Dreanaught (40K) question
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Genestealer cults still exist, they just don't have an army list.
Early era Orks were roughly human size. The really huge nobs and bosses came later. They were still built like strategically shaved gorillas though. A large number of Orks are still in the human size range, they just get bigger and stronger the more they fight. A Callidus isn't going to be able to pass as a Warboss, but would be able to pass as a comparative youngster.
Early era Orks were roughly human size. The really huge nobs and bosses came later. They were still built like strategically shaved gorillas though. A large number of Orks are still in the human size range, they just get bigger and stronger the more they fight. A Callidus isn't going to be able to pass as a Warboss, but would be able to pass as a comparative youngster.
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
I think it really depends on the Ork. Far as I know, the average height of your standard Ork is about that of a tall bloke, so around six feet tall or so - would be taller if they stood fully upright rather than hunched over - and nearly as broad across the shoulders. Of course, there are larger examples; per Gunheads, the Orks inhabiting the planet Golgotha are larger and stronger than the norm, and then there's the Dreadnought-sized warbosses, like Ghazgkhull Thraka, or Urzog Mag Kull (second-in-command of the horde that hit and nearly destroyed the Crimson Fists).[R_H] wrote:Why are they larger?Kojiro wrote:
Presumably similar implants could be made for an ork on a suitably sized human. Remember also this comes from an era when orks weren't the lumbering hulks they are now, but far smaller.
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Whiskey144: Sure you don't mean Nemesis, rather than Flight of the Eisenstein? As I recall, the Assassins didn't appear in Eisenstein...
I see no reason an Assassin or anybody else couldn't operate a Dreadnought, as observed it's mainly a matter of fitting them into a sarcophagus and then sticking said sarc' into the chassis.
The main issue is how they get the chassis in the first place, and how honestly useful it would be to them. Presumably they're optimized for Space Marine use, and I don't find it inconceivable that, for example, an Iron Snakes Dreadnought may operate with an Ithakan language interface rather than Gothic.
Speaking of which, do they in fact still manufacture Dreadnought chassis, or is it another 'lost tech' bullshit like the Terminator armours? Considering the case of the Arcadius ancestor, I imagine it's possible...
I see no reason an Assassin or anybody else couldn't operate a Dreadnought, as observed it's mainly a matter of fitting them into a sarcophagus and then sticking said sarc' into the chassis.
The main issue is how they get the chassis in the first place, and how honestly useful it would be to them. Presumably they're optimized for Space Marine use, and I don't find it inconceivable that, for example, an Iron Snakes Dreadnought may operate with an Ithakan language interface rather than Gothic.
Speaking of which, do they in fact still manufacture Dreadnought chassis, or is it another 'lost tech' bullshit like the Terminator armours? Considering the case of the Arcadius ancestor, I imagine it's possible...
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
As far as I'm aware, modern Dreadnought chassis and the modern marks of Terminator armour are well within the Imperium's capabilities to replicate. Which is hardly surprising; the rate at which those tend to be lost would be unsustainable if as is sometimes asserted they can't be reproduced.
(certainly, the Wolves don't seem to've been inconvenienced by the destruction of 2/3rds of the Dreadnoughts they had at the time during the Thousand Sons' attack on the Fang in M32)
(certainly, the Wolves don't seem to've been inconvenienced by the destruction of 2/3rds of the Dreadnoughts they had at the time during the Thousand Sons' attack on the Fang in M32)
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"Show me a general who has made no mistakes and you speak of a general who has seldom waged war." - Marshal Turenne, 1641
"Show me a general who has made no mistakes and you speak of a general who has seldom waged war." - Marshal Turenne, 1641
Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Well they damn well should. I loved those fat old 'stealers.Imperial Overlord wrote:Genestealer cults still exist, they just don't have an army list.
It's the 'really huge nobz and bosses' I dislike. It smacks of 'we don't know how to be creative so we'll make it bigger!' to me. GW had such and amazing IP and it's slowly being eroded into the lastest whizzbang codex of powah.Early era Orks were roughly human size. The really huge nobs and bosses came later. They were still built like strategically shaved gorillas though. A large number of Orks are still in the human size range, they just get bigger and stronger the more they fight. A Callidus isn't going to be able to pass as a Warboss, but would be able to pass as a comparative youngster.
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
I don't know; I think the way size increases as a function of combat experience and success in lording it over other orks, and authority within ork society increases as a function of size, is a very consistent part of the orks' style. They're supposed to be an exceedingly warlike and belligerent race, how else are they going to do it?
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Ah crap. I got the two mixed up; Nemesis is the novel I meant to be referring to, not Eisenstein.Elheru Aran wrote:Whiskey144: Sure you don't mean Nemesis, rather than Flight of the Eisenstein? As I recall, the Assassins didn't appear in Eisenstein...
Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
It's consistent with their current style yes. Now they're a bunch of psychically powered reality warping mushrooms yes. I know this isn't a recent change, it's just one I loathe particularly badly. The old Orks of 'Ere We Go and Waargh the Orks were better all round, in my opinion.Simon_Jester wrote:I don't know; I think the way size increases as a function of combat experience and success in lording it over other orks, and authority within ork society increases as a function of size, is a very consistent part of the orks' style. They're supposed to be an exceedingly warlike and belligerent race, how else are they going to do it?
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Ah, I'm sorry; I didn't get into the fluff until relatively recently. Could you expand on what you mean at greater length, for the benefit of the nongrognards in the audience?Kojiro wrote:It's consistent with their current style yes. Now they're a bunch of psychically powered reality warping mushrooms yes. I know this isn't a recent change, it's just one I loathe particularly badly. The old Orks of 'Ere We Go and Waargh the Orks were better all round, in my opinion.Simon_Jester wrote:I don't know; I think the way size increases as a function of combat experience and success in lording it over other orks, and authority within ork society increases as a function of size, is a very consistent part of the orks' style. They're supposed to be an exceedingly warlike and belligerent race, how else are they going to do it?
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Well, in lay mans terms (and if I recall correctly) the orks of the Rogue Trader days were not the genetically engineered super warrior race that they are today. Instead, they were more like rather brutish football hooligans built like rugby players who get drunk and go out to bash some heads in for lolz.Simon_Jester wrote:Ah, I'm sorry; I didn't get into the fluff until relatively recently. Could you expand on what you mean at greater length, for the benefit of the nongrognards in the audience?Kojiro wrote:It's consistent with their current style yes. Now they're a bunch of psychically powered reality warping mushrooms yes. I know this isn't a recent change, it's just one I loathe particularly badly. The old Orks of 'Ere We Go and Waargh the Orks were better all round, in my opinion.Simon_Jester wrote:I don't know; I think the way size increases as a function of combat experience and success in lording it over other orks, and authority within ork society increases as a function of size, is a very consistent part of the orks' style. They're supposed to be an exceedingly warlike and belligerent race, how else are they going to do it?
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
In and of itself, this is not incompatible with rule by biggest and most testosterone-poisoned ork.
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Actually, per the original "Ork trilogy" (Waaargh! The Orks, 'Ere We Go and Freebooterz), the Orks were "genetically engineered killing machines". The concept of the Brain Boyz was introduced here - basically, an ancient race created the Gretchin as the servant caste and the Orks as the warriors. Then, a galaxy-wide plague wiped out the fungus that was vital to their intelligence, and they devolved, their empire being taken over by the Orks. The devolved remnants of what once were the ruling Brain Boyz are now the Snotlings. As for "psychically powered reality warping mushrooms", again, that's all in the RT-era sourcebooks. The Orks have symbiotic algae and fungus in their skin - resulting in the leathery green hide. The details may have changed, but the idea was there almost from the start. The only thing added later on in 3rd edition was that Orks reproduce by sporing; in the RT books, Orks of a certain age go off into the wilderness to become feral and reproduce . The resultant offspring wander around in the wilderness for a while, forming primitive warbands, until discovered by a settlement and introduced to the ways of Orky "Kultur".
Oh, and one other obvious change is that Orks now look like extras from Mad Max, not ramshackle Nazis.
Oh, and one other obvious change is that Orks now look like extras from Mad Max, not ramshackle Nazis.
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Isn't there a Daemonhunter army Inquisitor who rides around in a rig that's pretty much a Dreadnaught with the sarcophagus replaced with a marble throne?
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Read Diary of a Space Marine. It will answer all your WH40k questions.
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
Yes, Inquisitor Karamazov.Ahriman238 wrote:Isn't there a Daemonhunter army Inquisitor who rides around in a rig that's pretty much a Dreadnaught with the sarcophagus replaced with a marble throne?
"So you want to live on a planet?"
"No. I think I'd find it a bit small and wierd."
"Aren't they dangerous? Don't they get hit by stuff?"
"No. I think I'd find it a bit small and wierd."
"Aren't they dangerous? Don't they get hit by stuff?"
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
There are a number of these; a Witch Hunter has one, as well, IIRC. The point of them is basically to go "look, your judge is here, now cower and tremble!". Protection is not as good as a proper Dreadnought, as they tend to use shields rather than armour. Could say the same about the Penitent Engines, too...Ahriman238 wrote:Isn't there a Daemonhunter army Inquisitor who rides around in a rig that's pretty much a Dreadnaught with the sarcophagus replaced with a marble throne?
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
And the new DreadKnight. At least a space marine is already wearing armor...There are a number of these; a Witch Hunter has one, as well, IIRC. The point of them is basically to go "look, your judge is here, now cower and tremble!". Protection is not as good as a proper Dreadnought, as they tend to use shields rather than armour. Could say the same about the Penitent Engines, too...
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Re: Dreanaught (40K) question
In the old red cover 40K Compendium for Rogue Trader you could build a 'piloted' dreadnought that had a cockpit that one sat in and ran the 'nought (PS- buy the pilot a rad suit!). If you paid for the upgrade to 'wired-in' it got better stats.