

It’s still left specifically to the CM as to which mission packet is used, and the length of the phases. Each phase has a Legendary Mission, and awards Strategic Points to whichever alliance earned the most War Zone Points during it. In terms of what hasn’t changed, it still has a Campaign Master with quite a bit of leeway, and still runs in 3 phases. That’s not me editorializing either – the text explicitly notes that this is going to be very similar to the Obolis Campaign, albeit with some additions, that we’ll get to shortly. This is very similar to what we saw in the Book of Rust. Then again, “Charadon Apeace” wouldn’t make for much of a campaign, so it’s hard to fault them for recycling that bit of language. The campaign here is Charadon Aflame, which if you recall is the same thing that happened to Vigilus and seems to be the general trend now – we’re fully expecting Octartius 2 to be “Octarius Aflame” because that’s the inevitable outcome of Chaos or Xenos darkening your doorstep. Everyone’s favorite immortal heel, the original Daemon Price, Be’lakor, is here, and has had one hell of a glow up. The first release, Book of Rust, had the Obolis campaign, which detailed the Death Guard scrapping with the Adeptus Mechanicus and their Knight allies, and the Book of Fire continues that story. I just flew in from the Charadon sector and boy are my arms and the rest of my entire body completely engulfed in flames.Ĭharadon was never a particularly nice place to be, and it hasn’t exactly gotten better since we last checked in.

Here we’re diving into the Narrative and Crusade half of the Book of Fire, but check out our coverage of the competitive parts of it, and Amidst the Ashes, too. This week brings us two new Charadon campaign supplements for Warhammer 40,000, and Games Workshop were nice enough to send us copies of both to look over.
