Saturday, March 14, 2026

Lore Post Chaos - The Ever-promise, when the veil thins

 


The Ever-promise, when the veil thins.


There are places in the galaxy where the fabric of reality grows thin, where the cold certainty of the material world softens and something older presses close. Some call it the Immaterium, others the Sea of Souls, but those names are only lantern‑light in a vast and shifting dark. To most, it is simply the Warp — a realm shaped by thought, stirred by emotion, and hungry for every secret mortals dare to feel.

To look toward it is to feel it looking back.

It is not a place that offers answers. It offers possibilities. Power without restraint. Change without limit. Release from the smallness of flesh and the weight of consequence. It whispers to the fearful, the ambitious, the broken, and the brilliant alike — promising each exactly what they most ache for.

There are places in the galaxy where the fabric of reality grows thin, where the cold certainty of the material world softens and something older presses close. Some call it the Immaterium, others the Sea of Souls, but those names are only lantern‑light in a vast and shifting dark. To most, it is simply the Warp — a realm shaped by thought, stirred by emotion, and hungry for every secret mortals dare to feel.

To look toward it is to feel it looking back.

It is not a place that offers answers. It offers possibilities. Power without restraint. Change without limit. Release from the smallness of flesh and the weight of consequence. It whispers to the fearful, the ambitious, the broken, and the brilliant alike — promising each exactly what they most ache for.

And that is where every story of Chaos truly begins: not with corruption, but with temptation.

A soft pull at the edge of thought. A warmth behind the veil. A promise that feels like it was meant for you alone.

The Ever‑Promise, when the veil thins.

What follows is not a map of the Warp — no such thing could ever exist — but a guided step into its shadow. A look at the storm behind the stars, the powers that rise from its tides, and the mortals who listen when the whisper becomes too sweet to ignore.

Read on, if you choose. But understand: the Warp does not force. It invites.

And that is why so many fall.

The Immaterium.

To speak of the Immaterium is to speak of the galaxy’s oldest truth: that beneath the surface of realspace lies a second ocean, unseen but ever‑present. It is called many things — the Warp, the Empyrean, the Sea of Souls — but all these names circle the same idea: a realm of pure psychic energy, shaped by the thoughts and emotions of every sentient being who has ever lived .

It is not a place of stars or matter. It is a storm of raw feeling, a reflection of mortal consciousness made fluid and dangerous. Hope, hatred, ambition, despair — all of it churns together in tides that can lift a ship across light‑years or tear it apart in an instant.

The Warp is both a tool and a threat. Humanity relies on it utterly: every faster‑than‑light journey plunges a voidship into this psychic sea, guided only by the mutant Navigators who can perceive its shifting currents. Without the Warp, the Imperium would collapse into isolated islands of civilisation. With it, they remain connected — barely, and at great cost.

Psykers draw their power from this same realm. Every spark of telepathy, every bolt of witch‑fire, every prophetic vision is a thread pulled from the Immaterium. But power invites attention, and the Warp is full of things that notice when a mind shines too brightly.

Those Who Stand Apart.

Not all species cast a shadow in the Warp. The Necrons, having surrendered their souls to cold metal, leave no psychic imprint at all. To the Immaterium they are blanks — silent, empty, untouchable. Their ancient C’tan masters fare no better; beings of pure matter, they are strangely vulnerable to the very energies they cannot perceive.

Others, like the T’au, barely register. Their psychic presence is so faint that daemonic entities struggle to sense or influence them, a quirk that has spared them horrors they do not yet understand.

A Necessary Madness.

To travel through the Warp is to surrender to its tides. Ships slip into its depths through their drives, wrapped in the protective shell of a Gellar Field, and ride the currents like vessels on a storm‑tossed sea. Time stretches and contracts unpredictably; a voyage that feels like days may consume months in realspace.

And always, there is the risk of disaster:

  • translation errors

  • catastrophic drive failure

  • storms that isolate entire systems

  • or the simple, terrible possibility of becoming lost forever

Space hulks — vast conglomerations of derelict ships fused by the Warp’s whims — are grim monuments to these dangers, drifting between realities like ghosts.

Creatures of the Deep.

The Warp is not empty. It teems with entities born from emotion itself — daemons, predators, and stranger things still. Some hunt psykers directly, drawn to their minds like sharks to blood. Enslavers, psychneuein, and countless unnamed horrors lurk in its depths, waiting for a moment of weakness, a crack in a Gellar Field, a single unguarded thought.

These beings are not merely hostile; they are alien in ways that defy mortal comprehension. They do not think as mortals do. They hunger for meaning, for sensation, for the spark of life they lack — and they reach for it whenever the veil thins.

Realm of Chaos.

Deep within the Warp, the tides of mortal emotion gather and sharpen into something vast enough to think. From these storms rise the beings mortals call gods — not divine in origin, but shaped by the collective passions of the galaxy. Rage, change, decay, excess… each emotion feeds a presence that grows ever stronger as mortals feel more deeply.

These are the Ruinous Powers, the great forces that rule the Immaterium’s shifting depths.

From each god’s essence spill their servants: daemons, fragments of purpose given form. They are not born, nor do they die; they simply manifest, acting as extensions of their creator’s will. To encounter one is to face a thought made real, a living echo of the emotion that birthed it.

Around each god, the Warp shapes itself into symbolic domains — landscapes that reflect the emotions that empower their rulers. These realms are not places in any physical sense. They change with every surge of feeling, expanding, collapsing, or twisting as the gods struggle for dominance in their endless, shifting Great Game.







The Blood God, Lord of Rage.

Where the Warp churns with violence, Khorne rises tallest. He is the god of wrath, war, and the primal truth that strength is the only real law. Every act of violence — from a whispered killing to a planetary genocide — feeds his power. Mortals fear him, warriors revere him, and all who shed blood, willingly or not, add another beat to his eternal drum.

Khorne is the first scream of battle, the last breath of the fallen, the fire that burns in every heart that refuses to yield.

The Mountain‑Throned War‑God.

Khorne manifests as a colossal figure of brass and muscle, seated upon a throne built from the skulls of champions, tyrants, heroes, and cowards alike. His armour is blackened iron, etched with runes of slaughter; his helm snarls with the visage of a monstrous hound. In one hand rests a blade that hums with barely contained destruction — a weapon that has split worlds and severed empires.

He does not whisper. He does not tempt. He roars — and the Warp roars with him.

To behold Khorne is to understand that violence is older than civilisation, older than language, older than fear itself.

Principles of the Blood God.

Khorne’s creed is brutally pure:

  • War — the crucible where worth is proven

  • Wrath — fury unbound, the fire that drives all warriors

  • Hatred — sharpened into purpose

  • Martial Honour — respect earned only through direct combat

  • Murder — the final truth of dominance

He cares nothing for motive or allegiance. Blood is blood. Skulls are skulls. All offerings are equal in his sight.

Daemons of Khorne.

The Legions of Fury

Khorne’s daemons are forged from pure rage — brutal, direct, and relentless.

Bloodletters — The Rank and Fury

Lean, horned, and blade‑armed, Bloodletters are the footsoldiers of Khorne’s endless wars. Each is a shard of the Blood God’s own hatred.

Skulltaker — The Sacred Executioner

Khorne’s chosen duellist, a daemon who collects the heads of champions and heroes with ritual precision. His existence is a ceremony of slaughter.

Bloodthirsters — The Greater Rage

Towering, winged avatars of Khorne’s will. Among them:

  • Ka’Bandha, whose hatred has shaped entire wars.

  • Skarbrand, the Exiled One, so consumed by fury that even Khorne cast him out.

Each is a storm of brass, fire, and unstoppable violence.

 The Ascended Butchers.

Some mortals rise so high in slaughter that Khorne reshapes them into daemonhood. These Daemon Princes are engines of divine wrath, rewarded for a lifetime of bloodshed.

And towering above them all stands Angron, the Red Angel — the most infamous of Khorne’s chosen, a Daemon Primarch whose legend needs no retelling here. His name alone is enough.

The Path of Khorne.

To walk Khorne’s path is to embrace clarity. Strength over weakness. Action over hesitation. Blood over words.

Every blow struck, every skull taken, every battle fought adds to the mountain beneath his throne.

And the Blood God is always hungry.


My path is deluge, my wake is holocaust, and my march is fealty. By blood I rise, by skulls I serve, by wrath I am made whole







The Plaguefather, Lord of All.

Where Khorne burns, Nurgle blooms. He is the god of decay, despair, and inevitable endings — yet also of resilience, rebirth, and the stubborn spark of life that refuses to die. Mortals fear him instinctively, for he is the shadow behind every sickness, the truth behind every failing breath. But to those who embrace him, he is Grandfather, warm, welcoming, and endlessly generous in his gifts of rot and renewal.

Nurgle is the cycle made flesh: what rots, feeds; what dies, nourishes; what falls, rises again in new and twisted forms. His laughter echoes through the Warp like a plague‑ridden lullaby, equal parts comforting and horrifying.

Principles of the Plaguefather.

Nurgle’s creed is not cruelty. It is acceptance.

  • Decay — the truth that all things fall apart

  • Despair — the emotion that feeds him most deeply

  • Endurance — the strength to persist through suffering

  • Rebirth — the new life that grows from rot

  • Inevitable Change — not Tzeentch’s scheming, but the slow, certain collapse of all things

His followers do not seek power through domination, but through release — release from fear, from pain, from the burden of mortality. In Nurgle’s embrace, they find a grotesque kind of peace.

The Jovial Rot-God.

When Nurgle manifests, it is as a vast, swollen figure of impossible girth, his body splitting and weeping with every kind of corruption. Flies swarm in clouds around him, and from the rents in his flesh spill giggling Nurglings who splash in the filth at his feet. His presence is overwhelming — a paradox of horror and paternal warmth, a god who welcomes all into his rancid embrace ().

To behold him is to understand that decay is not an ending, but a beginning.

Daemons of Nurgle.

The Children of Rot and Renewal

Nurgle’s daemons are as contradictory as their master: hideous, joyful, industrious, and endlessly creative in their pursuit of new plagues.

Plaguebearers — The Tally-Keepers

Gaunt, one‑eyed, and eternally counting, Plaguebearers are the footsoldiers of Nurgle’s legions. Each carries a portion of their master’s diseases, spreading them with every step.

Epidemius — The Tallyman

Among them rises Epidemius, borne on a palanquin of Nurglings, forever cataloguing every bubo, pustule, and plague unleashed in Nurgle’s name. His tally is endless, and with each new entry, the Plaguefather’s attention — and favour — grows ().

Ku’gath — The Plaguefather’s Prodigy

Then there is Ku’gath, the Great Unclean One who seeks the perfect disease. Once a mere Nurgling who drank too deeply from Nurgle’s cauldron, he now roams the Warp and realspace alike, brewing horrors in his mobile laboratory and testing them upon entire worlds ().

Mephidast — The Plaguereaver

And in the shadows of the Jericho Reach stalks Mephidast, a Daemon Prince whose artistry lies in crafting plagues that unravel both flesh and hope. His rise from mortal medicae to daemonhood is a testament to Nurgle’s favour for those who spread despair with devotion 

The Pale Son of Decay.

As Angron stands as Khorne’s greatest champion, so Mortarion stands as Nurgle’s. The Daemon Primarch of the Death Guard is not merely a servant — he is the Plaguefather’s chosen scythe, the embodiment of despair’s triumph over hope. Cloaked in toxic mists, wings spread like a shroud, Mortarion brings Nurgle’s gifts to entire systems with a single campaign.

Your readers already know his legend. He needs no retelling — only acknowledgement.

To walk Nurgle’s path is not to seek glory. It is to surrender fear. To accept decay as truth. To find comfort in the rot that claims all things.

And in that acceptance, the Plaguefather smiles — for every ending is a seed, and every seed is his.

From disease, birth; from death, life. In rot we flourish, in decay we are embraced.



The Changer of Ways, Architect of Fate.

If Nurgle is inevitability and Khorne is fury, then Tzeentch is everything that slips between. He is the god of change, sorcery, ambition, and the endless hunger for what might be. Every whispered plan, every spark of curiosity, every mortal who dreams of a different tomorrow feeds his power. He is the shifting flame in the dark — beautiful, dangerous, and never still.

Tzeentch is the Warp’s restless mind, forever weaving futures, unravelling destinies, and spinning new ones in their place. To follow him is to step into a maze that grows as you walk it.

The Thousand Masks.

Tzeentch has no single form. He is a storm of colours, a shifting silhouette, a face made of faces. One moment a robed sorcerer with a hunched neck and burning eyes; the next, a writhing mass of feathers, smoke, and mouths whispering contradictory truths. His presence bends reality like heat over a desert — nothing stays fixed, not even the ground beneath him.

To behold him is to feel your thoughts twist, your certainties melt, and your future slip from your grasp into his.

Principles of the Great Conspirator.

Tzeentch’s creed is motion — the refusal of stagnation.

  • Change — the only constant

  • Ambition — the spark that drives mortals forward

  • Knowledge — the most dangerous currency

  • Sorcery — the purest expression of will

  • Intrigue — the web that binds all things

Where others demand devotion, Tzeentch offers opportunity. Power. Secrets. A way out. A way up. But every gift is a hook, and every path leads deeper into his labyrinth.

Daemons of Tzeentch.

The Living Paradox

Tzeentch’s daemons are embodiments of flux — creatures of shifting form, impossible colours, and minds that move in spirals rather than lines.

Horrors — The Splintered Laugh

Pink, blue, or brimstone, Horrors are fragments of Tzeentch’s will, splitting, merging, and cackling as they unleash warpfire that twists flesh and fate alike.

Lords of Change — The Feathered Prophets

Towering avian sorcerers, the Lords of Change are Tzeentch’s greatest generals and scholars. Their every gesture is a spell, their every word a riddle.

Foremost among them is Kairos Fateweaver, the Oracle of Tzeentch — two‑headed, all‑knowing, and blind to the present. One head speaks truth, the other lies, and both are equally dangerous.

Ghargatuloth — The Prince of a Thousand Faces

A Greater Daemon whose essence is knowledge itself. Every secret learned, every soul broken, every truth extracted makes him stronger. His schemes span millennia, and even his defeats are often victories in disguise.

The Crimson Son of Change

As Mortarion stands for Nurgle and Angron for Khorne, Magnus the Red stands for Tzeentch — the Daemon Primarch of the Thousand Sons, a being of unmatched psychic might and tragic ambition. His story is known well enough to your readers; here, he serves as the living symbol of Tzeentch’s promise and price.

He is the caution and the temptation both.

The Path of Tzeentch.

To walk Tzeentch’s path is to chase possibility. To seek answers no one else dares ask. To believe you can shape your own fate — even as the Changer of Ways shapes it with you.

Every plan is a thread. Every choice is a knot. Every ambition, a door.

And behind every door, Tzeentch waits.

I am the weaver and the reaper, the shaper of souls and their devourer. Through change I ascend, through ruin I am revealed







The Dark Prince, Lord of Excess.

Where Khorne rages, Nurgle rots, and Tzeentch schemes, Slaanesh whispers. The youngest of the great powers, born from the collapse of the Aeldari’s decadent empire, the Dark Prince embodies pleasure, perfection, obsession, and the endless hunger for sensation. Wherever mortals desire — beauty, artistry, acclaim, indulgence, or the simple thrill of feeling alive — Slaanesh is there, smiling in the shadows.

Slaanesh is temptation made divine: the promise that you could be more, feel more, become more… if only you surrender a little restraint.

 The Perfect Form.

Unlike the monstrous visages of the other gods, Slaanesh appears in forms so beautiful they unmake the will. Androgynous, elegant, long‑limbed and radiant, the Dark Prince shifts shape to match the desires of the beholder — male, female, both, neither, or something entirely beyond mortal comprehension. Two pairs of slender horns rise from flowing golden hair, and every movement is a dance of impossible grace.

To look upon Slaanesh is to feel your soul lean forward, wanting

Principles of the Dark Prince.

Slaanesh’s creed is simple, and devastating:

  • Pleasure — in all its forms

  • Perfection — the pursuit of the flawless

  • Obsession — the spark that becomes a consuming fire

  • Excess — the refusal to stop

  • Desire — the universal weakness of all mortals

Where others demand obedience, Slaanesh offers fulfilment. Where others punish, Slaanesh rewards. And in that reward lies the hook.

Daemons of Slaanesh.

The Choir of Delight and Ruin

Slaanesh’s daemons are creatures of elegance and lethality — beautiful, terrible, and impossibly fast.

Daemonettes — The Claws of Delight

The most common of Slaanesh’s servants, Daemonettes are lithe, alluring killers whose every gesture is both invitation and execution. They fight with a dancer’s grace and a predator’s joy.

The Masque — The Eternal Dancer

Once Slaanesh’s favoured handmaiden, the Masque now wanders the Materium and Immaterium alike, cursed to dance forever. Her hypnotic performances ensnare mortals and daemons alike, drawing them into steps that end only in exhaustion and death.

Shalaxi Hellbane — The Perfect Slayer

A peerless Greater Daemon crafted to hunt champions, heroes, and demigods. Shalaxi is the embodiment of Slaanesh’s lethal perfection — a duellist whose beauty is matched only by their cruelty.

Doomrider — The Ecstatic Prince

A Daemon Prince of wild excess, Doomrider races across the galaxy on a daemonic steed of flame and metal, seeking ever-greater thrills. His existence is a blur of speed, sensation, and carnage — a perfect reflection of Slaanesh’s most unrestrained impulses.

 The Serpent of Perfection

As Angron stands for Khorne, Mortarion for Nurgle, and Magnus for Tzeentch, so Fulgrim stands for Slaanesh — the Daemon Primarch of the Emperor’s Children, a being who embodies the Dark Prince’s pursuit of beauty, artistry, and perfection taken to monstrous extremes.

Your readers know his legend well.

He needs only to be named.

The Path of Slaanesh.

To walk Slaanesh’s path is to chase sensation — not merely pleasure, but more. More beauty. More acclaim. More mastery. More feeling.

And in that pursuit, restraint becomes a memory, then a weakness, then a chain to be broken.

Slaanesh does not force. Slaanesh invites.

And that is why so many fall.

Let sensation wash over you, through you, claim you and cast you aside. In rapture we are unmade, and in ruin we are reborn


Flesh Bound to the Unseen

A Daemonhost is a mortal body forcibly bound to a daemon, its soul crushed beneath the weight of the entity imprisoned within. These creatures are abominations — twisted, floating, whispering things whose every movement strains the limits of their failing flesh. They are used only by the most radical Inquisitors, for even the act of creating one is a crime against the Imperium. A Daemonhost is not a servant. It is a cage — and cages break.

Blades That Hunger

Daemon weapons are forged in the Warp, each one a prison for a bound entity that whispers to its wielder. They promise strength, speed, victory — but every swing feeds the daemon within. These weapons are feared even by those who carry them, for they are never truly mastered. To draw such a blade is to bargain with something that remembers every soul it has tasted.

Planets Claimed by the Immaterium

A Daemon World is a place where reality has surrendered. The Warp bleeds through the veil, reshaping land, sky, and life into reflections of the ruling Chaos Power. Time twists. Gravity lies. Thought becomes landscape. These worlds are living nightmares — realms where daemons walk openly and mortals survive only by becoming part of the madness. To step upon such a world is to risk becoming part of its story forever.

A Chapter Tempered by Possession

The Exorcists are a Space Marine Chapter unlike any other. Created in secrecy, shaped by the Ordo Malleus, they undergo a ritual no loyalist should survive: controlled daemon possession. The entity is then exorcised, leaving the Astartes scarred but hardened, their souls tempered against corruption. They are living paradoxes — loyalists forged through heresy, daemonhunters who have worn the skin of the enemy.

The Purest Blade Against the Warp

The Grey Knights are the Imperium’s ultimate daemonhunters — warriors crafted from the Emperor’s own gene‑seed, each one a potent psyker, each one incorruptible. They stand as the Chamber Militant of the Ordo Malleus, striking down daemons with sanctified blades, psychic might, and absolute purity of purpose. Where they walk, daemons flee. Where they stand, the Warp recoils.

When the Veil Thins

Across this chronicle we have walked the shifting tides of the Immaterium — from the raw storm of the Warp to the thrones of the Dark Gods, from daemon legions to the mortal orders sworn to resist them. Each fragment, each truth, each whispered temptation leads back to the same place:

the veil.

Thin. Breathing. Waiting.

The Warp is not a distant realm. It is a reflection — of fear, of desire, of ambition, of the quiet thoughts mortals never speak aloud. It presses against reality like a tide against glass, shaping and shaped by every soul that lives beneath the stars.

Some fall to it. Some fight it. Some study it until it studies them in return.

But none escape its touch.

For the Warp is not merely a place. It is the shadow cast by consciousness itself — the echo of everything mortals are, and everything they might become.

And in that echo lies the Ever‑Promise: power, transformation, release… if only you listen when the veil begins to thin.

The circle closes here — not with certainty, but with understanding.

The Warp endures. The gods endure. The whisper endures.

And somewhere, in the quiet between heartbeats, the veil stirs again.


I have walked the tides of the Immaterium and felt each god’s breath upon my soul. In fury, I found purpose. In decay, I found peace. In change, I found possibility. In excess, I found truth.

All paths led me to the same revelation: the Warp does not command — it reflects. It shows us what we already are, and what we secretly wish to become.

The veil is thin, the promise eternal. And in its whisper, I am whole

- until the next hunt -





Friday, March 13, 2026

Lore Post - The Saga of the Hidden Howl




 The Saga of the Hidden Howl.

These are the truths kept closest to the heartfire — the tales spoken in low voices when the wind carries distant howls. Here are set down the hidden sagas of the curse, the lost hunters it claimed, and the spirit that endures in every son of Russ.

The Curse Beneath The Fang.

They say that on the longest nights of Fenris — when the sea-ice groans like a dying god and the sky burns with the colours of the Allfather’s forge — the old tales walk again.

Gather close, for this is one such tale.

They say that on the longest nights of Fenris — when the sea-ice groans like a dying god and the sky burns with the colours of the Allfather’s forge — the old tales walk again.

Gather close, for this is one such tale.

Not a curse laid by witch or daemon, but one born of the Primarch’s own making — a gift and a doom entwined. It sleeps within every son of Fenris, coiled like a winter serpent, waiting for the moment when blood runs hot, when battle-fury rises, when the line between man and beast thins to a thread.

Most master it. Some fall to it. And a rare, fearsome few… become something else entirely.

These are the Wulfen — the lost hunters, the half-remembered shadows who prowl the edges of every saga. Warriors who stepped too close to the heart of the storm and were remade by it, their humanity stripped to the bone, their loyalty sharpened to a killing edge.

To the Wolves, they are kin returned from the long dark. To the Imperium, they are a tale best left untold. To the enemies of mankind, they are the last sound heard before the end.

And beneath the Fang, in vaults sealed with oath and shame, their howls still echo — a reminder that every legend has teeth, and every curse has a beginning

The Forging of the Canis Helix.

Sit closer to the fire, for this part of the tale is older still — older than Fenris, older than the Fang, older even than the first howl raised in Leman Russ’s name. It begins not in the mead-halls of the tribes, but in the hidden vaults of Terra, where the Allfather shaped the destinies of His sons with tools no mortal hand could wield.

They say the Emperor forged the primarchs from His own blood, each a shard of His purpose given flesh. Yet in the making of the Wolf King, something else was woven in — something wild, something ancient, something that no gene‑wright of the Mechanicum has ever fully understood. The scholars of the Imperium call it the Canis Helix, though the Wolves themselves speak of it as the Spirit of the Wolf, a name truer to its nature.

The Helix is no simple mutation. It is a spark, a catalyst, a living storm bound into the marrow of every son of Russ. It sharpens their senses beyond mortal ken, hardens their bodies, and stirs their blood to battle-fury. It is the reason a Space Wolf can track prey across a frozen sea by scent alone, or hear the heartbeat of a foe through a fortress wall. These gifts are the Emperor’s doing, wrought in the crucible of the Primarch Project, where strands of His own genome were shaped, altered, and — some whisper — mingled with something not entirely human .

But every gift has its price.

For the Helix is unstable, a fire that burns too hot, too bright. In most, it settles into strength and ferocity. In others, it gnaws at the mind, frays the spirit, and pulls the warrior ever closer to the beast that lurks beneath the skin. And in a rare, fated few, it awakens fully — reshaping flesh and soul alike into the creature the Imperium fears to name.

This, the Wolves say, is the true curse beneath the Fang.

Some claim the Emperor intended it so — that the Wolf King was meant to be the spearpoint of His wrath, and that such power could never be forged without danger. Others whisper that the Helix was a flaw, a misstep in the Allfather’s design, one He could not undo even with all His mastery. And there are those, quietest of all, who believe the Helix is older than the Emperor’s craft, a relic of some forgotten age that He bound into Russ for reasons known only to Him.

Whatever the truth, the sons of Fenris bear it still: the blessing and the doom of their lineage, the spark that makes them heroes… and the shadow that may one day claim them.

The first to Howl.

Hear now the tale of the one whose name is lost, though his shadow still stalks the blood of every son of Russ. Long before the Imperium carved runes of warning upon the vaults beneath the Fang, before the priests learned to fear the signs, there was a warrior who walked the path alone — the first to feel the Helix awaken in full.

He was a champion of his pack, a hunter whose deeds filled the mead-halls with boasting. Some say he slew a kraken with nothing but a broken spear. Others claim he wrestled a frost‑wyrm until dawn. The truth is buried beneath the weight of centuries, but all the sagas agree on one thing:

He was the finest of them.

And that is why the Helix chose him.

It began as a stirring beneath the skin, a heat in the blood that no winter wind could cool. His senses sharpened beyond even the gifts of the Allfather — he could smell the iron in a man’s fear, hear the heartbeat of prey through stone. His brothers thought it a blessing. A sign of favour. A portent of greatness.

But the old skalds say that on the night of the Red Moon, when the sky burned like a wound and the wolves howled without pause, the warrior felt something else rise within him — something ancient, something hungry, something that remembered a time before men walked upright.

They say he fell to his knees. They say he tore at the earth with his bare hands. They say his howl split the night like a blade.

It was not the cry of a man. Nor was it the voice of any beast known to Fenris.

It was something between.

His brothers found him at dawn, crouched upon a rise of stone, his armour cracked, his eyes burning with a feral light. He knew them. He loved them. But he could no longer speak their tongue. The Helix had remade him — not in body alone, but in spirit.

He was the first Wulfen.

And when the priests beheld him, when they saw the truth of what lay coiled in the blood of every son of Russ, they gave the transformation a name whispered only in the deepest vaults and the darkest nights.

They called it the Curse.

Not out of hatred. Not out of fear. But out of sorrow — for they knew that what had claimed their brother was no accident, no madness, no failing.

It was destiny.

And destiny, once awakened, does not sleep again.

The Weight of the Howl.

When the first Wulfen rose from the stone, his brothers did not flee. They did not raise their blades. They did not curse his name. They wept — for they knew the warrior he had been, and they saw the shadow of what he had become.

But sorrow was only the beginning.

For the priests of the Fang understood what the others did not: this was no isolated madness, no quirk of fate. The Helix had shown its true face, and in doing so had revealed a truth too dangerous to speak aloud.

If the Imperium learned of this curse, the Wolves would be undone.

The Allfather’s realm had little patience for weakness, and none at all for mutation. A flaw in a Chapter’s gene‑seed was not a matter of pity — it was a matter of censure, of sanction, of extinction. The Wolves had seen other Legions broken for less. They knew the cold logic of Terra, the iron judgement of the High Lords, the ruthless purity demanded by the Inquisition.

And so they hid the truth.

Not out of cowardice, but out of loyalty — to their Primarch, to their brothers, to the legacy they had sworn to uphold. They sealed the first of the later turned Wulfen away in the deepest vaults beneath the Fang, where the stone was thick and the runes were old. They sang laments for him in private, and in public they spoke only of a hero who had fallen in battle.

The sagas were altered. The records were sealed. The truth became a whisper.

Yet secrecy alone was not enough. For the Wolves feared something deeper than Imperial judgement — they feared what the curse revealed about themselves.

If the finest of them could fall, then none were safe.

The Helix was not a flaw in one warrior. It was a shadow cast across them all. Every son of Russ carried the same fire in his blood, the same storm in his marrow. And though most mastered it, the knowledge that any one of them might one day feel the beast stir behind his ribs gnawed at their pride like a winter wolf at a bone.

So they forged rites to watch for the signs. They trained their Rune Priests to sense the shifting of the spirit. They taught their packs to look upon their brothers with love — and with vigilance.

But above all, they swore an oath: The Imperium must never know.

For if the curse became a weapon in the hands of their rivals, or a mark of shame upon their Chapter, the Wolves would be hunted not by beasts or daemons, but by their own kin. And so the truth was buried beneath the Fang, locked behind runes of silence and centuries of denial.

Yet secrets have a way of clawing their way back into the light.

And the day would come when the curse stirred not in one warrior, but in many — a storm that would sweep away the old lies and carve a new chapter in blood and sorrow.

But that tale belongs to the next part of the saga.

The Fall of the Wolf Brothers.

There are tales the skalds speak softly, even when the fire burns high and the mead runs warm. Tales of pride overreaching its grasp, of legacies stretched thin, of bloodlines pushed beyond what fate intended. Among these, none is spoken with heavier hearts than the saga of the Wolf Brothers.

For this was the moment the curse beneath the Fang reached beyond Fenris — and the galaxy learned why the Wolves stand alone.

When Roboute Guilliman decreed the Second Founding, carving the Legions into Chapters to safeguard the Imperium’s future, the sons of Russ answered as they always had — with pride, with defiance, and with the weight of their Primarch’s legacy upon their shoulders. The Emperor no longer walked among His sons, bound now to the Golden Throne, but His judgement still hung over the Wolves like a winter storm. To refuse the decree would be treason. To accept it meant sharing a bloodline they barely understood themselves.

Thus were born the Wolf Brothers…

a Chapter forged from the gene‑seed of the VI Legion, gifted a world of ice and fire, armed with half the Wolves’ fleet, half their armouries, and half their priests. They were meant to be the first of many, the beginning of a Fenrisian empire that would encircle the Eye of Terror like a ring of iron.

That was the dream.

But dreams are fragile things.

Far from Fenris, far from the rites and runes that had shaped the Wolves for millennia, the Canis Helix began to stir in ways no priest had foreseen. The Wolf Brothers were strong — fierce, loyal, eager to carve their own sagas — but the Helix within them was unstable, untamed, a fire without a hearth to contain it.

At first, the changes were subtle. A warrior whose eyes gleamed too bright. Another whose temper frayed too quickly. Packs that grew restless beneath the moons. But soon the signs became impossible to ignore. Flesh twisted. Spirits frayed. The beast within clawed its way to the surface.

What had been a whisper in the blood of the Space Wolves became a roar among the Wolf Brothers.

The curse spread like wildfire.

The priests tried to contain it. The jarls tried to deny it. The Chapter Master, Beor Arjac Grimmaesson, fought to hold his warriors together as the Helix tore them apart. But the truth was as cold and merciless as the Fenrisian sea: the gene‑seed of Russ could not be copied. Away from the Fang, away from the traditions that tempered it, the Helix devoured its sons.

Some Wolf Brothers fled into the wilds of their world, becoming beasts in truth. Others turned renegade, their minds broken, their loyalty shattered. A few fell to Chaos, drawn by whispers promising control over the storm within. Most were hunted down — by their own kin, by the Inquisition, by the Wolves themselves.

In the end, the Chapter was scattered to the six winds, its banners burned, its name struck from the rolls of honour.

And the Wolves learned a lesson carved in blood:

There would be no more sons of Russ. No successors. No empire. Only the Wolves — and the curse they alone must bear.

From that day onward, the Space Wolves guarded their gene‑seed with a ferocity unmatched by any Chapter. Not out of selfishness, but out of fear — fear of repeating the tragedy of the Wolf Brothers, fear of unleashing the Helix upon the Imperium once more.

And beneath the Fang, the priests whispered a new truth into the dark:

The curse is ours alone. And so is the burden.

The Wolves Who Did Not Return.

There are hunts that end in triumph, and hunts that end in death. But the darkest hunts are those from which no warrior returns — where the trail vanishes into shadow, and only the echo of a howl remains to mark the passing of the brave.

So it was with the Thirteenth.

In the days when the Eye of Terror yawned wide and the traitor Legions stalked the stars like wounded beasts, the sons of Russ answered the call to war with all the fury of their Primarch. Among them marched the Great Company of Jorin Bloodhowl — the Thirteenth — a host of warriors famed for their ferocity, their loyalty, and their unbreakable bond.

They were the first into the breach, the last to quit the field, the pack that laughed in the face of daemons and hunted the servants of the Dark Gods with a zeal that bordered on madness. Some say the Helix burned hotter in their blood. Others whisper that Russ himself had marked them for a fate beyond mortal ken.

Whatever the truth, the Thirteenth walked a path no other Wolves dared tread.

When the traitor Magnus tore open the veil between worlds, when the Eye boiled with warp‑fire and the Thousand Sons fled into its depths, the Thirteenth did not hesitate. They pursued the sorcerers into the storm, howling their defiance, their oaths, their hunger for justice. No order could restrain them. No plea could turn them aside.

They vanished into the warp like sparks swallowed by a gale.

Days passed. Then weeks. Then years. The Wolves waited, watching the horizon for any sign of their lost kin. But the Eye gives nothing back freely. And the Thirteenth did not return.

Not as they had been.

For in the timeless madness of the warp, the Helix awoke in full. The beast within each warrior stirred, then roared, then claimed them utterly. The Thirteenth became something more — and something less — than Space Marines. They became hunters without end, spirits of fang and fury, stalking the traitor Legions across the shifting realms of Chaos.

To the Wolves, they were brothers lost to the storm. To the Imperium, they were a myth. To the Thousand Sons, they were a terror that never slept.

And though centuries passed, the sagas insisted that the Thirteenth still hunted, still howled, still bled for the Allfather in places where time had no meaning.

The Wolves carved their names into the stone of the Fang. They sang laments for them in the long winter nights. But in their hearts, they knew the truth:

The Thirteenth had not died. They had simply gone where no warrior could follow.

And so they became the Wolves Who Did Not Return — a warning, a legend, and a promise that the curse beneath the Fang was not merely a burden… but a destiny written in blood and shadow.

The Recent Sagas of the Lost Wolves.

The Eye of Terror does not give back what it takes. Not whole. Not clean. Not in the same shape as before. And so the return of the Thirteenth was not a march, nor a triumph, nor a homecoming sung in the halls of the Fang.

It was a scattering of shadows.

A claw-mark on a daemon engine. A howl heard across a dead moon. A pack of grey shapes glimpsed on a battlefield where no Wolves had been deployed.

For centuries, these were dismissed as ghost stories — the kind of tales soldiers tell to keep the dark at bay. But the Wolves listened. They knew the scent of their own.

And slowly, piece by piece, the truth emerged.

The Thirteenth were returning. Not as a host. Not as a legion. But as hunters — broken into packs, scattered across the warp, each following its own trail of vengeance.

Some were found locked in battle with the Thousand Sons, still fighting a war ten millennia old. Others stalked the fringes of the Eye, tearing apart warbands of renegades who had never even heard the name Leman Russ. A few were discovered in places where time itself had twisted, warriors who believed the Heresy had ended only days before.

But the greatest return came with Njal Stormcaller.

The Rune Priest followed a trail of omens and warp‑whispers to the ruins of Prospero — the world where the Thirteenth had vanished, the wound that had never healed. There, amid the dust of a dead civilisation and the echoes of sorcery long spent, he found them.

More than two hundred of the lost. Still hunting. Still howling. Still bound to the oath they had sworn ten thousand years before.

Njal did not command them. He did not restrain them. He simply called them home.

And they followed.

Their arrival shook the Fang to its foundations. The priests saw the full fury of the Helix made flesh. The jarls saw warriors who had survived the warp by becoming something beyond mortal understanding. The Imperium saw a mutation that should not exist.

But the Wolves saw brothers.

Not all the Thirteenth have returned, not all have turned into Wulfen

Not all ever will. Some are still out there — hunting, fighting, lost in wars the Imperium has forgotten.

Yet their scattered returns have carved a new truth into the sagas:

The curse beneath the Fang does not end in death. It ends in the hunt. And the hunt never truly ends.

The Spirit of the Wolf.

Ask a son of Fenris what the Wulfen are, and he will give you many answers — each true, each incomplete. For the Wulfen are not merely warriors twisted by the Helix, nor ghosts returned from the warp, nor the shameful secret the Wolves once hid beneath the Fang.

They are all these things. And they are more.

To the Wolves, the Wulfen are the living echo of their Primarch’s spirit — the raw, untamed heart of Leman Russ made flesh. They are the reminder that the Wolf King was not a creature of marble halls and measured words, but a force of nature, a storm given shape, a hunter whose loyalty burned brighter than any star.

The Wulfen embody that truth without restraint.

Where the Wolves temper their fury with discipline, the Wulfen are the fury. Where the Wolves master the Helix, the Wulfen become it. Where the Wolves walk the line between man and beast, the Wulfen stride across it without fear.

And in this, the Wolves see not weakness — but purity.

For the Wulfen are what every son of Russ carries in his blood: the wildness, the instinct, the fierce devotion to pack and purpose. They are the truth beneath the armour, the howl beneath the oath, the spirit that no gene‑rite or Imperial decree can ever tame.

Once, the Wolves feared this truth. They hid it. They buried it. They sang laments for those who fell to it.

But the return of the Thirteenth changed everything.

When the lost hunters stepped out of the warp — all scarred, some transformed, yet still loyal — the Wolves saw the curse for what it truly was: not a flaw, not a failing, but a reflection of their deepest nature. A reminder that their strength does not come from purity, but from embracing the storm within.

The Wulfen are the shadow of Russ. The Wulfen are the promise of Fenris. The Wulfen are the spirit of the wolf, unbound and unbroken.

And so the Wolves honour them — not as monsters, nor as martyrs, but as brothers who walk a harder path. A path that leads through darkness, through madness, through the warp itself… yet never strays from the hunt.

For in the end, every son of Russ knows this truth:

The wolf is not something to be feared. The wolf is who they are.

And the Wulfen are simply the ones who stopped pretending otherwise.

- Until The Next Hunt -



Thursday, March 12, 2026

Deathwatch - Kryptmans War Book review spoiler free... Ish

 


Deathwatch - Kryptmans War by Ian St Martin.

Humanity has always stood upon the knife‑edge of extinction, but few threats have ever pressed that blade so deeply against the Imperium’s throat as the Tyranids. Against this extragalactic horror — a predator that does not negotiate, does not relent, and does not even recognise humanity as anything more than biomass — the Imperium has only a handful of tools sharp enough to matter. Foremost among them is the Deathwatch, the Ordo Xenos’ Chamber Militant: a brotherhood of veteran Space Marines drawn from a hundred Chapters, sworn to the Long Vigil and armed with the singular purpose of eradicating the alien wherever it rises.

Yet even the Deathwatch, for all their precision and fury, have never faced a foe quite like the Great Devourer. And no Imperial figure has shaped the war against the Tyranids more profoundly — or more controversially — than Inquisitor Fidus Kryptman of the Ordo Xenos. A man of towering intellect and unyielding resolve, Kryptman was among the first to witness the aftermath of Hive Fleet Behemoth’s assault on Tyran, and it was he who sounded the alarm that would define centuries of conflict.

For over two hundred and fifty years, he fought the Tyranids with a clarity of purpose that bordered on obsession. He guided Deathwatch kill‑teams through the defence of Tarsis Ultra, orchestrated the destruction of a Norn‑Queen, and implemented the infamous Kryptman Census — a desperate astropathic dragnet to chart the approach of Hive Fleet Leviathan. His strategies were brilliant, brutal, and increasingly extreme. When Leviathan’s advance threatened to overwhelm Imperial space, Kryptman ordered entire sectors evacuated and subjected to Exterminatus to deny the Tyranids their biomass. It was the largest act of self‑inflicted genocide in Imperial history, and it earned him a Carta Extremis: stripped of rank, cast out, and named too dangerous to remain within the Inquisition.

But exile did not stop him. With loyal Deathwatch elements still at his side, Kryptman enacted his most audacious gambit: seeding Genestealers into the Ork‑held Octavius Empire to lure Hive Fleet Leviathan into a grinding, system‑wide war against the Greenskins. The resulting Octarius War bought the Imperium precious time — and may yet doom it, should either xenos species emerge stronger from the crucible he engineered.

This is the crucible in which the Deathwatch operates: a galaxy where the Tyranids adapt faster than Imperial strategy can evolve, and where Kryptman’s legacy hangs like a shadow — part warning, part prophecy, part necessary evil. Any tale set against this backdrop carries the weight of impossible decisions, institutional strain, and the cold arithmetic of survival.

What immediately struck me about this story is how cleanly it exposes the long shadow of Kryptman’s decisions. His gambit in the Octarius sector — unleashing the Tyranids upon the Orks to buy the Imperium time — was always going to produce consequences no one could fully predict. The idea of an Ork Overfiend rising to power because of that endless, artificially sustained war is exactly the kind of grim irony that defines Kryptman’s legacy. He didn’t just weaponise a xenos species; he created a crucible in which something far worse could evolve.

And that’s where the Deathwatch come in. They are, in many ways, the only force capable of addressing a mistake of this magnitude. A conventional Imperial crusade would be swallowed whole by the sheer biomass of the Octarius conflict, but a kill‑team — precise, adaptable, and utterly unburdened by the need for large‑scale logistics — can strike at the heart of the problem. The mission to eliminate the Overfiend isn’t just another xenos purge; it’s an attempt to correct a strategic miscalculation that has spiralled into a sector‑wide existential threat.

What I appreciate here is the thematic clarity. This isn’t a story about Orks for the sake of Orks. It’s a story about consequences — about the Imperium’s habit of solving one apocalypse by creating another. The Deathwatch aren’t just fighting an Ork warlord; they’re fighting the unintended aftershocks of Kryptman’s desperation. That gives the narrative a weight and a sense of accountability that elevates it beyond a simple bolter‑and‑biomorph affair.

Even with limited information available, the premise alone carries a compelling tension. A Deathwatch kill‑team operating deep within a warzone shaped by Kryptman’s hand feels like a natural continuation of the themes that define the Ordo Xenos: moral ambiguity, strategic ruthlessness, and the constant struggle to contain threats that evolve faster than Imperial doctrine can adapt.

If the book leans into that — the sense of cleaning up a mess the Imperium refuses to acknowledge, the pressure of operating behind enemy lines, the grim satisfaction of correcting a catastrophic oversight — then it stands firmly within the lineage of the best Deathwatch fiction.

I should also say outright that I really enjoyed this story. Even with its shorter length and the scarcity of information surrounding it, the narrative delivers exactly what I look for in Deathwatch fiction: focus, pressure, and a mission with real consequence. As part of the Deathwatch Omnibus, it stands out as one of those compact but memorable tales that add texture to the wider Ordo Xenos mythos. If you’re already invested in the Deathwatch — or simply enjoy stories that explore the fallout of Kryptmans decisions — this one is absolutely worth your time.

In the end, this is exactly the kind of compact, high‑pressure Deathwatch tale that rewards anyone interested in the long shadow of Kryptman’s war. It’s a mission born from Imperial overreach, executed by the only warriors capable of correcting it, and framed within one of the most consequential xenos conflicts in the setting. As part of the Deathwatch Omnibus, it earns its place — and for fans of the Long Vigil, it’s absolutely worth reading.

-Until The Next Hunt - 



Accursed Eternity Book review spoiler free... Ish

 


Accursed Eternity by Sarah Cawkwell.

This short novella spans barely a hundred pages, yet it conjures an atmosphere thick with dread and unanswered questions. At its heart stand two loyalist Chapters — the Star Dragons, their lineage obscured by rumour and half‑truths, and the Blood Swords, a once‑proud brotherhood now cast into an enforced penitent crusade for a sin no outsider is permitted to name. Bound by centuries of shared campaigns and a rare, genuine fraternity forged in fire, these Chapters answer the call of the Ordo Malleus with a loyalty that borders on fatalism.

For months, the daemon‑ship Accursed Eternity has drifted through Imperial space like a wound that refuses to close. Every encounter with loyalist forces has ended the same way: total annihilation, no survivors, no vox‑records, only silence. Now, the Ordo Malleus claims to have divined the nature of the creature steering the hulk through the void — a threat they believe they can finally confront on their own terms.

But in the grim darkness of the far future, certainty is a luxury no one truly possesses. The Inquisition’s confidence masks secrets they refuse to share, and the Chapters’ own histories carry debts and shadows that tug them toward the hulk with a sense of inevitability. As Containment Fleet Kappa closes on the drifting nightmare, the stage is set not for a clean exorcism, but for a descent into something older, hungrier, and far more cunning than any daemon the Ordo Malleus expected to face.

In true Warhammer fashion, nothing unfolds as intended — and aboard the Accursed Eternity, survival becomes less a question of strength than of whether the ship itself will allow anyone to leave.

What struck me most was how quietly effective the story’s secrecy was. Nothing is over‑explained, nothing is handed to the reader, and that restraint ends up doing a lot of heavy lifting. The unknown becomes a character in its own right — a pressure in the background that shapes every decision the Astartes make. It suited the tone perfectly.

I also appreciated how the novella leaned into fear and expectation without ever breaking the stoic façade of the Space Marines themselves. You can feel the tension in the way they prepare, the way they interpret the Ordo Malleus’ intelligence, the way they assume they understand the threat because doctrine tells them they should. That subtle disconnect — between what they believe they’re facing and what’s actually waiting for them — is where the story really shines.

It’s rare to see a narrative that highlights how the Astartes’ own mindset can become a liability. Their rigid doctrines, their certainty, their reliance on pattern recognition… all of it leaves them dangerously exposed when the enemy refuses to behave according to expectation. In the 40K universe, assuming you know the nature of the threat is often the first step toward disaster, and this novella captures that truth with a kind of grim inevitability.

Overall, I was pleasantly surprised. The atmosphere, the tension, and the slow, creeping realisation that the Imperium’s finest are walking into something they are not prepared for — it all came together beautifully. It’s a reminder that even the most elite warriors in the galaxy can be undone not by weakness, but by certainty.

- Until The Next Hunt -



Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Lore Post - Da Big Klans

 


Da Big Klans.

Inquisitorial General Introduction to Ork Klanz

(Extract from the private instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

The Orkoid klan system is, at first glance, a crude taxonomy — a handful of behavioural archetypes into which their tribes conveniently fall — yet this simplicity is a deception that has cost more Imperial commanders their lives than any xenos cunning. A klan begins as a rigid imprint, a cultural instinct woven into the Ork’s very bio‑psychic substrate, but once a tribe grows beyond a certain threshold, these identities cease to be mere habits and instead become self‑propelling forces. The Klans preferences intensify, its traditions ossify, and its collective momentum begins to warp the behaviour of the entire horde around it. A Waaagh! seeded with too many Goffs becomes a grinding, unstoppable avalanche; one dominated by Evil Sunz mutates into a red‑streaked tempest of reckless velocity; a surge of Deathskulls can turn a stable front into a theatre of inexplicable thefts, sabotage, and battlefield “miracles.” Understand this well, Novitiate: Ork klanz do not merely influence the character of a Waaagh — they can redefine its trajectory, its tempo, and its ultimate scale. Once a klan identity takes on a life of its own, the Waaagh becomes something far more dangerous than a mass of rampaging xenos. It becomes a cultural engine, accelerating toward outcomes no human strategist can reliably predict.

(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

HUMIE WROTE TOO MUCH. Klanz iz easy: Sum smash. Sum go fasta. Sum got teef. Sum nick stuff. Sum eat bugs. Sum act sneaky. If ya need more dan dat, you’z da one wot’s thick.








Goffs — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

If there is a single Klan whose nature encapsulates the raw, unvarnished brutality of the Orkoid species, it is the Goffs. They are the largest, most aggressive, and most uncompromising of all Greenskin subcultures — towering brutes who disdain ornament, subtlety, and anything resembling tactical nuance. To a Goff, war is not merely a means to an end; it is the end itself, the purest expression of Ork existence. Their hordes favour massed infantry, thunderous charges, and the kind of close‑quarters savagery that reduces entire regiments to pulp beneath steel‑shod boots. When Goffs dominate a Waaagh!, its character becomes unmistakable: a grinding, unstoppable tide of bodies and choppas, driven by a cultural momentum that brooks no deviation. Their presence within a warband is not merely influential — it is transformative, dragging the entire horde toward a doctrine of relentless frontal assault. You will learn to recognise the signs early. Novitiate, for once the Goffs take root within a Waaagh!, the conflict ceases to be a campaign and becomes a cataclysm. 

It would be remiss not to acknowledge that the most infamous Ork in the galaxy — Ghazghkull Mag Uruk Thraka — hails from this Klan. His deeds, campaigns, and apocalyptic visions have been covered extensively in prior dossiers, and even the greenest Guardsman recruit can recite the broad strokes of his legend. For our purposes here, understand only this: Ghazghkull is the ultimate expression of the Goff ideal, and his shadow looms over every black‑armoured brute who marches beneath the bull‑horn totem.

(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

GOFFS. PFF. BIG, LOUD, BORIN’.

All dey do is shout an’ run in a straight line.

Proper thick‑’eads.

Freebootaz don’t need no klan.

We’z got STYLE, teef, an’ FREEDOM.

Now stop writin’ like a weedy humie

before I nick yer pen.

(Handwriting analysis inconclusive. Ink appears to be a mixture of promethium soot,
fungal residue, and what may be grog. Sample unsuitable for genetic tracing.)













Evil Sunz — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

If the Goffs embody the brute force of Ork warfare, then the Evil Sunz represent its velocity — a klan whose entire culture is built around the pursuit of speed, noise, and the delirious thrill of mechanised mayhem. Their obsession with motion is not merely behavioural but pathological; Evil Sunz Orks display an almost compulsive need to be in transit, whether astride a warbike, clinging to the side of a Trukk, or simply sprinting in circles while waiting for the engines to warm. Their warbands strike with blistering pace, careening across battlefields in clouds of dust and exhaust, smashing through infantry lines before wheeling away to wreak havoc elsewhere. The klan’s unusually high concentration of Mekboyz ensures a constant supply of ramshackle but terrifyingly fast vehicles, each one modified, over‑tuned, and painted in the klan’s sacred red — a colour they insist makes their machines “go fasta,” a superstition that, disturbingly, appears to have some measurable effect. When Evil Sunz dominate a Waaagh!, the entire horde becomes a storm of engines and flame, its tempo accelerating beyond the capacity of most Imperial forces to counter. Engagements devolve into running battles, ambushes collapse under sudden mechanised charges, and defensive lines are shredded before they can stabilise. You must learn to recognise the rising whine of their engines early, Novitiate, for once the Evil Sunz gather momentum, containment becomes a near‑impossible task.

Though the Evil Sunz boast many notorious Speedbosses, one name warrants brief acknowledgement: Gorgutz ’Ead ’Unter. His career has been documented in prior dossiers, and even the most junior Guardsman can recount the broad strokes of his rampages. For our purposes, understand only that Gorgutz exemplifies the Evil Sunz ideal — relentless, mobile, and violently opportunistic — and that his legacy continues to shape the klan’s reputation across multiple warzones. 


(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

EVIL SUNZ? HA! RED‑PAINTED LUNATIKS.

All dey do is shout “GO FASTA!”

an’ den crash into sumfink.

Freebootaz go fast ’cos we WANT to.

Dey go fast ’cos dey’z too dumb to stop.

Now move yer quill, humie.

Dis page is makin’ me itchy.






Blood Axes — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

Among the bewildering array of Orkoid subcultures, none are so distrusted by their own kind — nor so dangerously underestimated by ours — as the Blood Axes. Unlike the typical Greenskin, these Orks have spent long centuries in close, if acrimonious, contact with the Imperium, and have adopted a number of unsettlingly effective battlefield habits as a result. They trade rather than steal, negotiate rather than bellow, and will even retreat when faced with unfavourable odds — behaviours that other klanz consider outright heretical. Yet these same qualities grant the Blood Axes a level of tactical sophistication rare among their species. Their warbands employ ambushes, feints, staggered advances, and coordinated fire patterns that more closely resemble a professional military than the usual Ork tide. When Blood Axes dominate a Waaagh!, its character shifts dramatically: engagements become unpredictable, enemy lines collapse under sudden infiltration strikes, and entire campaigns are shaped by misdirection and calculated aggression. Do not mistake their camouflage, discipline, or uncharacteristic restraint for weakness, Novitiate. The Blood Axes are every bit as brutal as their cousins — they simply prefer to reach the krumpin’ alive.

Though not exclusively a Blood Axe, the infamous Kommando Boss Snikrot exemplifies the klan’s most terrifying traits taken to their extreme. His deeds in the jungles of Armageddon have been documented extensively, and even the most junior Guardsman knows his name whispered in the dark. For our purposes, understand only this: Snikrot represents the apex of Ork stealth warfare — a killer who moves like a wraith, strikes without warning, and leaves only mutilated corpses as evidence of his passing. His presence within any Blood Axe‑aligned force should be treated as a precursor to sustained infiltration, sabotage, and psychological terror.


(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

BLOOD AXES… SNEAKY, SNEAKY GITZ.

Wearin’ camo, marchin’ in lines,

actin’ like humies wiv sticks up dere backsides.

Freebootaz don’t need no “taktiks.”

We just shoot ya, loot ya,

an’ leave before anyone asks questions.

Now stop writin’ about cowards.

It’s makin’ me bored.






Deathskulls — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

Of all the Orkoid subcultures, the Deathskulls are perhaps the most insidious. Their defining traits — compulsive looting, pathological superstition, and an uncanny knack for battlefield “acquisitions” — make them a persistent threat long after the main Ork force has been driven off. Deathskulls operate with a scavenger’s instinct bordering on the preternatural; they can strip a tank to its chassis in minutes, dismantle a fortification while under fire, or “borrow” an entire artillery piece without the defenders noticing until it is already being turned against them. Their blue warpaint, worn for luck, seems to coincide disturbingly often with improbable survivals and mechanical miracles, suggesting a latent psychic component to their kleptomania. When Deathskulls dominate a Waaagh!, the conflict becomes a theatre of sabotage, jury‑rigged monstrosities, and sudden reversals as stolen materiel is repurposed with alarming speed. You must treat any battlefield touched by them as compromised, Novitiate — for where the Deathskulls roam, nothing remains where it was left.

Though not a Deathskull by strict lineage, the infamous Mad Dok Grotsnik is frequently found among their ranks, drawn by their abundance of “spare parts” and their willingness to tolerate his deranged surgical experiments. His history has been covered extensively in prior dossiers, and even the most junior Guardsman knows to fear the sight of his blood‑slick apron. For our purposes, understand only this: Grotsnik represents the apex of Ork medical insanity — a butcher‑savant whose “patients” rarely consent and never emerge unchanged. Any force operating near a Deathskull‑aligned warband should be alert for his presence, for where Grotsnik walks, mutilation and grotesque augmentation follow.


(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

DEATHSKULLZ… THIEVIN’ BLUE‑DAUBED GITZ.
Always nickin’ everyfink wot ain’t nailed down.
An’ even den, dey’ll nick da nails too.
An’ GROTSNIK?
DAT MAD SAWBONES STUCK A NEW ARM ON ME
WHEN I ONLY NEEDED STITCHES!
Didn’t even ask!
Just grabbed me, chopped, glued, an’ laughed.
If I see dat zoggin’ quack again,
I’m takin’ me arm BACK.
Now stop writin’ about klepto‑weirdboyz.
Dey make me skin crawl.









Bad Moons — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

Among the Orkoid klanz, none flaunt their status with such brazen excess as the Bad Moons. Their teeth grow faster than those of any other Greenskin, granting them a near‑constant influx of the crude currency that underpins Ork society. This biological quirk has elevated them into a merchant caste of sorts — acquisitive, ostentatious, and perpetually surrounded by the finest wargear teef can buy. Their armour gleams with gold plating, their banners bristle with gaudy ornamentation, and their weapons are often kustomised to the point of absurdity. Yet beneath this veneer of wealth lies a dangerous truth: Bad Moons are not merely showmen, but exceptionally well‑armed combatants whose ranged firepower can shred entire formations before the melee is joined. Their warbands favour heavy dakka, elaborate artillery, and mobs of Flash Gitz whose Snazzguns can level a hab‑block in moments. When Bad Moons dominate a Waaagh!, its character shifts toward overwhelming firepower, economic manipulation, and a relentless display of wealth intended to cow rivals and lure ambitious Freebootaz into their orbit. Do not be deceived by their ostentation, Novitiate — beneath the gold and glitter lies the same brutal Ork instinct, sharpened by privilege and armed to the tusks.

Though the Bad Moons boast many wealthy and ostentatious warlords, Nekkruncha warrants brief mention. His assault on the Knight World of Tarnis has been documented in prior dossiers, and even the most junior Guardsman can recount the broad strokes of his campaign. For our purposes, understand only this: Nekkruncha embodies the Bad Moons’ love of overwhelming firepower and excessive war‑engines. His forces fielded Deffkoptas, Deff Dreads, Gorkanauts, Squiggoths, and enough kustomised artillery to level a fortress. He is the Bad Moon ideal writ large — wealthy, heavily armed, and eager to prove his status through spectacular destruction.


(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

BAD MOONZ… FLASHY, GOLD‑DRIPPIN’ SHOW‑OFFS.

All dat shiny armour, all dem fancy gunz…

an’ not a lick o’ sense between ’em.

Dey spend teef like water,

den cry when a bigger lad knocks ’em out.

An’ NEKKRUNCHA?

HA! WALKIN’ FORTRESS WIV MORE BLING THAN BRAINS.

Saw ’im once — took ’alf a day to polish ’is zoggin’ Gorkanaut.

Freebootaz don’t need gold.

We take wot we want,

an’ we don’t need to paint ourselves yellow to prove it.

Now stop writin’ about posh gitz.

It’s hurtin’ me eyes.







Snakebites — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

Of all the Orkoid klanz, the Snakebites remain closest to the species’ primitive origins. They scorn advanced technology, preferring crude weapons, animal hides, and the brutal simplicity of the “old ways.” Their bodies are weather‑beaten, scarred, and toughened by a lifetime of hardship — and by the infamous rite of passage that gives the klan its name. Young Snakebites must provoke a venomous serpent into biting them, then suck out the poison to prove their resilience. This ritual, repeated throughout their lives, grants them a formidable resistance to toxins and a deep affinity for the vicious fauna they breed and carry into battle. Their Runtherdz are unmatched in the raising of Grots, Squigs, and even the colossal Squiggoths that serve as living engines of war. When Snakebites dominate a Waaagh!, the conflict becomes a stampede of beasts and bellowing warriors, a primal onslaught that overwhelms more sophisticated foes through sheer ferocity. Do not mistake their disdain for technology as ignorance, Novitiate — the Snakebites’ savagery is deliberate, honed, and terrifyingly effective.

Though expelled from his own Snakebite tribe, Zodgrod Wortsnagga remains one of the most infamous Runtherdz in Ork history. His exploits have been documented in earlier dossiers, and even the most junior Guardsman has heard rumours of his unnervingly disciplined “Supa‑Runtz.” For our purposes, understand only this: Zodgrod represents a rare and unsettling phenomenon — an Ork who cares for his Grots with fanatical protectiveness, and who has elevated their training to a level that borders on the heretical. His presence within any Snakebite‑aligned force should be treated as a warning that the enemy’s Gretchin may not behave as expected. They may, in fact, behave far too well.


(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

SNAKEBITES… MAD, MUD‑ROLLIN’, SQUIG‑SNIFFIN’ SAVAGES.

Bite snakes, suck poison, wear dead animals…

an’ dey call *me* uncivilised.

An’ ZODGROD?

DAT WEIRDO TRIED TO “TRAIN” ME GROTS.

Said dey needed “discipline.”

DEY AIN’T SUPPOSED TO HAVE DISCIPLINE!

Next fing I know,

me runts are marchin’ in lines

an’ refusin’ to fetch me ammo

’cos “it ain’t safe, boss.”

If I see dat beardy git again,

I’m feedin’ ’im to ’is own Supa‑Runtz.

Now stop writin’ about snake‑kissin’ nutters.

Dey give me hives.






Freebooterz — Inquisitorial Briefing.

(Instruction of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn to Novitiate‑Probationer Loran Veyl)

Of all Orkoid subcultures, the Freebooterz are the most unpredictable — and therefore the most dangerous. They exist outside the rigid structures of the major klanz, forming loose, piratical bands of exiles, mercenaries, renegades, and opportunists who owe allegiance to no warboss but the one they choose to follow. Their fleets roam the void in ramshackle kroozers, striking without warning at isolated worlds, merchant convoys, and even military installations when the promise of loot is sufficient. Freebooterz are distinguished by their flamboyant attire, personalised insignia, and a level of individual cunning rarely seen among their more regimented kin. Their warbands often include outcast Meks, Painboyz, Weirdboyz, and even feral Orks drawn to the promise of plunder. When Freebooterz join a Waaagh!, they do so as mercenaries — and their loyalty lasts only as long as the teef flow. A Waaagh! dominated by Freebooterz becomes a chaotic, opportunistic storm of raids, betrayals, and sudden shifts in allegiance. Treat them with extreme caution, Novitiate. Their lack of structure is not a weakness, but a freedom that allows them to strike where least expected.

Kaptin Badrukk, the so‑called “King of the Freebooterz,” is perhaps the most infamous Ork pirate of the current age. His exploits have been documented extensively in prior dossiers, and even the most junior Guardsman can recount the broad strokes of his legend. For our purposes, understand only this: Badrukk is a uniquely dangerous combination of wealth, firepower, and brutal cunning. His Flash Gitz wield weapons capable of levelling fortified positions, and his Kill Kroozer, Da Blacktoof, has left a trail of devastation across multiple sectors. Any sighting of his banners should be treated as a precursor to large‑scale piracy, opportunistic raids, and catastrophic loss of materiel.


(Recovered from the body of Novitiate Veyl, Tarnis theatre)

FREEBOOTAZ… NOW WE’RE TALKIN’.
Proper pirates, proper lootin’, proper fightin’.
None o’ dat klan nonsense.
BUT BADRUKK?
DAT GILDED, GOLD‑GRINNIN’, FLASH‑GIT TRAITOR!
Kicked me off ’is ship, ’e did.
Said I “weren’t stylish enough.”
ME! NOT STYLISH ENOUGH!
Left me floatin’ in a grotty escape pod
wiv nuffin’ but a half‑charged slugga
an’ a crate o’ stale squig jerky.
One day I’m gonna find dat shiny‑teefed git.
An’ when I do?
I’m takin’ ’is hat, ’is ship,
an’ EVERY LAST ONE o’ dem fancy guns.
Now stop writin’ about dat posh pirate.
I’m gettin’ angry again.

…AN’ YOU KNOW WOT?
I’M GLAD I KRUMPED DIS HUMMIE WOT WROTE ALL DIS.
Served ’im right for scribblin’ so much.
Wish I could do it again, too.
Woz funny da first time.


Post‑Action Addendum — Filed by Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn.

(For the attention of the Ordo Xenos Training Cohort)

The loss of Novitiate‑Probationer Veyl is regrettable only in the administrative sense. His failure to survive even the most rudimentary field observation exercise demonstrates a profound lack of aptitude, resilience, and basic self‑preservation. I will be submitting a formal request that the Tech‑Priest responsible for his hypno‑indoctrination regimen be reprimanded for gross negligence; no candidate should emerge from conditioning so ill‑prepared for the realities of xenos contact.

Let this serve as a reminder to all trainees: the Ork threat does not forgive incompetence, and neither do I.


(Filed and ratified under the authority of Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Thenn)

By my hand and seal, this dossier is hereby concluded. The loss of Novitiate‑Probationer Veyl shall be recorded as a minor administrative inconvenience, and his remains — such as they are — will be repurposed for servitor stock. His failure reflects not upon the Ordo, but upon the inadequacies of those responsible for his conditioning. A formal censure has been issued to the attending Tech‑Priest for producing a candidate of such lamentable fragility.

Let this document stand as both instruction and warning: Ignorance is death. Complacency is treason. The xenos does not forgive error, and neither does the Inquisition.

— Macharius Thenn, Ordo Xenos

Until the next Hunt



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