DeathReaper wrote:Voss wrote:
Gitdakka wrote:Dudeface wrote:
Gangland wrote:I'll wait till the rulebook is out to criticize, but I will say, if needed, I would houserule it that as long as 51% of the model is on top of the terrain feature it would be "wholly on top."
If the car is 51% in the parking space, is it in the parking space as intended?
If 4 clowncars have one wheel in one parking space, are they all in the parking space as intended? It all depends on the intention does it not?
No. It doesn't. It matters if they're in the space. Can't quite follow where the metaphor is supposed to be going, but the wording of the rule is quite clear in English.
Unless there's some
GW-ese language defining it differently waiting in the rulebook, the base of the model needs to be entirely within the bounds of the terrain feature.
Lorek wrote:
These are some of the basic tenets of You Make Da Call. Some of them clarify
the Dakka Rules and some of them are guidelines to ensure relatively smooth rules discussions. If you find someone going against these tenets, feel free to refer them to this post. The Moderation Staff will also use these as moderation guidelines in this forum.
Tenets of You Make Da Call (YMDC):
1. Don't make a statement without backing it up...
3. Never, ever bring real-world examples into a rules argument.
- The rules, while creating a very rough approximation of the real world, are an abstraction of a fantasy universe. Real world examples have no bearing on how the rules work. So quit it.
Most importantly #3...
Sorry. If you dock your imperial frigate 51% into the docking berth, is it within the docking berth as intended.
Abstraction included, if your unit is not in/on entirely then a chunk of it is hanging out. Can a unit occupy the space
outside the terrain feature without being onto of another mini claiming to be
wholly within. In this case, no it cannot.
Likewise the same reason we all largely seem to agree 1 & 4 are correct.
Edit: sorry I take objection to getting a slap on the wrist there as I presented a visualisation to the solution that explained why it didn't work. A metaphor as noted is not directly a real life example.
If I had said "no it doesn't count because I expect to get a legal fine for not using a parking space" then yes, tenet 3 is relevant. However I was merely trying to help visualise that an object with 49% of its mass hanging out of the designed space it should occupy does not in fact, constitute as "in the space". Likewise its inability to be in a space is not only abundantly clear, but presents a series of other issues that directly conflict the intent of the rule via movement.