I Watched My Miniature Die At Warhammer World, And Now I Want To Do It Again

I Watched My Miniature Die At Warhammer World, And Now I Want To Do It Again

Warhammer World is a bit of a place. Nestled among various warehouses in a suburb of the English Midlands’ fourth-biggest city is the heart and soul of a FTSE 500 business. Indeed, I turn the corner past a carpentry depot and find a queue of dedicated fans stretching nearly 100 yards to get into Games Workshop’s hallowed halls. A proud nerd myself, I join the queue, excited for my first visit to Warhammer World in at least a decade. The treasures inside the nondescript building are even better than I remember.

I’m attending Warhammer World’s 29th birthday celebrations, which include, among other things, a battle for the fate of the 500 Worlds. As a part of Captain Titus’ ongoing saga in the Warhammer lore and to complement the recently released 500 Worlds campaign book, attendees are invited to take control of various units as part of a mass-participation game featuring the Ultramarines and their Necron adversaries. As a collector of neither faction, I didn’t expect to care about the results. That was before Games Workshop offered me the chance to paint a Dreadnought for the battle.

Ultramarines Vs Necrons At Warhammer World

Warhammer Necron Firing Gauss Rifle

I opted for a Redemptor Dreadnought, and spent a few evenings painting my first ever Ultramarine. To be completely truthful, it didn’t feel as bad as I expected. I’m used to the grit of the Iron Hands rather than the affected blue tones of the Emperor’s Perfectionists, but I used some similar sponge techniques for the armour panels, spent some time on subtle object source lighting, and somehow achieved my best freehand designs to date. I couldn’t settle on a name for him, so decided at the last minute before packing him into a box that he would be christened Greg. Honestly, I’m kind of sad I’ll never see the big blue bloke again. But he’s in a better place now.

For the entirety of this weekend, Greg adorned a table in Warhammer World, piloted by community legend Nick Bayton and a rotating cast of attendees. By the time I arrived at the table, he’d already died twice, but I like to think he’d had a helping hand in destroying one of the Necron buildings that had been taken down. The whole battle reminded me of the Games Days of yore, with a Boarding Actions battle on the next table determining whether the Necrons on this battlefield would get emboldened as more ancient technology was brought online.

Warhammer Space Marine 2 Techmarine with blood spray

The Warhammer 40k Space Marine 2 Techmarine Class Could Fix My Biggest Issue With The Game

Space Marine 2 developer Focus Entertainment has revealed all the details about the forthcoming Techmarine class, and I couldn’t be more excited.

The whole event showed me what Warhammer has become since my last visit: welcoming. Content creator and general nice fella Jordan Sorcery was running demos of the Warhammer Roleplaying Game. There were intro games for 40k, Age of Sigmar, Blood Bowl, Kill Team, Aeronautica Imperialis, and more. Primarchs duelled to the death in a micro-version of the Horus Heresy. And my favourite game of the day was a completely custom ruleset for Gargant football. Yep, six giants kicking a classic black-and-white ball between the goalposts. What more could you ask for?

All the usual Warhammer World stuff was there, too. Bugman’s bar has its own range of Warhammer-themed beers now, and the miniatures gallery has only grown since my last visit. Huge dioramas stand 12 feet tall, featuring thousands of miniatures and, probably, millions of dollars worth of plastic. From the smoking wrecks of gargantuan titans on Isstvan V, to micro-dioramas from the early days of the hobby preserved for us to see, this exhibition is reason enough to make the pilgrimage.

Whether you want to see grass-tufted hobbit holes, grimdark manufactorums, or a Bretonnian jousting match, it truly has everything. While Warhammer World is free to enter, even for the anniversary event, the exhibition costs £8.50. Let me tell you right now that it is the best, most inspiring £8.50 you will ever spend on Warhammer.

I don’t know if Greg will earn a place in these cabinets—he’s certainly not painted to the same standard as the masterpieces therein—but I’m glad to have played a small part in marking the anniversary. From the custom games being played, to the creative kitbashes and perfect paintjobs in the Legends of Paint painting competition, this was truly a celebration of the hobby and a wonderful weekend of everything that makes it so special.

Even if Greg’s fate is to be consigned to a storage box in a forgotten cupboard in a Nottinghamshire warehouse, I’m proud that he’s squirreled away in this Nottinghamshire warehouse.


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Released

September 9, 2024

ESRB

M For Mature 17+ Due To Blood and Gore, Intense Violence

Developer(s)

Saber Interactive

Publisher(s)

Focus Entertainment

Engine

Swarm Engine

Multiplayer

Online Co-Op, Online Multiplayer

Cross-Platform Play

PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S


Autor

  • Gaby Souza é criador do MdroidTech, especialista em tecnologia, aplicativos, jogos e tendências do mundo digital. Com anos de experiência testando dispositivos e softwares, compartilha análises, tutoriais e notícias para ajudar usuários a aproveitarem ao máximo seus aparelhos. Apaixonado por inovação, mantém o compromisso de entregar conteúdo original, confiável e fácil de entender