Is GW still occasionally teasing a new Chaos Dwarf faction? Can't wait to see how Blunderbusses become Doomblaster Thunderpikers and Sneaky Gits become Hobgrot Rippasnippa Throatchokaz.
I'm the type of fellow that has no problem ordering a Rootie Tootie Fresh and Fruity from IHOP, and even I find these names obnoxious.
They did just get a blood bowl team that's been up for preorder for a couple weeks now. Probably going to get a release for The Old World at some point.
TTRPG communities and DMs also have the problem of looking at the game wrong. Damage per turn in straight combat or breaking a small subset of encounters matters not. The infamous "druid that polymorphs into a t-rex" exploit might trivialise open combat, but is useless in a murder investigation, or even in a small cave.
While I never got to play city fight or apocalypse or any of those other variant game modes, I can imagine they even the playing field quite a bit. Shooting army OP? Good look in a jungle scenario where you can only see 6 inches away. This is why objective modes always appealed to me more than simple "clear the table of enemies" games. Because you can lose the damage trade, but win the game if your strategy is good.
It's funny you mention that, because objectives and missions are another thing I see these hyper casual 40k players bitch and moan about. Some people literally just want to smash minis into the center of the board and throw dice at eachother till someone wins with zero consideration of something basic like using "cover" because it's "cowardly"
What's frustrating about this is that other hobbies don't have this problem. Football fans always make it to the match. People can make it to regular bike meets. But somehow TTRPGs and wargames are incapable of meeting once a week or even once a month.
Oh absolutely. TTRPGs are dirt cheap as a hobby, but most D&D5e campaigns seem to end before they get to lvl 5 because shit falls apart. And going to sports games? Tickets, parking/transit, food, that shit gets really expensive real fast. And those people also have jobs, kids, and other responsibilities. But wargamers, yeah I don't get it. Another excuse I've seen "I don't have the time to set aside 6 hours to play a game" well if you actually played and learned your rules it wouldn't take 6 hours to get in a single game, meanwhile the sports fans can fill their heads with all kinds of statistics for something they'll never actually participate in. I suppose it is true that TTRPGs and wargames as a hobby definitely attracts broken people who just don't have their shit together.
As mentioned, I think they ignore games. When I quit, a lot of people were more interested in theory crafting than playing. As with TTRPGs, they complain constantly but when it comes time to roll dice it's nothing but excuses. I sometimes wonder if I'm the problem. Especially now because the hobby has moved on since my time playing 3rd.
What, like you're the problem because you actually want to play? LOL, hell no. Yes shit has moved on since 3rd edition, the game plays differently. If you've got the ability to get some games in, then do it and see what happens. Find some pick up games and get some dice rolling done. From the past discussion about your armies will it mean some proxying and re-working what you've got into a list? Sure, but you can do that with some notes and newrecruit.eu
I heard a theory just today (was looking up that GW lawsuit) that Britain being smaller means travelling to gaming venues is less of an issue, whereas in the US it often requires an overnight stay. Hence the USA's obsession with tournament play. I don't know if I buy that but it's an interesting theory.
I don't know where you're at but I'm in the US, and there are definitely some areas within my state where if I weren't near a population center, it could definitely mean a 2 hour drive to get to a place to play a game where hopefully someone doesn't flake or I'd just be hoping to get there and sit around looking for a game and it isn't like mass transit is an option. Even in a populated enough area that I've got a few game stores within about a 30 minute drive, signing up for a local RTT means I can still get 3 games in, hopefully against people that actually know their rules, and stand a shot at completing those games in 3 hour rounds. Something I've heard about the UK as well is gaming clubs that I guess lease out retail or office space, have a membership covering the costs, issue keys to members, some people store things there, club maintains sets of terrain, starter armies for multiple games, etc. I can't imagine something like that in the US even standing a chance at getting off the ground.