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Have the Space Wolves ever actually refused a mission though? I don't mean "we're going to pass this off onto our newest recruits" but straight up "No, gently caress your mission and gently caress you"?
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 20:27 |
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# ? May 12, 2024 09:48 |
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Presumably several instances where said mission was authorized by the Inquisition as a way for "ork snipers" to draw belligerent Astartes chapters into a trap.
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 20:28 |
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Well, they famously defied the Inquisition and the Grey Knights that one time when they tried to stop the extermination of some guardsmen who had heroically fought off a daemon invasion.
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 20:30 |
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Let me get this straight. The angels and holy warriors of your God Emperor/Omnissiah ask you for support and you're going to ask for payment?
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 21:04 |
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It's heavily implied in A Thousand Sons that Fenris is far more populated than a death world should be because Fenrisians were genetically modified in the Dark Age to be adapted to the environment. Other sources suggest that Space Wolve aspirants accept the implants better than expected ; the Emperor was surprised that so many of Russ's vassals survived the process even though they were older than recommended. SardonicTyrant fucked around with this message at 21:44 on Jul 30, 2019 |
# ? Jul 30, 2019 21:40 |
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Guyver posted:Let me get this straight. The angels and holy warriors of your God Emperor/Omnissiah ask you for support and you're going to ask for payment? Some dude named Horace did that once.
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 21:50 |
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Inspector_666 posted:Some dude named Horace did that once. How did that go? Hurr, easy.
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 23:23 |
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Inspector_666 posted:Some dude named Horace did that once.
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# ? Jul 30, 2019 23:45 |
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SardonicTyrant posted:The Horse Heresy Here lies ‘ol Lorgar, thought of Imperial Divinity and died.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 01:52 |
An analysis of the economy of the imperium would be interesting, but I don't think there has ever been any centralized discussion/decisions made regarding it. Different authors just did their own thing and it was rarely a focus anyway. If anything the salaries of your average citizen would probably be more comparable to a company scrip type situation.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 03:51 |
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Think of it like our world. Sure, there's countries where you have economics and money changing hands and there's countries where people still barter for goods. Your credit card won't mean a thing in a desert where bartering goods is key. The Imperium doesn't care if you have an established interplanetery market system or if you trade heretic scalps. All they care about is tithes, be it raw materials, services or meat for the grinder. As for traders, you can stay in a system and trade within the markets of that, or you can go further out and play those cultures. Somewhere a backwater planet doesn't care about the massive shiney diamonds lying around the place, but they sure love those disposable battery torches you picked up in bulk. While those fops in the core worlds love themselves some diamond poo poo. Honestly, it's like you people never played Elite or something...
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 13:07 |
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It would be kinda funny if one of the best run clerical planets turned out to be a gene stealer cult that didn't feel like rejoining the hive because they like the tedium of paperwork.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 15:04 |
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Azubah posted:It would be kinda funny if one of the best run clerical planets turned out to be a gene stealer cult that didn't feel like rejoining the hive because they like the tedium of paperwork.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 15:18 |
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Forge Worlds tend to run on a barter system. In exchange for the protection of the Imperial Navy, Imperial Guard and Space Marines as well as being able to strip mine the hell out of a couple of neighboring system you have to make a couple of megatons of war materiel per year. The bonus for the Space Wolves is that those agreements will be signed by the Omnisiah and it's the motherfucking Space Wolves protecting you.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 15:54 |
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Foxtrot_13 posted:Forge Worlds tend to run on a barter system. In exchange for the protection of the Imperial Navy, Imperial Guard and Space Marines as well as being able to strip mine the hell out of a couple of neighboring system you have to make a couple of megatons of war materiel per year. Plus any golden age tech they find gets brought back to them to tinker with (as long as the inquisition don't hear of it)
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 16:09 |
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Carrion Throne is good. Real good. If Wraight keeps it up he'll be my favorite BL author. I went in expecting a byzantine inquisitorial mystery and descriptions of the grinding oppessiveness of life on a hive world and the book delivered. What I didn't expect was the whole story being set during Sanguinala. One of the weirder things about the 40k books I've read is the disconnect between the supposed extreme devotion of the Imperium and how faith is portrayed in the various books. It never really seems like that much of a central part of the stories. Sure there's wild eyed Sororitas, and puritan inquisitors, but never the sense that faith was the primary driving force for trillions of people. This book had it in droves. I could practically feel the frenzied devotion. All the parts about the pilgrims and the procession to the palace and especially the lead up to the scene at the Eternity Gate were amazing. The ending with Salvador being interrogated was a huge downer.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 22:52 |
Galvanik posted:Carrion Throne is good. Real good. If Wraight keeps it up he'll be my favorite BL author. I went in expecting a byzantine inquisitorial mystery and descriptions of the grinding oppessiveness of life on a hive world and the book delivered. What I didn't expect was the whole story being set during Sanguinala. One of the weirder things about the 40k books I've read is the disconnect between the supposed extreme devotion of the Imperium and how faith is portrayed in the various books. It never really seems like that much of a central part of the stories. Sure there's wild eyed Sororitas, and puritan inquisitors, but never the sense that faith was the primary driving force for trillions of people. This book had it in droves. I could practically feel the frenzied devotion. Wraight has become my favorite author. You should read The Hollow Mountain post haste because it is even better than Carrion Throne. Lords of Silence is one of my favorite 40k books. Great author.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 22:57 |
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D-Pad posted:Wraight has become my favorite author. You should read The Hollow Mountain post haste because it is even better than Carrion Throne. Lords of Silence is one of my favorite 40k books. Great author. He really does a great job world building, especially with his books that are set on the throne world. I really like ADB for how he portrays chaos, but for my dollar it doesn’t really get much better than Wraight.
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# ? Jul 31, 2019 23:43 |
Oculus Imperia just dropped a great video titled "A Pilgrimage to Holy Terra: An Account of Life on the Throneworld" It's a pro click: https://youtu.be/OXADvMf_7Mc
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# ? Aug 1, 2019 16:45 |
Reminder that for whatever reason the Celestine book release date is tomorrow. Coming soon has had it listed at the end of August since it was announced, but apparently that changed. I am pumped to hopefully get some answers into what the living saints are and how they work.
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# ? Aug 2, 2019 17:51 |
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Imperial Daemon Princes
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# ? Aug 2, 2019 21:58 |
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sensei knights
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# ? Aug 3, 2019 07:00 |
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graels (or some offshoot thereof) from unfinished Bequin trilogy
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# ? Aug 3, 2019 15:38 |
Finished Celestine. Wasn't that great. The lore was cool but in his attempt to explain the weirdness of the warp purgatory experience she goes through after each death and her super zealotry when alive he used way too many adjectives/descriptive/flowery phrases and it made the writing bad. The story idea was cool just not executed well. Andy Clark can be hit or miss.
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# ? Aug 6, 2019 00:54 |
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Looks like there's a poll going for the next reprints.
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# ? Aug 7, 2019 22:17 |
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I just started reading the Hollow Mountain, and I forget. What was the thing the inquisition team encountered in the vaults in the first book? It wasn’t a daemon I don’t seem to remember. Some kind of Dark Eldar flesh monster maybe?
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# ? Aug 8, 2019 14:57 |
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Moose-Alini posted:I just started reading the Hollow Mountain, and I forget. What was the thing the inquisition team encountered in the vaults in the first book? It wasn’t a daemon I don’t seem to remember. Some kind of Dark Eldar flesh monster maybe? A Dark Eldar grotesque, if I recall correctly.
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# ? Aug 8, 2019 15:04 |
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It was a bunch of groteqsues made by a Haemonculus that had been brought in to repair the failing Golden Throne
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# ? Aug 8, 2019 17:29 |
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I voted in the last poll (for Gotrek) and bought it - won't bother this time. But the lack of one of the later Gotrek novels (Road of Skulls, The Serpent Queen, Kinslayer and Slayer) leads me to believe that we might get a fifth and sixth omnibus. Or they left him out to give other stories a chance. I hope its the first one.
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# ? Aug 8, 2019 22:57 |
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So I am a big ol’ black library nerd and have read pretty much a bunch of series outside of the Horus Heresy stuff. I am wondering: if I know the backstory to the heresy would I miss much if I starting reading from “Solar War” going forward? As much as I love the setting I am an “all or nothing” kind of reader and if I start with book 1 of the Horus Heresy I’d feel compelled to read all 50something books and... and that feels like a tall order.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 04:39 |
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Hot Dog Day #82 posted:So I am a big ol’ black library nerd and have read pretty much a bunch of series outside of the Horus Heresy stuff. I am wondering: if I know the backstory to the heresy would I miss much if I starting reading from “Solar War” going forward? As much as I love the setting I am an “all or nothing” kind of reader and if I start with book 1 of the Horus Heresy I’d feel compelled to read all 50something books and... and that feels like a tall order. There are several posters in this thread that made compilations of the "main arc" books that are good reads and essentially take you to the Solar War setting while omitting books that don't aren't bad reads, but don't really contribute anything to the arc, and the outright terrible reads. You won't know every single side-plot or every single minor character - like that smug rear end in a top hat Word Bearer consigliere and his sidekicks - that you may encounter in the Solar War series, you'll know all the important ones, like Mersadie Oliton, whom you'll encounter in the very first book of the Horus Heresy.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 04:59 |
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Hot Dog Day #82 posted:So I am a big ol’ black library nerd and have read pretty much a bunch of series outside of the Horus Heresy stuff. I am wondering: if I know the backstory to the heresy would I miss much if I starting reading from “Solar War” going forward? As much as I love the setting I am an “all or nothing” kind of reader and if I start with book 1 of the Horus Heresy I’d feel compelled to read all 50something books and... and that feels like a tall order. there's an INSANE amount of detail and amazing moments and new, awesome characters and stuff invented whole cloth specifically for the horus heresy books. there's a lot of bad or boring or mediocre books in the series but there's also a lot of the absolute best black library/40k writing that exists. If you like reading and read a lot you should just go for it. you won't regret it in the long run I think, although you might regret reading a couple individual books that are truly stinkers. You would definitely be missing an absolute loving ton of great stuff.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 16:19 |
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hopterque posted:there's an INSANE amount of detail and amazing moments and new, awesome characters and stuff invented whole cloth specifically for the horus heresy books. there's a lot of bad or boring or mediocre books in the series but there's also a lot of the absolute best black library/40k writing that exists. Is there a list of absolute stinkers somewhere in the thread that you can recall? Off the top of my head I remember a lot of people comparing about Outcast Dead and Nemesis.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 17:09 |
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Battle for the Abyss
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 17:43 |
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Hot Dog Day #82 posted:Is there a list of absolute stinkers somewhere in the thread that you can recall? Off the top of my head I remember a lot of people comparing about Outcast Dead and Nemesis. If it's by Abnett, Wraight, or ADB it's probably worth reading. If it's not written by those authors and it isn't Thousand Sons then IMO it's probably worth skipping.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 17:49 |
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John French writes some dope poo poo
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 17:57 |
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Khizan posted:If it's by Abnett, Wraight, or ADB it's probably worth reading. If it's not written by those authors and it isn't Thousand Sons then IMO it's probably worth skipping. This guy speaks the truth. Read the first three then cherry pick the rest.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 19:05 |
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Hot Dog Day #82 posted:Is there a list of absolute stinkers somewhere in the thread that you can recall? Off the top of my head I remember a lot of people comparing about Outcast Dead and Nemesis. nemesis is the worst i'd say, both outcast dead and battle for the abyss are important later on but are quite bad. the salamanders books aren't awful garbage but they're very plodding and dull and unimaginative imo.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 19:27 |
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The plot of Battle of the Abyss can be summed up in a few lines, and the book itself is hot garbage. Ditto for Nemesis.
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# ? Aug 13, 2019 20:31 |
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# ? May 12, 2024 09:48 |
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Angry Lobster posted:The plot of Battle of the Abyss can be summed up in a few lines, and the book itself is hot garbage. Ditto for Nemesis. Anyone mind doing that?
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# ? Aug 14, 2019 03:26 |