![]() ![]() ![]() Let’s open the app up then, and have a look at it. I’m personally pretty price inelastic on this front, but from a business point of view I think this was an unforced error immediately – £3.99 is a fair old chunk for an app and I don’t really get what it does that is worth that amount of money compared to the cheaper AoS version. The trade-off here is that instead of the fairly cheap Azyr, the 40k version costs £3.99 a month. The app features in a handy graphic, per Warhammer Community There’s also a paid subscriber version, which lets you use an army builder (not included at launch), and ‘reference all your rules fast’ – which seems to refer to being able to use the app’s search feature to find datasheets and stratagems. The 40k version, as described, is different – the free version gives access to the core rules, and also you when you buy a new paper codex you can scan it into the app and you’ll have the rules there too. In AoS you have the option of either a free version or a very cheap subscription, but you have to buy the books within the app – if you own the paper copy, tough luck, buy it again. The 40k app is a little different in structure to Azyr (the Age of Sigmar app). ![]()
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