Promo banner with two armored characters—a sci‑fi soldier on the left and a Napoleonic general on the right—with a central 'Next Week' coming-soon stamp.

40K Battleforces, Ciaphas Cain, and Horus Heresy MkIV Pre-Orders Arrive Next Week

This Sunday Preview is packed with releases including 40K Battleforce, Horus Heresy, Black Library, and Warhammer TV.

However, the big draw is clearly the mix of practical army boxes and characterful collector pieces. For hobbyists, that means fresh projects, limited-stock temptations, and several easy ways to start armies. Also, Ciaphas Cain finally stepping onto the tabletop gives the whole week a welcome dose of Imperial comedy.

Battleforces, New Guard Vehicles, and Heresy Reinforcements

Two painted Warhammer miniatures: a red‑uniform officer with a ornate rifle and cape, and a green‑clad heavy gunner, on rocky bases. Warhammer Community logo top right.

The 40K section starts with Ciaphas Cain and Jurgen, which feels like a long-overdue Black Library crossover. Cain arrives as the allegedly heroic duelist and inspirational leader, while Jurgen brings the necessary meltagun backup. The kit can be built as separate models or as a small diorama, which is perfect for hobbyists who like narrative basing. Meanwhile, four limited-stock Battleforces give players ready-made army cores.

Group of Warhammer Tyranid miniatures in purple and pink hues on round bases, arranged as a display or collection.

Tyranids get a Hive Tyrant-led swarm with a Lictor, Warriors, Von Ryan’s Leapers, Hormagaunts, Termagants, and Ripper Swarms. That box feels ideal for players wanting synapse, speed, and gribblies in one purchase.

Group photo of Warhammer miniatures: a large multi-legged beast with riders and a collection of infantry figures on round bases, with Warhammer Community logo in the corner.

Chaos Space Marines receive a Warband built around a Lord Discordant on Helstalker, Legionaries, Cultists, Obliterators, and a Venomcrawler. That mix gives Chaos players bodies, daemon engines, and heavy firepower without feeling too narrow.

Group of Warhammer 40k Tyranid miniatures, featuring a towering central model on a throne and many smaller infantry figures on round bases; Warhammer Community logo visible.

Necrons get a Catacomb Command Barge, Warriors, Flayed Ones, Ophydian Destroyers with Plasmacyte, a Doomstalker, and Scarabs.

Warhammer 40k miniatures: two green tanks, artillery, and many infantry models on round bases, ready for battle.

Astra Militarum players get a proper combined-arms Platoon with a Commissar, Cadian Command Squad, Shock Troops, Field Ordnance Battery, Basilisk, and Rogal Dorn. The Guard also receive two new vehicles.

Green armored personnel carrier miniature with tracks, a mounted machine gun, and two soldiers on top; Warhammer Community logo in the corner.

The Centaur Rapid Strike Vehicle is a fast transport with open firing space, while the Hippogriff AFV brings flexible guns, including vigilator, chiron gatling, melta, or heavy lascannon options.

Scale model of a Cadia Warhammer armored vehicle with a commander figure, six-wheeled chassis, and long cannon on a white background.

Those kits suggest the Guard range is leaning harder into mobile support, not just static gunlines.

Group of teal-green Space Marines with bolters and melee weapons arranged around a large teal armored tank on circular brown bases, studio shot with Warhammer Community logo.

In Heresy, the Maximus Battle Group brings 20 MkIV Tactical Marines, 10 MkIV Assault Marines, a Sicaran, a Contemptor, and transfer sheets. Since that box is also limited stock, Heresy players may want to move quickly.

Yellow armored tank model with a large black missile launcher on top, tracked wheels, and blue and silver details (Warhammer Community branding).

Also, the Whirlwind Missile Tank adds long-range infantry clearing with HE or Pyrax missiles.

Cover of Warhammer: The Horus Heresy — Zone Mortalis, showing armored Space Marines in a dark, industrial scene.

The new Zone Mortalis Journal Tactica updates claustrophobic 1,500-point battles with new missions and units, which should make corridor fights even nastier. For more details, read the original article, Sunday Preview: Battleforces, MkIV Space Marines, and a Hero of the Imperium.

Black Library and Warhammer TV Round Out the Week

Book cover for 'For the Emperor' Illustrated and Annotated Edition by Sandy Mitchell, featuring a pencil sketch of soldiers with weapons and a red title area.

Black Library gets a heavy week too. For the Emperor returns in an illustrated and annotated hardback, now with Sandy Mitchell notes alongside Inquisitor Vail’s usual commentary. There is also a Valhallan Regimental Banner, a new hardback edition of The Sabbat Worlds Crusade, and a special edition of Rynn’s World with cloth-effect cover, foil details, printed edges, ribbon marker, and a new introduction.

Red ornate hardcover book titled 'The Sabbath Worlds Crusade' by Dan Abnett, featuring gold filigree borders and an imperial eagle emblem on the cover.

Paperbacks include Krakenblood, Vagabond Squadron, and Starseer’s Ruin. French readers get HIVE and Vainglorious, while German readers get HIVE and Defender of the Imperium. Finally, Warhammer TV adds Scribes and Scriveners with Denny Flowers, a Chaos Space Marines versus T’au Battle Report, Daz’s Aeldari on Armies of Renown, and the final Aeronautica Imperialis episode.

This Week on Warhammer TV banner with teal theme and a schedule listing Tuesday through Friday panels below the header.

The article also notes a coming Warhammer Preview event and the Battle for Hive Death Mire campaign. Ciaphas Cain and the 40K Battleforces are delayed in South Korea. As a whole, this section feels aimed at readers, viewers, and hobby lifers who like the setting between games.

Summary and Final Thoughts

Overall, this is a strong release week for collectors and players alike. The Battleforces offer real army starts, while the Heresy range gets meaningful MkIV support. Also, Cain, Black Library releases, and Warhammer TV keep the week from feeling like plain product logistics. There is enough here for competitive players, narrative gamers, painters, and readers. That balance is exactly what makes a good Sunday Preview work without drowning anyone in rules churn.

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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