This whole discussion surprises me, particularly since so many are using GW's examples in battle reports and the like because they are renowned for inaccuracies as are the books (in many sourcebooks, you'll find the costs of the pictured armies are wrong for example), but what surprises me more is that the designers have ruled against what the book says:
Ogrob wrote:
Found something:
Quote:
the first company purchased is automatically the command company and has X and a Banner Bearer included in the base cost
Now the base cost really has to be the first number, no? The only thing speaking against it is a battle report played, seemingly, before the army lists were finished.
If they are included in the BASE cost (X in this case), then why do you have to buy an additional company's worth of points as an ADDITIONAL cost (Y in the given examples)?
I will always check with my opponents, but they are generally friends, so we will either come up with a house rule based on how this rule has been written in all of the entries with no rules in the book stating contrary or play the "house rule" that the designers have randomly decided they intended it to be.
Regardless, GW generally likes to promote their named characters over "the unnamed heroes of Middle-Earth" and, let's face it, they'd make more money from selling named characters and are going to want them to look a better option and not all are Epic Heroes, so they will want to sell them as Legendary Formations, which mean you also have to buy the other models necessary. From a business standpoint (which is usually included in their rules as well as the models), it makes more sense.
Regardless, the official ruling from GW seems to be 100% contrary to the opposite of the book's specific wording stating that they are the command company and included in the cost. I think tis should be brought to the aforementioned designer's attention and sent in as an FAQ because, frankly, when they rule against what the book says, they're being stupid.