Tonight marks the end
for one of the greatest television shows in history, Breaking Bad. Over several
years of watching, we’ve watched as Walter White has transformed from a down-on-his-luck
Chemistry teacher with lung cancer, trying to make some money for his family to
megalomaniac mass murderer and drug kingpin. We’ve all suffered through this
season as, predictably, it’s all fallen down around Walt’s ears. We all hate
him now (at least I hope so. If you’re a #TeamWalt person, I’m puzzled and
slightly terrified of you at this point.) We’ve watched as, in showrunner Vince
Gilligan’s words, Mr. Chips has turned into Scarface. And tonight it comes to
an end. To commemorate the occasion (and get an easy post topic out of it,) I
decided to take some time and discuss one of my favorite masters in Malifaux,
every Malifool’s favorite drug dealer, Jacob Lynch. So, without further ado…
To start, let me just
say that I love Jacob Lynch as a character. I bought his whole crew when he was
released at Gencon 2012 and painted them up faster than any I had bought
previously. It could just be my proclivity for cheering for the morally complex
bad guys (I still think Lex Luthor has a point about Superman) but this crew
has always been attractive to me. I like the look. I like the focus on card
advantage. These guys are my kind of scum.
Lynch is the proprietor
of the Honeypot casino, a den of debauchery where any vice can be explored with
the right amount of scrip. The story started out with him down on his luck,
about to end up on the wrong side of a loan with the Ten Thunders and
desperate. Enter Messirs Graves and Tannen, a pair of disguised Neverborn with
an offer he can’t refuse. You see, something old and unspeakable lives below
the Honeypot (that’s quite the double entendre sentence), a creature from the
age of the tyrants who just wants to find a host to latch onto so it can get
out and feed. All Lynch has to do is bind with this Hungering Darkness and
spread his influence through the city in the form of Brilliance, the most
potent and intoxicating Narcotic to hit Malifaux and which, incidentally,
allows the HD to feed off of their essence until only a burned out shell
remains. Fast forward, and the Honeypot is a runaway success. Customers are
streaming in to try their luck at the tables, spend time with the beautiful ladies,
and have a taste of the good stuff that makes it all possible. But Misaki knows
what resides inside Lynch now and wants to use it for her own purposes, while
the Neverborn could frankly give a damn what they want, being interested only
in the corruption and ultimate destruction of the humans who have invaded their
home. Once again, Lynch finds himself being pulled between two masters who, if
we’re being honest, don’t EXACTLY have his best interests at heart, and trying
to find a way to get out from under their thumbs with his skin intact.
In his first iteration,
Lynch played very much as his fluff would suggest. He was pretty unassuming and
basically snuck around the board completing objectives while the rest of the
crew induced havoc. In 2nd edition, by contrast, he appears to have
embraced some of the powers made available to him and has become quite a bit
more “hands on” in his approach. His main offensive weapon, his hold out
pistol, has a trigger for each suit and the ability to pitch a card from his
hand and apply that suit to the duel total. The most obvious is the Ram trigger
that converts his damage profile to 4/5/6, but the others can be situationally
useful as well. Lynch also has an unorthodox ability called Ace in the Hole that
allows him to grab any aces flipped or discarded by other members of his crew
before they hit the discard pile, effectively allowing them to utilize
Defensive Stance and abilities like Rapid Fire and Flurry without giving up card
advantage, which we all know I appreciate. But when his activation comes
around, what do we do with all those aces? Well, there’s always his (0) action,
Mulligan, that lets him shuffle three cards into his deck and draw three new
ones which, when paired with his “Woke Up With a Hand” upgrade, basically
allows you to draw a brand new hand at the end of your turn in exchange for
waiting to activate Lynch last. Also, though I’ve never successfully used the
ability, the same upgrade gives him a (1) action called Final Debt where a
target with the Brilliance condition takes a point of damage for each card in
Lynch’s hand.
I’ve read a couple of
different suggestions on how to use Lynch in games. Obviously he’s a much more
effective combatant now, but he still has no real defensive abilities besides
making people take two damage when they cheat in a duel with him. As such you
kind of have to pick your spots with him and make sure he’s well supported. I
personally like to save him for the end of the turn and use Mulligan and Woke
Up With A Hand to ensure that I can dominate any duels that Lynch is involved
in since my opponent will likely have depleted their control hand by that
point. The holdout pistol’s ram trigger gives him a surprisingly effective
damage output. Others have suggested utilizing his “Play for Blood” attack to
spread more Brilliance through the crew, effectively using Lynch to optimize
things for his minions, but I’ve personally found the Beckoners and, to a
lesser extent, Hungering Darkness to be better at that job, especially given
the fact that “Under the Influence” drops off at the end of the turn. His walk
of 4 makes him not particularly speedy, so objective grabbing is probably
better accomplished by other crew members as well. So, honestly, I think the
best way to use Lynch is probably as a hand manipulator and surgical damage
dealer.
Also, a sharp dresser
Of course, just like
Walt, Lynch can’t do it all on his own. He needs a partner, though in this case
his partner is a lot more Gus Fringe and a lot less Jessie Pinkman. The real
power of the crew, both in terms of the fluff and on the tabletop, is the
Hungering Darkness. Despite resembling the Nightmare Edition of a Hungry-Hungry
Hippo (Gencon 2014), the HD is one of the nastiest melee monsters in the game.
A 50mm based model with a 3” melee range basically means everything is within
his threat radius on the second turn. He’s incorporeal and heals himself with successful
melee attacks. He has an enemies only Obey spell. He gets plus flips to
basically everything when you are “Under the Influence.” And all this comes
before you put any upgrades on him.
Taste me you will see,
more is all you need…
Of course, probably the
most important upgrade choice you make for HD actually gets played on Lynch. Both
are limited, so you have to make a call here, but the choice is between either
giving HD an additional CA action per turn (his melee attacks run off of Ca)
and makes him Terrifying (All) or gives him Bad Juju’s “When this model would
be killed, bury it instead” and lets you resummon him when a Brilliant model
dies. This was actually kind of a quandary for me when they introduced this
change between the closing of the Beta and publishing the rulebook. I can see
games where both would be useful. The ability to effectively prevent any
scoring from killing HD (since burying him doesn’t count as killing him) makes
it a pretty solid denial tactic for Reckoning or henchman-kill based schemes.
On the other hand, if you know you’re playing Ressers or one of the
construct-based Arcanists, Terrifying All becomes worth an investment, to say nothing
of the added offensive power. I tend to alternate between the two, particularly
when running the crew as Neverborn (Nexus of Power is incredibly strong on the
big guy and can make Rising Sun sort of superfluous.) We’ll have to see if,
after several games, one ends up supplanting the other.
The friendly staff members
of the Honeypot are always ready to serve.
The two remaining “in
theme” models for the crew are Beckoners and The Illuminated. Beckoners were
previously almost too good, effectively spreading Brilliance through the enemy
crew at will and giving you the ability to lock down most models in the
opposing crew by putting them on negative flips to hit them. They’ve been toned
down a bit at this point, but two of them are probably still an auto-include in
most Lynch builds. Lure is just too powerful of an ability to ignore in an
objective based game. They still have the negative flip to opposing models’
attacks when Brilliant, but their “The Party Never Ends” range has shrunk
significantly, making it easier for models to get away from them and sober up. They’re
not going to kill anybody, but that’s not what they’re here for. Put them in.
Paint ‘em up pretty. Thank me later.
I am not an expert on
the Illuminated, I’ll confess. The first time I tried to use one in a 2nd
edition game, it had a bad case of “new model syndrome,” walking up behind
cover against a Sonnia player only to be set on fire by a Witchling I had lured
in and subsequently blasted to pieces by her on the first turn. My take on them
at this point is that they’re worth including now and then but will probably
see limited use after the Wave 2 minions come out, simply because they seem to
be pretty good at a lot of things but not great at anything. I like the
combination of armor, regen, and their Brillshaper healing spell for
resilience, and Flay is always good, but the model’s statline is otherwise
fairly unremarkable and their ability to spread brilliance requires a trigger
and isn’t particularly efficient even when you do hit it. If they were a bit
cheaper I’d be singing a different tune, and it’s possible I’m just off base or
not using them right, but they just don’t feel like you’re getting a full 7
stones worth of model with these guys and, unfortunately, will probably be
replaced by better options once we see what’s coming with Wave 2.
Update: Many people have written/commented to me that the
Illuminated are, in fact, better than I’m giving them credit for here. One of
them did help me to win a game the previous weekend (as I’ll discuss in my
upcoming post about Vassal,) mostly by being able to weather a storm of ice
blasts from Rasputina while in defensive stance to hold the Turf War marker.
Certainly, Armor+Regen+Brillshaper makes for a pretty tough model. Also,
against a Brilliant target they will certainly do a lot of damage. I maintain
my concern that the model may end up on a pile of “hey, remember those things?
They were pretty good” once Wave 2 comes out, but I wanted to make sure people
are aware that this may be a minority opinion on my part.
The question of what
faction to run the Lynch crew with has always been a little one-sided for me
from a feel perspective. He just seems like he fits better with the Neverborn.
These are horrific monsters doing terrible things to the people who step
through the casino doors, and you don’t get much more Neverborn than that.
Plus, my Cade and Teddy are both wearing formal attire, so they’re dressed and
ready for a night on the town with Lynch. Mechanically, the Neverborn fit well
with him as well. As mentioned, Nexus of Power played on HD makes him pretty
difficult to take down simply by pouring Soulstone’s down the big guy’s throat
to heal any damage the opponent puts on him. Terror Tots become some of the
best objective grabbers in the game if you can manage to cycle through your
deck and find the ace of masks, since you can cheat the flip for their sprint
ability then pick the AoM back up thanks to Lynch. The Doppleganger gets a
number of tasty (1) actions to copy between HD, the Beckoners, and the Tot’s
unlimited sprinting. Teddy gets to flurry for free and provides a pretty solid
1-2 punch with the HD. I’ve played them much more often as Neverborn, and have
never felt that I was missing out.
That’s not to say that
the Thunders don’t bring some solid advantages as well. Recalled training is
just good no matter who you put it on. The Archers get to Rapid Fire for free
thanks to Lynch, and their ability to shoot into melee at will makes them
pretty useful to back up the HD. I’ve always liked putting Yamaziko and
Hungering Darkness together to form a massive wall of denial in the mid-board,
especially for scenarios like Squatter’s Rights. Misdirection is always handy
and, with the ace of masks trick, can end up being pretty effective to block
opponents’ attacks against your Henchmen and/or Enforcers late in the turn when
the opponent’s hand is shrinking.
Personally, I don’t think
you can go wrong and your choice may just come down to preference and
playstyle. Lynch is overall a good crew with some very interesting tricks. I
don’t know that he’s ever going to end up being classified into whatever shakes
out as the “Top Tier,” but I also don’t think the crew has very many particularly
bad match-ups either. I’m interested to see what they do with the rest of the
crew in Wave 2 (using the Depleted for reliable, cheap objective grabbers would
be excellent.) In the meantime, have fun spreading addiction and corruption
through Malifaux, and let’s all hope that Walt finally gets what’s coming to
him, and that Jessie gets revenge on that piece of crap Todd.
See you next time.