Warhammer TV is serving up the kind of hobby mix that keeps the week feeling busy between major reveals.
There is author insight from Denny Flowers, a spicy T’au versus Chaos Battle Report, and some useful Aeldari painting talk. Meanwhile, the Rumour Engine drops another tiny mystery image for everyone to wildly overanalyze. It is not the loudest news week, but it has plenty for lore fans, painters, and tabletop regulars.
Denny Flowers, Battle Report, and Aeldari Hobby Talk Hit Warhammer TV

The Warhammer TV lineup opens with Scribes and Scriveners featuring Denny Flowers, and that is a fun pull for Black Library readers. Flowers has written across several corners of Warhammer, including Grotsnik: Da Mad Dok, Above and Beyond, Fire Made Flesh, Ghazghkull Thraka: Warlord of Warlords, Da Gobbo’s Demise, Outgunned, and short stories.
The interview looks at how he started writing Warhammer fiction, what keeps him coming back, and what advice he has for writers trying to break into Black Library. That is the kind of behind-the-curtain content I enjoy, because it reminds you that Warhammer fiction is craft as much as lore delivery.

Tomorrow’s Battle Report shifts back to the table, with T’au Empire technology clashing against Chaos Space Marines. Abaddon and Cypher bring villain weight, while Shadowsun and the Twin Lance give the T’au side presence. That matchup should be useful for players watching how new-edition factions operate, not just reading datasheets in isolation.

Then Thursday’s Armies of Renown spotlights Daz and his Eldrad-aligned Aeldari exiles. The article emphasizes inspiration, color theory, long-term motivation, and knowing when to stop painting. Honestly, that last part may be the most valuable lesson this week.

Friday also brings the third and final Aeronautica Imperialis episode, which wraps the animated pilot drama.
A Battered Armour Tease Fuels Rumour Engine Guessing

The Rumour Engine entry is exactly the usual mystery grenade. This week’s image shows battered armour, and Warhammer Community asks who it belongs to and who did the battering. That is not much to go on, but that is also the point. The fun comes from arguing whether it hints at a wounded hero, wrecked vehicle, damaged daemon engine, or some unfortunate armored soul from a future release. For more details, read the original article,
Summary and Final Thoughts
Overall, this is a small update with broad hobby appeal. Warhammer TV gives viewers writing insight, gameplay, painting advice, and animation. Meanwhile, the Rumour Engine keeps the speculation engine running.

