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People who really like to convert vehicles by either lovingly crafting spectacular amalgams of 10 different kits, or by covering some other faction’s model in glue and rolling it around in their bitz box like a katamari.The people who love the idea of big green himbo football hooligans tearing their way across the galaxy in search of their next scrap.There are three kinds of people attracted to Orks as an army: So how do the Orks fare in this brave new world of insanely powerful codexes and incredibly killy units? Do the Orks stand on the precipice of ascension to the glorious ranks of 70%+ win rate armies, ready to dominate GTs or are they the first stumble we’ve had in a while? Let’s take a look.Īlso, extra special thanks to Rockfish for the hard work he’s been putting into his Ork collection, because this article wouldn’t look half as pretty without it! Why Play Orks? It’s a bit weird, but a book’s a book and that means more C O N T E N T for you, dear reader. So it’s out, but not quite out – to the point that Games Workshop’s own Warhammer Open 40k tournament in Orlando isn’t allowing the new Ork rules. Similar to what they did for the Adepta Sororitas in 8th edition, Games Workshop have released Codex: Orks as part of a limited edition boxed set with a collection of the new Beast Snagga models, with plans to release the Codex to the wider public in a number of weeks. Hot on the heels of the two most powerful codexes we’ve seen in 9th edition, Codex Orks releases this weekend.
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