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Harlequins Codex Review – Part 2

Embrace Your Inner Geek here again with the second installment of my Harlequins Codex review. Up this time, Masques. Check the Tactics Corner for more great articles!

If you missed it, catch part 1 in this series, here.

Masque forms, are the Harlequin equivalent of “chapter tactics”. There are 6, and they all have associated Enigmas, Warlord Traits and Stratagems. In this part I’ll deal with each of the Forms, and discuss their associated rules. They’re not all great to be honest, but there are a couple of really good ones.

Midnight Sorrow

One of the stronger Masques, but not the strongest. It would be good for a Solitaire. 

Veiled Path

One of the weaker Masques. It might work for a Shadowseer, letting you deep strike her exactly where you need that crucial power cast, without spending CPs, but there are stronger options.

Frozen Stars

This is one of the stronger Masques. It makes me want to take a unit of 12  “naked” Players on foot, and just run them across the table with a Troupe Master, cast Veil of Tears, and use Lightening Fast Reflexes for a -2 to hit, and then use Prismatic Blur for a 3++ (we’ll come to these stratagems shortly), for a reasonably survivable blender unit. 

Soaring Spite

To me, this is the stand our Masque, particularly if you want to run Troupe’s in Starweavers.

Expect to see a Soaring Spite battalion in pretty much every list.

Dreaming Shadow

This is the Masque to take if you love Death Jesters!

You might see this if somebody has a “thing” for Death Jesters (maybe in a Vanguard detachment, with a Solitaire) but it’s not the strongest Masque.

Silent Shroud

Conclusion

IMO, the clear winner here is Soaring Spite. Its Form is strong, and synergises well with all the other elements. Frozen Stars is also good, as is Midnight Sorrow. I suspect people might take Silent Shroud for the Stratagem alone, or for leadership bomb armies, allied with Drukhari and Craftworld. The others are “patchy”, but Dreaming Shadow Death Jesters may be a popular (but not optimal) choice. 

Read part 3 of this review, here.

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