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Post by gregwarhamsters on Feb 27, 2019 23:33:39 GMT
I'll try and keep this simple. My BSB was in a combat along side a unit he was touching the enemy lord.
My own Lord comes charging into the combat and whilst maximising engages the enemy BSB,
XOOOX O___O
So My Lord is in base to base with his BSB, His Lord is in base to base with my BSB.
There are 3 units in the combat.
As a single unit my Lord cannot decline a challenge as he's a single model, my BSB technically cannot decline as he cannot get to a rear rank whilst still with his unit.
I issue a challenge from my BSB (my lords a unit on his own and I'm trying not to have additional attacks against my BSB) now my opponent accepts with his BSB technically pulling it away from my Lord.
Is that allowed? If all the characters were in the same unit then fair enough but it's taking away a model in combat and doesn't seem right.
I'm sure I'll need to describe/discuss further but I'm sure you cannot take a model out of combat and the characters touching each other seems to go against everything.
Greg
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Post by strutsagget on Feb 28, 2019 6:04:19 GMT
Challenges really create special circumstances. I think a challenge is maybe the only way to bring models out of combat (they are still in combat but have no models in base contact to fight).
When he accepts he needs to move and swap his bsb with any a model in base contact with your bsb.
As your lord is not allowed to hit a model in a challenge. But as he swaps place he should get a new model to have as an alternative to fight.
Hard to know more and if I understood the situation correctly.
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Post by FvonSigmaringen on Feb 28, 2019 9:29:05 GMT
If I understand you correctly, your BSB had joined a unit, and his Lord & BSB also had joined a unit. He can accept the challenge with any character or champion in btb with the unit where the challenge came from. As @strusagget says, in normal circumstances, this means you would swap models. After all, the challenged model is not allowed to leave the unit. But perhaps you could try to make a better diagram, because the size of the bases may influence the situation.
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