Promotional Warhammer 40K banner: neon '#NEW40K' glow with a futuristic armored miniatures figure against a purple background and a white emblem behind.

Hedonites Revels and Genestealer Cult Uprisings Preview Fresh Warhammer Trouble

Chaos and xenos fans both get tasty previews here. However, each article scratches a different hobby itch. Slaanesh brings models, boxed sets, and collection options.

Meanwhile, Genestealer Cults get crunchy detachment rules. Together, they show how Warhammer mixes spectacle with identity.

Hedonites of Slaanesh Return With a New Lord and Decadent Army Options

Armored Warhammer miniature of a horned, skeletal warrior with gold armor and purple cape, wielding a curved double‑bladed axe and a staff, standing on a grassy base.

The Hedonites reveal is all about excess, movement, and Slaanesh swagger. The new miniature is the Lord of Hysteria. It joins the Lord of Hubris and Lord of Pain as a mortal champion.

Ornate Warhammer miniature in bronze armor with blue-green energy, on a textured base; insets show back view and side profile.

However, this one is framed more as a support character than a duelist. They have traded their soul to pleasure-daemons, giving them menace and the ability to drive followers into frenzy. Players can build it with a mirrored blade or censer, plus two helm-toppers.

Additionally, the hooved footwear is a design choice. It adds height while showing the self-inflicted agony this champion embraces for status.

Cover image for Warhammer Age of Sigmar: Hedonites of Slaanesh Chaos Battletome, showing a central armored warrior with a spear, surrounded by demon figures; Warhammer Community logo in the top-right corner.

The new Battletome: Hedonites of Slaanesh houses those rules, plus updated army rules, lore, and photography. Importantly, its battle traits revolve around temptations, forcing opponents into awful choices. That is exactly where Slaanesh should live mechanically, because strong Dark Prince rules make your opponent complicit. That feels very on-brand at the table.

Large diorama of Warhammer fantasy miniatures clashing on a ruined rocky battlefield with purple fog and ancient columns in the background. Central golden-armored hero with purple cape leads the charge with a sword and shield amid other ornate figures.

The Decadent Host boxed set gives mortal Slaanesh players a strong foundation. It includes Sigvald, Slaangor Fiendbloods, Myrmidesh Painbringers, Slickblade Seekers, and Blissbarb Archers.

Group of purple fantasy miniatures posed on a rocky diorama with ancient ruins and a Warhammer Community logo in the top right.

Therefore, it works as either a starter or expansion. It also supports the new Decadent Host Army of Renown.

Group of ornate Warhammer miniatures posed on a rocky diorama with purple mist and mossy foreground.

Meanwhile, the Epicurean Revellers Spearhead shifts toward daemons, packing the Thricefold Discord, Fiends, Daemonettes, and Seekers. Finally, the Thricefold Discord moves from Warhammer Underworlds into the main roster.

Group of ornate Warhammer miniatures on a rocky, purple-tinged battlefield with mist; Warhammer Community logo top-right.

The Accursed Reflection Regiment of Renown lets Chaos armies bring a Contorted Epitome and manifestations of excess.

Genestealer Cults Get Sneakier Heroes, Deadlier Purestrains, and Endless Neophytes

Warhammer miniature battle scene with red-cloaked leaders and skeletal warriors clashing on a detailed fortress diorama, blue-green glow in the background.

The Genestealer Cults focus is heavier on rules, and it absolutely leans into uprising warfare. Heroes of the Uprising spotlights the Kelermorph, Locus, Reductus Saboteur, and Sanctus as “Killer” models. These folk-hero assassins re-roll hit rolls of 1 and wound rolls of 1, making them reliable at deleting key pieces.

Poster-style rule card reading 'Detachment Rules: Killer Reputation' with text about Genestealer Cults, noting friendly Kelermorph/Locus/Reductus Saboteur/Sanctus models have Killer and Killer models’ attacks allow re-rolling 1s on hit and on wound. (Informative, game-contextual)

Additionally, Gene-tailored Toxins can give a Locus or Sanctus +1 Damage, turning precision attacks into elite infantry threats.

Panel titled Enhancements: Gene-tailored toxins described as experimental toxins used to coat the weapons of champions; notes Locus/Sanctus model only and +1 D.

Living Up to Legend rewards a Killer unit that destroys an enemy unit or Character.

Card titled 'Living Up to Legend: Heroes of the Uprising Stratagem' explaining WHEN a friendly Killer unit is attacked, TARGET that unit, and EFFECT makes nearby Genestealer Cult units within 12" no longer battle-shocked.

It clears battle-shock from visible friendly cult units within 12 inches. That is great flavor, because nothing rallies the underhive like watching an arrogant officer get removed.

Warhammer diorama showing a multi‑level battle with many painted miniatures and a large purple Tyranid on the right.

Purestrain Broodswarm goes in a different direction.

Poster titled 'Detachment Rules – Enemy Within' describing Genestealers' hunting abilities and that unengaged Purestrain Genestealer units may be placed in strategic reserves; Purestrain detachment cannot pair with another Purestrain detachment.

Enemy Within lets unengaged Purestrain Genestealer units enter Strategic Reserves at the end of the opponent’s Fight phase. Therefore, they can hit, fade, and reappear on flanks like nightmare xenos.

Upgrade card titled 'Mark of the Star Children' (Enhancements) showing flavor text about biomorphs; lists: +1 T, 4+ Sv, melee attacks +1 S, for PURESTRAIN GENESEALERS unit only.

Mark of the Star Children boosts up to three Purestrain units. They gain +1 Toughness, a 4+ save, and +1 Strength in melee.

Card titled Crawling Horror: Purestrain Broodswarm Strategem. Flavor text describes Genestealers; WHEN: start of opponent's Movement phase; TARGET: one Purestrain Genestealers unit; EFFECT: −6' detection range until end of turn.

Meanwhile, Crawling Horror gives a unit -6 inches detection range for a turn, helping them survive before the pounce.

Group of Warhammer 40,000 miniatures in orange and silver armor on a metallic battlefield with teal-lit water in the background, ready for battle.

Xenocult Masses then shifts back to the horde. Hordes of the Faithful heals three wounds from a Neophyte Hybrid unit in terrain during your Command phase.

Detachment Rules: Hordes of the Faithful. Neophyte Hybrids surge from tunnels; heal 3 wounds in terrain; HOSTS detachment cannot pair with another HOSTS.
UI card titled 'Enhancements: Devious Disguises' with an Upgrade badge; describes camouflage options and that Neophyte Hybrids have -3 detection range.

So, models return constantly. Devious Disguises gives Neophytes -3 inches detection range.

Strategic card: Xenocult Masses Stratagem for Neophyte Hybrids with brief description and stat blocks (When, Target, Effect). On the right UI icons panel.

Slunk from the Underbelly reduces incoming AP by 1 while they stay in terrain. Finally, each featured detachment costs 1 DP. Players can combine these tricks with Codex options like Brood Brother Auxilia or Outlander Claw.

Summary: Two Very Different Previews With Strong Tabletop Flavor

Overall, these previews understand their armies. Slaanesh gets collection building, a theatrical champion, and temptation-based rules. Meanwhile, Genestealer Cults get assassins, ambushers, and stubborn masses returning from the shadows. However, the win is identity. These rules and releases make each faction feel like itself, which matters more than raw power.

author avatar
Sam
The resident Flames of War, Historical, and narrative gaming expert. I have been playing tabletop games for 20 years with armies for 40k, Warhammer Fantasy, Horus Heresy, Age of Sigmar, Flames of War, Legions Imperialis, Battlefleet Gothic, and even Titanicus. I love narrative campaigns above all and dabble in customs missions too.

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