Ossiarch Bonereapers

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Grand Alliance Death

Ossiarch Bonereapers

The Skeleton War is upon us! We ride against the fuckboys!

Lore
Tactics
General Tactics

"A way to subjugate a country is through either the sword or debt."
– John Adams
"The bones of the skeleton which support the body can become the bars of the cage which imprison the spirit."
– J. Ruth Gendler
"Spooky Scary Skeletons, send shivers down your spine. Shrieking skulls will shock your souls, seal your doom tonight!"
– The first part of their theme song

Another addition to Nagash’s ever growing hordes (designed and sculpted by Maxime Corbeil, a former dentist), the Ossiarch Bonereapers (Also known as The Boney Boys, Bonecast, Tomb Kings 2.0, Bonechads, Nagash's Taxmen, The Boney Bean Counters, Ossiarch Bean Counters or The IRS (short for Internal Ribcage Service)) are the result of an eons old plan by Big Bone Daddy. Put simply, they are the manifestation of the old saying regarding Death and Taxes.

Likely inspired by the Stormcast Eternals (at the meta level. In-universe Nagash made them long before Sigmar had his Stormcast idea), the Bonereapers are not mere skeletons given life by necromancy, but massive constructs of bone and countless warrior souls, making them all look impressively robust for undead. Since the Soulblight Gravelords are the mainstay, the Nighthaunt are the shock troops and the Flesh-Eater Courts are completely insane, these buff bone bruisers are the elite vanguard of the Grand Alliance. Given their themes of bones, undead constructs, priest characters, architect characters and skull-throwing catapults... they're currently the closest thing we've got to Tomb Kings in AoS.

They also carry out the Bone Tithe; in addition to going out and killing shit to get their bones, the Ossiarchs give settlements they encounter a contract: Give up a set amount of bones whenever we stroll by, or face annihilation now. Understandably, most choose the former. Being unable to pay or even being rude to them also provokes a slaughter.

Visually-speaking, they're what happens when Games Workshop decides to mix Tyranids, Tomb Kings, and Necrons into one army. Thematically-speaking, they actually share quite a bit with the Death Korps of Krieg, mainly to how both reduce war and society to a ruthless and callous arithmetic designed solely to fulfill the orders of their Masters.

History[edit]

Age of Myth[edit]

"Anything you can do, I can do better!"
– Likely Nagash after learning how Sigmar makes Stormcast
SKULLS FOR THE SKULL THRONE Nagash! And all the other bones too!

When Nagash was helping Sigmar build his cities he secretly began experimenting on undead, combining their bones and souls into newer, stronger undead warriors; the Morghasts and the first Bonereapers. Most were put into massive underground crypts Nagash secretly built beneath the cities of Order, but others were kept on the surface and brought into battle alongside the armies of the other gods.

The other gods saw the Bonereapers and really didn't like them because of how unnatural they were, even for undead. In response, Nagash sent these Bonereapers to the edge of Shyish to lay low until he called on them (these Bonereapers who would go on to form the Null Myriad). He also sent at least twenty of them to wander the Realms on a long-forgotten mission (these would go on to become the Petrifex Elite).

Strangely, none of the Order groups noticed until however long its been since the start of the Age of Myth that there were crypts full of undead warriors beneath their cities. Especially since they know about and need to defend against enemies who specialize in creating massive complexes beneath your cities that they then invade from or ones who are just well-versed in tunnel warfare.

Age of Chaos[edit]

The Age of Chaos only affected the Bonereapers garrisoned at the edge of Shyish. By that time they had become resistant to magic, and they fought against demonic armies, their actions blunting the assault of Chaos on Shyish. During this time, Katakros led an army against Sigmar himself on Nagash's orders while the former was pursuing the latter for his betrayal. The battle resulted in the loss of Katakros' army, the Mortarch's defeat and subsequent confinement to a Stormvault.

Age of Sigmar[edit]

In the lead-up to the Soul Wars, Katakros was freed from the Stormvault by fellow Mortarch, Lady Olynder. The Bonereapers on the edge of Shyish acted as a military force protecting the skeletal work crews who carried grains of Shyishan realmstone to Nagashizzar for Nagash to use to build the Black Pyramid.

Soul Wars[edit]

After the Necroquake, Nagash decided the time was right to wake up everyone beneath these cities, who apparently marched back home, making them relatively pointless. In that respect, these tombs seemed to mirror the Stormvaults Sigmar had strewn about the Realms to contain various dangerous contraband like said Mortarch.

When the Bonereaper legions arrived in Shyish, Nagash got back to his pet-project of making super-skellies, and perfected the process. This involves taking souls and distilling them down to their most choice elements. This involves ripping apart their identity and keeping parts considered useful (such as skills, daring and knowledge) while discarding the parts that aren't useful (such as fear, compassion and loyalty to anything but Nagash) and replacing those parts with something "better" (like loyalty to Nagash), with the strongest-willed soul among them becoming the identity of the new Bonereaper. Then these fragmented and melded souls are put into specially crafted bone constructs. By doing so, he artificially created individuals who were warriors, leaders, bodyguards, artisans, architects, philosophers and sculptors all in one, which sounds a little familiar.

The Bonereapers subsequently had a meteoric rise, making their mark - and several enemies - across the realms. After establishing their powerbase in Shyish, the Ironjawz Warclan the Kryptboyz have focused their efforts on fighting the Bonereapers due to wanting to destroy their settlements and wear their bones as trophies. In Chamon, the Null Myriad encountered the Seraphon of the Thunder Lizard Constellation and got embroiled in wars for control of the realm's edge. The Ivory Host legion gained a foothold in Ghur, Katakros' realm of origin, and in building their cities they've positioned themselves for conflict with several Mawtribes and the free city of Excelsis. The Ivory Host also clashed with an infamous Mega-Gargant who went on to become the mercenary known as One-Eyed Grunnock.

This was followed by the Bonereapers most notable conflict; the War for the Eightpoints. Katakros led the Mortis Praetorians and detachments from other Legions into the Eightpoints alongside Olynder and a Nighthaunt army to take the Eightpoints for Nagash, the first invvasion of the realm since it had been captured by Chaos. They succeeded in capturing and fortifying the realmgate leading to Shyish, and established a fortified citadel around it as a base of operations. However, Katakros' campaign was halted by the sudden return of Archaon and a force of Varanguard plus a daemon army led by Be'lakor. Bolstered by the mortal and daemonic hosts, the Chaos armies routed Katakros' Nighthaunt allies and forced the Bonereapers to enact a tactical retreat, with Archaon personally slaying him after a lengthy duel. Katakros' soul returned to his stronghold, albeit wounded, and after Katakros' restoration in a new body, the conflict became a stalemate and a war of attrition.

Broken Realms[edit]

The Broken Realms Saga saw the Bonereapers take a huge boning in one book:

There was a small mention in Book 1: Morathi, where the titular villain made a deal with Katakros. She gave him several tons of bone infused with the magic of Ulgu in exchange for an attack on Archaon's base to distract his forces from what hers were doing. Katakros accepted, albeit wary of any skulduggery (heyo!) from Morathi.

But you're not here for that. You're here for Book 2: Teclis. It starts with Nagash marshalling Neferata, Mannfred and Arkhan in a plan to spread the Shyish Nadir to other realms. Teclis interrupts the meeting and warns Nagash to stop his expansionist plans or be stopped. Nagash, being Nagash, reacts accordingly, as in banishing Teclis and changing his plans a bit so Hysh is hit extra hard. Teclis' response is to gather a Lumineth army and put them on flying mountains to invade Shyish. This army attacks a trio of Bonereaper fortress-statues as a symbolic victory. The Bonereapers put up a fierce fight, even animating the statues to attack, but they're unable to stop the Lumineth who destroy the fortress-statues. The Lumineth flee, but not before Vokmortion appears to give Teclis a brief warning.

The Bonereapers replenished their losses with the dead of both sides and sought revenge. While Neferata's and Mannfred's forces invaded Chamon and Ghyran respectively, a Null Myriad Bonereaper army led by Arkhan himself invaded Hysh and press-ganged the local Flesh-Eater Courts to help. Along the way, Arkhan and his forces destroyed many fortresses and shrines, doing more damage to the Lumineth's realms than any foe since the Spirefall (though this lore was later added as kind of an apology from GW for jobbing the entire Death faction). A Lumineth army repelled Arkhan's first attempt, burning their dead to deny his forces the bones they needed to recover, forcing them to harvest the bones of their ghoul allies, whose retaliations weakened the Bonereapers further. Arkhan led his army to a realmgate on the edge of Hysh and tried again, trusting the magic of the realm's edge to stop any attackers. But it didn't completely. A volunteer Lumineth army attacked Arkhan's forces, even though they that knew between the Bonereapers and the realm's edge that it was likely a one-way trip. At their head was someone who had a major score to settle with Arkhan as he'd been cursed to a bodiless state by the liche - Eltharion. Though the magic of the realm's edge thinned their numbers, enough Lumineth survived to defeat the Bonereapers, with Arkhan himself being punted off the edge of Hysh by Eltharion, with him and his mount disappearing.

Then Nagash personally arrived in Hysh to finish what Arkhan started and kill Avalenor in revenge, but was forced to do battle against Teclis, with each god’s respective army doing battle beneath their feet. Though both gods were roughly equal in magical might, Nagash proved to be a superior combatant and marked Teclis with his blade and death magic. But Teclis got the last laugh due to some unexpected allies in Alarielle and several Luminarks, culminating in the destruction of Nagash's nine books. Nagash was bound to the slopes of Avalenor in a replica of the spell that bound Slaanesh before having his body broken and his soul imprisoned in Nagashizzar, followed by Teclis personally undoing the Necroquake.

With Nagash imprisoned (for the time being), the Necroquake ended, Arkhan deader than ever before and the other forces of death more fractious and carving their own trails of carnage, the Ossiarch are the only active remnant of their master’s will. There is also a looming Slaaneshi invasion on the horizon, as the reborn Sigvald seeks to avenge his Shadeglass imprisonment by destroying Nagash's beloved pet project.

Era of the Beast[edit]

Katakros is fixated on his campaign in the Eightpoints, but still keeping tabs on what's happened elsewhere, calling out Neferata's power play when she criticized Olynder working with Be'lakor. Katakros himself didn't criticize Olynder's actions because they hurt Sigmar's plan, with Neferata accusing Katakros of still being salty over his first loss to Sigmar. He's also starting a side project to seize control of Ghur, partly out of nostalgia, partly to distract himself from the side effects of the soul wound Archaon gave him.

The fight against Chaos is taking its toll on the Arx Terminus. While it has repelled nearly every assault, this means that it needs repairs regularly. Also meaning the Mortisans don't have time to purify the taint of Chaos from the bones they use. As a result, parts of the Arx Terminus have become corrupted by Chaos, with Bonereapers hearing strange voices and chambers randomly sealing themselves shut. These areas are quarantined from the rest, with regiments of Mortek Guard watching them in case something like a horde of daemons emerges. The one failure was when Archaon led an army that managed to break through the Arx Terminus and enter the Endgate, dealing significant damage to Gothizzar before being repelled. Whether the attack was a short statement from Archaon or the Bonereapers managed to push him back is unknown.

Apart from that, we get the thoughts of Mannfred and Neferata on Arkhan's disappearance. Mannfred gloats about it but is certain Arkhan will return (and plans to rub the defeat in his face when he does). Neferata doesn't comment much, except to subtly say that she "almost" missed him compared to a killjoy like Katakros (tsundere much?). The Bonereapers of the Null Myraid legion have started a project involving lots of grave-sand, which is heavily implied to be some sort of plan to bring Arkhan back.

Meanwhile, Nagash has been slowly regaining his power and awareness and already begun working on his vengeance. He's got some sort of link to Teclis, even interrupting Teclis' meditation to promise reprisals.

Dawnbringer Crusades[edit]

A garrison of Ossiarch Bonereapers in Ghyran made an all-enclosing bone wall designed to keep Ushoran trapped in his tower meet the Ghyranite half of the Twin-tailed Crusade. The Liege-Kavalos stood on top of the ramparts and offered a deal to the Dawnbringers. If they stopped where they are, the Bonereapers would allow them to settle and build a city next to the barricade and exempt them from any Bone Tithes for at least one generation; an extremely generous offer by Bonereaper standards. The Ghyranites engage in a bit of rules-lawyering with him as they work out whether to take the deal or smash through the wall.

The Liege-Kavalos gets sus as they parley and rightly assumes they're planning to fight, and they attack at almost the same time. The Dawnbringers smash through the barricade and keep going. The Bonereapers start to marshal an army for pursuit, but a missive from Katakros himself requesting aid from all Bonereaper garrisons stops them. The Liege-Kavalos assessed it and grudgingly called pursuit of the Ghyranite half of the Dawnbringer Crusade.

Society[edit]

Adds a whole new meaning to the phrase "pyramid scheme".

All Ossiarch Bonereapers are built for a specific purpose and assigned a role based on the souls from which they’re formed. This is codified through a caste system, with Nagash at the top, then Mortarchs Katakros and Arhkan, then the highest ranking Ossiarchs underneath and various ranks beneath that. The Bonereaper caste system has a cartouche representing each caste (though Nagash's is just to symbolize him). While there is a Mortarch cartouche, only Katakros wears it because Arkhan predates the Bonereaper system (and everyone but Nagash) by several eons, and despite their alliance he's too proud to wear Katakros' symbol. While they're all obedient to Nagash and fearless, the Bonereapers used in battle are sapient beings with enough individuality to have names and some personality, though they tend to be work-oriented and elitist. Having said that, Nagash and necromancy isn't infallible, so the process doesn't always excise personality traits Nagash opposes, so they are still capable of doubt and camaraderie which can make them question, regret or even challenge their orders.

While many Ossiarch Bonereapers are warriors, there are castes of groups such as crafters and preachers. There is movement between castes, but only downwards, and as a punishment for failure. A Liege Kavalos who fails in their mission, for example, may be remade as a Kavalos Deathrider. If the offense was major, they might get remade as a steed. The lowest caste are the exiles collectively referred to as Parrha, consisting of the worst offenders who get broken and remade into warped skeletal aberrations and the Bonereapers value them less than the Imperial Guard values the life of its rank-and-file soldiers (for the uninitiated, that's really saying something).

The Ossiarch Bonereapers can be found all across the Mortal Realms, aiming to conquer everything from Azyr to the Eightpoints. At present, the majority of the Ossiarch Bonereapers are concentrated in Shyish, inhabiting the nations that surround the Shyish Nadir. This allows them easy access to a vast source of magical power and establishes them as a permanent garrison around this most valuable of territories. Apart from Shyish, the largest concentrations of Bonereapers are in Ghur and Chamon.

The Ossiarch Bonereapers build according to principles laid down in the Principia Necrotopia, a set of guidelines that ensure optimal construction:

In the first stages of colonizing a new region, the Ossiarchs will establish tithing sites. Presumably, this involves mapping out surrounding settlements and segments of the region into their own tributaries, with each section's inhabitants made to sign a contract to begin paying the Tithe. They contruct shrines known as Bone-Tithe Nexus, which act as locations for vassals to dump their bones and are enchanted to give out powerful curses to ward off any scavengers seeking to steal from it.

Next, they will fortify key territories with small fortifications, following up with a number of Mortisan workshops to fuel the next stage of their expansion. These small holdings will eventually develop into vast and imposing fortresses, growing ever upward as the Bonereapers’ numbers grow. These are not just barracks, but places of culture for the Ossiarchs.

Ossiarch scholars will endlessly study scrolls in charnel libraries, recording the details of cultures in the Mortal Realms they have subjugated and those they seek to subjugate. These vast citadel-states eventually resemble Nagashizzar itself.

The Bone Tithe[edit]

Put your spines into it. Literally!

The Bone Tithe is instrumental to their society and Nagash's way of setting himself up as mob boss of the realms. Upon arriving in an area, the Ossiarchs send out scouts to get the lay of the land. When they find a settlement they want tribute from, a representative - in practice usually a Mortisan - approaches and makes them an offer they can't refuse; give "x" by the deadline at regular intervals, or we kill you all now and take what we want. To communicate, the Bonereapers draw on prior research for the local language; it doesn't matter if the vernacular's out of date by a few centuries or so, as long as they can be understood. If that doesn't work, the Bonereapers use other means, including killing a local and using their spirit as a translator if all else fails. If the locals refuse, attack them or are rude enough, the Bonereapers make good on their threat, slaughtering everything in the settlement that has bones, right down to the last child and stray animal. If they are feeling "nice", the Bonereapers might only kill the dissenters or leave a fraction of the people alive, but with even more bones required from them.

When demanding the Bone Tithe, what/who the bones come from and the required amount depends on the situation and Bonereaper legion. Human bone is the most widely used, with ogor bones a close second; duardin bones are liked for their durability but aren't common enough, aelf bones are slightly more common but don't replenish fast enough and greenskin bones are very common but coarse, porous and prone to spontaneous fungal growth unless treated properly. While animal bones are also used - such as for Kavalos steeds or Gothizzar Harvesters - that's not always the case and it depends on the animal (Rhinoxen and Bleaklake crocodiles are popular choices). How the bones are acquired is irrelevant, the most common options ranging from emptying the local cemetery to having everyone eligible give a limb or holding a lottery where those chosen are killed and the bones taken from their corpses.

The Bonereapers (though inbuilt or learned ability, it's not clear) CAN tell the difference between what race or species a specific bone comes from, so trying to cheat them with different kinds of bone doesn't work. They also respond to trickery the same way they respond to failure or refusal - immediate slaughter (as a human town learned to their cost when they tried to trick the Bonereapers by mixing pig bones in with human bones). Even other Death factions aren't exempt from the Bone Tithe, as the Bonereapers' laws consider their charge from Nagash to supersede any commonalities with his other followers (callous elitism isn't good for alliances, reflected in the rules by the Bonereapers not being able to take allies outside Drogg Fort-Kicka).

Sometimes things are even worse than the above. A particularly war-horny leader, most often from the Stalliarch Lords (more on them below), will give nigh-impossible demands to increase the chance of failure. What kinds of demands? How about asking a city's population for detailed records on everyone's family lineage going back to the founders and the condition of every bone in the city including bones still inside the living inhabitants. Or maybe they ask for just one ton of bones every day (for extra lulz, the offer is made at night and has to be completed the next day). They might instead, or also, arrive early to extract the Tithe just to get a good slaughter out of it; either exploiting the wording of their terms or causing a panic that makes their subjects attack.

However it ends, the bones of the Ossiarch's victims are sorted through, the good bones taken for future use the sub-par ones discarded (same with their victims souls). Strips of skin and flesh from these unfortunates are hung from the Bonereapers' spears as a warning to anyone who considers not paying the Tithe.

Ultimately, they have a term related to the Bone Tithe called the “Terminus Concept”. This refers to the point where a society can't provide enough bones so they get slaughtered and their bones are taken. For the truth is that the Bone Tithe is ultimately unsustainable for the payers, and the Bonereapers know it. This all proves that, while Nagash is a pragmatic sort of fellow, he'll always find a way to be a boner huge skeletal dick about it.

It is later revealed in revelations in the Era of the Beast that the Bone Tithe also serves a secondary secret purpose. In some underworlds that Nagash particularly desired (such as those close to the Shyish Nadir) he ordered particularly harsh Bone Tithes on these regions. Not because he needed the bones but to break the spirits of the inhabitants of those regions. As the people there lose hope and faith the respective underworlds start to drift further down the Shyish Nadir to empower Nagash. Making a potential weapon of psychological terror as well as resource supply.

Forces[edit]

Angry Dooting Intensifies

Leaders[edit]

  • Liege-Kavalos: Field generals with skeleton mounts placed in charge of leading the Bonereaper armies. They are forged as a cruel mockery of Sigmar’s Lord-Celestant on Dracoth.
  • Mortisan Boneshaper: The healers/builders of the Bonereapers. Formed from the souls of artists, they’re in charge of building the extravagant bone cities and other architecture of the legions. They all possess a friendly rivalry with each other that pushes them to one up another’s artwork. Has a spell that can hit a unit for approximately a third of its size in mortal wounds.
  • Mortisan Ossifector: New for third edition, can provide buffs to your spookiest of skeletons. Has a spell that lets them buff 3 such units within 24" at once.
  • Mortisan Soulmason: Miniature Arkhans with four arms who are in charge of hunting and fusing souls for their various constructs. They ride into battle on bony thrones with chicken legs. Provide buffs to your battleline units.
  • Mortisan Soulreaper: Your offensive caster for the Bonereapers with a scythe that doesn't like hordes. Has a spell that does more damage if it resolves at melee range and can be given a delayed resolution, so cast it, charge in and inform your opponent that they are already dead.

Battleline[edit]

  • Mortek Guard: Rank and file infantry of the Bonereapers. Well armored and shielded, they have the choice of swords or spears and optional greatswords as weapons. Their primary role is to create massive shield walls to protect their leaders.
  • Kavalos Deathriders: Bony heavy cavalry, each one has the soul of dozens of warriors to draw on their knowledge and is proportionately arrogant. They have undead birds roosting on their banner poles that act as spies and messenger birds. For added creep factor, these guys normally walk at a slow and ominous trot, only sprinting when going into a headlong charge and don't bother to clean themselves while hunting a target.

Others[edit]

  • Necropolis Stalkers: Four-armed skeletal constructs the size of Kurnoth Hunters with four faces, each one has the soul of four warriors, and switches between which one is dominant, altering their fighting style accordingly. Their name's ripped from the Necropolis Knights and the Tomb Stalkers.
  • Immortis Guard: Four-armed Grave Guard Tomb Guard elite skellingtons armed with a halberd in one set of hands and a shield in the other. Like the Morghasts, Immortis are the bodyguard bois to the Stalkers' chargey bois.
  • Morghast Harbingers and Archai: You know em, you love em. Nagash's original sculpted bone construct based on not-angels from the World-That-Was now served as prototypes to the current regime of spoopy skeltals. Flying blenders armed with either halberds (take these) or twin swords (don't take these). Harbingers are your deep strike bois, while the Archai are bodyguard bois.
  • Mortek Crawler: Screaming Skull Catapult 2.0 with an obligatory patent-friendly rename. In addition to flaming skulls, it can also hurl a cauldron of Death Magic that works based on bravery or a cursed stone that gets more powerful the more damage the Crawler takes. It's also powered by a bone-made hamster wheel and multiple legs.
  • Gothizzar Harvester: A big monster construct with weapon hands and half a skeleton for a codpiece that helps harvest bones. The Harvester uses them to make new constructs on the fly or repair damaged ones. Their weapon arms come with either enchanted maces or scything blades for hands.
  • Teratic Cohorts: The Warcry band, formed from the remains of failures and rejects and desperate to prove their worth. Their leaders, the Kavalos Centauri, are formed from the remains of a failed Liege-Kavalos and their bony steed. The Aviarch Harpies are giant skeletal birds formed from inept Ossiarchs ho were incompetent enough to let their prey escape. The Teratic Hounds are dog-like beasts made from defective Morteks.

Famous Legions[edit]

  • Mortis Praetorians: The 10,000 strong personal army of Katakros, created out of the souls of those he personally knew in life. They have gained a fearsome reputation for their tactical acumen, especially in Shyish. The poster boys who are a jack-of-all-trades, big on tactics and led by an ancient leader who was the basis for future generations. Whenever one dies, a new one is immediately made and travels to go where needed, even alone if only one new Bonereapers is needed.
  • Petrifex Elite: Made up of nomadic armies crafted from prehistoric fossilized bones, they are known for being slow-moving and a near impenetrable wall of bone. While fossilized bone tends to be fragile, the Petrifex Elite enchant them to be tough and also include already supernaturally tough bones among them (ie; the bones of godbeasts). Led by Mortisans, they only exist to slay and find ancient bones to build more of themselves and make themselves even deadlier. They have forgotten why Nagash wants them to do this, and their leaders eschew personal identity to the point of using titles instead of names, as mandated by their leader and most senior Mortisan, the Grand Necromystic.
    • This particular legion was OP and infamously spammed to hell in tournament play when the OBR were first released, potentially being a factor in the subsequent beat down/nerfing they received in Broken Realms.
  • Null Myriad: The first Ossiarch Bonereapers made during Nagash's experiments in the Age of Myth. The Null Myriad were later refined and bolstered using the bones and souls of the countless dead who helped construct Nagash’s Black Pyramid and the best of Arkhan's Black Disciples. They are a solemn yet prideful lot with high resilience to magic and were given to Arkhan to be his personal legion; they're so loyal to Arkhan that they defer to him even over Katakros himself. Their resistance to magic extends to the power of Chaos, so they're used to inhabit the most inhospitable parts of the realms. Recently Arkhan made an alliance with Katakros, and the Null Myriad's job is to secure magic-heavy locations in the realms so Katakros can control the sources of their magic. The Null Myriad forces in Chamon have come into conflict with the Seraphon of the Thunder Lizards Constellation who also dwell there.
  • Ivory Host: Outwardly, they appear as honorable warriors, but hidden away in their bodies is a monstrous frenzy that turns them into clawing slavering beasts. Fitting considering they are constructed from beast and monster bones. Tasked by Nagash to conquer Ghur, they overcompensate for their bestial anger by being meticulously clean and making everything of theirs as much of a work of art as possible. Also known for being the only Ossiarchs who build ships, use the color gold regularly in their attire and are led by a monarch. Currently they’ve claimed the realmgate of Greedmouth and established the Ivory Citadel in the southwestern corner of the Ghurish Heartlands, putting them awfully close to numerous Ogor Mawtribes and the free city of Excelsis.
  • Stalliarch Lords: A cavalry centric force who are skillful tacticians. Infamous for the nigh-impossible demands they make to have an excuse to raze cities and slaughter people (on the rare occasion that someone meets their outrageous demands they keep their promise but are really Butthurt about it). They take the freshest remains whenever possible to maximize how much they're infused with essence of the slain, which gives them more speed and vitality than other Bonereaper Legions and often a blood-slicked appearance. Basically That Guy as a cavalry-loving undead legion.
  • Crematorians: These Bonereapers are burning with an internal fire to the point where they literally explode when killed. Nagash crafted their legion to specifically level civilizations that displease him. Some of them have recently realized that they don't really have a purpose other than to fight and Nagashu Akbar explode and aren't too happy about that. In fact, their leaders have made pacts of friendship to repair each other if any of them are destroyed and the chief Liege-Kavalos has gone behind the Mortarchs' backs to scour the libraries of everyone they encounter in the hopes of finding a way to undo their fiery curse, and is implied to be on the verge of a breakthrough.

Significant Skeletons[edit]

  • Orpheon Katakros, Mortarch of the Necropolis: In life he was the greatest strategic genius in all the Mortal Realms, and undeath has done nothing to dull his mastery of military tactics. He's been given a new body of enscrolled bone by Nagash himself which looks like a JoJo stand rather than a skeleton. He goes into battle surrounded by various attendants; the Liege-Immortis, the Aviarch Spymaster, the Gnosis Scrollbearer, and the Prime Necrophoros.
  • Arch-Kavalos Zandtos: A Liege-Kavalos and Katakros’ most trusted lieutenant. In life he was a refined, death-obsessed assassin who considered killing a sacred act that should be as clean as possible. In undeath, he gradually became a death-purist who wishes to “cleanse” Shyish of anything still living.
  • Vokmortian, Master of the Bone-tithe: The grim tallyman in charge of recording/judging the Tithe. He carries the severed heads of those foolish enough to refuse to pay the Tithe and has a coffin on his back, making him look like a giant beetle. Though officially he’s under Katakros and Arkhan in the OBR hierarchy, he’ll only receive/carry out orders from Big Bone Daddy himself...which might be a bit difficult now that Nagash was sealed away by Teclis.
  • Arkhan the Black: Yeah, he's part of the army despite technically being just an "average" liche as opposed to a bone golem thing. Likely because apart from Nagash, he's the most privy to understanding how they are made without being one. While he has his own private legion in the Null Myriad, his authority is recognized by all the Ossiarch legions. He was recently thrown off the edge of Hysh by the Light of Eltharion, with him and his Dread Abyssal disappearing in a burst of light magic. While it's unlikely that Arkhan is gone for good, he's deader than ever before.
  • Xaramos: A Mortisan Boneshaper of the Mortis Praetorians, skilled in both diplomacy and keeping the legion operating at full efficiency. He assisted Arkhan in his counter invasion of Ymetrica in Hysh, where he put his diplomatic skills to use in acquiring the assistance of the Vertigon Court to defeat the Lumineth aelves and formed an unexpected friendship with the Ghoul King Varshorn. When relations turned sour over the Bone Tithe, the personal forces of Xaramos and Varshorn battled amidst the gore-caked caverns of the Starfang Mont in a conflict dubbed the Charnel War, with hints that Xaramos regretted fighting Vashorn. Xaramos died permanently in the last battle, personally decapitated by Vashorn.
  • King Zothar Athrabis: The ancient ruler of the Obsidian Coast, who gave his (and his entire army’s) soul to Nagash in exchange for the soul of his dead son. Now as a Bonereaper, Zothar enforces the Bone-Tithe on the few remaining mortals of the Coast, as well as demanding a vessel for his son’s soul every ten years. Things went like this for a thousand years, until his current “son” and his mortal subjects finally rebelled against his rule. Zothar, who was actually becoming close with this iteration of his son, was devastated and finally realized Nagash was never truly going to give him his son back. So he razed the last living city on the Obsidian Coast along with his remaining shred of humanity. All that’s left now is his duty as a servant of Nagash…and how much he hates the Necromancer.

Spooky Melodies for your Bony Boys[edit]

Trivia[edit]

  • The architecture of the Ossiarch Bonereapers was likely inspired by bone churches such as the Sedlec Ossuary in the Czech Republic. The Sedlec Ossuary is a Roman Catholic church where the bones of thousands of people have been artistically arranged to form the decorations and the furnishings of the chapel. Like other bone churches, this was done several centuries ago for creative interment reasons with many dead and not enough space to bury them on holy ground.
  • On a comical note, "Kavalos", the name for Bonereaper cavalry, translates to "crotch" in Greek (the Greek word is "kaválos"). Makes more sense when you think of Katakros' defining trait lookswise, and how his name even sounds like the Greek word.

Soulbound[edit]

The Age of Sigmar Roleplay supplement Champions of Death would naturally introduce the Ossiarch Bonereapers as a playable race, though like their gold-plated counterparts they aren't so much Soulbound as much as they are outsiders made to join a Binding for some other agenda. For those bound to Nagash, the purpose is obvious enough: The Ossiarchs are the ultimate form of his perfect future and are (almost) unquestionably loyal, sometimes even researching the uses of Soulfire in order to perfect the process of making more of their own. Their word is akin to the word of their god and thus cannot be refused. Those who join an Order Binding find themselves in one of two camps: Either as allies of desperation for a common goal or as a haven to escape from their place as an outcast in the rigid society of the Ossiarch legions that would see them recycled due to either defects or defiance.

Interestingly, their secondment to the party does not render them exempt from the Tithe. Even if their job would otherwise see them merely hoarding those bones for themselves, Ossiarch heroes are still forced to collect bones during any period of downtime. While this would sound odd for a party where the Ossiarch is ostensibly aligned with folks who would balk at the sight of such a deed, this is the only way for them to repair their frames (as they do have natural armor like the Sylvaneth).

You can have your Ossiarch hail from the following Legions:

  • Mortis Praetorians: The Legion of Orpheon Katakros himself, formed from the souls of his greatest soldiers and generals in life. They are the most determined of the legions, willing to use the bones of both friend and foe alike in order to bolster their ranks. That said, the demand for reinforcements are so frequent that there are those bodies that are made incomplete, subject to the whispers of waylaid spirits before being completely formed. Whenever Katakros sees interest in a Binding, he will often send a member of his Praetorians to accompany them and enforce order. Heroes from the Mortis Praetorians can spend an action to test Intuition against an opponent's Guile, allowing them to predict an enemy's move. In addition, all archetypes gain the Tactician talent.
  • Ivory Host: A legion sent to conquer Ghur, famous for slaying mighty monsters. While they obviously show scorn towards the primitive and weak cultures of the mortals here, the influence of the realm is very obvious from the frequent use of amber and use of animal bones in order to complete their tithe to the clearly caged savagery they unleash in the heat of battle. Heroes from the Ivory Host deal extra damage for each point of damage they suffer. In addition, all archetypes gain the Battle Rage talent.
  • Stalliarch Lords: A prideful band often formed from fresh bone and meat, the Ossiarchs of this legion are capable of some form of honor...just not in any way normal folk would understand. Often have they given near-impossible tasks for mortals to accomplish, either so they could claim their tithe or to see if the challenger can accomplish some greater goal worth the interest. That said, that latter part is often only carried out for amusement rather than any genuine respect. Heroes from the Stalliarch Lords can challenge an enemy, forcing the difficulty of all attacks to reach a high difficulty but making any hits against you deal double damage.
  • Petrifex Elite: A legion of nomadic bonecast, formed from the remains of ancient civilizations and forgotten graves. This legion views the binding with particular interest, seeing the parallels in becoming a whole greater than the sum of it parts and their own process of erasing all identity and originality - sometimes an Ossiarch might even have the remains of a former Soulbound in their body. Heroes from the Petrifex Elite are better armored than other Bonereapers, but they can't improve their bony armor in any way and can only repair it through collecting their tithe. In additionally, they can double their training for either navigating ancient ruins or recalling ancient history.
  • Null Myriad: Nagash's original legion, sent to keep watch on the realm's edges until the Necroquake forced them to return and be reinforced using the Black Pyramid's skeletal work gangs so they could better resist magic. As outsiders among the Ossiarchs, they are the most-versed in dealing with threats from beyond the edges of a realm and their special properties allow them to protect the very nature of the Binding. Heroes from the Null Myriad can spell Mettle to ignore the effects of a spell and double their training when dealing with exploring, navigating or withstanding the edges of the realms.
  • Crematorians: Ignited by the fires of the Shyish Nadir, the life of a Bonereaper here will often be short as the flames slowly consume their bony shells. This nature has led to many among their ranks questioning the wisdom of the skelepope's plans to make an army that can burn out, though they often cover it up with other purposes - such as studying the benefits of Soulfire and how it can sustain their bodies. Heroes from the Crematorians are constantly ablaze, letting them suffer a wound to restore Mettle. When they die, they explode and make the area where they stood a burning waste.

The Ossiarch Bonereapers have access to the Immortis Guard, Kavalos Deathrider, Morghast, Mortisan, or Necropolis Stalker archetypes

Gallery[edit]

See Also[edit]

  • Nagash, their jerk of a god whom they give their undisputed loyalty to (yes, really!)
Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar
Order
Chaos
Death
Destruction