this is my first post here so i figured i'd jump in with both feet.
i don't post often to forums so please advise if this is too long. ( i assume folks will just skip it if unintersted)
i have given the idea of competition in 40K much thought in my time with the game/hobby. these are a few things i have noticed.
* outside of the extremes of luck, a game is generally won by the player with the most wisdom. that is to say a player with an excellent memory and the best sense of timing. 40K has a lot of rules (which GW does not...um..... always.... present clearly
). a player's ability to remember all of the rules coupled with the skill to perceive the likely flow of the game, and lay out a consistently relevant future tactic go a long way to victory.
* there is a noticeable distance between players who have a well developed game play and those players who do not. when players from one group play against the other, the result is very rarely in question. however, when members of the same group play against each other, the result is much more often determined in the final turns.
* tournament 40K is not usually broken down between one's level of game play with the exception of qualifiers for invitational events and events clearly marked as designed for beginners. the common tournament that one sees invites players of all capacities to participate, which will, in most cases, contain an almost even mix of seasoned and non-seasoned players. inevitably, there will be pairings between these two groups.
* one gets out of the experience what one puts into it. enjoying a competitive game is easy when matched against someone of comparable skill. it can be less so when one faces an opponent that is clearly not in the same league. (unless one is sadistically or masochistically inclined
) competitive players of any capacity are the ones who consistently learn and improve their game play. each player ultimately makes the individual choice how far along the spectrum they will go between casual play and competitive play. as with any competitive endeavor, the more one applies oneself, the sharper the capacity one will have.