Nothing could be further from the truth! After seeing the rough treatment they got in the last article, this veteran Kor’O decided to send over an overview of my favorite BFG fleet that did them justice! Why You Should Play Tau People often like to talk down about the Tau Exploration fleet in BFG, calling it lame or some variation thereof. I, of course, believe it’s entirely fair but a challenger has arisen to provide a counterpoint! Max Kircher has pulled out his writing quill, splashed some ink onto the page, and given a much more level-headed review of the Tau Merchant fleets below – enjoy! The Tau Exploration Fleets – Take 2 I encourage you to seek out the “Battlefleet Gothic” Facebook group for a vibrant and active group! If you missed them, click here to read parts one, two, and three.īefore we go on, my extremely derogatory review of the Tau Merchant Fleets got quite the response. However, I also note that the player community itself has stepped in as it had with Blood Bowl and worked to balance much of the later rules. I do want to note that as BFG moved into the later stages of its official life, the rules for some of the expanded fleets not listed here did get increasingly unbalanced – for this reason I will not cover them here. If you ever need to edit it, you can right click the application, click show package contents, navigate to Contents, Resources, Scripts, and double click main.scpt, and it will open it in the scripts editor for editing.To close out our series on the fantastic world of Battlefleet Gothic, we’re going to take a look at just a few of the more prominent expanded play fleets and rules and dig into a bit of the narrative universe around both Battlefleet Gothic and Warhammer 40,000 that the games can open up. In the left, click desktop, so it saves it there.Īt the bottom, change the file format to Application so that it runs when clicked instead of opening. Set doRestart to button returned of askRestartĭo shell script "bless -mount /Volumes/BOOTCAMP/ -legacy -setBoot -nextonly shutdown -r now" password adminpass with administrator privilegesĪfter this, go to file, export- name the file whatever you want- ex. Set askRestart to display dialog "Restart in Windows?" buttons default button 1 with icon iconPath ![]() Set iconPath to (get name of startup disk) & ":Applications:Utilities:Boot Camp Assistant.app:Contents:Resources:DA.icns" as alias Leave everything like it is except for the line that says set adminpass to "****" - change the asterisks ( * ) to your password. all you have to do is double click it and it will automatically do everything for you. Make sure you change the password to yours though. Which is a script that will restart the computer into windows. I feel that the easiest way to do this is by opening up Script Editor. You can save that as part of a shell script or use Platypus to create an actual runnable application that will run the shell script for you.Īdditionally there are other options listed on MacOSXHints Tell application "System Events" to restart' & #Then a slightly cleaner restart than shutdown -r (which sends a kill message) #You could use -folder but this assumes the drive is always mounted and writeable Sudo bless -device /dev/disk#s# -legacy -setBoot ![]() ![]() So change the '#'s in the following command to the appropriate numbers: sudo umount /Volumes/NAME_OF_YOUR_WINDOWS_DRIVE Two - You'll need to find out the disk ID by running df -k - more than likely it is /dev/disk1s3 if you have partitioned your hard drive but you'll want to double check. One - when you restart you can hold the 'Option' key down and then choose Boot Camp - however this is a temporary selection so if you restart again it will start back up in OS X (or whatever the selected startup disk actually is).
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