"Wait," you say. "That unit behind him has a Fight First ability from a Stratagem."
You’ve heard the call to war. The clatter of dice, the slide of tape measures, the whispered arguments over line-of-sight. But you don’t own the massive, leather-bound Core Book —or you do, but its index is a labyrinth, and its spine cracks under the weight of constant flipping. Then, a veteran player at the local club leans over and types a single word into your browser: Wahapedia . wahapedia core rules
This is the soul of Wahapedia. Unlike a printed book that is obsolete the moment a FAQ drops, the Core Rules here are . When Games Workshop releases a Munitorum Field Manual or a Balance Dataslate , the maintainer of Wahapedia (the legendary Archivist known only as "Waha") updates the core rules within 48 hours. That rule about Devastating Wounds no longer spilling over? It’s already changed here. That nerf to Overwatch ? Already applied. A War Story: Using the Wahapedia Core Rules in Real Time Imagine the scene: Turn 3. Your opponent declares a charge with their Angron into your Squad of Intercessors . They roll a 12. You interrupt. "Wait," you say
A modal window slides down—it doesn’t reload the page. It tells you: "Line of Sight: For a model to have line of sight to another, you must be able to trace a straight line from any part of its body to any part of the target’s body without passing through terrain features that block line of sight..." But you don’t own the massive, leather-bound Core
So bookmark it. Turn off your ad-blocker (out of gratitude, not necessity). And the next time someone asks, "Can I shoot that?" —you’ll already have the answer glowing on your screen, nested in a gold-highlighted hyperlink, waiting to be clicked.
You open Wahapedia on your phone. You type "Fight First" into the search bar (a feature that loads results as you type, faster than Google). It brings up the subheading: "Order of Combat."