Dreadnought
- – The Emperor of Mankind's inscription on the sarcophagus of Sagittarus Malacque, first Dreadnought of the Adeptus Custodes
- – A Dreadnought saying
- – Meme made by Noah Cogliette
- – Arthur Schopenhauer
Space Marines are phenomenally tough, but there's a limit even to their durability. A battle-brother may be so grievously wounded that no amount of cybernetics and cloned tissue can bring him back to fighting strength. In cases like these, an Apothecary has two choices: grant his brother the Emperor's Peace and extract his gene-seed, or have him installed in a specialized life-support sarcophagus and attach that to an array of weapons and mobility systems, turning him into a Dreadnought.
The advantages to becoming a Dreadnought include the ability to support the battle-brothers as a walking siege engine, blasting vehicles and fortifications with heavy weapons and ripping open hard targets with hydraulic claws. Heavily-armored and no longer feeling pain, a Dreadnought can wade into swarms of light infantry with near-impunity, smashing, stomping, and shooting until nothing's left but greasy stains. The life-support systems in the sarcophagus allow the Dreadnought's occupant to live nearly forever, as demonstrated by Bjorn the Fell Handed of the Space Wolves, who has lived in such a state since the mid-31st millennium. Therefore, Dreadnoughts tend to gather lifetimes of experience and are often called upon to share that experience with newer battle-brothers. Having a Dreadnought on the field is both a force multiplier and a morale booster.
All that power comes at a cost, of course. The near-dead battle-brother no longer has senses of his own, his eyes and ears wired to the sarcophagus's auspex arrays. He lives in a bath of cool fluid, numb and sleeping without dreaming, when his services as a warrior or historian are not needed. Should he be crippled on the battlefield, he can do nothing to save himself and must have faith in his brothers and the God Emperor that they will retrieve him. The act of just creating one is highly traumatic to the interee and creates mental issues that living marines are not affected by. The best way of regulating this is by spending most of their time in suspended animation or full blown stasis till they are needed.
Tabletop wise, Dreads are an effective all-rounder and are fairly cheap to boot. They're good at any role they're tooled for, whether it's for blowing up tanks with twin-linked lascannons or meltaguns or mowing down infantry with an assault cannon or heavy flamer. They can also be formidable close combat units as they can be tooled with dreadnought-sized power fists, for example. You could also deep-strike them in Drop Pods, ensuring hilarity when you get lucky and they end up where they precisely need to be. Sadly with 8th edition drop pods can't carry dreads anymore. However the out of production Forge World Dreadnought Drop Pod is still a thing. The only ones that you can still find are pricy, or chinese recasts. But there's nothing stopping you from modifying a standard pod and using it as one.
Do note, however, that many enemies focus anti-armor weapons on them (especially if there isn't a Land Raider to distract them). A footslogging Dread, without heavy use of cover, will be a burning hulk of points within two turns, relying on the deep striking Drop Pods to get them where they need to go.
Dreadnought Variants[edit]
There's a whole bunch of Dreadnought variants that do different things. There are also Wraithlords, Deff Dreds, and Helbrutes, which used to be called Eldar Dreadnoughts, Ork Dreadnoughts, and Chaos Dreadnoughts, respectively.
Castraferrum Pattern[edit]
Is the name for the traditional "box" dreadnought that everyone is familiar with, comes in MkIV and MkV flavours (just so you know, MkIV are the ones with the helmet-head). Designed by the Mechanicus during the Great Crusade, specifically for its smaller size (to assist battle-brothers indoors), while its reactor runs on pretty much any fuel and the chassis is completely customisable; hence, there are a terrific number of variations, though the Castraferrum is usually outfitted with a hydraulic claw with mounted bolter or flamer and a heavy ranged weapon.
- Hellfire Dreadnought: The most common variation of shooty dread, swaps out its close combat weapon like their Dreadnought Chainfist, Dreadnought Power Claw or Dreadnought Power Fist for a missile launcher. (Not considered a separate pattern in the crunch because the "vanilla" dread statblock covers both punchy and Hellfire)
- Ironclad Dreadnought: Even more heavily armored melee dreadnoughts with a Seismic Hammer, Dreadnought Chainfist, Dreadnought Power Fist, Dreadnought Power Claw, Hunter-Killer Missiles, and a built-in Ironclad Assault Launcher, designed to put giant holes in tanks and bunkers. It may also be equipped with a Hurricane Bolter if you need a big blob of light infantry killed fast.
- Siege Dreadnought: Specialized bunker-busting Dreadnoughts equipped with Assault Drills and Inferno Cannons. If they manage to come close enough to any building, no matter how fortified, they would wreck it and burn the shit out of anyone inside.
- Venerable Dreadnoughts: Simply put, they're really old Dreadnoughts that have been locked up for a long time and as such are better at fighting due to experience. Also tend to get sleepy and lose their keys.
- Chaplain Dreadnoughts: Some Chapters have Venerable Dreadnoughts that used to be Chaplains. This basically means they have all those special effects that Chaplains do in a Dreadnought body. What makes a Chaplain so special enough to be put into a Dreadnought besides those buffs, we have no idea. As Chapter Masters or Captains to lend their expertise to the chapter HQ or Masters of the Forge would make much more sense. One could guess that they are stuffed into Venerable Dreads or the larger more advanced variants below.
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The basic MKV Dreadnought: Assault cannon, storm bolter, power fist.
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Hellfire Dreadnought
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Ironclad Dreadnought
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Siege Dreadnought
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Venerable Dreadnought
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Chaplain Dreadnought
Chapter Specific Dreads[edit]
- Furioso Dreadnought: Heavily armored Blood Angels dreadnoughts with two close combat weapons designed to RIP AND TEAR lots of troops in brutal close combat! Sometimes they even put a blood-crazed maniac from the Death Company inside, which turns a Furioso into an unholy, uncontrollable, and unstoppable rape machine.
- Furioso Librarian Dreadnoughts: Blood Angels can also lock psykers up in Dreadnoughts, creating
unholy amalgamations called Furioso Librarians. In addition to the badassery above, they replace one of their fists with a Force Weapon and can kill you with mind bullets. Furioso Librarians were once capable of flying (DAMN YOU WAAAAARRRRDDDD), but that was squatted for a while. As of 8th Codex, they indeed fly again.
- Furioso Librarian Dreadnoughts: Blood Angels can also lock psykers up in Dreadnoughts, creating
- Mortis Dreadnought: A variant supposedly exclusive to the Dark Angels that sports two copies of the same ranged weapon for maximum dakka. This was apparently due to the Dark Angels' talent for writing things down (for entirely practical reasons, like keeping track of grudges, rather than writing down some bible for space marines or the repressed/begrudging teeming masses) as all Legions had access to this pattern, but only the Angels remembered how to make a leftie dreadnought ranged weapon that wasn't a missile launcher.
- Deathwing Dreadnoughts: The Dark Angels' venerable dreads are all members of the inner circle and so reserve special hatred for
The FallenFILTHY CHAOS SCUM.
- Deathwing Dreadnoughts: The Dark Angels' venerable dreads are all members of the inner circle and so reserve special hatred for
- Doomglaive Dreadnoughts: Specialist dreadnoughts used by the Grey Knights, come with a nemesis force weapon and a psycannon as standard. Can attempt cleave attacks in close combat and try to hit additional dudes.
- Space Wolves Venerable Dreadnought: Not exactly unique in design compared to other Venerables, but the veteran Wolves interred in them are so viking that they want to keep on vikinging even after death, meaning that the Iron Wolves of the chapter figured out how to give them a Blizzard Shield and a fucking huge Frost Axe. They lack ranged weapons but, you know, Dreadnought-sized double-headed axe!
- Wulfen Dreadnought: Sometimes, a Space Wolf entombed in a Dreadnought succumbs to the Curse of the Wulfen, becoming a snarling metal beast whose violent temper makes him poorly suited for normal Dreadnought weaponry. Instead, the Iron Priests give him a great axe and a Great Wolf Claw and point him in the general direction of the enemy. The best-known of these is MURDERFANG, who has to be frozen solid with Helfrost Weaponry between battles to prevent him from killing his battle-brothers.
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Furioso -
Furioso Librarian -
Mortis -
Deathwing -
Doomglaive -
Space Wolves -
Wulfen
Contemptor Pattern[edit]
Really old Dreadnoughts from before the Horus Heresy that are bigger and stronger than "modern" Dreads. A few Chapters still have them and deploy them to the field. They look more humanoid and Anime-like, and people get puzzled as why the Grey Knights do not use these instead of the goofier Dreadknight, but the reasons they don't use them are exactly the same as why they started using the Castraferrum pattern instead; plus, Contemptors are becoming rarer and rarer in 40k, because the Adeptus Mechanicus keeps forgetting how to build things competently.
They have a bunch of mysterious cybernetic/AI stuff, which probably means that you should keep these away from the Adeptus Mechanicus, since they like stripping them out for parts to use on their robots. Unlike regular Dreads, they have access to Cyclone Missile Launchers, Heavy Conversion Beamers, Dreadnought Chainfists, Dreadnought Power Claw, Dreadnought Power Fist, Heavy Grav-Cannon, Plasma Blasters, and the Kheres-Pattern Assault Cannon. They also have an advanced Atomantic Reactor which no one knows how to make anymore, that is coupled to a field generator that gives them an invulnerable save at the expense of making a Vehicle Explodes result more dangerous.
A plastic one of these came as part of Betrayal at Calth, and the sheer terribleness of the model made every 30k player cry, least of all because of the absolutely crippled loadout. They would release a second crack at it with the revamp of the Horus Heresy line, giving them a more diverse loadout that can compete with their blockier brethren.
You've got to ask why Bjorn isn't one of these, he's certainly old and important enough. Contemptors were never as popular among the Space Wolves as they preferred the reliability of the Castraferrum pattern, and they also had a negative reputation for excess savagery during the early days of the Legion which stained the reputations of those interred within them. Its negative reputation became a self-fulfilling cycle when the Legion Iron Priests began selectively interring marines who already had dark deeds under their names.
- Contemptor-Mortis Dreadnoughts: A modified Contemptor Dreadnought most often used by the Dark Angels that puts out a massive amount of dakka...so massive, in fact, that modern autocannon Dreads live in jealousy. Also, they have targeting arrays to fire at flyers.
- Contemptor-Furioso Dreadnoughts: While any Contemptor can be kitted out with two close combat weapons only the Blood Angels do this exclusively, since they don't have access to "regular" Contemptors in the rules, which also means they don't get access to the cool relic weapons.
- Contemptor-Incaendius Dreadnought: A specialized Contemptor built in special Mechanicum enclaves on Baal, unique to the Blood Angels as a result of a pact with the Forge World Anvillus. It has a pair of improved Dreadnought Lightning Claws and A MOTHERFRACKING JUMP-PACK. You heard that. A Dreadnought with an actual Jump-Pack like Assault Marines (and ironically more down-to-earth when compared to their Librarian Dreads).
- Contemptor-Cortus Dreadnoughts: A more easily produced Contemptor, made from less sophisticated materials and spare parts cannibalised from other dreadnoughts, resulting in less armour, less effective shielding, and a worse user interface. However, they are faster and more cost effective than the standard Contemptors, and can overcharge their reactors for even more speed at a risk to themselves.
- Contemptor-Osiron Dreadnoughts: The Osiron Class Dreadnought was a type of Contemptor used by the Thousand Sons. These dreadnoughts were created by Magnus himself, and consisted of a mortally wounded psyker Space Marine laced with a psychometric barrier for his brain. Therefore they were considered as Humanity's first psychic Dreadnought.
- Venerable Contemptor Dreadnoughts: A Contemptor Dreadnought that is part of the Adeptus Custodes and is thus automatically given the title of 'Venerable' cause they're just that badass. Essentially a golden Contemptor Dreadnought that is armed with a standard issue Autocannons, Power Fists and Multi-Melta. For just 30 more points you get the Aegis (Which grants a 5+ invulnerable save), and Deep Strike abilities, plus the aforementioned venerable. Considered as a cheaper alternative to the Custodes' walkers (Yes, the Contemptor Dreadnought is considered as the equivalent of a worn down rented car for the Golden Bananas. This should tell you how OP they are).
- Contemptor-Galatus Dreadnoughts: Used exclusively by the Adeptus Custodes, these Dreads were badass. How badass? Besides being more advanced overall, they came with an extra shield for solid defense, and a giant fucking sword with a built-in heavy flamer. Truly a marvel worthy of the Emperor's bodyguards. Want to turn Terminators into piles of ruined flesh with one swipe? This is the weapon of choice. Want to roast a mob of angry Hormagaunts just by pointing your sword at them? This is also the weapon of choice. Accept no substitutes.
- Contemptor-Achillus Dreadnoughts: Yet another variant of a Adeptus Custodes exclusive dreadnought. The Contemptor-Achillus swaps the giant sword and shield with a ECKS BAWKS HUEG FUCK OFF Power Spear called the Dreadspear with an inbuilt Corvae Las-Pulser and two hand-mounted Storm Bolters. If you want to skewer the rear ends of Land Raiders, this is the walker for you.
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Contemptor-Mortis -
Contemptor-Furioso -
Contemptor-Incaendius -
Contemptor-Cortus -
Contemptor-Osiron -
Venerable Contemptor -
Contemptor-Galatus -
Contemptor-Achillus
Deredeo Pattern[edit]
The Dorito Deredeo is a dedicated heavy weapons platform, rather than a general purpose chassis like the Castraferrum or the Contemptor. To this end it gets access to specialized wargear which cannot be found anywhere else, like a tank busting version of an autocannon or a unique plasma battery.
Developed alongside the Castraferrum Pattern and Lucifer Pattern, the Deredeo Pattern was designed as a heavy assault platform. Rather than being a general assault unit like others of its kind, the Deredeo Pattern Dreadnought is a dedicated heavy weapons platform, intended to combine superior firepower with the flexibility and durability of a Dreadnought chassis. It was initially deployed in limited numbers to each of the Legions due to difficulties in its manufacture, its durability and firepower saw demand for the Deredeo pattern increase after the outbreak of the Horus Heresy.
The model is a reworking of one of the three 1st edition Dreadnought patterns (with the other two being the Furibundus and Contemptor) from FW's workshop. It is equipped with an Anvilus Autocannon Battery (which are S7 Sunder Autocannons for tank busting), torso-mounted heavy bolters/flamers, and the Aiolos Missile Launcher (which always hits the side armour of enemy tanks, doesn't require line of sight to fire, can be aimed at a different target from the autocannons, and is Pinning as well). Like the Contemptor Mortis, it has Atomantic Shielding and a Helical Targeting Array to take down fliers. It can also be equipped with Armoured Ceramite in the off-chance it ever gets into melta range. Alternately, it can switch out the autocannons for a twin-linked Hellfire Plasma Carronade that lets it fire off either 4 S7 AP2 shots or a single S7 AP2 Large Blast (with Gets Hot! on the latter mode, not that it matters much since it's still twin-linked), or an Arachnus Heavy Lascannon Battery, which isn't twin-linked but does fire 2 S10 AP2 shots, and if its shots score a penetrating hit on a vehicle the shot has a 50% chance of having it count as TWO penetrating hits instead of one! In Horus Heresy games it can also replace the missile launcher with an Atomantic Pavaise that improves its invulnerable save and lets anyone within 3" of it use the save too, at the expense of a larger explosion radius if it ever goes down. Since this can improve existing invulnerable saves by +1 for units which already have them, it's an ideal complement to Terminators with good ranged weapons (e.g. Tyrant Siege Terminators or anyone with an Assault Cannon).
They will soon be receiving two new options: a set of four Boreas Air Defence Missiles, which are one use but hit hard (S8 AP2 Heavy 1) and cancel Jink saves, and the Volkite Falconet, which spits out a considerable number of Deflagrate-inducing shots (Heavy 6 S7 AP2) and causes infantry that survive getting wounded by it to only fire snap shots.
Leviathan Pattern[edit]
AKA the Hulkbuster Pattern. Unlike other patterns, the Leviathan was apparently designed in secret on Terra instead of Mars. It is also said to take just as much resources to manufacture as an Imperial Knight. Despite the fact that it looks like it has considerably more mass than a regular Castraferrum dread, it is still nowhere near the size of a Knight. Therefore the subsystems used in its construction must be very difficult to manufacture and/or the raw resources used to make them are very rare and difficult to acquire. Of course, this is the same approach that the Imperium uses for much of its finest wargear.
Also there's an issue with the Leviathan system putting immense pressure on the pilot's brain, slowly killing him unless the sarcophagus is only hooked to an active dreadnought for short periods of time with long periods to recuperate and heal. Some Legions gave their pilots that time, others let them burn down when the situation demanded extended deployment, and when the Horus Heresy started escalating with higher and higher stakes every next battle, even Salamanders started sacrificing their "honored dead" to Leviathans with alarming frequency. In modern 40k, however, most loyalist chapters try to preserve the pilots they put into their Leviathans (the Red Scorpions even put their former Chapter Master into one), while Chaos marines just make their Leviathans daemonically possessed, which solves both brain degradation and typical dreadnought madness from the lack of sleep problems, as well as the problem of maintaining ancient tech no one understands any more, as possession somehow gives Leviathans ability to repair themselves by sacrificing the souls of people they kill.
In any event, the Leviathan is a specialist siege dreadnought, like an enhanced Ironclad variant, but like the Deredeo it comes with its own unique weapons not found anywhere else. By default, it begins with two Siege Claws with built-in meltaguns that have a 50% chance of causing d3 extra wounds on a successful To Wound roll. These can be replaced with Siege Drills for Armourbane, and it also has two torso-mounted heavy flamer that can be swapped out for Volkite Calivers if you REALLY need that blob of infantry dead. While it's a beast in assault since it gains 2 HoW attacks and +1 I on the charge, it's equally vicious if kitted out for shooting- its ranged options are a Leviathan Storm Cannon (S7 AP3, Heavy 6, and Sunder with a range of 24"), the Cyclonic Melta Lance (Range 18" S9 AP1 Heavy 3, Melta) or a Grav Flux Bombard, which acts like 30K's Graviton Weapons in that affected targets need to roll either at or under their Strength at 2d6 or be wounded (if infantry) or roll 3d6 for armor penetration (for vehicles), taking DOUBLE the number of Hull Points it would normally take if it penetrates successfully- and either way, the Large Blast leaves behind difficult/dangerous terrain for the next turn. Either of those can be further supplemented with a one-use Phosphex Discharger so enemy blobs can make like Fallujah and eat a dose of Willie Pete, and can also take a pack of three hunter-killer missiles for a little bit of long-range Rhino-popping. Its Reinforced Atomantic Shielding gives it a 4++ invulnerable save against all sources, but also increases the radius and Strength of an Explodes! result on the vehicle damage table by D3 (like damn near everything FW makes that has an invuln) so be careful there. It's potentially a blessing in disguise if you're charging into the midst of the enemy, but don't expect it to take down Titans in its dying throes.
A few of these still serve in the 41st millennium, though they lose out on several of their options (volkite calivers and phosphex discharger). This also ties into its status as a Relic of the Armoury, as these things are so unreliably kill-crazy that they are only sent out on the Chapter Master's direct say-so. The reason why this is so is unknown, but clearly even the loyalists aren't exempt from their pilots devolving into unhinged madmen. Some suspect this is due to the still poorly understood technologies that went into the dread's creation. As for Chaos Dreadnoughts, their pilots have often been alive since the Horus Heresy and are just fucking nuts regardless.
Loyalists have the prefix of "Relic" while Chaos Leviathan are "Hellforged." Besides how they look, they differ in the names of the weapons they can take.
For Zone Mortalis it should probably be said that the Leviathan Dreadnought is possibly the most terrifying thing in the entire world to deal with in tight, narrow corridors. Its two Heavy Flamers gain Shred and Rending by default in Zone Mortalis, and its default Meltaguns mean it can just vaporize any other walkers it comes across. This thing becomes the pinnacle of destruction whenever playing with the Blip Rule, as your opponent won't even know where the fuck it is.
Since it comes at 260 points base, you could easily just bring three of these, an HQ, and two scout squads to snag objectives. Just let the Leviathans become mobile platforms of absolute destruction that cause everything that walks around the corner to experience critical existence failure within the span of a single assault phase.
Redemptor Pattern[edit]
The new walking death machine in the dreadnought line. This pattern was created by Belisarius Cawl as part of the Primaris Space Marines project since their size could make the potential entombing in regular dread patterns difficult (and not to play a little with dreadnought tech, create his own pattern and make you buy the new model).
These Redemptor Dreadnoughts are notably bigger than the standard Castaferrum dreads, roughly equivalent to the aforementioned Leviathan pattern. Although it could be said that the Leviathan specializes in siege warfare whereas the Redemptor is more shock orientated in function, with extra guns replacing the atomantic shielding of the Leviathan.
As expected with all things Primaris, he's bigger, stronger, faster, and sturdier than most patterns, sharing many things with the Leviathan, including a major flaw of its own: it tends to kill its pilots rather quickly due to unknown reasons (possibly because said neural links are too well-designed, or maybe it's because the AdMech saw nothing wrong with making it work like their own Onager Dunecrawler; knowing the cogboys, we can safely assume it's the latter) so it's yet unknown how the pattern will fare in the future, but if that flaw has become a noticeable trend in just the century or so of the Indomitus Crusade, then there's no way the Redemptor can be expected to preserve valued veterans for millennia like regular dreads can, which is kinda half the point of a dreadnought in the first place.
It comes with a choice of gatling cannon or plasma incinerator on the right arm, with a Redemptor fist and heavy flamer support weapon or gatling cannon on the left, 2 chest-mounted fragstorm grenade launchers or storm bolters and a carapace-mounted Icarus rocket pod for aerial denial.
Brutalis Pattern[edit]
2023 introduced a new melee variant to the Redemptor in the same vein as the Furioso patterns of old.
Its two fists look notably different than the hand-like design of the Redemptor's and can be swapped out for claws which deal more melee damage and are similar to the Furioso’s Blood Talons in shape but without the latter’s flamers or other built-in ranged weapons. Speaking of ranged weapons its non-clawed version is apparently getting twin-linked auto bolt rifles over the hands rather than under for some reason. The chest weapons in the Brutalis are now either heavy meltas to deal with vehicles or heavy bolters instead of the fragstorm grenade launchers or storm bolters of the Redemptor. Meanwhile, the carapace mounts a pair of Ironhail heavy stubbers on top in place of the normal Redemptor’s Icarus rocket pod.
Ballistus Pattern[edit]
10th Edition's new contribution, harkening back to the old Hellfire Dreads. Rather than arms, this dread instead carries a double Lascannon hanging from one shoulder and a missile launcher hanging from the other. Its chest now only houses storm bolters.
Telemon Pattern[edit]
The third Adeptus Custodes-exclusive Dreadnought (because Emps saved all the best toys for the Golden Banana-men, which is just as well - could you imagine what might have happened if Horus had had these?!), and one so big it can be mistaken for a Knight. Fewer than a handful of Telemon Dreadnoughts are to be found within the ranks of the Legio Custodes, each intended to stand sentinel over its charges no matter the forces brought against it.
The honor of interment in one of the few existing Telemon sarcophagi is awarded to only the most celebrated warriors. Rare is the foe who can stand against the array of esoteric, hand-crafted weapons that grace its chassis or the ferocious will and warrior skill of the master Custodian interred within.
As they are reserved for the most elites in the Imperium, the Telemon's weaponry included in its armaments are the Telemon Caestus, which can be assembled with fist open or closed and has an in-built wrist-mounted Plasma weapon called the Proteus Plasma Projector. The ornate armor work includes an Aquila motif, and two fans are included, meaning the Caestus can be mounted on either of the left or right arm; and a choice of the Arachnus Storm Cannon or the Iliastus Accelerator Culverin (or a second Caestus, because why not?), with two separate elbow fans making it mountable on either arm of a Telemon Heavy Dreadnought. All of them are then topped with an oversized Cyclone Missile Launcher called the Spiculus Bolt Launcher. It is also possible to forgo the Caestus entirely for a second gun, but this is not recommended as your Telemon now has no melee weapon.
As previously mentioned, the Telemon Pattern Heavy Dreadnought towers over even a Contemptor Pattern Dreadnought, with a bulk comparable a good deal bigger than that of the Leviathan Pattern or the Primaris Redemptor pattern Dreadnoughts, but in an Artificer-wrought hull. The Telemon Heavy Dreadnought bears a striking resemblance to the Aquilon Terminator Armour worn by the elites of the Custodes but the size of a house.
Other Patterns[edit]
So far the Castraferrum, Contemptor, Deredeo, Leviathan, and Telemon are the only patterns of dreadnought that are available as models. (unless you count some of the chaos daemon-engines, but who knows what they started as?)
Other types have been named though, and it is also said that some of these older pre-heresy patterns could have been piloted by non-astartes. So we can cross our fingers that more dreadnoughts may be coming eventually.
- Unknown Space Crusade Pattern: In the "Mission Dreadnought!" expansion box for space Crusade released in 1991 is. . .the Dreadnought. Looking more like an ED209 then any of the other dreadnoughts it debatable if it's at all connected to 40k but early Space Crusade is definitely connected in terms of evolution to 40k and you do see third party Space Crusade Dreadnoughts every now and again so it gets a mention.
- Lucifer: Said to be the prototype for the Contemptor, but without the cool gubbinz and far less frontal armour than the Castraferrum. And what Imperial retard decided to name it the Lucifer? I mean, Emps, c'mon! You really want to make it a target that badly!?
- Furibundus: The other old Rogue Trader pattern. It's also one of the most fugly but since Forge World is set on updating the old stuff they'll fix that or make it more Grotesque. If they ever get around to making it. According to Warhammer Community, it was a precursor to the Furioso Dreadnought. Appropriately enough for a close-combat Dread, the name roughly means 'frenzied' or 'maddened'.
- Fyodor Karamazov's Chair: While not officially a known dreadnought pattern... just look at the thing. It's very obvious around the legs that his personal throne is some kind of dreadnought pattern or modification of a dreadnought.
- Invictor Tactical Warsuit: Like Karamazov's Chair but official, converted Redemptor to pilotable Sentinel-esque robot for Primaris.
- Other Dreadnoughts:In early editions of 40k "Dreadnought" was generically used to refer to both the Eldar Wraithlord and Ork Deff Dred and to a lesser extend the Chaos Helbrute.
Meme[edit]
"Even in death, I still serve" was a phrase scattered throughout Warhammer 40k, but it didn't become a meme until the original Dawn of War game, where it's one of the Dreadnought's more common quotes.
The making of a Dreadnought[edit]
1: Take 1 outstandingly badass Space Marine
2: Cut him in half (hopefully before he does the same to you)
3: Leave the dying body on the doorstep of some Adeptus Mechanicus guy
4: ???
5: PROFIT!!!
On a less lulzy note, the novel The Unforgiven gives us an insight as to what being put inside a Dreadnought is like, as well as a clear reason why the usual occupants are marines who've been chewed up and spat out by at least three separate Carnifexes. The process of implanting the neural connectors is so painful to a lucid brain that it can sometimes kill a Space Marine out of shock. Let me reiterate that this is a Space Marine, a Space Marine with the some of the best painkiller hormones in the galaxy, with mental conditioning and hypno-memetic psycho-reactive blocks to protect their minds from pain and torture, and the procedure is typically done with the Apothecary close at hand to monitor the pain threshold. It's still, somehow, even to a son of the Emperor, painful enough to almost kill them. Holy shit. If they survive, they can pretty much wrestle with the usual daemons and barbacue some Xenos while they are at it.
Gallery[edit]
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After his internment into a Dreadnought, Brother Koolaidius has specialized in dynamic entry at any location, usually attending to battle brothers with refreshment needs.
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Fear the motherfucking Breadnought.
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Even in death, I still fuck your army.
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I have come to destroy your anus.
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The Dreadnoughts of the Angry Marines are also known as the Belligerent Engines.
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Suck it.
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I came to reap the souls of those Traitorous Scum...if there was any...
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What's with the Battle Bunnies thing anyw...ooooh. That. No problem with it.
See Also[edit]
- Tankred, the original memenought. He endures, for he is here for the bitches.
- Donovan
- Chaos Dreadnought, the evil version
- Grandpa Dreadnought
- Bjorn the Fell Handed, of the Space Wolves, and the oldest living Space Marine in the Imperium.
- Davian Thule, of the Blood Ravens, also known as Davian Cool. Famous for conquering Kronus, beating up Eliphas the Inheritor, and getting nomed by a Tyranid Warrior.
- Belligerent Engine, a catch-all term for the Dreadnoughts of the Angry Marines.
- Spared, a short story about a Dreadnought and some Tau.
- Entombed, a not-so-short story about a Dreadnought.
- Invictor Tactical Warsuit, now Primaris can just hop in and pilot a Dreadnought without getting debilitated first.
- Penitent Engine and Mortifier, basically Sisters' answers to the Helbrute.
- Thallax, AdMech version.
- Wraithlord, what was originally billed as the Eldar dreadnought
- Killa Kan and Deff Dred, the Ork equivalents to the dread, with the former originally being sold as an Ork Dread.
Forces of the Primaris Marines | ||||||||
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Command | Apothecary Biologis • Helix Adept • Judiciar • Primaris Ancient • Primaris Apothecary • Primaris Captain • Primaris Chaplain • Primaris Librarian • Primaris Lieutenant • Primaris Techmarine • Vanguard Librarian • Vanguard Lieutenant | |||||||
Troops | Aggressor • Bladeguard Veteran • Desolation Squad • Eliminator • Eradicator • Hellblaster • Inceptor • Incursor • Infernus • Infiltrator • Intercessor • Phobos Strike Team • Reiver • Suppressor | |||||||
Structures | Firestrike Servo-Turret • Hammerfall Bunker | |||||||
Walkers | Ballistus Dreadnought • Brutalis Dreadnought • Invictor Tactical Warsuit • Redemptor Dreadnought | |||||||
Transports | Impulsor • Repulsor Tank | |||||||
AFVs | Gladiator Tank • Invader ATV • Primaris Outriders • Storm Speeder | |||||||
Superheavy Vehicles |
Astraeus Super-Heavy Tank | |||||||
Flyers | Overlord Gunship | |||||||
Spacecraft | Space Marine Landing Craft | |||||||
Allies | Space Marines |
Other Imperials | Chaos | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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