Codex Astartes
- – Captain Titus, Ultramarines 2nd Company
- – Leandros, Ultramarines 2nd Company
- – Leman Russ, during the Horus Heresy
The Codex Astartes (a.k.a Codex Asstardes) is the collective name given to a series of tactical and organisational guides written by Roboute Guilliman over the course of his life, compiled at the end of the Horus Heresy. The Codex's organizational mandates split the remaining Space Marine Legions into smaller chapters for reasons discussed below. It also includes many tactical doctrines and stratagems for just about every situation, like the formidable STEEL REHN! Most loyalist Space Marine chapters follow the Codex Astartes to varying degrees, with Ultramarines and their successors seeing it as literal holy writ while some chapters like the Black Templars, Space Wolves, and probably the Dark Angels (albeit quietly) merely see it as a book of tactics to be referred to when necessary. Most chapters fall somewhere between those two extremes, using the codex but making adaptations where necessary (the Imperial Fists, for example, use the Codex, but have a special appendix on how to Fist better, called the Book of Five Spheres. Perhaps Dorn was a fan of Musashi?). Generally every Chapter does still respect it as it is the brilliance of a Primarch; even the Space Wolves do respect its teachings although they view it much like how modern officers view The Art of War. Almost all chapters will make a few minor alterations at the very least, usually just superficial things accounting for the chapter's culture and occasionally major organizational changes due to needs or wants. At the absolute least, every Chapter follows its rules on how to coordinate with other Chapters into a temporary chain-of-command when in joint operations. Because it'd be really, unforgivably stupid not to. Even the Black Templars follow this.
After waking up, Guilliman has been making minor tweaks to the Codex Astartes thanks to the addition of Primaris Marines to the equation. The biggest obvious change is the addition of a pair Lieutenant positions per Battle Company (to act as actual battle leaders responsible for the tactical, while the Brother-Captain focuses on the strategic), a reshuffling of Battle Company composition and categories, and how all Primaris Marines in the reserve companies are supposed to undergo Vanguard training, and can be freely seconded to Battle companies in that role.
The hard-cap of 1000 marines seems to have been "officially" retained, but as shown by both the Dark Imperium books as well as the updated Ultramarines Chapter composition in 9th Edition (which not only featured regular Scouts in the 10th Company, but ten whole squads of Vanguard marines), it's now mostly a guideline rather than a strict standard. Unless a Chapter was particularly anal-retentive, that is.
You know...teeeechnically the implementation of the Codex organization and limitations by Chapter was for breaking up the Legions. Which means, if you were to get your lawyer on, it's arguable (preferably afterward so you have a lot of backup) that after the Legions broke up into Chapters, it no longer applied. So, you could ignore the size limitations and claim that the request was only for the Legions to break into thousand-man Chapters. They did so. You're a Chapter, not a Legion, so it doesn't apply to you. Unless the High Lords are claiming their authority is greater than the Emperor's and thus can dictate law to Space Marines. You don't think you're above the Emperor...do you? Try this and see how it turns out.
What the Codex set out to Accomplish[edit]
- – Captain Barbosa of the Black Locks illustrating how Guilliman intended his Codex to actually function
The Codex Astartes was written with three main purposes in mind.
First, the Codex is a tactical and strategic guide, containing tips and plans on how to handle nearly any battle situation imaginable and then some. The Codex served with flying colors until the modern day of the setting when its weaknesses began to show against certain unconventional enemies. Much like The Art of War or the FBI tactical guidebook, if you can get your hands on a copy you can anticipate the actions of those that use it, but countering it is really fucking hard because of just how comprehensive the Codex is. It doesn't just tell you "When your enemy is doing B, do C to counter it," it also says, "And when the enemy counters C with X and Y, use Z to shut down their counter." In real life warfare, soldiers have a hard time adapting to new information under pressure, which is why commanders need to limit the orders they give to their troops and keep them as unambiguous and simple as possible; drilling them on exactly what to do in a given situation, especially in such a comprehensive manner, does have its advantages since it reduces mental clutter. Sun Tzu's Art of War is still being taught millennia after its publication; now imagine that same spark of tactical genius manifesting inside the mind of a superhumanly intelligent demigod. The Codex isn't perfect - no tactical treatise is - but it's damn close.
Second, the Codex is an organizational guide. Guilliman was a flawed genius, an organizational savant literally unmatched in the galaxy and more than a little OCD when it came to detail. Beyond simple mandates about the composition of the Chapters, the Codex contains information on the minutiae of administration, with details on every subject from bolt shells to bread, water distribution to weapon production, organization of auxiliary forces, suggested countermeasures to viral outbreaks, training schedules, troop morale, ammunition production, distribution of that ammunition to terrestrial and naval combat units, how large reserves can be built up, how long those reserves will last when production stopped, ration distribution for militant and civilian populations, how those rations can be stored, food cycling to avoid waste, integration of chain of command with allied and auxiliary forces, integration of militia into formal military, suggested staging area locations relative to battle lines, suggested landing area locations relative to battle lines, prioritizing access to and from these areas, guides to avoiding massive compound sentences, fortification locations, demolition strategies for those fortifications in the event that they must be abandoned, and more. It also has plenty to say on how to live your day-to-day life with everything from codes of honor to follow, to how your boots should be laced. Seriously, the Codex can tell you how to spend every minute of your life from birth to death, and pretty much every part of it is either acceptable or outstanding if admittedly inflexible. Much of it, if applied to the Imperium as a whole, would also solve most of the grimdark.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the final version of the Codex is designed to keep the power of the Imperium decentralized. At the end of the Heresy, Guilliman wanted to ensure there wouldn't be any repeating performances of the strife that had gripped the galaxy. To this end, he tried to unite all Astartes into a single Legion but the High Lords went ape shit about this so instead he split the Imperial Army into the Imperial Navy and the Imperial Guard and broke up the Legions, to keep one person from ever having the power to cause such massive chaos. Whether or not this was a good move is a subject of ongoing debate. Detractors would point out that the newly decentralized and feudal Imperium (decentralized in lack of leadership organization, not in the layers of governing sense) is nowhere near as capable of unified action as it was before the heresy, pointing at how this decentralization screwed the Imperium over during the War of The Beast, while its defenders would point out the examples of The Badab War or the Macharian Crusade as examples of too much centralized power devolving into a clusterfuck even though the Badab War was an issue because the Badab side had strong organization while the Imperials did not and the Macharian Heresy was because of a lack of leadership and organization and therefore both are just more examples of why poor organization and coordination is bad, to say nothing of the Horus Heresy demonstrating why giving any one person too much power over the Imperium is a very bad idea but then again even if he had no authority the people who chose to follow him would have made that choice regardless, they aren’t mindless wind-up toys. But, really, the problem in all examples of too much power under one person was A) that person not being carefully watched by someone else and B) everyone under them being indoctrinated for mindless obedience to orders. Considering the Imperium has solved A but still heavily emphasizes B, it really could go either way. A large scale rebellion isn't really something the Imperium needs to fear regardless of who has how much power as people will rally to anyone they believe in, but someone with power over a lot of forces could easily deploy them in ways that strategically weakens the Imperium. It's not uncommon for corrupted/traitorous commanders to send regiments into traps, for example.
However, one thing that people often forget when they argue about whether Legions or post-Heresy Chapters are better is that the Legions and Chapters have very different roles. Legions of a hundred thousand Astartes are great when you want to steamroll the galaxy - which is exactly what the original Legions designed for - but not so great when you want to maintain peace in a sprawling galaxy-spanning empire. What the post-Scouring Imperium really needed were small-scale elite rapid-response forces, which is exactly the kind of role that the Chapters are most suited for. Well, that coupled with a large normal army to act as first-responders very quickly and hold the line for the big boys to come smash face. Come to think of it, this is very much like how real life destroyers worked in WW2, how infantry work in a mechanized infantry unit, and other such things. Fitting, since Space Marines are basically living tanks.
This is also a much more efficient use of the Astartes. You don't need a space marine to man a gun line or garrison a fort - why let a marine do a guardsman's job? - and considering how long it takes to create a fully-fledged Astartes, you'll want to get the most out of every single one of them. Remember also that there weren't all that many loyalist Astartes left alive after the Heresy. Getting a thousand Astartes killed just to win a battle may have been A-OK during the Great Crusade or the Heresy, but the post-Heresy Imperium just couldn't afford losses like that anymore (for a while, at least), so it only makes sense for the space marines to conform to tactics where your average space marine battle will result in few marine casualties. Guilliman designed the Codex marine armies to be modular, precise, and efficient in ways that the original legions weren't. Another factor might have been the cultural divide between the few surviving veterans of the Great Crusade and the Inductii recruited to bulk up numbers on short notice, which was rapidly leading to irreconcilable differences between the newcomers and the veterans that threatened to erupt into further internal strife. Which doesn't make sense given they recruited from the places they always had and indoctrinated newbies into their respective Legion's culture.
Of course, the tradeoff is that the marines are no longer well suited for large-scale warfare. But large-scale warfare and armoured warfare are now the Imperial Guard's job, anyway. On top of that Legion-sized (or at least multichapter) deployments can and will still happen whenever necessary, like with the Armageddon wars, the Black Crusades or the Wall of the Imperial Fist Legion during the War of the Beast. That said, there are situations in M41 where the Legions of old would probably be more effective than any gathering of Chapters: the Tyranids and the bigger Necron dynasties come to mind, though there's also less formidable threats like the Tau (pfft "threats"). But even there the Guard is a perfectly fine substitute for a Legion in most if not all of those cases, especially with their godly mechanization, tanks, and artillery. Hell, their standard procedure is to simply use various artillery to eradicate everyone and everywhere the enemy could hide (bunkers, trenches, buildings, tunnels, anything) then send in tanks to wipe out any resistance and the ground pounders to hunt down the survivors. We have billions of Guardsmen dying every day, but the number of Guardsmen in total makes losing billions a day look like a figurative drop in a figurative ocean. This means that the Astartes are not needed nearly as often as the Guard, especially since the Guard almost always operates on the defensive, which means that line-breaking supersoldier armies are rarely needed.
Interestingly enough, the original version of the Codex had no plans to break apart the Legions at all. Instead, it proposed their unification into a single Legion formed from multiple self-sufficient Chapters, which would merge and break up as needed regardless of which Primarch they descended from. While this may have been able to preserve the advantages of being a Legion better, the other High Lords of Terra were scared shitless by the idea of the Space Marines unifying and promptly rebelling a second time, so the original plan never came to pass. Even the idea of it happening was enough for the 41st millennium-era High Lords to plot Guilliman's overthrow when they heard he might resume his old position, which shows how little they know. The Primarchs are the sons of the Emperor for a reason. They are really fucking scary dudes. Besides, the Space Marines would unify as much or as little as they choose and there really isn't anything the High Lords can do about it so their concerns over Guilliman's original intentions for Chapters didn't matter and the changes didn't either. They still operate the same way Guilliman had intended, but with far less communication and co-ordination unless they needed it. Since they usually aren't needed, it doesn't really matter at all. Except on the strategic level for the Imperium. As lacking coordination means blindly fumbling around.
Even so, the biggest problem with splitting up the Legions comes down to the High Lords having control over creating new Chapters instead of letting each Chapter recruit all they can and naturally split up when they get, say, a hundred too many Astartes so that the number of Space Marines can keep up with the population and physical size of the Imperium (and its enemies). As a result, there are half as many Marines now as there were in the Great Crusade despite ten thousand years of growth and continuous expansion according to the lore. The lack of Space Marines from splitting the Chapters and giving over authority for making more to the Council of Terra also had the effect of preventing the Space Marines from having the numbers and coordination needed to enforce Compliance. Because of which the Imperium has become a hellhole and a mockery of what it was created to be.
In addition, the lack of large-scale coordination, or at least a source of information on the galaxy's strategic situation as a whole, has resulted in each Chapter pretty much just wandering around aimlessly looking for things to kill and sometimes responding to distress calls. Making them strategically useless except in the case of fighting massive invasions. Ironically, the Adeptus Astartes could probably fix this problem if they cooperated with the Inquisition's Ordo Astartes to act as coordinators and sources of strategic information and to help them with their immense authority. However, their wounded egos at the organization even existing and thinking it has any authority over them (and general disdain/hatred for the Inquisition) won't let them do so.
When Guilliman was finally revived, he began to see the flaws that came from strict adherence to the Codex Astartes which were partially his fault from paranoia after the Heresy, and others that had arisen as he wasn't around to correct them given he spent nearly ten thousand years in stasis moments from death. Thus, he has begun reforming its guidelines and got rid of several of its restrictions on Space Marines. He currently hopes to replace it entirely with the Codex Imperialis - a tome that won't just describe how to organize and direct the Adeptus Astartes or even the other Imperial military forces, but Imperial governance as a whole possibly down to the ideal daily lives of every Imperial citizen, likely in an attempt to make the entire Imperium look and operate as smoothly as Ultramar. Needless to say, this will probably be the size of a 10 volume encyclopedia, and still hasn’t been finished.
Chapter Organisation[edit]
Under the Codex Astartes, the Space Marine legions were to be split into groups of 1000 fighting men called a Chapter. While many people assume this means a chapter is composed of 1000 men, this is a bit misleading because that number does not include the chapter's upper echelons, support structure, auxiliary units (now including Scouts), dreadnought-interred veterans, the Librarius, honor guard, or other specialists (Techmarines, Apothecaries, Chaplains, pilots, permanent shipboard crews etc); this means that a chapter will commonly have upwards of 1100 space marines while still being codex compliant (1000 Brothers and Sergeants on the line, the rest officers and specialists) and many chapters will have large units of mortal retainers (including thousands of Voidship crew in their fleet, hell thousands to tens of thousands for a single ship isn't uncommon, so Chapters with big fleets pretty much have massive naval infantrymen just be default though of course the number doesn't hold a candle to Imperial Navy voidsmen) to serve as auxiliary forces. It's not uncommon for a chapter to have tens of thousands of soldiers to call upon, though only a minority of them will actually be Adeptus Astartes. It's important to note that the Chapter was already an existing subunit within the pre-Heresy legions, and those were organized much as they were in the Codex. Astartes chapters maintain a Fortress-Monastery that serves as their home and may maintain other garrisons as well. Fleet-based chapters are addressed below.
It should be noted, however, that the numbers of Veterans in a Chapter is not limited. Most Veterans choose to stick with their parent Battle Company. Considering how the training pipeline goes from the Scouts and through each Reserve Company, some might suggest the Space Marine Chapters treat the Battle Companies as a final training and test and then make those who pass into Veterans to circumvent the recruitment limitations. That they have not change recruitment practices and rates despite their numerical limitations is at least a little suspicious and confusing. Then there's the Imperial Fists recruiting from countless worlds plus Terra yet somehow have only a thousand Marines.
By the 42nd Millennium, the reawakened Guilliman has set about redrafting the Codex Astartes to accommodate the inclusion of Primaris Marines, who do not form the same sorts of squads as their traditional brothers. However he has not massively changed the organisational units of "Chapter" and/or "Company". With the new codex, the space marine company is still 100 men on paper, but can be organised in a far more flexible arrangement of squads and can accommodate additional squads drawn from reserve companies. It also means that whole Companies (or even Chapters) of Primaris Marines can be formed without the need to makes exceptions for them.
The 1st Company is composed of Veterans, and only marines who have served in the first company are allowed to wear terminator armor.
The 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th Companies are Battle Companies. Guilliman's reorganisation allows companies to be composed of as many as twenty squads of five men in which there will always be least six Battle line squads, at least two Fire Support squads, and least two Close Support squads. They train together, and when a Space Marine Company deploys as a single unit it will be one of these.
The 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th Companies are Reserve Companies and more specialized than the first five companies. The 6th and 7th Companies are composed entirely of Battleline squads (whose Tactical Marines also specialize in using bikes and Land Speeders, respectively), the 8th Company of Close Support squads and the 9th Company entirely of Fire Support squads. Additionally, Primaris Marines in reserve companies may also be seconded to Battle Companies as Vanguard Marines.
Originally, the 10th Company was composed entirely of Scout Marines, who were eventually promoted to other companies after a certain number of years. It's worthy of note that the 10th company was typically the largest in the chapter, containing 100 neophytes in addition to veterans seconded to the company for training. Additionally, the 10th company's 100 man limit was often uncapped so as to keep the chapter's flow of new marines steady in times of great loss. With the recent revisions to the Codex, Guilliman has ordered that all Primaris Marines train in Vanguard Tactics during their time in the Scout Company and can later revert to the squad organisation as required, whereas a regular Tactical Marine might never don his Scout uniform ever again (except in the old Deathwatch RPG). Consequently it now retains 10 squads' worth of fully initiated Vanguard Marines whose roles can be changed as needed, while the Scouts no longer seem to be counted towards the nominal 100-marine limit at all and just assigned where necessary and recruited however the Chapter deems fit. Given the current circumstances this is a sensible move.
There is a fair amount of leeway given to what roles the reserve companies can maintain. The 7th company, for instance, is given the moniker of "tactical reserve." Some chapters field these companies as bodies to replace losses from the battle companies. Some use them to train landspeeder pilots (the Codex states the entire company should be able to ride landspeeders.). Some chapters, such as the Salamanders, use the 7th company to train fighter pilots for their Air Force. Others, typically those suffering from heavy losses, use it in place of the tech auxillera for tank crews. Still others keep weapon specialists, such as dedicated plasma-gunners, on hand to replace battle company soldiers as need demands.
Marine roles[edit]
Among the tenets of the Codex, Guilliman outlined the roles of various Marines to be used in Chapters. They include the following:
Battleline Squad[edit]
The tactically flexible combat squads, being equipped with a type of bolter for ranged combat, a bolt pistol as a sidearm, and a combat knife, chainsword, or power weapon for close quarters combat. A Space Marine in a Battleline squad has served in both the Fire Support and Close Support squads. Under the Codex, the four battle companies will be composed of six Battleline squads, as well as the entire sixth and seventh companies.
- Tactical Squad: The backbone of a Battle Company, Tactical Marines are those who are flexible in combat, relying on both ranged weapons and melee weapons in combat. Note that due to the order of the Companies, they usually have served as both Assault and Devastator Marines, so they definitely know the basics of both, granting the majority of the chapter great theoretical tactical flexibility. Ironically, due to their wargear, they’d actually be more like a step up from how neophytes fight and so would make a much more logical role as the first post-graduation position of a newly minted Space Marine than Devastator or Assault, both of whom are the opposite of all the neophyte’s training to this point.
- Intercessor Squad: Those Primaris Marines who are armed uniformly with some version of Bolt Rifle, either the standard version, the more mobile Auto Bolt Rifle, or the longer-ranged Stalker bolt rifle. Their role on the battlefield is to set up lines of fire and advance on and secure objectives much in a similar way to Tactical Squads; although they lack their little brothers' overall flexibility due to their exclusive use of Bolt Rifle variants, it is said that a combination of these units with other squads is invaluable to a commander. They may be equipped with Combi Grenade Launchers. The Sergeant may take Chainswords, Power Weapons and/or Hand Flamers.
- Infiltrator Squad: Recon Primaris Marines wearing a slightly lighter armament, but are expected to perform extended operations behind enemy lines. All Primaris Marines can revert to Vanguard Marines at any time, though Primaris Marines from the reserve companies often get seconded to frontline companies in this way.
Fire Support Squads[edit]
The heavy weapon squads, designed for anti-armor and anti-infantry. This is the first place a Space Marine will serve after receiving his Black Carapace, allowing him to gain battlefield experience from relative safety. Under the Codex, the battle companies will employ two Fire Support squads, as well as the entire ninth company.
- Devastator Squad: Devastator Marines can be summed up in three words: Blow shit up. The purpose of the Devastator is to provide artillery strikes and heavy weapons fire in battle, and hunt tanks. Once a Scout earns his Black Carapace and Power Armor, he will be attached to a Devastator Squad, allowing him to gain battlefield experience by watching the conflict from afar with the added perk of allowing a new marine to bond with his armor while learning its strengths by lugging heavy weapons around. Unlike Sisters of Battle, the Devastator title refers to organization rather than weapon skill. Devastator squads will contain both heavy weapons and bolter marines who act as spotters and loaders; likewise, the heavy weapon marines in tactical squads are tactical marines, not devastators.
- Devastator Centurion Squad: Devastators trained to wear Centurion Warsuits, allowing them to carry considerably more firepower than any other marine short of a dreadnought. Centurion squads are organised in combat squads of three rather than five, which means that the reorganization of the codex to accommodate more variety actually means leftover soldiers can bulk up other Demi-squads without interfering with the 100 man standard.
- Hellblaster Squad: Primaris Marines who show a particular talent for marksmanship are elevated to the position of Hellblaster, which makes them a sort of elite promotion rather than Devastators who are often newbies. The reason for this is because the Plasma Incinerators they wield are very rare and difficult to maintain, and so are be entrusted to the care of a warrior who can put them to best use. Their role is to provide dedicated anti-armor firepower without sacrificing mobility in the process, and assault and heavy variants of the Plasma Incinerator also exist for greater effectiveness against massed light infantry and vehicles, respectively.
- Aggressor Squad: Primaris marines equipped with Mk X Gravis Armour, Auto Boltstorm Gauntlets and Flame Gauntlets (essentially power fists with built-in bolters or flamers, respectively). in the case of the former, they may also use shoulder-mounted grenade launchers to further supplement their firepower. Aggressors fulfill a similar role to Centurions and are also organised into combat squads of three, but are somewhat more lightly armed in exchange for superior maneuverability. Their role is to provide close-range anti-infantry fire support to an advancing force as they move in for the kill.
- Eliminator Squad: Marksmen Vanguard Marines wearing stripped-down Phobos Armour, with a Shrike Pattern Bolt Sniper Rifle with special ammunition or Las-fusils for AT work. Their duty is to hunt for targets of opportunity while being extra stealthy.
- Suppressor Squad: Come with Omnis Pattern Armour, a lighter variant of Gravis Armour equipped with various jump packs, grav chutes and shock absorbers. Unlike Inceptor Marines, they aren't meant to crash onto the battlefield from low orbit and cause havoc but are instead intended to maneuver themselves into position and lay down withering fire with their Accelerator Autocannons.
- Eradicator Squad: Come with Melta Rifles for medium range anti armor support and are equipped with Gravis Armor. Can exchange their Melta Rifles for the Heavy Melta Rifle variant, and one in three per squad can carry a Multi-Melta.
- Heavy Intercessor Squad: Equipped with Gravis Armor and carry either Heavy Bolt Rifles, shorter ranged and less powerful but faster firing Hellstorm Bolt Rifles or more powerful, slower and longer ranged Executor Bolt Rifles. One in every five Heavy Intercessor can carry a corresponding Heavy Bolter variant. Standard Heavy Bolt Rifle squads carry normal Heavy Bolters, Hellstorm Bolt Rifle Squads carry Hellstorm Heavy Bolters and Executor Bolt Rifle Squads carry Executor Heavy Bolters.
- Desolation Squad: The Desolation squads carry oversized Castellan Launchers capable of rapid fire anti-infantry work, with each marine also getting either Super-frag or Super-krak missile tubes attached to the Castellan for yet more Dakka. The Sergeants instead get the Vengor Launcher, which retains the rapid fire rotary anti infantry missile and exchanges the super-frag/super-krak tubes for an indirect fire generalist missile.
- Infernus Squad: Equipped with Pyreblasters, these squads conduct close fire support with their improved flamers and clear out infestations of enemy infantry, hordes of creatures or other nasty stuff that needs a good burning. Each Infernus also carries a bolt pistol by default just in case.
Close Support Squads[edit]
The close range, rapid moving squads, intended to rapidly close with the enemy, engage in either melee or close quarters gun battles, and then fall back. Space Marines will serve in these squads after serving a few tours in the Fire Support squads before moving to the Battle line squads. Under the Codex, the battle companies will be composed of two Close Support squads, along with the entire eighth company.
- Assault Squad: Assault Marines are those who specialize in melee combat, using Chain and Power weapons alike to fuck up the enemies of the Imperium of Man. In addition, they also usually take to the field wearing jump packs, which allows them to deepstrike onto the battlefield, move quickly from point to point, and even execute a jet-fueled charge of awesomeness into the enemy. This is the next stop in a new Marine's career when he graduates from the Devastator squads (Blood Angels start as Assault and become Devastators, a relatively common approved Codex variation; see below for details), helping to familiarize him with any weapons he hasn't used yet and putting him through the crushing psychological stress of hand-to-hand combat under something resembling optimal conditions. Assault marines can also use bikes, attack bikes, landspeeders, drop pods, Rhinos, and Razorbacks.
- Assault Centurion Squad: Assault Marines trained to use the Centurion warsuits for siege breaking and trench clearing.
- Inceptor Squads: Primaris marines who fulfill an analogue to the Assault squad role, though their function is less about engaging the enemy at close quarters and more to act as the spearhead unit that will arrive in advance of the main force and secure the drop zone. Their Assault Bolters and Plasma Exterminators are surprisingly powerful for their size, allowing Inceptors to perform deadly hit-and-run attacks with jump packs to move in for attack and rapidly fall back for the Battleline Squads to hold the newly acquired ground.
- Reiver Squad: Primaris specialists in shock and awe tactics, who fill a role somewhere between Assault Squad and Scouts. Their mission profile is to create confusion and terror by attacking from unexpected angles; to do this they can either infiltrate onto the battlefield or glide in silently on grav chutes. In battle, they can choose to wield either a paired combat blade and heavy bolt pistol for melee use or a bolt carbine for close-quarters firefights.
- Incursor Squad: Vanguard marines clad in lightweight Phobos Armor made for flushing out hidden positions and close combat. Their special Occulus Bolt Carbines and Multi-Spectrum Arrays allow them to detect enemies in any circumstance, while their haywire mines can cripple vehicles. Curiously, these are the only marines that seem to know how to dual-wield their knives effectively enough to be standard issue.
- Bike Squad: Space Marines on combat bikes, bikes scaled for armored Space Marines and armed with storm bolters for assaulting enemy forces. Bike Squads are used for rapid shock assault and flanking maneuvers.
- Outrider Squad: Primaris Bikers, armed with bike-mounted frontal twin bolters, bolt pistols and Astartes chainswords.
- Assault Intercessor Squad: Primaris marines equipped with Chainswords and Heavy Bolt pistols, as well as jump packs for rapid movement. The Sergeant may take the same weapons as an Intercessor sergeant, as well as Plasma Pistols and Thunder Hammers.
Others[edit]
Other types of Space Marine squads that don't qualify as part of the aforementioned squads, composed of Space Marine veterans or neophytes.
- Scout Squad: Scout Marines are Neophyte Space Marines who are charged with scouting terrain and enemy positions, in addition to demolitions and what we would today call special forces operations. A risky job, but this has the effect of ensuring that the more cautious ones survive while the reckless and foolish are weeded out.
- Veteran Squad: Veteran Marines are those who have been through several centuries of combat, allowing them access to all the cool toys in the Chapter's armory. They're hopefully experienced and cool-headed enough not to, say, super-glue the relic blade of the founder to the codpiece of their armor to skullfuck the enemies of mankind. A Chapter's first company veterans get to wear Terminator armor (the Crux Terminatus is a cross between a medal and authorization papers) but they sometimes stay with normally-sized power armor which is instead slowly turned into Artificer armor by all the bling and enhancements. Power-armored Veterans are divided into two subgroups: Vanguard (who focus on close quarters combat) and Sternguard (who focus on bolter drills and other forms of ranged warfare).
- Bladeguard Veteran Squad: Veteran Primaris Marines with Storm Shields, Heavy Bolt Pistols and Master Crafted Power Swords. The Sergeant may exchange his Heavy Bolt Pistol for a Plasma Pistol or a Neo-Volkite Pistol.
The first and tenth companies very rarely take to the field as single formations; instead the veterans are seconded to other companies, often serving as commanding officers and sergeants to other squads, so as to spread their experience and skill as widely as possible. The same is also said of Scouts, who are attached to other companies as auxiliary units so that they can learn their trades alongside their more experienced brothers, which was in fact the standard operating procedure as putting all scouts together was only done in major battles in desperate situations where the entire chapter was at war before the reforms dispersed the scouts by default to all companies and made the Tenth Company into a full vanguard company. Now, Vanguard squads are far more likely to be dispersed and if the Vanguard Company is working as one there is a direly critical objective to infiltrate which will likely draw most of the Chapter anyway. If the Veteran Company is fighting all together shit has officially hit the fan.
On top of listed equipment pretty much every marine not in Terminator or Gravis armor carries multiple frag and krak grenades and their combat knives.
A very common codex variant is to keep a company's veterans attached to their parent company permanently, acting as an additional squad in a company and assisting the captain and his command staff where necessary, filling the role of Champion, Standard Bearer and any other administrative positions as the Command Squad. These men are very seldom counted as part of the 100 man structure of the company and are instead counted among the command staff. More rarely the Veterans will supplant one of the tactical squads, particularly when they act autonomously from the Captain and form the line of battle, instead of as a command squad - or in an even greater deviation from the codex, are added as an extra squad that is counted amongst the company's order of battle. This organization is used by the Space Sharks, Iron Hands (and most of their successors due to the ancient Clan-Company tradition), Iron Snakes, Executioners, and Dark Angels (and their successors, as their first and second companies are the Deathwing and Ravenwing and they have... special duties, see below and their articles) among others.
Ranks[edit]
The Codex Astartes formalized and simplified the ranks among the Adeptus Astartes, eliminating some ranks like "commander" while adding some more. They include:
- Chapter Master: The grand poobah of the Chapter. He is the one who gives Marine companies their assignments and is under no obligation to recognize any external authority save for the God-Emperor of Mankind, though most Chapter masters will recognize and honor (if not obey) the authority of the Inquisition and the Administratum. A chapter master is not merely the commander-in-chief of the chapter; he is also expected to be an administrator, a paragon of martial skill, a councilor, a tactician, a strategist and often even an admiral or a planetary governor as the chapter master will typically have ultimate authority over the chapter's homeworld (or home fleet in the case of crusading chapters). Needless to say, chapter masters are some of the most formidable individuals in the galaxy, rivaled only by the greatest heroes and monsters of other races. Some Chapters (especially the Iron Hands and most of their successors who use the Clan-Company system) don't have Chapter Masters and have the company Captains jointly rule through council, though they may elect one among their number as Chapter Master either temporarily or permanently.
- Captain: Captains are the commanders of Companies, overseeing their Marines from the front line instead of the back. Captains are usually promoted from the senior Sergeant in the Company (though with the advent of Lieutenants this might have changed). The most senior is the First Captain. Each Company Captain also holds a Chapter-level position of authority, supervising his Chapter's fleet, vehicle pool, recruits, or territory.
- The First Captain holds the title of Regent and commands the Veteran First Company as well as being the regent of the Chapter's Home World or Fleet and the heir apparent to the Chapter Master. Most likely of all the Captains to wear Terminator armour as he is leading the squads that get to have it in the first place. Some chapters have the Chapter Master be the First Captain and directly lead the First Company (found in the Salamanders and Crimson Fists).
- The Captain of the Second Company is the Master of the Watch. Charged with maintaining discipline, they serve as the prosecution during trials within the Chapter and handle other cases involving a lack in discipline but which are not quite heretical. Their main responsibility lies in the logistics of defense for the chapter's Fortress-Monastery/main base of operations. In fleet-bound chapters these responsibilities are often rolled into the title of Master of the Fleet.
- The Captain of the Third Company is the Master of the Arsenal. They oversee the Chapter's stockpile of weapons, munitions, and vehicles of war, maintaining both number and quality of such. Likely works closely alongside the Master of the Forge.
- The Captain of the Fourth Company is the Master of the Fleet, charged with taking care of the Chapter's Fleet. It would seem logical that this position is more important in fleet-based Chapters as ships are even more key to the Chapter's function. The Master of the Fleet can give up his duty and simply be Fourth Captain if one more qualified than them is available for the duty of naval command (all captains can theoretically do this, but the Master of the Fleet is where this exception is most frequently found). Some Chapters have dedicated separate Masters of the Fleet and give the Fourth Company Captain a different role entirely.
- The Captain of the Fifth Company is the Master of the Marches. They have the duty of overseeing the Chapter's deployment and fighting strength; when a Chapter is rebuilding, they have the final say when the Chapter is ready. Their duties require an immense amount of time and effort; it is not uncommon for a Master of the Marches to spend all of his time on incoming data, which does not seem like the thing a seven foot superhuman should spend his time on. The Chapter Masters probably don't trust a newbie or mortal to handle something this important.
- The Captain of the Sixth Company is the Master of the Rites. They perform and oversee the rites, rituals and other formal occasions inherent to the Chapter; as such their duty (and the size of it) differs between the various Chapters. In many cases they work closely with the Chapter's Chaplains. The precise differences between Master of Rites and the Master of Sanctity vary greatly between chapters, generally with both holding special significance under different spheres.
- The Captain of the Seventh Company is the Chief Victualler. They are tasked with maintaining the logistics within the Chapter and with outside forces, ensuring supplies that the Chapter cannot make for itself are procured and that there is enough raw material for the things the Chapter can produce. They also make sure that the various ships and bases of the Chapter have ample supplies. Synonymous with Quartermaster.
- The Captain of the Eight Company is the Lord Executioner. Unlike his brethren, the Lord Executioner serves as a weapon for the Chapter, to be bloody in battle and destroy the Chapter's enemies in close range.
- The Captain of the Ninth Company is the Master of Relics. Their duties are twofold: to tend to the various relics that the Chapter has and to engage in long-ranged warfare both in sieges and firefights. Rumor that this duty also includes warding any and all Blood Ravens from the armory is unconfirmed.
- The Captain of the Tenth Company is the Master of the Recruits. They oversee the recruiting, indoctrination, training and deployment of the Chapter's Neophytes and Scouts.
- It should be noted that Chapters tend to have different roles for their Captains. The most common variant is among the Dark Angels and their successors within the Unforgiven having Deathwing and Ravenwing First and Second Companies with different roles for the Captains of those companies. Another common variant is to have one or more Captains to be designated as Siege Captain, specializing in taking and holding fortifications. This may be in addition or in full replacement of their normal roles as captain.
- Lieutenant: with the unveiling of Cawl's new Primaris Marines came a slight reorganisation of codex companies and delegation of officers duties. Each space marine company now has two lieutenants subservient to its captain, though their exact duties can vary from chapter to chapter; for example, Salamanders lieutenants are ceremonial bodyguards for their Captain, whilst Iron Hands lieutenants are naysmiths charged with arguing against their Captain's battle plans in order to ensure his logic is free from human error. Their main function is to act as an executive to their Captain and take command of the demi-companies when the company splits (one per demi-company), allowing specialist officers such as Chaplains and Librarians to actually focus on their roles rather than taking command themselves, which makes sense considering specialist officers trained for a particular duty may be no more qualified to command than any other battle brother.
- As with Captains, there is no actual requirement for Lieutenants to be Primaris Marines, and as it stands, regular Astartes lieutenants are more flexible thanks to the wider range of compatible wargear.
- Force Commander: Not a rank but a title given to the commander of a task force, either given if more than one company is fighting at the same time in which case it would be the senior captain or if the company has to split up and a junior officer such as a lieutenant takes command of forces aside from his own captain.
- Sergeant: Sergeants lead squads of four to nine other Marines depending on the influx of recruits. There are approximately ten sergeants per Codex-approved Company. Often the most senior sergeant will be the commander of a company's "First Squad" (usually a Tactical Squad) and will likely be next in line for a promotion if the Captain is ever slain, but not always, especially if the newly mandated Lieutenants are available for promotion instead. Members of the Captain's Command Squad may also be Sergeants who get additional duties as required.
- Veteran-Sergeant: Not a "rank" exactly, but more of a recognition of status for those who have been members of a Chapter's First Company; quite frequently these guys get redistributed back to the lower companies to act as squad leaders where their experience will do some good, hence "Veteran Sergeant". These guys will usually get to wear the "Crux Terminatus" even when in power armour to represent the fact that they have earned the right to use Terminator Armour. Note that Veteran Sergeants can serve in the ranks of the Scouts, Devastators, and Assault Marines despite being technically overqualified, in each case helping the new recruits to adapt to Chapter life. In old 3rd Edition rules you could get Captains without terminator honours, which implied that they never passed through the first company but still got command; nowadays a Captain is just one thing. It's also important to remember that the number of Veterans in a Chapter is not limited by the Codex.
- Champion: Champion is actually a number of positions within a chapter, with each company having a champion, the chapter as a whole having a champion, and a champion being drawn from within the ranks of the honour guard to serve as the personal champion of the chapter master (though these last two positions are often held by the same marine). A champion is theoretically the best close quarters fighter in a company, charged with protection of the Captain from all threats. Given that your average Captain is a badass in power armor this may seem redundant, but it's supposed to allow him to focus on coordinating the battle while the Champion tears up anyone who tries to interrupt. One of the biggest dissonances between the crunch and fluff is manifested with the champions: on the tabletop officers are almost universally more formidable than the champions that are supposedly there to protect them. In an ideal scenario, the Chapter has one champion for each Company, one Honour Guard Champion, one Chapter Master's Personal Champion and one Chapter Champion (the Honour Guard Champion and Chapter Master's Champion titles are frequently held concurrently by one Marine) giving a total of 12 or 13 champions for a full strength Chapter.
- Honour Guard: A veteran's veteran, assumed to be the best of the best. These guys get bunched together and given some of the best gear available to the chapter. The fluff tells us that these guys are peers of Captains in terms of battlefield experience but do not have the command rank to actually issue any orders, though when Honour Guard speak up it's advised that the officers nearby listen carefully. Thankfully the tabletop game is balanced not to give a whole squad full of Captain-equivalent soldiers. Essentially, the Honour Guard acts as the Chapter Master's Command Squad. As noted above, one of the Honour Guard is the Honour Guard Champion.
- Standard Bearer: The Company Standard Bearer, given the title of Ancient (the old term for Ensign, who was the traditional standard bearer), is charged with carrying and protecting the Company Standard. Also frequently joins the Command Squad. Should a Company Standard Bearer drop the banner and let it fall to the ground, he will essentially forfeit his honor. If the Standard Bearer should be killed and the banner stolen, the entire Company will be dishonored until the banner is reclaimed. Which means that if you steal a Company Standard, you now have nearly one hundred Space Marines who were just trying to kill you, but now you had to go and make it personal. The most elite of these is the Chapter Standard Bearer (often a member of the Honour Guard, but not necessarily), who carries the Chapter banner in war. If the Chapter Ancient isn't among the Honour Guard, then the Honour Guard will have its own Ancient as well. Primaris Bladeguard have Bladeguard Ancients.
Other Departments[edit]
Outside of the above mentioned battle ranks, there are other positions within a Chapter:
Librarium[edit]
A chapter may have any number of Librarians, with no Codex-mandated minimum or maximum. While some gene lines see a higher than normal rate of psykers than other gene lines, the fact that psykers, let alone Astartes psykers, are rare makes the position naturally self-limiting. Can use the standardized Librarian Discipline, Chapter specific disciplines or generic Psychic Disciplines like Biomancy, Pyromancy, Telekinesis, Telepathy, Technomancy or Divination to name a few.
- Chief Librarian: The head of the Librarium, who assigns Librarians to assist in battlefield communications. He is also tasked to determine whether or not his battle-brothers are tainted by Chaos.
- Epistolary: The highest rank below Chief Librarian, Epistolaries serve as the main communication aides on the battlefield.
- Codicier: Mid-level Librarians who evaluate reports from campaigns and document them in their Librariums.
- Lexicanum: Entry-level Librarians responsible for compiling battlefield reports for the Codiciers.
- Acolytum: Neophytes who have been identified as psykers.
- Vanguard Librarian: Primaris Librarian assigned to Vanguard duty. Trained in the special Obscuration discipline.
Apothecarion[edit]
A chapter may have any number of apothecaries, although the Codex mandates at least 11 (one per Company, plus the Chief Apothecary).
- Master of the Apothecarion: The head of the Apothecarion, who assigns an Apothecary to each Company. The Apothecarion in turn also takes care of the gene-seed that Chapters place such holy emphasis on, for good reason: no gene-seed = no new recruits.
- Apothecary: Responsible for medical care, biological and genetic research, and the critically important harvesting of gene-seed from Battle Brothers and the cultivation of said gene-seed.
- Helix Adept: Apprentice Primaris Apothecaries assigned to Infiltrator squads.
- Apothecary Biologis: Apothecaries who work in the study of xenobiology and xenogenetics to develop better countermeasures against them by analyzing their genetic and physical make up.
The Chaplaincy/Reclusium[edit]
A chapter may have any number of chaplains, although the Codex mandates at least 11 or 12 if fully staffed (One per Company, plus the Reclusiarch/Master of Sanctity).
- Master of Sanctity: The head of the Chaplaincy and spiritual leader of the Chapter. He assigns Chaplains to the Companies to oversee the spiritual health of the Chapter. This position is often but not always held by the chapter's Reclusiarch. Though it might be tempting to compare them to warrior bishops, they're actually atheists (save some Chapters closely aligned to the Ecclesiarchy or the Mechanicus), seeing the Emperor as an honored predecessor and the epitome of humanity but not a god.
- Reclusiarch: The Chaplain who oversees the Chapter's Reclusiam (where they keep the relics and other secret historical stuff). Often the job gets rolled up into the Master of Sanctity's job description (particularly if the Chapter is relatively young and has not accrued entire millennia worth of trinkets). It's uncertain what interaction (if any) they have with the Master of Relics; it is quite possible that a Chaplain receives the role if that Captain of the 9th company gets a different position. It is possible that the Reclusiarch looks after the more "holy" and historically significant relics, distributing some of them to Chaplains to carry in battle, while the Master of Relics okays the deployment of precious but combat-worthy stuff like ancient marks of power armour or Heresy-era tanks (Master of the Forge is technically a specialist position, not an authoritative one).
- Chaplain: Ministers to the psychological stability of their brothers, inspiring them and allied forces in battle and watching for Chaos corruption.
- Judiciar: Primaris Chaplains in training equipped with Executioner Blades and Tempormortis temporal distortion devices, charged with enforcing the Chapter Master's will.
Armoury/Armorium[edit]
A Chapter's armoury consists of any number of Techmarines and dedicated vehicle operators who do not formally get assigned to any Company. In practice, techmarines tend to form a distinct clique within their chapters; partly due to their idiosyncrasies, and partly because they have a dual loyalty to Mars.
- Master of the Forge: The head of the Armoury, who assigns Techmarines to oversee maintenance of the machine-spirits of the chapter's wargear and motor pool. Their position often overlaps to some degree with the Chapter's Reclusiarch, given that both are responsible for keeping the chapter's relics in good condition; many artifacts will fall under both of their duties. Given that their religious zeal is tempered by the practical mindset of a space marine, Masters of the Forge are some of the only engineers in the galaxy that are actually still innovating to any degree, which really shows when you compare the armories of the modern space marine chapters with their traitorous counterparts.
- Techmarine: As with the Apothecaries, one per company and the Master of the Forge plus others is a frequent arrangement; otherwise they are deployed as needed to operate advanced war gear or lend technical expertise at battle. When not in the field they repair or produce arms, equipment, vehicles and other supplies along with Chapter Serf Artificers and any Tech Priests assigned to the Chapter.
- All Space Marines are required to familiarise themselves with operation of Rhino tanks at the very least as part of their standard training.
- Drivers of the armoury vehicles are referred to as Custodians (unrelated to the Adeptus Custodes), many of whom are assigned when necessary from the squads of the 6th & 7th reserve companies. They are expected to continue their development through the companies and learn every aspect of war so that vehicle commanders better anticipate the roles of Tactical/Assault/Devastator and provide battlefield support without even being requested - unless they get assigned to the armoury on a more permanent basis, such as being trained to operate larger, more precious vehicles and/or specialising in armoured operations.
- Battlefield support vehicles tend not to be assigned permanent crews but are manned by individuals capable of operating a number of chapter vehicles, helped in part to the ubiquity of the Rhino chassis and the standard training.
- Dreadnoughts are typically assigned back to their original companies and appear sporadically across a chapter's roster, though some chapters assign Dreadnoughts to their own formations instead. The technology to build even the most basic dreadnought is rare and time-consuming even for master artificers, so the number is limited; also the frequency of wakefulness decreases over time and they get used less and less.
The Fleet[edit]
A chapter is allowed a fleet of as many ships as it can get together, and may assign Marines to these ships as permanent staff in a similar fashion to the Armoury, although the Codex is significantly more flexible on Fleet staff. A chapter can be Codex-compliant without any Marines in their Fleet at all. Ship designations made for Space Marines have a fairly narrow band of marine transport capacity - one to three companies' worth - which does not change significantly between chapters. Therefore while a chapter could theoretically muster a fleet of any size, the practical and political restraints limit a chapter fleet's size. At the top end, the best is a Battle Barge for each company, another Battle Barge for a flagship and accompanying Strike Cruisers, Light Cruisers and Escorts, plus whatever orbital defenses of the homeworld and the system fleet and maybe one or two mobile stations. This is stretching it for most chapters, though ancient and politically secure can have more than this and some chapters have different classes of ship as well. The Navy frowns upon Marines having too many Lance-equipped ships in particular. Fleet based Chapters obviously have more than usual, and one powerful vessel, possibly even a Warp-capable Star Fort, serves as the Fortress-Monastery.
- Master of the Fleet: Often the Captain of the 4th company gets this position by default, but as mentioned above in the entry for Fourth Captain it's not unheard of for a Captain to step down from the position if someone else would be better suited to the role: that person is titled "Lord Admiral" and gets command over the Chapter's fleet assets. It is perfectly reasonable that the Lord Admiral holds a battlefield rank of Battle-Brother or Sergeant, making him probably temporary until the Captain or his replacement wants the job back. As mentioned above, some Chapters (especially fleet-based ones) have this post be straight-up separate from the role of Fourth Company captain and have a dedicated full-time Marine as Master of the Fleet in the Chapter Council while the Fourth Captain gets different special roles.
- Lieutenant Commander: In the days of the Great Crusade, these individuals commanded battalions of five companies, outranking Captains and subservient to Chapter Masters. We know of only one example of this rank though it is uncertain whether the title holds the same authority as before. From what we know it now applies to the commander of a vessel, which makes sense since most Space Marine chapters have more ships than Captains, so somebody has to get the job of commanding them. Often assumed to be just a techmarine or sergeant of whichever squad gets attached to that vessel, or more likely a badass high ranking Chapter Serf who doesn't need to be superhuman to understand how spaceships operate.
- With the advent of the company rank of Lieutenant, it is uncertain as to how the Lieutenant Commander actually fits in the new command structure. Is it a superior form of Lieutenant with new duties (which is what the rank itself implies) or is it a Lieutenant who has been officially combined with the Force Commander role (see above) and has his own units set aside from his company that he commands on a full time basis? More likely, considering that Space Marines tend to hold to an army chain of command rather than a naval hierarchy, the rank is probably an honorific title that stands alongside their company rank as with the Lord Admiral. It is also quite possible this is now the same as a old naval Lieutenant Commander, which was a Lieutenant serving as the Commander of a vessel. If you wish to fluff Your Dudes, you can have this title be used for the senior of two lieutenants of each company, a Marine fully assigned as a Ship Captain (referred to as Shipmaster in Marine Chapters to avoid confusion with Company Captain) or for when a Lieutenant serves as a Force Commander when the Captain is busy elsewhere (with regular Force Commander's being a senior sergeant when both the Captain and the LTs are busy). As a bit more detail, you can have some Marines assigned as permanent ship crews (say a squad to each capital vessel) as a cheeky of way remaining within the letter of the Codex Astartes while stuffing the command ranks to their maximum possible extent. There is surely more than one Chapter that is actually around 1200-1300 Marines or so with a full exploitation of a full specialist cadre, each company having a veteran squad on top of the line squads and the command squad, permanent ship crews and keeping the Honor Guard full.
Codex Skub[edit]
In case you haven't picked up on it yet, the Codex is rather controversial for a number of reasons. First off, and perhaps most significantly, is the fact that even GW's own writers don't agree on what the codex is. Saint Abnett views it as a book of tips and strategies, comparable to The Art of War. Graham McNeill (the guy who wrote the Ultramarines Omnibus) sees it as a comprehensive but inflexible guide to strategy, organization, and conduct. Matt Ward quite famously sees it as a literal Space Marine Bible, a holy book that all marines follow to the letter. Like a lot of GW lore, the canon is up in the air, and as such it's open to interpretation. Many writers are clearly very critical of the Codex, and portray it as antiquated and damaging, whereas others portray it as comprehensive and useful but increasingly antiquated. Also there's Ward, but let's not talk about him. Which version is true? Yes.
It's also worthy of note that many people within the Ultramarines take the Codex with a grain of salt. Captain Titus, Uriel Ventris, even Marneus Calgar and the freaking primarch himself have all been critical of the codex at various times, or rather been critical of people's reception of it. All of these people see the codex as useful and important, but take issue with people, Ultramarines or otherwise, that see it as a holy book that contains everything you need to know. Perhaps Guilliman himself put it best, saying, "[My teachings] are yet flawed. No one, not even one such as I, can anticipate every possible outcome of battle. My words are not some holy writ that must be obeyed. There must always be room for personal initiative on the battlefield. You and I both know how one spark of heroism can turn the tide of battle. That knowledge and personal experience can only be earned in blood, and the leader in the field must always be the ultimate arbiter of what course of action should be followed." As the opening quote implies, Captain Titus is also quite critical of Leandros's interpretation of the codex, pointing out that personal initiative is just as important as adhering to the codex. Then again, Titus is also quite clearly a company champion who got mistaken for a captain, what with his disregard for tactics in favor of glorious melee, so maybe we should just ignore what he thinks.
Ultimately, your own take on the codex is going to depend on a number of things, including whose canon you believe, your opinion of the Legions, your opinion of Guilliman, and a dozen other things. Don't let yourself get pulled in by the fanboys saying the Codex is the perfect guide to everything, and conversely don't listen to the idiots who say the Codex is only useful as toilet paper.
"Codex" Chapters with doctrinal variations[edit]
More commonly, are those chapters which follow the codex at an organisational level, but disregard certain tactical aspects contained within, most likely because they have their own modus-operandi that they have a preference for, or because they create their own unique tactics that had never been considered. For a while Angels Penitent substituted the codex with their own Arc Resplendent.
- Follows the Codex Astartes, yet has a large number of vehicles.
- They have a lot of vehicles.
- For a 1000 man sized Chapter, they have a lot of tanks.
- Of all the Codex Chapters they have the most tanks.
- Their armored spearhead attacks are pretty devastating.
- Cannot say too much about those guys since they are very secretive, thus their organisation and structure are completely unknown.
- Are confirmed to be Blood Angels successors, yet as said before, they are totally unknown from a organisational and structural P.O.V.
- Have a lot of Great Crusade and Horus Heresy Era stuff, including a Fellblade.
- More tactically oriented Imperial Fists.
- Actually do follow the Codex more closely than other Sons of Dorn (but not that much like the Hammers of Dorn).
- At the time of their founding, they were known to be the most level-headed members of the Imperial Fists Legion, therefore took in the Codex much faster and easier.
- Only deviation is the existence of a Crusader Company that is a 1st Company that has 128 Veterans. A result of an event where they were reduced to 128 members during the Crusade of Righteous Liberation.
- Their First Company is also led by their Chapter Master, though this is an occasional variant rather than uniquely Crimson Fist.
- Due to the whole situation with Rynn's World, the Chapter became very capable at fighting Orks.
- Iron Hands Successors that follow the Codex rather than the Clan-Company variant.
- Put more emphasis on projectile weapons (like Bolter Weapons) and Dreadnoughts.
- Follow the Codex to the letter, yet do put more emphasis on heavy weapons and overwhelming firepower.
- No really, they follow the ABSOLUTE LETTER of the codex.
- Not even the Ultramarines (Famous for having the primarch that wrote the damn thing) follow the codex more rigidly than them.
- They probably actually read the Codex from cover to cover.
- Codex compliant, yet put large emphasis on flyers.
- Instead of sending out a single company, the Minotaurs utilize mob and berserker tactics along with sending out all ten of their companies to utterly overwhelm and crush their foes.
- Camouflage Power Armour. Technically this IS in the codex, but they're the only space marine chapter out of literally thousands that actually bothers to do it. They're also sneeki beekies, just like their Raven Guard progenitors.
Raven Guard and Sucessors
- Sneeki Cheeki Beekies. While they do follow the codex, their chapter is renowned for its skill with stealth tactics and guerilla warfare. It also made extensive use of mutants (during the Horus Heresy) due to their situation after the Drop Site Massacre.
- Greater emphasis on infantry and terror tactics.
- Will sneak up as close as possible to the enemy to later tear them a new one in close combat while berserking.
- May be organisationally non compliant as well, but they are quite tight lipped about it.
- Like the Iron Hands and Dark Angels, they keep veterans in their battle companies to maintain coherency within the companies.
- Codex compliant, but utilize armoured assaults, Drop Pod strikes, and heavily use Scouts to get intel before ruining someone's day.
- Due to their heavy use of Scouts, they have a larger than average 10th Company.
White Scars and some Successors
- Disproportionate emphasis put on bikes and speeders compared to heavy vehicles, still adhering to codex formation however.
- Disfavor Dreadnoughts as they think
they can't condemn their brothers to such a slow existenceit is dishonourable to deny a warrior his death.
Chapters with differences in formations or composition[edit]
Some chapters have taken the idea of a "Chapter" and tweaked it with their own unique spin on its organization, either by adding units or ranks that aren't found anywhere else, or have their own composition of companies that doesn't fit with the approved codex model. In some cases they may ignore the codex altogether and do their own thing.
- Dragon Claw squads, made up of mutants who make use of adamantium-coated wrist blades.
- Pre-Aurelian Crusade:
- Usually, the Chapter Master was the Chief Librarian too, like Azariah Kyras. This tradition of Chapter Master/Librarian combo started with Great Father Azariah Vidya (as in Vidya Games or the Indian term for knowledge, science, scholarship, learning and etc.), who the chapter believes was their founding Chapter Master (officially he was, but given they are Thousand Sons loyalists who don't know their heritage someone else probably founded them and were censored willingly). This would backfire dearly when Kyras turned out to be a heretic.
- Their gene seed causes them to have an above average number of Librarians, so many they can field two whole squads of them in the First Company. Librarians are so recurrent among Blood Ravens that it's not uncommon for one to even be a Captain (can you actually name one though?).
- Actually Codex Compliant in structure, yet utilize their Librarians to scry and predict the movements of their enemies (so their Scouts are Librarians too?) and use the intel to formulate a counter strategy (because they appeared in Dawn of War, their way of war is an emulation of how RTS gamers play when they are serious).
- Non-standard patterns of speech (exacerbated by a Gene-seed quirk known as "unavailable voice actor syndrome"), incidents of hairesy, compulsive kleptomania and emphasis on devastating, defensive deep-strikes.
- Post-Aurelian Crusade:
- With Gabriel Angelos, a non-psyker, taking the position of Chapter Master and separating the Chapter Master and Chief Librarian (currently Jonah Orion) positions, they returned to a more codex-compliant organization, albeit severely undermanned pre-Indomitus Crusade.
Blood Angels and Successors (collectively "The Chapters of the Blood" or just "The Blood")
- Scouts graduate to Assault Squads rather than to Devastator squads to work out Red Thirst related anger issues.
- The use of non-standard tech, like Baal Predators, Furioso and Librarian Dreadnoughts.
- Sanguinary Priests (Apothecaries) make up part of the chapter priesthood equivalent to Chaplains, who are busy tending to...
- ...The Death Company.
Dark Angels and Successors (collectively "The Unforgiven")
- The Deathwing & Ravenwing instead of First and Second companies. Veteran elite Deathwing Knights (each squad lead by a Knight Master) and Ravenwing Black Knights present in Deathwings and Ravenwings. As of the start of the Indomitus Crusade (8th edition), this modification has been officially approved by Guilliman, ostensibly on account of their proven effectiveness. Deathwing Lieutenants are called Strikemasters and Ravenwing Lieutenants are called Talonmasters.
- Inner Circle in place of the usual chapter command structure.
- Chaplains taking the additional role of Interrogators.
- Battle Companies incorporate an additional squad of veteran marines picked from within the company as the Deathwing does not directly take promising veterans as other First Companies would.
- Some nifty STCs that they do not share with anybody apart from their own successors (The Mortis Dreads and Land Raider Ares).
- Handful of successors not in the Unforgiven due to diplomatic fractures, but retain standard practices.
- Disregard many of the Codex's rules and trappings, but nonetheless follow the ten company outline.
- Choose to go into close combat with the enemy, while heavily preferring Land Speeders over Bikes.
- Heavy emphasis on their own skills and superhuman abilities enhanced with sheer determination.
- Each company has three Death Speakers.
- Battle Companies have only one Devastator Squad each, but can field their own Veteran Squads.
- Have two additional scout companies to account for the high attrition rate amongst recruits.
- ...said attrition rate being caused by subjecting recruits to daemonic possession.
- Apparently picked up a loophole from the Blood Angels and have their scouts immediately go to the Assault reserve company to work out their unbridled aggression before becoming Fire Support.
Iron Hands and Most Successors
- Have a Chapter Council instead of a fixed Chapter Master, though a leader may be nominated.
- Chaplain Techmarines, aka "Iron Fathers".
- The current leader is thus a Chapter Master Chaplain Techmarine. And people say the Blood Ravens are the crazy ones.
- Each Clan Company has its own armoury, rather than a single armoury for the whole chapter including relics for individual companies, but the Master of the Forge (effectively also the Master of Sanctity and Reclusiarch) still has the very very important stuff.
- Terminator Armour was distributed to squad sergeants instead of being reserved only for the First company. It's uncertain if this still exists as of 8E.
- Pre-6th Edition fluff indicated that individual companies (clans) had their own veterans and recruits, newer fluff put them more in line with the Codex on the surface.
- Some Iron Hands successors appear to be Codex compliant in organization by rejecting the Clan Company system, like the Red Talons.
- Instead of having five regular battle companies and five reserve companies, the Iron Snakes have ten battle companies with an equal number of veterans, regulars and neophytes for perfect balance.
- Each squad has an Apothecary, personal Squad Standard Bearer and a number of specialists of their own.
- Apothecaries act in squad command roles instead of sergeants.
- Functionally the opposite of the Raptors, the Red Scorpions ignore all of the codex's teachings on stealth.
- Have seven oversized companies instead of ten, but otherwise broadly conform to the codex.
- Their First Company is also presided over by the Chapter Master
- Have three Masters of the Forge, usually tending to more specialized matters since most battle-brothers can maintain their own wargear.
- Champion Librarian rank of Prognosticator, who specialize in divination and omen reading. The entire chapter has been known to refuse deployment if a single Prognosticator reads a single bad omen.
- Non-psyker elite veterans, the Talriktug, are considered second to Prognosticators despite the latter's specialist status and the formers presence in the first company.
- 9th Company serves as a designated siege specialist company is counted amongst the Battle Companies rather than the Reserve Companies. The 9th Captain is referred to as the Siege Captain.
- Each battle company takes a Devastator Squad over a Tactical Squad, leaving five Tactical and three Devastators squads in each.
- The chapter is never at full strength, seldom even at half, but maintains weapons as though they were. Their "tactical" reserve companies can fill in for full devastator squads, if needed.
- Tempest Blades being a non-codex formation.
- Heavy emphasis on mechanized warfare and mano-a-mano honorable duels to the death.
- Tyrannic War Veterans are a non-codex formation.
- Originally, Guilliman deliberately gave himself an 11th company in contravention of his own rules for the sole purpose of guarding the Pharos device in the aftermath of the Battle of Sotha during the heresy (incidentally causing the Tyranids to become aware of the existence of the Milky Way and the beacon turned out to have been built by the C'tan Zarhulash the Potentate and a shard of him was buried there at the time). Though this company got rolled into its own chapter while the Adeptus Terra were doing their audits for an unanticipated Third Founding.
- The Ultramarines still have an "apparent" 11th company that guards the Eye of Terror; made up of volunteer squads donated from their successors but all wearing Ultramarine uniforms.
- After Guilliman's return, he appointed Decimus Felix as an 11th captain/equerry (no particular company assigned at this time). The break with the codex was enough to give Felix cause for concern. Later, Guilliman appointed him Tetrarch and gave him authority over Ultramar's Eastern expanses.
- Cato Sicarius is still the 11th (12th/13th?) Captain. He now commands the Victrix Guard, which is a new formation of Veterans who act as Guilliman's bodyguards and envoys. This might actually set a precedent by creating separate a Honour Guard for the Primarch from a First Founding Chapter's normal Honour Guard, who for the Ultramarines still serve with Chapter Master Marneus Calgar.
- There is also Captain Demeter and the Fulminata, which are a Demi-Company outside the main companies.
- Have two Chapter Masters instead of one, due their situation as one of the Astartes Praeses making the Chapter deem it necessary to have one lead the Cadian Gate garrison and the other those forces in other Imperial Warzones. With the fall of Cadia and both Chapter Masters dead however, chances are they have since reverted to a single Chapter Master.
Non-Codex Chapters[edit]
As mentioned, there are so many chapters in the Imperium and very few of them follow the codex absolutely to the letter. Many chapters have their own preferred mode of warfare based upon their experiences, supplies and dispositions, often they generate their own interpretations and deviations from the codex. Here follows a comparative listing of those chapters and the way in which they differ from what the codex actually prescribes.
- Pre-Red Corsairs Times: Before Lugft Huron went pants-on-heads retarded, the Chapter was known for being exceptionally stubborn with skilled Bikers and favoring lightning strikes and boarding actions while still following the Codex.
- Badab War Times:
- Due to Huron's pants-on-heads retarded thinking, the Chapter seized the Badab Sector's industry and made it so that Bolter rounds and Rhinos were mass-produced to the point being expendable, not to mention the larger-than-standard number of marines due to them purposefully not paying their geneseed tithe and the absorption of the survivors of the Tiger Claws, their successor chapter, after their last fleet went MIA following devastating casualties.
- Emergence of specialized units (such as the hated Corpse-Takers) and human Auxilia. Squads larger due to aforementioned not paying of the geneseed tithe.
- Obviously, after the Badab War was lost, the survivors gave up even lip service and became a Chaos Warband.
- Has a liberal interpretation of the codex's fleet-based/crusade chapter rules (having more than 1,000 marines to quickly replenish losses). To the Templars, this meant: as many marines as we want (but usually no more than a thousand on the ground in any one place due to obvious reasons). The actual number hovers around several thousand divided to several crusades. Technically they are still compliant as the 1000 Astartes rule only applies when not on crusade, and the Templars are always crusading.
- No Scout company, instead recruits are apprenticed to fully fledged battle-brothers, aka "Crusader squads".
- No Librarians, though some theories state that this may be due to a gene seed problem caused by the defeat of the Xenos Psyker known as the Cacodominus, see their main article for more information.
- Doctrinal emphasis on close quarters combat.
- Abundance of previously unsanctioned Land Raider "Crusader"s to deliver said Crusader squads to CQC. See the trend here?
- May or may not deify the Emperor. The canon is kind of up in the air right now.
- The position of "Emperor's Champion", a Chapter Champion-esque title but of religious significance.
- The Deathwatch count as a unique organization, being made up of several thousand Marines seconded from other chapters and under special anti-Xenos duties across the galaxy, though unlike the Grey Knights they technically aren't a Chapter. Still, they're included in this section to cover our bases.
- Originally, Slaughter Koorland intended the Deathwatch to be set to Chapter-strength, with their head being named Watch Commander as opposed to Chapter Master. Nowadays, the contemporary Deathwatch not follow the standard 1000-marine limit, with unclear lore bits putting the range between 2100-4800 marines. However, they are usually divvied up between various Watch Fortresses/Stations located in Imperial space, each led by a Watch Master. Deathwatch HQ is officially located at Talasa Prime.
- Aside from anti-Xenos duties, the Deathwatch are trained to perform missions outside of your usual Astartes fare, such as hostage rescue or false flag ops.
- Due to their unique training and equipment (not to mention the intimidatingly insane shit they have to deal with), the Codex would actually hamper them instead if they were subject to it.
- All psyker Chapter of Demon hunting marines. Nuff said.
- The infamous Dreadknight.
- The Purifiers are a separate force separate from the rest of the chapter, though able to be seconded when needed.
- There are no scout companies or equivalents (they have the Ordo Malleus to do their recon work for them). An aspirant who makes it past training is immediately promoted to the role of Battle Brother.
- Similarly, the process of earning the right to don Terminator Armour is a much shorter journey, since it is not allotted exclusively to the First Company.
- That said, there is a sort of system of progression throughout each of the eight Brotherhoods (each essentially a company and representative of the eight founders of the chapter in the original Knights Errant of Malcador the Sigillite) and the elite Purifier and Paladin Brotherhoods.
- Companies have both a Captain and a Grand Master.
- Company Champion is renamed Brotherhood Champion due to obvious reasons.
- Chapter frequently operates with individual squads due to that being enough for most cases, coordinated by the Grand Masters and the Captains taking the best squad of the individual Brotherhood for difficult missions not needing an entire Brotherhood.
- Chapter Master renamed Supreme Grand Master.
- Do not have any artillery weapons like Whirlwind Artillery Tanks or lack of certain vehicles other Chapters have.
- Previously Codex adherent Fire Hawks (maybe, now it's uncertain if they are Fire Hawks or somebody/something completely different), now a horde of angry hellfire powered, space/time/dimension travelling, spectrerevenantdemonspacemarines. More recent lore consistently depicts them as effectively acting as in a role analogous to Minor Daemons of the Emperor, with Living Saints being the equivalent of Greater Daemons (of course, nobody would dare refer to them in such terms lest they be blammed).
- Utilize more powerful, but unstable early versions of existing Imperial Weapons like early Horus Heresy Era Plasma Weapons.
Space Wolves (and their Successors)
- Ignore the organizational parts of the codex outright. It would be easier to go to their page to find out how they are organized.
- Simply put, Leman Russ wanted them to be forged in his vision instead that of Roboute Guilliman, and Guilliman gave him permission to do so (or rather, didn't interfere).
- Until the Ultima Founding and the Primaris Marines, Space Wolf gene-seed was incapable of being implanted in non-Fenrisian humans without resulting in Wulfen, allowing the Space Wolves an exception to the number limit without the crusade loophole. Their successors in the Ultima Founding followed the Space Wolf system.
- Although they do however take some useful tactics from the codex because they like them, they see them as just that: useful tactics, and nothing more.
- Fenrisian Wolves/Thunderwolves used by the Chapter. This may or may not be heresy.
- Have more than a thousand marines, yet not that much as the Black Templars. If anything, its just a few more hundred. Well, until recently that is. They now have straight up multiple thousands in at least one Great Company and nobody cares anymore due to the Great Rift.
- Threw the typical training process out the window because of the Canis Helix which must be taken prior to the rest of the Gene-seed, otherwise the rest of the organs will not work. That the Helix is also incompatible with anyone outside of Fenris is another reason why they go past the Codex-mandated limit to help recover from losses.
- A newly trained initiate as thrown into their assault companies called Blood Claws, to allow them to express and better-control their savage nature. Particularly rowdy Blood Claws end up in the Skyclaws, the actual Assault Marine counterparts.
- They do have actual Scout Squads, unimaginatively known as Wolf Scouts, but these are exclusively made up of veteran marines. These Wolf Scouts are selected due to being both experienced and, which is most important, cool-headed (though also because they are Lone Wolves, the last survivors of wiped out squads with the temperament to match), Something the Blood Claws certainly are NOT.
- Tactical Marines are known as Grey Hunters, and any Blood Claws who have worked out their aggression are moved here.
- Their Devastators are called Long Fangs and rather than an immediate position, it is reserved for the most battle-hardened veterans who have proven themselves capable enough of being entrusted with the ownership and handling of the chapter's heavy weaponry.
- Squads/Packs can be oversized, and if they lose all but one member they aren't reinforced. Said lone survivor becomes a Lone Wolf, who seeks death in battle against the strongest foes to atone for the shame. If against all odds said Marine does manage to kill a big ugly creature/huge tank/massive horde without dying, they get promoted to Wolf Guard.
- Honour Guard renamed Wolf Guard, who are not limited in number and anyone can be promoted there after sufficient valor and heroic feats, including Lone Wolves. Each Wolf Lord (Captain) has a Wolf Guard, each Wolf Lord has two Wolf Guard Battle Leaders (Lieutenant) and The Great Wolf (Chapter Master) has the largest Wolf Guard.
- The Great Wolf directly leads the First Company, though as mentioned previously this is not a unique arragement.
- In the previous editions, they had access to Leman Russ Battle Tanks, since the tank was named after their Primarch.
- Wolf Priests combine both Chaplain and Apothecary roles.
- Techmarines renamed Iron Priests, but otherwise function like their Codex-compliant fellows.
- No Librarians, but Rune Priests, who are totally 100% not psykers, honest.
Purpose for Gamers[edit]
Of course, there's a reason Games Workshop included the Codex Astartes in their fluff (long before Matt Ward came along, by the way); basically it makes it easier for players to invent their own Chapters.
Players who just have an idea for a cool color scheme or name but don't want to put any effort into making up a whole organizational layout can just make a Chapter that rigidly follows the Codex like the Ultramarines. Those who want to have one or two unique organizational or tactical features can make a Chapter that generally follows the Codex but has some variances, like... well, most of them (see above). And players that want to make up entirely independent structures themselves can make Chapters that ignore the Codex entirely, like the Space Wolves or the Black Templars.
This means that Matt Ward's Codex worship isn't just lame but actually bad for GW's business. By telling players that only Codex Chapters are any good, he's discouraging players with their own ideas from investing in models, paints, tournaments, and maybe even later editions of the game. Truly, there is no end to his failure.