grailkeeper Posted July 16 Share Posted July 16 Having finished this, its very mush skippable. I bought it for the ADB story cos I love ADB. Most of the stories are "fine" at best, but some are dull. I could have bought two or three pints for the price of this book, and my enjoyment of them would probably have lasted longer. OpossumStrong and Roomsky 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6122057 Share on other sites More sharing options...
KJB Posted Tuesday at 08:26 AM Share Posted Tuesday at 08:26 AM Well, it’s taken many, many years, but Battle for the Abyss is no longer the worst book in the series Dornfist, wecanhaveallthree and System Sound 2 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6123594 Share on other sites More sharing options...
grailkeeper Posted Tuesday at 08:51 AM Share Posted Tuesday at 08:51 AM 23 minutes ago, KJB said: Well, it’s taken many, many years, but Battle for the Abyss is no longer the worst book in the series This book is basically inconsequential. Damnation of Pythos is what made me stop reading every book that came out. Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6123598 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dornfist Posted Tuesday at 03:37 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 03:37 PM 6 hours ago, grailkeeper said: This book is basically inconsequential. Damnation of Pythos is what made me stop reading every book that came out. That book was the first Warhammer book I never finished. I skipped the last 100 pages, and found the ending "meh". DarkChaplain 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6123663 Share on other sites More sharing options...
System Sound Posted Tuesday at 04:20 PM Author Share Posted Tuesday at 04:20 PM 7 hours ago, KJB said: Well, it’s taken many, many years, but Battle for the Abyss is no longer the worst book in the series Yeah, it's called Vulkan Lives... Urauloth and Roomsky 1 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6123667 Share on other sites More sharing options...
DarkChaplain Posted Tuesday at 06:31 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 06:31 PM Damnation of Pythos was fantastic. That's all I've got to say. Malkydel, TwinOcted, wecanhaveallthree and 4 others 6 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6123695 Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Scorpion Posted Friday at 02:58 AM Share Posted Friday at 02:58 AM (edited) On 7/22/2025 at 2:51 AM, grailkeeper said: This book is basically inconsequential. Damnation of Pythos is what made me stop reading every book that came out. It annoys me when people say that books are bad because they are inconsequential. It makes me think of another story from Annadale: "The Unburdened", released as part of the Betrayal at Calth set The story deals with Kurtha Sedd and his Word Bearers being stranded at Calth. What could be more inconsequential than the Underworld War? The protagonist seems to believe this, yet this is one of the best Word Bearer stories out there: themes of morality, crisis of faith and guilt, ideological differences, and the nature of Chaos. You learn A LOT about the Word Bearers from following 5th company into the "heart of darkness" of the tunnels. It is not quite the Dark Coil, but you can FEEL the waxing and waning of the ruinous powers as time bleeds into a forever now One of the best Horus Heresy stories, and in the grand scheme of things does not matter at all. Same with "The Deeper Darkness", which has one of the best demon depictions I've seen Now, people are fully entitled to dislike Damnation of Pythos for a plethora of reasons. But because it is "inconsequential"? It is still within your rights, but come on fellas... Edited Friday at 03:04 AM by The Scorpion Malkydel, darkhorse0607, 1ncarnadine and 4 others 1 5 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6124152 Share on other sites More sharing options...
DarkChaplain Posted Friday at 05:06 AM Share Posted Friday at 05:06 AM The Unburdened was so good especially when read right after the utterly lackluster The Honoured. You basically need to read both for the full picture of the rivalry between Ultramarine dude and Kurtha Sedd, but it says a lot that I can still clearly remember Kurtha Sedd's name (and am ticked off about how he was done dirty in an Aeonid Thiel audio drama by Kyme) but not that of his rival. Roomsky and 1ncarnadine 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6124157 Share on other sites More sharing options...
1ncarnadine Posted Friday at 08:09 PM Share Posted Friday at 08:09 PM Finished this on a plane flight yesterday. My thoughts: Angels of Another Age: This was ok. I think it almost belongs in a late-siege anthology that doesn't exist, rather than the post-Siege anthology, and felt like French just wanted to do his own take on the Black Rage and remarking on the Blood Angels going forward. Which was fine, but we've already seen some of this a bit in this series Fulgurite: Hahaha, weird Fabius cameo but ok. Again, another story that feels like it's not really part of a post-Siege anthology. It's hard to place this with everything else, but I guess Erebus took a little detour while hopping through time and space to chase Oll and his crew? The short itself is probably the least interesting in the anthology. Just tying up the loose end of Narek, or setting up something else re: the fulgurite. Fragments (All We Have Left): Another story that isn't post-Siege! Feels like something that was cut from TEatD, even though seemingly nothing was cut from TEatD. It was good, though. It's sad to think on the loss of even the most banal histories in this conflict, and the way the driest texts became a temporary reprieve is a fantastic thought. Ex Libris: I am essentially always in for weird John French Ahriman warptime shenanigans, so I enjoyed this, though it was very short. Also the first story that understands the assignment in this anthology, because we're actually dealing with the metaphysical fallout of Horus's death. System Purge: I was really in for the first half, remembering that at some point in The Last Wall we had a Dark Mechanicum character cameo in Inar Satarael. And I just love seeing into the Mechanicum in general. But it's just the obliterator virus being the obliterator virus. Very interesting set-up, very poor pay-off. After the Dawn, the Darkness: Yes, excellent. This was good. I'd strongly argue some of the first few shorts of this should have been swapped out for more of this kind of end-cap story, actually dealing with aspects of the fallout of the conflict. This one does very well on the human side of things, giving Katsuhiro's story the ending it deserves. That the people who survive the Siege are essentially press-ganged is pretty brutal in and of itself, too. Again, I feel like there's more to say here, about how the Imperium treats its people, about the Ultramarines overseeing it, about the lives and politics at play, but still this was a great look into it.Homebound: Oof, ouch. Amazing. The journey through the wasteland, reflecting on the devastation, and seeing the various ways the invasion has affected the world despite the increasing distance from the palace, was all handled pretty beautifully. This is a story about mourning, that times have past, and accepting the end of them. Not just for Ilya but for the White Scars as a legion, personified by Sojuk. Also, it's so painful to watch someone you love waste away. I'm going to add TMI, but I watched by his bedside as my father passed on last weekend, so this story hit extra hard. It was an end to a very long fight with a terrible disease. I'm glad his suffering is over and sad that he's gone. And that sums up my feelings on this one pretty well. Yeah, worth the price of the anthology for this one alone. 11/10. Actual art. The Carrion Lord of the Imperium: Wow, we have really been starved for ADB content for a while, huh? This was great. I appreciate following Dio's perspective through from Unity to the end, and the story does a huge amount of lifting regarding the Talons of the Emperor with limited pages. I have a pet theory with the Custodes, that their souls are bound to the Emperor's own amid the alchemical process that creates them. So when Dio admits he's getting nightmares, I had to wonder how that relates to the Emperor himself. And I wondered if there's a second unspoken question after Dio's first; "and are your dreams nightmares too?" But hey, that's just my read. Also a really dark juxtaposition of how the Sisters are treated after the Heresy vs Aphone in Fragments. cheywood, darkhorse0607, Roomsky and 1 other 1 2 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6124287 Share on other sites More sharing options...
cheywood Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago Homebound alone makes this anthology worthwhile. It’s a perfect coda for Wraight’s heresy work, and one of the best short stories BL has published. I cried multiple times. What an incredible writer he’s become over the years. I’m so excited for Ashes of Imperium. Roomsky and System Sound 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/386163-era-of-ruin/page/4/#findComment-6124423 Share on other sites More sharing options...
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