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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 05:22:13
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Regular Dakkanaut
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Basically as in the title, i'm curious to see if a literary precedent exists
We've all heard of the single god-like OP space marine demolishing everyone, but i'm drawing a blank where the opposite happens, ie, its a SM 'having some difficulty' 1v1ing a Ork Slugga Boy or some such.
Ie, is there a book where the SM depicted are either;
1. mass-produced low-end thin-blooded astartes from some bio-vat somewhere and chucked into the fray (think of something like Bodt, but extra cheap)
or
2. non-overpowered Space Marines who whilst still being capable of 1v1 a Ork Slugga, aren't 1v1 a Chaos Terminator or Meganob
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 06:39:12
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Pestilent Plague Marine with Blight Grenade
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these are essentially what the Inductii were during the Heresy isn't it? Rushed through recruitment to put bodies on the battlefield quickly.
Same with the Daemonculaba, that was an attempt to fast-track the implantation/growth process
As far as modern, loyalist astartes? I don't think so, especially since the Primaris marines reinforced existing chapters with massive numbers of new marines
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 10:19:50
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Longtime Dakkanaut
London
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In some of the various books featuring Night Lords they disparage the last set of recruits from the home world. Regarded as pretty bad though still obviously have the astartes training and biology.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 10:46:25
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Preparing the Invasion of Terra
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That was to do with Nostramo sending the Legion the dregs and criminals of the world instead of its best and brightest like it was supposed to.
It was psychological not physical.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 11:41:14
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Ridin' on a Snotling Pump Wagon
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Kind of?
It’s a long road from Smelly Hooman, via Aspirant, to full Battle Brother.
First, you need to pass the tests, which of course vary Chapter to Chapter, but are always rigorous.
Next, once you’ve cut that mustard? There’s a lengthy conversion process. You can be the highest scoring recruit they’ve ever seen ever - but if your body can’t adapt to the implants at any stage? You’re probably gonna die.
But let’s say you survive into the Scout Company? It’s still possible some kind of skill deficiency will see you dead before you become a full Battle Brother.
However? The exacting nature of the recruitment process offers the Chapter insulation. If your mind isn’t suited to the various forms of indoctrination, or you’ve some kind of previously undiagnosed genetic flaw? That process weeds you out before the implantation process, helping to reduce the chance of a No-Hoper wasting precious Geneseed reserves.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 13:07:34
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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[MOD]
Villanous Scum
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The Beast series features loads of Marines dying like chumps to Orks, including the entirety of a first founding chapter, twice...
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On parle toujours mal quand on n'a rien à dire. |
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 13:31:01
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Preparing the Invasion of Terra
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Right but that's in the context of those Orks being much more dangerous on average and it's not like they're having controlled duels between single opponents.
The biggest war the Imperium had fought since the Heresy and the Orks are regularly using gravity weapons that toss Land Raiders like pebbles.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 13:38:24
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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[MOD]
Villanous Scum
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Some of them are, some of them are just normal orks and they manage to take down plenty of Marines 1v1 in melee. And plenty more die to conventional weaponry as well as to Ad Mech forces.
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On parle toujours mal quand on n'a rien à dire. |
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 13:49:48
Subject: Re:Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Storm Trooper with Maglight
Ottawa
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The Space Marines lowering their standards in order to increase their numbers would probably be beneficial for the Imperium, because let's face it, the #1 aspirant of a crop of 100 recruits is not that much better than the #2 or #3 aspirants (and hell, even the #20 aspirant is likely still in the same ballpark). Also, the limited size of a chapter means that an aspirant who otherwise meets the standards might be rejected solely because an even better aspirant took the one available spot.
But I think Space Marines are too constrained by tradition to significantly increase their numbers at the expense of individual ability. Even non-Codex-compliant chapters like the Black Templars, who can have as many brothers as they choose, still have their pride and would not want to be known as "the chapter with 'good enough' Marines".
Chaos Space Marines would have presented a good opportunity for GW to give us quantity-over-quality Marines, but I think I read somewhere that their recruitment process is even more unforgiving. Or perhaps that's just a Fabius Bile thing, and not all traitor chapters are beholden to him. In any case, this could be justified both by Chaos' social-darwinist nature and by their dearth of gene-seed to create new marines and/or equipment to outfit them.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 15:03:10
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Lone Wolf Sentinel Pilot
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This is 100% the lore of Inductii, which makes up the backbone of the later half of the new Horus Heresy lore. Every legion was churning out marines as fast as they could, with some taking bigger shortcuts than others. It's actually part of the explanation for why we'd often see modern M41 marines killing ten times their number of CSM as well as why the Imperial Fists are missing two organs.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 16:34:20
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Storm Trooper with Maglight
Ottawa
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jareddm wrote:It's actually part of the explanation for why we'd often see modern M41 marines killing ten times their number of CSM
So are the traitor chapters still making Inductii, then? Because I have trouble believing that very many of the Heresy-era Inductii would have survived 10,000 years of warfare.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 17:28:12
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Lone Wolf Sentinel Pilot
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-Guardsman- wrote:jareddm wrote:It's actually part of the explanation for why we'd often see modern M41 marines killing ten times their number of CSM
So are the traitor chapters still making Inductii, then? Because I have trouble believing that very many of the Heresy-era Inductii would have survived 10,000 years of warfare.
A combination of things, yes.
First, the time dilating effects of the Eye means for many CSM, it hasn't even been close for 10,000 years. A week, a year, a century or two. And for others it's been far more. Second, the legions at the Siege were massive compared to any 100k number you might see thrown around. Given the descriptions presented in the SoT books of endless masses of marines for each legion, I wouldn't be surprised if each traitor legion, especially the SoH, WE, and DG, were 200, 300, or even 400k legionnaires each considering the amount of mass recruitment all were doing in the lead-up to the Siege. Third, we see in "It Bleeds" that World Eater warbands are still producing plenty of shoddy marines with fake memories of being at the Siege, despite being less than a century old.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 19:50:33
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Heroic Senior Officer
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Helsreach is one novel where Marines get fairly constrained. One gets ambushed by an Ork or two with a special anti-PA weapon and would've died if others hadn't found him.
The main character and his retinue of 4 or 5 Marines were about to get overwhelmed and killed by a horde of about 30 Orks before some regular humans save them
One Marine gets injured to the point where his enhanced blood can't even save him.
Now, I don't really read Marine novels, but that one seems to be one where they're shown as rather low end, compared to other stuff.
But in general, if you want to see low end Marines, you have to have them feature as antagonists, then they're dangerous, but not the lame demi-gods that they're sometimes portrayed as.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 20:36:45
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Ultramarine Chaplain with Hate to Spare
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the-gentleman-ranker wrote:Basically as in the title, i'm curious to see if a literary precedent exists
We've all heard of the single god-like OP space marine demolishing everyone, but i'm drawing a blank where the opposite happens, ie, its a SM 'having some difficulty' 1v1ing a Ork Slugga Boy or some such.
Ie, is there a book where the SM depicted are either;
1. mass-produced low-end thin-blooded astartes from some bio-vat somewhere and chucked into the fray (think of something like Bodt, but extra cheap)
or
2. non-overpowered Space Marines who whilst still being capable of 1v1 a Ork Slugga, aren't 1v1 a Chaos Terminator or Meganob
The depictions of Space Marines in the Ian Watson novels are pretty modest in comparison to the typical bolter porn later publications serve up.
Sometimes you can find snippets of stuff in the codices of other armies too. In the 2nd end Ork codex there's part of a story where some Ork Goffs charge in to meet some attacking Space Wolves and come out the end with casualties but having won the fight. The fight happens "offscreen" and there's no real details, so you don't know the numbers of anything involved, but the Orks come out on top. In the Eldar codex a Chaos Marine gets minced by a Warp Spiders monofilament Web Spinner. It's a Chaos Marine rather than a loyalist, but they're still roughly equivalent.
Gert wrote:The biggest war the Imperium had fought since the Heresy and the Orks are regularly using gravity weapons that toss Land Raiders like pebbles.
That's a fairly common weapon for Orks in Epic. It's called a Lifta-Droppa or a Supa-Lifta Droppa depending on the size of it. The tank-mounted ones could lift Land Raiders and toss them onto other things, iirc. The Titan mounted ones could toss Superheavies and maybe Warhound Titans around.
In 2nd ed Orks had access to a Smasha Gun, which did the same thing to infantry targets.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 20:44:57
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Heroic Senior Officer
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Insectum7 wrote:the-gentleman-ranker wrote:Basically as in the title, i'm curious to see if a literary precedent exists
We've all heard of the single god-like OP space marine demolishing everyone, but i'm drawing a blank where the opposite happens, ie, its a SM 'having some difficulty' 1v1ing a Ork Slugga Boy or some such.
Ie, is there a book where the SM depicted are either;
1. mass-produced low-end thin-blooded astartes from some bio-vat somewhere and chucked into the fray (think of something like Bodt, but extra cheap)
or
2. non-overpowered Space Marines who whilst still being capable of 1v1 a Ork Slugga, aren't 1v1 a Chaos Terminator or Meganob
The depictions of Space Marines in the Ian Watson novels are pretty modest in comparison to the typical bolter porn later publications serve up.
Sometimes you can find snippets of stuff in the codices of other armies too. In the 2nd end Ork codex there's part of a story where some Ork Goffs charge in to meet some attacking Space Wolves and come out the end with casualties but having won the fight. The fight happens "offscreen" and there's no real details, so you don't know the numbers of anything involved, but the Orks come out on top. In the Eldar codex a Chaos Marine gets minced by a Warp Spiders monofilament Web Spinner. It's a Chaos Marine rather than a loyalist, but they're still roughly equivalent.
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That's a good point. The Scion Codex had a snipper about a battle where the AAA was so thick even Drop Pods assaults failed, and instead Scions dropped from orbit in small groups, with individual Scions being too small to be tracked. They open up a crack in the AAA defense and the Flesh Tearers can then land. There's also a few more battles where Scions come out on top of CSMs
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 20:49:08
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Preparing the Invasion of Terra
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Insectum7 wrote:That's a fairly common weapon for Orks in Epic. It's called a Lifta-Droppa or a Supa-Lifta Droppa depending on the size of it. The tank-mounted ones could lift Land Raiders and toss them onto other things, iirc. The Titan mounted ones could toss Superheavies and maybe Warhound Titans around.
In 2nd ed Orks had access to a Smasha Gun, which did the same thing to infantry targets.
I mean they were also throwing moons and asteroids around like pebbles, maybe that would have got the point across better?
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/29 21:56:08
Subject: Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Ultramarine Chaplain with Hate to Spare
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Well those are many many orders of magnitude larger than Land Raiders, so yes that's rather different.
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![[Post New]](/s/i/i.gif) 2025/04/30 11:37:32
Subject: Re:Is there a precedent regarding 'low-end' Space Marines?
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Stealthy Warhound Titan Princeps
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Marines dying quickly can be taken from the Dawn of War series (games and novels/comics) and from the old Necron World Engine blurb, where all the named Space Marine chapters pull through OK....
Except for the "who are these guys?" chapter of Astral Knights, who send in every member of their order except for a Dreadnought and 31 guys.
By the end of the battle, the Astral Knights have a Dreadnought and 31 guys.
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