Hena wrote:
This is actually an interesting question. How this could be done so that it's not based on "feelings".
Can anyone else come up with some method to compared units or formations?
The problem is, there's too many reasons why a formation is taken, coupled with a truly limited number (comparatively) of games in the sample pool. You can get trends, perhaps, but there's a lot of other issues that preclude a purely statistical approach from working.
Off the top of my head, these are some of the reasons a formation may be fielded.
- The formation is over-effective because of it's cost.
- The formation is required as a limited/singular Core Formation. (Black Legion Retinue, Necron Warriors)
- The formation is iconic or liked for fluffy reasons, and the player feels it should be there.
- The formation is painted (happens locally a fair amount. "Yeah, I know they're crap, but I already painted them.")
- The formation accomplishes something that nothing else in the army does. (AA, or ranged TK, or long BP are some examples, if the army has severely limited options).
- The local metagame forces certain options (aircraft tend to be the biggest variance here, some groups seem to play limited amounts, and so AA isn't as important. Others all but require 500+ pts of counter/defensive AA).
- Inexperienced players also tend to skew data. Even if they take an optimal build, their inability to use it to the fullest can effect the numbers. Warhounds that expose themselves to Shadowsword batteries, Terminators placed sub-optimally, etc. And even experienced players playing armies outside their comfort zone.
If done on a unit base, as Moscovian says, Rhinos, Thunderbolts and Warhounds will be up there, due to appearing multiple times, or in multiple armies.
Unless you can filter out all but the first bullet point, any raw statistical analysis is going to be skewed heavily into the "feelings" based area at least as much as the current system. I have faith in numbers, even when it screws me. So much so, it tends to drive FrogBear a little nutty at times. But there's a reason "Lies, damned lies, and statistics" is a common usage phrase. Substitution of poor data, for thought, can be just as bad, if not worse, than no thought at all.
Morgan Vening