

Combat Patrols, like much Warhammer these days, are still pretty pricey, coming in at $160-but with all of 10th edition’s rules being updated and available digitally for free from day one, that’s the only cost you’ll need to get started with 40K or with a new army, compared to spending magnitudes more as you would now. They were a way to get people a single box to start playing the game with, one that gave them the flavor of what any given faction in Warhammer did in a size that made it easier to learn.Īn example showing the difference between a Combat Patrol datasheet for a Space Marine Captain in Terminator armor, and the standard datasheet for use in other game modes.Įven if you aren’t a newcomer to the hobby, the format provides an interesting chance to experiment with a faction you’re unfamiliar with-without the daunting prospect of committing to a massive force you might ultimately not enjoy playing. Replacing previous start-collecting kits for the various factions of Warhammer, they were all designed with the purpose of giving newcomers to the game or a given faction a cheaper, play-legal, and fairly varied box of models equivalent to approximately 500 points, the smallest size of game in Warhammer 40K’s various scales. In the ninth edition of 40K, Games Workshop introduced “Combat Patrol” box sets. From full-on legions on each side to squad-based skirmishes, they’re still persisting into the game’s upcoming new edition-just with the re-working of simple idea to make the game easier to get into than before. In a game as vast as Warhammer 40,000 has become, there’s always been need for different ways to smash your pile of plastic against someone else’s pile of plastic in ritual combat.
