Golden-armored fantasy knight action figure wielding a sword and shield, standing on rubble among ancient columns with purple mist

Slaanesh Armies of Renown and Warhammer TV Looted Wagons Preview

This week’s Warhammer news hits two different hobby nerves at once. Age of Sigmar players get deeper Hedonites rules, which means more Slaanesh nonsense.

Meanwhile, Warhammer TV leans into Ork kitbashing, Armageddon lore, and gameplay advice. Together, it offers rules inspiration, narrative fuel, and hobby chaos.

Sigvald and the Twins Bring Slaanesh Drama to the Table

Epic Warhammer battle on a rocky cliff under a pink–purple sky; ornate armored figures clash.",

The new Hedonites of Slaanesh battletome is not just updating warscrolls. Instead, it adds two Armies of Renown that push the faction toward specific play fantasies. The Decadent Host is all about Sigvald, which feels perfect for Warhammer’s most flawless peacock.

Passive ability card titled 'All For The Prince' describing Sigvald in the libertine followers and his Decadent Host Sybarite unit, with ward points and combat damage rules.

This force centers on mortal followers whose role is making the Prince look better. In practice, Sigvald becomes absurdly protected when near Decadent Host Sybarites. All for the Prince gives him a 2+ Ward, but successful rolls push damage onto nearby units. That is nasty and hilarious, since his followers suffer so his hair remains flawless.

Fantasy game card: gold-armored prince with sword and shield on rocks, purple cape; heading 'Your Movement Phase' and title 'The Prince in the Mirror' with brief rules text.

The Contorted Epitome also matters, because The Prince in the Mirror can return Sigvald after destruction. He comes back near the Epitome and outside combat, so killing him once may only start the problem.

Rule card with purple header 'Once Per Turn (Army), End of Any Turn'; title 'IMPORTANT PEOPLE HAVE IMPORTANT PLACES TO BE' and italic note about Sigvald; includes an 'Effect' section describing movement and combat limits.

Better yet, Important People Have Important Places to Be lets him move 2D6 inches if he ends contesting an objective.

Passive card titled MIRROR-PLATE describing a polished armor wearer as a Mirror Guard member; duty to guard the Prince; effect: weapons have maximum Attacks of 1; while within 3 inches and visible to Sigvald, add 20 to Sigvald's control score.

Mirror-plate adds personality by making a follower carry reflective armor so Sigvald can admire himself. That unit has weapons capped at one attack, but if visible within 3 inches of Sigvald, he adds 20 to control.

Dexcessa, the Talon of Slaanesh—Melee Weapon card showing a demon with massive winged talons; weapon: Impaling Talons (Atk 8, Hit 3+, Wnd 3+, Rnd 2, Dmg 2); End of Any Turn: Joyous Battle Fury description.

The second Army of Renown, Court of the Godlings, focuses on Dexcessa, Synessa, and Daemons serving the twins. Dexcessa looks nastier now, with Impaling Talons that hit hard and grow deadlier. Joyous Battle Fury heals Dexcessa D3 and adds one attack after slain enemy models. Since the effect stacks, Dexcessa can become a blender if unchecked.

Card: THE GRANDER VISAGE. Once per Turn, if a Twin is damaged, choose the less-damaged Twin; grants Ward 4+ for rest of turn.

The twins’ rivalry drives The Grander Visage, which gives the less damaged twin a 4+ Ward for a turn.

'Essence Transfusion' spell card—during Your Hero Phase, pick donor and target Twins, roll 2D6 to cast, allocate damage to donor, heal target; keywords: Spell, Unlimited.

Meanwhile, Essence Transfusion lets one twin take damage to heal the other for double that amount.

Group of ornate fantasy miniatures on a rocky battlefield with purple fog; Warhammer Community logo top-right.

Finally, two Regiments of Renown spread temptation beyond Hedonites armies. Mist-Clad Revellers combine Blissbarb Archers and a Shardspeaker, appearing through mist.

Warhammer miniature battle scene with ornate blue portal shields fighting a tentacled white creature in purple fog and ruins.

Accursed Reflection brings the Contorted Epitome and Slaanesh manifestations into other Chaos forces.

Warhammer TV Mixes Looted Wagons, Armageddon Lore, and Game Tips

Two hobbyists wearing safety glasses and aprons assemble Warhammer miniatures at a workshop, with a large unfinished model on the table and banners in the background.

Warhammer TV’s lineup is more hobby-table focused, which balances the battletome rules. The headline show is Scrap Demon: Looted Wagons, and the premise sounds wonderfully unhinged. Four contestants get 10 vehicle frames and only three hours to build the best looted wagon. That setup is perfect, because Ork conversions thrive on bad decisions made confidently. The article also notes that these ramshackle results could fit beyond Orks, especially in the Ash Wastes or Dark Mechanicum forces.

Massive war machine blasts fire across a smoky battlefield; inset panels show a red-armored swordsman and a banner-wielding knight.

Loremasters returns to Armageddon with Battleground of Monsters and Heroes, covering the planet’s legends. On the Ork side, it highlights Ghazghkull, Uzmog, Glitztoof, and Wazdakka Gutsmek. On the Imperial side, it covers fighters like Yarrick and Graves. Since Armageddon anchors the new edition’s narrative mood, this is useful homework.

Presenter in a green-lit Warhammer studio with a 'Victory Pointers' logo, foreground shows a row of painted miniature archers on a game board.

Victory Pointers tackles the Age of Sigmar shooting phase, with advice from John. The week also includes a new Aeronautica Imperialis trailer.

Poster-style schedule for This Week on Warhammer TV: Tuesday features Loremasters artwork in a dark frame margin.

The article reminds subscribers about Warhammer+ benefits, including 700-plus episodes, app features, Vault access, yearly miniatures, competitions, and merch discounts.

Summary and Final Thoughts

Overall, this is a strong slice of Warhammer coverage. The Hedonites article gives Slaanesh players two themed ways to build around vanity, rivalry, and excess. Meanwhile, Warhammer TV keeps the wider hobby moving between release weeks. Better yet, both updates understand what makes Warhammer fun: rules with personality and hobby ideas.

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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