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* AllForNothing: Piscina IV is heavily damaged and the Dark Angels lose several soldiers, including veteran scout sergeant Naaman. Ghazghkull not only escapes the planet unharmed, but the waghboss only considered the entire thing a dress rehearsal for his pending attack on Armageddon.
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AIIsACrapshoot: Averted for most, but still depends on Adeptus Mechanicus's Tech priests and the Techmarines of the various SpaceMarine Chapters. (The Imperium banned Artificial Intelligence for a reason) The Chaos [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] battle robots and vehicles are most certainly running on this Trope.

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* AIIsACrapshoot: Averted for most, but still depends on Adeptus Mechanicus's Tech priests and the Techmarines of the various SpaceMarine Chapters. (The Imperium banned Artificial Intelligence for a reason) The Chaos [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] battle robots and vehicles are most certainly running on this Trope.



ArmorIsUseless: Averted for the many PowerArmor types worn by the various Space Marines, which make them nigh-invincible unless you can get a lucky shot through the armour's weak points or have heavy weapons designed specifically to kill Space Marines.

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* ArmorIsUseless: Averted for the many PowerArmor types worn by the various Space Marines, which make them nigh-invincible unless you can get a lucky shot through the armour's weak points or have heavy weapons designed specifically to kill Space Marines.



BroughtDownToBadass: Stripping a Marine of his weapons and PowerArmor will probably just make you die slower. Specifically, we have Captain Lysander who [[spoiler:breaks out of an Iron Warriors prison, and then breaks ''back inside'' with nothing but a rusty axe]], and Over-captain Vallax who breaks out of an Ork mobile fortress, kills the Doks who tortured him, and breaks into his own fortress to help take down the BigBad.

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* BroughtDownToBadass: Stripping a Marine of his weapons and PowerArmor will probably just make you die slower. Specifically, we have Captain Lysander who [[spoiler:breaks out of an Iron Warriors prison, and then breaks ''back inside'' with nothing but a rusty axe]], and Over-captain Vallax who breaks out of an Ork mobile fortress, kills the Doks who tortured him, and breaks into his own fortress to help take down the BigBad.



BullyingTheDragon: Why yes, Ecclesiarch. I'm certain that asking that Space Marine Captain to kiss your boots will only end great for you and your private army which you aren't supposed to have. We all know what happens next.
CannonFodder: Averted. Space Marine Chapters do not spend their companies and squads needlessly, but some Chapters (like the Iron Hands) are not above sending Imperial Guard forces in mass numbers to the frontlines before they deploy their own troops.
TheChainsOfCommanding: Some of the Space Marine Captains have to make harsh decisions to save the Imperium. At first it weighs heavily on them, especially the newly promoted Captains and Sergeants, but throughout the battles ahead they grow to accept the mantle handed to them. Specifically, Kersh from ''Legion'' and Volos from ''Antagonis'' have the whole YouAreInCommandNow aspect woven pretty deeply into their character arcs.

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* BullyingTheDragon: Why yes, Ecclesiarch. I'm certain that asking that Space Marine Captain to kiss your boots will only end great for you and your private army which you aren't supposed to have. We all know what happens next.
* CannonFodder: Averted. Space Marine Chapters do not spend their companies and squads needlessly, but some Chapters (like the Iron Hands) are not above sending Imperial Guard forces in mass numbers to the frontlines before they deploy their own troops.
* TheChainsOfCommanding: Some of the Space Marine Captains have to make harsh decisions to save the Imperium. At first it weighs heavily on them, especially the newly promoted Captains and Sergeants, but throughout the battles ahead they grow to accept the mantle handed to them. Specifically, Kersh from ''Legion'' and Volos from ''Antagonis'' have the whole YouAreInCommandNow aspect woven pretty deeply into their character arcs.



{{Determinator}}: It takes a ''lot'' to down a Space Marine:

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* {{Determinator}}: It takes a ''lot'' to down a Space Marine:



HeroicSacrifice: [[OnceAnEpisode At least once per book]].
MoreDakka: '''AND HOLY GOD-EMPEROR HOW!''' Almost every novel in this series is bound to have scenes of Space Marines unloading their weaponry into Daemons, Heretics and Xenos alike.

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* HeroicSacrifice: [[OnceAnEpisode At least once per book]].
* MoreDakka: '''AND HOLY GOD-EMPEROR HOW!''' Almost every novel in this series is bound to have scenes of Space Marines unloading their weaponry into Daemons, Heretics and Xenos alike.



SpaceBattle: A common occurrence in the series. Half the plot of ''The Gildar Rift'' is about a space battle between the Red Corsairs and the Silver Skulls, to name one example.

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* SpaceBattle: A common occurrence in the series. Half the plot of ''The Gildar Rift'' is about a space battle between the Red Corsairs and the Silver Skulls, to name one example.



AwesomeButImpractical: The Iron Halo. It can protect the wearer from pretty much everything, but eats up so much energy, the Marine wearing it is pretty much immobile while it's working, and it leads to severe overheating.
CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Kantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.
CountingBullets: Pedro Kantor does it all the time with Dorn's Arrow, although he has a built-in counter to help him. It's amazing how quickly over six hundred projectiles can be spent.
FateWorseThanDeath: Scout Kennen is sentenced to being converted to servitor - essentially, serving as lobotomized WetwareCPU ''and'' framework for hardware for a thousand years.
KnowWhenToFoldThem: When it realizes it can't beat Kantor, Snagrod bails out of the fight.
NonIndicativeName: In-universe, in ''Rynn's World'' the narrative takes its time to point out that the Iron Halo is actually made from several different metals, none of which is iron.
NowLetMeCarryYou: Kantor initially refuses to let human refugees join the Space Marines' column, ultimately giving in on the condition that anyone who can't keep up will be left behind for the Orks. A mother struggles to keep up while carrying her two young children. When she finally collapses in exhaustion, Kantor calls a halt and walks back. His captain fears that he's about to perform a MercyKill to prevent them from suffering a much more horrible death from the Orks... but Kantor only tells her how brave she's been, and that she's earned the right for her and her children to be carried instead, and lifts them into his own arms.
OlderThanTheyLook: Many noblemen, thanks to rejuvenation treatments they can afford. Maia Caglieri, for example, is ninety seven, but looks forty.
ThePowerOfHate: Alessio Cortez believes that hate for traitors and xenos is what has kept him alive and going for all three centuries of his service.
RedOniBlueOni: In the Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Kantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.

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* AwesomeButImpractical: The Iron Halo. It can protect the wearer from pretty much everything, but eats up so much energy, the Marine wearing it is pretty much immobile while it's working, and it leads to severe overheating.
* CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Kantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.
* CountingBullets: Pedro Kantor does it all the time with Dorn's Arrow, although he has a built-in counter to help him. It's amazing how quickly over six hundred projectiles can be spent.
* FateWorseThanDeath: Scout Kennen is sentenced to being converted to servitor - essentially, serving as lobotomized WetwareCPU ''and'' framework for hardware for a thousand years.
* KnowWhenToFoldThem: When it realizes it can't beat Kantor, Snagrod bails out of the fight.
* NonIndicativeName: In-universe, in ''Rynn's World'' the narrative takes its time to point out that the Iron Halo is actually made from several different metals, none of which is iron.
* NowLetMeCarryYou: Kantor initially refuses to let human refugees join the Space Marines' column, ultimately giving in on the condition that anyone who can't keep up will be left behind for the Orks. A mother struggles to keep up while carrying her two young children. When she finally collapses in exhaustion, Kantor calls a halt and walks back. His captain fears that he's about to perform a MercyKill to prevent them from suffering a much more horrible death from the Orks... but Kantor only tells her how brave she's been, and that she's earned the right for her and her children to be carried instead, and lifts them into his own arms.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Many noblemen, thanks to rejuvenation treatments they can afford. Maia Caglieri, for example, is ninety seven, but looks forty.
* ThePowerOfHate: Alessio Cortez believes that hate for traitors and xenos is what has kept him alive and going for all three centuries of his service.
* RedOniBlueOni: In the Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Kantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.



ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: Despite the brutal action and depiction of war in the 41st Millennium, some of the best scenes are quiet moments where the [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] are discussing tactics and plans about how to wage war or giving some {{Exposition}} on the background of the planet or enemy they face. Grimaldus speaks to his Fighting Company's Apothecary, who is close to crossing the DespairEventHorizon due to the casualties that the Black Templars are sustaining (by this point in the book only a few are left and the defenders are near defeat).
ArcWords: We are judged in life by the evil we destroy"
AttackItsWeakPoint: The Orks are pushing towards Hel's Highway, which is a wide open highway running straight through the centre of the city and allowing access pretty much everywhere.
BornLucky: Andrej,He's in the thick of the fighting from the very beginning, his subordinates are conscripted dockers, he gets lost in a city overrun with Orks, gets drawn into the final close-quarters battle and has the entire (Imperial-sized) cathedral dropped on his head. He somehow survives all this.
BuriedAlive: ''Helsreach'''s final battle ends with the cathedral collapsing on everyone, essentially burying them alive. Grimaldus is one of seven people who survive this, the Astarte pretty much digging himself out.
DeliberateValuesDissonance: Between Salamanders and Templars. Salamanders' creed compels them to protect civilians wherever possible, even to the point of foregoing glory, but the POV character, a Templar, has exactly opposite mindset and thus the story paints Salamanders as obstructive and wrong.

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ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: *ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: Despite the brutal action and depiction of war in the 41st Millennium, some of the best scenes are quiet moments where the [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] are discussing tactics and plans about how to wage war or giving some {{Exposition}} on the background of the planet or enemy they face. Grimaldus speaks to his Fighting Company's Apothecary, who is close to crossing the DespairEventHorizon due to the casualties that the Black Templars are sustaining (by this point in the book only a few are left and the defenders are near defeat).
ArcWords: *ArcWords: We are judged in life by the evil we destroy"
AttackItsWeakPoint: *AttackItsWeakPoint: The Orks are pushing towards Hel's Highway, which is a wide open highway running straight through the centre of the city and allowing access pretty much everywhere.
BornLucky: *BornLucky: Andrej,He's in the thick of the fighting from the very beginning, his subordinates are conscripted dockers, he gets lost in a city overrun with Orks, gets drawn into the final close-quarters battle and has the entire (Imperial-sized) cathedral dropped on his head. He somehow survives all this.
BuriedAlive: *BuriedAlive: ''Helsreach'''s final battle ends with the cathedral collapsing on everyone, essentially burying them alive. Grimaldus is one of seven people who survive this, the Astarte pretty much digging himself out.
DeliberateValuesDissonance: *DeliberateValuesDissonance: Between Salamanders and Templars. Salamanders' creed compels them to protect civilians wherever possible, even to the point of foregoing glory, but the POV character, a Templar, has exactly opposite mindset and thus the story paints Salamanders as obstructive and wrong.



MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence to support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].
OpposingCombatPhilosophies: Between the Black Templars and The Salamanders in ''Helsreach'', who are focused on "destroying the Emperor's Enemies" and "defending the Emperor's people" respectively. The two are working together to defend a civilian shelter, and have broken the first Ork wave. The Templars pursue and head StraightForTheCommander, while the Salamanders fall back and prepare for the second wave. From the Templar perspective the Salamanders hung them out to dry when killing the Ork Boss leading the attack could have prevented further waves entirely, and from the Salamander perspective the Templar attack was a foolish risk that would have left the civilians vulnerable to attack from other enemy forces even if it succeeded.
OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Throughout ''Helsreach'', the Templars of Grimaldus' squad keep on pointing out that he's acting incredibly subdued and uninvested, especially compared to his previous fiery zeal. Grimaldus himself keeps on thinking on why this is happening.

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* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence to support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].
* OpposingCombatPhilosophies: Between the Black Templars and The Salamanders in ''Helsreach'', who are focused on "destroying the Emperor's Enemies" and "defending the Emperor's people" respectively. The two are working together to defend a civilian shelter, and have broken the first Ork wave. The Templars pursue and head StraightForTheCommander, while the Salamanders fall back and prepare for the second wave. From the Templar perspective the Salamanders hung them out to dry when killing the Ork Boss leading the attack could have prevented further waves entirely, and from the Salamander perspective the Templar attack was a foolish risk that would have left the civilians vulnerable to attack from other enemy forces even if it succeeded.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Throughout ''Helsreach'', the Templars of Grimaldus' squad keep on pointing out that he's acting incredibly subdued and uninvested, especially compared to his previous fiery zeal. Grimaldus himself keeps on thinking on why this is happening.



PyrrhicVictory: The titular Hive City manages to survive the Ork invasion until the Season of Fire grinds the invasion to a halt, but their manufacturing facilities, transport infrastructure, and worker population had been beyond decimated. Estimates putting the city's current max output capabilities at just 5% of what it was producing before the war.

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* PyrrhicVictory: The titular Hive City manages to survive the Ork invasion until the Season of Fire grinds the invasion to a halt, but their manufacturing facilities, transport infrastructure, and worker population had been beyond decimated. Estimates putting the city's current max output capabilities at just 5% of what it was producing before the war.



AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens: The Orks also have no problem communicating with the Dark Angels
AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs: The orks seize control of the Dark Angels' basilica off-page in ''The Purging of Kadillus''. Chaplain Boreas leads multiple assaults on the basilica in an effort to take it back, finally succeeding on his fifth attempt.
BigBadDuumvirate: Ghazghkull and Nazdreg, Ork warbosses of the Goffs and Bad Moons respectively, have teamed up to conquer Piscina IV in ''Purging of Kadillus''.
CoversAlwaysLie: The cover has Belial facing off against Ghazghkull Thraka. In the battle, the two never came within several kilometers of each other, and one of the times that Belial did fight personally in the battle, he was supported by Deathwing terminators, not the regular marines that the cover shows.

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* AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens: The Orks also have no problem communicating with the Dark Angels
* AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs: The orks seize control of the Dark Angels' basilica off-page in ''The Purging of Kadillus''. Chaplain Boreas leads multiple assaults on the basilica in an effort to take it back, finally succeeding on his fifth attempt.
* BigBadDuumvirate: Ghazghkull and Nazdreg, Ork warbosses of the Goffs and Bad Moons respectively, have teamed up to conquer Piscina IV in ''Purging of Kadillus''.
* CoversAlwaysLie: The cover has Belial facing off against Ghazghkull Thraka. In the battle, the two never came within several kilometers of each other, and one of the times that Belial did fight personally in the battle, he was supported by Deathwing terminators, not the regular marines that the cover shows.



NonIndicativeName: Kadillus Harbor is purged off-screen by the PDF. The Space Marine characters we follow throughout the book are trying to purge a series of power plants instead.
ObsessivelyOrganized: Chaplain Boreas stops in the middle of a pitched siege to glue part of a statue back together. In his mind he realizes there's probably better things to be doing at that moment, but he'd also be a bad [[BadassPreacher Chaplain]] if he wasn't a stickler for details.

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* NonIndicativeName: Kadillus Harbor is purged off-screen by the PDF. The Space Marine characters we follow throughout the book are trying to purge a series of power plants instead.
* ObsessivelyOrganized: Chaplain Boreas stops in the middle of a pitched siege to glue part of a statue back together. In his mind he realizes there's probably better things to be doing at that moment, but he'd also be a bad [[BadassPreacher Chaplain]] if he wasn't a stickler for details.



AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens: The Necrons seem to enjoy taunting the human defenders in their own tongue.
AntiVillain: The Flayed Lord, from ''Fall of Damnos'', realized how messed up he has become but can't really stop himself.
AnyoneCanDie: Corporal Besseque; of all the non-space marines he's held in possibly the highest regard by the PDF thanks to saving the lives of both the planetary governor AND his temporary replacement. [[SurprisinglySuddenDeath He dies out of nowhere when a 8-inch rock falls from the ceiling and hits him on the head.]]
BadassNormal: Captain Evvers and the mountainside guerrillas in ''Damnos''. For over a year they survive in some of the harshest climates killing Necrons with nothing more than ice picks and improvised explosives. Conscript Falka deserves a mention as well, leading a hundred-man charge against a phalanx of Necrons and ''winning''.
BigDamnHeroes: Agrippan, Captain of the 1st Company, saves Sicarius and kills the Voidbringer.
BrokenAce: Cato Sicarius, following the fall of Damnos, considers it his greatest failure, has troubles fighting and is plagued by dreams about the Undying.
BrokenPedestal: As the battle of Damnos goes on, Praxor - before, staunch supporter, if not outright ''believer'' of Sicarius - starts to see less of TheGoodCaptain and more of a GloryHound.
EstablishingCharacterMoment: Fall of Damnos gives the Necrons one in their ResistanceIsFutile line.

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* AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens: The Necrons seem to enjoy taunting the human defenders in their own tongue.
* AntiVillain: The Flayed Lord, from ''Fall of Damnos'', realized how messed up he has become but can't really stop himself.
* AnyoneCanDie: Corporal Besseque; of all the non-space marines he's held in possibly the highest regard by the PDF thanks to saving the lives of both the planetary governor AND his temporary replacement. [[SurprisinglySuddenDeath He dies out of nowhere when a 8-inch rock falls from the ceiling and hits him on the head.]]
* BadassNormal: Captain Evvers and the mountainside guerrillas in ''Damnos''. For over a year they survive in some of the harshest climates killing Necrons with nothing more than ice picks and improvised explosives. Conscript Falka deserves a mention as well, leading a hundred-man charge against a phalanx of Necrons and ''winning''.
* BigDamnHeroes: Agrippan, Captain of the 1st Company, saves Sicarius and kills the Voidbringer.
* BrokenAce: Cato Sicarius, following the fall of Damnos, considers it his greatest failure, has troubles fighting and is plagued by dreams about the Undying.
* BrokenPedestal: As the battle of Damnos goes on, Praxor - before, staunch supporter, if not outright ''believer'' of Sicarius - starts to see less of TheGoodCaptain TheGood* Captain and more of a GloryHound.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Fall of Damnos gives the Necrons one in their ResistanceIsFutile line.



FirstNameBasis: Space Marine captain Scipio and mortal guerilla fighter Jynn quickly call each other by names - at first because Jynn doesn't know Scipio's surname and then because he decides that she deserves the honor after saving his life. Other members of Scipio's squad are rather displeased with this.
HonorBeforeReason: Sicarius goes to fight the Undying by himself, forbidding his men from committing to the duel, because that's "the proper way". [[spoiler:Had he taken at least Agrippen with him, he might've succeeded in defending Damnos.]]

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* FirstNameBasis: Space Marine captain Scipio and mortal guerilla fighter Jynn quickly call each other by names - at first because Jynn doesn't know Scipio's surname and then because he decides that she deserves the honor after saving his life. Other members of Scipio's squad are rather displeased with this.
* HonorBeforeReason: Sicarius goes to fight the Undying by himself, forbidding his men from committing to the duel, because that's "the proper way". [[spoiler:Had he taken at least Agrippen with him, he might've succeeded in defending Damnos.]]



MyGreatestFailure: Scipio keeps flashing back to an attack against Nurgle cultists, in which he failed to [[spoiler:MercyKill his Chaplain in time, resulting in a demon popping out of Chaplain Orad's flesh and killing another squadmate.]] Thus he becomes a bit of a perfectionist (by Space Marine standards), and when more squad mates die to the Necrons he's having trouble accepting it truly isn't his fault this time.
PyrrhicVictory: 'The book ends with the Ultramarines saving Kellenport, but half of 2nd Company is killed or wounded including Captain Sicarius, most of Damnos' defenses are gone, and the Necrons haven't even begun to fight.
RedOniBlueOni: Among Ultramarines, Sicarius is Red to Agemann's Blue. While Cato is HotBlooded, prone to LargeHam behaviour and charging straight for the enemy, Severus is slower, likes to think things out and have worked-out tactic before comitting to the fight, not to mention that he's CombatPragmatist while Cato practices HonorBeforeReason.

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* MyGreatestFailure: Scipio keeps flashing back to an attack against Nurgle cultists, in which he failed to [[spoiler:MercyKill his Chaplain in time, resulting in a demon popping out of Chaplain Orad's flesh and killing another squadmate.]] Thus he becomes a bit of a perfectionist (by Space Marine standards), and when more squad mates die to the Necrons he's having trouble accepting it truly isn't his fault this time.
* PyrrhicVictory: 'The book ends with the Ultramarines saving Kellenport, but half of 2nd Company is killed or wounded including Captain Sicarius, most of Damnos' defenses are gone, and the Necrons haven't even begun to fight.
* RedOniBlueOni: Among Ultramarines, Sicarius is Red to Agemann's Blue. While Cato is HotBlooded, prone to LargeHam behaviour and charging straight for the enemy, Severus is slower, likes to think things out and have worked-out tactic before comitting to the fight, not to mention that he's CombatPragmatist while Cato practices HonorBeforeReason.



SanitySlippage: Sahtah the Enfleshed, a Necron Lord turned flayed one, finds himself growing less and less self-aware as his cravings for flesh grow stronger. The Necron Overlord whom Sahtah answers to isn't doing much better, debating whether or not to join [[OmnicidalManiac the Destroyer Court]].
SecretPath: Squad Scipio spends most of the story looking for one, since the Necron artillery pieces high in the mountains have extremely strong yet extremely wide circles of defence.

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* SanitySlippage: Sahtah the Enfleshed, a Necron Lord turned flayed one, finds himself growing less and less self-aware as his cravings for flesh grow stronger. The Necron Overlord whom Sahtah answers to isn't doing much better, debating whether or not to join [[OmnicidalManiac the Destroyer Court]].
* SecretPath: Squad Scipio spends most of the story looking for one, since the Necron artillery pieces high in the mountains have extremely strong yet extremely wide circles of defence.



TheStarscream: Tahek the Voidbringer and Ankh the Necron Lorn have more than a few shades of this, both towards their Overlord and towards each other.
TacticalWithdrawal: Sicarius commits all his Ultramarines to an offensive feint in an attempt to draw out the Necron Lords. The Necrons don't fall for it, and the Ultramarines find themselves nearly surrounded in short order.
TheWorfEffect: Fall of Damnos is little more than one long series of this, to drive home how serious and dangerous the threat of the Necrons is.

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* TheStarscream: Tahek the Voidbringer and Ankh the Necron Lorn have more than a few shades of this, both towards their Overlord and towards each other.
* TacticalWithdrawal: Sicarius commits all his Ultramarines to an offensive feint in an attempt to draw out the Necron Lords. The Necrons don't fall for it, and the Ultramarines find themselves nearly surrounded in short order.
* TheWorfEffect: Fall of Damnos is little more than one long series of this, to drive home how serious and dangerous the threat of the Necrons is.



AndShowItToYou: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red kills Greyloc by ripping out both of his hearts]].
ArchEnemy: The Space Wolves and Thousand Sons are each other's arch-enemies in general, but Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm views the Thousand Sons' primarch Magnus the Red as his personal nemesis in ''Battle of the Fang'', having spent decades chasing him across the galaxy while Magnus eggs him on with taunting psychic visions.
BadassNormal: The Kaerls, only a few thousand mortal men and women holding off two million Spireguard and over seven-hundred Thousand Sons in the defense of the Aett.
BenevolentBoss: The Space Wolves are this to their chapter-serf kaerls, not treating them as disposeable fodder, at least one Space Wolf sacrifices himself to hold off the enemy to allow a company of kaerls to withdraw to a safer location.
BlatantLies: The Thousand Sons tell the first wave of Spireguard soldiers being sent down to secure landing sites that the Space Wolves they'll be fighting against are just ordinary men, like the Spireguard themselves. They quickly realize they were lied to once they encounter the Wolves and start getting slaughtered.

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* AndShowItToYou: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red kills Greyloc by ripping out both of his hearts]].
* ArchEnemy: The Space Wolves and Thousand Sons are each other's arch-enemies in general, but Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm views the Thousand Sons' primarch Magnus the Red as his personal nemesis in ''Battle of the Fang'', having spent decades chasing him across the galaxy while Magnus eggs him on with taunting psychic visions.
* BadassNormal: The Kaerls, only a few thousand mortal men and women holding off two million Spireguard and over seven-hundred Thousand Sons in the defense of the Aett.
* BenevolentBoss: The Space Wolves are this to their chapter-serf kaerls, not treating them as disposeable fodder, at least one Space Wolf sacrifices himself to hold off the enemy to allow a company of kaerls to withdraw to a safer location.
* BlatantLies: The Thousand Sons tell the first wave of Spireguard soldiers being sent down to secure landing sites that the Space Wolves they'll be fighting against are just ordinary men, like the Spireguard themselves. They quickly realize they were lied to once they encounter the Wolves and start getting slaughtered.



BringHelpBack: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves scout Blackwing must race to the Gangava system to warn the rest of his chapter that their home planet Fenris is besieged by the Thousand Sons. His task is complicated by both the fact that his badly-damaged ship is falling apart around him, and by a team of Thousand Sons saboteurs that teleported onboard to expedite the process.
BrokenAce: Bjorn the Fell-Handed is revealed to be this. He's the oldest and most sophisticated Dreadnought in the Imperium, is revered and respected by all the Space Wolves and is a killing machine like no other once roused, but on the inside he's wracked with self-loathing and abandonment issues due to the unexplained departure of his primarch Leman Russ.
CoDragons: Ahmuz Temekh and Herume Aphael . The two of them act as joint commanders of the Thousand Sons forces invading Fenris, with Aphael leading their troops on the ground while Temekh carries out the taxing ritual to summon their master, Magnus the Red, into the physical world.

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* BringHelpBack: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves scout Blackwing must race to the Gangava system to warn the rest of his chapter that their home planet Fenris is besieged by the Thousand Sons. His task is complicated by both the fact that his badly-damaged ship is falling apart around him, and by a team of Thousand Sons saboteurs that teleported onboard to expedite the process.
* BrokenAce: Bjorn the Fell-Handed is revealed to be this. He's the oldest and most sophisticated Dreadnought in the Imperium, is revered and respected by all the Space Wolves and is a killing machine like no other once roused, but on the inside he's wracked with self-loathing and abandonment issues due to the unexplained departure of his primarch Leman Russ.
* CoDragons: Ahmuz Temekh and Herume Aphael . The two of them act as joint commanders of the Thousand Sons forces invading Fenris, with Aphael leading their troops on the ground while Temekh carries out the taxing ritual to summon their master, Magnus the Red, into the physical world.



DefiantToTheEnd: The defenders believe nobody is going to come and save them, with their fleet on deployment and no messages out (as far as they know), but they decide to make the Thousand Sons pay for every inch of ground they claim.
DynamicEntry:[[spoiler:Ironhelm enters the fight between Bjorn and Magnus with a flying tackle that knocks all three of them off a cliff]].
ElementalPowers: The Wolves' magically gifted Priests wield these in battle.
EyeScream: An unfortunate deckhand gets his eyes gouged out by a Thousand Sons sorcerer so that the sorcerer can implant magical eyes in their place and use him as a mind-controlled spy.
GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: When Trom Rossek falls into a depressive funk after getting his entire squad killed by the Thousand Sons, Wyrmblade tries to snap him out of it by punching him in the face with enough force to knock him flat on his ass.
HonorBeforeReason: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Harek Ironhelm is so obsessed with defeating Magnus the Red and settling the Space Wolves' ancient feud with the Thousand Sons that he's willing to mobilize the entire chapter and leave Fenris unprotected when he thinks he's got Magnus cornered on Gangava--just as Magnus planned.

to:

* DefiantToTheEnd: The defenders believe nobody is going to come and save them, with their fleet on deployment and no messages out (as far as they know), but they decide to make the Thousand Sons pay for every inch of ground they claim.
* DynamicEntry:[[spoiler:Ironhelm enters the fight between Bjorn and Magnus with a flying tackle that knocks all three of them off a cliff]].
* ElementalPowers: The Wolves' magically gifted Priests wield these in battle.
* EyeScream: An unfortunate deckhand gets his eyes gouged out by a Thousand Sons sorcerer so that the sorcerer can implant magical eyes in their place and use him as a mind-controlled spy.
* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: When Trom Rossek falls into a depressive funk after getting his entire squad killed by the Thousand Sons, Wyrmblade tries to snap him out of it by punching him in the face with enough force to knock him flat on his ass.
* HonorBeforeReason: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Harek Ironhelm is so obsessed with defeating Magnus the Red and settling the Space Wolves' ancient feud with the Thousand Sons that he's willing to mobilize the entire chapter and leave Fenris unprotected when he thinks he's got Magnus cornered on Gangava--just as Magnus planned.



KungFuWizard: [[spoiler:Magnus the Red spends as much time beating Space Wolves to death with his bare hands as he does exploding them with his godlike psychic powers]].
MechanicalMonster: The Thousand Sons deploy the last of their Cataphract robots against the Space Wolves. While few in number, the hulking war machines pose a serious threat to the Wolves, sporting plasma cannons siege drills that can fell even a Terminator with one blow, and enough durability to withstand anything short of a Dreadnought's weapons.
MookHorrorShow: One scene told from the perspective of a Spireguard soldier sent in to establish a beachhead for the invading Thousand Sons. His initial confidence and professionalism--born of the belief that the Space Wolves are simply normal men like himself--quickly give way to panic and terror once the Wolves show up and start butchering his unit.
OrbitalBombardment: The Thousand Sons assault the titular fortress with a pair of "planet-scourers"--ships built for the sole purpose of housing [[WaveMotionGun enormous, downward-pointing plasma cannons powerful enough to raze a continent]]. The resulting bombardment isn't strong enough to bring down the Fang's shields, but it ''does'' prevent the Space Wolves from bringing the Fang's anti-orbit weapons to bear and keeps them from sending out Thunderhawks to interfere with the Thousand Sons' landing operations.
OurWerewolvesAreDifferent: The Halls of the Revered Fallen--the caves where the Space Wolves keep their Dreadnoughts--are guarded by mysterious "beasts" that appear to be gigantic, semi-humanoid wolves with cybernetic augmentations. [[spoiler:In the same book, Helfist succumbs to his grief and battle-rage during the final days of the siege, transforming into a Wulfen.]]
PerspectiveReversal: Morek Karekborn and his daughter Freija have opposing views of the Space Wolves. Morek looks up to the Space Wolves with respect and reverence, while Freija instead resents the Wolves for their arrogance and superior attitude. By the end of the novel, Morek's faith in the Wolves has been shaken while Freija has gained a newfound respect and admiration for them.
ProtectiveCharm: The Space Wolves inscribe protective runes into their armour to ward off maleficarum, their term for the power of Chaos. The Fang itself has thousands of similar wards etched into its stone walls, and their presence helps to slow the advance of the Thousand Sons once they break into the fortress, most notably by [[spoiler:preventing Magnus the Red from physically manifesting within the Fang]] until the Sons destroy enough of the wards.
SizeShifter: [[spoiler:Magnus the Red enlarges himself so that he can stand eye-to-eye with--and tear down--a Titan-sized statue of Leman Russ, then shrinks back down to his (still considerable) normal height once the deed is done. Later on, he shrinks to a mere three metres in order to duel Wyrmblade]].
SlobsVersusSnobs: Some of the Thousand Sons, those who don't realise what lies beneath the Space Wolves' exterior, see their conflict with the "dog-warriors" as this.
TeleFrag: A Thousand Sons sorcerer experience this when he hastily teleports himself and a squad of Rubric Marines into an oncoming Space Wolves vessel. Only two of the Rubric Marines make it through, and only one of them does so intact; the other one materializes within a wall and effectively dies. The sorcerer himself suffers injuries to his hands, face, and internal organs.

to:

* KungFuWizard: [[spoiler:Magnus the Red spends as much time beating Space Wolves to death with his bare hands as he does exploding them with his godlike psychic powers]].
* MechanicalMonster: The Thousand Sons deploy the last of their Cataphract robots against the Space Wolves. While few in number, the hulking war machines pose a serious threat to the Wolves, sporting plasma cannons siege drills that can fell even a Terminator with one blow, and enough durability to withstand anything short of a Dreadnought's weapons.
* MookHorrorShow: One scene told from the perspective of a Spireguard soldier sent in to establish a beachhead for the invading Thousand Sons. His initial confidence and professionalism--born of the belief that the Space Wolves are simply normal men like himself--quickly give way to panic and terror once the Wolves show up and start butchering his unit.
* OrbitalBombardment: The Thousand Sons assault the titular fortress with a pair of "planet-scourers"--ships built for the sole purpose of housing [[WaveMotionGun enormous, downward-pointing plasma cannons powerful enough to raze a continent]]. The resulting bombardment isn't strong enough to bring down the Fang's shields, but it ''does'' prevent the Space Wolves from bringing the Fang's anti-orbit weapons to bear and keeps them from sending out Thunderhawks to interfere with the Thousand Sons' landing operations.
* OurWerewolvesAreDifferent: The Halls of the Revered Fallen--the caves where the Space Wolves keep their Dreadnoughts--are guarded by mysterious "beasts" that appear to be gigantic, semi-humanoid wolves with cybernetic augmentations. [[spoiler:In the same book, Helfist succumbs to his grief and battle-rage during the final days of the siege, transforming into a Wulfen.]]
* PerspectiveReversal: Morek Karekborn and his daughter Freija have opposing views of the Space Wolves. Morek looks up to the Space Wolves with respect and reverence, while Freija instead resents the Wolves for their arrogance and superior attitude. By the end of the novel, Morek's faith in the Wolves has been shaken while Freija has gained a newfound respect and admiration for them.
* ProtectiveCharm: The Space Wolves inscribe protective runes into their armour to ward off maleficarum, their term for the power of Chaos. The Fang itself has thousands of similar wards etched into its stone walls, and their presence helps to slow the advance of the Thousand Sons once they break into the fortress, most notably by [[spoiler:preventing Magnus the Red from physically manifesting within the Fang]] until the Sons destroy enough of the wards.
* SizeShifter: [[spoiler:Magnus the Red enlarges himself so that he can stand eye-to-eye with--and tear down--a Titan-sized statue of Leman Russ, then shrinks back down to his (still considerable) normal height once the deed is done. Later on, he shrinks to a mere three metres in order to duel Wyrmblade]].
* SlobsVersusSnobs: Some of the Thousand Sons, those who don't realise what lies beneath the Space Wolves' exterior, see their conflict with the "dog-warriors" as this.
* TeleFrag: A Thousand Sons sorcerer experience this when he hastily teleports himself and a squad of Rubric Marines into an oncoming Space Wolves vessel. Only two of the Rubric Marines make it through, and only one of them does so intact; the other one materializes within a wall and effectively dies. The sorcerer himself suffers injuries to his hands, face, and internal organs.



ThereWasADoor: Blackwing is combing the bowels of his ship for Thousand Sons infiltrators when a Rubric Marine suddenly bursts out of a wall, taking him and his men by surprise.

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* ThereWasADoor: Blackwing is combing the bowels of his ship for Thousand Sons infiltrators when a Rubric Marine suddenly bursts out of a wall, taking him and his men by surprise.



WaveMotionGun: The Thousand Sons seem fond of these. Their planet-scourer ships are basically giant plasma cannons built to raze a planet's surface with continuous streams of plasma fire. Their gate-breaker daemon engines, similarly, are 200-metre long self-propelled gun barrels that they use to hammer the Fang's gates with giant yellow beams of eldritch energy.

to:

* WaveMotionGun: The Thousand Sons seem fond of these. Their planet-scourer ships are basically giant plasma cannons built to raze a planet's surface with continuous streams of plasma fire. Their gate-breaker daemon engines, similarly, are 200-metre long self-propelled gun barrels that they use to hammer the Fang's gates with giant yellow beams of eldritch energy.



AsteroidThicket: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the titular rift is a dense asteroid field that covers the entire Gildar system and makes traveling within the system very dangerous.
BadBoss: "Blackheart did very little for his Red Corsairs other than provide them a staging ground for war. He never praised them or rewarded them but none of them questioned it; least of all the staunchly loyal Astral Claws. He expected them to die willingly at his whim, and they did. If they survived a campaign or a raid, so much the better; he could utilise their muscle again. Nobody ever spoke out against it and Blackheart never changed the ground rules. It was a perfect arrangement."
BulletDodgesYou: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus quickly discovers that attempting to shoot Huron Blackheart is pointless, as his bolt rounds simply veer away from the Chaos Lord before they can hit him.
DerelictGraveyard: The dangers of traversing the titular Rift are compounded by the countless wrecked starships which drift through the asteroid field. The sheer density of said asteroid field makes these wrecks almost impossible to salvage: any vessel that tries will inevitably be wrecked in turn.
DyingRace: ''The Gildar Rift'' suggests that the Silver Skulls are slowly dying out, as several characters remark that their numbers are dwindling and that the influx of inexperienced new Space Marines can't make up for their lost veterans. The events of the novel do nothing to reverse this trend, with [[spoiler:the Fourth Company losing a quarter of its strength, Captain Daerys Arrun dying at Huron Blackheart's hands, and the senior Apothecary Ryarus being captured by the Red Corsairs]].
DynamicEntry: [[spoiler:An Assault Marine tries to save Daerys Arrun by knocking Huron Blackheart away from him with a rocket-powered tackle]]. See SenselessSacrifice for how well ''that'' turns out.

to:

* AsteroidThicket: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the titular rift is a dense asteroid field that covers the entire Gildar system and makes traveling within the system very dangerous.
* BadBoss: "Blackheart did very little for his Red Corsairs other than provide them a staging ground for war. He never praised them or rewarded them but none of them questioned it; least of all the staunchly loyal Astral Claws. He expected them to die willingly at his whim, and they did. If they survived a campaign or a raid, so much the better; he could utilise their muscle again. Nobody ever spoke out against it and Blackheart never changed the ground rules. It was a perfect arrangement."
* BulletDodgesYou: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus quickly discovers that attempting to shoot Huron Blackheart is pointless, as his bolt rounds simply veer away from the Chaos Lord before they can hit him.
* DerelictGraveyard: The dangers of traversing the titular Rift are compounded by the countless wrecked starships which drift through the asteroid field. The sheer density of said asteroid field makes these wrecks almost impossible to salvage: any vessel that tries will inevitably be wrecked in turn.
* DyingRace: ''The Gildar Rift'' suggests that the Silver Skulls are slowly dying out, as several characters remark that their numbers are dwindling and that the influx of inexperienced new Space Marines can't make up for their lost veterans. The events of the novel do nothing to reverse this trend, with [[spoiler:the Fourth Company losing a quarter of its strength, Captain Daerys Arrun dying at Huron Blackheart's hands, and the senior Apothecary Ryarus being captured by the Red Corsairs]].
* DynamicEntry: [[spoiler:An Assault Marine tries to save Daerys Arrun by knocking Huron Blackheart away from him with a rocket-powered tackle]]. See * SenselessSacrifice for how well ''that'' turns out.



KilledOffscreen: Sergeant Matteus is last seen standing his ground as Huron Blackheart bears down on him. The scene then cuts to Daerys Arrun demanding a status report from Matteus, only for Blackeart to answer the call and gloat about the sergeant's demise.
NonIndicativeName: The narrative points out that the Corpsemaster is not a necromancer: he just likes to dissect bodies ([[TortureTechnician living]] or dead) in order to better understand the biological process of death.
OrganTheft: [[spoiler:the Corpsemaster steals Sergeant Porteus's progenoid glands after the latter is captured by the Red Corsairs]]. A former Space Wolf turned Red Corsair implies that the same was done to both him and many other formerly loyal Space Marines pressganged into the Corsairs' ranks.
PyrrhicVictory: The Silver Skulls succeed in driving the Red Corsairs out of the Gildar Rift, but Huron Blackheart gets away with most of his plunder and the Silver Skulls lose many experienced warriors[[spoiler:, including Captain Daerys Arrun and Apothecary Ryarus. The botched outcome of the battle also leads many of the Skulls to harbour doubts about the competence of their Prognosticators]]. The final chapter of the book is even titled "What Price Victory?" in a bit of LampshadeHanging.
SapientShip: The aim of the Silver Skulls' Resurgent project is to create one of these by wiring Volker Straub into the ''Dread Argent's'' systems, effectively turning him into a WetwareCPU and giving him absolute control over the ship. [[spoiler:They succeed, spectacularly so.]]
Seers: The Silver Skulls' unique Prognosticators are hybrid Chaplain-Librarians trained to read the future with their psychic powers. The chapter places great stock in their divinations, to the point where they will not commit to a battle plan until a Prognosticator has read the portents and given it his approval. [[spoiler:However, the Prognosticators are not infallible, and many Silver Skulls begin to harbour doubts about them after they sanction the costly battle of the Gildar Rift.]]
SenselessSacrifice: [[spoiler:A Silver Skulls Assault Marine tries to save the grievously injured Captain Arrun's life by tackling Huron Blackheart away from him. He only manages to distract Huron Blackheart for a few seconds before getting killed, and while his sacrifice allows Arrun to regain some strength and continue fighting for a bit longer, it ultimately doesn't change the outcome.]]
SpitefulSpit: Huron Blackheart spits on Daerus Arrun twice during their battle. The trope is actually weaponized, as Blackheart does it not only to show his contempt for the Imperium but also to hinder Arrun's combat effectiveness as the acidic saliva eats into his armour.
{{Synchronization}}: [[spoiler:One unfortunate side effect of Volker Straub's connection to the ''Dread Argent'' is that he feels any damage inflicted to the ship as physical pain]].
TimeBomb: The Silver Skulls discover that the Red Corsairs have rigged the promethium refinery to blow at the climax. forcing the Skulls to waste time defusing the explosives while the Corsairs escape with their plunder.

to:

* KilledOffscreen: Sergeant Matteus is last seen standing his ground as Huron Blackheart bears down on him. The scene then cuts to Daerys Arrun demanding a status report from Matteus, only for Blackeart to answer the call and gloat about the sergeant's demise.
* NonIndicativeName: The narrative points out that the Corpsemaster is not a necromancer: he just likes to dissect bodies ([[TortureTechnician living]] or dead) in order to better understand the biological process of death.
* OrganTheft: [[spoiler:the Corpsemaster steals Sergeant Porteus's progenoid glands after the latter is captured by the Red Corsairs]]. A former Space Wolf turned Red Corsair implies that the same was done to both him and many other formerly loyal Space Marines pressganged into the Corsairs' ranks.
* PyrrhicVictory: The Silver Skulls succeed in driving the Red Corsairs out of the Gildar Rift, but Huron Blackheart gets away with most of his plunder and the Silver Skulls lose many experienced warriors[[spoiler:, including Captain Daerys Arrun and Apothecary Ryarus. The botched outcome of the battle also leads many of the Skulls to harbour doubts about the competence of their Prognosticators]]. The final chapter of the book is even titled "What Price Victory?" in a bit of LampshadeHanging.
* SapientShip: The aim of the Silver Skulls' Resurgent project is to create one of these by wiring Volker Straub into the ''Dread Argent's'' systems, effectively turning him into a WetwareCPU and giving him absolute control over the ship. [[spoiler:They succeed, spectacularly so.]]
* Seers: The Silver Skulls' unique Prognosticators are hybrid Chaplain-Librarians trained to read the future with their psychic powers. The chapter places great stock in their divinations, to the point where they will not commit to a battle plan until a Prognosticator has read the portents and given it his approval. [[spoiler:However, the Prognosticators are not infallible, and many Silver Skulls begin to harbour doubts about them after they sanction the costly battle of the Gildar Rift.]]
* SenselessSacrifice: [[spoiler:A Silver Skulls Assault Marine tries to save the grievously injured Captain Arrun's life by tackling Huron Blackheart away from him. He only manages to distract Huron Blackheart for a few seconds before getting killed, and while his sacrifice allows Arrun to regain some strength and continue fighting for a bit longer, it ultimately doesn't change the outcome.]]
* SpitefulSpit: Huron Blackheart spits on Daerus Arrun twice during their battle. The trope is actually weaponized, as Blackheart does it not only to show his contempt for the Imperium but also to hinder Arrun's combat effectiveness as the acidic saliva eats into his armour.
* {{Synchronization}}: [[spoiler:One unfortunate side effect of Volker Straub's connection to the ''Dread Argent'' is that he feels any damage inflicted to the ship as physical pain]].
* TimeBomb: The Silver Skulls discover that the Red Corsairs have rigged the promethium refinery to blow at the climax. forcing the Skulls to waste time defusing the explosives while the Corsairs escape with their plunder.



BadassNormal: The Excoriators' Chapter serfs. They take part in the siege, firing lasrifles and tending to autocannon turrets.
BigDamnHeroes: The titular Legion of the Damned. They arrived at the last possible moment before [[spoiler:Captain Kersh of the Excoriators SpaceMarine Chapter]] was overwhelmed by the foul forces of Chaos.
Determinator: Scout Omar. He's buried alive in heretics, stabbed in the chest by a set of Lightning Claws, gets his legs eaten by a daemon, and ''still begs to be put on the front lines'' (he ends up playing spotter for another scout with a sniper rifle). He then takes on the role of the sniper when the his fellow scout is killed, and continues putting down daemons and heretics until he was eventually overwhelmed.
DidntSeeThatComing: The titular Legion Of The Damned come out of nowhere, as far as the forces of Chaos were concerned. The results did not end well for them in the novel.

to:

* BadassNormal: The Excoriators' Chapter serfs. They take part in the siege, firing lasrifles and tending to autocannon turrets.
* BigDamnHeroes: The titular Legion of the Damned. They arrived at the last possible moment before [[spoiler:Captain Kersh of the Excoriators SpaceMarine Chapter]] was overwhelmed by the foul forces of Chaos.
* Determinator: Scout Omar. He's buried alive in heretics, stabbed in the chest by a set of Lightning Claws, gets his legs eaten by a daemon, and ''still begs to be put on the front lines'' (he ends up playing spotter for another scout with a sniper rifle). He then takes on the role of the sniper when the his fellow scout is killed, and continues putting down daemons and heretics until he was eventually overwhelmed.
* DidntSeeThatComing: The titular Legion Of The Damned come out of nowhere, as far as the forces of Chaos were concerned. The results did not end well for them in the novel.



BadassNormal: Every loyalist Guardsman. Hell, even most of the "traitors" are pretty ballsy before they start getting replaced with Abnormals.
BetterToDieThanBeKilled: [[spoiler: When (former) General Nethena from ''Wrath of Iron'' realizes the Space Marine are about to royally fuck him up for attempted mutiny, he takes his rebreather off in the middle of a chemical fogbank.]]
CivilWarcraft: For the entire first half of the book, the "traitor Guardsmen" have no knowledge that their planetary governor has fallen to chaos, and the Iron Hands [[OmniscientMoralityLicense refuse to let anyone take the time out to explain anything]].
DeathEqualsRedemption and RedemptionEqualsDeath: Valien the Death Cult Assassin grew up in the slums and is addicted to drinking blood. He knew damn well his sins were great and constantly worried that his career wouldn't help his life amount to anything. At least through his suicide bomb he was able to make his death count for something, by blowing up [[spoiler:a Slaanesh Daemon Prince's sanctuary, wounding said Prince and atomizing his personal bodyguards]].
MookHorrorShow: The book opens with a brief PerspectiveFlip, showing the Iron Hands [[ImplacableMan shrug off a volley of lasgun fire and smash apart a bunker with little effort]].
OmniscientMoralityLicense: The Iron Hands in ''Wrath of Iron'' view their Imperial Guard allies as ignorant martyrs with their "cold flawless logic", happy to send them to die to further the success of the campaign. Sure, it all works out since the Guard aren't aware of the Slaanesh cult, but are the Iron Hands willing to just share that little detail? Not a chance.

to:

* BadassNormal: Every loyalist Guardsman. Hell, even most of the "traitors" are pretty ballsy before they start getting replaced with Abnormals.
* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: [[spoiler: When (former) General Nethena from ''Wrath of Iron'' realizes the Space Marine are about to royally fuck him up for attempted mutiny, he takes his rebreather off in the middle of a chemical fogbank.]]
* CivilWarcraft: For the entire first half of the book, the "traitor Guardsmen" have no knowledge that their planetary governor has fallen to chaos, and the Iron Hands [[OmniscientMoralityLicense refuse to let anyone take the time out to explain anything]].
* DeathEqualsRedemption and RedemptionEqualsDeath: Valien the Death Cult Assassin grew up in the slums and is addicted to drinking blood. He knew damn well his sins were great and constantly worried that his career wouldn't help his life amount to anything. At least through his suicide bomb he was able to make his death count for something, by blowing up [[spoiler:a Slaanesh Daemon Prince's sanctuary, wounding said Prince and atomizing his personal bodyguards]].
* MookHorrorShow: The book opens with a brief PerspectiveFlip, showing the Iron Hands [[ImplacableMan shrug off a volley of lasgun fire and smash apart a bunker with little effort]].
* OmniscientMoralityLicense: The Iron Hands in ''Wrath of Iron'' view their Imperial Guard allies as ignorant martyrs with their "cold flawless logic", happy to send them to die to further the success of the campaign. Sure, it all works out since the Guard aren't aware of the Slaanesh cult, but are the Iron Hands willing to just share that little detail? Not a chance.



TheAllegedCar: The Iron Warriors have this impression when they're forced to hijack an Ork plane. The only reason a throttle was installed was so the Ork pilot could weld the thrust lever into the highest gear (Orks are funny like that), and it doesn't have any landing gear.
BadassNormal: Yuxiang. Little more than an escaped slave, he ends up starting a secret revolt and, to his own surprise, [[spoiler:kills a Chaos Space Marine]].
Determinator: Over-captain Vallax is teleported into a trap by [[spoiler:Oriax]], where he's mobbed by nearly a million Orks. He's captured and tortured to within an inch of his life, repeatedly, for seven days straight. He then fights his way out of the torture chamber and into his own home base, which is under siege at the time, and ''finally'' goes down fighting, all with half of his skull missing.
GoldfishPoopGang: The Iron Warriors in ''Siege of Castellax'' are essentially this throughout the entire book. They constantly fight with one another and constantly attempting to undermine one another until the orks show up, are constantly outwitted by the orks in various ways, and many of them end up dying humiliating deaths and the orks end up taking Castellax. Even ''before'' the book they seemed to be like this, mentioning a raid prior to the story where they were nearly defeated by the planet's local defense forces when said forces tricked their air forces into bombing a dummy armor column, leaving the ''real'' column to go off and attack the Iron Warrior forces sieging the planetary capital. ''Space Marines'' almost defeated by ''regular humans''.

to:

* TheAllegedCar: The Iron Warriors have this impression when they're forced to hijack an Ork plane. The only reason a throttle was installed was so the Ork pilot could weld the thrust lever into the highest gear (Orks are funny like that), and it doesn't have any landing gear.
* BadassNormal: Yuxiang. Little more than an escaped slave, he ends up starting a secret revolt and, to his own surprise, [[spoiler:kills a Chaos Space Marine]].
* Determinator: Over-captain Vallax is teleported into a trap by [[spoiler:Oriax]], where he's mobbed by nearly a million Orks. He's captured and tortured to within an inch of his life, repeatedly, for seven days straight. He then fights his way out of the torture chamber and into his own home base, which is under siege at the time, and ''finally'' goes down fighting, all with half of his skull missing.
* GoldfishPoopGang: The Iron Warriors in ''Siege of Castellax'' are essentially this throughout the entire book. They constantly fight with one another and constantly attempting to undermine one another until the orks show up, are constantly outwitted by the orks in various ways, and many of them end up dying humiliating deaths and the orks end up taking Castellax. Even ''before'' the book they seemed to be like this, mentioning a raid prior to the story where they were nearly defeated by the planet's local defense forces when said forces tricked their air forces into bombing a dummy armor column, leaving the ''real'' column to go off and attack the Iron Warrior forces sieging the planetary capital. ''Space Marines'' almost defeated by ''regular humans''.



JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Over-captain Vallax is about as close to this trope as a Chaos Marine can get. He's an egotistical, glory-stealing jerkass, but he really does have a sense of honor and would hate to see his brothers die in anything short of a glorious battle. Later, when he fails his brothers by [[spoiler:leading a team of Ork Kommandoes into the Bastion]], he takes it upon himself to [[spoiler:HoldTheLine and FaceDeathWithDignity]].
LaserGuidedKarma: [[spoiler:Skintaker Algol threatens to torture a rebelling slave slowly and painfully in the most drawn-out way possible. Then the ceiling collapses, trapping Algol under hundreds of tons of concrete. The slave isn't trapped, and stabs Algol through the neck repeatedly. Since Algol is a Space Marine, it takes him well over 15 minutes for him to die, and he's awake for every second of it.]]
TheSecretOfLongPorkPies: It shouldn't surprise you much to learn that the Iron Warriors have linked their slave morgue to the food production plant, but it's a big reveal for the slaves themselves, especially Yuxiang.

to:

* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Over-captain Vallax is about as close to this trope as a Chaos Marine can get. He's an egotistical, glory-stealing jerkass, but he really does have a sense of honor and would hate to see his brothers die in anything short of a glorious battle. Later, when he fails his brothers by [[spoiler:leading a team of Ork Kommandoes into the Bastion]], he takes it upon himself to [[spoiler:HoldTheLine and FaceDeathWithDignity]].
* LaserGuidedKarma: [[spoiler:Skintaker Algol threatens to torture a rebelling slave slowly and painfully in the most drawn-out way possible. Then the ceiling collapses, trapping Algol under hundreds of tons of concrete. The slave isn't trapped, and stabs Algol through the neck repeatedly. Since Algol is a Space Marine, it takes him well over 15 minutes for him to die, and he's awake for every second of it.]]
* TheSecretOfLongPorkPies: It shouldn't surprise you much to learn that the Iron Warriors have linked their slave morgue to the food production plant, but it's a big reveal for the slaves themselves, especially Yuxiang.



TooDumbToFool: The Iron Warriors try to stall the Orks using a giant minefield, but with intercontinental ballistic missiles instead of regular mines. Problem is, instead of trying to sweep the desert to find the rest of the warheads, they just charge through the one patch of land they know the missiles ''aren't'' hidden, and that's the five-mile-wide crater where the first missile exploded.

to:

* TooDumbToFool: The Iron Warriors try to stall the Orks using a giant minefield, but with intercontinental ballistic missiles instead of regular mines. Problem is, instead of trying to sweep the desert to find the rest of the warheads, they just charge through the one patch of land they know the missiles ''aren't'' hidden, and that's the five-mile-wide crater where the first missile exploded.



ActionGirl: Sister Sethano, she's a [[ChurchMilitant Sister of Battle]] Canoness for a reason.
BadassNormal: Mere days after walking off a bolter wound to the gut, Sister Sethano fights off an ambush with two daemons and a [[spoiler:fallen Inquisitor]], and wins decisively.
BeautyEqualsGoodness: Captain Toharan believes this more and more over the course of the story.
ComicallySmallBribe: The xenos temples in ''Death of Antagonis'' have to be bribed with blood to get the [[spoiler:enormous war machines]] working, but the amount of blood is pretty small compared to how massive some of the mechanisms are. The Black Dragons even lampshade this when [[spoiler:a bell the size of a small planet]] considers itself fully charged with only about 50 slaves' worth of blood.
DidntSeeThatComing: [[spoiler:"That pretty-faced traitor is no captain of mine."]]

to:

* ActionGirl: Sister Sethano, she's a [[ChurchMilitant Sister of Battle]] Canoness for a reason.
* BadassNormal: Mere days after walking off a bolter wound to the gut, Sister Sethano fights off an ambush with two daemons and a [[spoiler:fallen Inquisitor]], and wins decisively.
* BeautyEqualsGoodness: Captain Toharan believes this more and more over the course of the story.
story [[spoiler: it plays a large role in his HeelFaceTurn.]]
*
ComicallySmallBribe: The xenos temples in ''Death of Antagonis'' have to be bribed with blood to get the [[spoiler:enormous war machines]] working, but the amount of blood is pretty small compared to how massive some of the mechanisms are. The Black Dragons even lampshade this when [[spoiler:a bell the size of a small planet]] considers itself fully charged with only about 50 slaves' worth of blood.
* DidntSeeThatComing: [[spoiler:"That pretty-faced traitor is no captain of mine."]]



FeelNoPain: Sister Sethano. She takes a [[MadeOfExplodium bolter round]] to the gut, and not only kills the traitor who shot her but shrugs it off in a matter of days.
IDidWhatIHadToDo: One of the major themes throughout the story.
MoralEventHorizon: In-universe, [[spoiler:Toharan ordering a military strike against the Imperial world of Aighe Mortis]].
MyGreatestFailure: Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later dies [[spoiler: because she was infected by a chaos plague before they even met]]. He had invested a lot in rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.
NonIndicativeName: [[spoiler:The planet Antagonis is blown up barely a third of the way into the book. The Planet Aighe Mortis is home to a lot more drama. The real story is the rise and fall of Toharan and his defeat at the hands of Volos.]]
OurZombiesAreDifferent: Brought up in-universe, when the Black Dragons, Sethano, and Lettinger discuss that the local plague zombies are faster than Nurgle's zombies, infect other subjects at an absurdly fast rate, and ignore space marines...
PyrrhicVictory: This is just one in a long string of these for the Black Dragons.
RealityIsOutToLunch: The Xeno temples.
TheStoic: Sister Sethano. To the point that is intimidates an Inquisitor.
TechnicallyLivingZombie: [[spoiler:The zombies aren't fully dead, they're brainwashed by a Chaos mind-virus called the Doubtworm. The zombies are still, in their own minds, actually loyalist imperial citizens [[AndIMustScream fully aware of their infected state, but with no ability to communicate that fact]]. All they can do is wildly flail at the Doubtworm's asymptomatic carriers, hoping to kill them before they can spread the Doubtworm to the next planet. This is also why they ignore space marines, who are immune to the Doubtworm in the first place.]]

to:

* FeelNoPain: Sister Sethano. She takes a [[MadeOfExplodium bolter round]] to the gut, and not only kills the traitor who shot her but shrugs it off in a matter of days.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: One of the major themes throughout the story.
* MoralEventHorizon: In-universe, [[spoiler:Toharan ordering a military strike against the Imperial world of Aighe Mortis]].
* MyGreatestFailure: Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later dies [[spoiler: because she was infected by a chaos plague before they even met]]. He had invested a lot in rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.
* NonIndicativeName: [[spoiler:The planet Antagonis is blown up barely a third of the way into the book. The Planet Aighe Mortis is home to a lot more drama. The real story is the rise and fall of Toharan and his defeat at the hands of Volos.]]
* OurZombiesAreDifferent: Brought up in-universe, when the Black Dragons, Sethano, and Lettinger discuss that the local plague zombies are faster than Nurgle's zombies, infect other subjects at an absurdly fast rate, and ignore space marines...
* PyrrhicVictory: This is just one in a long string of these for the Black Dragons.
* RealityIsOutToLunch: The Xeno temples.
* TheStoic: Sister Sethano. To the point that is intimidates an Inquisitor.
* TechnicallyLivingZombie: [[spoiler:The zombies aren't fully dead, they're brainwashed by a Chaos mind-virus called the Doubtworm. The zombies are still, in their own minds, actually loyalist imperial citizens [[AndIMustScream fully aware of their infected state, but with no ability to communicate that fact]]. All they can do is wildly flail at the Doubtworm's asymptomatic carriers, hoping to kill them before they can spread the Doubtworm to the next planet. This is also why they ignore space marines, who are immune to the Doubtworm in the first place.]]



AIIsACrapshoot: [[spoiler:The situation is well warranted, considering that the AI in question was driven insane with grief after his captain was killed by Imperium officials for "heresy".]]
BecauseISaidSo: Subverted by Lord Plosk. While he has a signed permission slip from the High Lords of Terra to more or less do ANYTHING he wants, he realizes the Space Marines would be better motivated if he treats them like equals, and agrees to trade their assistance for custom-built spaceships.
ClarkesThirdLaw: [[spoiler:The spaceship known as the Spirit of Eternity was built during the Golden Age of Technology, and it outclasses the Imperial fores so badly it almost becomes an OutsideContextProblem.]]
GameplayAndStoryIntegration: The story does this for TabletopGame/SpaceHulk. Why send bulky, slow moving tactical dreadnought armor into the confined spaces of a Space Hulk, when Genestealers can tear through Terminator armor like tissue paper? Because radiation levels within the Hulk are so high that regular Space Marines would die in hours, as demonstrated when the Magos sends servitors along with the marines in order to set beacons.

to:

* AIIsACrapshoot: [[spoiler:The situation is well warranted, considering that the AI in question was driven insane with grief after his captain was killed by Imperium officials for "heresy".]]
* BecauseISaidSo: Subverted by Lord Plosk. While he has a signed permission slip from the High Lords of Terra to more or less do ANYTHING he wants, he realizes the Space Marines would be better motivated if he treats them like equals, and agrees to trade their assistance for custom-built spaceships.
* ClarkesThirdLaw: [[spoiler:The spaceship known as the Spirit of Eternity was built during the Golden Age of Technology, and it outclasses the Imperial fores so badly it almost becomes an OutsideContextProblem.]]
* GameplayAndStoryIntegration: The story does this for TabletopGame/SpaceHulk. Why send bulky, slow moving tactical dreadnought armor into the confined spaces of a Space Hulk, when Genestealers can tear through Terminator armor like tissue paper? Because radiation levels within the Hulk are so high that regular Space Marines would die in hours, as demonstrated when the Magos sends servitors along with the marines in order to set beacons.



TheLastDance: Chapter Master Caedis of the Blood Drinkers knows that he is close to the Black Rage claiming him, showing him visions of the ancient hero Holos' final climb. He still heads aboard the Space Hulk, eventually succumbing and turning into a ravenous beast.

to:

* TheLastDance: Chapter Master Caedis of the Blood Drinkers knows that he is close to the Black Rage claiming him, showing him visions of the ancient hero Holos' final climb. He still heads aboard the Space Hulk, eventually succumbing and turning into a ravenous beast.



AffablyEvil: Shalhadar is well-spoken, admirer of arts, curious and generally nice to Lysander, treating him as equal, despite being a Daemon Prince.
AggressiveNegotiations: Lysander gets to witness what passes for diplomacy between the Iron Warriors of Kraegon Thul and the Daemon Prince Shalhadar. The negotiations start out with Thul's envoy effectively demanding Shalhadar's complete surrender, and quickly descend into violence when those demands aren't met. The dry reaction of Shalhadar's own envoy suggests that this is a regular occurrence. [[folder:Pandorax]]
AlienSky: The titular planet of Malodrax is surrounded by an "orbital reef" so dense that one needs a map to get through alive. This [[FridgeLogic somehow]] does nothing to disrupt the normal day/night cycle - multiple mentions are made of being able to see the twin suns unobstructed - so the "sky" is presumably a hellscape of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Warp]].

to:

* AffablyEvil: Shalhadar is well-spoken, admirer of arts, curious and generally nice to Lysander, treating him as equal, despite being a Daemon Prince.
* AggressiveNegotiations: Lysander gets to witness what passes for diplomacy between the Iron Warriors of Kraegon Thul and the Daemon Prince Shalhadar. The negotiations start out with Thul's envoy effectively demanding Shalhadar's complete surrender, and quickly descend into violence when those demands aren't met. The dry reaction of Shalhadar's own envoy suggests that this is a regular occurrence. [[folder:Pandorax]]
occurrence.
*
AlienSky: The titular planet of Malodrax is surrounded by an "orbital reef" so dense that one needs a map to get through alive. This [[FridgeLogic somehow]] does nothing to disrupt the normal day/night cycle - multiple mentions are made of being able to see the twin suns unobstructed - so the "sky" is presumably a hellscape of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Warp]].



ArcWords: Malodrax wanted to be ruled."
ArtInitiatesLife: When the Imperial Fists invade Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax'', the many daemonic frescoes, tapestries, mosaics and sculptures within the palace come to life and attack them.

to:

* ArcWords: Malodrax wanted to be ruled."
* ArtInitiatesLife: When the Imperial Fists invade Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax'', the many daemonic frescoes, tapestries, mosaics and sculptures within the palace come to life and attack them.



DarkSecret: Lysander never tells the other Imperial Fists about all the deals and alliances he made with daemons during his time on Malodrax. When other Fists notice that the daemons they're killing seem to know him, he lies through his teeth about ''how'' they know him.

to:

* DarkSecret: Lysander never tells the other Imperial Fists about all the deals and alliances he made with daemons during his time on Malodrax. When other Fists notice that the daemons they're killing seem to know him, he lies through his teeth about ''how'' they know him.



DidYouJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Captain Lysander spends a good chunk of ''Malodrax'' chatting with Daemon Prince Shalhadar and rehearsing for a play. This only applies during the flashbacks, however; in the present day Lysander and Shahadar are quick to try and kill each other.
DogPileOfDoom: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets mobbed by a few hundred cultists the first time he enters Shalhadar's city. Since he's unarmed and unarmoured, he can't fight them off effectively, and he's nearly crushed to death under a pile of bodies until a third party calls the cultists off.

to:

* DidYouJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Captain Lysander spends a good chunk of ''Malodrax'' chatting with Daemon Prince Shalhadar and rehearsing for a play. This only applies during the flashbacks, however; in the present day Lysander and Shahadar are quick to try and kill each other.
* DogPileOfDoom: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets mobbed by a few hundred cultists the first time he enters Shalhadar's city. Since he's unarmed and unarmoured, he can't fight them off effectively, and he's nearly crushed to death under a pile of bodies until a third party calls the cultists off.



DwindlingParty: Inquisitor Corvin gradually loses many of his retainers during his time on Malodrax. At least two men die before he enters Shalhadar's city, and he loses two more by the time he leaves the place, bringing him down to five. By the time of his final journal entry, two of those five are dead and Corvin is convinced that the other two must also be dead. [[spoiler:His assassin Sildyne is the only member of the team still alive and loyal by the time of Lysander's return to Malodrax.]]
DysonSphere: The titular planet of ''Malodrax'' is surrounded by a giant "orbital reef" made of space coral, just to further point out how [[SpaceIsAnOcean oceany the space of this universe is]].
EatsBabies: The cursed daemon "brood mother" eats her own offspring after they [[{{Squick}} crawl out of her skin's pustules]].

to:

* DwindlingParty: Inquisitor Corvin gradually loses many of his retainers during his time on Malodrax. At least two men die before he enters Shalhadar's city, and he loses two more by the time he leaves the place, bringing him down to five. By the time of his final journal entry, two of those five are dead and Corvin is convinced that the other two must also be dead. [[spoiler:His assassin Sildyne is the only member of the team still alive and loyal by the time of Lysander's return to Malodrax.]]
* DysonSphere: The titular planet of ''Malodrax'' is surrounded by a giant "orbital reef" made of space coral, just to further point out how [[SpaceIsAnOcean oceany the space of this universe is]].
* EatsBabies: The cursed daemon "brood mother" eats her own offspring after they [[{{Squick}} crawl out of her skin's pustules]].



EvilVersusEvil: Kraegon Thul and Shalhadar both want to rule Malodrax, but their mutual hostility keeps their ambitions in check.
EyeScream: [[spoiler:Lysander kills Kraegon Thul by stabbing him in the eye with a poisoned dagger]].
FlashbackWithinAFlashBack: Flashbacks of Lysander's first time on the planet are accompanied by flashbacks from Inquisitor Corvin's ApocalypticLog.
GalacticConqueror: Kraegon Thul aims to become the next great Warmaster of Chaos, and Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin are both convinced that he could wreak untold havoc on the Imperium if he overcomes Malodrax's trials. [[spoiler:Ultimately subverted, though, as he dies without ever conquering a single planet.]]
GeniusLoci: Every major character is convinced that the titular planet is actively toying with them to satisfy a goal of some kind. Considering it's a [[PlanetHeck daemon world]], they are likely correct by some measure.

to:

* EvilVersusEvil: Kraegon Thul and Shalhadar both want to rule Malodrax, but their mutual hostility keeps their ambitions in check.
* EyeScream: [[spoiler:Lysander kills Kraegon Thul by stabbing him in the eye with a poisoned dagger]].
* FlashbackWithinAFlashBack: Flashbacks of Lysander's first time on the planet are accompanied by flashbacks from Inquisitor Corvin's ApocalypticLog.
* GalacticConqueror: Kraegon Thul aims to become the next great Warmaster of Chaos, and Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin are both convinced that he could wreak untold havoc on the Imperium if he overcomes Malodrax's trials. [[spoiler:Ultimately subverted, though, as he dies without ever conquering a single planet.]]
* GeniusLoci: Every major character is convinced that the titular planet is actively toying with them to satisfy a goal of some kind. Considering it's a [[PlanetHeck daemon world]], they are likely correct by some measure.



GenuineHumanHide: Kraegon Thul's ambassador to Shalhadar sets himself up in a pavilion made of freshly flayed human skin--so fresh, in fact, that there is still blood and guts clinging to it and the pavilion's interior stinks horribly. Even Lysander is grossed out by the smell.

to:

* GenuineHumanHide: Kraegon Thul's ambassador to Shalhadar sets himself up in a pavilion made of freshly flayed human skin--so fresh, in fact, that there is still blood and guts clinging to it and the pavilion's interior stinks horribly. Even Lysander is grossed out by the smell.



LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair: Whatever mighty civilization ruled the planet of Malodrax in the past, they've been reduced to nothing but a crumbling castle and some slaves for the Iron Warriors.
TheMole: [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul's mysterious alien lieutenant Karnak is revealed to be Inquisitor Corvin's assassin Sildyne, who worked his way into a position of power so that he could kill Thul if he ever got the chance. Thul knew Karnak's true identity, however, and never let his guard down around him]].

to:

* LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair: Whatever mighty civilization ruled the planet of Malodrax in the past, they've been reduced to nothing but a crumbling castle and some slaves for the Iron Warriors.
* TheMole: [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul's mysterious alien lieutenant Karnak is revealed to be Inquisitor Corvin's assassin Sildyne, who worked his way into a position of power so that he could kill Thul if he ever got the chance. Thul knew Karnak's true identity, however, and never let his guard down around him]].



OrganTheft: Toward the climax of ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Brother Helaestus reveals that the Iron Warriors stole his gene-seed during his captivity]].
ProtectiveCharm: The book spends an entire paragraph describing the many, many ways that the ''Breaker of Darkness'' has been magically warded and blessed to keep out daemons. Upon entering Malodrax's orbital reef, these various charms allow the ship to go unmolested by daemonic incursion... for ''thirty minutes''.
PurpleProse: Inquisitor Golrukhan's journal about Malodrax is written in this style. Lysander doesn't care for it in-universe, preferring the BeigeProse of Rogal Dorn's writing.

to:

* OrganTheft: Toward the climax of ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Brother Helaestus reveals that the Iron Warriors stole his gene-seed during his captivity]].
* ProtectiveCharm: The book spends an entire paragraph describing the many, many ways that the ''Breaker of Darkness'' has been magically warded and blessed to keep out daemons. Upon entering Malodrax's orbital reef, these various charms allow the ship to go unmolested by daemonic incursion... for ''thirty minutes''.
* PurpleProse: Inquisitor Golrukhan's journal about Malodrax is written in this style. Lysander doesn't care for it in-universe, preferring the BeigeProse of Rogal Dorn's writing.



RiddlingSphinx: A daemonic sphinx guards the entrance to Shalhadar's palace. Instead of asking a riddle, it will only let people pass if they can show it something it has never experienced before (and being a Slaaneshi daemon, there's very little it hasn't already experienced). Lysander is able to get in the first time by teaching it the concept of fear. The second time, he doesn't bother with the sphinx's games and just kills it.
SchizoTech: The Imperium's technology level has always been all over the place, but Malodrax cranks it up a notch. The Imperial Fists strike cruiser ''Breaker of Darkness'' has bridge consoles that are operated with punchcards and have ticker tape readouts instead of screens, and her crew has to use ''abacuses'' whenever they perform calculations.
Seers: The brood mother knows everything that happens on Malodrax, including snippets of what will happen in the future. She's willing to share that information with anyone who seeks her out, for a price.
ShoutOut: Inquisitor Corvin notes that his archivist was "most perturbed" by the impossibility of Shalhadar's city. This is a reference to Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'s own savant Uber Aemos, whose catchphrase was "most perturbatory".
SlobsVersusSnobs: One half of the story concerns the feud between the luscious, extravagant, hedonistic cult of Shalhadar and the grungy, militant, dour Iron Warriors.

to:

* RiddlingSphinx: A daemonic sphinx guards the entrance to Shalhadar's palace. Instead of asking a riddle, it will only let people pass if they can show it something it has never experienced before (and being a Slaaneshi daemon, there's very little it hasn't already experienced). Lysander is able to get in the first time by teaching it the concept of fear. The second time, he doesn't bother with the sphinx's games and just kills it.
* SchizoTech: The Imperium's technology level has always been all over the place, but Malodrax cranks it up a notch. The Imperial Fists strike cruiser ''Breaker of Darkness'' has bridge consoles that are operated with punchcards and have ticker tape readouts instead of screens, and her crew has to use ''abacuses'' whenever they perform calculations.
* Seers: The brood mother knows everything that happens on Malodrax, including snippets of what will happen in the future. She's willing to share that information with anyone who seeks her out, for a price.
* ShoutOut: Inquisitor Corvin notes that his archivist was "most perturbed" by the impossibility of Shalhadar's city. This is a reference to Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'s own savant Uber Aemos, whose catchphrase was "most perturbatory".
* SlobsVersusSnobs: One half of the story concerns the feud between the luscious, extravagant, hedonistic cult of Shalhadar and the grungy, militant, dour Iron Warriors.



TakeUpMySword: In a literal example from ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:the dying Agent Sildyne entrusts Lysander with a poisoned dagger made specifically to kill Space Marines so that Lysander can kill Kraegon Thul in his stead]].
ThoseTwoGuys: Givenar and Antinas keep on arguing and bantering, even when in middle of combat, to Lysander's neverending annoyance.

to:

* TakeUpMySword: In a literal example from ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:the dying Agent Sildyne entrusts Lysander with a poisoned dagger made specifically to kill Space Marines so that Lysander can kill Kraegon Thul in his stead]].
* ThoseTwoGuys: Givenar and Antinas keep on arguing and bantering, even when in middle of combat, to Lysander's neverending annoyance.



{{Hypocrite}}: For a guy that uses psyker spells a lot, Mortarion does enjoy insulting the "little witches" of the Grey Knights for being pyskers.


to:

* {{Hypocrite}}: For a guy that uses psyker spells a lot, Mortarion does enjoy insulting the "little witches" of the Grey Knights for being pyskers.




EnemyMine: Subverted. Just because the Astral Knights and Overlord Turakhin are both fighting the same enemy does ''not'' make them allies; they simply agree to ignore each other until Overlord Heqiroth dies.
InMediasRes: The story starts when the eponymous machine already has a death toll of millions and the Imperium has been battling it for days.
SeriesContinuityError: The Necrons don't phase out when they're damaged beyond repair; they just crumple to the ground.

to:

* EnemyMine: Subverted. Just because the Astral Knights and Overlord Turakhin are both fighting the same enemy does ''not'' make them allies; they simply agree to ignore each other until Overlord Heqiroth dies.
* InMediasRes: The story starts when the eponymous machine already has a death toll of millions and the Imperium has been battling it for days.
* SeriesContinuityError: The Necrons don't phase out when they're damaged beyond repair; they just crumple to the ground.



AllJustADream: Most of [[spoiler: ''Veil of Darkness'' is Cato Sicarius' dream while in medical coma.]] This being said, it turns out to be quite prophetic and in the end, enables the Space Marines to stop it before it happens.
MyGreatestFailure: In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers Damnos his greatest failure and is fairly confident that he'll be severly punished for losing the planet. Understandable, considering its his first time he ever lost as a Captain.

to:

* AllJustADream: Most of [[spoiler: ''Veil of Darkness'' is Cato Sicarius' dream while in medical coma.]] This being said, it turns out to be quite prophetic and in the end, enables the Space Marines to stop it before it happens.
* MyGreatestFailure: In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers Damnos his greatest failure and is fairly confident that he'll be severly punished for losing the planet. Understandable, considering its his first time he ever lost as a Captain.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Spelling/grammar fix(es)


[[folder: Helsreach]

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[[folder: Helsreach]
Helsreach]]

Added: 45581

Changed: 23062

Removed: 46843

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Spelling/grammar fix(es), General clarification on work content


!!This Series Provides Examples Of:
* ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: Despite the brutal action and depiction of war in the 41st Millennium, some of the best scenes are quiet moments where the [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] were discussing tactics and plans about how to wage war or giving some {{Exposition}} on the background of the planet or enemy they face. For example, during ''Helsreach'' where Grimaldus speaks to his Fighting Company's Apothecary, who is close to crossing the DespairEventHorizon due to the casualties that the Black Templars are sustaining (by this point in the book only a few are left and the defenders are near defeat).
* ActionGirl: Sister Sethano in ''Death of Antagonis''. She's a [[ChurchMilitant Sister of Battle]] Canoness for a reason.

to:

!!This Series Provides Examples Of:
* ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: Despite

[[folder:Across
the brutal action and depiction of war in the 41st Millennium, some of the best scenes are quiet moments where the [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] were discussing tactics and plans about how to wage war or giving some {{Exposition}} on the background of the planet or enemy they face. For example, during ''Helsreach'' where Grimaldus speaks to his Fighting Company's Apothecary, who is close to crossing the DespairEventHorizon due to the casualties that the Black Templars are sustaining (by this point in the book only a few are left and the defenders are near defeat).
* ActionGirl: Sister Sethano in ''Death of Antagonis''. She's a [[ChurchMilitant Sister of Battle]] Canoness for a reason.
Series]]



* AggressiveNegotiations: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets to witness what passes for diplomacy between the Iron Warriors of Kraegon Thul and the Daemon Prince Shalhadar. The negotiations start out with Thul's envoy effectively demanding Shalhadar's complete surrender, and quickly descend into violence when those demands aren't met. The dry reaction of Shalhadar's own envoy suggests that this is a regular occurrence.
* AIIsACrapshoot: Averted for most, but still depends on Adeptus Mechanicus's Tech priests and the Techmarines of the various SpaceMarine Chapters. (The Imperium banned Artificial Intelligence for a reason) The Chaos [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] battle robots and vehicles are most certainly running on this Trope. The one time we've seen this in action in ''Death of Integrity'', [[spoiler:the situation is well warranted, considering that the AI in question was driven insane with grief after his captain was killed by Imperium officials for "heresy".]]
* AlienSky: The titular planet of Malodrax is surrounded by an "orbital reef" so dense that one needs a map to get through alive. This [[FridgeLogic somehow]] does nothing to disrupt the normal day/night cycle - multiple mentions are made of being able to see the twin suns unobstructed - so the "sky" is presumably a hellscape of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Warp]].
* AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens:
** The Necrons in ''Fall of Damnos'' seem to enjoy taunting the human defenders in their own tongue.
** The Orks also have no problem communicating with the Dark Angels in ''Purging of Kadillus'', although they avert the trope in ''Siege of Castellax''.
* TheAllegedCar: The Iron Warriors have this impression when they're forced to hijack an Ork plane. The only reason a throttle was installed was so the Ork pilot could weld the thrust lever into the highest gear (Orks are funny like that), and it doesn't have any landing gear.
* AllJustADream: Most of [[spoiler: ''Veil of Darkness'' is Cato Sicarius' dream while in medical coma.]] This being said, it turns out to be quite prophetic and in the end, enables the Space Marines to stop it before it happens.
* AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs: The orks seize control of the Dark Angels' basilica off-page in ''The Purging of Kadillus''. Chaplain Boreas leads multiple assaults on the basilica in an effort to take it back, finally succeeding on his fifth attempt.
* AlternateContinuity: ''Malodrax'' seems to take place in one. While the 40k canon has it that the Iron Warrior who kidnapped Lysander and rules Malodrax is named Shon'tu, the novel replaces him with a similar character named Kraegon Thul. [[spoiler:And while Shon'tu survives the battle of Malodrax, Kraegon Thul unambiguously dies during it.]]
* AndIMustScream: In ''Battle of the Fang'', an unfortunate deckhand is captured by a Thousand Sons sorcerer, who promptly gouges out his eyes and psychically suppresses his will to turn him into an unwilling spy. His reaction says it all:
-->Reri kept screaming. He kept screaming as the torchlights were doused, he kept screaming as Master Fuerza went to work, and he kept screaming until the Thousand Sons sorcerer-lord had finished. Indeed, though his features remained slack and emotionless, locked into surface equanimity by magicks more powerful than he'd ever be able to comprehend, there was a part of Reri Urfangborn that would never stop screaming again.
* AndShowItToYou: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red kills Greyloc by ripping out both of his hearts]].
* AntiVillain: The Flayed Lord, from ''Fall of Damnos'', realized how messed up he has become but can't really stop himself.

to:

* AggressiveNegotiations: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets to witness what passes for diplomacy between the Iron Warriors of Kraegon Thul and the Daemon Prince Shalhadar. The negotiations start out with Thul's envoy effectively demanding Shalhadar's complete surrender, and quickly descend into violence when those demands aren't met. The dry reaction of Shalhadar's own envoy suggests that this is a regular occurrence.
*
AIIsACrapshoot: Averted for most, but still depends on Adeptus Mechanicus's Tech priests and the Techmarines of the various SpaceMarine Chapters. (The Imperium banned Artificial Intelligence for a reason) The Chaos [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] battle robots and vehicles are most certainly running on this Trope. The one time we've seen this in action in ''Death of Integrity'', [[spoiler:the situation is well warranted, considering that the AI in question was driven insane with grief after his captain was killed by Imperium officials for "heresy".]]
* AlienSky: The titular planet of Malodrax is surrounded by an "orbital reef" so dense that one needs a map to get through alive. This [[FridgeLogic somehow]] does nothing to disrupt the normal day/night cycle - multiple mentions are made of being able to see the twin suns unobstructed - so the "sky" is presumably a hellscape of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Warp]].
* AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens:
** The Necrons in ''Fall of Damnos'' seem to enjoy taunting the human defenders in their own tongue.
** The Orks also have no problem communicating with the Dark Angels in ''Purging of Kadillus'', although they avert the trope in ''Siege of Castellax''.
* TheAllegedCar: The Iron Warriors have this impression when they're forced to hijack an Ork plane. The only reason a throttle was installed was so the Ork pilot could weld the thrust lever into the highest gear (Orks are funny like that), and it doesn't have any landing gear.
* AllJustADream: Most of [[spoiler: ''Veil of Darkness'' is Cato Sicarius' dream while in medical coma.]] This being said, it turns out to be quite prophetic and in the end, enables the Space Marines to stop it before it happens.
* AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs: The orks seize control of the Dark Angels' basilica off-page in ''The Purging of Kadillus''. Chaplain Boreas leads multiple assaults on the basilica in an effort to take it back, finally succeeding on his fifth attempt.
* AlternateContinuity: ''Malodrax'' seems to take place in one. While the 40k canon has it that the Iron Warrior who kidnapped Lysander and rules Malodrax is named Shon'tu, the novel replaces him with a similar character named Kraegon Thul. [[spoiler:And while Shon'tu survives the battle of Malodrax, Kraegon Thul unambiguously dies during it.]]
* AndIMustScream: In ''Battle of the Fang'', an unfortunate deckhand is captured by a Thousand Sons sorcerer, who promptly gouges out his eyes and psychically suppresses his will to turn him into an unwilling spy. His reaction says it all:
-->Reri kept screaming. He kept screaming as the torchlights were doused, he kept screaming as Master Fuerza went to work, and he kept screaming until the Thousand Sons sorcerer-lord had finished. Indeed, though his features remained slack and emotionless, locked into surface equanimity by magicks more powerful than he'd ever be able to comprehend, there was a part of Reri Urfangborn that would never stop screaming again.
* AndShowItToYou: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red kills Greyloc by ripping out both of his hearts]].
* AntiVillain: The Flayed Lord, from ''Fall of Damnos'', realized how messed up he has become but can't really stop himself.



** For sake of example, Corporal Besseque in ''Fall of Damnos''; of all the non-space marines he's held in possibly the highest regard by the PDF thanks to saving the lives of both the planetary governor AND his temporary replacement. [[SurprisinglySuddenDeath He dies out of nowhere when a 8-inch rock falls from the ceiling and hits him on the head.]]
* ApocalypticLog: ''Being A Description Of Malodrax And Its Foulness,'' a renegade Inquisitor's monograph which Lysander stumbles upon while escaping the fortress of Kulgarde. It ends up being a very useful resource for Lysander, both as a source of information on how to deal with Malodrax's many horrors, [[ThrowTheBookAtThem and as a weapon.]]
* ArcWords:
** "Malodrax wanted to be ruled." in ''Malodrax''
** "We are judged in life by the evil we destroy" in ''Helsreach''
* ArchEnemy: The Space Wolves and Thousand Sons are each other's arch-enemies in general, but Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm views the Thousand Sons' primarch Magnus the Red as his personal nemesis in ''Battle of the Fang'', having spent decades chasing him across the galaxy while Magnus eggs him on with taunting psychic visions.
* ArmorIsUseless: Averted for the many PowerArmor types worn by the various Space Marines, which make them nigh-invincible unless you can get a lucky shot through the armour's weak points or have heavy weapons designed specifically to kill Space Marines.
* ArtInitiatesLife: When the Imperial Fists invade Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax'', the many daemonic frescoes, tapestries, mosaics and sculptures within the palace come to life and attack them.
* ArtifactTitle: In-universe, the One Hundred has never had as many members and certainly don't have now, but they keep the name, because it sounds nice.
* AsteroidThicket: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the titular rift is a dense asteroid field that covers the entire Gildar system and makes traveling within the system very dangerous.

to:

** For sake of example, Corporal Besseque in ''Fall of Damnos''; of all the non-space marines he's held in possibly the highest regard by the PDF thanks to saving the lives of both the planetary governor AND his temporary replacement. [[SurprisinglySuddenDeath He dies out of nowhere when a 8-inch rock falls from the ceiling and hits him on the head.]]
* ApocalypticLog: ''Being A Description Of Malodrax And Its Foulness,'' a renegade Inquisitor's monograph which Lysander stumbles upon while escaping the fortress of Kulgarde. It ends up being a very useful resource for Lysander, both as a source of information on how to deal with Malodrax's many horrors, [[ThrowTheBookAtThem and as a weapon.]]
* ArcWords:
** "Malodrax wanted to be ruled." in ''Malodrax''
** "We are judged in life by the evil we destroy" in ''Helsreach''
* ArchEnemy: The Space Wolves and Thousand Sons are each other's arch-enemies in general, but Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm views the Thousand Sons' primarch Magnus the Red as his personal nemesis in ''Battle of the Fang'', having spent decades chasing him across the galaxy while Magnus eggs him on with taunting psychic visions.
*
ArmorIsUseless: Averted for the many PowerArmor types worn by the various Space Marines, which make them nigh-invincible unless you can get a lucky shot through the armour's weak points or have heavy weapons designed specifically to kill Space Marines.
* ArtInitiatesLife: When the Imperial Fists invade Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax'', the many daemonic frescoes, tapestries, mosaics and sculptures within the palace come to life and attack them.
* ArtifactTitle: In-universe, the One Hundred has never had as many members and certainly don't have now, but they keep the name, because it sounds nice.
* AsteroidThicket: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the titular rift is a dense asteroid field that covers the entire Gildar system and makes traveling within the system very dangerous.
Marines.



* AttackItsWeakPoint: The Orks in ''Helsreach'' are pushing towards Hel's Highway, which is a wide open highway running straight through the centre of the city and allowing access pretty much everywhere.
* AwesomeButImpractical: The Iron Halo. It can protect the wearer from pretty much everything, but eats up so much energy, the Marine wearing it is pretty much immobile while it's working, and it leads to severe overheating.
* BadBoss: Many Chaos Lords tend to treat their warriors like shit. This passage from ''The Gildar Rift'' puts it best:
-->Blackheart did very little for his Red Corsairs other than provide them a staging ground for war. He never praised them or rewarded them but none of them questioned it; least of all the staunchly loyal Astral Claws. He expected them to die willingly at his whim, and they did. If they survived a campaign or a raid, so much the better; he could utilise their muscle again. Nobody ever spoke out against it and Blackheart never changed the ground rules. It was a perfect arrangement.



* BadassBoast: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander delivers this one to a daemon as he kills it:
--> "I told your kind I would return. When daemons have nightmares, I am what they see, and I always keep my word."



* BadassNormal: Several from the various novels.
** Captain Evvers and the mountainside guerrillas in ''Damnos''. For over a year they survive in some of the harshest climates killing Necrons with nothing more than ice picks and improvised explosives. Conscript Falka deserves a mention as well, leading a hundred-man charge against a phalanx of Necrons and ''winning''.
** The Excoriators' Chapter serfs in ''Legion of the Damned''. They take part in the siege, firing lasrifles and tending to autocannon turrets.
** Every loyalist Guardsman in ''Wrath of Iron''. Hell, even most of the "traitors" are pretty ballsy before they start getting replaced with Abnormals.
** Yuxiang in ''Siege of Castellax''. Little more than an escaped slave, he ends up starting a secret revolt and, to his own surprise, [[spoiler:kills a Chaos Space Marine]].
** The Kaerls in ''Battle of the Fang'', only a few thousand mortal men and women holding off two million Spireguard and over seven-hundred Thousand Sons in the defense of the Aett.
** Sister Sethano in ''Death of Antagonis''. Mere days after walking off a bolter wound to the gut, she fights off an ambush with two daemons and a [[spoiler:fallen Inquisitor]], and wins decisively.
* BecauseISaidSo: Subverted by Lord Plosk in ''Death of Integrity''. While he has a signed permission slip from the High Lords of Terra to more or less do ANYTHING he wants, he realizes the Space Marines would be better motivated if he treats them like equals, and agrees to trade their assistance for custom-built spaceships.
* BenevolentBoss: The Space Wolves are this to their chapter-serf kaerls, not treating them as disposeable fodder to the point in ''Battle of the Fang'' at least one Space Wolf sacrifices himself to hold off the enemy to allow a company of kaerls to withdraw to a safer location.
* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: Inverted most of the time. Space Marines would rather go down fighting, taking as many enemies as possible with them.
** Played straight for non-Astartes. [[spoiler: When (former) General Nethena from ''Wrath of Iron'' realizes the Space Marine are about to royally fuck him up for attempted mutiny, he takes his rebreather off in the middle of a chemical fogbank.]]
* BigBadDuumvirate: Ghazghkull and Nazdreg, Ork warbosses of the Goffs and Bad Moons respectively, have teamed up to conquer Piscina IV in ''Purging of Kadillus''.
* BigDamnHeroes:
** The titular Legion of the Damned. They arrived at the last possible moment before [[spoiler:Captain Kersh of the Excoriators SpaceMarine Chapter]] was overwhelmed by the foul forces of Chaos.
** In ''Fall of Damnos'' Agrippan, Captain of the 1st Company, saves Sicarius and kills the Voidbringer.
* BlatantLies: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Thousand Sons tell the first wave of Spireguard soldiers being sent down to secure landing sites that the Space Wolves they'll be fighting against are just ordinary men, like the Spireguard themselves. They quickly realize they were lied to once they encounter the Wolves and start getting slaughtered.



* BodyHorror: Aphael suffers from the flesh-change during ''Battle of the Fang'', which causes his body to undergo unpleasant mutations. His armour hides the full extent of the transformation, but at several points he notes that he can feel ''feathers'' growing out of his face and brushing against the inside of his helmet, and eventually his flesh becomes fused to the inside of the armour.



* BornLucky: Andrej of ''Helsreach''. He's in the thick of the fighting from the very beginning, his subordinates are conscripted dockers, he gets lost in a city overrun with Orks, gets drawn into the final close-quarters battle and has the entire (Imperial-sized) cathedral dropped on his head. He somehow survives all this.
* BringHelpBack: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves scout Blackwing must race to the Gangava system to warn the rest of his chapter that their home planet Fenris is besieged by the Thousand Sons. His task is complicated by both the fact that his badly-damaged ship is falling apart around him, and by a team of Thousand Sons saboteurs that teleported onboard to expedite the process.
* BroughtDownToBadass: Stripping a Marine of his weapons and PowerArmor will probably just make you die slower. Specifically, we have Captain Lysander who [[spoiler:breaks out of an Iron Warriors prison, and then breaks ''back inside'' with nothing but a rusty axe]], and Over-captain Vallax who breaks out of an Ork mobile fortress, kills the Doks who tortured him, and breaks into his own fortress to help take down the BigBad.
* BrokenAce:
** Cato Sicarius, following the fall of Damnos, considers it his greatest failure, has troubles fighting and is plagued by dreams about the Undying.
** ''Battle of the Fang'' reveals Bjorn the Fell-Handed to be this. He's the oldest and most sophisticated Dreadnought in the Imperium, is revered and respected by all the Space Wolves and is a killing machine like no other once roused, but on the inside he's wracked with self-loathing and abandonment issues due to the unexplained departure of his primarch Leman Russ.
* BrokenPedestal: As the battle of Damnos goes on, Praxor - before, staunch supporter, if not outright ''believer'' of Sicarius - starts to see less of TheGoodCaptain and more of a GloryHound.

to:

* BornLucky: Andrej of ''Helsreach''. He's in the thick of the fighting from the very beginning, his subordinates are conscripted dockers, he gets lost in a city overrun with Orks, gets drawn into the final close-quarters battle and has the entire (Imperial-sized) cathedral dropped on his head. He somehow survives all this.
* BringHelpBack: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves scout Blackwing must race to the Gangava system to warn the rest of his chapter that their home planet Fenris is besieged by the Thousand Sons. His task is complicated by both the fact that his badly-damaged ship is falling apart around him, and by a team of Thousand Sons saboteurs that teleported onboard to expedite the process.
*
BroughtDownToBadass: Stripping a Marine of his weapons and PowerArmor will probably just make you die slower. Specifically, we have Captain Lysander who [[spoiler:breaks out of an Iron Warriors prison, and then breaks ''back inside'' with nothing but a rusty axe]], and Over-captain Vallax who breaks out of an Ork mobile fortress, kills the Doks who tortured him, and breaks into his own fortress to help take down the BigBad.
* BrokenAce:
** Cato Sicarius, following the fall of Damnos, considers it his greatest failure, has troubles fighting and is plagued by dreams about the Undying.
** ''Battle of the Fang'' reveals Bjorn the Fell-Handed to be this. He's the oldest and most sophisticated Dreadnought in the Imperium, is revered and respected by all the Space Wolves and is a killing machine like no other once roused, but on the inside he's wracked with self-loathing and abandonment issues due to the unexplained departure of his primarch Leman Russ.
* BrokenPedestal: As the battle of Damnos goes on, Praxor - before, staunch supporter, if not outright ''believer'' of Sicarius - starts to see less of TheGoodCaptain and more of a GloryHound.
BigBad.



* BulletDodgesYou: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus quickly discovers that attempting to shoot Huron Blackheart is pointless, as his bolt rounds simply veer away from the Chaos Lord before they can hit him.
* BullyingTheDragon: Why yes, Ecclesiarch. I'm certain that asking that Space Marine Captain to kiss your boots will only end great for you and your private army which you aren't supposed to have. We all know what happens next.
* BuriedAlive: ''Helsreach'''s final battle ends with the cathedral collapsing on everyone, essentially burying them alive. Grimaldus is one of seven people who surivive this, the Astarte pretty much digging himself out.
* CannonFodder: Averted. Space Marine Chapters do not spend their companies and squads needlessly, but some Chapters (like the Iron Hands) are not above sending Imperial Guard forces in mass numbers to the frontlines before they deploy their own troops.
* CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Kantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.
* TheChainsOfCommanding: Some of the Space Marine Captains have to make harsh decisions to save the Imperium. At first it weighs heavily on them, especially the newly promoted Captains and Sergeants, but throughout the battles ahead they grow to accept the mantle handed to them. Specifically, Kersh from ''Legion'' and Volos from ''Antagonis'' have the whole YouAreInCommandNow aspect woven pretty deeply into their character arcs.
* ClarkesThirdLaw: [[spoiler:The spaceship known as the Spirit of Eternity, from ''Death of Integrity'', was built during the Golden Age of Technology, and it outclasses the Imperial fores so badly it almost becomes an OutsideContextProblem.]]
* CivilWarcraft: For the entire first half of ''Wrath of Iron'' the "traitor Guardsmen" have no knowledge that their planetary governor has fallen to chaos, and the Iron Hands [[OmniscientMoralityLicense refuse to let anyone take the time out to explain anything]].
* CoDragons: Ahmuz Temekh and Herume Aphael in ''Battle of the Fang''. The two of them act as joint commanders of the Thousand Sons forces invading Fenris, with Aphael leading their troops on the ground while Temekh carries out the taxing ritual to summon their master, Magnus the Red, into the physical world.
* ComicallySmallBribe: The xenos temples in ''Death of Antagonis'' have to be bribed with blood to get the [[spoiler:enormous war machines]] working, but the amount of blood is pretty small compared to how massive some of the mechanisms are. The Black Dragons even lampshade this when [[spoiler:a bell the size of a small planet]] considers itself fully charged with only about 50 slaves' worth of blood.
* CountingBullets: In ''Rynn's World'', Kantor does it all the time with Dorn's Arrow, although he has a built-in counter to help him. It's amazing how quickly over six hundred projectiles can be spent.
* CoversAlwaysLie: The cover of ''Purging of Kadillius'' has Belial facing off against Ghazkul. In the battle, the two never came within several kilometers of each other, and one of the times that Belial did fight personally in the battle, he was supported by Deathwing terminators, not the regular marines that the cover shows.

to:

* BulletDodgesYou: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus quickly discovers that attempting to shoot Huron Blackheart is pointless, as his bolt rounds simply veer away from the Chaos Lord before they can hit him.
*
BullyingTheDragon: Why yes, Ecclesiarch. I'm certain that asking that Space Marine Captain to kiss your boots will only end great for you and your private army which you aren't supposed to have. We all know what happens next.
* BuriedAlive: ''Helsreach'''s final battle ends with the cathedral collapsing on everyone, essentially burying them alive. Grimaldus is one of seven people who surivive this, the Astarte pretty much digging himself out.
*
CannonFodder: Averted. Space Marine Chapters do not spend their companies and squads needlessly, but some Chapters (like the Iron Hands) are not above sending Imperial Guard forces in mass numbers to the frontlines before they deploy their own troops.
* CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Kantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.
*
TheChainsOfCommanding: Some of the Space Marine Captains have to make harsh decisions to save the Imperium. At first it weighs heavily on them, especially the newly promoted Captains and Sergeants, but throughout the battles ahead they grow to accept the mantle handed to them. Specifically, Kersh from ''Legion'' and Volos from ''Antagonis'' have the whole YouAreInCommandNow aspect woven pretty deeply into their character arcs.
* ClarkesThirdLaw: [[spoiler:The spaceship known as the Spirit of Eternity, from ''Death of Integrity'', was built during the Golden Age of Technology, and it outclasses the Imperial fores so badly it almost becomes an OutsideContextProblem.]]
* CivilWarcraft: For the entire first half of ''Wrath of Iron'' the "traitor Guardsmen" have no knowledge that their planetary governor has fallen to chaos, and the Iron Hands [[OmniscientMoralityLicense refuse to let anyone take the time out to explain anything]].
* CoDragons: Ahmuz Temekh and Herume Aphael in ''Battle of the Fang''. The two of them act as joint commanders of the Thousand Sons forces invading Fenris, with Aphael leading their troops on the ground while Temekh carries out the taxing ritual to summon their master, Magnus the Red, into the physical world.
* ComicallySmallBribe: The xenos temples in ''Death of Antagonis'' have to be bribed with blood to get the [[spoiler:enormous war machines]] working, but the amount of blood is pretty small compared to how massive some of the mechanisms are. The Black Dragons even lampshade this when [[spoiler:a bell the size of a small planet]] considers itself fully charged with only about 50 slaves' worth of blood.
* CountingBullets: In ''Rynn's World'', Kantor does it all the time with Dorn's Arrow, although he has a built-in counter to help him. It's amazing how quickly over six hundred projectiles can be spent.
* CoversAlwaysLie: The cover of ''Purging of Kadillius'' has Belial facing off against Ghazkul. In the battle, the two never came within several kilometers of each other, and one of the times that Belial did fight personally in the battle, he was supported by Deathwing terminators, not the regular marines that the cover shows.
arcs.



* CurbStompCushion:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Trom Rossek]] is one of the first Space Wolves to die at [[spoiler:Magnus]]'s hands, but he ''does'' manage to land a single hit on [[spoiler:Magnus]] with enough force to make [[spoiler:the daemon primarch]] pause for a second--before [[spoiler:Magnus]] promptly knocks him down and [[GiantFootOfStomping crushes him underfoot]]. Later on, [[spoiler:Magnus]] reflects that the blow actually hurt.
** In the same book, [[spoiler:Greyloc, Sturmhjart, Bjorn the Fell-Handed and two of Greyloc's Terminators all confront Magnus at once. Bjorn gets trashed to the point where he's taken out of the fight and the others all die, but they actually manage to put Magnus on the back foot for a while with the sheer ferocity of their assault, and the damage they inflict weakens Magnus enough for the newly-arrived Ironhelm to destroy his physical form and banish him back to the Warp, though he too dies in the process]].
* DarkSecret: Lysander never tells the other Imperial Fists about all the deals and alliances he made with daemons during his time on Malodrax. When other Fists notice that the daemons they're killing seem to know him, he lies through his teeth about ''how'' they know him.
* DeathEqualsRedemption and RedemptionEqualsDeath: From ''Wrath of Iron'', Valien the Death Cult Assassin grew up in the slums and is addicted to drinking blood. He knew damn well his sins were great and constantly worried that his career wouldn't help his life amount to anything. At least through his suicide bomb he was able to make his death count for something, by blowing up [[spoiler:a Slaanesh Daemon Prince's sanctuary, wounding said Prince and atomizing his personal bodyguards]].
* DecapitationPresentation: In ''Malodrax'', the final entry of Inquisitor Corvin's journal reveals that [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul paid him a personal visit in his cell, just to drop off the decapitated and [[EyeScream eyeless]] head of Corvin's pilot Maskelin.]]
* DefiantToTheEnd: When Captain Lysander is captured in ''Malodrax'', he quickly accepts that he's lost and at his enemy's mercy, but keeps on struggling anyway because that's just what a Space Marine does. As long as he can recognize some way to inconvenience his captors, he'll try and do it.
** The defenders in ''Battle of the Fang'' believe nobody is going to come and save them, with their fleet on deployment and no messages out (as far as they know), but they decide to make the Thousand Sons pay for every inch of ground they claim.
* DelayedReaction: In ''The Purging of Kadillus'', Sergeant Naaman cuts off an ork's arm with a chainsword. The ork doesn't realize this until it attempts to punch him with its missing arm:
--> Out of instinct, the alien tried to throw a punch with the bloody stump. It stared at the ragged wound in amazement when the expected blow failed to appear.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: Between Salamanders and Templars in ''Helsreach''. Salamanders' creed compels them to protect civillians wherever possible, even to the point of foregoing glory, but the POV character, a Templar, has exactly opposite mindset and thus the story paints Salamanders as obstructive and wrong.
* DerelictGraveyard: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the dangers of traversing the titular Rift are compounded by the countless wrecked starships which drift through the asteroid field. The sheer density of said asteroid field makes these wrecks almost impossible to salvage: any vessel that tries will inevitably be wrecked in turn.
* DespairEventHorizon:

to:

* CurbStompCushion:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Trom Rossek]] is one of the first Space Wolves to die at [[spoiler:Magnus]]'s hands, but he ''does'' manage to land a single hit on [[spoiler:Magnus]] with enough force to make [[spoiler:the daemon primarch]] pause for a second--before [[spoiler:Magnus]] promptly knocks him down and [[GiantFootOfStomping crushes him underfoot]]. Later on, [[spoiler:Magnus]] reflects that the blow actually hurt.
** In the same book, [[spoiler:Greyloc, Sturmhjart, Bjorn the Fell-Handed and two of Greyloc's Terminators all confront Magnus at once. Bjorn gets trashed to the point where he's taken out of the fight and the others all die, but they actually manage to put Magnus on the back foot for a while with the sheer ferocity of their assault, and the damage they inflict weakens Magnus enough for the newly-arrived Ironhelm to destroy his physical form and banish him back to the Warp, though he too dies in the process]].
* DarkSecret: Lysander never tells the other Imperial Fists about all the deals and alliances he made with daemons during his time on Malodrax. When other Fists notice that the daemons they're killing seem to know him, he lies through his teeth about ''how'' they know him.
* DeathEqualsRedemption and RedemptionEqualsDeath: From ''Wrath of Iron'', Valien the Death Cult Assassin grew up in the slums and is addicted to drinking blood. He knew damn well his sins were great and constantly worried that his career wouldn't help his life amount to anything. At least through his suicide bomb he was able to make his death count for something, by blowing up [[spoiler:a Slaanesh Daemon Prince's sanctuary, wounding said Prince and atomizing his personal bodyguards]].
* DecapitationPresentation: In ''Malodrax'', the final entry of Inquisitor Corvin's journal reveals that [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul paid him a personal visit in his cell, just to drop off the decapitated and [[EyeScream eyeless]] head of Corvin's pilot Maskelin.]]
* DefiantToTheEnd: When Captain Lysander is captured in ''Malodrax'', he quickly accepts that he's lost and at his enemy's mercy, but keeps on struggling anyway because that's just what a Space Marine does. As long as he can recognize some way to inconvenience his captors, he'll try and do it.
** The defenders in ''Battle of the Fang'' believe nobody is going to come and save them, with their fleet on deployment and no messages out (as far as they know), but they decide to make the Thousand Sons pay for every inch of ground they claim.
* DelayedReaction: In ''The Purging of Kadillus'', Sergeant Naaman cuts off an ork's arm with a chainsword. The ork doesn't realize this until it attempts to punch him with its missing arm:
--> Out of instinct, the alien tried to throw a punch with the bloody stump. It stared at the ragged wound in amazement when the expected blow failed to appear.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: Between Salamanders and Templars in ''Helsreach''. Salamanders' creed compels them to protect civillians wherever possible, even to the point of foregoing glory, but the POV character, a Templar, has exactly opposite mindset and thus the story paints Salamanders as obstructive and wrong.
* DerelictGraveyard: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the dangers of traversing the titular Rift are compounded by the countless wrecked starships which drift through the asteroid field. The sheer density of said asteroid field makes these wrecks almost impossible to salvage: any vessel that tries will inevitably be wrecked in turn.
* DespairEventHorizon: Happens frequently when the forces of Chaos are involved,



* {{Determinator}}: It takes a ''lot'' to down a Space Marine:
** Scout Omar in ''Legion of the Damned''. He's buried alive in heretics, stabbed in the chest by a set of Lightning Claws, gets his legs eaten by a daemon, and ''still begs to be put on the front lines'' (he ends up playing spotter for another scout with a sniper rifle). He then takes on the role of the sniper when the his fellow scout is killed, and continues putting down daemons and heretics until he was eventually overwhelmed.
** Over-captain Vallax in ''Siege of Castellax'' is teleported into a trap by [[spoiler:Oriax]], where he's mobbed by nearly a million Orks. He's captured and tortured to within an inch of his life, repeatedly, for seven days straight. He then fights his way out of the torture chamber and into his own home base, which is under siege at the time, and ''finally'' goes down fighting, all with half of his skull missing.
* DidYouJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Captain Lysander spends a good chunk of ''Malodrax'' chatting with Daemon Prince Shalhadar and rehearsing for a play. This only applies during the flashbacks, however; in the present day Lysander and Shahadar are quick to try and kill each other.
* DidntSeeThatComing:
** The Legion Of The Damned in the titular book come out of nowhere, as far as the forces of Chaos were concerned. The results did not end well for them in the novel.
** This line in ''Death of Antagonis'':
-->[[spoiler:"That pretty-faced traitor is no captain of mine."]]
* DogPileOfDoom: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets mobbed by a few hundred cultists the first time he enters Shalhadar's city. Since he's unarmed and unarmoured, he can't fight them off effectively, and he's nearly crushed to death under a pile of bodies until a third party calls the cultists off.

to:

* {{Determinator}}: It takes a ''lot'' to down a Space Marine:
** Scout Omar in ''Legion of the Damned''. He's buried alive in heretics, stabbed in the chest by a set of Lightning Claws, gets his legs eaten by a daemon, and ''still begs to be put on the front lines'' (he ends up playing spotter for another scout with a sniper rifle). He then takes on the role of the sniper when the his fellow scout is killed, and continues putting down daemons and heretics until he was eventually overwhelmed.
** Over-captain Vallax in ''Siege of Castellax'' is teleported into a trap by [[spoiler:Oriax]], where he's mobbed by nearly a million Orks. He's captured and tortured to within an inch of his life, repeatedly, for seven days straight. He then fights his way out of the torture chamber and into his own home base, which is under siege at the time, and ''finally'' goes down fighting, all with half of his skull missing.
* DidYouJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Captain Lysander spends a good chunk of ''Malodrax'' chatting with Daemon Prince Shalhadar and rehearsing for a play. This only applies during the flashbacks, however; in the present day Lysander and Shahadar are quick to try and kill each other.
* DidntSeeThatComing:
** The Legion Of The Damned in the titular book come out of nowhere, as far as the forces of Chaos were concerned. The results did not end well for them in the novel.
** This line in ''Death of Antagonis'':
-->[[spoiler:"That pretty-faced traitor is no captain of mine."]]
* DogPileOfDoom: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets mobbed by a few hundred cultists the first time he enters Shalhadar's city. Since he's unarmed and unarmoured, he can't fight them off effectively, and he's nearly crushed to death under a pile of bodies until a third party calls the cultists off.
Marine:



** Daerys Arrun won't be able to capture or kill Huron Blackheart in ''The Gildar Rift'', since one of them is an actual character in the tabletop game with a unique model, and the other is not. [[spoiler:Sure enough, Huron Blackheart kills him in a CurbStompBattle and gets away Scott-free.]]
* DressingAsTheEnemy: When hiding in Kulgarde's underground, Lysander pretends to be one of many mutants serving the Iron Warriors.
* DueToTheDead: ''Malodrax'': The Imperial Fists have multiple ways of honouring their dead. When Skelpis is killed by the Red Widow, Chaplain Lycaon honours him by scrimshawing one of Skelpis's knuckles. When three of them are killed in the attack on Shalhadar's palace, the Fists eulogize them and then hold a series of short wrestling matches in their honour.
* DwindlingParty: Inquisitor Corvin gradually loses many of his retainers during his time on Malodrax. At least two men die before he enters Shalhadar's city, and he loses two more by the time he leaves the place, bringing him down to five. By the time of his final journal entry, two of those five are dead and Corvin is convinced that the other two must also be dead. [[spoiler:His assassin Sildyne is the only member of the team still alive and loyal by the time of Lysander's return to Malodrax.]]
* DyingRace: ''The Gildar Rift'' suggests that the Silver Skulls are slowly dying out, as several characters remark that their numbers are dwindling and that the influx of inexperienced new Space Marines can't make up for their lost veterans. The events of the novel do nothing to reverse this trend, with [[spoiler:the Fourth Company losing a quarter of its strength, Captain Daerys Arrun dying at Huron Blackheart's hands, and the senior Apothecary Ryarus being captured by the Red Corsairs]].
* DynamicEntry:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Ironhelm enters the fight between Bjorn and Magnus with a flying tackle that knocks all three of them off a cliff]].
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:an Assault Marine tries to save Daerys Arrun by knocking Huron Blackheart away from him with a rocket-powered tackle]]. See SenselessSacrifice for how well ''that'' turns out.
* DysonSphere: The titular planet of ''Malodrax'' is surrounded by a giant "orbital reef" made of space coral, just to further point out how [[SpaceIsAnOcean oceany the space of this universe is]].

to:

** Daerys Arrun won't be able to capture or kill Huron Blackheart in ''The Gildar Rift'', since one of them is an actual character in the tabletop game with a unique model, and the other is not. [[spoiler:Sure enough, Huron Blackheart kills him in a CurbStompBattle and gets away Scott-free.]]
* DressingAsTheEnemy: When hiding in Kulgarde's underground, Lysander pretends to be one of many mutants serving the Iron Warriors.
* DueToTheDead: ''Malodrax'': The Imperial Fists have multiple ways of honouring their dead. When Skelpis is killed by the Red Widow, Chaplain Lycaon honours him by scrimshawing one of Skelpis's knuckles. When three of them are killed in the attack on Shalhadar's palace, the Fists eulogize them and then hold a series of short wrestling matches in their honour.
* DwindlingParty: Inquisitor Corvin gradually loses many of his retainers during his time on Malodrax. At least two men die before he enters Shalhadar's city, and he loses two more by the time he leaves the place, bringing him down to five. By the time of his final journal entry, two of those five are dead and Corvin is convinced that the other two must also be dead. [[spoiler:His assassin Sildyne is the only member of the team still alive and loyal by the time of Lysander's return to Malodrax.]]
* DyingRace: ''The Gildar Rift'' suggests that the Silver Skulls are slowly dying out, as several characters remark that their numbers are dwindling and that the influx of inexperienced new Space Marines can't make up for their lost veterans. The events of the novel do nothing to reverse this trend, with [[spoiler:the Fourth Company losing a quarter of its strength, Captain Daerys Arrun dying at Huron Blackheart's hands, and the senior Apothecary Ryarus being captured by the Red Corsairs]].
* DynamicEntry:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Ironhelm enters the fight between Bjorn and Magnus with a flying tackle that knocks all three of them off a cliff]].
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:an Assault Marine tries to save Daerys Arrun by knocking Huron Blackheart away from him with a rocket-powered tackle]]. See SenselessSacrifice for how well ''that'' turns out.
* DysonSphere: The titular planet of ''Malodrax'' is surrounded by a giant "orbital reef" made of space coral, just to further point out how [[SpaceIsAnOcean oceany the space of this universe is]].
scot-free.]]



* EatsBabies: The cursed daemon "brood mother" in ''Malodrax'' eats her own offspring after they [[{{Squick}} crawl out of her skin's pustules]].
* ElementalPowers: The Wolves' magically gifted Priests wield these in battle.
* EnemyMine:
** Subverted in ''The World Engine''. Just because the Astral Knights and Overlord Turakhin are both fighting the same enemy does ''not'' make them allies; they simply agree to ignore each other until Overlord Heqiroth dies.
** Lysander is quite disgusted by his own alliance with Shalhadar in ''Malodrax'', but goes through with it, as he wants revenge on Thul and the Daemon Prince wants to teach the Iron Warrior his place and have some entertainment.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: ''Fall of Damnos'' gives the Necrons one in their ResistanceIsFutile line.
--> ''We are the Necrontyr. We are Legion. We Claim Dominion of this World... Surrender and Die.''
* EvilVersusEvil: Kraegon Thul and Shalhadar both want to rule Malodrax, but their mutual hostility keeps their ambitions in check.
* EyeScream:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', an unfortunate deckhand gets his eyes gouged out by a Thousand Sons sorcerer so that the sorcerer can implant magical eyes in their place and use him as a mind-controlled spy.
** In ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Lysander kills Kraegon Thul by stabbing him in the eye with a poisoned dagger]].
* FaceHeelTurn: [[spoiler:Captain Toharan and Inquisitor Lettinger in ''Death of Antagonis]].
** {{Irony}}: [[spoiler:Lettinger was convinced the Black Dragons would betray the Imperium, and believed Toharan was the Dragons' last chance at redemption.]]
* FateWorseThanDeath: Scout Kennen is sentenced to being converted to servitor - essentially, serving as lobotomized WetwareCPU ''and'' framework for hardware for a thousand years.
* FeelNoPain: Sister Sethano. She takes a [[MadeOfExplodium bolter round]] to the gut, and not only kills the traitor who shot her but shrugs it off in a matter of days.
* FireForgedFriends: On Damnos, the Necron threat gradually changes the dynamic between Space Marines and mortals from protectors and protected to friends, or even battle-brothers.
* FirstNameBasis: In ''Fall of Damnos'', Space Marine captain Scipio and mortal guerilla fighter Jynn quickly call each other by names - at first because Jynn doesn't know Scipio's surname and then because he decides that she deserves the honor after saving his life. Other members of Scipio's squad are rather displeased with this.
* FlashbackWithinAFlashBack: In ''Malodrax'', flashbacks of Lysander's first time on the planet are accompanied by flashbacks from Inquisitor Corvin's ApocalypticLog.



* GalacticConqueror: In ''Malodrax'', Kraegon Thul aims to become the next great Warmaster of Chaos, and Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin are both convinced that he could wreak untold havoc on the Imperium if he overcomes Malodrax's trials. [[spoiler:Ultimately subverted, though, as he dies without ever conquering a single planet.]]
* GameplayAndStoryIntegration: ''Death of Integrity'' does this for TabletopGame/SpaceHulk. Why send bulky, slow moving tactical dreadnought armor into the confined spaces of a Space Hulk, when Genestealers can tear through Terminator armor like tissue paper? Because radiation levels within the Hulk are so high that regular Space Marines would die in hours, as demonstrated when the Magos sends servitors along with the marines in order to set beacons.
* GeniusLoci: Every major character in ''Malodrax'' is convinced that the titular planet is actively toying with them to satisfy a goal of some kind. Considering it's a [[PlanetHeck daemon world]], they are likely correct by some measure.
--> [[ArcWords Malodrax wanted to be ruled.]]
* GenuineHumanHide: In ''Malodrax'', Kraegon Thul's ambassador to Shalhadar sets himself up in a pavilion made of freshly flayed human skin--so fresh, in fact, that there is still blood and guts clinging to it and the pavilion's interior stinks horribly. Even Lysander is grossed out by the smell.
* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: ''Battle of the Fang:'' When Trom Rossek falls into a depressive funk after getting his entire squad killed by the Thousand Sons, Wyrmblade tries to snap him out of it by punching him in the face with enough force to knock him flat on his ass.
* GoldfishPoopGang: The Iron Warriors in ''Siege of Castellax'' are essentially this throughout the entire book. They constantly fight with one another and constantly attempting to undermine one another until the orks show up, are constantly outwitted by the orks in various ways, and many of them end up dying humiliating deaths and the orks end up taking Castellax. Even ''before'' the book they seemed to be like this, mentioning a raid prior to the story where they were nearly defeated by the planet's local defense forces when said forces tricked their air forces into bombing a dummy armor column, leaving the ''real'' column to go off and attack the Iron Warrior forces sieging the planetary capital. ''Space Marines'' almost defeated by ''regular humans''.
* TheHedonist: Shalhadar, as befitting a Daemon Prince of Slaanesh. His entire city is a garish tribute to himself, his citizens gladly live and die for the sole purpose of providing him fleeting moments of entertainment, and he spends much of his time directing, acting in, watching, financing, and critiquing stage plays (sometimes all at once).
* HeroicBSOD:

to:

* GalacticConqueror: In ''Malodrax'', Kraegon Thul aims to become the next great Warmaster of Chaos, and Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin are both convinced that he could wreak untold havoc on the Imperium if he overcomes Malodrax's trials. [[spoiler:Ultimately subverted, though, as he dies without ever conquering a single planet.]]
* GameplayAndStoryIntegration: ''Death of Integrity'' does this for TabletopGame/SpaceHulk. Why send bulky, slow moving tactical dreadnought armor into the confined spaces of a Space Hulk, when Genestealers can tear through Terminator armor like tissue paper? Because radiation levels within the Hulk are so high that regular Space Marines would die in hours, as demonstrated when the Magos sends servitors along with the marines in order to set beacons.
* GeniusLoci: Every major character in ''Malodrax'' is convinced that the titular planet is actively toying with them to satisfy a goal of some kind. Considering it's a [[PlanetHeck daemon world]], they are likely correct by some measure.
--> [[ArcWords Malodrax wanted to be ruled.]]
* GenuineHumanHide: In ''Malodrax'', Kraegon Thul's ambassador to Shalhadar sets himself up in a pavilion made of freshly flayed human skin--so fresh, in fact, that there is still blood and guts clinging to it and the pavilion's interior stinks horribly. Even Lysander is grossed out by the smell.
* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: ''Battle of the Fang:'' When Trom Rossek falls into a depressive funk after getting his entire squad killed by the Thousand Sons, Wyrmblade tries to snap him out of it by punching him in the face with enough force to knock him flat on his ass.
* GoldfishPoopGang: The Iron Warriors in ''Siege of Castellax'' are essentially this throughout the entire book. They constantly fight with one another and constantly attempting to undermine one another until the orks show up, are constantly outwitted by the orks in various ways, and many of them end up dying humiliating deaths and the orks end up taking Castellax. Even ''before'' the book they seemed to be like this, mentioning a raid prior to the story where they were nearly defeated by the planet's local defense forces when said forces tricked their air forces into bombing a dummy armor column, leaving the ''real'' column to go off and attack the Iron Warrior forces sieging the planetary capital. ''Space Marines'' almost defeated by ''regular humans''.
* TheHedonist: Shalhadar, as befitting a Daemon Prince of Slaanesh. His entire city is a garish tribute to himself, his citizens gladly live and die for the sole purpose of providing him fleeting moments of entertainment, and he spends much of his time directing, acting in, watching, financing, and critiquing stage plays (sometimes all at once).
* HeroicBSOD: Happens a lot in the 40K universe,



* HeroicSacrifice: [[OnceAnEpisode At least once per book]].

to:

* HeroicSacrifice: [[OnceAnEpisode At least once per book]]. book]].
MoreDakka: '''AND HOLY GOD-EMPEROR HOW!''' Almost every novel in this series is bound to have scenes of Space Marines unloading their weaponry into Daemons, Heretics and Xenos alike.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast:
** In ''Siege of Castellax'', Skintaker Algol.
** In ''Legion of the Damned'', we have Umbragg of the Brazen Flesh.
** The planet Armageddon has a full catalogue of such places: Helsreach, Tartarus, Hades, Armageddon itself...
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', we have Lord Apothecary Gareon, of the Red Corsairs, a.k.a. "the Corpsemaster".
SpaceBattle: A common occurrence in the series. Half the plot of ''The Gildar Rift'' is about a space battle between the Red Corsairs and the Silver Skulls, to name one example.
* TakingYouWithMe: Hoo boy...
** ''Kadillus'': Naaman to an Ork walker.
** ''Legion'': Omar to a pack of flying daemons.
** ''Damnos'': Agrippan to as many Necrons as possible, [[spoiler:though the novel doesn't show it.]]
** ''Castellax'': Vortsk to as many Orks as possible.
** ''Antagonis'': [[spoiler:Nessus to Volos, by way of possessing Toharan. It doesn't work.]]
** ''Integrity'': This is how Voldo tries to die. [[spoiler:It doesn't work, but he ''does'' die fighting in such a way that helps his brothers continue the mission]].

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Rynn's World]]

AwesomeButImpractical: The Iron Halo. It can protect the wearer from pretty much everything, but eats up so much energy, the Marine wearing it is pretty much immobile while it's working, and it leads to severe overheating.
CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Kantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.
CountingBullets: Pedro Kantor does it all the time with Dorn's Arrow, although he has a built-in counter to help him. It's amazing how quickly over six hundred projectiles can be spent.
FateWorseThanDeath: Scout Kennen is sentenced to being converted to servitor - essentially, serving as lobotomized WetwareCPU ''and'' framework for hardware for a thousand years.
KnowWhenToFoldThem: When it realizes it can't beat Kantor, Snagrod bails out of the fight.
NonIndicativeName: In-universe, in ''Rynn's World'' the narrative takes its time to point out that the Iron Halo is actually made from several different metals, none of which is iron.
NowLetMeCarryYou: Kantor initially refuses to let human refugees join the Space Marines' column, ultimately giving in on the condition that anyone who can't keep up will be left behind for the Orks. A mother struggles to keep up while carrying her two young children. When she finally collapses in exhaustion, Kantor calls a halt and walks back. His captain fears that he's about to perform a MercyKill to prevent them from suffering a much more horrible death from the Orks... but Kantor only tells her how brave she's been, and that she's earned the right for her and her children to be carried instead, and lifts them into his own arms.
OlderThanTheyLook: Many noblemen, thanks to rejuvenation treatments they can afford. Maia Caglieri, for example, is ninety seven, but looks forty.
ThePowerOfHate: Alessio Cortez believes that hate for traitors and xenos is what has kept him alive and going for all three centuries of his service.
RedOniBlueOni: In the Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Kantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.
ShockwaveStomp: The gargant almost does this by accident, its footfall being nearly hard enough to collapse the tunnels the Crimson Fists are hiding in.
* TemptingFate: "Even the foulest and most violent of the xenos races surely weren't foolish enough to attack a Space Marine homeworld." Guess what happens soon thereafter. [[spoiler:Orks.]]

[[/folder]]


[[folder: Helsreach]

ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: Despite the brutal action and depiction of war in the 41st Millennium, some of the best scenes are quiet moments where the [[SpaceMarine Space Marines]] are discussing tactics and plans about how to wage war or giving some {{Exposition}} on the background of the planet or enemy they face. Grimaldus speaks to his Fighting Company's Apothecary, who is close to crossing the DespairEventHorizon due to the casualties that the Black Templars are sustaining (by this point in the book only a few are left and the defenders are near defeat).
ArcWords: We are judged in life by the evil we destroy"
AttackItsWeakPoint: The Orks are pushing towards Hel's Highway, which is a wide open highway running straight through the centre of the city and allowing access pretty much everywhere.
BornLucky: Andrej,He's in the thick of the fighting from the very beginning, his subordinates are conscripted dockers, he gets lost in a city overrun with Orks, gets drawn into the final close-quarters battle and has the entire (Imperial-sized) cathedral dropped on his head. He somehow survives all this.
BuriedAlive: ''Helsreach'''s final battle ends with the cathedral collapsing on everyone, essentially burying them alive. Grimaldus is one of seven people who survive this, the Astarte pretty much digging himself out.
DeliberateValuesDissonance: Between Salamanders and Templars. Salamanders' creed compels them to protect civilians wherever possible, even to the point of foregoing glory, but the POV character, a Templar, has exactly opposite mindset and thus the story paints Salamanders as obstructive and wrong.



* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Attempted in ''The Gildar Rift''. While fighting Huron Blackheart, Daerys Arrun notices a nearby gas pocket and tries to lure Blackheart toward it so that the Chaos Lord will ignite it with a stray blast from his flamer and blow himself up. [[spoiler:The plan fails due to Blackheart catching up to him faster than he anticipated and hurling him away from the gas pocket.]]
* HonorBeforeReason:
** Sicarius goes to fight the Undying by himself, forbiding his men from comitting to the duel, because that's "the proper way". [[spoiler:Had he taken at least Agrippen with him, he might've succeeded in defending Damnos.]]
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', Harek Ironhelm is so obsessed with defeating Magnus the Red and settling the Space Wolves' ancient feud with the Thousand Sons that he's willing to mobilize the entire chapter and leave Fenris unprotected when he thinks he's got Magnus cornered on Gangava--just as Magnus planned.




* {{Hypocrite}}: For a guy that uses psyker spells a lot, Mortarion does enjoy insulting the "little witches" of the Grey Knights for being pyskers.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: One of the major themes of ''Death of Antagonis''.
* InMediasRes: The ''World Engine'' starts when the eponymous machine already has a death toll of millions and the Imperium has been battling it for days.
* InsistentTerminology: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Daerys Arrun insists on referring to Huron Blackheart by his original name of Lufgt Huron. Why he does so isn't clear, and he doesn't provide an answer when one of the chapter's Prognosticators asks him.
* ItCanThink: ''Death of Integrity'' will make damn sure that you don't think of Genestealers as just random packs of feral beasts. They can study, ambush, use adaptive tactics, find [[BulletProofHumanShield practical uses]] for their own corpses, [[spoiler:identify and destroy your communication lines]]...
** At least until you [[spoiler:kill their Broodlord]].
* {{Jerkass}}: The Iron Warriors as a whole. In ''Siege of Castellax'' they routinely kill their slaves ''pour encourager les autres'' when the slaves have already spent their entire lives being in fear of their masters.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold:
** In ''Siege of Castellax'', Over-captain Vallax is about as close to this trope as a Chaos Marine can get. He's an egotistical, glory-stealing jerkass, but he really does have a sense of honor and would hate to see his brothers die in anything short of a glorious battle. Later, when he fails his brothers by [[spoiler:leading a team of Ork Kommandoes into the Bastion]], he takes it upon himself to [[spoiler:HoldTheLine and FaceDeathWithDignity]].
* JustToyingWithThem: ''Battle of the Fang'': When Wyrmblade confronts [[spoiler:Magnus]] in the ruins of his laboratory, the narration makes it clear that [[spoiler:Magnus]] is just toying with him as they cross swords:
-->[[spoiler:Magnus]] parried him with an unconscious ease, moving just as smoothly, deploying his blade with all the remorseless skill of his heritage. It was almost as if he were allowing the Wolf Priest his last moment of perfection, gifting him a final flourish of martial sublimity before the end had to come.
* KeystoneArmy:
** The Necrons in ''Fall of Damnos'' become sluggish and stilted if they don't have a nearby Lord or Overlord to direct them. Sicarius spends the entire book trying to exploit this fact.

to:

MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence to support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].
* {{Hypocrite}}: For OpposingCombatPhilosophies: Between the Black Templars and The Salamanders in ''Helsreach'', who are focused on "destroying the Emperor's Enemies" and "defending the Emperor's people" respectively. The two are working together to defend a guy civilian shelter, and have broken the first Ork wave. The Templars pursue and head StraightForTheCommander, while the Salamanders fall back and prepare for the second wave. From the Templar perspective the Salamanders hung them out to dry when killing the Ork Boss leading the attack could have prevented further waves entirely, and from the Salamander perspective the Templar attack was a foolish risk that uses psyker spells a lot, Mortarion does enjoy insulting would have left the "little witches" civilians vulnerable to attack from other enemy forces even if it succeeded.
OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Throughout ''Helsreach'', the Templars of Grimaldus' squad keep on pointing out that he's acting incredibly subdued and uninvested, especially compared to his previous fiery zeal. Grimaldus himself keeps on thinking on why this is happening.
PosthumousCharacter: Mordred, Grimaldus' OldMaster, whose shadow continues to plague Grimaldus, as the newly-promoted Reclusiarch doesn't feel like he can match his accomplishments. Other characters also mention him quite often, which obviously doesn't help Grimaldus.
PyrrhicVictory: The titular Hive City manages to survive the Ork invasion until the Season of Fire grinds the invasion to a halt, but their manufacturing facilities, transport infrastructure, and worker population had been beyond decimated. Estimates putting the city's current max output capabilities at just 5% of what it was producing before the war.
* ThisIsGonnaSuck: The first thought Grimaldus has upon hearing of Armageddon?
-->I will die on this world.

[[/folder]]


[[folder:The Purging of Kadillus]]

AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens: The Orks also have no problem communicating with the Dark Angels
AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs: The orks seize control
of the Grey Knights for being pyskers.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: One of the major themes of ''Death of Antagonis''.
* InMediasRes: The ''World Engine'' starts when the eponymous machine already has a death toll of millions and the Imperium has been battling it for days.
* InsistentTerminology: In
Dark Angels' basilica off-page in ''The Gildar Rift'', Daerys Arrun insists Purging of Kadillus''. Chaplain Boreas leads multiple assaults on referring the basilica in an effort to Huron Blackheart by take it back, finally succeeding on his original name of Lufgt Huron. Why he does so isn't clear, fifth attempt.
BigBadDuumvirate: Ghazghkull
and Nazdreg, Ork warbosses of the Goffs and Bad Moons respectively, have teamed up to conquer Piscina IV in ''Purging of Kadillus''.
CoversAlwaysLie: The cover has Belial facing off against Ghazghkull Thraka. In the battle, the two never came within several kilometers of each other, and one of the times that Belial did fight personally in the battle,
he was supported by Deathwing terminators, not the regular marines that the cover shows.
* DelayedReaction: Sergeant Naaman cuts off an Ork's arm with a chainsword. The ork
doesn't provide an answer when one of the chapter's Prognosticators asks him.
* ItCanThink: ''Death of Integrity'' will make damn sure that you don't think of Genestealers as just random packs of feral beasts. They can study, ambush, use adaptive tactics, find [[BulletProofHumanShield practical uses]] for their own corpses, [[spoiler:identify and destroy your communication lines]]...
** At least
realize this until you [[spoiler:kill their Broodlord]].
* {{Jerkass}}: The Iron Warriors as a whole. In ''Siege
it attempts to punch him with its missing arm:
--> Out
of Castellax'' they routinely kill their slaves ''pour encourager les autres'' instinct, the alien tried to throw a punch with the bloody stump. It stared at the ragged wound in amazement when the slaves have already spent their entire lives being in fear of their masters.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold:
** In ''Siege of Castellax'', Over-captain Vallax
expected blow failed to appear.
NonIndicativeName: Kadillus Harbor
is about as close to this trope as a Chaos purged off-screen by the PDF. The Space Marine can get. He's an egotistical, glory-stealing jerkass, but he really does have a sense of honor and would hate to see his brothers die in anything short of a glorious battle. Later, when he fails his brothers by [[spoiler:leading a team of Ork Kommandoes into characters we follow throughout the Bastion]], he takes it upon himself book are trying to [[spoiler:HoldTheLine and FaceDeathWithDignity]].
* JustToyingWithThem: ''Battle
purge a series of the Fang'': When Wyrmblade confronts [[spoiler:Magnus]] power plants instead.
ObsessivelyOrganized: Chaplain Boreas stops
in the ruins middle of a pitched siege to glue part of a statue back together. In his laboratory, the narration makes it clear mind he realizes there's probably better things to be doing at that [[spoiler:Magnus]] is just toying with him moment, but he'd also be a bad [[BadassPreacher Chaplain]] if he wasn't a stickler for details.
* SuicideMission: Scout Sergeants Naaman and Damas know that their mission to find the orks' landing site out in the East Barrens will likely end in their deaths,
as they're going far behind enemy lines and there will be no chance of extraction. They choose not to tell their scouts that this will be a one-way trip, so as not to demoralize them. [[spoiler:They all die, but the intel they cross swords:
-->[[spoiler:Magnus]] parried him with an unconscious ease, moving just as smoothly,
gather allows Azrael to disable the orks' tellyporta, temporarily preventing the orks from deploying his blade with all the remorseless skill more reinforcements.]]

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Fall
of his heritage. It was almost as if he were allowing the Wolf Priest his last moment of perfection, gifting him a final flourish of martial sublimity before the end had to come.
* KeystoneArmy:
**
Damnos]]

AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens:
The Necrons seem to enjoy taunting the human defenders in their own tongue.
AntiVillain: The Flayed Lord, from
''Fall of Damnos'' Damnos'', realized how messed up he has become but can't really stop himself.
AnyoneCanDie: Corporal Besseque; of all the non-space marines he's held in possibly the highest regard by the PDF thanks to saving the lives of both the planetary governor AND his temporary replacement. [[SurprisinglySuddenDeath He dies out of nowhere when a 8-inch rock falls from the ceiling and hits him on the head.]]
BadassNormal: Captain Evvers and the mountainside guerrillas in ''Damnos''. For over a year they survive in some of the harshest climates killing Necrons with nothing more than ice picks and improvised explosives. Conscript Falka deserves a mention as well, leading a hundred-man charge against a phalanx of Necrons and ''winning''.
BigDamnHeroes: Agrippan, Captain of the 1st Company, saves Sicarius and kills the Voidbringer.
BrokenAce: Cato Sicarius, following the fall of Damnos, considers it his greatest failure, has troubles fighting and is plagued by dreams about the Undying.
BrokenPedestal: As the battle of Damnos goes on, Praxor - before, staunch supporter, if not outright ''believer'' of Sicarius - starts to see less of TheGoodCaptain and more of a GloryHound.
EstablishingCharacterMoment: Fall of Damnos gives the Necrons one in their ResistanceIsFutile line.
--> ''We are the Necrontyr. We are Legion. We Claim Dominion of this World... Surrender and Die.''
* FireForgedFriends: On Damnos, the Necron threat gradually changes the dynamic between Space Marines and mortals from protectors and protected to friends, or even battle-brothers.
FirstNameBasis: Space Marine captain Scipio and mortal guerilla fighter Jynn quickly call each other by names - at first because Jynn doesn't know Scipio's surname and then because he decides that she deserves the honor after saving his life. Other members of Scipio's squad are rather displeased with this.
HonorBeforeReason: Sicarius goes to fight the Undying by himself, forbidding his men from committing to the duel, because that's "the proper way". [[spoiler:Had he taken at least Agrippen with him, he might've succeeded in defending Damnos.]]
* KeystoneArmy: The Necrons
become sluggish and stilted if they don't have a nearby Lord or Overlord to direct them. Sicarius spends the entire book trying to exploit this fact.



* KilledOffscreen: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus is last seen standing his ground as Huron Blackheart bears down on him. The scene then cuts to Daerys Arrun demanding a status report from Matteus, only for Blackeart to answer the call and gloat about the sergeant's demise.
* KnowWhenToFoldThem: When it realizes it can't beat Kantor, Snagrod bails out of the fight.
* KungFuWizard: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red spends as much time beating Space Wolves to death with his bare hands as he does exploding them with his godlike psychic powers]].
* LaserGuidedKarma: In ''Siege of Castellax'', [[spoiler:Skintaker Algol threatens to torture a rebelling slave slowly and painfully in the most drawn-out way possible. Then the ceiling collapses, trapping Algol under hundreds of tons of concrete. The slave isn't trapped, and stabs Algol through the neck repeatedly. Since Algol is a Space Marine, it takes him well over 15 minutes for him to die, and he's awake for every second of it.]]
* TheLastDance: In ''Death Of Integrity'' Chapter Master Caedis of the Blood Drinkers knows that he is close to the Black Rage claiming him, showing him visions of the ancient hero Holos' final climb. He still heads aboard the Space Hulk, eventually succumbing and turning into a ravenous beast.
* LaughingMad: While infiltrating Shalhadar's city in ''Malodrax'', Lysander happens upon a man who is giggling while being vivisected in some sort of cult ceremony. The victim laughs even harder when he notices Lysander, giving his presence away.
* LightIsNotGood: Played with in ''Malodrax''. The daemon prince Shalhadar takes the form of a golden angelic statue when he confronts the Imperial Fists invading his palace, complete with wings made of light, a mace with a white flame burning inside its head, and stained glass windows worked into his body. However, this statue is merely a shell for Shalhadar's true form, [[DarkIsEvil a shapeless mass of darkness]].
* LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair: Whatever mighty civilization ruled the planet of Malodrax in the past, they've been reduced to nothing but a crumbling castle and some slaves for the Iron Warriors.
* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence to support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].
* MechanicalMonster: The Thousand Sons deploy the last of their Cataphract robots against the Space Wolves in ''Battle of the Fang''. While few in number, the hulking war machines pose a serious threat to the Wolves, sporting plasma cannons siege drills that can fell even a Terminator with one blow, and enough durability to withstand anything short of a Dreadnought's weapons.
* TheMole: In ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul's mysterious alien lieutenant Karnak is revealed to be Inquisitor Corvin's assassin Sildyne, who worked his way into a position of power so that he could kill Thul if he ever got the chance. Thul knew Karnak's true identity, however, and never let his guard down around him]].
* MookHorrorShow:
** ''Wrath of Iron'' opens with a brief PerspectiveFlip, showing the Iron Hands [[ImplacableMan shrug off a volley of lasgun fire and smash apart a bunker with little effort]].
** ''Battle of the Fang'' has a scene told from the perspective of a Spireguard soldier sent in to establish a beachhead for the invading Thousand Sons. His initial confidence and professionalism--born of the belief that the Space Wolves are simply normal men like himself--quickly give way to panic and terror once the Wolves show up and start butchering his unit.
* MoralEventHorizon: In-universe, [[spoiler:Toharan ordering a military strike against the Imperial world of Aighe Mortis]].
* MoreDakka: '''AND HOLY GOD-EMPEROR HOW!!''' Almost every novel in this series is bound to have scenes of Space Marines unloading their weaponry into Daemons, Heretics and Xenos alike.
* MotherOfAThousandYoung: The Brood Mother from Malodrax has thousands upon thousands of incredibly mutated offspring. She eats them... well, [[ZergRush not all of them]].
* MyGreatestFailure:
** Scipio in ''Fall of Damnos'' keeps flashing back to an attack against Nurgle cultists, in which he failed to [[spoiler:MercyKill his Chaplain in time, resulting in a demon popping out of Chaplain Orad's flesh and killing another squadmate.]] Thus he becomes a bit of a perfectionist (by Space Marine standards), and when more squadmates die to the Necrons he's having trouble accepting it truly isn't his fault this time.
** In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers Damnos his greatest failure and is fairly confident that he'll be severly punished for losing the planet. Understandable, considering its his first time he ever lost as a Captain.
** In ''Death of Antagonis'', Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later dies [[spoiler: because she was infected by a chaos plague before they even met]]. He had invested a lot in rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast:
** In ''Siege of Castellax'', Skintaker Algol.
** In ''Legion of the Damned'', we have Umbragg of the Brazen Flesh.
** The planet Armageddon has a full catalogue of such places: Helsreach, Tartarus, Hades, Armageddon itself...
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', we have Lord Apothecary Gareon, of the Red Corsairs, a.k.a. "the Corpsemaster".
* NeverSpeakIllOfTheDead: At the end of ''Malodrax'', Lysander asks Sergeant Kaderic how [[spoiler:Helaestus]] died. When Kaderic tells him that he died "with valour and fury", Lysander realises that this trope is in effect:
-->Lysander wondered if there could have been a reply that meant less. An Imperial Fist was expected to fight and die with valour and fury – it would have been an obscenity if he died any other way. [[spoiler:Helaestus]] could have died a whimpering wreck and the same would still be said of him.
* NonIndicativeName:
** In ''Death of Antagonis'', [[spoiler:the planet Antagonis is blown up barely a third of the way into the book. The Planet Aighe Mortis is home to a lot more drama. The real story is the rise and fall of Toharan and his defeat at the hands of Volos.]]
** In ''Purging of Kadillus'', Kadillus Harbor is purged off-screen by the PDF. The Space Marine characters we follow throughout the book are trying to purge a series of power plants instead.
** In-universe, in ''Rynn's World'' the narrative takes its time to point out that the Iron Halo is actually made from several different metals, none of which is iron.
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', the narrative points out that the Corpsemaster is not a necromancer: he just likes to dissect bodies ([[TortureTechnician living]] or dead) in order to better understand the biological process of death.
* NowLetMeCarryYou: In ''Rynn's World'', Kantor initially refuses to let human refugees join the Space Marines' column, ultimately giving in on the condition that anyone who can't keep up will be left behind for the Orks. A mother struggles to keep up while carrying her two young children. When she finally collapses in exhaustion, Kantor calls a halt and walks back. His captain fears that he's about to perform a MercyKill to prevent them from suffering a much more horrible death from the Orks... but Kantor only tells her how brave she's been, and that she's earned the right for her and her children to be carried instead, and lifts them into his own arms.
* ObsessivelyOrganized: Chaplain Boreas in ''Purging of Kadillus'' stops in the middle of a pitched siege to glue part of a statue back together. In his mind he realizes there's probably better things to be doing at that moment, but he'd also be a bad [[BadassPreacher Chaplain]] if he wasn't a stickler for details.
* OpposingCombatPhilosophies: Between the Black Templars and The Salamanders in ''Helsreach'', who are focused on "destroying the Emperor's Enemies" and "defending the Emperor's people" respectively. The two are working together to defend a civilian shelter, and have broken the first Ork wave. The Templars pursue and head StraightForTheCommander, while the Salamanders fall back and prepare for the second wave. From the Templar perspective the Salamanders hung them out to dry when killing the Ork Boss leading the attack could have prevented further waves entirely, and from the Salamander perspective the Templar attack was a foolish risk that would have left the civilians vulnerable to attack from other enemy forces even if it succeeded.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Many noblemen, thanks to rejuvenation treatments they can afford. Maia Caglieri, for example, is ninety seven, but looks forty.
* OmniscientMoralityLicense: The Iron Hands in ''Wrath of Iron'' view their Imperial Guard allies as ignorant martyrs with their "cold flawless logic", happy to send them to die to further the success of the campaign. Sure, it all works out since the Guard aren't aware of the Slaanesh cult, but are the Iron Hands willing to just share that little detail? Not a chance.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Throughout ''Helsreach'', the Templars of Grimaldus' squad keep on pointing out that he's acting incredibly subdued and uninvested, especially compared to his previous fiery zeal. Grimaldus himself keeps on thinking on why this is hapenning.
* OrbitalBombardment: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Thousand Sons assault the titular fortress with a pair of "planet-scourers"--ships built for the sole purpose of housing [[WaveMotionGun enormous, downward-pointing plasma cannons powerful enough to raze a continent]]. The resulting bombardment isn't strong enough to bring down the Fang's shields, but it ''does'' prevent the Space Wolves from bringing the Fang's anti-orbit weapons to bear and keeps them from sending out Thunderhawks to interfere with the Thousand Sons' landing operations.
* OrganTheft:
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:the Corpsemaster steals Sergeant Porteus's progenoid glands after the latter is captured by the Red Corsairs]]. A former Space Wolf turned Red Corsair implies that the same was done to both him and many other formerly loyal Space Marines pressganged into the Corsairs' ranks.
** Toward the end of ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Brother Helaestus reveals that the Iron Warriors stole his gene-seed during his captivity]].
* OurWerewolvesAreDifferent: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Halls of the Revered Fallen--the caves where the Space Wolves keep their Dreadnoughts--are guarded by mysterious "beasts" that appear to be gigantic, semi-humanoid wolves with cybernetic augmentations. [[spoiler:In the same book, Helfist succumbs to his grief and battle-rage during the final days of the siege, transforming into a Wulfen.]]
* OurZombiesAreDifferent: Brought up in-universe in ''Death of Antagonis'', when the Black Dragons, Sethano, and Lettinger discuss that the local plague zombies are faster than Nurgle's zombies, infect other subjects at an absurdly fast rate, and ignore space marines...
* PerspectiveReversal: Morek Karekborn and his daughter Freija have opposing views of the Space Wolves in ''Battle of the Fang''. Morek looks up to the Space Wolves with respect and reverence, while Freija instead resents the Wolves for their arrogance and superior attitude. By the end of the novel, Morek's faith in the Wolves has been shaken while Freija has gained a newfound respect and admiration for them.
* PyrrhicVictory: ''Fall of Damnos'' ends with the Ultramarines saving Kellenport, but half of 2nd Company is killed or wounded including Captain Sicarius, most of Damnos' defenses are gone, and the Necrons haven't even begun to fight.
* PosthumousCharacter: Mordred, Grimaldus' OldMaster, whose shadow continues to plague Grimaldus, as the newly-promoted Reclusiarch doesn't feel like he can match his accomplishments. Other characters also mention him quite often, which obviously doesn't help Grimaldus.
* ThePowerOfHate: Alessio Cortez believes that hate for traitors and xenos is what has kept him alive and going for all three centuries of his service.
* ProtectiveCharm:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves inscribe protective runes into their armour to ward off maleficarum, their term for the power of Chaos. The Fang itself has thousands of similar wards etched into its stone walls, and their presence helps to slow the advance of the Thousand Sons once they break into the fortress, most notably by [[spoiler:preventing Magnus the Red from physically manifesting within the Fang]] until the Sons destroy enough of the wards.
** ''Malodrax'' spends an entire paragraph describing the many, many ways that the ''Breaker of Darkness'' has been magically warded and blessed to keep out daemons. Upon entering Malodrax's orbital reef, these various charms allow the ship to go unmolested by daemonic incursion... for ''thirty minutes''.
* PurpleProse: Inquisitor Golrukhan's journal about Malodrax is written in this style. Lysander doesn't care for it in-universe, preferring the BeigeProse of Rogal Dorn's writing.
* PyrrhicVictory:
** ''Death of Antagonis'' is just one in a long string of these for the Black Dragons.
** Pretty much all of the entries under DoomedByCanon are this.
** The Silver Skulls succeed in driving the Red Corsairs out of the Gildar Rift, but Huron Blackheart gets away with most of his plunder and the Silver Skulls lose many experienced warriors[[spoiler:, including Captain Daerys Arrun and Apothecary Ryarus. The botched outcome of the battle also leads many of the Skulls to harbour doubts about the competence of their Prognosticators]]. The final chapter of the book is even titled "What Price Victory?" in a bit of LampshadeHanging.
** The titular Hive City in ''Helsreach'' manages to survive the Ork invasion until the Season of Fire grinds the invasion to a halt, but their manufacturing facilities, transport infrastructure, and worker population had been beyond decimated. Estimates putting the city's current max output capabilities at just 5% of what it was producing before the war.
* RealityIsOutToLunch: The Xeno temples in ''Death of Antagonis''.
%%** YearOutsideHourInside
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: The BigBad of ''Wrath of Iron'' gives one to the Iron Hands, how they've become little more than machine fetishists and obsessed, paranoid automatons since Ferrus Mannus was killed. Ironfather Krastos was too busy calculating the Prince's weak spot to bother listening.
* RedOniBlueOni:
** Among Ultramarines, Sicarius is Red to Agemann's Blue. While Cato is HotBlooded, prone to LargeHam behaviour and charging straight for the enemy, Severus is slower, likes to think things out and have worked-out tactic before comitting to the fight, not to mention that he's CombatPragmatist while Cato practices HonorBeforeReason.
** In Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Kantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.
* RiddleForTheAges: In ''Malodrax'', both Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin wonder whether the "people" who used to rule the planet are xeno species or heavily mutated humans. Ultimately, though, no-one's eager to return and make DNA tests.
* RiddlingSphinx: A daemonic sphinx guards the entrance to Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax''. Instead of asking a riddle, it will only let people pass if they can show it something it has never experienced before (and being a Slaaneshi daemon, there's very little it hasn't already experienced). Lysander is able to get in the first time by teaching it the concept of fear. The second time, he doesn't bother with the sphinx's games and just kills it.

to:

* KilledOffscreen: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus is last seen standing his ground as Huron Blackheart bears down on him. The scene then cuts to Daerys Arrun demanding a status report from Matteus, only for Blackeart to answer the call and gloat about the sergeant's demise.
* KnowWhenToFoldThem: When it realizes it can't beat Kantor, Snagrod bails out of the fight.
* KungFuWizard: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red spends as much time beating Space Wolves to death with his bare hands as he does exploding them with his godlike psychic powers]].
* LaserGuidedKarma: In ''Siege of Castellax'', [[spoiler:Skintaker Algol threatens to torture a rebelling slave slowly and painfully in the most drawn-out way possible. Then the ceiling collapses, trapping Algol under hundreds of tons of concrete. The slave isn't trapped, and stabs Algol through the neck repeatedly. Since Algol is a Space Marine, it takes him well over 15 minutes for him to die, and he's awake for every second of it.]]
* TheLastDance: In ''Death Of Integrity'' Chapter Master Caedis of the Blood Drinkers knows that he is close to the Black Rage claiming him, showing him visions of the ancient hero Holos' final climb. He still heads aboard the Space Hulk, eventually succumbing and turning into a ravenous beast.
* LaughingMad: While infiltrating Shalhadar's city in ''Malodrax'', Lysander happens upon a man who is giggling while being vivisected in some sort of cult ceremony. The victim laughs even harder when he notices Lysander, giving his presence away.
* LightIsNotGood: Played with in ''Malodrax''. The daemon prince Shalhadar takes the form of a golden angelic statue when he confronts the Imperial Fists invading his palace, complete with wings made of light, a mace with a white flame burning inside its head, and stained glass windows worked into his body. However, this statue is merely a shell for Shalhadar's true form, [[DarkIsEvil a shapeless mass of darkness]].
* LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair: Whatever mighty civilization ruled the planet of Malodrax in the past, they've been reduced to nothing but a crumbling castle and some slaves for the Iron Warriors.
* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence to support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].
* MechanicalMonster: The Thousand Sons deploy the last of their Cataphract robots against the Space Wolves in ''Battle of the Fang''. While few in number, the hulking war machines pose a serious threat to the Wolves, sporting plasma cannons siege drills that can fell even a Terminator with one blow, and enough durability to withstand anything short of a Dreadnought's weapons.
* TheMole: In ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul's mysterious alien lieutenant Karnak is revealed to be Inquisitor Corvin's assassin Sildyne, who worked his way into a position of power so that he could kill Thul if he ever got the chance. Thul knew Karnak's true identity, however, and never let his guard down around him]].
* MookHorrorShow:
** ''Wrath of Iron'' opens with a brief PerspectiveFlip, showing the Iron Hands [[ImplacableMan shrug off a volley of lasgun fire and smash apart a bunker with little effort]].
** ''Battle of the Fang'' has a scene told from the perspective of a Spireguard soldier sent in to establish a beachhead for the invading Thousand Sons. His initial confidence and professionalism--born of the belief that the Space Wolves are simply normal men like himself--quickly give way to panic and terror once the Wolves show up and start butchering his unit.
* MoralEventHorizon: In-universe, [[spoiler:Toharan ordering a military strike against the Imperial world of Aighe Mortis]].
* MoreDakka: '''AND HOLY GOD-EMPEROR HOW!!''' Almost every novel in this series is bound to have scenes of Space Marines unloading their weaponry into Daemons, Heretics and Xenos alike.
* MotherOfAThousandYoung: The Brood Mother from Malodrax has thousands upon thousands of incredibly mutated offspring. She eats them... well, [[ZergRush not all of them]].
* MyGreatestFailure:
**
MyGreatestFailure: Scipio in ''Fall of Damnos'' keeps flashing back to an attack against Nurgle cultists, in which he failed to [[spoiler:MercyKill his Chaplain in time, resulting in a demon popping out of Chaplain Orad's flesh and killing another squadmate.]] Thus he becomes a bit of a perfectionist (by Space Marine standards), and when more squadmates squad mates die to the Necrons he's having trouble accepting it truly isn't his fault this time.
** In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers Damnos his greatest failure and is fairly confident that he'll be severly punished for losing the planet. Understandable, considering its his first time he ever lost as a Captain.
** In ''Death of Antagonis'', Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later dies [[spoiler: because she was infected by a chaos plague before they even met]]. He had invested a lot in rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast:
** In ''Siege of Castellax'', Skintaker Algol.
** In ''Legion of the Damned'', we have Umbragg of the Brazen Flesh.
** The planet Armageddon has a full catalogue of such places: Helsreach, Tartarus, Hades, Armageddon itself...
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', we have Lord Apothecary Gareon, of the Red Corsairs, a.k.a. "the Corpsemaster".
* NeverSpeakIllOfTheDead: At the end of ''Malodrax'', Lysander asks Sergeant Kaderic how [[spoiler:Helaestus]] died. When Kaderic tells him that he died "with valour and fury", Lysander realises that this trope is in effect:
-->Lysander wondered if there could have been a reply that meant less. An Imperial Fist was expected to fight and die with valour and fury – it would have been an obscenity if he died any other way. [[spoiler:Helaestus]] could have died a whimpering wreck and the same would still be said of him.
* NonIndicativeName:
** In ''Death of Antagonis'', [[spoiler:the planet Antagonis is blown up barely a third of the way into the book. The Planet Aighe Mortis is home to a lot more drama. The real story is the rise and fall of Toharan and his defeat at the hands of Volos.]]
** In ''Purging of Kadillus'', Kadillus Harbor is purged off-screen by the PDF. The Space Marine characters we follow throughout the book are trying to purge a series of power plants instead.
** In-universe, in ''Rynn's World'' the narrative takes its time to point out that the Iron Halo is actually made from several different metals, none of which is iron.
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', the narrative points out that the Corpsemaster is not a necromancer: he just likes to dissect bodies ([[TortureTechnician living]] or dead) in order to better understand the biological process of death.
* NowLetMeCarryYou: In ''Rynn's World'', Kantor initially refuses to let human refugees join the Space Marines' column, ultimately giving in on the condition that anyone who can't keep up will be left behind for the Orks. A mother struggles to keep up while carrying her two young children. When she finally collapses in exhaustion, Kantor calls a halt and walks back. His captain fears that he's about to perform a MercyKill to prevent them from suffering a much more horrible death from the Orks... but Kantor only tells her how brave she's been, and that she's earned the right for her and her children to be carried instead, and lifts them into his own arms.
* ObsessivelyOrganized: Chaplain Boreas in ''Purging of Kadillus'' stops in the middle of a pitched siege to glue part of a statue back together. In his mind he realizes there's probably better things to be doing at that moment, but he'd also be a bad [[BadassPreacher Chaplain]] if he wasn't a stickler for details.
* OpposingCombatPhilosophies: Between the Black Templars and The Salamanders in ''Helsreach'', who are focused on "destroying the Emperor's Enemies" and "defending the Emperor's people" respectively. The two are working together to defend a civilian shelter, and have broken the first Ork wave. The Templars pursue and head StraightForTheCommander, while the Salamanders fall back and prepare for the second wave. From the Templar perspective the Salamanders hung them out to dry when killing the Ork Boss leading the attack could have prevented further waves entirely, and from the Salamander perspective the Templar attack was a foolish risk that would have left the civilians vulnerable to attack from other enemy forces even if it succeeded.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Many noblemen, thanks to rejuvenation treatments they can afford. Maia Caglieri, for example, is ninety seven, but looks forty.
* OmniscientMoralityLicense: The Iron Hands in ''Wrath of Iron'' view their Imperial Guard allies as ignorant martyrs with their "cold flawless logic", happy to send them to die to further the success of the campaign. Sure, it all works out since the Guard aren't aware of the Slaanesh cult, but are the Iron Hands willing to just share that little detail? Not a chance.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Throughout ''Helsreach'', the Templars of Grimaldus' squad keep on pointing out that he's acting incredibly subdued and uninvested, especially compared to his previous fiery zeal. Grimaldus himself keeps on thinking on why this is hapenning.
* OrbitalBombardment: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Thousand Sons assault the titular fortress with a pair of "planet-scourers"--ships built for the sole purpose of housing [[WaveMotionGun enormous, downward-pointing plasma cannons powerful enough to raze a continent]]. The resulting bombardment isn't strong enough to bring down the Fang's shields, but it ''does'' prevent the Space Wolves from bringing the Fang's anti-orbit weapons to bear and keeps them from sending out Thunderhawks to interfere with the Thousand Sons' landing operations.
* OrganTheft:
** In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:the Corpsemaster steals Sergeant Porteus's progenoid glands after the latter is captured by the Red Corsairs]]. A former Space Wolf turned Red Corsair implies that the same was done to both him and many other formerly loyal Space Marines pressganged into the Corsairs' ranks.
** Toward the end of ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Brother Helaestus reveals that the Iron Warriors stole his gene-seed during his captivity]].
* OurWerewolvesAreDifferent: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Halls of the Revered Fallen--the caves where the Space Wolves keep their Dreadnoughts--are guarded by mysterious "beasts" that appear to be gigantic, semi-humanoid wolves with cybernetic augmentations. [[spoiler:In the same book, Helfist succumbs to his grief and battle-rage during the final days of the siege, transforming into a Wulfen.]]
* OurZombiesAreDifferent: Brought up in-universe in ''Death of Antagonis'', when the Black Dragons, Sethano, and Lettinger discuss that the local plague zombies are faster than Nurgle's zombies, infect other subjects at an absurdly fast rate, and ignore space marines...
* PerspectiveReversal: Morek Karekborn and his daughter Freija have opposing views of the Space Wolves in ''Battle of the Fang''. Morek looks up to the Space Wolves with respect and reverence, while Freija instead resents the Wolves for their arrogance and superior attitude. By the end of the novel, Morek's faith in the Wolves has been shaken while Freija has gained a newfound respect and admiration for them.
*
PyrrhicVictory: ''Fall of Damnos'' 'The book ends with the Ultramarines saving Kellenport, but half of 2nd Company is killed or wounded including Captain Sicarius, most of Damnos' defenses are gone, and the Necrons haven't even begun to fight.
* PosthumousCharacter: Mordred, Grimaldus' OldMaster, whose shadow continues to plague Grimaldus, as the newly-promoted Reclusiarch doesn't feel like he can match his accomplishments. Other characters also mention him quite often, which obviously doesn't help Grimaldus.
* ThePowerOfHate: Alessio Cortez believes that hate for traitors and xenos is what has kept him alive and going for all three centuries of his service.
* ProtectiveCharm:
** In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves inscribe protective runes into their armour to ward off maleficarum, their term for the power of Chaos. The Fang itself has thousands of similar wards etched into its stone walls, and their presence helps to slow the advance of the Thousand Sons once they break into the fortress, most notably by [[spoiler:preventing Magnus the Red from physically manifesting within the Fang]] until the Sons destroy enough of the wards.
** ''Malodrax'' spends an entire paragraph describing the many, many ways that the ''Breaker of Darkness'' has been magically warded and blessed to keep out daemons. Upon entering Malodrax's orbital reef, these various charms allow the ship to go unmolested by daemonic incursion... for ''thirty minutes''.
* PurpleProse: Inquisitor Golrukhan's journal about Malodrax is written in this style. Lysander doesn't care for it in-universe, preferring the BeigeProse of Rogal Dorn's writing.
* PyrrhicVictory:
** ''Death of Antagonis'' is just one in a long string of these for the Black Dragons.
** Pretty much all of the entries under DoomedByCanon are this.
** The Silver Skulls succeed in driving the Red Corsairs out of the Gildar Rift, but Huron Blackheart gets away with most of his plunder and the Silver Skulls lose many experienced warriors[[spoiler:, including Captain Daerys Arrun and Apothecary Ryarus. The botched outcome of the battle also leads many of the Skulls to harbour doubts about the competence of their Prognosticators]]. The final chapter of the book is even titled "What Price Victory?" in a bit of LampshadeHanging.
** The titular Hive City in ''Helsreach'' manages to survive the Ork invasion until the Season of Fire grinds the invasion to a halt, but their manufacturing facilities, transport infrastructure, and worker population had been beyond decimated. Estimates putting the city's current max output capabilities at just 5% of what it was producing before the war.
* RealityIsOutToLunch: The Xeno temples in ''Death of Antagonis''.
%%** YearOutsideHourInside
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: The BigBad of ''Wrath of Iron'' gives one to the Iron Hands, how they've become little more than machine fetishists and obsessed, paranoid automatons since Ferrus Mannus was killed. Ironfather Krastos was too busy calculating the Prince's weak spot to bother listening.
* RedOniBlueOni:
**
RedOniBlueOni: Among Ultramarines, Sicarius is Red to Agemann's Blue. While Cato is HotBlooded, prone to LargeHam behaviour and charging straight for the enemy, Severus is slower, likes to think things out and have worked-out tactic before comitting to the fight, not to mention that he's CombatPragmatist while Cato practices HonorBeforeReason.
** In Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Kantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.
* RiddleForTheAges: In ''Malodrax'', both Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin wonder whether the "people" who used to rule the planet are xeno species or heavily mutated humans. Ultimately, though, no-one's eager to return and make DNA tests.
* RiddlingSphinx: A daemonic sphinx guards the entrance to Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax''. Instead of asking a riddle, it will only let people pass if they can show it something it has never experienced before (and being a Slaaneshi daemon, there's very little it hasn't already experienced). Lysander is able to get in the first time by teaching it the concept of fear. The second time, he doesn't bother with the sphinx's games and just kills it.
HonorBeforeReason.



* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: In ''Fall of Damnos'', the Ultramarines -- and Brother Agrippan in particular -- are '''pissed''' when they think [[spoiler:Sicarius is dead]].
* SanitySlippage: Sahtah the Enfleshed, a Necron Lord turned flayed one, in ''Fall of Damnos'', finds himself growing less and less self-aware as his cravings for flesh grow stronger. The Necron Overlord whom Sahtah answers to isn't doing much better, debating whether or not to join [[OmnicidalManiac the Destroyer Court]].
* SapientShip: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the aim of the Silver Skulls' Resurgent project is to create one of these by wiring Volker Straub into the ''Dread Argent's'' systems, effectively turning him into a WetwareCPU and giving him absolute control over the ship. [[spoiler:They succeed, spectacularly so.]]
* SchizoTech: The Imperium's technology level has always been all over the place, but ''Malodrax'' cranks it up a notch. The Imperial Fists strike cruiser ''Breaker of Darkness'' has bridge consoles that are operated with punchcards and have ticker tape readouts instead of screens, and her crew has to use ''abacuses'' whenever they perform calculations.
* TheSecretOfLongPorkPies: It shouldn't surprise you much to learn that the Iron Warriors have linked their slave morgue to the food production plant, but it's a big reveal for the slaves themselves, especially Yuxiang.
* SecretPath: Squad Scipio spends most of ''Fall of Damnos'' looking for one, since the Necron artillery pieces high in the mountains have extremely strong yet extremely wide circles of defense.
* {{Seers}}:
** The Silver Skulls' unique Prognosticators are hybrid Chaplain-Librarians trained to read the future with their psychic powers. The chapter places great stock in their divinations, to the point where they will not commit to a battle plan until a Prognosticator has read the portents and given it his approval. [[spoiler:However, the Prognosticators are not infallible, and many Silver Skulls begin to harbour doubts about them after they sanction the costly battle of the Gildar Rift.]]
** The brood mother knows everything that happens on Malodrax, including snippets of what will happen in the future. She's willing to share that information with anyone who seeks her out, for a price.
* SenselessSacrifice: In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:a Silver Skulls Assault Marine tries to save the grievously injured Captain Arrun's life by tackling Huron Blackheart away from him. He only manages to distract Huron Blackheart for a few seconds before getting killed, and while his sacrifice allows Arrun to regain some strength and continue fighting for a bit longer, it ultimately doesn't change the outcome.]]
* SeriesContinuityError: The Necrons in ''The World Engine'' don't phase out when they're damaged beyond repair; they just crumple to the ground.
* ShellShockedVeteran: In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers his jumping at shadows and paranoia about Necrons being everywhere to be symptoms of PTSD. [[spoiler:While ''Warzone: Damnos'' suggests he has it, the Necrons in the Temple of Hera are real and hiding in shadows.]]
* ShockwaveStomp: The gargant in ''Rynn's World'' almost does this by accident, its footfall being nearly hard enough to collapse the tunnels the Crimson Fists are hiding in.
* ShoutOut: In ''Malodrax'', Inquisitor Corvin notes that his archivist was "most perturbed" by the impossibility of Shalhadar's city. This is a reference to Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'s own savant Uber Aemos, whose catchphrase was "most perturbatory".
* SizeShifter: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red enlarges himself so that he can stand eye-to-eye with--and tear down--a Titan-sized statue of Leman Russ, then shrinks back down to his (still considerable) normal height once the deed is done. Later on, he shrinks to a mere three metres in order to duel Wyrmblade]].
* SlobsVersusSnobs: ''Malodrax'' concerns the feud between the luscious, extravagant, hedonistic cult of Shalhadar and the grungy, militant, dour Iron Warriors.
** Some of the Thousand Sons, those who don't realise what lies beneath the Space Wolves' exterior, see their conflict with the "dog-warriors" as this.
* SpaceBattle: A common occurrence in the series. Half the plot of ''The Gildar Rift'' is about a space battle between the Red Corsairs and the Silver Skulls, to name one example.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Techpriest Oriax is secretly sabotaging his Iron Warrior "brothers" throughout ''Siege of Castellax''.]]
** [[spoiler:Towards the end, Oriax probably sees Captain Rhodaan as this, since Rhodaan doesn't submit to the BolivianArmyEnding and starts to undo some of the sabotage, and ultimately survives the novel.]]
** Captain Lysander in ''Malodrax''. [[spoiler:[[GeniusLoci The whims of fate]] unleashed him to test the strength of the Iron Warriors and the reign of Shalhadar. Both of the Chaos factions fail miserably.]]
*** Even before that, Lysander only escaped captivity because of a faulty scalpel breaking off where he could reach it.
* SpitefulSpit: Huron Blackheart spits on Daerus Arrun twice during their battle in ''The Gildar Rift''. The trope is actually weaponized, as Blackheart does it not only to show his contempt for the Imperium but also to hinder Arrun's combat effectiveness as the acidic saliva eats into his armour.

to:

* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: In ''Fall of Damnos'', the The Ultramarines -- and Brother Agrippan in particular -- are '''pissed''' when they think [[spoiler:Sicarius is dead]].
* SanitySlippage: Sahtah the Enfleshed, a Necron Lord turned flayed one, in ''Fall of Damnos'', finds himself growing less and less self-aware as his cravings for flesh grow stronger. The Necron Overlord whom Sahtah answers to isn't doing much better, debating whether or not to join [[OmnicidalManiac the Destroyer Court]].
* SapientShip: In ''The Gildar Rift'', the aim of the Silver Skulls' Resurgent project is to create one of these by wiring Volker Straub into the ''Dread Argent's'' systems, effectively turning him into a WetwareCPU and giving him absolute control over the ship. [[spoiler:They succeed, spectacularly so.]]
* SchizoTech: The Imperium's technology level has always been all over the place, but ''Malodrax'' cranks it up a notch. The Imperial Fists strike cruiser ''Breaker of Darkness'' has bridge consoles that are operated with punchcards and have ticker tape readouts instead of screens, and her crew has to use ''abacuses'' whenever they perform calculations.
* TheSecretOfLongPorkPies: It shouldn't surprise you much to learn that the Iron Warriors have linked their slave morgue to the food production plant, but it's a big reveal for the slaves themselves, especially Yuxiang.
*
SecretPath: Squad Scipio spends most of ''Fall of Damnos'' the story looking for one, since the Necron artillery pieces high in the mountains have extremely strong yet extremely wide circles of defense.
* {{Seers}}:
** The Silver Skulls' unique Prognosticators are hybrid Chaplain-Librarians trained to read the future with their psychic powers. The chapter places great stock in their divinations, to the point where they will not commit to a battle plan until a Prognosticator has read the portents and given it his approval. [[spoiler:However, the Prognosticators are not infallible, and many Silver Skulls begin to harbour doubts about them after they sanction the costly battle of the Gildar Rift.]]
** The brood mother knows everything that happens on Malodrax, including snippets of what will happen in the future. She's willing to share that information with anyone who seeks her out, for a price.
* SenselessSacrifice: In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:a Silver Skulls Assault Marine tries to save the grievously injured Captain Arrun's life by tackling Huron Blackheart away from him. He only manages to distract Huron Blackheart for a few seconds before getting killed, and while his sacrifice allows Arrun to regain some strength and continue fighting for a bit longer, it ultimately doesn't change the outcome.]]
* SeriesContinuityError: The Necrons in ''The World Engine'' don't phase out when they're damaged beyond repair; they just crumple to the ground.
* ShellShockedVeteran: In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers his jumping at shadows and paranoia about Necrons being everywhere to be symptoms of PTSD. [[spoiler:While ''Warzone: Damnos'' suggests he has it, the Necrons in the Temple of Hera are real and hiding in shadows.]]
* ShockwaveStomp: The gargant in ''Rynn's World'' almost does this by accident, its footfall being nearly hard enough to collapse the tunnels the Crimson Fists are hiding in.
* ShoutOut: In ''Malodrax'', Inquisitor Corvin notes that his archivist was "most perturbed" by the impossibility of Shalhadar's city. This is a reference to Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'s own savant Uber Aemos, whose catchphrase was "most perturbatory".
* SizeShifter: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red enlarges himself so that he can stand eye-to-eye with--and tear down--a Titan-sized statue of Leman Russ, then shrinks back down to his (still considerable) normal height once the deed is done. Later on, he shrinks to a mere three metres in order to duel Wyrmblade]].
* SlobsVersusSnobs: ''Malodrax'' concerns the feud between the luscious, extravagant, hedonistic cult of Shalhadar and the grungy, militant, dour Iron Warriors.
** Some of the Thousand Sons, those who don't realise what lies beneath the Space Wolves' exterior, see their conflict with the "dog-warriors" as this.
* SpaceBattle: A common occurrence in the series. Half the plot of ''The Gildar Rift'' is about a space battle between the Red Corsairs and the Silver Skulls, to name one example.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Techpriest Oriax is secretly sabotaging his Iron Warrior "brothers" throughout ''Siege of Castellax''.]]
** [[spoiler:Towards the end, Oriax probably sees Captain Rhodaan as this, since Rhodaan doesn't submit to the BolivianArmyEnding and starts to undo some of the sabotage, and ultimately survives the novel.]]
** Captain Lysander in ''Malodrax''. [[spoiler:[[GeniusLoci The whims of fate]] unleashed him to test the strength of the Iron Warriors and the reign of Shalhadar. Both of the Chaos factions fail miserably.]]
*** Even before that, Lysander only escaped captivity because of a faulty scalpel breaking off where he could reach it.
* SpitefulSpit: Huron Blackheart spits on Daerus Arrun twice during their battle in ''The Gildar Rift''. The trope is actually weaponized, as Blackheart does it not only to show his contempt for the Imperium but also to hinder Arrun's combat effectiveness as the acidic saliva eats into his armour.
defence.



* TheStarscream: Tahek the Voidbringer and Ankh the Necron Lorn in ''Fall of Damnos'' have more than a few shades of this, both towards their Overlord and towards each other.
* StatusQuoIsGod: ''Death of Integrity'' centers around retrieving a special data core that contains the blueprints for every war machine and piece of technology that was used by the Emperor to conquer the galaxy. Actually succeeding in retrieving the data core would more or less spell death for any and all of mankind's enemies throughout the universe. Guess what the Space Marines don't end up capturing?
** [[spoiler: ConsolationPrize: Lord Plosk still managed to capture a fraction of the blueprints from the data core of the ''Spirit of Eternity''.]]
* TheStoic: Sister Sethano.
* SuicideMission: In ''The Purging of Kadillus'', Scout Sergeants Naaman and Damas know that their mission to find the orks' landing site out in the East Barrens will likely end in their deaths, as they're going far behind enemy lines and there will be no chance of extraction. They choose not to tell their scouts that this will be a one-way trip, so as not to demoralize them. [[spoiler:They all die, but the intel they gather allows Azrael to disable the orks' tellyporta, temporarily preventing the orks from deploying more reinforcements.]]
* {{Synchronization}}: In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:one unfortunate side effect of Volker Straub's connection to the ''Dread Argent'' is that he feels any damage inflicted to the ship as physical pain]].
* TacticalWithdrawal: In ''Fall of Damnos'' Sicarius commits all his Ultramarines to an offensive feint in an attempt to draw out the Necron Lords. The Necrons don't fall for it, and the Ultramarines find themselves nearly surrounded in short order.
* TakeUpMySword: In a literal example from ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:the dying Agent Sildyne entrusts Lysander with a poisoned dagger made specifically to kill Space Marines so that Lysander can kill Kraegon Thul in his stead]].
* TakingYouWithMe: Hoo boy...
** ''Kadillus'': Naaman to an Ork walker.
** ''Legion'': Omar to a pack of flying daemons.
** ''Damnos'': Agrippan to as many Necrons as possible, [[spoiler:though the novel doesn't show it.]]
** ''Castellax'': Vortsk to as many Orks as possible.
** ''Antagonis'': [[spoiler:Nessus to Volos, by way of possessing Toharan. It doesn't work.]]
** ''Integrity'': This is how Voldo tries to die. [[spoiler:It doesn't work, but he ''does'' die fighting in such a way that helps his brothers continue the mission]].
* TechnicallyLivingZombie: [[spoiler:The zombies in ''Death of Antagonis'' aren't fully dead, they're brainwashed by a Chaos mind-virus called the Doubtworm. The zombies are still, in their own minds, actually loyalist imperial citizens [[AndIMustScream fully aware of their infected state, but with no ability to communicate that fact]]. All they can do is wildly flail at the Doubtworm's asymptomatic carriers, hoping to kill them before they can spread the Doubtworm to the next planet. This is also why they ignore space marines, who are immune to the Doubtworm in the first place.]]
* TeleFrag: ''Battle of the Fang'' has a Thousand Sons sorcerer experience this when he hastily teleports himself and a squad of Rubric Marines into an oncoming Space Wolves vessel. Only two of the Rubric Marines make it through, and only one of them does so intact; the other one materializes within a wall and effectively dies. The sorcerer himself suffers injuries to his hands, face, and internal organs.
* TemptingFate: From ''Rynn's World'': "Even the foulest and most violent of the xenos races surely weren't foolish enough to attack a Space Marine homeworld." Guess what happens soon thereafter. [[spoiler:Orks.]]
* ThanatosGambit: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red's plan requires the Space Wolves to kill [[FightingAShadow his frail old man avatar]] on Gangava so that he can manifest on Fenris in his full might and lay waste to the Fang]]. He even tells them what the plan entails, knowing that they won't believe him.
* ThereWasADoor: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Blackwing is combing the bowels of his ship for Thousand Sons infiltrators when a Rubric Marine suddenly bursts out of a wall, taking him and his men by surprise.
* ThisIsGonnaSuck: The first thought Grimaldus has upon hearing of Armageddon?
-->I will die on this world.
* ThoseTwoGuys: Givenar and Antinas keep on arguing and bantering, even when in middle of combat, to Lysander's neverending annoyance.
* ThrowTheBookAtThem: Lysander spends a decent chunk of ''Malodrax'' armed with nothing but a chainsword (which he eventually loses) and a long-dead inquisitor's journal-slash-treatise on the titular daemon world. Between him being a Space Marine and this being [[DoorStopper a very thick, very heavy iron-bound book on a chain,]] [[EpicFlail he puts it to very effective use.]]
* TimeBomb: The Silver Skulls discover that the Red Corsairs have rigged the promethium refinery to blow at the climax of ''The Gildar Rift'', forcing the Skulls to waste time defusing the explosives while the Corsairs escape with their plunder.
* TooDumbToFool: In ''Siege of Castellax'', the Iron Warriors try to stall the Orks using a giant minefield, but with intercontinental ballistic missiles instead of regular mines. Problem is, instead of trying to sweep the desert to find the rest of the warheads, they just charge through the one patch of land they know the missiles ''aren't'' hidden, and that's the five-mile-wide crater where the first missile exploded.
* VillainRespect: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Magnus the Red surprises one of his subordinates by admitting that he has grown to respect the Space Wolves since the Literature/HorusHeresy.

to:

* TheStarscream: Tahek the Voidbringer and Ankh the Necron Lorn in ''Fall of Damnos'' have more than a few shades of this, both towards their Overlord and towards each other.
* StatusQuoIsGod: ''Death of Integrity'' centers around retrieving a special data core that contains the blueprints for every war machine and piece of technology that was used by the Emperor to conquer the galaxy. Actually succeeding in retrieving the data core would more or less spell death for any and all of mankind's enemies throughout the universe. Guess what the Space Marines don't end up capturing?
** [[spoiler: ConsolationPrize: Lord Plosk still managed to capture a fraction of the blueprints from the data core of the ''Spirit of Eternity''.]]
* TheStoic: Sister Sethano.
* SuicideMission: In ''The Purging of Kadillus'', Scout Sergeants Naaman and Damas know that their mission to find the orks' landing site out in the East Barrens will likely end in their deaths, as they're going far behind enemy lines and there will be no chance of extraction. They choose not to tell their scouts that this will be a one-way trip, so as not to demoralize them. [[spoiler:They all die, but the intel they gather allows Azrael to disable the orks' tellyporta, temporarily preventing the orks from deploying more reinforcements.]]
* {{Synchronization}}: In ''The Gildar Rift'', [[spoiler:one unfortunate side effect of Volker Straub's connection to the ''Dread Argent'' is that he feels any damage inflicted to the ship as physical pain]].
*
TacticalWithdrawal: In ''Fall of Damnos'' Sicarius commits all his Ultramarines to an offensive feint in an attempt to draw out the Necron Lords. The Necrons don't fall for it, and the Ultramarines find themselves nearly surrounded in short order.
TheWorfEffect: Fall of Damnos is little more than one long series of this, to drive home how serious and dangerous the threat of the Necrons is.
* TakeUpMySword: YouShallNotPass: In ''Fall of Damnos'', when Scipio's squad find themselves being chased down by a literal example pack of Flayed Ones, brothers Largo and Brakkius offer to lay down their already-limping lives to slow the pursuers down. [[spoiler:[[BigDamnHeroes Tigurius pops out of nowhere and saves them]].]

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Battle of the Fang]]

* AndIMustScream: In ''Battle of the Fang'', an unfortunate deckhand is captured by a Thousand Sons sorcerer, who promptly gouges out his eyes and psychically suppresses his will to turn him into an unwilling spy. His reaction says it all:
-->Reri kept screaming. He kept screaming as the torchlights were doused, he kept screaming as Master Fuerza went to work, and he kept screaming until the Thousand Sons sorcerer-lord had finished. Indeed, though his features remained slack and emotionless, locked into surface equanimity by magicks more powerful than he'd ever be able to comprehend, there was a part of Reri Urfangborn that would never stop screaming again.
AndShowItToYou: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red kills Greyloc by ripping out both of his hearts]].
ArchEnemy: The Space Wolves and Thousand Sons are each other's arch-enemies in general, but Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm views the Thousand Sons' primarch Magnus the Red as his personal nemesis in ''Battle of the Fang'', having spent decades chasing him across the galaxy while Magnus eggs him on with taunting psychic visions.
BadassNormal: The Kaerls, only a few thousand mortal men and women holding off two million Spireguard and over seven-hundred Thousand Sons in the defense of the Aett.
BenevolentBoss: The Space Wolves are this to their chapter-serf kaerls, not treating them as disposeable fodder, at least one Space Wolf sacrifices himself to hold off the enemy to allow a company of kaerls to withdraw to a safer location.
BlatantLies: The Thousand Sons tell the first wave of Spireguard soldiers being sent down to secure landing sites that the Space Wolves they'll be fighting against are just ordinary men, like the Spireguard themselves. They quickly realize they were lied to once they encounter the Wolves and start getting slaughtered.
* BodyHorror: Aphael suffers
from ''Malodrax'', the flesh-change, which causes his body to undergo unpleasant mutations. His armour hides the full extent of the transformation, but at several points he notes that he can feel ''feathers'' growing out of his face and brushing against the inside of his helmet, and eventually his flesh becomes fused to the inside of the armour.
BringHelpBack: In ''Battle of the Fang'', the Space Wolves scout Blackwing must race to the Gangava system to warn the rest of his chapter that their home planet Fenris is besieged by the Thousand Sons. His task is complicated by both the fact that his badly-damaged ship is falling apart around him, and by a team of Thousand Sons saboteurs that teleported onboard to expedite the process.
BrokenAce: Bjorn the Fell-Handed is revealed to be this. He's the oldest and most sophisticated Dreadnought in the Imperium, is revered and respected by all the Space Wolves and is a killing machine like no other once roused, but on the inside he's wracked with self-loathing and abandonment issues due to the unexplained departure of his primarch Leman Russ.
CoDragons: Ahmuz Temekh and Herume Aphael . The two of them act as joint commanders of the Thousand Sons forces invading Fenris, with Aphael leading their troops on the ground while Temekh carries out the taxing ritual to summon their master, Magnus the Red, into the physical world.
* CurbStompCushion: [[spoiler:Trom Rossek]] is one of the first Space Wolves to die at [[spoiler:Magnus]]'s hands, but he ''does'' manage to land a single hit on [[spoiler:Magnus]] with enough force to make
[[spoiler:the dying Agent Sildyne entrusts Lysander daemon primarch]] pause for a second--before [[spoiler:Magnus]] promptly knocks him down and [[GiantFootOfStomping crushes him underfoot]]. Later on, [[spoiler:Magnus]] reflects that the blow actually hurt.
** [[spoiler:Greyloc, Sturmhjart, Bjorn the Fell-Handed and two of Greyloc's Terminators all confront Magnus at once. Bjorn gets trashed to the point where he's taken out of the fight and the others all die, but they actually manage to put Magnus on the back foot for a while with the sheer ferocity of their assault, and the damage they inflict weakens Magnus enough for the newly-arrived Ironhelm to destroy his physical form and banish him back to the Warp, though he too dies in the process]].
DefiantToTheEnd: The defenders believe nobody is going to come and save them, with their fleet on deployment and no messages out (as far as they know), but they decide to make the Thousand Sons pay for every inch of ground they claim.
DynamicEntry:[[spoiler:Ironhelm enters the fight between Bjorn and Magnus
with a poisoned dagger made specifically to kill Space Marines flying tackle that knocks all three of them off a cliff]].
ElementalPowers: The Wolves' magically gifted Priests wield these in battle.
EyeScream: An unfortunate deckhand gets his eyes gouged out by a Thousand Sons sorcerer
so that Lysander the sorcerer can kill Kraegon Thul implant magical eyes in their place and use him as a mind-controlled spy.
GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: When Trom Rossek falls into a depressive funk after getting
his stead]].
* TakingYouWithMe: Hoo boy...
** ''Kadillus'': Naaman to an Ork walker.
** ''Legion'': Omar to a pack of flying daemons.
** ''Damnos'': Agrippan to as many Necrons as possible, [[spoiler:though
entire squad killed by the novel doesn't Thousand Sons, Wyrmblade tries to snap him out of it by punching him in the face with enough force to knock him flat on his ass.
HonorBeforeReason: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Harek Ironhelm is so obsessed with defeating Magnus the Red and settling the Space Wolves' ancient feud with the Thousand Sons that he's willing to mobilize the entire chapter and leave Fenris unprotected when he thinks he's got Magnus cornered on Gangava--just as Magnus planned.
* JustToyingWithThem: When Wyrmblade confronts [[spoiler:Magnus]] in the ruins of his laboratory, the narration makes it clear that [[spoiler:Magnus]] is just toying with him as they cross swords:
-->[[spoiler:Magnus]] parried him with an unconscious ease, moving just as smoothly, deploying his blade with all the remorseless skill of his heritage. It was almost as if he were allowing the Wolf Priest his last moment of perfection, gifting him a final flourish of martial sublimity before the end had to come.
KungFuWizard: [[spoiler:Magnus the Red spends as much time beating Space Wolves to death with his bare hands as he does exploding them with his godlike psychic powers]].
MechanicalMonster: The Thousand Sons deploy the last of their Cataphract robots against the Space Wolves. While few in number, the hulking war machines pose a serious threat to the Wolves, sporting plasma cannons siege drills that can fell even a Terminator with one blow, and enough durability to withstand anything short of a Dreadnought's weapons.
MookHorrorShow: One scene told from the perspective of a Spireguard soldier sent in to establish a beachhead for the invading Thousand Sons. His initial confidence and professionalism--born of the belief that the Space Wolves are simply normal men like himself--quickly give way to panic and terror once the Wolves
show it.up and start butchering his unit.
OrbitalBombardment: The Thousand Sons assault the titular fortress with a pair of "planet-scourers"--ships built for the sole purpose of housing [[WaveMotionGun enormous, downward-pointing plasma cannons powerful enough to raze a continent]]. The resulting bombardment isn't strong enough to bring down the Fang's shields, but it ''does'' prevent the Space Wolves from bringing the Fang's anti-orbit weapons to bear and keeps them from sending out Thunderhawks to interfere with the Thousand Sons' landing operations.
OurWerewolvesAreDifferent: The Halls of the Revered Fallen--the caves where the Space Wolves keep their Dreadnoughts--are guarded by mysterious "beasts" that appear to be gigantic, semi-humanoid wolves with cybernetic augmentations. [[spoiler:In the same book, Helfist succumbs to his grief and battle-rage during the final days of the siege, transforming into a Wulfen.
]]
** ''Castellax'': Vortsk to as many Orks as possible.
** ''Antagonis'': [[spoiler:Nessus to Volos, by way of possessing Toharan. It doesn't work.]]
** ''Integrity'': This is how Voldo tries to die. [[spoiler:It doesn't work, but he ''does'' die fighting in such a way that helps
PerspectiveReversal: Morek Karekborn and his brothers continue daughter Freija have opposing views of the mission]].
* TechnicallyLivingZombie: [[spoiler:The zombies in ''Death of Antagonis'' aren't fully dead, they're brainwashed by a Chaos mind-virus called the Doubtworm. The zombies are still, in their own minds, actually loyalist imperial citizens [[AndIMustScream fully aware of their infected state, but with no ability to communicate that fact]]. All they can do is wildly flail at the Doubtworm's asymptomatic carriers, hoping to kill them before they can spread the Doubtworm
Space Wolves. Morek looks up to the next planet. This is also why they ignore space marines, who are immune to Space Wolves with respect and reverence, while Freija instead resents the Doubtworm Wolves for their arrogance and superior attitude. By the end of the novel, Morek's faith in the first place.]]
*
Wolves has been shaken while Freija has gained a newfound respect and admiration for them.
ProtectiveCharm: The Space Wolves inscribe protective runes into their armour to ward off maleficarum, their term for the power of Chaos. The Fang itself has thousands of similar wards etched into its stone walls, and their presence helps to slow the advance of the Thousand Sons once they break into the fortress, most notably by [[spoiler:preventing Magnus the Red from physically manifesting within the Fang]] until the Sons destroy enough of the wards.
SizeShifter: [[spoiler:Magnus the Red enlarges himself so that he can stand eye-to-eye with--and tear down--a Titan-sized statue of Leman Russ, then shrinks back down to his (still considerable) normal height once the deed is done. Later on, he shrinks to a mere three metres in order to duel Wyrmblade]].
SlobsVersusSnobs: Some of the Thousand Sons, those who don't realise what lies beneath the Space Wolves' exterior, see their conflict with the "dog-warriors" as this.
TeleFrag: ''Battle of the Fang'' has a A Thousand Sons sorcerer experience this when he hastily teleports himself and a squad of Rubric Marines into an oncoming Space Wolves vessel. Only two of the Rubric Marines make it through, and only one of them does so intact; the other one materializes within a wall and effectively dies. The sorcerer himself suffers injuries to his hands, face, and internal organs.
* TemptingFate: From ''Rynn's World'': "Even the foulest and most violent of the xenos races surely weren't foolish enough to attack a Space Marine homeworld." Guess what happens soon thereafter. [[spoiler:Orks.]]
* ThanatosGambit: In ''Battle of the Fang'', [[spoiler:Magnus the Red's plan requires the Space Wolves to kill [[FightingAShadow his frail old man avatar]] on Gangava so that he can manifest on Fenris in his full might and lay waste to the Fang]]. He even tells them what the plan entails, knowing that they won't believe him.
* ThereWasADoor: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Blackwing is combing the bowels of his ship for Thousand Sons infiltrators when a Rubric Marine suddenly bursts out of a wall, taking him and his men by surprise.
* ThisIsGonnaSuck: The first thought Grimaldus has upon hearing of Armageddon?
-->I will die on this world.
* ThoseTwoGuys: Givenar and Antinas keep on arguing and bantering, even when in middle of combat, to Lysander's neverending annoyance.
* ThrowTheBookAtThem: Lysander spends a decent chunk of ''Malodrax'' armed with nothing but a chainsword (which he eventually loses) and a long-dead inquisitor's journal-slash-treatise on the titular daemon world. Between him being a Space Marine and this being [[DoorStopper a very thick, very heavy iron-bound book on a chain,]] [[EpicFlail he puts it to very effective use.]]
* TimeBomb: The Silver Skulls discover that the Red Corsairs have rigged the promethium refinery to blow at the climax of ''The Gildar Rift'', forcing the Skulls to waste time defusing the explosives while the Corsairs escape with their plunder.
* TooDumbToFool: In ''Siege of Castellax'', the Iron Warriors try to stall the Orks using a giant minefield, but with intercontinental ballistic missiles instead of regular mines. Problem is, instead of trying to sweep the desert to find the rest of the warheads, they just charge through the one patch of land they know the missiles ''aren't'' hidden, and that's the five-mile-wide crater where the first missile exploded.
* VillainRespect: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Magnus the Red surprises one of his subordinates by admitting that he has grown to respect the Space Wolves since the Literature/HorusHeresy.



* VitriolicBestBuds: For all the insults the two sling at each other, you can see Givenar and Antinas are best friends.
* WaveMotionGun: The Thousand Sons seem fond of these in ''Battle of the Fang''. Their planet-scourer ships are basically giant plasma cannons built to raze a planet's surface with continuous streams of plasma fire. Their gate-breaker daemon engines, similarly, are 200-metre long self-propelled gun barrels that they use to hammer the Fang's gates with giant yellow beams of eldritch energy.
* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: This SugarWiki/{{Funny Moment|s}} from ''Malodrax'':
-->'''Lycaon''': Do you know how to kill him?\\
'''Lysander''': [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill Cut him into pieces and burn them.]]\\
'''Lycaon''': Is that what the people of Malodrax say?\\
'''Lysander''': No, but that works on everything.
* TheWorfEffect: ''Fall of Damnos'' is little more than one long series of this, to drive home how serious and dangerous the threat of the Necrons is.
* TheWorldIsAlwaysDoomed: Has shown up twice now:
** In ''Death of Antagonis'' the villains aren't threatening enough just attacking the planets Antagonis and Aighe Mortis, they also have to [[spoiler:revive an ancient alien planet-buster and take it to Holy Terra as well]].
** Likewise, ''The World Engine'' doesn't feel the stakes raised enough with just the Varv system in peril, the Necrons feel the need to try and teleport the titular Engine to [[spoiler:Mars, and probably shoot at Terra a few times for good measure]].
* WorthyOpponent: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Daerys Arrun and Huron Blackheart develop a mutual if begrudging respect for one another as both warriors and strategists. Before their final confrontation, Blackheart even feels a sliver of regret at the knowledge that he can't turn such a worthy foe to Chaos and will have to kill him.
* WouldHurtAChild: In ''Battle of the Fang'', Aphael comes across a group of scared, helpless children while destroying the Space Wolves' magical wards and decides to kill some of them shits and giggles [[spoiler:, only to discover that they are neither scared nor helpless when one of them chucks a grenade at his face]].
* WritersCannotDoMath: ''Legion of the Damned'' kicks off with the 817th Feast of Blades, a tournament taking place every century. Check how many years would have had to pass for this to be the 817th Feast, and compare that to how many years have passed since the Space Marines were first created...[[note]]81,700 and 10,900 respectively[[/note]]

to:

* VitriolicBestBuds: For all the insults the two sling at each other, you can see Givenar and Antinas are best friends.
*
WaveMotionGun: The Thousand Sons seem fond of these in ''Battle of the Fang''.these. Their planet-scourer ships are basically giant plasma cannons built to raze a planet's surface with continuous streams of plasma fire. Their gate-breaker daemon engines, similarly, are 200-metre long self-propelled gun barrels that they use to hammer the Fang's gates with giant yellow beams of eldritch energy.
* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: This SugarWiki/{{Funny Moment|s}} from ''Malodrax'':
-->'''Lycaon''': Do you know how
WouldHurtAChild: Aphael comes across a group of scared, helpless children while destroying the Space Wolves' magical wards and decides to kill him?\\
'''Lysander''': [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill Cut him into pieces
some of them shits and burn them.]]\\
'''Lycaon''': Is
giggles [[spoiler:, only to discover that what the people of Malodrax say?\\
'''Lysander''': No, but that works on everything.
* TheWorfEffect: ''Fall of Damnos'' is little more than one long series of this, to drive home how serious and dangerous the threat of the Necrons is.
* TheWorldIsAlwaysDoomed: Has shown up twice now:
** In ''Death of Antagonis'' the villains aren't threatening enough just attacking the planets Antagonis and Aighe Mortis,
they also have to [[spoiler:revive an ancient alien planet-buster and take it to Holy Terra as well]].
** Likewise, ''The World Engine'' doesn't feel the stakes raised enough with just the Varv system in peril, the Necrons feel the need to try and teleport the titular Engine to [[spoiler:Mars, and probably shoot
are neither scared nor helpless when one of them chucks a grenade at Terra a few times for good measure]].
* WorthyOpponent:
his face]].

[[/folder]]


[[folder:The Gildar Rift]]

AsteroidThicket:
In ''The Gildar Rift'', the titular rift is a dense asteroid field that covers the entire Gildar system and makes traveling within the system very dangerous.
BadBoss: "Blackheart did very little for his Red Corsairs other than provide them a staging ground for war. He never praised them or rewarded them but none of them questioned it; least of all the staunchly loyal Astral Claws. He expected them to die willingly at his whim, and they did. If they survived a campaign or a raid, so much the better; he could utilise their muscle again. Nobody ever spoke out against it and Blackheart never changed the ground rules. It was a perfect arrangement."
BulletDodgesYou: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Sergeant Matteus quickly discovers that attempting to shoot Huron Blackheart is pointless, as his bolt rounds simply veer away from the Chaos Lord before they can hit him.
DerelictGraveyard: The dangers of traversing the titular Rift are compounded by the countless wrecked starships which drift through the asteroid field. The sheer density of said asteroid field makes these wrecks almost impossible to salvage: any vessel that tries will inevitably be wrecked in turn.
DyingRace: ''The Gildar Rift'' suggests that the Silver Skulls are slowly dying out, as several characters remark that their numbers are dwindling and that the influx of inexperienced new Space Marines can't make up for their lost veterans. The events of the novel do nothing to reverse this trend, with [[spoiler:the Fourth Company losing a quarter of its strength, Captain Daerys Arrun dying at Huron Blackheart's hands, and the senior Apothecary Ryarus being captured by the Red Corsairs]].
DynamicEntry: [[spoiler:An Assault Marine tries to save Daerys Arrun by knocking Huron Blackheart away from him with a rocket-powered tackle]]. See SenselessSacrifice for how well ''that'' turns out.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Attempted. While fighting Huron Blackheart, Daerys Arrun notices a nearby gas pocket and tries to lure Blackheart toward it so that the Chaos Lord will ignite it with a stray blast from his flamer and blow himself up. [[spoiler:The plan fails due to Blackheart catching up to him faster than he anticipated and hurling him away from the gas pocket.]]
InsistentTerminology: In ''The Gildar Rift'', Daerys Arrun insists on referring to Huron Blackheart by his original name of Lufgt Huron. Why he does so isn't clear, and he doesn't provide an answer when one of the chapter's Prognosticators asks him.
KilledOffscreen: Sergeant Matteus is last seen standing his ground as Huron Blackheart bears down on him. The scene then cuts to Daerys Arrun demanding a status report from Matteus, only for Blackeart to answer the call and gloat about the sergeant's demise.
NonIndicativeName: The narrative points out that the Corpsemaster is not a necromancer: he just likes to dissect bodies ([[TortureTechnician living]] or dead) in order to better understand the biological process of death.
OrganTheft: [[spoiler:the Corpsemaster steals Sergeant Porteus's progenoid glands after the latter is captured by the Red Corsairs]]. A former Space Wolf turned Red Corsair implies that the same was done to both him and many other formerly loyal Space Marines pressganged into the Corsairs' ranks.
PyrrhicVictory: The Silver Skulls succeed in driving the Red Corsairs out of the Gildar Rift, but Huron Blackheart gets away with most of his plunder and the Silver Skulls lose many experienced warriors[[spoiler:, including Captain Daerys Arrun and Apothecary Ryarus. The botched outcome of the battle also leads many of the Skulls to harbour doubts about the competence of their Prognosticators]]. The final chapter of the book is even titled "What Price Victory?" in a bit of LampshadeHanging.
SapientShip: The aim of the Silver Skulls' Resurgent project is to create one of these by wiring Volker Straub into the ''Dread Argent's'' systems, effectively turning him into a WetwareCPU and giving him absolute control over the ship. [[spoiler:They succeed, spectacularly so.]]
Seers: The Silver Skulls' unique Prognosticators are hybrid Chaplain-Librarians trained to read the future with their psychic powers. The chapter places great stock in their divinations, to the point where they will not commit to a battle plan until a Prognosticator has read the portents and given it his approval. [[spoiler:However, the Prognosticators are not infallible, and many Silver Skulls begin to harbour doubts about them after they sanction the costly battle of the Gildar Rift.]]
SenselessSacrifice: [[spoiler:A Silver Skulls Assault Marine tries to save the grievously injured Captain Arrun's life by tackling Huron Blackheart away from him. He only manages to distract Huron Blackheart for a few seconds before getting killed, and while his sacrifice allows Arrun to regain some strength and continue fighting for a bit longer, it ultimately doesn't change the outcome.]]
SpitefulSpit: Huron Blackheart spits on Daerus Arrun twice during their battle. The trope is actually weaponized, as Blackheart does it not only to show his contempt for the Imperium but also to hinder Arrun's combat effectiveness as the acidic saliva eats into his armour.
{{Synchronization}}: [[spoiler:One unfortunate side effect of Volker Straub's connection to the ''Dread Argent'' is that he feels any damage inflicted to the ship as physical pain]].
TimeBomb: The Silver Skulls discover that the Red Corsairs have rigged the promethium refinery to blow at the climax. forcing the Skulls to waste time defusing the explosives while the Corsairs escape with their plunder.
* WorthyOpponent:
Daerys Arrun and Huron Blackheart develop a mutual if begrudging respect for one another as both warriors and strategists. Before their final confrontation, Blackheart even feels a sliver of regret at the knowledge that he can't turn such a worthy foe to Chaos and will have to kill him. \n* WouldHurtAChild: In ''Battle

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Legion
of the Fang'', Aphael comes across a group of scared, helpless children while destroying Damned]]

BadassNormal: The Excoriators' Chapter serfs. They take part in
the Space Wolves' magical wards siege, firing lasrifles and decides tending to kill some autocannon turrets.
BigDamnHeroes: The titular Legion
of the Damned. They arrived at the last possible moment before [[spoiler:Captain Kersh of the Excoriators SpaceMarine Chapter]] was overwhelmed by the foul forces of Chaos.
Determinator: Scout Omar. He's buried alive in heretics, stabbed in the chest by a set of Lightning Claws, gets his legs eaten by a daemon, and ''still begs to be put on the front lines'' (he ends up playing spotter for another scout with a sniper rifle). He then takes on the role of the sniper when the his fellow scout is killed, and continues putting down daemons and heretics until he was eventually overwhelmed.
DidntSeeThatComing: The titular Legion Of The Damned come out of nowhere, as far as the forces of Chaos were concerned. The results did not end well for
them shits and giggles [[spoiler:, only to discover that they are neither scared nor helpless when one of them chucks a grenade at his face]].
in the novel.
* WritersCannotDoMath: ''Legion A possible example as Legion of the Damned'' Damned kicks off with the 817th Feast of Blades, a tournament taking place every century. Check how many years would have had to pass for this to be the 817th Feast, and compare that to how many years have passed since the Space Marines were first created...[[note]]81,700 and 10,900 respectively[[/note]]




[[/folder]]


[[folder:Wrath of Iron]]

BadassNormal: Every loyalist Guardsman. Hell, even most of the "traitors" are pretty ballsy before they start getting replaced with Abnormals.
BetterToDieThanBeKilled: [[spoiler: When (former) General Nethena from ''Wrath of Iron'' realizes the Space Marine are about to royally fuck him up for attempted mutiny, he takes his rebreather off in the middle of a chemical fogbank.]]
CivilWarcraft: For the entire first half of the book, the "traitor Guardsmen" have no knowledge that their planetary governor has fallen to chaos, and the Iron Hands [[OmniscientMoralityLicense refuse to let anyone take the time out to explain anything]].
DeathEqualsRedemption and RedemptionEqualsDeath: Valien the Death Cult Assassin grew up in the slums and is addicted to drinking blood. He knew damn well his sins were great and constantly worried that his career wouldn't help his life amount to anything. At least through his suicide bomb he was able to make his death count for something, by blowing up [[spoiler:a Slaanesh Daemon Prince's sanctuary, wounding said Prince and atomizing his personal bodyguards]].
MookHorrorShow: The book opens with a brief PerspectiveFlip, showing the Iron Hands [[ImplacableMan shrug off a volley of lasgun fire and smash apart a bunker with little effort]].
OmniscientMoralityLicense: The Iron Hands in ''Wrath of Iron'' view their Imperial Guard allies as ignorant martyrs with their "cold flawless logic", happy to send them to die to further the success of the campaign. Sure, it all works out since the Guard aren't aware of the Slaanesh cult, but are the Iron Hands willing to just share that little detail? Not a chance.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: The BigBad of gives one to the Iron Hands, how they've become little more than machine fetishists and obsessed, paranoid automatons since Ferrus Mannus was killed. Ironfather Krastos was too busy calculating the Prince's weak spot to bother listening.

[[/folder]]


[[folder:The Siege of Castellax]]

TheAllegedCar: The Iron Warriors have this impression when they're forced to hijack an Ork plane. The only reason a throttle was installed was so the Ork pilot could weld the thrust lever into the highest gear (Orks are funny like that), and it doesn't have any landing gear.
BadassNormal: Yuxiang. Little more than an escaped slave, he ends up starting a secret revolt and, to his own surprise, [[spoiler:kills a Chaos Space Marine]].
Determinator: Over-captain Vallax is teleported into a trap by [[spoiler:Oriax]], where he's mobbed by nearly a million Orks. He's captured and tortured to within an inch of his life, repeatedly, for seven days straight. He then fights his way out of the torture chamber and into his own home base, which is under siege at the time, and ''finally'' goes down fighting, all with half of his skull missing.
GoldfishPoopGang: The Iron Warriors in ''Siege of Castellax'' are essentially this throughout the entire book. They constantly fight with one another and constantly attempting to undermine one another until the orks show up, are constantly outwitted by the orks in various ways, and many of them end up dying humiliating deaths and the orks end up taking Castellax. Even ''before'' the book they seemed to be like this, mentioning a raid prior to the story where they were nearly defeated by the planet's local defense forces when said forces tricked their air forces into bombing a dummy armor column, leaving the ''real'' column to go off and attack the Iron Warrior forces sieging the planetary capital. ''Space Marines'' almost defeated by ''regular humans''.
* {{Jerkass}}: The Iron Warriors as a whole. They routinely kill their slaves ''pour encourager les autres'' when the slaves have already spent their entire lives being in fear of their masters.
JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Over-captain Vallax is about as close to this trope as a Chaos Marine can get. He's an egotistical, glory-stealing jerkass, but he really does have a sense of honor and would hate to see his brothers die in anything short of a glorious battle. Later, when he fails his brothers by [[spoiler:leading a team of Ork Kommandoes into the Bastion]], he takes it upon himself to [[spoiler:HoldTheLine and FaceDeathWithDignity]].
LaserGuidedKarma: [[spoiler:Skintaker Algol threatens to torture a rebelling slave slowly and painfully in the most drawn-out way possible. Then the ceiling collapses, trapping Algol under hundreds of tons of concrete. The slave isn't trapped, and stabs Algol through the neck repeatedly. Since Algol is a Space Marine, it takes him well over 15 minutes for him to die, and he's awake for every second of it.]]
TheSecretOfLongPorkPies: It shouldn't surprise you much to learn that the Iron Warriors have linked their slave morgue to the food production plant, but it's a big reveal for the slaves themselves, especially Yuxiang.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Techpriest Oriax is secretly sabotaging his Iron Warrior "brothers".]]
** [[spoiler:Towards the end, Oriax probably sees Captain Rhodaan as this, since Rhodaan doesn't submit to the BolivianArmyEnding and starts to undo some of the sabotage, and ultimately survives the novel.]]
TooDumbToFool: The Iron Warriors try to stall the Orks using a giant minefield, but with intercontinental ballistic missiles instead of regular mines. Problem is, instead of trying to sweep the desert to find the rest of the warheads, they just charge through the one patch of land they know the missiles ''aren't'' hidden, and that's the five-mile-wide crater where the first missile exploded.



* YouAreInCommandNow: [[spoiler:Rhodaan takes command of the 3rd Grand Company after everyone above him dies in ''Siege of Castellex''.]]
* YouShallNotPass: In ''Fall of Damnos'', when Scipio's squad find themselves being chased down by a pack of Flayed Ones, brothers Largo and Brakkius offer to lay down their already-limping lives to slow the pursuers down. [[spoiler:[[BigDamnHeroes Tigurius pops out of nowhere and saves them]].]]

--------

to:

* YouAreInCommandNow: [[spoiler:Rhodaan takes command of the 3rd Grand Company after everyone above him dies.]]

[[/folder]]


[[folder:The Death of Antagonis]]

ActionGirl: Sister Sethano, she's a [[ChurchMilitant Sister of Battle]] Canoness for a reason.
BadassNormal: Mere days after walking off a bolter wound to the gut, Sister Sethano fights off an ambush with two daemons and a [[spoiler:fallen Inquisitor]], and wins decisively.
BeautyEqualsGoodness: Captain Toharan believes this more and more over the course of the story.
ComicallySmallBribe: The xenos temples in ''Death of Antagonis'' have to be bribed with blood to get the [[spoiler:enormous war machines]] working, but the amount of blood is pretty small compared to how massive some of the mechanisms are. The Black Dragons even lampshade this when [[spoiler:a bell the size of a small planet]] considers itself fully charged with only about 50 slaves' worth of blood.
DidntSeeThatComing: [[spoiler:"That pretty-faced traitor is no captain of mine."]]
* FaceHeelTurn: [[spoiler:Captain Toharan and Inquisitor Lettinger in ''Death of Antagonis]].
** {{Irony}}: [[spoiler:Lettinger was convinced the Black Dragons would betray the Imperium, and believed Toharan was the Dragons' last chance at redemption.]]
FeelNoPain: Sister Sethano. She takes a [[MadeOfExplodium bolter round]] to the gut, and not only kills the traitor who shot her but shrugs it off in a matter of days.
IDidWhatIHadToDo: One of the major themes throughout the story.
MoralEventHorizon: In-universe, [[spoiler:Toharan ordering a military strike against the Imperial world of Aighe Mortis]].
MyGreatestFailure: Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later
dies [[spoiler: because she was infected by a chaos plague before they even met]]. He had invested a lot in ''Siege rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.
NonIndicativeName: [[spoiler:The planet Antagonis is blown up barely a third
of Castellex''.]]
* YouShallNotPass: In ''Fall
the way into the book. The Planet Aighe Mortis is home to a lot more drama. The real story is the rise and fall of Damnos'', Toharan and his defeat at the hands of Volos.]]
OurZombiesAreDifferent: Brought up in-universe,
when Scipio's squad find themselves being chased down the Black Dragons, Sethano, and Lettinger discuss that the local plague zombies are faster than Nurgle's zombies, infect other subjects at an absurdly fast rate, and ignore space marines...
PyrrhicVictory: This is just one in a long string of these for the Black Dragons.
RealityIsOutToLunch: The Xeno temples.
TheStoic: Sister Sethano. To the point that is intimidates an Inquisitor.
TechnicallyLivingZombie: [[spoiler:The zombies aren't fully dead, they're brainwashed
by a pack of Flayed Ones, brothers Largo and Brakkius offer to lay down Chaos mind-virus called the Doubtworm. The zombies are still, in their already-limping lives own minds, actually loyalist imperial citizens [[AndIMustScream fully aware of their infected state, but with no ability to communicate that fact]]. All they can do is wildly flail at the Doubtworm's asymptomatic carriers, hoping to kill them before they can spread the Doubtworm to the next planet. This is also why they ignore space marines, who are immune to the Doubtworm in the first place.]]
* TheWorldIsAlwaysDoomed: The villains aren't threatening enough just attacking the planets Antagonis and Aighe Mortis, they also have to [[spoiler:revive an ancient alien planet-buster and take it to Holy Terra as well]].

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Death of Integrity]]

AIIsACrapshoot: [[spoiler:The situation is well warranted, considering that the AI in question was driven insane with grief after his captain was killed by Imperium officials for "heresy".]]
BecauseISaidSo: Subverted by Lord Plosk. While he has a signed permission slip from the High Lords of Terra to more or less do ANYTHING he wants, he realizes the Space Marines would be better motivated if he treats them like equals, and agrees to trade their assistance for custom-built spaceships.
ClarkesThirdLaw: [[spoiler:The spaceship known as the Spirit of Eternity was built during the Golden Age of Technology, and it outclasses the Imperial fores so badly it almost becomes an OutsideContextProblem.]]
GameplayAndStoryIntegration: The story does this for TabletopGame/SpaceHulk. Why send bulky,
slow moving tactical dreadnought armor into the pursuers down. [[spoiler:[[BigDamnHeroes Tigurius pops out confined spaces of nowhere a Space Hulk, when Genestealers can tear through Terminator armor like tissue paper? Because radiation levels within the Hulk are so high that regular Space Marines would die in hours, as demonstrated when the Magos sends servitors along with the marines in order to set beacons.
* ItCanThink: 'The story will make damn sure that you don't think of Genestealers as just random packs of feral beasts. They can study, ambush, use adaptive tactics, find [[BulletProofHumanShield practical uses]] for their own corpses, [[spoiler:identify
and saves them]].destroy your communication lines]]...
** At least until you [[spoiler:kill their Broodlord]].
TheLastDance: Chapter Master Caedis of the Blood Drinkers knows that he is close to the Black Rage claiming him, showing him visions of the ancient hero Holos' final climb. He still heads aboard the Space Hulk, eventually succumbing and turning into a ravenous beast.
* StatusQuoIsGod: The story centers around retrieving a special data core that contains the blueprints for every war machine and piece of technology that was used by the Emperor to conquer the galaxy. Actually succeeding in retrieving the data core would more or less spell death for any and all of mankind's enemies throughout the universe. Guess what the Space Marines don't end up capturing?
** [[spoiler: ConsolationPrize: Lord Plosk still managed to capture a fraction of the blueprints from the data core of the ''Spirit of Eternity''.
]]

--------[[/folder]]


[[folder:Malodrax]]

AffablyEvil: Shalhadar is well-spoken, admirer of arts, curious and generally nice to Lysander, treating him as equal, despite being a Daemon Prince.
AggressiveNegotiations: Lysander gets to witness what passes for diplomacy between the Iron Warriors of Kraegon Thul and the Daemon Prince Shalhadar. The negotiations start out with Thul's envoy effectively demanding Shalhadar's complete surrender, and quickly descend into violence when those demands aren't met. The dry reaction of Shalhadar's own envoy suggests that this is a regular occurrence. [[folder:Pandorax]]
AlienSky: The titular planet of Malodrax is surrounded by an "orbital reef" so dense that one needs a map to get through alive. This [[FridgeLogic somehow]] does nothing to disrupt the normal day/night cycle - multiple mentions are made of being able to see the twin suns unobstructed - so the "sky" is presumably a hellscape of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Warp]].
* AlternateContinuity: ''Malodrax'' seems to take place in one. While the 40k canon has it that the Iron Warrior who kidnapped Lysander and rules Malodrax is named Shon'tu, the novel replaces him with a similar character named Kraegon Thul. [[spoiler:And while Shon'tu survives the battle of Malodrax, Kraegon Thul unambiguously dies during it.]]
* ApocalypticLog: ''Being A Description Of Malodrax And Its Foulness,'' a renegade Inquisitor's monograph which Lysander stumbles upon while escaping the fortress of Kulgarde. It ends up being a very useful resource for Lysander, both as a source of information on how to deal with Malodrax's many horrors, [[ThrowTheBookAtThem and as a weapon.]]
ArcWords: Malodrax wanted to be ruled."
ArtInitiatesLife: When the Imperial Fists invade Shalhadar's palace in ''Malodrax'', the many daemonic frescoes, tapestries, mosaics and sculptures within the palace come to life and attack them.
* BadassBoast: Lysander delivers this one to a daemon as he kills it:
--> "I told your kind I would return. When daemons have nightmares, I am what they see, and I always keep my word."
DarkSecret: Lysander never tells the other Imperial Fists about all the deals and alliances he made with daemons during his time on Malodrax. When other Fists notice that the daemons they're killing seem to know him, he lies through his teeth about ''how'' they know him.
* DecapitationPresentation: The final entry of Inquisitor Corvin's journal reveals that [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul paid him a personal visit in his cell, just to drop off the decapitated and [[EyeScream eyeless]] head of Corvin's pilot Maskelin.]]
* DefiantToTheEnd: When Captain Lysander is captured at the beginning, he quickly accepts that he's lost and at his enemy's mercy, but keeps on struggling anyway because that's just what a Space Marine does. As long as he can recognize some way to inconvenience his captors, he'll try and do it.
DidYouJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Captain Lysander spends a good chunk of ''Malodrax'' chatting with Daemon Prince Shalhadar and rehearsing for a play. This only applies during the flashbacks, however; in the present day Lysander and Shahadar are quick to try and kill each other.
DogPileOfDoom: In ''Malodrax'', Lysander gets mobbed by a few hundred cultists the first time he enters Shalhadar's city. Since he's unarmed and unarmoured, he can't fight them off effectively, and he's nearly crushed to death under a pile of bodies until a third party calls the cultists off.
* DressingAsTheEnemy: When hiding in Kulgarde's underground, Lysander pretends to be one of many mutants serving the Iron Warriors.
* DueToTheDead: ''Malodrax'': The Imperial Fists have multiple ways of honouring their dead. When Skelpis is killed by the Red Widow, Chaplain Lycaon honours him by scrimshawing one of Skelpis's knuckles. When three of them are killed in the attack on Shalhadar's palace, the Fists eulogize them and then hold a series of short wrestling matches in their honour.
DwindlingParty: Inquisitor Corvin gradually loses many of his retainers during his time on Malodrax. At least two men die before he enters Shalhadar's city, and he loses two more by the time he leaves the place, bringing him down to five. By the time of his final journal entry, two of those five are dead and Corvin is convinced that the other two must also be dead. [[spoiler:His assassin Sildyne is the only member of the team still alive and loyal by the time of Lysander's return to Malodrax.]]
DysonSphere: The titular planet of ''Malodrax'' is surrounded by a giant "orbital reef" made of space coral, just to further point out how [[SpaceIsAnOcean oceany the space of this universe is]].
EatsBabies: The cursed daemon "brood mother" eats her own offspring after they [[{{Squick}} crawl out of her skin's pustules]].
* EnemyMine: Lysander is quite disgusted by his own alliance with Shalhadar in ''Malodrax'', but goes through with it, as he wants revenge on Thul and the Daemon Prince wants to teach the Iron Warrior his place and have some entertainment.
EvilVersusEvil: Kraegon Thul and Shalhadar both want to rule Malodrax, but their mutual hostility keeps their ambitions in check.
EyeScream: [[spoiler:Lysander kills Kraegon Thul by stabbing him in the eye with a poisoned dagger]].
FlashbackWithinAFlashBack: Flashbacks of Lysander's first time on the planet are accompanied by flashbacks from Inquisitor Corvin's ApocalypticLog.
GalacticConqueror: Kraegon Thul aims to become the next great Warmaster of Chaos, and Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin are both convinced that he could wreak untold havoc on the Imperium if he overcomes Malodrax's trials. [[spoiler:Ultimately subverted, though, as he dies without ever conquering a single planet.]]
GeniusLoci: Every major character is convinced that the titular planet is actively toying with them to satisfy a goal of some kind. Considering it's a [[PlanetHeck daemon world]], they are likely correct by some measure.
--> [[ArcWords Malodrax wanted to be ruled.]]
GenuineHumanHide: Kraegon Thul's ambassador to Shalhadar sets himself up in a pavilion made of freshly flayed human skin--so fresh, in fact, that there is still blood and guts clinging to it and the pavilion's interior stinks horribly. Even Lysander is grossed out by the smell.
* TheHedonist: Shalhadar, as befitting a Daemon Prince of Slaanesh. His entire city is a garish tribute to himself, his citizens gladly live and die for the sole purpose of providing him fleeting moments of entertainment, and he spends much of his time directing, acting in, watching, financing, and critiquing stage plays (sometimes all at once).
* LaughingMad: While infiltrating Shalhadar's city, Lysander happens upon a man who is giggling while being vivisected in some sort of cult ceremony. The victim laughs even harder when he notices Lysander, giving his presence away.
* LightIsNotGood: Played with. The daemon prince Shalhadar takes the form of a golden angelic statue when he confronts the Imperial Fists invading his palace, complete with wings made of light, a mace with a white flame burning inside its head, and stained glass windows worked into his body. However, this statue is merely a shell for Shalhadar's true form, [[DarkIsEvil a shapeless mass of darkness]].
LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair: Whatever mighty civilization ruled the planet of Malodrax in the past, they've been reduced to nothing but a crumbling castle and some slaves for the Iron Warriors.
TheMole: [[spoiler:Kraegon Thul's mysterious alien lieutenant Karnak is revealed to be Inquisitor Corvin's assassin Sildyne, who worked his way into a position of power so that he could kill Thul if he ever got the chance. Thul knew Karnak's true identity, however, and never let his guard down around him]].
MotherOfAThousandYoung: The Brood Mother has thousands upon thousands of incredibly mutated offspring. She eats them... well, [[ZergRush not all of them]].
* NeverSpeakIllOfTheDead: At the end of ''Malodrax'', Lysander asks Sergeant Kaderic how [[spoiler:Helaestus]] died. When Kaderic tells him that he died "with valour and fury", Lysander realises that this trope is in effect:
-->Lysander wondered if there could have been a reply that meant less. An Imperial Fist was expected to fight and die with valour and fury – it would have been an obscenity if he died any other way. [[spoiler:Helaestus]] could have died a whimpering wreck and the same would still be said of him.
OrganTheft: Toward the climax of ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:Brother Helaestus reveals that the Iron Warriors stole his gene-seed during his captivity]].
ProtectiveCharm: The book spends an entire paragraph describing the many, many ways that the ''Breaker of Darkness'' has been magically warded and blessed to keep out daemons. Upon entering Malodrax's orbital reef, these various charms allow the ship to go unmolested by daemonic incursion... for ''thirty minutes''.
PurpleProse: Inquisitor Golrukhan's journal about Malodrax is written in this style. Lysander doesn't care for it in-universe, preferring the BeigeProse of Rogal Dorn's writing.
* RiddleForTheAges: Both Lysander and Inquisitor Corvin wonder whether the "people" who used to rule the planet are xeno species or heavily mutated humans. Ultimately, though, no-one's eager to return and make DNA tests.
RiddlingSphinx: A daemonic sphinx guards the entrance to Shalhadar's palace. Instead of asking a riddle, it will only let people pass if they can show it something it has never experienced before (and being a Slaaneshi daemon, there's very little it hasn't already experienced). Lysander is able to get in the first time by teaching it the concept of fear. The second time, he doesn't bother with the sphinx's games and just kills it.
SchizoTech: The Imperium's technology level has always been all over the place, but Malodrax cranks it up a notch. The Imperial Fists strike cruiser ''Breaker of Darkness'' has bridge consoles that are operated with punchcards and have ticker tape readouts instead of screens, and her crew has to use ''abacuses'' whenever they perform calculations.
Seers: The brood mother knows everything that happens on Malodrax, including snippets of what will happen in the future. She's willing to share that information with anyone who seeks her out, for a price.
ShoutOut: Inquisitor Corvin notes that his archivist was "most perturbed" by the impossibility of Shalhadar's city. This is a reference to Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'s own savant Uber Aemos, whose catchphrase was "most perturbatory".
SlobsVersusSnobs: One half of the story concerns the feud between the luscious, extravagant, hedonistic cult of Shalhadar and the grungy, militant, dour Iron Warriors.
* SpannerInTheWorks: Captain Lysander on Malodrax. [[spoiler:[[GeniusLoci The whims of fate]] unleashed him to test the strength of the Iron Warriors and the reign of Shalhadar. Both of the Chaos factions fail miserably.]]
*** Even before that, Lysander only escaped captivity because of a faulty scalpel breaking off where he could reach it.
TakeUpMySword: In a literal example from ''Malodrax'', [[spoiler:the dying Agent Sildyne entrusts Lysander with a poisoned dagger made specifically to kill Space Marines so that Lysander can kill Kraegon Thul in his stead]].
ThoseTwoGuys: Givenar and Antinas keep on arguing and bantering, even when in middle of combat, to Lysander's neverending annoyance.
* ThrowTheBookAtThem: Lysander spends a decent chunk of his first stint on Malodrax armed with nothing but a chainsword (which he eventually loses) and a long-dead inquisitor's journal-slash-treatise on the titular daemon world. Between him being a Space Marine and this being [[DoorStopper a very thick, very heavy iron-bound book on a chain,]] [[EpicFlail he puts it to very effective use.]]
* VitriolicBestBuds: For all the insults the two sling at each other, you can see Givenar and Antinas are best friends.
* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: This SugarWiki/{{Funny Moment|s}}
-->'''Lycaon''': Do you know how to kill him?\\
'''Lysander''': [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill Cut him into pieces and burn them.]]\\
'''Lycaon''': Is that what the people of Malodrax say?\\
'''Lysander''': No, but that works on everything.

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Pandorax]]

{{Hypocrite}}: For a guy that uses psyker spells a lot, Mortarion does enjoy insulting the "little witches" of the Grey Knights for being pyskers.


[[/folder]]


[[folder:The World Engine]]

EnemyMine: Subverted. Just because the Astral Knights and Overlord Turakhin are both fighting the same enemy does ''not'' make them allies; they simply agree to ignore each other until Overlord Heqiroth dies.
InMediasRes: The story starts when the eponymous machine already has a death toll of millions and the Imperium has been battling it for days.
SeriesContinuityError: The Necrons don't phase out when they're damaged beyond repair; they just crumple to the ground.
* TheWorldIsAlwaysDoomed: The World Engine doesn't feel the stakes raised enough with just the Varv system in peril, the Necrons feel the need to try and teleport the titular Engine to [[spoiler:Mars, and probably shoot at Terra a few times for good measure]].

[[/folder]]


[[folder:Novellas and Short Stories]]

AllJustADream: Most of [[spoiler: ''Veil of Darkness'' is Cato Sicarius' dream while in medical coma.]] This being said, it turns out to be quite prophetic and in the end, enables the Space Marines to stop it before it happens.
MyGreatestFailure: In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers Damnos his greatest failure and is fairly confident that he'll be severly punished for losing the planet. Understandable, considering its his first time he ever lost as a Captain.
* ShellShockedVeteran: In ''Veil of Darkness'', Sicarius considers his jumping at shadows and paranoia about Necrons being everywhere to be symptoms of PTSD. [[spoiler:While ''Warzone: Damnos'' suggests he has it, the Necrons in the Temple of Hera are real and hiding in shadows.]]

[[/folder]]

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-->I am going to die on this world.

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-->I am going to will die on this world.
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* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].

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* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The repeated survival of Andrej of the Armageddeon Steel Legion. The stormtrooper has survived events that even a fully armored space marine should not have survived (such as an entire temple collapsing atop him while fighting Orks in hand-to-hand combat). There is equal evidence to support that he is a [[{{Immortality}} Perpetual]] or [[BornLucky just that lucky]].



** In ''Death of Antagonis'', Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later dies [[spoiler: by giving herself to a doubtworm due to being a daemonhost]]. He had invested a lot in rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.

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** In ''Death of Antagonis'', Toharan early on rescues a small girl, who later dies [[spoiler: because she was infected by giving herself to a doubtworm due to being a daemonhost]].chaos plague before they even met]]. He had invested a lot in rescuing the girl, and the moment shakes him to the core.
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* CoversAlwaysLie: The cover of ''Purging of Kadillius'' has Belial facing off against Ghazkul. In the battle, the two never came within several kilometers of each other, and one of the times that Belial did fight personally in the battle, he was supported by Deathwing terminators, not the regular marines that the cover shows.

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* CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Cantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.

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* CelebCrush: It's heavily implied that Maia Caglieri has a crush on Pedro Cantor.Kantor. Problem is, while she's a noblewoman, he's a Chapter Master of Crimson Fists.



* NowLetMeCarryYou: In ''Rynn's World'', Kantor initially refuses to let human refugees join the Space Marines' column, ultimately giving in on the condition that anyone who can't keep up will be left behind for the Orks. A mother struggles to keep up while carrying her two young children. When she finally collapses in exhaustion, Kantor calls a halt and walks back. His captain fears that he's about to perform a MercyKill to prevent them from suffering a much more horrible death from the Orks... but Kantor only tells her how brave she's been, and that she's earned the right for her and her children to be carried instead, and lifts them into his own arms.



** In Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Cantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.

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** In Crimson Fists, Alessio Cortez is Red, while his Chapter Master Pedro Cantor Kantor is Blue. Cantor has soft voice, charismatic presence and in-depth understanding of and care for matters such as administration or politics, while Cortez considers them waste of time, is impatient, would rather kill xenos all the time and utilizes ThePowerOfHate.

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