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4%%Please remember that information about the End Times should go on the Warhammer: The End Times (https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/TabletopGame/WarhammerTheEndTimes) pages not here.
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6[[quoteright:338:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/orcvsdwarf.jpg]]
7[[caption-width-right:338:This is the ''least'' epic thing you will see from this franchise.]]
8
9->''"Prepare thyself to enter a world of daemons and vile sorcery, of battle and death, of violence and of madness."''
10
11->''"The fate of the world, be it damnation or salvation will soon be decided. This is a world of eternal war and fleeting glory. This is the world of Warhammer."''
12
13->''"The gods of strife shall feast upon this day, and every day hence, until the end of time."''
14
15-->-- '''Excerpts from the introduction to the 8th edition rulebook'''
16
17''Warhammer'' is the generic name of a number of tabletop {{Wargam|ing}}es and {{Tabletop RPG}}s marketed by UK firm Creator/GamesWorkshop. "Warhammer" was a tabletop battle game that began in 1983 and was previously known as ''Warhammer Fantasy Battle'' (WHFB).
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19[[folder:About the Setting]]
20
21''Warhammer'' takes place on an unnamed planet that bears a striking resemblance to our own Earth, with continents laid out in a similar pattern, though not quite the same shape.
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23Most of the action takes place within "The Old World", roughly analogous to 16th century Europe. The continent is dominated by the Empire of Man, a human-dominated polity based on the real life [[UsefulNotes/HolyRomanEmpire Holy Roman Empire]] and presided over by an elected Emperor and a dogmatic ChurchMilitant centered on [[DeityOfHumanOrigin worship of the]] [[FounderOfTheKingdom Empire's founder, the barbarian warrior-king Sigmar]]. The Empire's western neighbour and rival[=/=][[EnemyMine occasional ally]] is the kingdom of Bretonnia, a [[FrenchJerk comparatively poor and socially backwards analogue of France]] with a dash of King Arthur's England ([[CampbellCountry but very]] ''[[CampbellCountry wrong]]'') thrown in for flavour along with every foul stereotype of TheDungAges. There are other human realms in the Old World including the mysterious and rain-swept island of Albion, the grimly proud and frigidly cold northeastern realm of Kislev, the free MerchantCity state of Marienburg, and the civilized and cosmopolitan southern kingdoms of Estalia and Tilea, but these are usually kept OutOfFocus in the wider narrative and not represented by official armies in the game.
24
25There is also "The New World", which has two continents: Naggaroth in the north, an inhospitable frozen wasteland home to all manner of terrible monsters, not least of which the cruel and xenophobic Dark Elves, and southern Lustria, a sweltering southern jungle home to the Lizardmen as well as other dangers. There is also a third continent: Ulthuan, the {{Atlantis}}-esque home of the High Elves. At the very north pole of the world is the Chaos Wastes, a nightmare realm from which the greatest evils of the world originate.
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27In addition, the map of the Warhammer world includes several OutOfFocus locations not covered by the game, with [[SarcasmMode such original names]] as [[ArabianNightsDays Araby]], [[MysticalIndia Ind]], [[{{Wutai}} Nippon and Cathay]] (Cathay is even protected by a [[TheGreatWall "Great Bastion"]]).
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29Standard fantasy elements are also present -- the Elves used to dominate the world but are [[VestigialEmpire now a shadow of their former selves]], splitting into three factions after a civil war and now battling against impending extinction in a world that is no longer theirs to call; Dwarfs occupy the few mountain strongholds that have not yet fallen to Skaven, Orcs and Goblins, fighting a desperate defensive war with grim determination. Chaos represents a constant existential threat for the good... erm, ''[[BlackAndGrayMorality civilized]]'' races, both in the form of great warbands of mutated and corrupted warriors and as insidious cult activity in the heart of society.
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31The uninitiated might think that Warhammer isn't all that bad and is a heroic fantasy land [[AWorldHalfFull on its way to getting better]] -- that's right. There are just a few small problems like delusional (or worse) madmen empowered by the [[EldritchAbomination Dark Gods]] to increasingly frequently lead crusades reducing the world further into hellish misery and incorporate it into the REAL hell. Then there are the rampaging hordes of Greenskins, both [[OurOrcsAreDifferent Orcs]] and [[OurGoblinsAreDifferent goblins]], scarily psychopathic aliens infesting everywhere existing only to joyously, brutally and (with known exceptions) mercilessly fight, destroy, enslave, kill and in the case of goblins malevolently torture every innocent creature they could find -- and the Greenskins are the comic relief in this setting. If you thought things would get better after that, that's just two of the [[BlackAndGrayMorality usually gray forces]] inhabiting [[CrapsackWorld the world,]] which only survived as long as it did because of the eternal sacrifice of some Elven mages imprisoned in their own spell, maintaining it forever to keep the forces of Chaos from overwhelming the world like they almost did in ancient times and nigh-inevitably did anyway. But it really could have been saved if only those [[SayingTooMuch tasty...]] uh... [[FantasticRacism good-willed denizens]] of it would have heeded wisdom!
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33The writing of the setting is quintessentially British, with a bleak and cynical feel and a constant undercurrent of very dry and often [[BlackComedy gallows]] humour. If you were to combine equal parts Creator/JRRTolkien, Creator/MichaelMoorcock's ''Literature/TheElricSaga'', ''Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian'', ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'', ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', Creator/MontyPython, ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'', and Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'', with a little Creator/HPLovecraft for good measure, then you would have found something similar to ''Warhammer''.
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35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:How to Play the Game]]
38
39''Warhammer'' is a tabletop wargame where two or more players compete against each other with "armies" of 20mm to 50mm heroic scale miniatures. Armies of each race[=/=]faction are composed of melee and missile infantry, cavalry, chariots, artillery pieces, monstrous infantry, large monsters both groundborne and flying, and spellcasters, all led by mighty heroes. Many doctrines of warfare from Earth's history are represented: the Empire bringing stalwart 16th Century [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pike_and_shot pike-and-shot]] tercio tactics; Bretonnia relying on the knightly cavalry charges of the High Middle Ages; the High Elves combining the phalanxes of ancient Greece with magic, [[BeastOfBattle war beasts]] and customary elvish grace and badassery; the Greenskins rampaging forward as an OnrushingArmy of Iron Age barbarians eager for the slaughter; the Skaven haphazardly fielding World War I-esque [[{{Pun}} ratling guns]], poison gas grenadiers and sniper teams alongside [[WeHaveReserves hordes of Clanrats armed with nothing but primitive clubs and torches]], and so on.
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41The rules of the game are published in a series of rulebooks, which describe how to move miniatures around the game surface and simulate combat in a balanced and fair manner. Games may be played on any appropriate surface, although the standard is a 6 ft. by 4 ft. tabletop decorated with model scenery in scale with the miniatures. Any individual or group of miniatures in the game is called a "unit", whether represented by a single model or group of similar troops.
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43The core game rules are supplied in a single book, with supplemental Warhammer Army Books giving guidelines and background for army-specific rules. Movement about the playing surface is generally measured in inches and combat between troops or units given a random element with the use of 6-sided dice. Points values are assigned to each unit and option in the game, giving players the ability to play on even terms. An average game has armies of 750 to 3,000 points, although smaller and larger values are quite possible.
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45Gameplay follows a turn structure in which one player completes all movement for troops, then simulates casting spells (when spell-using units are available) and uses all ranged or missile weapons in the army such as bows and handguns, followed by any units in contact fighting in melee or close-combat. After finishing, the second player does the same. This is repeated for a number of equal turns, generally six, although occasionally to a time limit or until no units are left on the playing surface. The winner is often determined by victory points; earning a number equal to the value of enemy units killed. Special factors, or "objectives" could add or subtract from this total based on predefined goals, usually holding parts of the battlefield or killing powerful units (such as the enemy general).
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47Dice rolls generally uses traditional six-sided dice (d6), with a high result being desirable (in most cases). For example, an archer unit is given a statistic that allows it to hit on the roll of a four or more. Various factors can change this number, reducing or raising the number needed. Mitigation of random results is a large part of the game, as well as traditional battlefield tactics. In some cases, other types of dice are needed; this could be a d3 (simulated with a normal die, 1 and 2 counting as a result of 1 and so on), or it can be a 6-sided "scatter" die used to generate random directions, often used alongside an "artillery" die (also 6-sided), used mainly for cannons, stone-throwers, and unusual variant artillery.
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49[[/folder]]
50
51----
52
53The wargame also spawned a [[TabletopGames role-playing game]] tie-in, ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasyRoleplay'', which is not unlike a DarkerAndEdgier LowFantasy version of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''. Like its SciFi sister game line, it also has some {{Gaiden Game}}s: ''TabletopGame/BloodBowl'', a "fantasy football" wargame set in a parallel dimension of the ''Warhammer'' where a kind of [[RugbyIsSlaughter ultra-violent rugby]] has become SeriousBusiness among the various races and replaced war as the chief way they settle their differences; ''TabletopGame/{{Mordheim}}'', a semi-postapocalyptic wargame set in the eponymous ruined city after it got levelled by a meteorite of solid [[GreenRocks Wyrdstone]], leaving mercenary warbands and cutthroat war parties scrambling for the meteorite shards for different nefarious purposes; TabletopGame/HeroQuest, a DungeonCrawler-style board game, also set in the ''Warhammer Fantasy'' universe; and last but not least ''Man-O-War'', a naval combat game set in the ''Warhammer'' world where players pit fleets of [[CoolBoat cool warships]] against each other.
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55There's also ''Warmaster'', another miniature wargame within the same setting that uses smaller figures and a zoomed-out scale, thus allowing much larger battles. ''Warmaster'' became popular with historical wargamers and a specially-modified version called ''Warmaster Ancients'' is one of the major rule sets used for ancient and medieval historical wargames. There's also ''Battle Masters'', a Milton Bradley board game that uses models the same scale as ''Warhammer''.
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57The setting has a few computer games, among them ''Warhammer: Shadow of the Horned Rat'', ''VideoGame/WarhammerDarkOmen'', ''VideoGame/WarhammerOnline'' and ''VideoGame/WarhammerMarkOfChaos'', which met with varying reception. There is also a ''VideoGame/Left4Dead''-ish game set in the End Times setting, appropriately titled ''VideoGame/TheEndTimesVermintide'' and its sequel ''VideoGame/VermintideII''. There is also the ''VideoGame/TotalWarWarhammer'' series of strategy games by Creator/CreativeAssembly. ''Warhammer'' has also given inspiration to non-RPG tabletop games, such as ''Chaos Invasion'' and ''TabletopGame/ChaosMarauders''. It spawned a relatively long-running (and decently successful) CollectibleCardGame simply known as ''Warcry'', although the mechanics of the game were very close to the actual miniatures game. Finally for ''Warhammer''-curious bibliophiles, there are a large number of novels set in the ''Warhammer'' world such as ''Literature/WarhammerTimeOfLegends'', ''Literature/{{Drachenfels}}'' and the ''Literature/GotrekAndFelix'' series.
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59In the second half of 2014, a campaign/expansion was added: ''TabletopGame/WarhammerTheEndTimes''. This campaign was a [[WhamEpisode huge leap fluff-wise and game-wise]]. Long story short, [[AntiChrist Archeaon the Everchosen]] finally launched his invasion, but before that [[ManipulativeBastard Mannfred von Carstein]] and [[TheDragon Arkhan the Black]] set things in motion to stop him by resurrecting [[BigBad Nagash]]. Everything consequently (and quite literally) went to Hell in the handbasket: Daemonic invasions all over the world, Skaven overran entire human kingdoms, Bretonnia suffered a civil war... Tropes relating to this period of the game's history should be placed on [[TabletopGame/WarhammerTheEndTimes this page]]. The eventual result was the [[TheBadGuyWins ultimate triumph of the Forces of Chaos]] and the [[DownerEnding total destruction of the world]] at their hands, followed by a SoftReboot of ''Warhammer'' in the form of ''TabletopGame/WarhammerAgeOfSigmar''.
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61After the events of ''TabletopGame/WarhammerTheEndTimes'', ''Warhammer'' was officially discontinued and replaced with the ''[[TabletopGame/WarhammerAgeOfSigmar Warhammer: Age of Sigmar]]'' game universe by Creator/GamesWorkshop in July 2015. All official support for ''Warhammer Fantasy Battle'' was discontinued until 2024, which saw the release of ''Warhammer: The Old World'', a revisiting of the setting at an earlier point in its history, 243 years before the End Times, as a rough equivalent of the ''Literature/HorusHeresy: Age of Darkness'' game for ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000''.
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63For tropes relating to this game's sister product, the [[JustForFun/RecycledInSpace sci-fi-themed]] ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', '''please''' add them to that page and not here. Although sharing some common themes, they are two distinct game lines in different settings.
64----
65!!Tropes for the Tropes God!:
66[[index]]
67* [[Warhammer/WFBTropesAToF A to F]]
68* [[Warhammer/WFBTropesGToZ G to Z]]
69[[/index]]
70----
71->''"Glimpse the World that Was..."''

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