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Warhammer 40,000 (informally known as Warhammer 40K or just 40K) is a science fiction tabletop miniature wargame, produced by the British gaming company Games Workshop. Play centers around 28mm scale (approximately 1:65) miniature figurines produced by Citadel Miniatures, which represent soldiers, creatures and vehicles of war. The game requires a combination of tactics and luck.

Warhammer 40K is the science fiction companion to Warhammer Fantasy. Warhammer 40K allows for less regimental, formation-based movement, and deals with more advanced weaponry.

History

Rogue Trader - the first edition of Warhammer 40,000The first edition of the game (Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader) was published in 1987. The man responsible for creating the original rules set and the Warhammer 40,000 gameworld was game designer Rick Priestley. This original version came as a very detailed rulebook, making it most suitable for fighting small skirmishes. Much of the composition of units was determined randomly, by rolling dice.

A few elements of the setting (bolters, Dreadnought armour) can be seen in a set of wargaming rules called Laserburn produced by Tabletop Games. The influence of these can also be seen in the prototype Necromunda game mechanics. Laserburn was turned into the computer game Lasersquad that subsequently evolved into the X-COM computer games.

The second edition was published in late 1993, aimed at making it easier to fight larger battles. This and later developments of the game are the work of editor Andy Chambers. This version relied greatly on cards, and came as a boxset including Space Marine and Ork miniatures, scenery and dice, as well as the main rules. An expansion pack Dark Millenium was later released.

The third edition was released in 1998, and again concentrated on streamlining the rules for larger battles. The rulebook was available alone, or as a boxset with miniatures (Space Marines and the newly introduced Dark Eldar).

The current version is the fourth edition, and was released in 2004. It was not such a major change as between previous editions, as it did not break gamers' old army lists or codexes. It is also available as either a boxset (Battle For Macragge - featuring Space Marines and Tyranids) or just the rulebook.

Over the years the game has been expanded by many supplements. There has also been cross fertilization from other games in the same setting.

Warhammer 40K, the Game

Overview

Cover of the Warhammer 40,000 4th edition rulebookEach player assembles an army from one of the official lists (see below) and constructs an army of pewter and plastic miniatures representing the various units in that army. Rules for constructing armies are contained within the Warhammer 40K rulebook, as well there are army-specific Codices that contain specific information on the units and rules for each army. (certain armies have multiple Codices-- for example, many of the major Chapters of the Space Marines army have individual Codices).

Army size is determined by "points" (pts); each figure and vehicle has an associated cost proportionate to its potential worth on the battlefield. Players agree on how many points for the game and each assemble an army up to that maximum limit. Typical game sizes are 500, 750, 1000, 1500, and 2000 points. Games can vary in length of time from half an hour to several hours.

Play is divided into turns, with each player choosing specific actions for all of his units on his turn, and using dice to determine the results of those actions. Each match, at the onset, is assigned a set of additional rules and a goal (collectively called a "scenario") specific to it. The simplest of these is a basic "cleanse" mission, which ends after six turns, the victor being declared based on the control of the four quarters of the board; more complex goals can include night fights, take-and-hold missions, and various others.

Some players organize a series of scenarios, called a campaign, where two or more players fight against each other in a number of battles. These campaigns may feature their own special rules, and are tied together by a storyline, which might alter according to the results of each scenario when it is played.


Collecting
The hobby is widely considered even by collectors and enthusiasts to be very expensive. New players wishing to start playing should expect to spend upwards of $200 - $300 for a reasonably sized army (1000 to 2000 points worth of models), including costs for rulebooks and paints. Players must purchase units, sold individually in blister packs or in squads in boxed sets. A typical blister pack with 1-3 models will cost $9 - $25, with boxed sets varying widely ($20 - $100) depending on the contents.

In addition to the current line of units, Games Workshop makes available past model lines as a part of their "Classic" series. This is the only way to get certain factions (for example, Harlequins), which have been discontinued.


Modeling
Since the models are hand-painted and assembled by the player, players are often encouraged to design their own paint schemes as well as using the pre-designed ones displayed in the various books. They are also encouraged to further modify their figures and vehicles using parts from other kits and models (known as "bitz" to players), or scratch-made from plasticard, modeling putty, or whatever the modeler can scrounge up. These conversions are often entered into contests at sponsored tournaments and similar gaming events.

Terrain is an important part of play. Though Games Workshop makes terrain kits available, many hobbyists prefer to make their own elaborate set pieces. Common household items like soda cans, coffee cans, styrofoam packing pieces, and pill bottles can be transformed into ruined cathedrals, alien habitats, or the like with the addition of plasticard, a bit of putty, and a bit of skill.


Current state of play
As of May 2005, Warhammer 40K is in its fourth edition. The core rules are presented in a single large volume, with details for each army appearing in separate codices. As of May 2005, the Space Marines codex has been updated to fourth edition, as well as the Tyranid codex. Several other codices are due later in the year, including those of the Black Templar Space Marines and Eldar. In the meantime, there exist FAQs and errata for materials done under the previous iteration of the rules.

Background

Setting
The Warhammer 40,000 gameworld is most readily characterized as a gothic science-fantasy setting. The central and most popular elements of the Warhammer 40k universe are the Space Marines, futuristic versions of fantasy knights and the finest warriors of the Imperium of Mankind, a dystopian and degenerate galaxy-spanning civilization.

Since it originally was created as a sci-fi spinoff of the Warhammer Fantasy Battle game, the 40k gameworld contain many elements of the fantasy genre, for example the concept of magic and adapted versions of classic fantasy races. The eclectic mix of inspirational sources for the 40k universe include classic and contemporary sci-fi, horror and fantasy movies and television series and the works of renowned genre authors such as Isaac Asimov, Frank Herbert, H.P. Lovecraft, Michael Moorcock, J.R.R. Tolkien and Robert Heinlein (Heinlein's novel Starship Troopers inspired many aspects of the dystopian, militaristic universe of Warhammer 40K), medieval, baroque and surrealist art (especially H.R. Giger), popular depictions of historical settings, such as the World Wars, Victorian Britain, Imperial Rome, Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Therefore, there are countless anachronisms and juxtapositions in the Warhammer 40K setting.

The battle for survival takes place on two different planes of existence:

The Materium
The Immaterium (the Warp)

Timeline
Fabricatorgeneral's Timeline (http://www.geocities.com/fabricatorgeneral/general/40000timeline.html)
Criticalhit's Timeline (http://www.criticalhit.co.uk/cgi-bin/wh40ktl.cgi?all)

Galaxy Maps
Darkmillennia's Galaxy Map (http://www.darkmillennia.net/QuadrantMap_pages/GMap.htm)

Armies/Races/Species

The Forces of the Imperium
There are three main arms of the forces of the Imperium:

Imperial Guard
Imperial Navy
Space Marines (of which there are various chapters)
Additionally, the Emperor has at his disposal the tripartite forces of the Inquisition:

Alien Hunters (Ordo Xenos), including the Deathwatch Space Marine units, which are specially trained Kill Teams gathered from various chapters, who owe allegiance to both the Inquisition and their chapter.
Daemonhunters (Ordo Malleus), including the Grey Knights chapter of the Space Marines
Witch Hunters (Ordo Hereticus), including the Sisters of Battle

The Forces of Chaos
Ten thousand years ago, the Horus Heresy nearly tore the Imperium apart. Forces loyal to the dark gods of the Warp corrupted nearly half the Space Marine legions, and plunged the Imperium into a cataclysmic civil war. The Imperium defeated the traitors, but at great cost.

The Forces of Chaos still tear away at the Imperium. The sinister whispers of the dark gods turn many people away from the Emperor and their own people, and the remnants of the traitor Space Marine Legions still reside in the Eye of Terror, occasionally striking out




The Lost and the Damned
Chaos Space Marines

The Xenos
Mankind is not the only sentient race in the galaxy. Many other races vie for survival and dominance of the galaxy. To the Imperium, all of them are enemies to be destroyed.


The Eldar
The Eldar are an ancient race that has long since fallen into decline. They still wield advanced technology and great psychic power. Thematically, they are reminescent of Tolkien's elves, a vastly magical people set against the inevitability of their own demise. There are several different factions of the remaining race:

Craftworld Eldar
Eldar Exodites
Eldar Outcasts
Eldar Pirates
Harlequins
Dark Eldar

Other major races
Necrons
Orks
Tau
Tyranids
Abhumans

Minor Races/Sub-Races
Kroot
Demiurg
Nicassar
Necrontyr
Old Ones
Slann
Hrud
Squats (officially killed off)

Notable characters
The Emperor
Horus
Abaddon the Despoiler
Khârn the Betrayer
Cypher
Ahriman
Commander Farsight
Eldrad Ulthran (deceased)
The four Chaos Gods (Khorne, Slaanesh, Nurgle, Tzeentch)

Warhammer 40K spin-offs

Miniature based games
Other miniature-based games in the Warhammer 40K universe include:

Battlefleet Gothic - a spaceship combat game
Epic 40,000 - a much larger scale war simulation, with much smaller 6mm miniatures
Gorkamorka - Ork gang fighting based on a desert planet, with a focus on scavenging
Inquisitor - a smaller scale fight simulation, with relatively large 54mm models
Necromunda - gang fighting in a large underground slum
Space Crusade - a board game where Space Marines battle the forces of Chaos
Space Hulk - a board game where Space Marine Terminators fight Genestealers on an abandoned spaceship

Computer games
Several computer games have also been based on Warhammer 40K:

Warhammer 40,000: Chaos Gate
Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War
Warhammer 40,000: Fire Warrior
Warhammer 40,000: Rites of War
Final Liberation: Warhammer Epic 40,000
Space Hulk
Space Hulk: Vengeance of the Blood Angels
Apart from official computer game projects there have also been a number of mod developer teams inspired by the Warhammer 40K background. WH40K : Rival Species is a mod for Half-Life which uses the background of Warhammer 40K.

Warhammer 40,000(Winter Assault) due to be released end of 2005 as an expansion to Warhammer 40k Dawn of War with a new playable faction called the imperial guard.

Website Link: http://www.gamerankings.com/itemrankings/l...p?newsid=146267

The popular computer game Starcraft is thought by some to have been largely inspired by the Warhammer 40K universe.

Non-wargame products
Include books, comics and art albums, published by the Black Library Books include the Gaunt's Ghosts series and Eisenhorn trilogy by Dan Abnett, the Space Wolf series by William King and the Inquistion War trilogy by Ian Watson.

Source:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warhammer_40,000
y0zza
Please stop plagiarising articles from Wikipedia.

At least leave a link to the original article.
sound_of_pain
so do any of u play 40k cos i do n i was just wondering if any 1 have has same hobby as me hug.gif
Da_Devil
i collect and paint the figures but i don't exactly know how to play.
Recca168
i have a choas army... but they just sit there and look cool....
i don't have the patience to actually play the game tongue.gif

DoW is pretty fun though.
popo
Anyone into WARHAMMER game? Cross between model building and war game.
I need some input into whether to let the kids go into it.

a) cost?
cool.gif any bad influence/side effect? e.g. Dungeon and Dragon is pretty dangerous stuff which I would not let my kids play.
c) how to get start?
d) would the kids drop it in 3months kind of hobby.
Thanks in advance.
Inokuchi
ok if your a parent, trust me, the kid has to have a JOB, it cost ALOT.......alot.....alot....sleep.gif

im just a kid myself i guess, 19 years old. i taken up the warhammer hobby prob at age 13, man did it cost me alot of money, i spent over 3000 dollars on it within a 2 year period. luckily i used up my own money, but ya, its a really cool game where it captures their imaginations and wants to get into it more.

there shouldnt be any bad influence except massive killings(like any other online game that somewhat promotes killing) of whatever race they face. if you kid doesnt have the patience to do the glueing and painting.....then he'll drop it fast. it takes a while, this one model(hero type) took me 9 hours to paint with all the details i placed into it so if your kid doesnt have patience, he'll easily drop the hobby.

this tabletop game(depending if warhammer or warhammer 40k) has comptuer games and such also, Dawn of War, Warhammer MMORPG, as well as a Computer First person Shooter, etc. these games are only but a side attraction to keep their imaginations intact and keep playing.

its quite a friendly environment if your kid meets other people that plays this game, basically those who are into it arent really nerds or anything, their just regular people that have enough time to collect this hobby.

starting off playing this game is quite costly.....hmm rule book 70 dollars, codex 30 dollars, start up kit for your race 130-360 dollars or so. not to mention paint roughly 50+ dollars for paint, different size paint brushes to the very last detail. special glue and super glue from their shop 20 dollars or so. spray paint coating 20 dollars. carrying case for models 55 dollars, terrain ranges from 60 dollars+. ALL THIS is just to START off this hobby, you cant really launch off the ground on this hobby without this, start up army is fine for the time being to keep them busy but pretty soon if your kid gets into it, it gets severe....paying 60 dollars per tank and stuff. yep....very expensive, if you have the cash fro your kid then ya....but definately not for anyone younger than 13-14 because they will not understand the sophistication in the rules and how the tabletop game works. need to do alot of reading.

not really a 3 month hobby, if they really get hooked on it.....its gonan be expensive, they will spend alot of time in dark places under a lamp painting/glueing, thats for sure, check it out at http://www.games-workshop.com , the storyline, the details, the graphics, everything about this game inspires you to take it up and be apart of it, its really astonishing really, they made both the tabletop game look so cool, any sci-fi/medieval person would love to start collecting.

you can private message me for more details i guess, since i mainly hang out in the anime forums if im not playing computer games biggrin.gif
popo
Thanks. It is really helpful.

I shall message you privately with the boys detail and ask for advice how to help him start. or don't help him start depends on your advice.

We are in oz not us. So everything is at least 1.2 times the price you have mentioned.
Inokuchi
sure no problem, btw all those $$$ was in canadian dollars. u can ask any question about this game, although im not totally interested in it like i used to, i still follow up on their storylines and computer games, found a new passion atm but i can pretty much answer all the questions asked since i would have qualified to work for games-workshop happy.gif
popo
Thanks.
Oz price and Canadian price are about the same in general. I have lived in both countries.

He was asking to combine his birthday and christmas present togather to get into warhammer. I have asked him to get some info, price and what he wants to collect.

a) he want a space marine squad. (that means warhammer 40000 right? not war hammer fantasy)
cool.gif the glue, paint, tools.... is there any reason not to get it in model/craft shop.
c) what are the book set that he need?

as a absolute minimum.... what does he need?

is ebay a good source? or the real war hammer shop.

in Melbourne. It is sold exclusively through the war hammer chain store in expensive/good shopping centre.

any good suggestion on what and how to get him a reasonable starter set.

Thanks in advance.


ps. I think he has to think deep and hard. He can kiss his kingdom heart II, final fantasy 12, ps3 or wii all good bye. That is what I told him last night. Then he collapsed on the floor. I think that is funny.
RampageEX
Warhammer 40k is one of the best RTS game I've ever played. The very different of this game compare to others RTS are the fighting styles and some finishing moves.

The second expansion is coming soon; Warhammer 40k: Dark Crusade introducing 2 new race the Necron and Tau.
popo
QUOTE(RampageEX @ May 27 2006 9 16 AM) [snapback]2455931[/snapback]

Warhammer 40k is one of the best RTS game I've ever played. The very different of this game compare to others RTS are the fighting styles and some finishing moves.

The second expansion is coming soon; Warhammer 40k: Dark Crusade introducing 2 new race the Necron and Tau.

what is the relationship of this pc game with the board game and model kits thing?
how old is this game?

I am a ufo/xcom guy, try all of them disregarding the quality. (didn't try the flying one) but the one that I really enjoy is xcom 1 and xcom acopolapsy.

Would you recommend warhammer 40k, if you are xcom fan?
iRaven
Warhammer 40k: DoW and its expansion was very good. Almost the same implementation of heros like warcraft 3, but much more balance in my opinion. The first one came out 2 years ago, expansion came after shortly.

Heres a link for more info:
http://www.gamespot.com/pc/strategy/wh40kd...war/review.html
LessThanThreeYou
I brought DoW with extension Winter Assault.. Its quite fun playing this but you need to use loads of strategies. I like to spend 20 mins just building and capturing those point things. Then i can build tanks, dread noughts and my army.THen i do a full on attack wipin out enemy bases.
RampageEX
QUOTE(popo @ Jun 1 2006 12 26 PM) [snapback]2476496[/snapback]

what is the relationship of this pc game with the board game and model kits thing?
how old is this game?

I am a ufo/xcom guy, try all of them disregarding the quality. (didn't try the flying one) but the one that I really enjoy is xcom 1 and xcom acopolapsy.

Would you recommend warhammer 40k, if you are xcom fan?


I dont play xcom. I heard xcom: apocalypse was quite famous during the 1997's?

Warhammer was suppose to be a board game. But I think in 1997 they started creating pc games.

I see no difference between the pc game and the board game. Eg. the abilities and types of units are just as the same as in the pc game Warhammer 40k.


Recca168
DOW is a very awesome game biggrin.gif been a while since theres been a new RTS system. The only problem i had with it was that the unit caps weren't big enough. warhammer has always been about massive wars. But theres a total war mod that fixes that. Multiplies the unit cap by 4 biggrin.gif. theres also a tau and necron mod floating around if you want to give them a try. not completely balanced...(tau are completely cheap) but fun to test out.

The RTS is based a lot around the TT game. Never played xcom but i have a chaos army and i really hate the TT game. its too tedious for me to deal with. However the models do look real nice.
CptMe
I love DOW brilliant and i cant wait for the necron expansion laugh.gif if anyone wants a game one day add me Krytie (new acc.) and tell me your from the website.
Jihhuan
Brilliant game, unlike other RTS this doesn't feel like a repetive game because it gives a different form of it to attract my attention...can't wait till the next one comes out! infatuated.gif
popo
Hi
Things were going a bit slow... I didn't get the warhammer 40K starter kit till last weekend. The painting kit is $75. (for 6 bottles of acrylic paint, glue, cutter and some imitation grass stuff)
I just wonder if it is ok to go to normal hobby shop to get acrylic paint. Does it make any differences? Does it need to be special glue or must be plastic cement....
(standard hobby/craft shop acrylic paint is $3 per bottle)
Is there any good advice on what to get for him to do the painting and assembly?

The carrying case is $85 for a cheapy black plastic case with some high density foam.... Is it really worth the money? or any carrying case with packing foam is fine?

I don't quite get the kids logic.... He sort of think the $75 paint is worth it... How does real warhammer enthusiast think?...
Thanks in advance.
QUOTE(Inokuchi @ May 16 2006 2 45 PM) [snapback]2412604[/snapback]

ok if your a parent, trust me, the kid has to have a JOB, it cost ALOT.......alot.....alot....sleep.gif

im just a kid myself i guess, 19 years old. i taken up the warhammer hobby prob at age 13, man did it cost me alot of money, i spent over 3000 dollars on it within a 2 year period. luckily i used up my own money, but ya, its a really cool game where it captures their imaginations and wants to get into it more.

there shouldnt be any bad influence except massive killings(like any other online game that somewhat promotes killing) of whatever race they face. if you kid doesnt have the patience to do the glueing and painting.....then he'll drop it fast. it takes a while, this one model(hero type) took me 9 hours to paint with all the details i placed into it so if your kid doesnt have patience, he'll easily drop the hobby.

this tabletop game(depending if warhammer or warhammer 40k) has comptuer games and such also, Dawn of War, Warhammer MMORPG, as well as a Computer First person Shooter, etc. these games are only but a side attraction to keep their imaginations intact and keep playing.

its quite a friendly environment if your kid meets other people that plays this game, basically those who are into it arent really nerds or anything, their just regular people that have enough time to collect this hobby.

starting off playing this game is quite costly.....hmm rule book 70 dollars, codex 30 dollars, start up kit for your race 130-360 dollars or so. not to mention paint roughly 50+ dollars for paint, different size paint brushes to the very last detail. special glue and super glue from their shop 20 dollars or so. spray paint coating 20 dollars. carrying case for models 55 dollars, terrain ranges from 60 dollars+. ALL THIS is just to START off this hobby, you cant really launch off the ground on this hobby without this, start up army is fine for the time being to keep them busy but pretty soon if your kid gets into it, it gets severe....paying 60 dollars per tank and stuff. yep....very expensive, if you have the cash fro your kid then ya....but definately not for anyone younger than 13-14 because they will not understand the sophistication in the rules and how the tabletop game works. need to do alot of reading.

not really a 3 month hobby, if they really get hooked on it.....its gonan be expensive, they will spend alot of time in dark places under a lamp painting/glueing, thats for sure, check it out at http://www.games-workshop.com , the storyline, the details, the graphics, everything about this game inspires you to take it up and be apart of it, its really astonishing really, they made both the tabletop game look so cool, any sci-fi/medieval person would love to start collecting.

you can private message me for more details i guess, since i mainly hang out in the anime forums if im not playing computer games biggrin.gif

LessThanThreeYou
this stuff is FUN... but costs LOADS of money.. i spent over £700 on it in 8 months and after that i stopped... its a good way to learn because you need to think of tactics and all that to defeat the opponent.. but the rolling the dice part is just luck...

The PC game is also fun.. i think you should just buy that.. its called Dawn Of War.. MUCH CHEAPER..
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