Deadshot wrote:The difference between the
VI, VIII and XII Legions is this.
The Space Wolves get ordered to destroy an entire system because it needs a good purging. Response: "Sure, that's what I'm paid for." Job done, and nothing more than a job to be done. They are like a sledgehammer, just a tool to smash the target. Once target is destroyed they go sit down and wait for the next task because it was just the job.
Night Lords overkill as a matter of point, to scare the survivors into behaving. "Oh, you think we're being nasty? Fine, we'll skin you with your own teeth, stfu." They are doing it for a purpose that they decide for themselves. They don't lose sleep over it but they actively try to massacre people.
World Eaters are more like a swarm of angry honey badgers thrown into the chicken coupe.
They are angry aggressive and attack anything on sight for no reason. They have no control or purpose, just kill for kill's sake. They are not actively trying to massacre systems, they just do.
Which World Eaters, though? They evolved with time.
The War Hounds pre-Angron don't fit that description. The post-Angron, Crusade-era
WE probably don't either, even with the Nails. Guilliman notes in that quote that even the
WE don't resort to Totality often. Post-Isstvan 3? Maybe. As Betrayer indicates, they're still functioning during the Shadow Crusade, although they're starting to lose their grip, and the Rubicon is crossed with Angron's ascension. By the time they're at the Palace...all bets are probably off at that point.
Clearly the
WE descend into madness (although even the
40K loonies can't be quite as loony as they're sometimes portrayed, or else they would have expired a long time ago). But I'd argue that their genetically-encoded
MO and reason-to-be wasn't about random carnage, but total war a la Sherman, taken to an extreme degree.
It's part of what makes Angron and Lorgar and their respective legions such an interesting odd couple. Angron and the
WE are of the mindset that you kill the enemy quick and move on to the next. Lorgar and the
WB would rather collect some captives, set a spell, and do terrible, terrible, things.
The Night of the Wolf is a fascinating encounter because both sides won and lost. As a gladiator, Angron viewed his beatdown of Russ as a confirmation of his rightness, and probably felt honor (which is hugely important to Angron) was served. An interesting point that's rarely pointed out is that Angron doesn't kill Russ, even though the book suggests he was in position to do so. Meanwhile the
WE gave the
SW a good bloody nose. And yet the
WE were similarly bloodied, and you get the sense that Angron knows he was ultimately outmanuevered.
Russ and the
SW proved their point by maneuvering to be in position to take down Angron, and gave as good as they got versus the
WE. Similarly, Russ chooses not to have the
SW take down Angron, although he probably would have lost his own life in the process. And yet the
WE weren't brought to heel, and I think Russ discovers that the point wasn't lost on Angron so much as it was never important to him. I also wonder a little if Russ leaves fully confident that he has the moral high ground. Does Russ wonder how he'd feel about the Emperor had he had been in Angron's shoes when the Emperor found him? That's the basis of the Khan's quote about caution with judging Angron.
Angron and Russ enter and leave that encounter with very different mindsets and world views, and I feel like the stalemate was an expression of how there would never be a meeting of the minds between them. Mutual annihilation was the only possible result.