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Encyclopedia > Titan (Warhammer 40,000)

In the Warhammer 40,000 fictional universe, a Titan is a colossal armoured fighting vehicle which moves as a walker. Image File history File links Emblem-important. ... Warhammer 40,000 (informally known as Warhammer 40K, WH40K, W40K or just 40K) is a science fantasy game produced by Games Workshop. ... A fictional universe is an imaginary world that serves as the setting or backdrop for one or (more commonly) multiple works of fiction or translatable non-fiction. ... An armoured fighting vehicle (AFV) is a military vehicle, protected by armour and armed with weapons. ... Walker is frequently used for any mobile vehicle that moves on legs rather than wheels or tracks. ...


Titans are considered the largest and most powerful types of War Engines and primarily feature in the Epic series of games. War engines vary immensely in role and size, ranging from battle titans to super-heavy tanks and large transports; the only thing that they have in common is that they can suffer repeated successful hits that would otherwise destroy smaller vehicles and units. In the current version of the Epic game, War Engine damage capacity is represented by hitpoints, of which Titans have the most. Epic is a series of tabletop wargames set in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ...


In the game of Epic, the smallest Titan model stands around 7 cm high next to a standard human at around 6 mm. In Warhammer 40,000, the smallest of the Imperial Titans, the Warhound, also towers over the human sized 28mm tall models at some 10.5 inches.[1] In the Winter Assault expansion to the computer game Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War, the head of an Imperator Titan, the largest of the Imperial titans, alone is at least 12 metres tall. Epic is a series of tabletop wargames set in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ... Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War: Winter Assault is a expansion to Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War for the PC developed by Relic Entertainment and published by THQ. Based on Games Workshops popular tabletop wargame, Warhammer 40,000, Dawn of War: Winter Assault was released in 2005. ... Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War is a Real Time Strategy game for the PC developed by Relic Entertainment and published by THQ. Based on Games Workshops popular tabletop wargame, Warhammer 40,000, Dawn of War was released in September 2004. ...

Contents

Imperial Titans

The first Titans were built during the Age of Strife on Mars, as a way for the then-new Adeptus Mechanicus to effectively fight on the irradiated surface. They were later sent with the fleets that established the first Forge Worlds, leading to the creation of the Titan Legions - armed forces made up entirely of Titans specific to that forge world. In the background they are described as standing between 15 and 40 m (about 50 to 130 ft) tall. There are a variety of classes that a Titan falls under. In the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe, the Age of Strife is the name for the chaotic period of human history between the 25th and 30th millennia. ... Adjectives: Martian Atmosphere Surface pressure: 0. ... In the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe, the Adeptus Mechanicus is an institution of the Imperium dedicated to the preservation and restoration of science and technology. ... Radiation as used in physics, is energy in the form of waves or moving subatomic particles. ... The following is a list of planets in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ...


Due to their high standing, all Titans are important enough to be given their own High Gothic names when built. This is represented in published materials by giving each one a two-word Latin name, always some venerated title or concept. Examples include Aquila Ignis, Regalis Annihilatus, Vitas Falco, Imperius Eradicus, Imperius Belladon, Apocalyptus Credo, Imperius Brontos, Imperius Excelsior, Dies Irae, Imperius Augusta, and Imperius Dominatus. Similarly, the loss of a Titan is considered tragic and mourned by the Forge World that produced it. In the fictional universe of Warhammer 40,000, the Imperium of Man contains many languages. ... For other uses, see Latin (disambiguation). ...


Imperial Titans are unique in the sense that their computer mind-cores are sentient, albeit in a highly-erratic manner. This is in contrast with the usually non sentient "machine spirits" or onboard computer systems found in many other imperial war machines like tanks and armored vehicles. In the "Titan" comic, the newly connected Princeps was formally greeted by Imperius Dictatio inside its mental landscape; there was also Laudator Magnificat, which was forcibly reactivated after falling in combat. This proved disastrous: the mind-core had suffered severe psychological trauma from its "death", and began attacking everything. Not to be confused with sapience. ... Psychological trauma is a type of damage to the psyche that occurs as a result of a traumatic event. ...


Most Imperial Titans are roughly humanoid, but with thick lower legs, a hunched head, and an oversized torso. Forward-oriented main weapons mount directly into where the arms would be, and additional weapons are often found on the chassis. These configurations (called patterns) vary, and most Titans are built on these presets. However the actual design of the chassis can vary greatly, so only the absolute basic features(such as leg joints and weapon hardpoints) are constant. This is most evident in the Warhound class of titans(the Lucius pattern looks more geometric and broader than the Mars Pattern, which is more rounded and dog-like). The term humanoid refers to any being whose body structure resembles that of a human. ...


Imperial Titan Classes

Warhound

Warhound Titans are the scouts or flanking elements of a Titan force. Appearance-wise, the Warhound differs the most from other Imperial Titans; anthropomorphic canine-like overall structure, reverse-jointed legs; and direct shoulder weapon mounts. They are lightly-armed and armored for Titans, although still fearsome compared to more standard combat vehicles. Due to this, they are the only ones to be normally deployed in packs of at least two members, as compared to the larger Titans which usually operate alone. Mixed reconnaissance patrol of the Polish Home Army and the Soviet Red Army during Operation Tempest, 1944 Reconnaissance is the military term for the active gathering of information about an enemy, or other conditions, by physical observation. ... “Flanking” redirects here. ... An anthropomorphic character; a cat ascribed human characteristics. ... Genera Alopex Atelocynus Canis Cerdocyon Chrysocyon Cuon Cynotherium † Dusicyon † Dasycyon † Fennecus (Part of Vulpes) Lycalopex (Part of Pseudalopex) Lycaon Nyctereutes Otocyon Pseudalopex Speothos Urocyon Vulpes The Canidae (′kanə′dē, IPA: ) family is a part of the order Carnivora within the mammals (Class Mammalia). ... Diagram of an insect leg A leg is the part of an animals body that supports the rest of the animal above the ground and is used for locomotion. ... This article is about the body part. ... A formation is a high-level military organization, such as a Brigade, Division, Corps, Army or Army group. ...


The Warhound is the only Imperial Titan that has received an official model kit from Forge World in the Warhammer 40,000 scale. Available in several patterns, classes and choice of weapons, they stand over 10 inches tall when assembled, and are 15 meters tall in 'real life'. In the early 1990s, Mike Biasi Studios was given the license to create various Titans in the same scale, including a Warhound, a Reaver and various Eldar titans. These were later reproduced by Armorcast and Epicast. The term Forge World can relate to one of two concepts related to Games Workshops tabletop wargame, Warhammer 40,000; one within the games fictional universe, one in the real world. In Warhammer 40,000 A Forge World in the Warhammer 40,000 universe is a collective term... Warhammer 40,000 (informally known as Warhammer 40K, WH40K, W40K or just 40K) is a science fantasy game produced by Games Workshop. ...


Reaver

The Reaver Titan is a medium-sized Titan and the smaller of the two Battle-class Titans. They are considerably more durable than Warhounds, and are able to take roughly twice the amount of damage of a Warhound (according to the game rules). This extra durability is probably due to the unusual placement of the plasma generator on the back of the main carapace, where in most titans the generator is located in the core of the Titan, hence the term "energy core." This placement ensures that the titan can take more frontal damage than other titans of the same approximate class, but is at a severe disadvantage when in cluttered environments (cities or canyons). They stand just under twice the height of a Warhound - approximately 30 metres.


The Reaver is described as an older design than the Warlord.


The weapons mounted are variable; they can mount some of the more powerful Battle Titan weapons, although Scout Titan weapons are more common. Most of the patterns carry Multiple Rocket Launchers on their carapace mounting. Unlike Warhounds they can take close-combat weapons, which are extremely effective in Titan-scale mêlée battles. However, it is suggested that Reavers are becoming increasingly rare, and it is possible that the secrets to their manufacture have been lost (a common fate for Imperial technologies). For these reasons, Reavers usually perform fire support, avoiding direct combat. The term carapace refers to a dorsal section of an exoskeleton or shell, in a number of animal groups. ... Mêlée generally refers to disorganized hand-to-hand combat involving a group of fighters. ... Fire Support is a military term referring to long-range firepower provided to a front-line unit. ...


The Mars Pattern's carapace mounts a Multiple Rocket Launcher and Turbo-Laser Destructors on each arm. The Lucius Pattern's carapace bears a Rocket Launcher, with the arms carrying a Volcano Cannon and Gatling Blaster. There is also a fire support variant of the Lucius, with Multiple Rocket Launchers on all three mounts.[2]


Forgeworld is currently developing a 40k-scale model for the Reaver.


Warlord

An Imperial Warlord Class Titan from the original Adeptus Titanicus boxed set
An Imperial Warlord Class Titan from the original Adeptus Titanicus boxed set

Warlord Titans are the larger and more powerful class of Battle Titans, the other being the smaller Reaver. They appear to be the most common class in use, and many Forge Worlds field their own patterns. Image File history File links Metadata Size of this preview: 488 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (1098 × 1350 pixel, file size: 364 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) An Imperial Warlord Titan File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Image File history File links Metadata Size of this preview: 488 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (1098 × 1350 pixel, file size: 364 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) An Imperial Warlord Titan File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... The following is a list of planets in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ...


They are approximately 50% larger than the aging Reaver class, putting its height at around 45 meters. The Warlord Titan is also able to withstand considerably more damage. They have four Battle Titan weaponry hardpoints on the shoulders and arms, allowing a great variety of configurations. While Scout-class weapon batteries can be mounted, Warlords usually mount Battle-class weaponry. There is even a specialist class, the rare Psi-Titans, where psychic weaponry is added.


The Mars Pattern mounts two Turbo-Laser Destructors on its carapace, with a Volcano Cannon and Gatling Blaster on the arms. A special variant carries a close combat Powerfist and Gatling Blaster on its arms, plus Vortex missile and Rocket Launchers on the caparace.


Imperius Dictatio of the "Titan" graphic novels is a standard Mars-pattern. Trade paperback of Will Eisners A Contract with God (1978), often mistakenly cited as the first graphic novel. ...


The Warlord Titans were the first to be introduced in the Epic scale, featured as a box set with 6 plastic models and Styrofoam buildings. The accompanying rules were meant for Heresy-era Titan/Titan combat. Simple rules for interactions with vehicles and infantry were subsequently published, and the Epic Space Marine box set developed the full initial rules for infantry and vehicles. In "The Siege of the Emperor's Palace" diorama for 2000's UK Games Day and since then on display in Warhammer World a Warlord titan features on each side. Rules for 40K scale Warlord titans were introduced in the 2007 Warhammer 40,000 supplement, Apocalypse, however no model to represent it on the field has been produced by Games Workshop or its subsidiaries thus far, encouraging players to build their own from scratch should they wish to field such a weapon in their army. This article or section contains a plot summary that is overly long or excessively detailed compared to the rest of the article. ...


Emperor

The superheavy Emperor Titans are subdivided into two classes, the Imperator and Warmonger. Of these, the Imperator is a more general-purpose assault platform, whereas the Warmonger is a dedicated fire-support unit with advanced fire control and targeting systems. Both are extremely powerful. They are loaded to the brim with pre-installed weapons, and their mounts can handle Titan weapons too big for even the other classes (they do not carry any of the close-combat weapons, as their sole focus is on extreme firepower). Emperor Titans are very rare, and can crush many weaker war engines. This class of titan also houses a full company of troops within its legs for defence and assault assistance. In real scale a Emperor class titan would stand over 100 meters tall.


The most noteworthy feature of an Emperor titan is the fortified castle structure that occupies its entire upper half. These castles sport ornate features like spired towers and stained glass windows. The building is heavily-armed, and more than capable of contributing to combat. Due to its prominent position, the Titan's head is hunched more than usual on the body, almost level with the arm weaponry. Table of Fortification, from the 1728 Cyclopaedia. ... For other uses, see Castle (disambiguation). ... A modern spire on the Lancaster University Chaplaincy Centre A spire is a tapering conical or pyramidal structure on the top of a building, particularly a church tower. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... Strictly speaking, stained glass is glass that has been painted with silver stain and then fired. ...


In Winter Assault, the planet Lorn V houses the fallen Mars-pattern Imperator Dominatus. In Dark Crusade, the planet Kronus bears the Hellstorm Cannon of the Imperator Aquila Ignis. The Hellstorm Cannon of Aquila Ignis was so large that it was capable of destroying any unit within its line of fire with a single shot.


Imperial Knights

Knights are smaller than Titans though built on the same principle, and are also related to Sentinels. They can be seen as one-man mini-Titans. Unlike Imperial Titans, Knights use high-capacity energy cells rather than plasma reactors. Knights also benefit from power fields, which provide the same protection as Titans' void shields though they cannot be replenished in the course of a battle.


They are the product of feudal agri-worlds within the Imperium and are, like the Sentinels, in imitation of machines built by the Eldar - "Eldar Knights". While Sentinels herd sauropoda, Knights defend them from predators. Feudalism comes from the Late Latin word feudum, itself borrowed from a Germanic root *fehu, a commonly used term in the Middle Ages which means fief, or land held under certain obligations by feodati. ... Families Brachiosauridae Camarasauridae Cetiosauridae Diplodocidae Dicraeosauridae Euhelopodidae Nemegtosauridae Omeisauridae Rebbachisauridae Titanosauridae/Saltosauridae Vulcanodontidae Sauropoda, the sauropods, are a suborder or infraorder of the saurischian (lizard-hipped) dinosaurs. ...


Three types were introduced in the 1990s - the Warden, Paladin and Lancer. The Wardens are defensive; armed with long range heavy weapons and well protected. The Paladin are fitted with a ranged weapon and a close combat weapon. The Lancer has only a single major ranged weapon but is speedier than the other types.


The range was reworked in look and rules to "Paladin", "Errant" and "Lancer" types with the "Baron" as a superior command unit.


A number of Knights were included in the Titan Legions box set (Epic 2nd edition) and also feature as a hidden extra in the Final Liberation game. Final Liberation: Warhammer Epic 40,000, also known as Warhammer 40,000: Final Liberation is a turn-based strategy game released for the PC in 1997. ...


Imperial Titan Weaponry and Defences

The weaponry carried by Titans are usually dedicated to certain tasks. Some are for targeting high-priority and well-armoured enemies, such as fortresses or armoured divisions, others are particularly effective against legions of troops and laying down devastating artillery barrages. Titan weapons are divided into two rough categories:


Scout Titan Weapons are weapons normally fitted to light Titans such as the Warhound. Rarely found on the largest Titans, and usually of short range, these are designed to destroy light to medium vehicles quickly, and to deal with huge masses of troops. Below are some examples of such weapons:

  • Inferno Cannon - An uprated version of the flamers mounted on vehicles, the triple-barrel Inferno Cannon is immensely devastating in close quarters against infantry and light vehicles, particularly those in hiding.
  • Plasma Blastgun - The lightest plasma-based Titan weapon, and the most powerful that can be mounted on the Warhound. Slow to fire and only medium ranged, but can badly damage well-armoured vehicles and even other Titans.
  • Turbo Laser-Destructor - A Titan-scale laser weapon for anti-tank support. Very destructive compared to most vehicle and infantry-level laser weapons. Less powerful than the Plasma Blastgun, but much longer-ranged and can shoot at two different targets. Unlike the other Scout Titan weapons, Turbo-Laser Destructors are commonly found on the Battle Titans.
  • Vulcan Mega-Bolter - A Titan-scale bolter weapon, comprising of two large-calibre Gatling gun-style assemblies. Able to tear through infantry and light vehicles with ease.

Battle Titan Weapons have more destructive and longer-ranged weapons mounted commonly on Reaver and Warlord Titans. Most are designed to destroy other Titans, engage enemy detachments, or bring devastation to fortifications. This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ... The word caliber (American English) or calibre (British English) comes from the Italian calibro, itself from the Arabic quâlib, meaning mould. ... An 1865 Gatling gun. ...

The Hellstorm Cannon from the Aquila Ignis
  • Close combat weapon - although they do not provide ranged firepower, this category of weapons is horrendously effective against enemy war engines and Titans - that is, if the Titan can get close enough. They can only be mounted on the Titan's arms; which rules out the Warhound. In Epic Space marine, close combat weapons included the powerfist, laser burner and chainfist.
  • Gatling Blaster - A larger projectile weapon commonly found on battle Titans. It is a rapid-fire weapon like the Vulcan Mega-Bolter, but instead fires 150mm shells, powerful enough to inflict damage upon superheavily-armoured targets.
  • Hellstorm Cannon - Seen lying on its side in Dark Crusade, the Hellstorm Cannon is a huge five-barrelled super energy weapon. Right in front of it is a massive long-distance trench, carved out by previous firings.The Hellstorm Cannon can completely decimate an entire city(maybe even more)in just one salvo. In addition, the central hub around which the barrels are mounted can be converted to a Gatling Blaster.
  • Melta Cannon - An upsized melta (fusion) weapon mounted on Warlord Titans. Notably short-ranged, but incredibly effective at penetrating armour and destroying Titans.
  • Multiple Rocket Launcher - Long range artillery which unleashes heavy barrages to suppress and devastate enemies. And because it is mounted on a Titan, it is much less vulnerable to air and fast attacks than dedicated artillery companies.
  • Quake Cannon - A very, very large artillery piece that is of a more massive caliber than any other artillery weapon in the game.
  • Volcano Cannon - Powered directly from the Titan's plasma reactor, the Volcano Cannon has extreme range and is very effective at penetrating armour, making it used primarily against war engines and other Titans. A favoured weapon of the Warlord and certain Reaver patterns.
  • Plasma Annihilator - This is the largest and heaviest plasma weapon in the entire game(second only to the battle barge mounted Nova Cannon). The Plasma Annihilator can demolish any fortification with ease, and can destroy other titans somewhat quickly because of its immense size and power. It takes enormous amounts of energy directly from the titan's reactor and takes a long time to cool down.
  • Missile Weapons

Warlord titans can carry one missile on a shoulder hardpoint, Warmonger and Imperator classes can carry them, but this is unusual. Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (1280x1024, 626 KB) A shot of the Hellstorm cannon, originally mounted on the Imperator Titan Aquila Ignis. ... Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (1280x1024, 626 KB) A shot of the Hellstorm cannon, originally mounted on the Imperator Titan Aquila Ignis. ... Epic is a series of tabletop wargames set in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ...

  • Vortex Missile - This missile creates a warp vortex (a controlled black hole to a hostile space inimical to all matter), which destroys tanks and infantry instantly. Vortex missiles can either collapse on themselves or move, meaning massive damage can be caused even if the missile does not hit the enemy directly
  • Titan Warp Missile - Titan Warp missiles ignore void shields, which makes them very effective in Titan/Titan engagements.

A number of other weapons and add-ons for Titans have been described. Among them are the "Corvus" assault pod and "Deathstrike Cannon".


Titan Defences

Imperial Titans become increasingly well-armoured as their size increases. They also have 'Void Shield' generators to augment existing protection, which are able to absorb destructive energy on the Titan's behalf, although there is a limit to how much they can handle. They are directly controlled by the Princeps, and can be left running after having absorbed dangerous amounts of energy to allow for extra protection; this however has a high chance of permanently damaging the generator.


Void Shields always come in sets to maximize the likelihood of at least one remaining up after a barrage, and larger Titans may have as many as six or more fields. It is theoretically possible for a huge amount of small-arms fire to bring down a shield, giving infantry some ability to attack them. They however cannot defend against everything; for instance they cannot block non-ranged weapons (eg Titan-scale mêlée combat) and special technology like the "Warp missile", which bypasses normal defences by travelling through the Immaterium. Mêlée generally refers to disorganized hand-to-hand combat involving a group of fighters. ... The Immaterium (also referred to as the Empyrean, Aether or Warp) is an alternate dimension in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ...


Emperor-class Titans are also commonly equipped with point-defence weapons to protect themselves against infantry and aircraft that cannot be targeted with larger-scale weaponry. Carapace-mounted multilasers are often employed in this respect, as are more exotic weapons for dealing with aircraft. Point-defence (or point-defense, see spelling differences) is the defence of a single object or a limited area, e. ...


Imperial Titan Construction

Very little is known about the methods used in the construction of Imperial Titans. It is known that many Forge Worlds are capable of producing their own Titans (and some have their own patterns and legions). Of these Forge Worlds, it is known that Mars and Lucius have their own patterns (these patterns are provided as model kits by Forge World), and it is likely that other large Forge Worlds such as Ryza and the recently destroyed Gryphonne IV do/did as well. The following is a list of planets in the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ...


Often, the Imperium does not have the means to build new Titans, as the knowledge of their construction is lost. Titans however were not built using STC templates, and as such the Adeptus Mechanicus knows fully how to build at least some of the Titan variants. As the process of building any machine requires a complex ceremony and rituals, it is probable that the construction of a Titan is an immense undertaking. Such an undertaking would take decades or centuries to complete, requiring extremely experienced and talented fabricators and the purest and most blessed materials, hence Titan production will probably only be able to keep up with Titan losses, as although they are rarely lost, they are rarely built either.


Imperial Titan Crew

The 'Captain' of a Titan is called the Princeps, a rare individual in that he can retain his sanity after connecting with the 'Machine Spirit' of the Titan. The Princeps controls the Titan by means of a mental link device. Using this, the Princeps merges his/her consciousness with the Titan's sentient machine spirit. After doing so, he/she can guide its movements and weapons as though it were an extension of his/her body, and provides a greatly heightened perception of the battlefield. It requires a strong will to maintain this connection, and Titans can go out of control on rampages of destruction should the Princeps fail to maintain dominance. The Latin word Princeps (plural: principes) means the first. This article is devoted to a number of specific historical meanings the word took, by far the most important of which follows first. ...


There has also been noted rare instances where a Princeps has died while connected to the Titan, thus creating a ghost of themselves that remains inside the Titan's 'machine spirit'. This is often referred to as a "ghost in the link".


The Princeps is located in the head, along with several system controllers called Moderati. The number of moderati depends on the size of the Titan, and their duties are relegated to monitoring and maintaining weapons, as well as keeping track of "Auspex" (a radar like device) readings.


Further crew includes engineers (Techpriests) for repair work and blessings, and cyborg-like organisms (servitors) set on the more mundane tasks like manipulation of controls and monitoring of Auspexes. Some of the largest Titans also have Armed forces on board in case of an enemy attempting to board and take control/destroy the Titan.


Standard Template Construct Titan

In the novel Dark Adeptus (Counter, 2006), the autonomous Castigator STC Titan was revealed, claimed to be the first one ever built. Called the Father of Titans, it was first designed during the Dark Age of Technology but became forgotten as time went by, bearing advanced long-lost technologies such as rapid self-repair routines, and a muscle-like locomotive system. Standing larger than even the Imperator-class Titans, the Castigator notably had its head on top of its body, matched by an elegant yet super heavy and armoured design and impossibly-graceful movement, and it was far superior to any class of titan utilised by the Adeptus Mechanicus or any other race in the Warhammer 40k universe, for that matter. In the novel, it was armed with an arm-mounted melee weapon and a large vulcan cannon that fired daemons. The daemons are later found out to be due to a pact the Castigator formed with the Chaos Gods. In the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe, a Standard Template Construct (STC) system allowed the very efficient creation of technological designs. ... In the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe, the Dark Age of Technology is the name given to the period of human history that begins sometime after present day and ends in the 26th millennium. ... A top-down view of skeletal muscle Muscle (from Latin musculus little mouse [1]) is contractile tissue of the body and is derived from the mesodermal layer of embryonic germ cells. ... In the Warhammer Fantasy and Warhammer 40,000 fictional universes, the Daemons are malevolent spirits born out of the destructive power called Chaos. ...


The single Castigator-class featured in the novel was brought down by destroying its reactor, and its STC, although complete, had to be destroyed due to its corruption.


The main problem with the idea of an STC Titan is that by official Games Workshop background, they were actually developed during the Age of Strife on the Forge World of Mars. This would put them after the Dark Age of Technology, meaning that an STC templated version of the Titan would never have been developed.


Chaos Titans

During the Horus Heresy, half of the Adeptus Mechanicus, including several hundred Titan Legions, turned to Chaos, taking their mighty war machines with them. Chaos Titans are usually similar to their Imperial counterparts, but their long exposure to the warping influence of Chaos has changed many of them. In some cases, the crew has merged with their machine, making it impossible to tell where one ends and the other begins. Other crews have given themselves and their weapons over to one of the four great powers of Chaos. This article or section contains a plot summary that is overly long or excessively detailed compared to the rest of the article. ... In Games Workshops Warhammer 40,000 and Warhammer Fantasy fictional universes, Chaos refers to the often stereotypically malevolent entities which live in some sort of parallel universe, known as the Warp in Warhammer 40,000 and as the Realm of Chaos in Warhammer Fantasy. ...


The most infamous of these monster war machines was the Dies Irae (literally 'Day of Wrath') which stormed the battlements of the Emperor's palace during the siege of Terra. It was eventually destroyed 10,000 years later, during an Iron Warriors campaign against the Imperial citadel of Hydra Cordatus, where the Dies Irae engaged in battle with an entire demi-legion of twelve Imperial Titans, destroying almost all of them before finally being stopped by the Warlord Titan Honoris Causa. Dies Irae is featured in the first 3 books in the Horus Heresy series. The Latin term Dies Irae (Day of Wrath) may refer to: Dies Irae, a Latin hymm. ... In the fictional universe of Warhammer 40,000, the Iron Warriors are one of the traitorous Chaos Space Marine Legions. ...


With the release of the Black Legion Army List(Version 3.7) for Epic Armegeddon, the Feral, Ravager, and the different versions of the Warlord Titans have been detailed.


Feral Titan

Feral Titans are twisted versions of the Imperial Warhound Titan. The Chaos Warhound Titan has been given an official model from Forgeworld. For other uses, see Chaos (disambiguation). ...


Ravager Titan

Ravager Titans are the Chaos versions of the Imperial Reaver Titan. For other uses, see Chaos (disambiguation). ...


Chaos Warlord Titans

The Warlord class titan has four (4) different versions depending on which power of Chaos the titan is aligned with. Even though there are different versions of the warped Warlord Titan, the rules for Epic Armageddon only list the most commonly sighted one, the Banelord Titan. For other uses, see Chaos (disambiguation). ...

  • The Banelord Titan is dedicated to the Chaos God Khorne with a long tail ending in a large cannon, another cannon protruding from the daemonic head's mouth, and three special weapons; a Havoc Missile Rack, Hellstrike Cannon and Doomfist. This is the most common Chaos Warlord Titan.
  • The Plaguelord Titan is dedicated to the Chaos God Nurgle.
  • The Painlord Titan is dedicated to the Chaos God Slaanesh.
  • The Warplord Titan is dedicated to the Chaos God Tzeentch.

In the fictional universes of Warhammer 40,000 and Warhammer Fantasy, Khorne is one of the four major Chaos gods. ... For other uses, see Chaos (disambiguation). ... Nurgle overlooking his army, as depicted on the cover of Realm of Chaos:The Lost and the Damned In the fictional universes of Warhammer 40,000 and Warhammer Fantasy, Nurgle is one of the four major Chaos gods. ... In the fictional universes of Warhammer 40,000 and Warhammer Fantasy, Slaanesh is one of the four major Chaos gods. ... In the fictional universes of Warhammer 40,000 and Warhammer Fantasy, Tzeentch is one of the four major Chaos gods. ...

Chaos Imperator Titans

Abominatus was another special class of Chaos Titan, which was created by the fusing of a Khorne greater daemon and an Imperator Titan. The Caligula came out recently as a titan competition winner: it is also a chaos Imperator titan and is similarly aligned with the blood god.


Other Chaos Titans

The Gaunt class titan appears in all of the Horus Heresy trilogy of novels. It is not well described, but seems to be comparable to a Warlord class. At the time it was a new design (possibly more technologically advanced). It seems to have disappeared since then, presumably the designs were lost during the conflict.**


Ork Gargants

The Ork equivalent of a titan is called a Gargant. Gargants are as much idols of the savage Ork gods, Gork and Mork, as they are engines of destruction. Big Meks receive a divine vision of sorts from Gork (or possibly Mork), and set out to bring that vision to life in the artistic medium of thick armor plates, smoke-belching engines, and lots and lots of very large guns. This quickly spreads amongst other Big Meks in the area, and soon Gargants spring up all over the place. The construction of Gargants is one of the typical signs of an impending WAAAGH! from an Ork-held system. The cover of the current Codex: Orks sourcebook The Orks are a race from the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. ...


In an Ork warband, there can exist Gargants and Gargant-like warmachines all the way from single-man Killa Kans to the vast armoured behemoths of the Mega-Gargants. From smallest to largest, the most typical machines of these type include:


Stompas

  • Stompas are not war engines nor Titans proper but rather large armoured fighting vehicles built as roughly Ork-shaped effigies. They are armed with both long- and short-range weaponry and are used in the same manner as heavy tanks.
  • Supa-Stompas are significantly more powerful than regular Stompas, and count as war engines. They can mount two of the weapons that are carried on the larger Gargants and can be seen as equivalent to a War Hound titan

Gargants

Gargants and Great Gargants are the archetypal Ork Titans. They are massive constructions broad and squat compared to an Imperial Titan. They are fitted with many batteries of guns and also tend to have at least one mega-weapon. They are roughly equivalent to Reaver and Warlord Titans, respectively.


Mega-Gargant

The Mega-Gargant is a very rare super-large gargant on a par in size with the Imperator and Warmonger Titans, though not as powerful. It carries a large number and variety of weapons including the mega-dropper. The Mega Gargant was introduced alongside the Imperator Titan in the Titan legions box set; two plastic models being included to give the Imperator a challenge. Unlike the other Gargants which shuffle on their short legs the Mega Gargant is a tracked vehicle.


Construction

Ork Gargants are an extremely varied lot, no two ever being alike. Thanks to the frenzied imaginations of the Mekboyz building them, Ork weapons tend to be haphazard, unreliable and noisy. When they work, however, they can inflict gruesome damage. Gargants are commonly equipped with at least one close-combat weapon, because charging in and bashing heads is considered to be a very "Orky" thing to do.


For defence, Gargants have power fields which are the equivalent to an Imperial Titan Void shield. However while Gargants tend to have more power fields, they cannot regenerate these during the battle.


Orks do not rely on auto-systems to the same extent as other races, and Gargants carry a large crew of both Orks and Gretchins. The crew is led by a Kaptin, who relays orders through a body of officers. A speaking-tube is the preferred method of communication within a Gargant. Each officer is in charge of one section of the Gargant, be it a weapon, the magazine, the engine room, or any other chambers. Under the officer is a crew of Orks and Gretchins who carry out the orders passed down to them. Repair crews are composed of Gretchins, whose smaller build suits them to crawling through cramped spaces armed with wrenches and oily rags.


Compared to Imperial Titans, Gargants have weaker armour and comparatively shorter-ranged weaponry. However, Gargants are extremely difficult to destroy due to their dense (albeit crude) construction (in games, this is represented by Gargants have more damage points). While Gargants do not suffer from potentially fatal plasma reactor meltdowns, they are particularly vulnerable to fires and magazine explosions.


Eldar Titans

Eldar Titans are quick and nimble machines of war. They are thinly armored but despite their frailty, Eldar Titans can pack a mean punch, and can move about the battlefield with frightening speed, thanks to their jump jets. Eldar 4th edition codex In the fictional universe of Warhammer 40,000, the Eldar are a race of elf-like humanoids. ...


Instead of void shields or power fields used by other races' titans, the Eldar rely upon advanced holographic field generators which in conjunction with speed make their titans extremely difficult to target. However, holo-fields do not actually deflect enemy firepower, so Eldar titans are even more vulnerable should they suffer hits.


There are three types of Eldar titans:

  • The Revenant is a relatively light warmachine, roughly equivalent to an Imperial Warhound, though much more agile. They are best suited for lightning-fast raids on enemy lines, using their speed to retreat before a counter-offensive can be mounted. A model of this titan has been created by Forge World. It can come armed with either Pulsars or Sonic Lances.
  • The Phantom is a more massive warmachine capable of taking on its Imperial equivalents. What makes Phantom titans distinctive from those of lesser races is their crew. In addition to the living, the souls and memories of ancient Eldar warriors are maintained in the wraithbone matrix of the Titan.
  • The Warlock is a refinement of the Phantom. Its wraithbone core hosts the spirits of late Seers and Warlocks, focusing their power into a near-unstoppable engine of destruction.

Tyranid Bio-Titans

Bio-Titans are more than exceptionally large Tyranid biomorphs, they are on par with the Titans of other races. Bio-Titans are deployed in the final stages of the assimilation of a planet into the hive-fleets biomass. In the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe, Tyranids are a locust-like swarm of aliens which come in many shapes and sizes. ...


While their supersized bio-weaponry is potent, Bio-Titans are feared mainly for their extreme effectiveness in close combat against enemy Titans and war engines. They are also considerably faster than Titans of other races; as a result Bio-Titans often charge towards the enemy. Their ripper tentacles can neutralize enemy Titan close combat weapons, while monstrous claws will make short work of Titan hulls.


Early editions of Epic did not give them "shields" like that of Imperial Titans or Ork Gargants; however they made up for this by being able to "regenerate" or self-heal. Experimental rules of Epic gave Bio-Titans a limited number of bio-plasma fields to make them less vulnerable to sniping from Imperial Volcano cannons, however this appears to have been dropped.


Examples of Tyranid Bio-Titans include the Vituperator, the terrifying Hierophant and the even more monstrous Hydraphant. They are roughly equivalent to the Imperial Warhound, Reaver, and Warlord Titans, respectively. The Hierophant is the only one of the three to have been converted into 40K scale by Forgeworld.


Regular Tyranid biomorphs (not war engines, let alone titans) include the tank-sized burrowing Trygon and the winged Harridan (a war engine but not considered a Titan). The Heirodule was used as the name of the smaller Bio-Titan (the Hierophant was the larger titan) when the model range was released in November 1997, however the Heirodule is now just a biomorph construction.


A specialist breed of bio-titan is the Dominatrix, a powerful Hive node that can use its malign intellect to command the hordes of lessers around itself with ghastly efficiency. In the hierarchy of Tyranids, they are the Supreme Commanders of the battlefield and second only to the shipbound Norn-Queens themselves.


Tau

Although the Tau do not have actual Titans, they do have Manta Missile Destroyers which seem to be equal in firepower to a Titan.


A Manta carries a very large amount of fire power and ordinance to gain Air to Surface superiority, firing super heavy rail guns at enemy titans as it disgorges entire Cadres of fire warriors onto the battlefield. The Manta has been made into a 40K scale model by forgeworld, one of the largest models to date.


See also

For the fictional robot, see Mecha. ...

References

  1. ^ http://www.forgeworld.co.uk/acatalog/QUATERMASTERS_STORE_TITANS_31.html
  2. ^ http://www.forgeworld.co.uk/acatalog/QUATERMASTERS_STORE_EPIC_40_000_TITANS_24.html
  • Andrews, Dave (1994). "Chaos Titan", Citadel Miniatures Catalogue, Section Four. Nottingham: Games Workshop. 
  • Counter, Ben (2006). Dark Adeptus. Nottingham: Black Library. ISBN 1-84416-242-7. 
  • Codex: Tau Empire

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