Tournament Tips For The Filthy Casual
Good day, battle brothers! I've been bumping into first-time tournament goers a fair bit, which made remember how nervous I was when I attended my first tournament. Heck, I've been doing it regularly for years now, and I still get the jitters going to a tournament. So, I thought people might be interested in the little measures I take to make tournaments a little easier on myself, removing small stressors so I can concentrate on playing well and having a good time. Maybe some of these little measures I take will be helpful to you.
The first thing I like to do is get as much squared away the night before as I possibly can. What this usually looks like is packing my car in advance. I put my army and my gaming bag with my codexes, dice, and assorted gaming paraphernalia in the car the night before so I don't have to worry about those things in the morning. That way, I have that much less to worry about that morning.To make my life easier during the tournament, I do a number of things with dice, all of which are illustrated by the photo here. First, bottom center of the photo you can see my main gaming dice. There are exactly 20 of them, 10 blue, and 10 white. They are a different size and/or different color than all the other dice I use, so I can't mistake any of my other dice as belonging to this batch. I did this so I can confidently pick up the number of dice I need for any given roll quickly. I don't very often have the need to roll more than 20 dice at any given time, and for those occasions I have the bigger container of dice upper center of the photo. When I need more dice for a roll, I pull them from there.
Next to my supplemental dice bin are a couple of smaller containers with dice in them. These are pre-counted buckets of dice for specific units - one for my Hellblasters, the other for my Devastator Squads. That way, when I use those units, I just have to pick up the bucket, tell my opponent which dice are for which weapons, and roll away. Those dice are also the only dice of those colors I have out, so again it would be really hard to mistakenly roll too many dice. From experience, having more than a couple pre-counted dice buckets causes its own headaches, but having 2-3 will save you a bit of time.
Then there are game aids. The last little container of dice holds the D10s I use for wound counters and the dice I use for various in-game conditions. I have the good fortune to have some Battlefleet Gothic special order dice, that have various symbols on them instead of pips or numbers. The symbols were for BFG in game effects, but they are applicable to 40K in game effects like advancing, falling back, battle shock, marking an Oath target, and even performing an action. Very handy if you happen to have them, can find them at a flea market, or make your own with a 3D printer. Also, the clipboard visible in the corner has both my detachment strats and the universal ones so I can reference them quickly. And, of course, I have the datacards, which make it easier to quickly reference unit stats and abilities.
I'd like to mention of pennies as an invaluable game aid. I keep some pennies in my big dice container for marking out deployment zones. The nice things about pennies is they're easy to carry, you can leave them on the table and play over them, and if you forget them on the table you're not really out much. I've also found they're handy for marking out where a particular piece of terrain or unit is if I have to remove it from the table for some reason. For instance, in Game 4 of the CaptainCon GT, I was obliged to pick up one of my Razorbacks so I could put down an objective mat, so I marked its position with pennies and then put it back afterwards.
Another little convenience that makes tournament play a little easier is a carrying tray. I learned pretty quick I don't want to put my army in it's carrying case between every game. Having a carrying tray makes it easier to transfer your minis to and from the table as needed. You can group them by unit, which saves time hunting for particular minis. That way, you're only taking them out of their carrying case when you arrive and only going back in when you're packing up to leave.
Great entry, great advice! I just do the same the night before :)
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