Warhammer 40k

TheChirurgeon’s Road Through 2025, Part 7: Taking Down a Stompa

The Road Through 2025 continues for TheChirurgeon! This week he takes his Creations of Bile list up against a Dread Mob Orks army running a Stompa and plans the scheme on his Emperor's Children Rhino.

Detachment Focus: Cohort Cybernetica

In our Detachment Focus series we take a deep dive into an army’s Detachments, covering what’s in them, how they play, and how they’ll fit into the broader meta and your games. In this Detachment Focus we’re looking at...

Crusade: Nachmund Gauntlet – The Goonhammer Review

It’s been over a year since Games Workshop dropped their last Crusade book, Pariah Nexus, which brought with it huge improvements over the Leviathan rules that launched 10th edition. Since then a ton has changed - every army has...

[40k] Competitive Innovations in 10th: Keeping it Real pt.2

Elite forces push back against the Slaanesh Daemon menace in part 2 of Competitive Innovations.

Detachment Focus: Rad-Zone Corps

The Rad-Zone Corps is an updated version of the oft-maligned Index Detachment for the Adeptus Mechanicus, giving players a set of rules designed to model a flexible, “all-rounder” army.

TheChirurgeon’s Road Through 2025, Part 6: Battling the Ork Hordes

Welcome back, Dear Reader, to my ongoing blog of competitive and hobby progress for 2025. Last Time Around I took my revised Creations list to league games, scoring wins against GSC (Ryan) and Marines (KC). Good wins, and shortly after I'd...

[40k] Competitive Innovations in 10th: Keeping it Real pt.1

Slaanesh grows ever more powerful in part 1 of Competitive Innovations.

Fury of da Beast: The Ork Horde Mode Open Beta Begins

Announcing Fury of da Beast, the follow up to last year's hit supplement, Fury of the Swarm! Roadmap and more inside.

Hammer of Math: The Aeldari Guardian Death Star

We take a look at a potential "Death Star" unit from the upcoming Codex: Aeldari, break down what goes into it, and talk about what it can do and how to play against it.

In the Beginning: The Origins of the Black Library

Jay Kirkman starts reviewing The Black Library from the very beginning -- all the way back in 1989.