![]() ![]() An entirely new range of Space Marines that would replace old models were coming, Vehicles, Monsters and Infantry were now all the same, everyone could wound everyone. Rumours started flying around, templates were getting removed. Another source of hysteria was the release of Age of Sigmar only 2 years earlier which replaced Warhammer Fantasy with a totally different game, removed great deals of models, and at the time of release was a very bland game with a lot of problems, so people started drawing their own conclusions that 8th wouldn’t be any different. This was understandable of course, as I pointed out last time, 7th edition alone saw 50 books, or sources of rules, getting released, and hearing all that becoming unusable was not something people were expecting. ![]() 8th Edition (2017 onward)Ĩth edition was a big shock to the player base as majority had not experienced the 2nd to 3rd shift and the announcement that all the books, supplements, campaigns books and WD updates were now going to be invalidated did not sit well with most. Whatever the case may be, 8th Edition differed mechanically from 7th in a big way, however the philosophy of the design team didn’t change. This edition saw a major shake up to the game, what could be argued to be even bigger than the shift from 2nd to 3rd edition. Welcome to the final article in the series, now we get to the latest edition of 40k. Come Grimdark enthusiasts as we cover the history and review of every edition of 40k.
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