Sort by:
This multi-part plastic kit contains the components necessary to assemble a Plagueburst Crawler. An extremely front-heavy tracked dozer brimming with horrible weaponry, it is covered in thick armour pitted and rusting with corrosion and decay. A standout feature is the huge, spiked dozer blade, with a symbol of Nurgle proudly displayed, picked out in skulls.
It bears 2 plaguespitters on the sponsons, which you can replace with the 2 included entropy cannon, and the heavy slugger at the front-centre can be replaced with a rothail volley gun – each option is equally potent, but the biggest worry to the enemy is undoubtedly the plagueburst mortar, whose targeting mechanisms and enormous barrel dominate the rear of the vehicle.
This kit comes as 71 components.
This miniature is supplied unpainted and requires assembly. Glue & paints sold separately.
In this kit, you’ll find 10 Poxwalkers. Each is uniquely unpleasant, armed with hastily improvised close-combat weapons, or bare teeth and fingernails. The Poxwalkers themselves are ghastly, their pallid faces twisted into sneering grimaces. Mutations, boils and gashes cover their spindly limbs.
This plastic kit comes as 24 components, and is supplied with 10 25mm Round bases. Rules for these miniatures are included in the box.
These miniatures are supplied unpainted and require assembly. Glue & paints sold separately.
This multi-part plastic kit contains the parts necessary to assemble Scribbus Wretch, a Death Guard Tallyman.
His is a particularly unpleasant model, even for Death Guard, with a morbid focus on gleefully counting and cataloguing misfortune – he carries a massive ream of paper on a clipboard in the crook of his left arm, with a bone stylus in his right adding to his tallies. A strange apparatus hangs from his back, ending in a tentacle that grasps an abacus – its beads, upon closer inspection, reveal themselves as skulls.
His armour, as standard for the Death Guard, is covered in corrosion, boils and Nurgle icons, and he is accompanied by a Nurgling, busy with the task of carrying extra ink and paper. Scribbus Wretch stands atop a pile of books; likely written by him, and full of atrocities.
This kit comes as 8 components, and is supplied with a Citadel 40mm Round base.
This miniature is supplied unpainted and requires assembly. Glue & paints sold separately.
This multi-part plastic kit contains the components necessary to build Typhus, Herald of Nurgle, Host of the Destroyer Hive.
This is an appropriately large model, covered head to toe in rot, pitted Cataphractii armour, skulls, Nurgle icons and spikes – there’s even room for a Nurgling to hitch a ride, clinging to his waist. He holds aloft a master-crafted manreaper, taller even than Typhus himself, which features a host of unpleasant effects of corruption and wear; it’s clearly a blade that has seen a lot of action.
The chimney found on his back is belching forth a vile hive swarm with impressive effect – some of the flies bursting forth are the size of a Nurgling. Included is a scenic element to his base, as he stands with a foot resting arrogantly on some toppled Imperial masonry.
This kit comes as 15 components, and is supplied with a Citadel 50mm Round base.
This miniature is supplied unpainted and requires assembly. Glue & paints sold separately.
This multipart plastic kit builds 10 Tzaangors, bird-headed mutants sworn to Tzeentch. Each of these models can be armed with an arcanite shield and a savage blade, or a pair of axe-like savage blades. You'll also find components to build a Twistbray champion, a brayhorn-blowing musician, and an icon bearer, as well as two especially twisted Tzaangor mutants and two Tzaangor armed with savage greatblades.
These models can also be used for Thousand Sons armies in games of Warhammer 40,000. They are compatible with the Tzaangor Upgrade Pack, which is available separately and provides chainswords and autopistols as weapon options.
This kit offers a huge amount of customisation, with two sets of 12 different head designs that can be paired with eight distinct horn designs, as well as two sets of five different designs of maned backs, crooked legs, and armoured torsos to mix-and-match, and two sets of six separate designs of blade, shield, and paired blades that you can combine however you see fit.
This kit comprises 142 plastic components, and comes with 10x Citadel 32mm Round Bases. These miniatures are supplied unpainted and require assembly – we recommend using Citadel Plastic Glue and Citadel Colour paints.
These models can also be used for Thousand Sons armies in games of Warhammer 40,000. They are compatible with the Tzaangor Upgrade Pack, which is available separately and provides chainswords and autopistols as weapon options.
$0.00
Unit price perRegister your interest to purchase the Warhammer 40k Battleforce - EMPEROR'S CHILDREN: BLISSBOUND WARBAND.
When the release date has been made official, and if you would like to proceed, you will be invited to purchase a digital voucher to secure your purchase.
The Lord Exultant of the Emperor's Children is an exemplar of war with an ego to match, risen to command a warband.
They ply the stars for the rarest and most terrible sensations, wading into the thick of combat to slaughter their foes in a lurid display of expertise. This kit comes with three right arm options: power fist, plasma pistol or rupture lash, and three left arm options: phoenix power spear, power sword or screamer pistol, plus a choice of bare head or helmet.
The Lord Kakophanist of the Emperor's Children is a true connoisseur of his legion’s sonic weaponry.
The Doom Siren grafted to his body is complex and powerful, its user uniquely attuned to the vibrations of battle, and he leads his Noise Marines as a conductor in an orchestra of slaughter. This miniature comes with two head options, and a choice of screamer pistol and power sword, or two screamer pistols wielded gunslinger-style.
Lucius the Eternal of the Emperor's Children is as arrogant as he is cruel, seeking to humiliate the most skilled opponents in battle. Quite how he factors a semi-sentient daemonic lash into the equation is up for debate, but given he’s using the Blade of the Laer, and has the ability to take over the bodies of those who do kill him, we’re not sure he’s really interested in playing fair.