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Biplane posted:The earlier Ghost books are pretty bad with it, like I mentally edit in a few zeroes at the end of nearly every number on rereads. If wonder if you counted every nameless tanith soldier that dies or is mentioned to have died in those books, if you'd reach a point when more people have died than are supposedly in the regiment.
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# ? Jun 12, 2020 17:20 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:21 |
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Brendan Rodgers posted:Even the better writers do this, I was rereading a Ravenor book the other day and I got to a point where something very bad happens to a whole hive city, the next line is "Thousands died." One of the things I appreciated a lot about Helsreach was that even a "minor" city hab is still countless lives before you even factor in the defensive forces and guys who are flown in to assist.
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# ? Jun 12, 2020 17:27 |
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"Hello space marines? We had an ork rok with quite a few orks slam full tilt into our hive. We have multiple causalities, please send help" There was one book that did numbers kinda well when it mentioned that an ork held space hulk slamming into the ground would likely release a billion or so still functional orks and that this would indeed be an issue. Telsa Cola fucked around with this message at 19:31 on Jun 12, 2020 |
# ? Jun 12, 2020 19:16 |
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Not to fully commit to my iron hands posting gimmick but The Voice of Mars has an ork invasion via Rok on a knight world that brings up how even if millions of orks die in the crash there's still billions more inside
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# ? Jun 12, 2020 19:26 |
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The trick with 40k casualty reports is to mentally add in "who matter" to any mention of numbers.
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# ? Jun 12, 2020 19:42 |
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hey uh off topic but are battletech books interesting and fun or nah? I seem to remember whole shelves of them at a half price books once and it made me think of the let’s rewrite battletech lp and how much I used to like reading that Edit: about numbers chat- I’m half way through The Emperor’s Legion and the mob at the palace gates number in the thousands and there are 6,000 custodes and ... hmph wolfs fucked around with this message at 05:12 on Jun 13, 2020 |
# ? Jun 13, 2020 05:10 |
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wolfs posted:hey uh As I recall there were some authors that got started on BT books end went on to do better stuff, but generally they were poorly edited and hacky.
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 06:59 |
wolfs posted:hey uh As with the 40k books (or any multi-authored shared setting) some are terrible, most are kinda average, a couple are really good. Wolves on the Border is probably the best of the lot.
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 08:10 |
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Brendan Rodgers posted:Even the better writers do this, I was rereading a Ravenor book the other day and I got to a point where something very bad happens to a whole hive city, the next line is "Thousands died." One imagines that there are hives and then there are hives, in the same way that the smallest city in the world has a population of 23 people. A failed and decaying hive dedicated to producing something for which the Imperium no longer has much demand and where all but a few zones have become uninhabitable may undergo a catastrophic depopulation and get down to the thousands. Roller Coast Guard fucked around with this message at 17:24 on Jun 13, 2020 |
# ? Jun 13, 2020 16:56 |
BL keeps coming up with better ways to make me spend money. The two special editions have different bonus short stories. https://www.warhammer-community.com/2020/06/13/warhammer-40000-preview-beyond-the-boxgw-homepage-post-2/ Those covers are sweet too.
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 21:32 |
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SerCypher posted:If wonder if you counted every nameless tanith soldier that dies or is mentioned to have died in those books, if you'd reach a point when more people have died than are supposedly in the regiment. At least the Ghosts are explicitly reinforced at several points during the seriew
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 21:39 |
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Gravitas Shortfall posted:At least the Ghosts are explicitly reinforced at several points during the seriew You want tight continuity look elsewhere than GG, a series in which a minor continuity error midway through became a major plot point in the later novels. Also early on in the series he kills a named soldier off and then accidentally brought them back in a later book, and when he realised he worked the miraculous survival into their character.
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 22:44 |
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Bonin is a good character though so it was worth falling to his supposed death off of a battle pyramid.
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 22:52 |
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Abnett is more interested in telling war stories IN SPACE than meticulous continuity and tbh I'm happy with that approach. It's pulp war sci-fi.
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# ? Jun 13, 2020 23:56 |
I got the Hams 4 Kidz books on a lark. I’m halfway through the first one, currently reading the Jokaero POV chapter. It’s fun, and I’m excited for the Ork book with green pages!
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 03:42 |
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I got about halfway through the first one and put it down somewhere and just sort of... forgot about it. I dunno why, since I was enjoying it even if it was written for 10 year olds.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 04:41 |
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https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1272053924762136583?s=20 So an increased orbit of around 2 and a half miles further out in the year 40,000.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 07:53 |
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I'm at book 5 of reading the whole Horus Heresy series, and I am really enjoying it. Particularly this theme of like, 'Good Religion vs Bad Religion' and 'Good Art vs Destructive Passion'. Often military sci-fi books are written by grognard conservative grumps, and they tend to view art and religion with a bit of a sneer. So it's fun seeing a military sci-fi book try to tackle like, what is great about art, and it's value. At one point Fulgrim gives a definition for what abstract art is, "They are recreations of reality formed according to the artist's metaphysical value judgements." It's such a good description that I wonder if the author stole it from something. I also like how the little remembrancer conclaves on the various ships turn into little hippie towns that everyone wants to hang out in. Especially the one on Horus's ship. Like of course plopping 200 artists together on a ship without much supervision is going to lead to some shenanigans.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 07:54 |
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MariusLecter posted:https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1272053924762136583?s=20 drat Grey Knights messing around with greenskin tellyporta techiology.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 08:08 |
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Arcsquad12 posted:drat Grey Knights messing around with greenskin tellyporta techiology. I think Titan has explicitly been removed not just from its orbit, but the entire physical universe in 40k. I think it's literally parked in the warp, presumably as a 'gently caress you' to Chaos.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 12:31 |
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Yvonmukluk posted:I think Titan has explicitly been removed not just from its orbit, but the entire physical universe in 40k. I think it's literally parked in the warp, presumably as a 'gently caress you' to Chaos. Nah that happened during the Horus Heresy, it's back out now, it was done to protect the moon and slow down time locally while the Grey Knights were built into the full chapter.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 12:45 |
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I mean it's not beyond the Imperium's power. Didn't they somehow move the entire solar system closer to galactic central to better serve as the capital? Not to mention how they quietly relocated Ullanor and renamed it Armageddon.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 17:35 |
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Arcsquad12 posted:I mean it's not beyond the Imperium's power. Didn't they somehow move the entire solar system closer to galactic central to better serve as the capital? Not to mention how they quietly relocated Ullanor and renamed it Armageddon.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 17:50 |
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SardonicTyrant posted:The Sol system not being where it's supposed to be in real life has been a thing for a long time. As far as I know, the Imperium didn't move it. But Ullanor was moved because it was an Ork attack moon with its own teleportation system. Wasn't there a theory that the system encountered in the first Horus Heresy book was the actual Sol system?
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 18:03 |
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Arcsquad12 posted:I mean it's not beyond the Imperium's power. Didn't they somehow move the entire solar system closer to galactic central to better serve as the capital? Not to mention how they quietly relocated Ullanor and renamed it Armageddon. It is beyond them when the guy who did it didn't just die, but had his soul utterly consumed by the Golden Throne (Malcador). I mean the entire point of the Imperium is they've declined and can't do the things they used to do. The Mechanicum didn't want to destroy Ullanor like the Imperium wanted, so they used the Ork Tellyporta stuff to move it and apparently learn the Ork tech secrets, and covered it all up. They didn't actually figure any of the tech out, they just made more problems for the Imperium, because the Orks are still drawn to their homeworld. Brendan Rodgers fucked around with this message at 18:12 on Jun 14, 2020 |
# ? Jun 14, 2020 18:08 |
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https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1789991935/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 its up for preorder and expanded.
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# ? Jun 14, 2020 23:14 |
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Dapper_Swindler posted:https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1789991935/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Is that just a reprint of the uplifting primer?
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 00:36 |
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And the munitorum manual, with some other stuff in there too it seems.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 00:42 |
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Arquinsiel posted:And the munitorum manual, with some other stuff in there too it seems. I went and looked in my garage, since I remembered I had a copy of the primer. I guess I actually had the infantryman's handbook instead. I wonder if someone would actually buy it for Amazon's used price of 471 for a hardcover. I'll take 450.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 00:58 |
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Plucky Brit posted:Wasn't there a theory that the system encountered in the first Horus Heresy book was the actual Sol system? It probably was.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 01:26 |
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Plucky Brit posted:Wasn't there a theory that the system encountered in the first Horus Heresy book was the actual Sol system? Its a fan theory but GW is internally consistent that Terra is our Earth with ruins, names and civilizations, artifacts and even people (perpetuals) existing in universe
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 01:30 |
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SerCypher posted:I went and looked in my garage, since I remembered I had a copy of the primer. I guess I actually had the infantryman's handbook instead.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 02:20 |
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That could also be a trick stores do to avoid paying restocking fees. You mark an out of stock item up to something absurd, and then you don't have to pay Amazon to list it again if it ever comes back into stock. (You just set the price back where it belongs. )
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 02:37 |
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Arquinsiel posted:That is likely a relic of some bot-driven price setting. I doubt it will ever sell. Dang, there goes my riches
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 07:00 |
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I think one of the Ravenor books has one of the characters run into a Soviet action figure of Yuri Gagarin in an antique shop.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 11:52 |
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Of course the disapointingly mundane answer to "Terra being in the wrong place" is "Early GW hosed up".
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 12:04 |
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Demiurge4 posted:I think one of the Ravenor books has one of the characters run into a Soviet action figure of Yuri Gagarin in an antique shop. It was a model of a space probe in Pariah. Now Abnett could have used the same trick twice.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 12:11 |
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There's a strong case to be made that our Earth, Dark Future, Chainsaw Warrior, Warhammer 40k, Warhammer Fantasy, and then AoS all take place in the same universe. Dark Future and Chainsaw Warrior featured Chaos on Earth, and 40k has definite roots here. WHFB actually takes place after 40k, given than 1) the Storm of Chaos relics were 40k wargear and 2) Slaanesh already exists. And there's a direct path from WHFB to AoS. I've seen it floated around that WHFB takes place on a tiny world somewhere in 40k, but it makes much more sense if it's the last world of 40k. I could probably do a clickbait article or bad YouTube about it, but honestly that's my whole theory.
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 12:12 |
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Demiurge4 posted:I think one of the Ravenor books has one of the characters run into a Soviet action figure of Yuri Gagarin in an antique shop. Close - they were three Soviet toy rockets. But their survival only requires that our Earth existed at some point in the 40k timeline; it doesn't need it to have become Holy Terra. Mind you, I think it would be insanely dumb if HT wasn't Earth, given that the lore is full of references to only slightly altered Earth names, cultures and religions, and that the solar system matches the Sol system to a T. I haven't read the Horus Heresy snippet being alluded to, but the only way I can see it making any sense would be if DAOT humanity had used their godlike tech to build a clone of the Sol system, perhaps after some catastrophe befell the original. And it would still be a huge stretch to describe that as "making any sense".
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 12:27 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:21 |
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Deptfordx posted:Of course the disapointingly mundane answer to "Terra being in the wrong place" is "Early GW hosed up". Why go with the boring but probably correct answer when you can make up super convoluted explanations like all nerds like to do?
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# ? Jun 15, 2020 12:48 |