![]() ![]() Scenery is either scratch-built, Snapdragon Studio (sadly no longer available) and Forgeworld.1 EPIC ARMAGEDDON COMPENDIUM DISCLAIMER All of this remains the intellectual property of Specialist Games, Forgeworld, and Games Workshop. I have also built using Tamiya 35mm German Armoured Cars and Half-tracks. I also have a large and varied collection of “non-official” miniatures, such as GZG VTOLs and CMD Patrol Boats. I am painting up an Eldar detachment to be a allied force and have some Squats hanging around from 1989ish to paint up as well. Space Marines – well when you get all those plastic miniatures in the box, you have to do something with them, find them a little too shooty for me. I also have an Imperial Guard Tank force as I do like tanks and the miniatures are the best of the lot. I am currently converting some miniatures into Heavy Artillery, I also have a large Ork transport on the way and I am thinking about making some Heavy Ork Bommerz… I have a large Ork force (still too many infantry to paint) though this is my major and favourite force for Epic, I just find it an amusing army to fight with and I like the fact the rules reflect this. I am looking forward to the new version, Epic Armageddon and hopefully we will see lots of new and exciting models as a result. I bought a shedload in the February 1998 sale plus got some more when a local gaming shop closed down and had a 50% off sale. When Titan Legions was published I really hated the Ork Mega-Gargant (still do I am afaid to say) and didn’t like the simplicity of the new Epic models.Įverything changed with the release of Epic40000 and I thought the new models were excellent especially the Imperial Guard models. In the end I used a simplified version of Dirtside from GZG. I didn’t really like the Space Marine rules (heretic I hear you say) but did like the miniatures. I had seen Adeptus Titanicus in 1988, but thought it’s “Battletech” so didn’t buy it. ![]() I first played “Epic” with the release of Space Marine in 1989. ![]() It was though my favourite set of Epic rules. Epic 40,000 never enjoyed the popularity of the previous two editions, and after support was reduced many of the miniatures planned for Epic 40,000 were never released. The game had a very short period of support (six months) from the company before it was withdrawn. In contrast to previous editions, this was released as just one set of rules. The third edition of Epic was released as Epic 40,000 in 1997. However, Epic 40,000 brings futuristic combat to your tabletop on a whole new scale as entire armies of thousands of troops do battle among legions of the most powerful and gigantic weapons of war ever to blast their opponents into oblivion in the nightmarish future of the Warhammer 40,000 universe! In the dark future of the 41st Millennium, there is only war. ![]()
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