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 BrookM wrote:
Kdash wrote:
I agree on the sequels – but we also have to remember that Outer Dark is set before the Badab War as well, so who knows how the storylines will progress!
I do like the epilogue of Outer Dark though. You just know that everything that would have been said in the unwritten conversation, would have been highly skewed and bias and will lead us to an attempted reckoning in one way or another.

I liked the nod to Death Warrant, but, I also think it was a bit of a wasted character opportunity. Someone with her knowledge and skills could have provided a lot more to a Chapter on the fringes of the Imperium.
It takes place before the Badab Wars?

Now that is something to look forward to!


a Badab War novel would be AWESOME. it shocks me come to think of it we've not gotten one

Opinions are not facts please don't confuse the two 
   
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BrianDavion wrote:
 BrookM wrote:
Kdash wrote:
I agree on the sequels – but we also have to remember that Outer Dark is set before the Badab War as well, so who knows how the storylines will progress!
I do like the epilogue of Outer Dark though. You just know that everything that would have been said in the unwritten conversation, would have been highly skewed and bias and will lead us to an attempted reckoning in one way or another.

I liked the nod to Death Warrant, but, I also think it was a bit of a wasted character opportunity. Someone with her knowledge and skills could have provided a lot more to a Chapter on the fringes of the Imperium.
It takes place before the Badab Wars?

Now that is something to look forward to!


a Badab War novel would be AWESOME. it shocks me come to think of it we've not gotten one


Yeah, I never realised it was set before Badab until the other week when it was mentioned on the 40k Lore reddit. I think a lot of people, including myself, took it as “new novel = current/just before the new Black Crusade setting”.
   
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We'll find out soon enough eh.

Oh that's interesting. I'd stopped keeping track of most BL stuff on the assumption that outside of a few things already firmly set in "the past" stuff with a 40K setting would either get no further sequels or would end up crammed to the gills with Primarchs and Primaris from now on, but if these are decent and set well before Rowboat Girlyman's Magical Mystical Resurrection Comeback Tour I'll give them a go.

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"Your society's broken, so who should we blame? Should we blame the rich, powerful people who caused it? No, lets blame the people with no power and no money and those immigrants who don't even have the vote. Yea, it must be their fething fault." - Iain M Banks
-----
"The language of modern British politics is meant to sound benign. But words do not mean what they seem to mean. 'Reform' actually means 'cut' or 'end'. 'Flexibility' really means 'exploit'. 'Prudence' really means 'don't invest'. And 'efficient'? That means whatever you want it to mean, usually 'cut'. All really mean 'keep wages low for the masses, taxes low for the rich, profits high for the corporations, and accept the decline in public services and amenities this will cause'." - Robin McAlpine from Common Weal 
   
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I've just finished Of Honour and Iron. It starts off fairly cookie cutter but improves as the book goes on. It's Ultramarines, so nothing off the wall, but it deals with veterans encountering Primaris for the first time.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
Oh, and Guilliman makes an appearance in it and it feels a bit weird having a primarch in a 40k book, but that's probably just on me.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2018/09/24 21:32:55


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phillv85 wrote:
I've just finished Of Honour and Iron. It starts off fairly cookie cutter but improves as the book goes on. It's Ultramarines, so nothing off the wall, but it deals with veterans encountering Primaris for the first time.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
Oh, and Guilliman makes an appearance in it and it feels a bit weird having a primarch in a 40k book, but that's probably just on me.


it'll take some getting used too yeah.

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The art used for the contest is brilliant as always by the way:



Started on Shroud of Night, not big on Chaos Space Marines, but seeing as this one is written by Andy "Imperial Knights are my bread and butter" Clark, I'm giving it a go.



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Have there been any good Tyranid books lately? I don't think I've seen any (other than a Cain novel) since the invention of the Tyrannofex.

Also, what are all the books that take place during the Gathering Storm/Indominus Crusade era? There's Dark Imperium, Cadia Stands, and...? How can I get caught up with the least amount of Nurgle?

   
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 BobtheInquisitor wrote:
Have there been any good Tyranid books lately? I don't think I've seen any (other than a Cain novel) since the invention of the Tyrannofex.

Also, what are all the books that take place during the Gathering Storm/Indominus Crusade era? There's Dark Imperium, Cadia Stands, and...? How can I get caught up with the least amount of Nurgle?


The Emperors Legion is set in the Gathering Storm time and is an excellent read.
   
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Shroud of Night takes place during that period and is mainly told from a Chaos perspective, though the Imperials are also involved. It features the Alpha Legion, Emperor's Children and World Eaters.



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Gathering the Informations.

 BobtheInquisitor wrote:
Have there been any good Tyranid books lately? I don't think I've seen any (other than a Cain novel) since the invention of the Tyrannofex.

Also, what are all the books that take place during the Gathering Storm/Indominus Crusade era? There's Dark Imperium, Cadia Stands, and...? How can I get caught up with the least amount of Nurgle?

There's a sequel on the way to "Cadia Stands" called "Cadian Honor".

There's also a short story tied in to it, "Battle for Markgraaf Hive", but...

Spoiler:
there's Nurgle in it. Interestingly enough there's things resembling the Nightmare Hulks and the grubs in there.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2018/09/26 20:32:19


 
   
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OH. MY. DAYS.

https://www.games-workshop.com/en-NL/Print-on-Demand-Collection-2018



Available in English only.

Available for one month only!

With the glorious return of Inferno! as a paperback short story anthology, we're reprinting classic issues of the original Inferno! for you to collect. Each issue will be a facsimile of the original magazine, available to print on demand for one month only – and this fantastic one-click collection will get you the first five issues!

READ IT BECAUSE
It's a window on the past, looking at the very first publications from Black Library – the genesis for more than twenty years of amazing stories from the worlds of Warhammer. This is, very literally, where it all began – and if you weren't there at the time, this is your chance to see it.

DESCRIPTION
Inferno! magazine was the very first publication from Black Library, way back in the wild days of 1997. A bi-monthly magazine gathering together short stories, comics, art and interesting features, it delved into the worlds of Warhammer in a way that codexes and rulebooks couldn't – and acted as a launching point for new writers and characters who soon found their way into novels (and even games!). These first five issues include no fewer than 20 short stories, loads of comics and much more besides – as well as the Black Library debuts of Dan Abnett, Gav Thorpe and Jonathan Green. In these pages you will find the first adventure of Gaunt's Ghosts, Lieutenant Kage's initial meeting with the terrifying Colonel Schaeffer, the start of the infamous Blood Angels comic Bloodquest and loads more adrenaline-fuelled fiction – it's a window on the past and one you won't want to miss!

Includes stories, comics, art and features by Dan Abnett, John Blanche, Mark Brendan, Ben Chessell, Simon Coleby, Simon Davis, Wayne England, Mark Gibbons, Jonathan Green, Alex Hammond, Simon Harrison, John Hincklenton, Kev Hopgood, Ralph Horsley, Mark Irwin, Andy Jones, Bill Kaplan, William King, Karl Kopinski, Tom Lauten, Logan Lubera, Colin MacNeil, Percy Melbye, Andras Millward, Dan Nekrosis, Ian Pickstock, Chris Pramas, David Pugh, Jeff Rebner, Gordon Rennie, Geoff Taylor, Gav Thorpe, Kev Walker, James Wallis, Jeff Waye, John Wigley & Craig Yeung.

CONTENTS
Classic Inferno! Issue 1
Classic Inferno! Issue 2
Classic Inferno! Issue 3
Classic Inferno! Issue 4
Classic Inferno! Issue 5



Automatically Appended Next Post:
Also!

https://www.games-workshop.com/en-NL/Inferno-1-eng-2018



Tales from the Worlds of Warhammer

Inferno! Volume 1 showcases some of the best new fiction from across Games Workshop's many universes; from the grim darkness of the 41st Millennium, to the brutal underhive of Necromunda, through to the sprawling realms of the Age of Sigmar and the ancient lands of the Warhammer Chronicles.

READ IT BECAUSE
Inferno! is back! And it's packed full of tales from across all the worlds of Warhammer, including some by familiar faces, and loads by newcomers whose unique takes on the universes we love are sure to thrill you.

DESCRIPTION
The premiere volume of this new anthology series brings you new short fiction from the worlds of Warhammer. Penned by debut and current Black Library authors, its tales range from the back streets of the world-that was to a shrouded inn in the Mortal Realms, while in the brutal galaxy of the Dark Imperium, the Ultramarines and others deliver the Emperor's fury to their many foes, and in the depths of Necromunda's underhive, gangers clash in brutal combat.

CONTENTS
The Unsung War by David Annandale
No Hero by Peter McLean
The Path to Glory by Evan Dicken
A Common Ground by Mike Brooks
The Emperor's Wrath by Steven B Fischer
Waking the Dragon by Josh Reynolds
The Enemy of My Enemy by Nate Crowley
How Vido Learned the Trick by Josh Reynolds
The Firstborn Daughter by Filip Wiltgren
Mercy by Danie Ware
At the Sign of the Brazen Claw by Guy Haley

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2018/09/29 09:12:12




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I've just ordered the Inferno stuff. GW is costing me a fortune recently. I've just been sat on Element games with £172 of pre orders in my basket and had to just be reasonable and say no to myself.

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The reprints on their own are decently priced at €7,- a mag at least. It's just that their fast shipping option (Royal Mail abroad is a horrible thing to inflict on others) that's always painful.

Also chucked in the new version of Inferno!, it'll be interesting to see how this will do, though at €12,50 per book, not a bad deal in my humble opinion.

Wasn't going to spend anything myself and save up money for the 20th of October, but this is something I could not pass up on. I do hope they'll do more print runs of other issues later down the road.



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So for someone who never read inferno what is it like beyond the cover? GW pages on the store oddly don't have any pictures of the internal content of the books (which is a shame). Are we talking full colour glossy great artwork (that doesn't have half of it lost to vanishing into the middle of two pages where the edges meet the spine).

The short stories I assume are mostly collected in latter BL collections on the store, but the comics and artwork and lore bits I assume not

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A selection of short stories, short comic (and some which are serialised, such as Obvious Tactics! which features a squad of Blood Angels Space Marines as part of an invasion of a Chaos-held planet - this issue is a single page, but other issues are a little longer). There's also illustrations, maps, cutaway diagrams, odd things like a transcript of an Eversor Assassin release order (single page), that sort of thing.

Bloodquest, Gaunt's Ghosts, the Last Chancers and Ciaphas Cain all began in Inferno, as well as a few others, I'm sure. Some of the stories will have been collected later, but probably not all of them.
   
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Word of warning: the cover almost never has anything to do with the actual contents! This was addressed in an editorial pretty early on.

But yeah, it was an anthology magazine with the odd comic (some bad, some good) or bits of background thrown in, like maps, technical drawings of vehicles or what have you. Contents are always pretty solid, at least four short stories per issue, two fantasy, two sci-fi, plus some extra stuff thrown in there alongside the classic ads and whatnot.

And yes, a lot of stuff got its start in Inferno! before becoming proper novels.

Obvious Tactics! is still utterly horrible though. Thankfully we later got Deff Skwadron and Wolf Pack (Battlefleet Gothic) to make up for this.



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 BrookM wrote:
Kdash wrote:
I agree on the sequels – but we also have to remember that Outer Dark is set before the Badab War as well, so who knows how the storylines will progress!
I do like the epilogue of Outer Dark though. You just know that everything that would have been said in the unwritten conversation, would have been highly skewed and bias and will lead us to an attempted reckoning in one way or another.

I liked the nod to Death Warrant, but, I also think it was a bit of a wasted character opportunity. Someone with her knowledge and skills could have provided a lot more to a Chapter on the fringes of the Imperium.
It takes place before the Badab Wars?

Now that is something to look forward to!
It's a minor detail at the end but
Spoiler:
the Inquisitor who interrogates Rannik is the same one who was nominally in charge of the Imperium's forces during the Badab War. Robbie himself confirmed it on his tumblr.







Definitely a dangling plot hook....

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Yes! Yes! Yes!



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We'll find out soon enough eh.

Are they going to put out a synopsis for the stories in the new version, or will we have to wait until a canary buys one and reviews it?

I need to acquire plastic Skavenslaves, can you help?
I have a blog now, evidently. Featuring the Alternative Mordheim Model Megalist.

"Your society's broken, so who should we blame? Should we blame the rich, powerful people who caused it? No, lets blame the people with no power and no money and those immigrants who don't even have the vote. Yea, it must be their fething fault." - Iain M Banks
-----
"The language of modern British politics is meant to sound benign. But words do not mean what they seem to mean. 'Reform' actually means 'cut' or 'end'. 'Flexibility' really means 'exploit'. 'Prudence' really means 'don't invest'. And 'efficient'? That means whatever you want it to mean, usually 'cut'. All really mean 'keep wages low for the masses, taxes low for the rich, profits high for the corporations, and accept the decline in public services and amenities this will cause'." - Robin McAlpine from Common Weal 
   
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I'll have mine in about a month or so, but I'm sure someone will give us a rundown / ratio of stories in the first issue. At least one 40K story should be part of a larger novel that gets told over the course of the run, but the rest should be an even mix of 40K, Necromunda, Age of Sigmar and Warhammer Legacy.

Josh Reynolds is on there twice, so we can probably (hopefully!) expect at least one story to tie into the Eight Lamentations and maybe the other Lukas the Trickster or Fabius Bile.

Plenty of other names that don't ring any bells though, so good to see this once more being a platform for aspiring Black Library authors to get their name out and create their own slices of the IP.



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We'll find out soon enough eh.

 BrookM wrote:
I'll have mine in about a month or so, but I'm sure someone will give us a rundown / ratio of stories in the first issue. At least one 40K story should be part of a larger novel that gets told over the course of the run, but the rest should be an even mix of 40K, Necromunda, Age of Sigmar and Warhammer Legacy.

Josh Reynolds is on there twice, so we can probably (hopefully!) expect at least one story to tie into the Eight Lamentations and maybe the other Lukas the Trickster or Fabius Bile.

Plenty of other names that don't ring any bells though, so good to see this once more being a platform for aspiring Black Library authors to get their name out and create their own slices of the IP.


Aye no doubt it's a good thing in general, but since I'm firmly in Crusty Old Grog mode these days and only want stories from Warhammer Chronicles, 30K, and 40K stuff that's either pre-Gathering Storm, or which is so isolated from the "main plot" that it might as well be, whether any given "issue" of nuInferno appeals will be down to how much of it is "waste" for me coming from that perspective.

I need to acquire plastic Skavenslaves, can you help?
I have a blog now, evidently. Featuring the Alternative Mordheim Model Megalist.

"Your society's broken, so who should we blame? Should we blame the rich, powerful people who caused it? No, lets blame the people with no power and no money and those immigrants who don't even have the vote. Yea, it must be their fething fault." - Iain M Banks
-----
"The language of modern British politics is meant to sound benign. But words do not mean what they seem to mean. 'Reform' actually means 'cut' or 'end'. 'Flexibility' really means 'exploit'. 'Prudence' really means 'don't invest'. And 'efficient'? That means whatever you want it to mean, usually 'cut'. All really mean 'keep wages low for the masses, taxes low for the rich, profits high for the corporations, and accept the decline in public services and amenities this will cause'." - Robin McAlpine from Common Weal 
   
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Holy Terra

Anyone looking forward to the Dark Imperium sequel, "Plague War" coming on the 6th of October?

I think the Guy Haley books - Dark Imperium and Devastation of Baal have really helped to establish the post Great Rift setting.

-~Ishagu~- 
   
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 Ishagu wrote:
Anyone looking forward to the Dark Imperium sequel, "Plague War" coming on the 6th of October?

I think the Guy Haley books - Dark Imperium and Devastation of Baal have really helped to establish the post Great Rift setting.


I'm counting the days as it where, Guy Haley has rapidly become a favorite of mine

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Armpit of NY

BrianDavion wrote:
 Ishagu wrote:
Anyone looking forward to the Dark Imperium sequel, "Plague War" coming on the 6th of October?

I think the Guy Haley books - Dark Imperium and Devastation of Baal have really helped to establish the post Great Rift setting.


I'm counting the days as it where, Guy Haley has rapidly become a favorite of mine


I'll be looking forward to it as well. Haley's portrayal of Guilliman in Dark Imperium was pretty striking. It left the impression of a very lonely man, who has had to shoulder the ultimate burden of being responsible for all humanity. But he has no peers who he can freely discuss anything with, and has to face that responsibility alone. The Emperor managed it, but he was a different level of being, and had people like Malcador around him.
   
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 totalfailure wrote:
BrianDavion wrote:
 Ishagu wrote:
Anyone looking forward to the Dark Imperium sequel, "Plague War" coming on the 6th of October?

I think the Guy Haley books - Dark Imperium and Devastation of Baal have really helped to establish the post Great Rift setting.


I'm counting the days as it where, Guy Haley has rapidly become a favorite of mine


I'll be looking forward to it as well. Haley's portrayal of Guilliman in Dark Imperium was pretty striking. It left the impression of a very lonely man, who has had to shoulder the ultimate burden of being responsible for all humanity. But he has no peers who he can freely discuss anything with, and has to face that responsibility alone. The Emperor managed it, but he was a different level of being, and had people like Malcador around him.


yeah agreed. on one hand bringing back other primarchs is inevitable I think but at the samne time I hope they don't rush it simnply because the "Gulliman returned" story is sooo gooood

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 totalfailure wrote:
BrianDavion wrote:
 Ishagu wrote:
Anyone looking forward to the Dark Imperium sequel, "Plague War" coming on the 6th of October?

I think the Guy Haley books - Dark Imperium and Devastation of Baal have really helped to establish the post Great Rift setting.


I'm counting the days as it where, Guy Haley has rapidly become a favorite of mine


I'll be looking forward to it as well. Haley's portrayal of Guilliman in Dark Imperium was pretty striking. It left the impression of a very lonely man, who has had to shoulder the ultimate burden of being responsible for all humanity. But he has no peers who he can freely discuss anything with, and has to face that responsibility alone. The Emperor managed it, but he was a different level of being, and had people like Malcador around him.


Guilliman is also having to keep up appearances. After his audience with the Emperor, Guilliman has realized the Emperor never truly loved him as a son, and instead just treated him (and still does) as a tool. He also has realized the Emperor loves no one and nothing, except maybe the abstract ideal of humanity, yet Guilliman still has to keep up morale in his followers by lying that the Emperor loves all of them.

I am really hoping some Primarchs, like Sanguinius, stay dead. It is no sacrifice if he comes back. Unfortunately I am also aware that some players will kick up a fuss feeling their favorite chapter is left out of the big Primarch homecoming.

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2018/09/30 00:35:57


 
   
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Holy Terra

Yeah, Guy Haley has really elevated himself and is the one working on arguably the most important stories.

Has anyone read Blood of Iax? I think it was released only recently...

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Going by this article here we at least know that The Unsung War by David Annandale is a 40K story and that both stories by Josh Reynolds, Waking the Dragon and How Vido Learned the Trick are Warhammer Legacy.

Also, this blurb,

Each time a new volume of Inferno! is released, you’ll be able to pick up more classic issues, expanding your collection. Order your copies now.


pleases me to no end. It'll be fun to collect these over time, good show Black Library!

They released 46 issues, so if all goes well, nine batches of five issues (final batch six issues) total to collect.



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https://www.trackofwords.com/2018/09/29/the-return-of-inferno-to-black-library/


To celebrate the launch of Inferno! Volume 1, I spoke to all ten authors to gather a little bit of information about what you can expect in these eleven stories, and what it means to each of them to have stories included in the brand new Inferno! Read on to hear from each of the authors.

The Unsung War by David Annandale
The collection opens with a 40k story from a well-established Black Library author, set very much in the ‘now’ of the setting. Here’s David to tell you a little bit about it.

David: The Primaris Space Marines are almost literally titans of war, but they too can be overwhelmed. This is a tale of two Ultramarines Intercessors who must find a way to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. Trapped on a ship with two enemy forces aboard, they and a lone human survivor are the only ones who can prevent a world’s doom.

I missed the original incarnation of Inferno!, but I’ve long been aware of its importance. I think it’s wonderful that it has a new form. It’s a terrific showcase for the range of stories Black Library can tell, and for the range of voices, old and new, telling those stories. It feels to me like a vital piece of Black Library’s history has returned to become a vital part of its future, and it means a lot to have chance to be part of that narrative.

No Hero by Peter McLean
Next up is an Imperial Guard story from Peter McLean, his third Black Library story after Baphomet by Night and Lightning Run, and very much in the same dark vein as those two tales.

Peter: No Hero is a story of heroism, pure and simple, and of the great and selfless deeds that go unsung and forgotten in every war. It’s a tale of youthful innocence and sacrifice, in a setting inspired by the Vietnam War. It’s not a happy tale but this is 40K after all, and in war there are very few happy stories. I think it still has something uplifting to it though, something about faith and duty, loyalty and sacrifice.

I remember being aware of Inferno!, but I never owned any copies. Back in 1997 when it first came out I was 25 years old and newly married, and wargaming and RPG-ing had given way to home-making and…other things. I grew up in the 80s on White Dwarf and Citadel Miniatures, as they were called back then, though, and I was still keeping half a wistful eye on the hobby scene but I just didn’t have the time or the money to devote to it back then. Looking back on it now, though, I seriously can’t believe I’m in Inferno! – how cool is that!

The Path to Glory by Evan Dicken
Evan’s debut Black Library story, set in the days before the Age of Sigmar itself, this is the first time it’s been available in print.

Evan: The Path to Glory is sort of my farewell to the Warhammer world-that-was. I’m a big fan of Age of Sigmar, but I grew up in the Old World, so it was really cool to have the chance to explore characters seeing the world as they know it torn apart by Chaos. The narrative follows a soldier, a wizard, and a young noble as they try to preserve the last of their failing empire. It deals with the choices and compromises they have to make when faced with insurmountable odds.

The story is set during the Red Century, when Chaos forces sweep over the Mortal Realms forcing Sigmar to seal the Realmgates. While doing research in the Battletomes and various lore books, I kept coming across references to ‘The Lantic Empire’ a massive, multi-Realm spanning empire that stood as a bulwark against Chaos until it was betrayed and brought down. It seemed the perfect setting for a desperate tale about good intentions leading to arguably bad ends.

I remember that day when I walked into my local hobby store and found the first copy of Inferno! on the shelves next to the gaming books. It was my first brush with Warhammer fiction, and I never looked back. My brothers and I read almost every issue, discussing the stories’ various merits as well as other, less-serious, qualities. They may have been ridiculous arguments, but we argued with the earnestness of Redemptionist deacons debating the Imperial Creed. For instance, during a heated dispute about the various merits of elven archers versus orc boys, I ran a stop sign and got into a bad car accident.

Honestly, I can’t tell you how much it means to me to see my work appear in Inferno!‘s modern incarnation. I’ve been writing fiction for well over a decade, with some small degree of success, but never in my wildest dreams did I imagine I’d be writing for Warhammer, let alone have one of my stories appear in the same table of contents as Josh Reynolds, or Guy Haley, or David Annandale. I can’t tell you how many hours I’ve delightfully wiled away with their novels and short stories.

It’s been an amazing and surreal experience. I can’t really convey how grateful I am, both to the editors and staff at Black Library, and to all the readers of Warhammer fiction.

A Common Ground by Mike Brooks
Mike Brooks pays a visit to the underhive for his third Black Library story, adding a little welcome variety to a collection that’s mostly focused on the core Games Workshop settings.

Mike: It’s a Necromunda tale, told (mainly) from the point of view of Jax, a Goliath who’s making a living as a pit fighter and is offered a compelling deal by a mysterious stranger. It actually deals with themes of familial bonds and economic inequality…and violence, of course.

I still have a bunch of the original magazines! I tried to get stories into Inferno! when I was sixteen or so, but to no avail. I wasn’t going to pass up the opportunity to get a story into the first edition of the relaunch! I can now tick something off my list of achievements that I thought was long gone.

The Emperor’s Wrath by Steven B. Fischer
The first of three Black Library debuts in the collection, this introduces us to Steven’s writing with a 40k story from a different angle to usual.

Steven: The Emperor’s Wrath is a story about pragmatism and change. One of my favorite things about 40k, and about grimdark speculative fiction in general, is the way it recognizes the fact that the universe isn’t black and white, and that morality can only be judged by comparison. I wanted this story to reflect that theme and to show how even deep-held beliefs can crumble in the face of new information. So often, in fiction and the real world, we fight most bitterly with those who are most similar to us, and it often takes an external threat for us to recognize what we have in common and put differences aside to achieve a common goal.

Also guns and monsters. The story is about guns and monsters, too.

I was five when Inferno! first came out, and only twelve when it was discontinued, so unfortunately no memories of it for me. I first heard about Warhammer when I was in college, but didn’t start getting into the 40k universe until a little over a year ago. So I’m certainly new to the scene here, but I’m incredibly excited to have my first 40k story in Inferno!’s re-inaugural issue. Working with Black Library has been nothing but fantastic, and I find myself more hooked by 40K with every novel and short that I read. It’s a huge honor to have my name on the issue next to a whole host of authors I really respect, and I hope the readers decide it deserves to be there!

Waking the Dragon and How Vido Learned the Trick by Josh Reynolds
The ever-prolific Josh Reynolds has two stories in the collection, both harking back to an earlier age of Warhammer. Nostalgia abounds…

Josh: Both are Warhammer Fantasy stories, featuring popular characters. Waking the Dragon was meant to be a lead-in to a Warhammer Heroes novel [featuring Heinrich Kemmler and Krell] that never materialised, due to the End Times, while How Vido Learned the Trick is one of several Zavant Konniger short stories I wrote, as a sort of try out for reviving that series. Of the two, I’m more disappointed I never got to write a proper Zavant novel.

I had the first handful of issues of Inferno! and read them to pieces. As far as having stories in the modern version, I hope that it lives up to the impact of the original series. I love the idea of Inferno!, and would like to see it continue on a bit longer, this time around.

The Enemy of My Enemy by Nate Crowley
The second of three Black Library debuts, file this 40k story under unexpected but strangely brilliant.

Nate: The Enemy of My Enemy addresses a theoretical question that has come up time and time again over the years: would Imperial troops ever fight side by side with orks? It got me thinking: what sort of Imperial commander would even consider that situation – and what kind of ork? How bad would things have to get before that even seemed like a sane option? And how the hell would both sides start to negotiate?

The story gave me a chance to really explore how humans and orks might interact, not necessarily in a *friendly* way, but in a situation other than a frantic, merciless fight to the death. It also looks at how Imperial commanders are trained to think of their enemies, and where that might have its shortcomings….

Crikey, do I ever remember Inferno!. It came out when I was 12, right as I was getting massively into 40k for the first time. That was the summer where my hands were permanently covered in superglue, and my room was covered in splotches of red and gold from my disastrous attempts to paint metal space marines.

Honestly, the 40k stories I was reading in that era really shaped my taste for SF, and it inspired me to write tonnes of rubbish short fiction on our family PC. Being asked to contribute to that universe – and in a title with such great memories attached to it – has been a proper highlight of my career. And now, if I ever get into an argument with someone over whether orks can ally with Guard, I can look them in the eye and say, with commissarial authority, that they bloody well can.

The Firstborn Daughter by Filip Westgren
A Vostroyan Firstborn story (don’t see many of those) that provides the third and final Black Library debut in the collection.

Filip: It’s a coming of age story with guns. Lots and lots of guns. Also, swords and pistols. And a case of melta bombs. Basically, since I got to write it, it’s the type of 40k story I’d have liked to read

I go waaay back with 40k. As in Rogue Trader way back, when orks were spindly-armed gits and Space Marines had snouts like the Slann (OK, slight exaggeration.) By the time the first Inferno! was in its heyday, I was embroiled in real life, with studies, work, and commitments. So I didn’t have as close a relationship to it as some of my gaming buddies.

In fact, I never dreamed I’d be allowed to write for Inferno! and the Black Library. I mean, this is the place with people like Gav Thorpe, Andy Hoare, and David Ferring (whose Konrad trilogy got me into grimdark fantasy in the first place.) So being here, I’m both honored and very lucky.

Mercy by Danie Ware
Danie’s first Black Library story, in print at last after its original e-short release, this is a strong showing for the Sisters of Battle.

Danie: Mercy gave me the chance to have fun – to take out the Sisters and do their ‘Nuns With Guns’ joke justice. Their worship of the Emperor is untouchable (we know that), but Mercy takes the safety catch off and lets them cut loose. Nuns they may be, but they’re also soldiers, and they’re as brutal, as highly trained, and as efficient as any of their male counterparts… though they might be smaller than some!

Inferno! was was always floating about, loitering at the outskirts of your youthful gaming – something that we’d pick up and read almost gleefully, like we’d discovered something we shouldn’t. It was packed with fabulous fiction, artwork, games…we were forever having ideas about the the next project and what we should do (and forever nicking them to put in other projects, but we don’t talk about that bit). Since moving to London twenty years ago, I’ve watched as many of my youthful dreams have solidified into (slightly surreal) fact – where I work, my published fiction – but this stuff still is still magic, and I hope it always will be.

I often stop and wonder what my twenty-something self would have thought…

At the Sign of the Brazen Claw by Guy Haley
The collection concludes with this story from the safe hands of Guy Haley, kicking off a new chapter of the story started in The Autumn Prince and The Sands of Grief.

Guy: It’s part of my ongoing, linked series of Prince Maesa stories, an Age of Sigmar-set saga about an exiled Aelf Wanderer trying to bring his dead love back to life. The Sign of the Brazen Claw sees him stuck in an inn in the middle of a raging storm waiting for a Kharadron packet ship. To pass the time, the travellers within relate tales to one another from all over the Realms.

Yes I do remember Inferno!, because I am well into middle age now! It’s cool to have a story in there, but even better to see so many new writers getting their chances to play in the marvellous worlds of Warhammer.




The poor man really has a stake in the country. The rich man hasn't; he can go away to New Guinea in a yacht. The poor have sometimes objected to being governed badly; the rich have always objected to being governed at all
We love our superheroes because they refuse to give up on us. We can analyze them out of existence, kill them, ban them, mock them, and still they return, patiently reminding us of who we are and what we wish we could be.
"the play's the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king,
 
   
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Decrepit Dakkanaut






Cozy cockpit of an Archer ARC-5S

Many thanks for sharing!

So, in short..

The Unsung War by David Annandale - 40K (Ultramarines)
No Hero by Peter McLean - 40K (Imperial Guard)
The Path to Glory by Evan Dicken - Age of Sigmar (Empire)
A Common Ground by Mike Brooks - Necromunda (Goliath / Pit fighters)
The Emperor's Wrath by Steven B Fischer - 40K (???)
Waking the Dragon by Josh Reynolds - Warhammer Legacy (Heinrich Kemmler & Krell)
The Enemy of My Enemy by Nate Crowley - 40K (Imperial & Orks)
How Vido Learned the Trick by Josh Reynolds - Warhammer Legacy (Zavant!)
The Firstborn Daughter by Filip Wiltgren - 40K (Vostroyans)
Mercy by Danie Ware - 40K (Sisters of Battle)
At the Sign of the Brazen Claw by Guy Haley - Age of Sigmar (Aelf)



Fatum Iustum Stultorum



Fiat justitia ruat caelum

 
   
 
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