BoLS logo Today's Tabletop & RPG News
Advertisement

Mantic: Get on the Warpath – Units 101

4 Minute Read
May 4 2017
Hot story icon
Advertisement

Gather your troops and prepare for battle!

With the new starter set available it’s a great time to pick up a new army – or scale up the one you’ve been using for Deadzone – and start playing. You can check out the rules for free here. Not sure where to start? Start with the basics: units.

A Team of Asterian Marionettes from Warpath

In Firefight a unit is composed of individual miniatures, each one tracking things like damage, line of sight and weaponry individually. In Warpath, units are made up of teams, where multiple miniatures are formed up into one team, that is treated as a single entity on the tabletop which attacks and takes damage as one. Warpath’s system allows for larger forces to be controlled easily and quickly to facilitate larger games, while Firefight is built for more detailed gameplay on a smaller scale. This does not limit how you can play these games – you can play small games of Warpath or large games of Firefight without issue.

Units can be upgraded with additional weapons or specialists. There are three types of upgrade; Equipment, Personnel and Support. In Warpath, a team may only take one of each upgrade and in Firefight, these are specifically limited in each unit entry.

This team of Plague 3rd Generation Troopers has been given a HMG Equipment upgrade.

Advertisement

An Equipment upgrade replaces one miniature’s weapon with another, adding to their firepower. In Firefight, this replaces that miniature’s shooting completely, but in Warpath, this simply adds an extra attack without affecting the original unit’s attacks. These work in the same way for both melee and ranged weapons.

A unit of GCPS Rangers with a Leader Personnel upgrade.

A Personnel upgrade replaces one of the miniatures in the unit with a specialist or leader. The new miniature is armed in the same ways as the rest of the unit, unless stated otherwise and they add new abilities. Leaders grant units better morale, Medics make units more resilient, Engineers can repair vehicles and so on.

Advertisement

A unit of Enforcer Pathfinders with a D.O.G. Drone Support Upgrade.

A Support upgrade adds a new miniature to the unit, rather than replacing an existing one. The best example of this is the Enforcer Pathfinders’ D.O.G. Drone. This extra model can add its attacks to the unit it joins, as well as adding abilities, such as the D.O.G. Drone’s RDL Transmission special rule.

In games of Warpath or Firefight, you and your opponent take it in turns to activate your units in order to fight and outwit each other across the tabletop, through firepower, close quarters combat or capturing objectives. The core of both games is similar to our Sci-Fi Skirmish game, Deadzone, in that it works around activating units (sometimes known as alternate activation).

At the beginning of the game, the two players roll for initiative – the player who rolls highest gets to choose who has the initiative first this turn. The player with initiative may then issue up to two different short actions or one long action to one of their own units. Once these actions have been completed, the initiative moves to the opposing player. Both players carry on in this way until all of the units on the board have activated, at which point, the turn ends. In the next turn, the player who activated all of their units first will have the initiative first. Although there are some things that can alter this sequence – most notably orders – almost everything in a game of Warpath, from occupying terrain to shooting, uses this simple system.

Start Playing Warpath Today

Avatar
Author: Mars Garrett
Advertisement
  • 40K BREAKING: Morale In 8th

    Warhammer 40K