About This Series
With the release of the latest Battlescroll, Games Workshop have once again adjusted points across multiple factions in an effort to keep Age of Sigmar balanced and competitive. As always, these changes have sparked plenty of discussion, with more than a little debate.
This article is part of a wider Woehammer series examining those points changes through a data-led view. Each faction is analysed using real tournament results to assess whether Games Workshop’s adjustments align with how armies and warscrolls are actually performing on the table.
Our full thoughts on methodology and where it differs to Games Workshop are explained after our faction analysis.
Idoneth Deepkin Analysis

Win Rate: 47% (Rank: 18th)
Average Elo: 432.9 (Rank: 15th)
Popularity: 635 Games (Rank: 11th)
Idoneth Deepkin sit on the lower side of the healthy band at 47%, with solid popularity and an average player skill base. Idoneth struggle to convert games despite consistent representation.
But, as always, their win rate only tells part of the story.
Looking at warscroll usage, Idoneth have lists made up of Akhelian Morrsarr Guard, Eidolon of Mathlann (Aspect of the Sea), Akhelian Allopex, and Akhelian Leviadon. That combination appears repeatedly and forms the backbone of most Idoneth lists.
A significant portion of the Idoneth range sees either very low pick rates, or
sub-45% win rates when included.
Namarti builds seem to struggle, despite being one of the main themes of the army. Even with points drops applied to support heroes and Namarti options, they’ll remain unattractive compared to the Akhelian core.
This creates a pattern of competitive players using the same lists. Experimental builds underperform, and internal balance becomes non-existent
The points reductions in this battlescroll appear sensible, targeting lesser used warscrolls without touching the faction’s strongest units. However, much like Soulblight, these changes lower the cost of entry into current meta lists rather than creating new ones.
How Games Workshop Use Their Data
Games Workshop have previously stated that their balance decisions are informed by results from the last 60 days of events, primarily drawn from Best Coast Pairings. This dataset includes both one and two day events.
This approach gives GW a very broad view of the game, capturing everything from highly competitive play to more casual, experimental lists. From an accessibility and participation standpoint this does makes sense. It reflects how the majority of players experience the game.
How Woehammer Uses Its Data
For this series, Woehammer takes a narrower approach.
Our analysis is based exclusively on two-day events (typically five-round tournaments), drawn from multiple platforms, including:
- Best Coast Pairings
- Milarki
- Ecksen
- Mini Head Quarters
- Longshanks
- Tabletop Herald
- Championshub.app
These events are competitions where lists are refined, and player skill is more consistent across the field.
Why Focus on GT Data?
One day events and casual tournaments introduce significant variance when used for balance decisions:
- Fewer rounds mean higher randomness
- Greater spread in player skill
- More thematic or experimental lists
- Less pressure to optimise for the meta
Two-day events, by contrast, are where balance issues reliably surface. Strong warscrolls and strong combinations tend to rise quickly, while weaker options are filtered. If a unit or build is genuinely pushing an army beyond a healthy win rate, it will almost always show up here first.
For that reason, Woehammer prioritises signal over volume. The dataset is smaller, but the conclusions are clearer.
How to Read These Articles
Each faction articles follows the same structure:
- Overall faction performance (win rate, average Elo, Popularity)
- Warscroll performance when included vs excluded
- A review of the points changes and whether they’re supported by our data
- Pointing out any changes that appear questionable or which we think may be missing.
Throughout the series, we use a 45–55% win-rate band as a reference point for healthy balance. Units or factions consistently operating outside this range are flagged as potential problems in either direction.
Final Note
This analysis isn’t intended to dismiss the value of casual play. Instead, it offers a view on how the game may behave being pushed in its competitive format.
Games Workshop looks wide, aiming to satisfy all players in the hobby, whether thats with pick-up games, or at competitive events.
Woehammer looks deeper at the competitive side, believing that balance for casual play can fall from balancing the game for competitive play.







