Karhedron Posted May 17 Share Posted May 17 2 hours ago, Cpt_Reaper said: In short if GW knows the answer to a question or scenario they posed us they must answer it at some point. GW often doesn't know the answer when it creates a mystery. They scatter plot hooks like seeds through their lore so they can pick up on things later. A classic example is the 3rd edition BRB vaguely mentioned "the quiescent perils of C'tan". It was years later that they picked this name up for the Necron star-gods. Antarius and ZeroWolf 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171609 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karhedron Posted May 17 Share Posted May 17 6 hours ago, Kommisar_K said: Anyway, I'm kinda curious about the true origin of the Orks. Only stuff I've heard is that they were probably creations of the Old Ones, but "Orks iz Orks" they say. Never found out if that theory has officially been confirmed or is just fanfiction. Anyway, seems like a tale that could be quite interesting. Even more so if we just got a few tidbits. Yes, this was confirmed in the 5th edition Necron codex. The Old Ones created a race of resilient, green skinned warriors called the Krork to act as their foot soldiers in the war against the Necrons. Some characters in 40k have referred to Orks as Krork. ZeroWolf and Kommisar_K 1 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171610 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karhedron Posted May 17 Share Posted May 17 8 hours ago, Vogon said: One thing I'd like to know is what happened to all the perpetuals from theHH books. I think a couple were resolved but there were quite a few of them. I think that the only Perpetuals surviving after the HH are the Emperor, Vulkan, Cyrene Valantion (now merged with Katerina Moriana) and John Gramaticus, everyone else is dead. Also it is not clear if JG is still a Perpetual or is on his last life since he was resurrected by the Eldar which may be a one-time deal. Here are the ones I can remember. Malcador: Burned up by the Golden Throne. Alivia Sureka: Sacrificed her immortality to resurrect Malcador after he was killed by Magnus Ollanius: Killed by Horus while protecting the Emperor Damon Prytanis: Killed by Barthusa Narek at the behest of Eldrad Erda: Killed by Eerebus and 4 Greater Daemons This suggests that the Emperor is the last surviving "true" Perpetual since the others received their powers from others. Vulkan was designed that way by the Emperor. Cyrene only became a Perpetual after being resurrected by Erebus. John Grammaticus became a Perpetual after being empowered by the Eldar. Vogon 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171612 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rogue Posted May 17 Share Posted May 17 9 hours ago, Cpt_Reaper said: In short if GW knows the answer to a question or scenario they posed us they must answer it at some point. I'm curious as to why you think that. I get the Chekhov's Gun element, and in something that's more narrative, I'd broadly agree. But when it comes to world-building, I don't think everything does need to be resolved. In a complex and interesting world, not everything needs to be explained or even explored. It's the open-endedness that brings depth and texture to the world. But we're in very subjective territory, so, like I said, I'm interested to know why you think the opposite. calgar101, Antarius, sitnam and 2 others 4 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171627 Share on other sites More sharing options...
GSCUprising Posted May 17 Share Posted May 17 3 hours ago, Rogue said: I'm curious as to why you think that. I get the Chekhov's Gun element, and in something that's more narrative, I'd broadly agree. But when it comes to world-building, I don't think everything does need to be resolved. In a complex and interesting world, not everything needs to be explained or even explored. It's the open-endedness that brings depth and texture to the world. But we're in very subjective territory, so, like I said, I'm interested to know why you think the opposite. I am in agreement here. Mysteries posed by the creators of the setting do not *have* to be resolved. When planted and planted well, as opposed to just tossed in like some casual narrative hand grenade, can linger and add to the setting. I quite enjoy some mysteries being left in the stories I read and have incorporated a couple into my own writing. 329, in my writing, for example, is not sentient, but still autonomous. One character becomes a little too obsessed with trying to pry open its secrets and it really saddens him when he has to send it off on a suicide run knowing he'll never know all the answers. And I'll never give those answers because even I don't have them, intentionally. I would hope its a similar case for Legios II and XIII. I don't need to know the answer. Keep me guessing! Antarius 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171647 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Antarius Posted May 18 Share Posted May 18 I am broadly in agreement with the last couple of posts, but I'd also add that, from a purely practical perspective, since most of these mysteries were not designed as actual mysteries with a solution, the odds that they can be answered in a way that is at all satisfying and/or makes any sense seem quite low. ThaneOfTas, ZeroWolf and GSCUprising 1 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171710 Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThaneOfTas Posted May 18 Share Posted May 18 To be honest, I'm fine with mysteries existing in the background, but you cant then go and tease at those mysteries as time goes on. II and XI are prime examples of this, the more that GW hint and tease at them over the years, as well as the more of the Crusade and Heresy that gets written about, the more obvious it gets that the mystery box is actually empty, theres nothing behind the curtain. Basically, I don't need to know what the answer actually is, but I need to believe that there is an answer. The more obvious that it gets that there's no real answer, the less invested I am. Kaede45, Antarius and Inquisitor_Lensoven 2 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171713 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Valkyrion Posted May 18 Share Posted May 18 Legions II and XI are the best mystery, IMO, and it was fun getting new information throughout the HH books (e.g suggestions they were folded in to the UM and IF, hints that Leman Russ killed one etc), but if one day there is a line or story or even novel series about who they definitively were then it would ruin it because it wouldn't be done well enough. Just like real life mysteries. Do I want to know how they built the pyramids? Yes, but only if it's aliens or sound magic or something, not if it's just slaves and big rollers. Do I want to Atlantis to be discovered? Sure, but only if they were a race of technologically advanced super humans, not that it was a tiny little port that got nuked when a volcano erupted. So do I want to find out what happened to II? Yes, but only if it turns out they fled the galaxy, encountered the Tyranids, were eaten by the Tyranids who then discovered how to find our galaxy and begin a journey 10,000 years in the making. I don't want to know that he was a hippy pacifist that wanted peace and love instead of conquering the galaxy so fell out with his dad. The Praetorian of Inwit 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171736 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Antarius Posted May 18 Share Posted May 18 7 hours ago, ThaneOfTas said: Basically, I don't need to know what the answer actually is, but I need to believe that there is an answer. The more obvious that it gets that there's no real answer, the less invested I am. It's pretty much the "Lost" pitfall of storytelling. If you just keep adding more mystery hints in order to keep people interested but don't actually have any sort of meaning behind the mystery, it eventually becomes pretty apparent that there's no actual story there. But vague mentions of things that sound cool, as fodder for the imagination is a different matter. Evil Eye and ThaneOfTas 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171738 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Evil Eye Posted May 18 Share Posted May 18 Thermonuclear take but I wish there were MORE lost Legions with varying levels of information surviving ranging from "they existed" to "They wore orange" at maximum, if only for your dudes potential for HH. The second and eleventh Legions being the most infamous ones, the others being wiped out/dissolved over mundane, honourable or humiliating circumstances. Kaede45 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171740 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vassakov Posted May 18 Share Posted May 18 8 hours ago, ThaneOfTas said: To be honest, I'm fine with mysteries existing in the background, but you cant then go and tease at those mysteries as time goes on. II and XI are prime examples of this, the more that GW hint and tease at them over the years, as well as the more of the Crusade and Heresy that gets written about, the more obvious it gets that the mystery box is actually empty, theres nothing behind the curtain. Basically, I don't need to know what the answer actually is, but I need to believe that there is an answer. The more obvious that it gets that there's no real answer, the less invested I am. So, this attitude makes sense to a degree in more linear fictional settings but I actually think trying to apply this logic to 40k is a bit of a red herring. 40k isn't a narrative. Even with the more focused storytelling since 2018 on the Indomitus Crusade and now the Imperator Crusade, it's still a setting designed to sell toy soldiers. The II and XI aren't lost because of narrative reasons or because they wanted a "mystery box" - it was there to allow players to go wild. Leaving it vague and ambiguous is the point, because despite much of the doomposting about it in this parish and elsewhere... making your own models is still a core part of the hobby. Vast stretches of time and space are left vague to enable players and hobbyists to do what they want. Not everything exists to be explained. Hotter take: The "wikification" of 40k is far more potentially damaging than the rules simplification/changes or the rules for army construction. Dalmyth, Felix Antipodes, GSCUprising and 4 others 2 5 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171743 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Felix Antipodes Posted May 19 Share Posted May 19 I don’t have a problem with mysteries in W40K. As @Vassakov stated they are there for a reason. For instance, if they ever explained who the lost Primarchs were and what they did to earn the enmity of the Emperor I would probably be pissed off. In my head-canon I already know the answers and how it affects (or not) “my guys” and their place in the settings. However, if GW ever change their mind and ever do a game set in the Great Crusade, they may have to rethink this. Do we need to know the origins of the Tyranids to fight them on the tabletop? I think not, but YVMV. Tawnis 1 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6171851 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tawnis Posted Thursday at 02:17 PM Share Posted Thursday at 02:17 PM On 5/17/2026 at 9:51 PM, ThaneOfTas said: To be honest, I'm fine with mysteries existing in the background, but you cant then go and tease at those mysteries as time goes on. II and XI are prime examples of this, the more that GW hint and tease at them over the years, as well as the more of the Crusade and Heresy that gets written about, the more obvious it gets that the mystery box is actually empty, theres nothing behind the curtain. Basically, I don't need to know what the answer actually is, but I need to believe that there is an answer. The more obvious that it gets that there's no real answer, the less invested I am. That's really interesting. I'm curious, what leads you to that conclusion? I've always been pretty interested in the Lost Primarchs and I've actually felt the opposite from all the recent lore stuff (post 2019). That they have decided loosely who they were and what they did, they just aren't telling anyone because the mystery is super popular. There are a lot of connecting breadcrumbs in the fluff in recent years if you know where to look (or know to look where something should be but isn't). Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6172153 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kaede45 Posted Thursday at 04:14 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 04:14 PM Seeing all the discussion of the lost primarchs, I had the thought that it would’ve been fun to address them without addressing them. For instance, they & their legions would be mentioned, but never by name other than number, they could be listed as taking part in certain battles whilst no details of their involvement are revealed & I think most importantly, they indicate which legion is loyal & which is traitor. Having them as unnamed, but ever present characters with no actual details would make them more fun for people who want to create their own legions. You’d then have a template for your own primarch being in the story without having to adhere too far to established canon. Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6172171 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tawnis Posted Thursday at 07:17 PM Share Posted Thursday at 07:17 PM 3 hours ago, Kaede45 said: I think most importantly, they indicate which legion is loyal & which is traitor. That is one of the few things we know for sure. While the original lore had the implication was one was loyalist and one was traitor, it has been cannon for quite a while now that they were erased long before the Horus Heresy so the normal titles of loyalist or traitor don't apply to them. GSCUprising, ZeroWolf, Kommisar_K and 2 others 1 4 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6172196 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Inquisitor_Lensoven Posted Sunday at 12:17 AM Share Posted Sunday at 12:17 AM Did the emperor ever find Atlantis? Or Nessie? Or big foot? were the grays the first xenos species he eliminated? GSCUprising, NovemberIX and Kaede45 1 2 Back to top Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6172430 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kaede45 Posted Monday at 11:06 PM Author Share Posted Monday at 11:06 PM On 5/21/2026 at 12:17 PM, Tawnis said: That is one of the few things we know for sure. While the original lore had the implication was one was loyalist and one was traitor, it has been cannon for quite a while now that they were erased long before the Horus Heresy so the normal titles of loyalist or traitor don't apply to them. True enough, but I was talking about if the legions had survived into the modern day. Having them be mentioned, but never truly addressed. It could be pretty fun to have these 2 legions—one loyal & one traitor—who are just always present in the background, from the Heresy to modern 40K, but never named or addressed to allow fans to plug in their own characters, legions, lore, etc. On 5/23/2026 at 5:17 PM, Inquisitor_Lensoven said: Did the emperor ever find Atlantis? Or Nessie? Or big foot? were the grays the first xenos species he eliminated? Maybe he was in the kitchen with Dinah too! Link to comment https://bolterandchainsword.com/topic/387924-40k-mysteries/page/2/#findComment-6172607 Share on other sites More sharing options...
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