Imperial Fists: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Check out the [[Imperial Fists/Characters|character sheet]].
Check out the [[Imperial Fists/Characters|character sheet]].


{{tropelist}}
=== Tropes associated with the novels include: ===
* [[Arch Enemy]]: The Imperial Fists and Iron Warriors were at loggerheads long before the [[Horus Heresy|Heresy]]. Now, the rivalry has transformed into one of the bitterest hatreds in the galaxy. And that's saying something.
* [[Arch Enemy]]: The Imperial Fists and Iron Warriors were at loggerheads long before the [[Horus Heresy|Heresy]]. Now, the rivalry has transformed into one of the bitterest hatreds in the galaxy. And that's saying something.
* [[The Atoner]]
* [[The Atoner]]

Latest revision as of 20:19, 18 December 2019

Primarch-Progenitor, to your glory and the glory of Him on earth!

The Imperial Fists are a chapter of Imperial Space Marines in Warhammer 40,000. Noted for their determination and discipline even by Warhammer 40,000 Imperial Space Marine standards, along with being considerable expertise at siege warfare. The other Legion that similarly specialised in siegecraft before the Heresy was the Iron Warriors, fostering a rivalry that would develop into outright hatred during and after it. Their primarch was Rogal Dorn.

Chris Robeson's Sons of Dorn is an Imperial Fists novel; they also feature in Graham McNeill's Storm Of Iron and Horus Heresy novel Fulgrim. The Imperial Fists were the chapter focused on in the first ever Warhammer 40K novel about Space Marines, the tellingly-titled Space Marine, which formed the second novel of Ian Watson's Inquisition War trilogy.

They were the founding chapter for the Soul Drinkers.

Check out the character sheet.

Tropes used in Imperial Fists include: