for them. So much of the game comes down to personal play style and preferences. Make every army your own!

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2020/09/01 06:44:28


 
   
Made in us
Been Around the Block




Azuza001 wrote:
Interesting read. Good to see! Here is my 2 cents for what its worth lol.

I have had around 50/50 win / loss so far with nids in 9th. Nids really depend on the mission and terrain and secondaries to win.

Engage on all fronts is an easy and obvious pic but i typically prefer linebreaker. Putting 2 ravaner squads and 3 lictors in my opponents do turn 2 and 3 for 8vp is pretty easy to achieve. I have also found running 2 mawlocks, while they wont kill anything, will score points.

Deploy scramblers is a reliable 10vp as well, but you could also go ballsy and do teleport homers. It requires those 3 lictors surviving from t3 to t4 but if successful its 12vp. And you can always have 1 more try again to max out to 15vp. Down side is if there isn't a good place to hide terrain wise or you don't see yourself being able to force a good hiding hole in your opponents back line by t3 then yeah go deploy scramblers.

The problem I always find myself in is the final secondary, in all of my games i have found it comes to the missions specific secondary / domination / bring it down. While we stand we fight i always find as not a good option, our expensive stuff is very valuable to nids and we can't afford to give up vp by making them bigger targets. If the mission has an easy 2ndary i typically go there. If not i look to see if there are 5 objectives. If so domination becomes more valuable as not only does it get me 3vp for that but it means I am definitely getting the 15 primary so its even better for catching me up or putting me ahead further.

If those are no gos then we are looking at bring it down. Its much better than thin their ranks (really? 1vp for every 10 and if a vehicle has more than 10w it counts as 10 models? Vs flat 2 or 3vp per vehicle?!). Other ones just are not a viable option, maybe assassinate if things look good but not normally in my group.


In case it matters I run normally Jormungandr. I take 2 flying double scythe hive tyrants and a ground double rending claw tyrant in almost all my lists, as well as 10 warriors with the +2 to saving throws while in cover adaptation. Warriors with 2+ saves are just very effective and hard to shift. I know the ground tyrant isn't a popular option, but at 155 my "queen" always puts in some work. Last game she killed an invictor warsuit in cc then turned around and dropped a 2nd warsuit to 1w. Thats bang for buck. I also almost always take a maleceptor. His strat to reduce str of guns firing at nids units within 6" by 1 is money! Watching guardsmen realize their wounding warriors with their las guns on 6's, or marines wounding the hive tyrant on 6's with their bolters....

After that its sometimes 6 zonathropes, sometimes 6 biovores, sometimes 2 tyranofexs with rupture cannons. Again maleceptor can really help keep them alive. T8 and reduce str by 1? I suddenly have hope I will survive some of those las cannons pointing my way. . . Point is its just a case of what I feel like and how I want things to go that determines the list. I have had success with ravaners too, their speed and cc efficiency can't be denied.

1 unit I no longer enjoy using are termagaunts. They seem too expensive with devourers now. And if you put them in trygon that's even more of an investment. I dont mind hormagaunts (never leave home without at least 30) even though they also die very quickly. People seem afraid of them.... lol.




I am glad that you are getting jormungunder to work for you. In my meta one of my common opponents runs fists, and the ignore cover just really killed my own jormungunder experiments. But if you don't have a counter like that in your meta, go nuts.

As far as secondaries, I agree and have some thoughts. Because I have a lot of cheap deepstrike I usually find linebreaker scores more for me than engage. Engage is the safer pick though, and linebreaker is tough to get against a castle gunline or on one of the missions with small deployment areas.

WWSWF is not a great pick for us. That said, I still find it important in my experience to have it as an option. When evaluating an opponent and the mission, you want as many potential options as possible. It is sort of the best of a bad bunch when all other options are closed. The problem is if you don't think about it in list design, you might have a list with throw away mawlocs that also need to stay alive? So to score you have to throw away score? My list is specifically designed to be tough to get assassinate or bring them down points against, and abhor is often a trap against me as it can be really difficult to get to the characters.

I like that you are running a lot of different choices than me and making it work. In my experience the Tyranids book has started off 9th as one of the strongest ones, and it actually has a surprisingly deep pool of options when you start constructing combinations. What I wrote is what has ultimately worked for me in a meta that is 70% marines running tough lists. If you can get something else to work, so much the harder for them to start to tailor against us!!
   
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Stubborn White Lion




Even as a filthy casual soft list guy this is a great OP, have an exalt my friend! More real experience and analysis over mathhammer and perceived net wisdom!
   
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Been Around the Block




 catbarf wrote:
Generally tracks well with my experience. As a Kraken player my worst defeat was a Space Wolves list pulling the same infiltrate -> T1 charge shenanigans. I've seen Tyranid players report early success; but as Marine players are retooling to play to the mission rather than just killing the enemy they're resuming their previous stature. Krakenstealer shenanigans got hit hard by the combination of midboard objectives and points increases; a unit of Genestealers with the Swarmlord might be handy to get that turn 1 charge but I wouldn't base my entire army around it. Shooting with Hive Guard and Exocrines definitely feels like a solid plan.

Gaunt carpet losing to 12+ Aggressors and Nidzilla losing to 9 Eradicators isn't necessarily a fault of your list composition; those are bs units that hard-counter you for little cost.

I definitely have noticed the same thing about first-turn advantage, and how armies can get tabled and still win...


I'm glad to hear that my experience is not unique and is similar to your own. I feel like everyone is working off a limited data set now which is why we have to put our collective hive mind heads together. Still, even with just a few hundred games in our group definite trends emerged.
   
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Spoiler:


RandomHeretic wrote:
Azuza001 wrote:
Interesting read. Good to see! Here is my 2 cents for what its worth lol.

I have had around 50/50 win / loss so far with nids in 9th. Nids really depend on the mission and terrain and secondaries to win.

Engage on all fronts is an easy and obvious pic but i typically prefer linebreaker. Putting 2 ravaner squads and 3 lictors in my opponents do turn 2 and 3 for 8vp is pretty easy to achieve. I have also found running 2 mawlocks, while they wont kill anything, will score points.

Deploy scramblers is a reliable 10vp as well, but you could also go ballsy and do teleport homers. It requires those 3 lictors surviving from t3 to t4 but if successful its 12vp. And you can always have 1 more try again to max out to 15vp. Down side is if there isn't a good place to hide terrain wise or you don't see yourself being able to force a good hiding hole in your opponents back line by t3 then yeah go deploy scramblers.

The problem I always find myself in is the final secondary, in all of my games i have found it comes to the missions specific secondary / domination / bring it down. While we stand we fight i always find as not a good option, our expensive stuff is very valuable to nids and we can't afford to give up vp by making them bigger targets. If the mission has an easy 2ndary i typically go there. If not i look to see if there are 5 objectives. If so domination becomes more valuable as not only does it get me 3vp for that but it means I am definitely getting the 15 primary so its even better for catching me up or putting me ahead further.

If those are no gos then we are looking at bring it down. Its much better than thin their ranks (really? 1vp for every 10 and if a vehicle has more than 10w it counts as 10 models? Vs flat 2 or 3vp per vehicle?!). Other ones just are not a viable option, maybe assassinate if things look good but not normally in my group.


In case it matters I run normally Jormungandr. I take 2 flying double scythe hive tyrants and a ground double rending claw tyrant in almost all my lists, as well as 10 warriors with the +2 to saving throws while in cover adaptation. Warriors with 2+ saves are just very effective and hard to shift. I know the ground tyrant isn't a popular option, but at 155 my "queen" always puts in some work. Last game she killed an invictor warsuit in cc then turned around and dropped a 2nd warsuit to 1w. Thats bang for buck. I also almost always take a maleceptor. His strat to reduce str of guns firing at nids units within 6" by 1 is money! Watching guardsmen realize their wounding warriors with their las guns on 6's, or marines wounding the hive tyrant on 6's with their bolters....

After that its sometimes 6 zonathropes, sometimes 6 biovores, sometimes 2 tyranofexs with rupture cannons. Again maleceptor can really help keep them alive. T8 and reduce str by 1? I suddenly have hope I will survive some of those las cannons pointing my way. . . Point is its just a case of what I feel like and how I want things to go that determines the list. I have had success with ravaners too, their speed and cc efficiency can't be denied.

1 unit I no longer enjoy using are termagaunts. They seem too expensive with devourers now. And if you put them in trygon that's even more of an investment. I dont mind hormagaunts (never leave home without at least 30) even though they also die very quickly. People seem afraid of them.... lol.




I am glad that you are getting jormungunder to work for you. In my meta one of my common opponents runs fists, and the ignore cover just really killed my own jormungunder experiments. But if you don't have a counter like that in your meta, go nuts.

As far as secondaries, I agree and have some thoughts. Because I have a lot of cheap deepstrike I usually find linebreaker scores more for me than engage. Engage is the safer pick though, and linebreaker is tough to get against a castle gunline or on one of the missions with small deployment areas.

WWSWF is not a great pick for us. That said, I still find it important in my experience to have it as an option. When evaluating an opponent and the mission, you want as many potential options as possible. It is sort of the best of a bad bunch when all other options are closed. The problem is if you don't think about it in list design, you might have a list with throw away mawlocs that also need to stay alive? So to score you have to throw away score? My list is specifically designed to be tough to get assassinate or bring them down points against, and abhor is often a trap against me as it can be really difficult to get to the characters.

I like that you are running a lot of different choices than me and making it work. In my experience the Tyranids book has started off 9th as one of the strongest ones, and it actually has a surprisingly deep pool of options when you start constructing combinations. What I wrote is what has ultimately worked for me in a meta that is 70% marines running tough lists. If you can get something else to work, so much the harder for them to start to tailor against us!!





My meta is very fluid. Almost all players have 2 or 3 armies to choose from, with some having 5 or more. Typically all marine players have at least 1 xenos army, and there are currently only 2 imp fist players (with me being one of them, and I haven't put them on the table this edition yet). So yeah, while there is always a chance I could face almost anything the same goes for my opponents.

A 70% marine super meta would be incredibly tough to deal with. The last game I played was vs an incredibly tough marine list and I was destroyed pretty easily. I made some really bad choices t1, improper placement of swarm lord so he couldn't tell hive tyrant with wings to move again, misplacement of maelceptor so he couldn't protect anything but warriors, advanced my gaunts to center of table and pulled them from support range.... it was a total clusterf!@#. My opponent had a large castle (6 centurion devs with las cannons and hurricane bolters), surrounded by a massive screen of primaris and impusors for deployment. Finally he had 3 of those tactical war suits on a flank.

Mission was bad for me, secondaries I picked were too aggressive.... my point is I can see playing with nids in a mostly competitive marine environment being hard to do. You would really have to be on your toes moat games to make them work. I thankfully have more freedom there.
   
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Dakka Veteran





I'm interested in thoughts about using Metabolic Overdrive and maybe even Kraken strat just to push a cheap blob of Hormagants into their front lines turn 1. Similar strength to doing it with Stealers but without the downside of having big expensive blobs that need multiples for redundancy that lose you games if you go first. And with Onslaught they can move just as fast as Stealers and still charge if you don't need to metabolic overdrive
   
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Been Around the Block




 Nitro Zeus wrote:
I'm interested in thoughts about using Metabolic Overdrive and maybe even Kraken strat just to push a cheap blob of Hormagants into their front lines turn 1. Similar strength to doing it with Stealers but without the downside of having big expensive blobs that need multiples for redundancy that lose you games if you go first. And with Onslaught they can move just as fast as Stealers and still charge if you don't need to metabolic overdrive


I think it can be very powerful. The horms are probably going to come out cheaper than the stealers, will take up space and when it works will be a very annoying tarpit to give you a full turn scoring advantage. It won't work as well when you go second, but you do still have a bunch of fast obsec bodies to throw around somewhere. Hormagants open up options like simply surrounding an enemy transport on an objective. You now claim it, you are obsec, and they can't disembark. Even if they can fallback with fly it will take them another turn beyond that to hold the objective again.

I probably wouldn't take a custom hive fleet or anything to boost the damage, the point of the unit is not to really kill anything, but to disrupt position and scoring opportunities. And they won't last long. Aggressors will rip through them once they are in range without problem. Your best defense will be to stay in combat. Still, if an opponent simply falls out of combat and shoots horms on t1 instead of pushing up the board, you probably already have won, right?

Nothing is foolproof. But you need a few troop choices anyway. The question for nids is which are the troop options that are going to help us impact scoring against good opponents the most. I didn't find going heavy on horde working because of aggressors in particular and marine volume of fire in general. But one unit with a lot of speed? It has legs.
   
Made in fi
Locked in the Tower of Amareo





 Nitro Zeus wrote:
I'm interested in thoughts about using Metabolic Overdrive and maybe even Kraken strat just to push a cheap blob of Hormagants into their front lines turn 1. Similar strength to doing it with Stealers but without the downside of having big expensive blobs that need multiples for redundancy that lose you games if you go first. And with Onslaught they can move just as fast as Stealers and still charge if you don't need to metabolic overdrive


If you get first turn then locking enemy to their deployment zone T1 is HUGE. Generally in my games if one player has been unable to leave his DZ T1 then generally that player has lost.

I don't even care if unit kills anything if it forces enemy to deal with them and maybe even block road to midfield. Unit well spent.

So I can see use for that. Issue will be points and can unit do it's weight if you go 2nd.

2024 painted/bought: 109/109 
   
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Been Around the Block




Here is a super quick change that would pull off what you are looking for using my base list. Just as a starting point to bounce ideas around:

Patrol - Kraken

Broodlord - resonance barb, catalyst
30 x Hormagaunts - adrenal glands
Lictor
Lictor

Patrol - leviathan

Neurothrope - psychic scream, warlord
5x warriors - deathspitter, lashwhip, adaptive/enhanced resist
5x zoan - horror
5x zoan - onslaught
mawloc

Patrol - kronos

Neurothrope - symbiostorm
3x ripper
6x hive guard
exocrine - adaptive/dermic
exocrine

2000 pts exactly and starts with 8cp. Retains most of the advantages of my original list, except it has a little less deepstrike, but has the speed option to pin someone turn one with the hormagants.

Of course, alter as it fits your own playstyle. I'm actually quite excited to give this a test spin in my next game. Thanks hive mind!

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2020/09/02 10:54:30


 
   
Made in au
Dakka Veteran





Real question is How important is it to charge? Cause metabolic a blob of kraken Termagants moves even further, doesn’t use onslaught, costs less pts, and is much easier to have redundant copies of so your plan doesn’t get singled out by wyverns or whatever turn 1. But obviously you’re using metabolic so it can’t charge at all.
   
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Been Around the Block




That's a good question. If your opponent has very little fly there is no reason to charge at all. Just stand there as a physical roadblock before their first turn. Charging might also open you up to losses from overwatch or a good hth hit. Also if you don't charge you can better ensure you stay out of HI range. Also, as you say, not charging lets you MO as well as OA, combining those means you have a lot of flexibility on where to place your wall of flesh.

Honestly it could work either way. Play around with it. My next game is tomorrow night, and I'll be taking the 30 hormagant list for a spin, and see how it does.
   
Made in us
Confessor Of Sins





Tacoma, WA, USA

RandomHeretic, what is your meta's opinion on Strategic Reserves? You didn't mention it in your analysis and I would think that would be a good 'solution' to the pinned in your deployment zone problem. Did it just not work to resolve the issue? To limiting to get to objectives?

Inquiring minds (well mine anyway) want to know.
   
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Been Around the Block




 alextroy wrote:
RandomHeretic, what is your meta's opinion on Strategic Reserves? You didn't mention it in your analysis and I would think that would be a good 'solution' to the pinned in your deployment zone problem. Did it just not work to resolve the issue? To limiting to get to objectives?

Inquiring minds (well mine anyway) want to know.


Strategic reserves are great for a fragile shooting unit that you want to be sure gets at least one turn of fire in. (exocrine, eradicators)

Strategic reserves can be used to deepstrike weak infantry units to deploy scramblers if your army doesn't have abilities or strats that otherwise make this easy to do. (tau fire warriors)

Outside of those two uses, it generally does not work well. Charging out of reserves is always difficult, and the opponent knows you are coming in off the edge. If you don't charge, the soonest a unit out of strategic reserves can score is turn 4, and that is very late. So, you come in turn 2, stuck where you are. You get to an objective and hold it turn 3. You score primaries for that objective on turn 4 command phase. Even if they come in turn 2 you can only score with those units for the last 2 turns, typically.

So, from a scoring perspective strategic reserve almost takes you out of the game unless you are also charging. And now you are probably trying to make a 9 on 2d6. Not fun.

So use it to protect a killy unit and kill, use it to protect cheap infantry to deploy scramblers, or don't use it at all as you just put yourself in a scoring hole. I hope that answers your question.
   
Made in fi
Locked in the Tower of Amareo





RandomHeretic wrote:
That's a good question. If your opponent has very little fly there is no reason to charge at all. Just stand there as a physical roadblock before their first turn. Charging might also open you up to losses from overwatch or a good hth hit. Also if you don't charge you can better ensure you stay out of HI range. Also, as you say, not charging lets you MO as well as OA, combining those means you have a lot of flexibility on where to place your wall of flesh.

Honestly it could work either way. Play around with it. My next game is tomorrow night, and I'll be taking the 30 hormagant list for a spin, and see how it does.


Otoh charging allows tagging stuff into melee. With blast weapons no shooting period, without it even you direct fire at expendable troop. Charging infantry unit and piling into leman russes is still valid(not even overwatch for the tank)
   
Made in it
Longtime Dakkanaut





I'm also pondering on the possibility of sacrificing 3 CP and 100 points to forward deploy 2x5 spore mines before the start of the game to road block toward the opponent's closest objectives. It has the advantage of working even if you go second.

If the map doesn't allow an easy obstruction with 2x5 units, or the enemy has too many flying models, then keep those reinforcements points and CPs and use them to recycle a troop later in the game (you can also pheromon them from those lictors).

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2020/09/03 10:08:10


 
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut





Gig Harbor, WA

I’ve only got a patrol of nids, all my kill team dudes, but his was a really interesting read. What about carnifexes?
   
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Been Around the Block




I didn't find that they worked against marines or harlequins. They did alright against custodes and death guard. As marines are my most common opponent I stopped using them. But please experiment and see what works for you.
   
 
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