Yes, it's called a split charge. If your unit consists of one model, place it so that the shortest way towards the primary target puts you in base-contact with the secondary.
Then fight the combat as usually.
AnswerYes, it contains the 28mm standard models, but they are not as customizable
Necrons
The A in a units profile stands for attacks.
You can't.
In warhammer terms TAU is a young yet sophisticated army which includes kroots and fire units. Personally I believe Tau are the best with Eldar in warhammer 40k.
There is no set amount of 'men' required to play Warhammer, as it is a points and unit based system. Each character or unit of 'men' (Elves, dragons, Chaos Space Marines, Monsters... the list goes on) is worth a set amount of points. When you play a game or Warhammer 40,000 or Warhammer Fantasy, you and your opponent will agree on a certain points limit for the battle.You select units for your army, ensuring that the sum total of their points does not exceed the total agreed upon by the waring parties. The force you select also has to include certain elements, and these differ between then Warhammer systems.To play a Warhammer 40,000 game, you have to have a HQ (Commander type character) and two units of troops.For Warhammer Fantasy you must take a Lord, and two units of core.
No, in Warhammer 40k, each army must consist of units from the same faction. Mixing armies from different factions is not allowed in the standard rules of the game.
Leadership. It determines the model or units ability to stay and fight. AKA moral.
This is more of an opinion rather than a fact, it's really hard to take all the armies together and pick the ten best units.
AnswerIt stands for movement if it is under the units profile. It is the number of inches a model can move in the movement phase.
To prompt conversions made by the player/hobbyist.
Yep, they cost alot more "points" compared to other units though