There have been a lot of Warhammer 40k games over the years. Games Workshop has been very generous with the license, giving many developers the chance to make their own take on the influential tabletop game. The end result has been what feels like a never-ending stream of Warhammer Fantasy and Warhammer 40k games pouring onto the market, with wargaming and novel lore fans also getting bombarded with new releases. Warhammer never rests for too long, and it has carved out a large niche in most forms of media because of it.
Even now, there's still Warhammer games close on the horizon. The last few months of 2022 alone will play host to Warhammer 40,000: Shootas, Blood & Teef by the Guns, Gore & Cannoli developer Rogueside, and Warhammer 40,000: Darktide, a Warhammer 40k take on Warhammer: Vermintide. At some point, a Rogue Trader CRPG is coming from the accomplished Pathfinder game developer Owlcat Games, and Space Marine fans are getting both a sequel to the 2011 action classic Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine and an oldschool shooter going by the name Warhammer 40,000: Boltgun. The upcoming slate alone shows variety that most game franchises could never dream of. It's stunning that there's still genres that Warhammer 40k hasn't touched, and there's always a chance it could.
What Made Warhammer 40K Space Marine So Unique
Despite the fairly popular Blood Bowl tabletop and video games that sprung from Warhammer Fantasy, Warhammer 40k has no equivalent. Some sort of Blood Bowl 40k is just waiting to be made, with Space Marines donning enormous metal American football uniforms as they charge into battle against a team of orks. This game could take the strategic turn-based approach that past Blood Bowl games have, but there's a lot
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