Ginger wrote:
Kyrt wrote:
Removing the IC special rule should always be considered if possible IMO, not because of balance but as its generally prudent to avoid special rules wherever possible. Of course it does boost the unit vs infantry compared to now. Those are independent but both valid factors.
Sorry, but this is not correct. IC is
vital to ensure the Cobra can hit and destroy enemy titans by sustaining with 2BP weapons, whilst also minimising the impact against enemy infantry. The 2008 changes removed IC against infantry targets
I think you've misinterpreted me. Currently cobras have a special unit specifc IC rule, and in general IMO such rules should be avoided. All I said was, the desire to restore the regular IC rule is not for balance (as Irisado somewhat disingenuously suggested), but the two factors are independent and need to be weighed up.
I have to be honest, I am becoming less convinced by your "you're doing it wrong" position the more detail you give. You talk about sustaining on an unshielded Titan, and somehow this requires to be able to activate -after- the Titan. Well, that's the opposite of what you need to do to be able to sustain - if its not an early activation the Titan isn't going to hang around. Apparently this will "usually" kill it - which is simply untrue. And of course titans at the beginning of the turn are never unshielded. Even after all that, I'm a bit underwhelmed at the prospect of sacrificing 750 points of cobra to kill a titan - not good value across all your games.
I know you like using them and are convinced they can work, but so much of what you're saying just sounds like you're misrepresenting general eldar themes to justify why cobras need so many excuses making for them. Yet unlike "air assaults" and "webway" I myself don't consider "anti Titan" to be a core strategy, so it is not something you should be expected to max out on in a tournament list in order to field them. Similarly, the soap bubble analogy is quite acceptable, except the main thing you're ignoring is that the eldar are supposed to play as to keep these fragile units out of harms way, not to sacrifice them in kamikaze moves. Aggressive sometimes, sure, but generally when the odds are stacked in your favour and the risk of reprisal low, and then escape.
None of this is to say I doubt there are circumstances where cobras can be effective, but please forgive me if it irks me to see you construe Lordotmilk as not knowing how eldar work. Clearly lots of people agree with him that they too rarely pay back their points, because they are rarely taken. You can't just assume that's because you know better - it's not because they can't pay off, but because the times that they do are too few and the points needed when they do are too high.