Putting the 'role' back in role-playing games since 2002.
Donate to Codex
Good Old Games
  • Welcome to rpgcodex.net, a site dedicated to discussing computer based role-playing games in a free and open fashion. We're less strict than other forums, but please refer to the rules.

    "This message is awaiting moderator approval": All new users must pass through our moderation queue before they will be able to post normally. Until your account has "passed" your posts will only be visible to yourself (and moderators) until they are approved. Give us a week to get around to approving / deleting / ignoring your mundane opinion on crap before hassling us about it. Once you have passed the moderation period (think of it as a test), you will be able to post normally, just like all the other retards.

Incline Warhammer 40,000 Lore Thread

Major_Blackhart

Codexia Lord Sodom
Patron
Joined
Dec 5, 2002
Messages
18,330
Location
Jersey for now
I hope Angron has Yarrick's skull. I dunno.

They need to solidify Angron in-game as a certified monster and badass who's completely addicted to his pain, anger, and inflicting violence. All the books on him being a primarch simplified things too much into him being a victim.

I mean he was. But 10k years as a daemon prince God pretty much can change anyone's mind on it.
 
Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Oct 2, 2018
Messages
17,900
Location
大同
I mean he was. But 10k years as a daemon prince God pretty much can change anyone's mind on it.
Meh, not so much of a badass. More of a dumb overpowered beast which is at best to be pitied.

Slaves to Darkness by John French said:
Angron struck the summit of the hill as the Iron Warriors scattered. Steam poured into the air as the mud flashed to dust and then to glass. The daemon primarch rose, his movement a blur, the roar from his mouth shuddering through Argonis’ flesh.

He had asked Perturabo about this moment, about how he would deal with the creature that his brother had become.

‘As all conquest begins – with his weakness,’ Perturabo had replied, and had given no further answer. On the summit of the hill, with the fire-wind of Angron’s presence beating against his body and mind, Argonis could see no weakness in what the primarch had become. Perturabo stood inside the ring of his Iron Circle. The hammer Forgebreaker hung in his left hand, its head alight with cold lightning. The automata had turned so that their shields faced in, forming a circle around the two primarchs.

Beyond them, down the flanks of the hill, the walls of the Iron Warriors formation had driven through the World Eaters.

Volleys of bolt-rounds had ripped holes in the tide of howling legionaries. Tanks had ploughed through them, crushing bodies.

Shieldbearers had followed in their wake, forming new lines of blood-streaked plasteel. It was no longer a defence. It was strangulation. Channelled even as they killed, the World Eaters were now cut into pockets, contained. It would not hold, though.

‘This is madness,’ shouted Argonis.

‘It was always madness, Voice of Horus,’ said Forrix, the words edged with a cold chuckle. ‘Now it is just visible madness.’

On the hilltop, Angron reared to charge at Perturabo.

‘Fire,’ said Perturabo.

The Iron Circle obeyed. Fist-sized rounds tore into the daemon primarch. Explosions shattered against brass armour. Chunks of flesh and blood tore free, foaming into black ectoplasm as they fell. More units began to fire. Angron roared, his wings snapping wide as missiles and las-blasts tore them to tatters. The volume of fire was blinding, a lattice of angry light against the storm clouds. Angron came forwards, muscles pushing his form against the fire. Ichor drooled from gaping wounds, smoke and ashes shook from him. His flesh was remaking itself even as it was torn from him, swelling him so that he loomed above the crest of the hill, shivering with rage, radiating pain.

For an instant Argonis thought that the creature would fall. Then he seemed to shrink. Wounds closed. Armour glowed white and flowed into bullet holes. A high ringing noise filled Argonis’ head, blotting out the sound of gunfire and the roll of thunder.

He could feel nothing else, just the pain boring into the meat of his soul and burning down his nerves, and he knew that it would go on forever unless he stood, unless he poured it into the world as rage and let it coat his hands red.

The deluge of fire intensified, but Angron had taken a step forwards, and the blasts and shots were vanishing into the shadow of his shape. The daemon that had been a primarch charged.

Space folded as he moved. Features dissolved in a blur. His wings were slices of fast-moving shadow, his strides a flicker. The storm dragged after him. Lightning arced down, spearing through warriors and war machines. A tank exploded, its ammunition and fuel cooking off and punching its turret up into the air. A cluster of World Eaters became ash as power arced through them.

Blood cooked and rose in charring globules. Argonis watched, unable to move, unable to turn his mind to action. This was not simply a creature of destruction; it was a force of annihilation that was not meant to share the same realm as mortals.

He saw an axe form in Angron’s hand. Its edge was a slit of sharpened light. Reality tore as it cut. Smoke bled from the wound left behind its edge.

Perturabo was a statue of metal standing in the shadow of death. The axe cut. Perturabo moved aside. Even layered in armour and pistons, he was still faster than Argonis could dream, fast enough to almost avoid the blow. But nothing that was even half mortal could have avoided that cut. The axe struck his shoulder. White light blazed. For a second he could only see white, and then the neon scar burned onto the back of his eyes. He heard more blows fall, each one screaming louder than gunfire.

In the pit of his soul, he thought of all of the duties he had done Horus in the hope of clawing back the feeling of brotherhood that had been everything but was now just a memory. This would not just be failure. This would be death. He would end here, another heap of butchered meat on a world that was a graveyard of bones in a galaxy they had set ablaze. It all ended here: redemption, brotherhood and the lie of a higher purpose.

His sight cleared.

Perturabo still stood. Impossibly, the Lord of Iron stood.

Glowing scars marked the plates of his armour. Blood hissed as it ran over orange iron.

But he stood, and Forgebreaker was rising in his grasp, its head a comet as it swung.

Angron did not move to avoid the blow. He was swinging again, roaring, blood-slicked cables lashing around his head. Like all the other blows he had struck in the last second, it was faster than the eye that saw it. But Perturabo had timed his blow and slid it into the split-second gap as Angron swung back to strike again. The hammer struck. Forged by Fulgrim for the brother he had murdered, then given by Horus to Perturabo, it was a weapon that transcended even the craft put into its making.

The hammer head hit Angron’s chest. Brass armour shattered. The shock wave ripped outwards. Argonis felt it pass through him. Angron staggered.

Perturabo stepped forwards, the hammer swinging back in a blurred sheet of lighting.

Angron rammed forwards before Perturabo could strike, and now it was Perturabo going back, armour blackening as furnace flame breathed from Angron’s teeth. The axe struck again and again, blows that could end Titans falling. Fresh wounds opened in Perturabo’s armour. But still he stood.

‘You think I am weak,’ Perturabo’s voice boomed from the grille of his helm. Angron struck him twice again. Splinters of metal fell from the Lord of Iron as he staggered once more. ‘But you have grown weaker, Angron.’ The daemon primarch lashed a kick into Perturabo and struck once, twice, three times as the Lord of Iron stumbled back and crashed to his knees. ‘I have learnt. I have remade my strength. While you have sold yours out of despair.’

Argonis heard the words, heard the spite in them, the cold bitterness. There was something else there, too, something that made Argonis think of the knife duels in the dark warrens of Cthonia – cuts meant to goad, not kill.

Angron roared, and in the fraction of time that gave, Perturabo was on his feet, Forgebreaker moving faster than before. The air shook as its head struck and struck again, and there was blood on the baked mud of the ground beneath the two. Angron was scattering burning blood and broken armour. He lashed a fist at Perturabo. Claws tore the front from the Lord of Iron’s helm.

Perturabo’s skin was pale grey streaked with blood beneath. ‘You are weak,’ snarled Perturabo. ‘You are a slave. You were born a slave and a slave you remain.’

Angron cut Perturabo.

Argonis did not see it done, just the Lord of Iron suddenly still, a crimson trail running down his chest and glowing gashes smiling across his torso. Angron was striking again, but somehow he seemed to be shrinking, the edges of his shadow-and-flame bulk retreating like a wave from the shore. Perturabo struck back, and hammer and axe met.

‘Your strength flees,’ roared Perturabo. ‘It does not belong to you. It is your master’s, and the chain that keeps you throttles you. The threads of blood are thinning. The meal of slaughter will only keep you here long enough to see your bastard sons die.’

Beside Argonis, Forrix heard the words and keyed a control on his vox. Rounds began to hammer into the divided World Eaters. It had only been seconds since the Iron Warriors formation had entered its last configuration, and now Argonis saw that its weakness to further attack up the hill was a simple trade-off: vulnerability sold to allow for slaughter. In a few more minutes the World Eaters would have broken out of their corral, Argonis had no doubt, but they would not have that chance. Mortars thumped explosives into the kettled XII Legion. Cannons roared in overlapping sweeps. World Eaters fell, torn apart, their fury no more than bloody mist coughed from shredding lungs.

Angron turned towards the circle of automata surrounding them. His axe lashed out, burning gouges across the front of the circle of shields, again and again scoring deep.

‘Their skin is my skin,’ called Perturabo. ‘A gift of suffering at the hands of our brother.’ He was walking towards Angron, limping but hammer in hand. ‘You think that I would let your kind wield your weapons against me? I have taken their measure.’

Angron whirled, wings extending to carry him back at his brother. Perturabo raised his hands, weapon pods unfolding from his armoured shell. Angron’s tattered shadow wings beat.

Perturabo fired.

Streams of energy and exotic rounds blazed across the space between the two. Fire and explosions wreathed Angron. Ectoplasmic smoke billowed off him. His wings were broken frames of bone draped with scraps of skin. Perturabo came forwards as he kept up the fusillade, each step a slow thud of braced pistons.

‘They will die, here on this hill. They will die without striking a blow. All your best mongrel sons of slaughter. They will die, and your battered soul will watch as it sinks back into the dark.’

Angron was an outline now, a thing of threads remaking itself even as it was unravelled into smoke.
 

NecroLord

Dumbfuck!
Dumbfuck
Joined
Sep 6, 2022
Messages
8,913
Location
Southeastern Yurop
I hope Angron has Yarrick's skull. I dunno.

They need to solidify Angron in-game as a certified monster and badass who's completely addicted to his pain, anger, and inflicting violence. All the books on him being a primarch simplified things too much into him being a victim.

I mean he was. But 10k years as a daemon prince God pretty much can change anyone's mind on it.
Not necessarily a victim,but once he got the Butcher's Nails implanted in his head,it was the end of all Angron could have been as a Primarch. He was incredibly compassionate towards and a true bro to his gladiator fellows,he could even soothe their pain and channel it through himself,so he could've also been a psyker? Who knows...
 

Major_Blackhart

Codexia Lord Sodom
Patron
Joined
Dec 5, 2002
Messages
18,330
Location
Jersey for now
He was a specific type that was an empath. Probably he would have acted as shrink to the other Primarchs to allow for greater understanding among one another, to avoid all the... communication problems that developed.

Basically he could have sat down with Perturabo or Kurze and ease their pain, understand it, absorb it, and reinforce their good enotions.
 

Storyfag

Perfidious Pole
Patron
Joined
Feb 17, 2011
Messages
16,036
Location
Stealth Orbital Nuke Control Centre
I mean he was. But 10k years as a daemon prince God pretty much can change anyone's mind on it.
Meh, not so much of a badass. More of a dumb overpowered beast which is at best to be pitied.

Slaves to Darkness by John French said:
Angron struck the summit of the hill as the Iron Warriors scattered. Steam poured into the air as the mud flashed to dust and then to glass. The daemon primarch rose, his movement a blur, the roar from his mouth shuddering through Argonis’ flesh.

He had asked Perturabo about this moment, about how he would deal with the creature that his brother had become.

‘As all conquest begins – with his weakness,’ Perturabo had replied, and had given no further answer. On the summit of the hill, with the fire-wind of Angron’s presence beating against his body and mind, Argonis could see no weakness in what the primarch had become. Perturabo stood inside the ring of his Iron Circle. The hammer Forgebreaker hung in his left hand, its head alight with cold lightning. The automata had turned so that their shields faced in, forming a circle around the two primarchs.

Beyond them, down the flanks of the hill, the walls of the Iron Warriors formation had driven through the World Eaters.

Volleys of bolt-rounds had ripped holes in the tide of howling legionaries. Tanks had ploughed through them, crushing bodies.

Shieldbearers had followed in their wake, forming new lines of blood-streaked plasteel. It was no longer a defence. It was strangulation. Channelled even as they killed, the World Eaters were now cut into pockets, contained. It would not hold, though.

‘This is madness,’ shouted Argonis.

‘It was always madness, Voice of Horus,’ said Forrix, the words edged with a cold chuckle. ‘Now it is just visible madness.’

On the hilltop, Angron reared to charge at Perturabo.

‘Fire,’ said Perturabo.

The Iron Circle obeyed. Fist-sized rounds tore into the daemon primarch. Explosions shattered against brass armour. Chunks of flesh and blood tore free, foaming into black ectoplasm as they fell. More units began to fire. Angron roared, his wings snapping wide as missiles and las-blasts tore them to tatters. The volume of fire was blinding, a lattice of angry light against the storm clouds. Angron came forwards, muscles pushing his form against the fire. Ichor drooled from gaping wounds, smoke and ashes shook from him. His flesh was remaking itself even as it was torn from him, swelling him so that he loomed above the crest of the hill, shivering with rage, radiating pain.

For an instant Argonis thought that the creature would fall. Then he seemed to shrink. Wounds closed. Armour glowed white and flowed into bullet holes. A high ringing noise filled Argonis’ head, blotting out the sound of gunfire and the roll of thunder.

He could feel nothing else, just the pain boring into the meat of his soul and burning down his nerves, and he knew that it would go on forever unless he stood, unless he poured it into the world as rage and let it coat his hands red.

The deluge of fire intensified, but Angron had taken a step forwards, and the blasts and shots were vanishing into the shadow of his shape. The daemon that had been a primarch charged.

Space folded as he moved. Features dissolved in a blur. His wings were slices of fast-moving shadow, his strides a flicker. The storm dragged after him. Lightning arced down, spearing through warriors and war machines. A tank exploded, its ammunition and fuel cooking off and punching its turret up into the air. A cluster of World Eaters became ash as power arced through them.

Blood cooked and rose in charring globules. Argonis watched, unable to move, unable to turn his mind to action. This was not simply a creature of destruction; it was a force of annihilation that was not meant to share the same realm as mortals.

He saw an axe form in Angron’s hand. Its edge was a slit of sharpened light. Reality tore as it cut. Smoke bled from the wound left behind its edge.

Perturabo was a statue of metal standing in the shadow of death. The axe cut. Perturabo moved aside. Even layered in armour and pistons, he was still faster than Argonis could dream, fast enough to almost avoid the blow. But nothing that was even half mortal could have avoided that cut. The axe struck his shoulder. White light blazed. For a second he could only see white, and then the neon scar burned onto the back of his eyes. He heard more blows fall, each one screaming louder than gunfire.

In the pit of his soul, he thought of all of the duties he had done Horus in the hope of clawing back the feeling of brotherhood that had been everything but was now just a memory. This would not just be failure. This would be death. He would end here, another heap of butchered meat on a world that was a graveyard of bones in a galaxy they had set ablaze. It all ended here: redemption, brotherhood and the lie of a higher purpose.

His sight cleared.

Perturabo still stood. Impossibly, the Lord of Iron stood.

Glowing scars marked the plates of his armour. Blood hissed as it ran over orange iron.

But he stood, and Forgebreaker was rising in his grasp, its head a comet as it swung.

Angron did not move to avoid the blow. He was swinging again, roaring, blood-slicked cables lashing around his head. Like all the other blows he had struck in the last second, it was faster than the eye that saw it. But Perturabo had timed his blow and slid it into the split-second gap as Angron swung back to strike again. The hammer struck. Forged by Fulgrim for the brother he had murdered, then given by Horus to Perturabo, it was a weapon that transcended even the craft put into its making.

The hammer head hit Angron’s chest. Brass armour shattered. The shock wave ripped outwards. Argonis felt it pass through him. Angron staggered.

Perturabo stepped forwards, the hammer swinging back in a blurred sheet of lighting.

Angron rammed forwards before Perturabo could strike, and now it was Perturabo going back, armour blackening as furnace flame breathed from Angron’s teeth. The axe struck again and again, blows that could end Titans falling. Fresh wounds opened in Perturabo’s armour. But still he stood.

‘You think I am weak,’ Perturabo’s voice boomed from the grille of his helm. Angron struck him twice again. Splinters of metal fell from the Lord of Iron as he staggered once more. ‘But you have grown weaker, Angron.’ The daemon primarch lashed a kick into Perturabo and struck once, twice, three times as the Lord of Iron stumbled back and crashed to his knees. ‘I have learnt. I have remade my strength. While you have sold yours out of despair.’

Argonis heard the words, heard the spite in them, the cold bitterness. There was something else there, too, something that made Argonis think of the knife duels in the dark warrens of Cthonia – cuts meant to goad, not kill.

Angron roared, and in the fraction of time that gave, Perturabo was on his feet, Forgebreaker moving faster than before. The air shook as its head struck and struck again, and there was blood on the baked mud of the ground beneath the two. Angron was scattering burning blood and broken armour. He lashed a fist at Perturabo. Claws tore the front from the Lord of Iron’s helm.

Perturabo’s skin was pale grey streaked with blood beneath. ‘You are weak,’ snarled Perturabo. ‘You are a slave. You were born a slave and a slave you remain.’

Angron cut Perturabo.

Argonis did not see it done, just the Lord of Iron suddenly still, a crimson trail running down his chest and glowing gashes smiling across his torso. Angron was striking again, but somehow he seemed to be shrinking, the edges of his shadow-and-flame bulk retreating like a wave from the shore. Perturabo struck back, and hammer and axe met.

‘Your strength flees,’ roared Perturabo. ‘It does not belong to you. It is your master’s, and the chain that keeps you throttles you. The threads of blood are thinning. The meal of slaughter will only keep you here long enough to see your bastard sons die.’

Beside Argonis, Forrix heard the words and keyed a control on his vox. Rounds began to hammer into the divided World Eaters. It had only been seconds since the Iron Warriors formation had entered its last configuration, and now Argonis saw that its weakness to further attack up the hill was a simple trade-off: vulnerability sold to allow for slaughter. In a few more minutes the World Eaters would have broken out of their corral, Argonis had no doubt, but they would not have that chance. Mortars thumped explosives into the kettled XII Legion. Cannons roared in overlapping sweeps. World Eaters fell, torn apart, their fury no more than bloody mist coughed from shredding lungs.

Angron turned towards the circle of automata surrounding them. His axe lashed out, burning gouges across the front of the circle of shields, again and again scoring deep.

‘Their skin is my skin,’ called Perturabo. ‘A gift of suffering at the hands of our brother.’ He was walking towards Angron, limping but hammer in hand. ‘You think that I would let your kind wield your weapons against me? I have taken their measure.’

Angron whirled, wings extending to carry him back at his brother. Perturabo raised his hands, weapon pods unfolding from his armoured shell. Angron’s tattered shadow wings beat.

Perturabo fired.

Streams of energy and exotic rounds blazed across the space between the two. Fire and explosions wreathed Angron. Ectoplasmic smoke billowed off him. His wings were broken frames of bone draped with scraps of skin. Perturabo came forwards as he kept up the fusillade, each step a slow thud of braced pistons.

‘They will die, here on this hill. They will die without striking a blow. All your best mongrel sons of slaughter. They will die, and your battered soul will watch as it sinks back into the dark.’

Angron was an outline now, a thing of threads remaking itself even as it was unravelled into smoke.
Emps damn, somebody had a hard on for the Iron Warriors. Too bad it borders on marysueism.
 

lightbane

Arcane
Joined
Dec 27, 2008
Messages
10,208
I recently discovered that the Codex for the nu-Squats or Vottan as they call themselves now is out already. Has someone checked it? I suppose GW took the formerly luzly squats and added a coat of grimdark paint. I noticed they still have super-tech compared to the Imperium and stuff that would trigger the AM, such as companion bots capable of learning and growing. Also "minor" stuff such as super-Power Fists and Heavy Poxer Axes.

So: how do they play? What about their lore?
 

Tyranicon

A Memory of Eternity
Developer
Joined
Oct 7, 2019
Messages
6,087
I recently discovered that the Codex for the nu-Squats or Vottan as they call themselves now is out already. Has someone checked it? I suppose GW took the formerly luzly squats and added a coat of grimdark paint. I noticed they still have super-tech compared to the Imperium and stuff that would trigger the AM, such as companion bots capable of learning and growing. Also "minor" stuff such as super-Power Fists and Heavy Poxer Axes.

So: how do they play? What about their lore?
Ehhh, from what I've seen they're way less grimdark than the rest of the setting sans Tau. Actually, if anything they remind me of dwarf-themed tau in a lot of ways.

If you want to give the lore a read: https://warhammer40k.fandom.com/wiki/Leagues_of_Votann.

Or the shorter Lexicanum version: https://wh40k.lexicanum.com/wiki/Leagues_of_Votann.
 

Akratus II

Savant
Patron
Joined
Jan 21, 2021
Messages
792
Location
The Netherlands
So I've finished 'Pawns of Chaos' and am halfway through Titanicus. Both are great in different ways. I really like the way Pawns of Chaos uses human characters to contextualize and philosophize a bit on Chaos. I don't think the 'Imperium' side of the story was all that interesting, but it's a good story and very good for newcomers or for people just trying to get the cream of the crop of BL.

Titanicus is amazing by sheer bloody awesomeness. In regular fight scenes in other books my eyes usually glaze over a little bit, if the writer describes exactly what moves the characters are making. Those details don't really have any impact or interest for me most of the time and I have trouble visualizing it generally; we just need to know who'se got the upper hand. But the titan battles in this are just, awesome. All of it is awesome as fuck. I want to start collecting Adeptus Titanicus, so that I can tactilely experience Titans engaging full stride and unleashing their awe-inspiring firepower.
 
Last edited:

Galdred

Studio Draconis
Patron
Developer
Joined
May 6, 2011
Messages
4,357
Location
Middle Empire
Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag.
I took the plunge and paid for a Warhammer + subscription. You can easily watch all the animations there in one month:
Animation quality is GW studios weakest points, and go from powerpoint to mediocre.
Interrogator: Pretty cool noir animation. Feels like a typical Cyberpunk story in the 40K settings
Angels of Death: Typical Space Marine bolter porn. It is cool to watch, but dull.
The Exodite: very weak pacing. It is a 3*10 minute miniseries, and it manage to have a slow pacing. It has cool titan action, but I'd say it is the weakest of them.
Astartes: Bolter porn made by a fan with 3D animations that put all GW animations to shame. They recruited him since, but that was not enough (nothing he has done since has aired yet). The lack of characters makes it weaker than Angels of Death IMO.
Hammer and Bolter: This series is interesting, because it tells very different unrelated stories. Animations are the worst of all GW animations, but some episodes show interesting facets of the lore.
  • Death's hand: really poor animation, but it features the Inquisition
  • Bound for Greatness: This one is really slow. Too slow I would say, but it has an interesting take on how life is rotten for an imperial servant.
  • Old Bale Eye: I hoped it would be cool to see some ork's perspective, but it is basically Commissar Yarrick's fanboyism.
  • Fangs: Some Space Wolves novices we don't care about go through trials. It felt kind of pointless to watch
  • A question of Faith: Last stand of Sister of battles. Not too bad.
  • In the garden of Ghosts: I really liked this one, as it had a tragic feel to it. Eldars get ridiculed by Space Marines again, but I liked it.
  • Kill Protocol: One of the best IMO. It shows a tech priest and her Castellan robot buddy on a quest for arecheotech in a hostile planet.
  • Cadia Stands: pointless recruitment clip for the imperial guard
  • Artefacts: Cool evil vs evil battle (Chaos vs Necrons)
  • Plague song: A lot of grotesque Nurgle transformations. I fet the episode was too slow, but it has some cool moments and characters.
  • Double or Nothing: Age of Sigmar lighthearted episode. Skip
  • Monsters: Another AoS episode. But it features chaos marauders viewpoint, which I found cool.
  • A new life: One of my preferred, as it also focuses on the Imperium, and the ruthlessness of the curfed shortly before a planetary invasion.
So, I think it is worth getting one month sub. Some of the stories are pretty cool. But it is pointless to stay longer, as the rythm of new episode production is abysmal.
 

NecroLord

Dumbfuck!
Dumbfuck
Joined
Sep 6, 2022
Messages
8,913
Location
Southeastern Yurop
So I've finished 'Pawns of Chaos' and am halfway through Titanicus. Both are great in different ways. I really like the way Pawns of Chaos uses human characters to contextualize and philosophize a bit on Chaos. I don't think the 'Imperium' side of the story was all that interesting, but it's a good story and very good for newcomers or for people just trying to get the cream of the crop of BL.

Titanicus is amazing by sheer bloody awesomeness. In regular fight scenes my eyes usually glaze over a little bit, if the writer describes exactly what moves the characters are making. Those details don't really have any impact or interest for me most of the time and I have trouble visualizing it generally; we just need to know who'se got the upper hand. But the titan battles in this are just, awesome. All of it is awesome as fuck. I want to start collecting Adeptus Titanicus, so that I can tactilely experience Titans engaging full stride and unleashing their awe-inspiring firepower.
What will you read after Titanicus?
 

Galdred

Studio Draconis
Patron
Developer
Joined
May 6, 2011
Messages
4,357
Location
Middle Empire
Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag.
So I've finished 'Pawns of Chaos' and am halfway through Titanicus. Both are great in different ways. I really like the way Pawns of Chaos uses human characters to contextualize and philosophize a bit on Chaos. I don't think the 'Imperium' side of the story was all that interesting, but it's a good story and very good for newcomers or for people just trying to get the cream of the crop of BL.

Titanicus is amazing by sheer bloody awesomeness. In regular fight scenes my eyes usually glaze over a little bit, if the writer describes exactly what moves the characters are making. Those details don't really have any impact or interest for me most of the time and I have trouble visualizing it generally; we just need to know who'se got the upper hand. But the titan battles in this are just, awesome. All of it is awesome as fuck. I want to start collecting Adeptus Titanicus, so that I can tactilely experience Titans engaging full stride and unleashing their awe-inspiring firepower.
Titanicus was a great read indeed. As for Adeptatus Titanicus, I haven't played it, but fielding titans in Space Marines/Titan Legion was awesome. I still remember the huge battle I played with a battle group of warlord titans supported by an imperator in which one of my warlords lost all of his weapons and ended up charging the enemy (with his pitiful movement allowance).

Final Liberation might well be the next best thing when it comes to fielding titans, as they are pretty awesome (and badly underpriced) in the game.
 
Last edited:

Akratus II

Savant
Patron
Joined
Jan 21, 2021
Messages
792
Location
The Netherlands
What will you read after Titanicus?
I've got a few options floating around in my head, haven't decided yet. I'm very interested in the Word Bearers trilogy, Gaunt's Ghosts, Helsreach, Double Eagle, The Vaults of Terra and Watchers of the Throne series, and there's a new halloween horror short involving the Drukhari called Pain Engine, and you know I have to read each and every single Drukhari story. Oh and I once got a few pages into 'The Oubliette' which I've been meaning to finish. I would prefer to read most of the standalone books I want to read before getting into series.

So, I think it is worth getting one month sub. Some of the stories are pretty cool. But it is pointless to stay longer, as the rythm of new episode production is abysmal.
I've not paid for it, but I've watched everything they've put out. I'll take anything 40k. And I see a lot of future potential in it, so I hope Warhammer+ survives.
 
Last edited:

BrotherFrank

Nouveau Riche
Patron
Joined
Apr 19, 2012
Messages
1,587
Linking this art piece because I think it's cool and a nice example of cartoony art that capures the grimdarkness of the setting.

 

Akratus II

Savant
Patron
Joined
Jan 21, 2021
Messages
792
Location
The Netherlands
b1558723dc90ca34b78f5455dc36ae54.jpg
19f3bbca86d19aad75898b42b4292a1b.jpg
 

Tyranicon

A Memory of Eternity
Developer
Joined
Oct 7, 2019
Messages
6,087
So apparently Henry Cavil is attached to a 40k project produced by Amazon Prime Video of all places. While I am not especially optimistic about the entire venture, I saw this on r/grimdank.

q3q9eat6i86a1.png


Y'know, that could actually work. I have no faith in anybody involved for it to be good, but this could work.
 

Tyranicon

A Memory of Eternity
Developer
Joined
Oct 7, 2019
Messages
6,087
"Johnny Galecki as Ferik Jurgen".

What
Jurgen is supposed to be disgusting.

Vail on the other hand, I always pictured as drop-dead gorgeous. This fanart (?) captures her nicely. Dunno who would play her.

85d1238eab44a1a042da8803d2b542ae.jpg


Doesn't matter because it's not gonna happen, and now that 40k is going full mainstream, it's gonna bring a lot of disgusting normal people into the "hobby."
 

Caim

Arcane
Joined
Aug 1, 2013
Messages
15,715
Location
Dutchland
I hope that they don't do a Space Marine movie/series/whatever. They might be the most recognizable part of the franchise, but they're also its least interesting part.
 

Tyranicon

A Memory of Eternity
Developer
Joined
Oct 7, 2019
Messages
6,087
I hope that they don't do a Space Marine movie/series/whatever. They might be the most recognizable part of the franchise, but they're also its least interesting part.
Depends on the chapter. Or the skill of the author. Helsreach makes the Black Templars very interesting, for example.

It boggles the mind that they chose the Ultramarines to be their "flagship" chapter when the Black Templars basically embody grimdark. Also a successor chapter of the :obviously: Imperial Fists :obviously:
 

NecroLord

Dumbfuck!
Dumbfuck
Joined
Sep 6, 2022
Messages
8,913
Location
Southeastern Yurop
I hope that they don't do a Space Marine movie/series/whatever. They might be the most recognizable part of the franchise, but they're also its least interesting part.
Depends on the chapter. Or the skill of the author. Helsreach makes the Black Templars very interesting, for example.

It boggles the mind that they chose the Ultramarines to be their "flagship" chapter when the Black Templars basically embody grimdark. Also a successor chapter of the :obviously: Imperial Fists :obviously:
"PURGING WITH MY KIN!"
 

Caim

Arcane
Joined
Aug 1, 2013
Messages
15,715
Location
Dutchland
I hope that they don't do a Space Marine movie/series/whatever. They might be the most recognizable part of the franchise, but they're also its least interesting part.
Depends on the chapter. Or the skill of the author. Helsreach makes the Black Templars very interesting, for example.
It boggles the mind that they chose the Ultramarines to be their "flagship" chapter when the Black Templars basically embody grimdark. Also a successor chapter of the :obviously: Imperial Fists :obviously:
"PURGING WITH MY KIN!"
I'll concede that the Sons of Dorn are more interesting than the Ultramarines. Prussian defense experts and their cousins, the IMPERATOR VULT brigade, the Spanish hype squad ("I didn't lose my arm in battle, it's right over there."), dudes who out-Ultramarine the Ultramarines, crazy motherfuckers who wield axes in melee combat, the guys who sacrificed themselves to blow up a Necron Death Star, the astronomy dudes who have one of the few Space Marines smart enough to put a foregrip on his Bolter, the guys who are totally not loyalist Emperor's Children dude trust me, and... well, I guess the Soul Drinkers have their fans?
 

Storyfag

Perfidious Pole
Patron
Joined
Feb 17, 2011
Messages
16,036
Location
Stealth Orbital Nuke Control Centre
I hope that they don't do a Space Marine movie/series/whatever. They might be the most recognizable part of the franchise, but they're also its least interesting part.
Depends on the chapter. Or the skill of the author. Helsreach makes the Black Templars very interesting, for example.

It boggles the mind that they chose the Ultramarines to be their "flagship" chapter when the Black Templars basically embody grimdark. Also a successor chapter of the :obviously: Imperial Fists :obviously:
The Smurfs strive to make the Imperium as it should be. That is: with minimal grimdark. Doubly so since Papa Smurf is back.
 

As an Amazon Associate, rpgcodex.net earns from qualifying purchases.
Back
Top Bottom