Cities of Death Visions of desolate, ruined, war-torn cityscapes covered in snow and i ce are very evocative, conjuring up images of snipers shivering beneath their greatcoats or guns freezing up as they fire. Lost in the SnowA driving b lizzard can make a di saster of a relative ly simple d eployment - marker beac ons are no longer visible, communications are disrupted and visibility drops to almost nothing. Units (friendly and enemy) deploying to the battlefield via Deep Strike or Outflank suffer -1 to their reserve rolls. Additionally, units that Deep Strike roll 3D6 for scatter, rather than 2D6. Freezing FogVisibility across the battlefield has been drastically reduced, leaving the combatants to blindly guess at enemy positions. Use the Night Fighting scenario special rule from the main rulebook to represent the freezing fog. Note, however, that searchlights cannot be used, as they are unable to penetrate the swirling mists. Additionally, assault grenades have no effec t in this game - the assaulting troops cannot see the defenders clearly enough to glean full advantage from their grenades. Roll a dice at the start of each game turn - if you roll under the turn number, the fog lifts and the stratagem no longer applies.
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Visions of desolate, ruined, war-torn cityscapes covered in snow and ice are very evocative,conjuring up images of snipers shivering beneath their greatcoats or guns freezing up as they
fire.
Lost in the Snow A driving blizzard can make a disaster of a relatively simple deployment - marker beacons
are no longer visible, communications are disrupted and visibility drops to almost nothing.
Units (friendly and enemy) deploying to the battlefield via Deep Strike or Outflank suffer -1
to their reserve rolls. Additionally, units that Deep Strike roll 3D6 for scatter, rather than2D6.
Freezing Fog
Visibility across the battlefield has been drastically reduced, leaving the combatants to
blindly guess at enemy positions.
Use the Night Fighting scenario special rule from the main rulebook to represent the freezing
fog. Note, however, that searchlights cannot be used, as they are unable to penetrate the
swirling mists. Additionally, assault grenades have no effect in this game - the assaulting
troops cannot see the defenders clearly enough to glean full advantage from their grenades.
Roll a dice at the start of each game turn - if you roll under the turn number, the fog lifts and
Snowdrifts The wind has driven snow and ice into the confines of the ruins, creating vast frozen drifts
that are treacherous to traverse.
All city ruins count as dangerous terrain. Furthermore, units must roll an extra dice for alldifficult terrain tests in city ruins, and discard the highest result. If this stratagem is used in
the same game as the Lost in the Snow stratagem then roll a D6 for each city ruin at the start
of each player turn. On a roll of 1, that ruin is treated as impassable terrain for the rest of the
game. Any units in that ruin must immediately move out of the ruin - any model unable to do
so for any reason is overwhelmed by the mounting snowdrifts and removed from play.
Freezing Flood An icy river has burst its banks somewhere near the battlefield - its chill waters could sweep
the battlefield at any point.
The Freezing Flood is rolled for at the start of each game turn exactly as if it were a unit inreserve - it cannot arrive on the first game turn, but will arrive on the second game turn on a
4+ and then on a 3+ in the next turn and so on. Immediately as the Freezing Flood arrives,
only units on the first or higher floors of buildings are safe. Roll a D6 for every unit at
'ground' level. On a 2 or more, the unit is swept away by the chill waters. All models in the
squad are removed as a casualties. Once the Freezing Flood's onset has been resolved, the
water level subsides, leaving the entire battlefield to be treated as difficult terrain. Vehicles
are unaffected.
Frozen Engines Unprepared vehicles can quickly succumb to the effects of the extreme cold. The enemy's
vehicles are ill-equipped to deal with the sub-zero weather. If their tanks and transports are
left stationary for long they will cease to function as engines seize and axles freeze up.
At the end of each of the enemy player's turns he must roll a D6 for each of the vehicles that
did not move. On a roll of 2+ it has frozen up treat it as having suffered a crew stunned result.
When the apocalypse arrives it matters not if it's on some sun-baked desert planet, in lush
forest or on sub-zero ice-caked worlds. The only time the environment is relevant is if it can
be turned to your advantage.
Intermittent Comms
The extreme cold and treacherous blizzard make communication difficult to the point of
impossible when the ice storm rages at its peak.
When Revealed: At the start of one of the opposing team's turns.
Effect: The members of that team may not speak or communicate in any way about the game
until the end of the Shooting phase. (No speaking, writing or gesticulating of any kind!)
The Mother of All Hailstorms
The battlefield is blighted by a short but deadly ice storm, as hail stones ranging from thesize of bolter rounds to large boulders fall to the ground at great speed.
When revealed: At the start of your Shooting phase.
Effect: Place D3 Apocalyptic Barrage templates anywhere on the battlefield, although they
must be within 12 inches of each other. The hailstorm uses the following Apocalyptic
Barrage (5), Strength 5, AP 5.
Experimental Ice Weapon One of your troops has been armed with an experimental weapon. It looks and works similar
to a flamer but instead of burning prometheum, it sprays a chemical coolant. While not deadly, the coolant can temporarily freeze targets, encasing them in ice and weakening their
Effect: Pick any one model armed with a flamer in your force - he is carrying the
experimental weapon. The weapon is treated like a normal flamer with the following
exceptions; the weapon does not fire the normal flamer template but the hellstorm templateinstead. Models under the template when fired must make a successful Initiative test to dive
out of the way or be sprayed with the coolant. If the test is failed the model has been hit and
becomes frozen in place. Frozen models may not move, shoot nor act in the subsequent
player turn. Additionally, models do not have an armour save when frozen (invulnerable
saves work as normal). If assaulted they are automatically wounded. If only some members
of a squad are frozen, then the active members cannot break squad coherency although they
can otherwise move, shoot and fight as normal.
Models with an armour value cannot dodge the coolant if they are under the template but they
can move and shoot as normal in their next player turn if hit. However, their armour value is
reduced by 3 until the end of the next player turn.
The experimental weapon is unstable, and as such counts as having the Gets Hot! Rule
(although it should be called Gets Cold! in this case).
Frozen Booby Trap A remnant from a previous conflict, this wreckage has remained dormant, frozen by the
elements for decades. Now the arrival of another great war has reactivated the sensors. The
close proximity of enemy troops has started the automated countdown of a rigged plasma
warhead hidden amongst the wreckage.
When Revealed: After deployment.
Effect: After the forces have set up but before the game begins, the owning player places awreckage marker anywhere in no-man's-land. For the wreckage marker we've used a Titan
cockpit in this example but you can use any suitable model in your collection to mark the
area. As soon as any model from either side goes within 10" of the marker the booby trap is
activated. At the start of the following turn roll a D6: on a 3+ the warhead explodes. If it
doesn't explode then roll a D6 at the start of each player turn until it explodes or the game
ends. Treat the exploded warhead exactly like an Apocalyptic explosion as described on page
93 of the Apocalypse book with the wreckage marker at the centre of the blast.
Hypercold Bubble Due to atmospheric anomalies, there are pockets of extreme 'hyper-cold' areas all over the
planet. Should vehicles or troops move into these bubbles of extreme cold they will be frozen
in an instant, as armour shatters and molecules freeze over.
When Revealed: At the start of the battle.
Effect: The owning player nominates an area on the battlefield no more than 12 inches in
length and 8 inches wide as the Hypercold Bubble. This can be based around a terrain feature,
like this petrified forest in the picture above. Any models that enter this area must
immediately take a dangerous terrain test to represent the hyper-cold effect but are removedon the roll of a 1 or 2. Vehicles that enter the area must take a dangerous terrain test, being
affected on a 1 or 2. If they fail, not only are they immobilised but their armour value on all
facings is reduced by 2, as the extreme cold weakens the structure.