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		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Horned_Rat&amp;diff=255594</id>
		<title>Horned Rat</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Horned_Rat&amp;diff=255594"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T14:08:52Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Introduction */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;[[File:Hornedratsymbol.jpg|center]]&lt;br /&gt;
{{heresy}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Horned-rat-tw2.jpg|700px|thumb|right|Yes yes my ratlings! Kill elf-things! Kill lizard-things! I come-scurry soon soon!]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;span style=&#039;color:brown;font-size:100%&#039;&amp;gt;&#039;&#039;&#039;DIE DIE MANTHING! LOOT LOOT RATKIN! RAPE RAPE DAEMONMEN!&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;- The Chant of The Horned One being still illiterate&#039;&#039;&#039;&amp;lt;/span&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|By gnawing through a dike, even a rat may drown a nation.|Edmund Burke}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Introduction==&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;&#039;Horned Rat&#039;&#039;&#039; is the festering disgusting god of the equally disgusting [[Skaven]] race in the [[Warhammer Fantasy]] setting. The horned rat is everything terrible about each God of Chaos distilled of even the most fleeting slivers of good that come with the whole package. He is what happens when you combine the Machiavellian backstabbing genius of [[Tzeentch]], the ratty repulsiveness of [[Nurgle]], the will for indiscriminate slaughter of [[Khorne]] toward the meek and helpless (especially women and children), and the intense hubris of [[Slaanesh]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Where Khorne is the god of war and bloodshed but also the god of honor, Tzeench is the god of assholes and backstabbing but also the god of hope and ingenuity, Nurgle is the god of decay and death but also the god of contentment and rebirth, and Slaanesh is the god of excess of all kinds but also the god of love and fun; the Great Horned Rat is the god of murder, betrayal, decay, and all negative excesses such as pain and rape.  Unlike Chaos, he has no good aspects.  At all.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Spreader of AIDS and STDs, rolling around in his own muck &amp;amp; delighting in plucking of limbs from squirming insects the Horned Rat only exists to troll his own worshipers and the rest of the world and to tear down civilization, the arts, anything remotely good and replace it with his own favourite pastimes (namely disease, ruination, backstabbing, and cruelly toying with others). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
He hangs out in an area of the warp known as the realm of ruin, a decaying hellhole that resembles a world completely taken over by skaven. The realm is inhabited by as many verminlords as there are living skaven, as well as demon rats and the souls of dead skaven. This is no heaven for the skaven, since most of them are turned into suffering demon-rats or fat blind mice that are forced to wallow in their failure for all eternity. The only good fate that awaits a skaven is if he becomes a vermin lord.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As you can expect, no one likes him and he is the archenemy of several gods, particularly [[Sigmar]] and [[Sotek]]. The only reason he hasn&#039;t been curbstomped and fumigated is because he has perhaps more worshippers alive then any other god in the setting and this gives him a bloated amount of power (and a needless sense of self-importance). Granted the prayers of skaven carry about as much power as the value given for skaven lives as but put enough together and it gives him enough power to be a major god of the underworld.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
However, he doesn&#039;t do anything, as he is too busy getting eaten by Sotek or his head smashed in by Sigmar&#039;s hammer. &lt;br /&gt;
[[File:AoS Great Horned Rat.jpeg|500px|right|thumb|VERMINTIDE!]]&lt;br /&gt;
Once his divine majesty deigned to make an appearance, to end one of the civil wars that was tearing his people apart. Summoned by the [[Grey Seers]], he ate a few skaven, gave them a telling off, ate a few more and then left some pillars of warpstone behind with instructions on how to backstab and bitch better in his name. And no word of him since then.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Horned Rat keeps going on about a great plan to take over the world and passes it onto his Grey Seers for them to tell the masses but this is really just a tool to keep the Skaven in line and generally striving towards the Rabid Rat&#039;s goals. Needless to say, once (if) the Skaven do take over the world, then the Horned Rat will swoop in, thank them for their hard work and then eat them all, satisfied he has finally won ([[just as planned]]).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
He has his own greater daemons, the [[Verminlord]]s, who are renowned trollers who give any skaven and others quite rightly the creeps. It is one of the toughest units a Skaven force can wield, combining powerful magic, strong combat skills and general unpleasantness into one hideously glorious model.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Considering his penchant for scheming he is probs [[Tzeentch]]&#039;s pet rat that got too much of an ego boost and decide to go it alone.  Although equally possible with his connection to disease he is [[Nurgle]]&#039;s test subject and is taking out his pain through others.  Khorne regularly tries to stomp on him since he despises cowards and well...does Khorne need a good reason to get angry?  Slaanesh meanwhile constantly has strange ideas about what to do with the Horned Rat that for reasons of mental hygiene cannot be repeated here.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Whatever the case is, other chaotic beings look down on the Skaven and the Horned Rat as mere vermin, perhaps useful to a degree but not worthy of respect and they are usually killed on sight. And this is what other chaos races think of the Skaven. So being a ratman is not a good sell.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Should you see a Horned Rat in your area, call your local fumigators to get rid of the problem.  Nothing ruins a day like a nasty ratmen infestation.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
One interpretation is that the Horned Rat is actually a guise cooked up by [[Tzeentch]] to create his own exclusive race of mortal worshipers. Let&#039;s see; a race driven entirely by ambition (Tzeentch&#039;s fueling emotion), that prizes constant innovation (Tzeentchian doctrine), noted for its embrace of both constantly changing technology AND rampant mutation/biomanipulation (more Tzeentchian doctrine/methodology), with a creedo of being the ultimate survivors and manifest destiny (you see where I&#039;m going here, right?).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
However the existence of Clan Pestilens, which reveres the Horned Rat as a spirit of disease, decay and ruination, challenges this, and Age of Sigmar refutes it completely by confirming that Tzeentch, Nurgle and the Horned Rat are three separate gods, the former two are far more powerful than the latter and they all despise each other, with the Horned Rat being the most hated.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== End Times ==&lt;br /&gt;
In [[The End Times|the End Times]], the Horned Rat plays a major role in &#039;&#039;Thanquol.&#039;&#039; He speaks directly to the Council of Thirteen and politely tells them to cut all the shit and stop fighting each other; after all the Warhammer World is ripe for the taking and the Horned Rat wants the Skaven to conquer it, as a unified race. To emphasize this, he incinerates the current Grey Seer and replaces him with... [[Thanquol]]. Yes, &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; Thanquol. The drugged up failure of a rat, [[Abaddon|so incomprehensibly incompetent]] that he could only function as &amp;quot;that one guy who tries to be evil and cool but fucks up all the time because of how fucking stupid he is.&amp;quot; Although, of course, he makes an easy pawn for the Vermin King.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Anyway, for the first time in history, the [[Skaven]] are truly united and rise to the surface in the millions at the command of the Horned Rat. They then take the role of the [[Tyranids]] by infesting/invading [[Estalia]] (olé-olé!), [[Tilea]] (Rome burns, yes-yes), the Border Princes, Araby (Horned Rat akbar-akbar!), the Kingdom of Ind (dravani, dravani!), the Southlands, [[Lustria]] (meteor-induced dinosaur extinction!), [[Bretonnia]] (c&#039;est terrible!), [[Naggaroth]] (though all they did was helped destroy one city), Nuln, Nippon (Horned Senpai notice me!), Karaz Eight Peaks, Cathay (though Cathay was triple-teamed by them, the followers of Chaos and the Orcs, though the Cathayans managed to wipe out the Skaven in their lands and fled on boats on their own terms)... Actually, let&#039;s just say the only nations they didn&#039;t wipe out, heavily damage, or at least do harm to were:&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Ulthuan]] (because the Elves already fucked it up pretty badly as-is, in addition to being unable to reach a seaborne island by tunneling underground)&lt;br /&gt;
* Nehekhara (because Nagash and co. got there first and worked it over.  Also Skaven are gluttinous cowards and a desert full of undead armies that will kill them on sight is too desolate and scary for them.  To be fair, they did send an assassin to Prince Apophas to point out the Destroyer of Eternities as a means to kill Nagash.  Apophas even managed to stab him with it but at that point Nagash had reached godhood so it was as dangerous to him as a back scratcher) &lt;br /&gt;
* [[Athel Loren]] (because magic shenanigans).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
And then they blow up [[Morrslieb]], which is both fucking [[Awesome]] and incredibly stupid, since the Warhammer World would have been destroyed by the resultant meteors (which it would have been if not for the [[Slann]] managing to stop most of the meteors from colliding)(wrong wrong manthings, plan was to destroy surface empires all along, with skavendom safe-secure underground).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Horned Rat, however, had to admit that, even with such successes, the Skaven still wouldn&#039;t be able to defeat the forces of the [[Chaos Gods]], and so he makes a deal, through Thanquol, with [[Archaon]].  Their contribution to the forces of Chaos is a force under the command of Ikit Claw tunneling into Nagash&#039;s Black Pyramid (airlifted from Nehekhara&#039;s ruins to Sylvania) while the undead are fighting the forces of Nurgle and traitor undead and blowing it up with Warpstone nukes. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Horned Rat moved Skavenblight into his Realm of Ruin, as the physical world was destroyed by Archaon &amp;amp; Co, later becoming part of the Realm of Chaos when Slaanesh disappeared.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== [[Age of Sigmar]] ==&lt;br /&gt;
As of Age of Sigmar, the Horned Rat has added the term &amp;quot;Great&amp;quot; to his title and has been promoted into a major Chaos God, replacing Slaanesh as the fourth Great God of Chaos, so things are looking up for rats in the world. The rest of the Chaos Gods hate his guts even more than they hate each other, and when he tried to grant his blessing to Archaon, the new Incarnate of Chaos literally just spat in his face.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== [[40k]] ==&lt;br /&gt;
Ratskins worship a rat god named &amp;quot;the caller&amp;quot;. This obviously is not the same god given that it&#039;s not assholish enough.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== [[Total War: Warhammer II]] ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;100%&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Do not click unless you have beaten the game as any faction or afraid of spoiler. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:Spoilers}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
To summon their favorite god, the Skaven have come up with the most balls-to-the-wall insane plan of all time. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
First, the Skaven designed a space ship that makes it looks like a twin-tailed comet in the sky (yes, skaven can go into space now, but the space ship crashed as soon as it ran out of fuel anyway, but is still pretty impressive compared to other factions that don&#039;t have the power to build the thing) thus fooling every major faction in the new world into shitting their pants, and resulting in a race to control the vortex.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Then, after one of the other races reaches their final stage, they will have to fight a final, massive battle against the other three major factions. Of course, even if the Skaven faction involved in the battle didn&#039;t win it doesn’t matter, as there will be ANOTHER Skaven army, ready to ambush the winner who would be already exhausted from fighting off the three armies from each faction.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The final step would then require a bell device that could soak in all the magic from the vortex, further strengthened by the magic poured in from every major faction that participated in the ritual.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If the Skaven are victorious, they will begin to see their horned god in the vortex, with the horned rat eventually manifesting into the material realm after the bell device tolls 13 times...and after one final sacrifice.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[just as planned|It seems like the Council of Thirteen had already planned this]] [[grimdark|though, with whichever clan winning the war being completely sacrificed to the horned one to finalize its resurrection]]. Yeah, pretty typical of a Skaven scheme to fuck over their own people. Though in the end, the chosen clan does end up fucking over the council in return when the Skaven scribe spilled the blood of a grey seer on the bell&#039;s clapper, resulting in the Grey Seer clan being marked for sacrifice instead. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Also, this is the second time in the history of Warhammer that the Horned Rat has made its official appearance, he made a brief cameo in the bad end for the video game &#039;&#039;Warhammer: Shadow of The Horned Rat&#039;&#039;. You can see him in the background of the final battle where he tried to break into the material realm, as well as in the grand reveal cinematic.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Gallery ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Horned rat grand reveal.PNG| If this thread ends in 13, you are a faggot and shall be sacrifice to resurrect the horned god!&lt;br /&gt;
File:Horned rat vortex battle.PNG| The horned rat, as he emerge from the vortex and prepare to snatch every kids from the world and eat them.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Hornet_Rat_Concept_Art.jpeg| Concept art on the horned rat, initially mistaken for a verminlord piece. Puts the &amp;quot;horn&amp;quot; in Great Horned Rat and it is glorious.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Rat Facts ==&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://youtu.be/uiDZToowbCs  Great Horned Rat Day] is a thing&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:ChaosGods}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Age of Sigmar]][[Category:Skaven]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Sigvald&amp;diff=426505</id>
		<title>Sigvald</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Sigvald&amp;diff=426505"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T14:02:51Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Age of Sigmar */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;[[image:SIGVALD.jpg|450px|thumb|Don&#039;t be fooled by the nice appearance - this guy is pure evil, and a colossal asshole.]]&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|The definition of the true savage does not concern itself even with how much more he hurts strangers or captives than do the other tribes of men. The definition of the true savage is that he laughs when he hurts you; and howls when you hurt him.|G. K. Chesterton}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|[[Tl;dr|Sickly, sinful, spectacles stand, shuffle, shamble and saunter shamelessly in mine scandalized sight! I suggest a solution... Surely such sedition should sour and succumb to Sigvald - the salacious, scandalous and sensational servant of Slaanesh! Son of Succubi, scion of sordid acts and slayer of squalid serfs!&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;See how I stroll, stride, swagger and swirl, spin, and slash and stab at stupid, senseless scum! Soon they shall swoon, shall seek solace and death from sundry and torments wrought on them by my strategic, severing, scintillating shower of shimmering strikes!&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Send for the sword - summon Sliverslash!]]|Sigvald the Magnificent, alliterating like a boss during [[Total War: WARHAMMER|the Sliverslash quest battle]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Imagine [[A Song of Ice and Fire|Joffrey Baratheon]] growing up, and gaining the favor of the god(dess) of being a colossal narcissistic asshole FOR being a colossal narcissistic asshole, along with getting demigod powers and an army of sick fucks. That&#039;s who&#039;s the Sigvald is. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVE-mncKFsA He&#039;s also a pithy wordsmith.] (Magnifissscchent!)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Sigvald was born from an incestuous relationship between a powerful warlord and his sister. Sigvald was beautiful from birth, save for a horned birthmark on the back of his neck.  He grew into a strong, skilled warrior who was spoiled by his father until expelled from his tribe by his father due to Sigvald&#039;s [[Flesh_Eaters|cannibalism... ahem, &amp;quot;fondness for human flesh&amp;quot;]].  Sigvald proceeded to murder his father in his sleep and departed for the [[Chaos Wastes]], earning [[Slaanesh]] as his patron the next day. Soon Sigvald marched at the head of an army devoted to himself, eradicating anything he deems to be ugly, crude or irritating. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Sigvald has burned down cities on a whim; he destroyed the Bretonnian town of Chamburg because he once got a bottle of wine from there that he didn&#039;t like. Other exploits include declaring war on a province of the Empire because he broke a nail on a warrior priest&#039;s armor during a previous battle, and heading to Ulthuan to scalp as many High Elves as he could because they were more renowned for nice hair than Sigvald was. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
He is spoiled by Slaanesh and is extremely self-centered: in addition to the above, his body-guards bear mirrored shields so that he may preen himself or admire his reflection in the midst of battle. His gifts from Slaanesh have left him beautiful on the outside, but rotten inside. The ground literally reshapes itself for him and his feet float an inch above the world&#039;s surface. He wears an armor of ensorcelled gold that never rusts or gets dirty and fights with Sliverslash: a rapier of silver forged from the sword of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
He appears a few times in the end times, first ravaging [[Kislev]]. After this he makes his way to Bretonnia where he heads the siege of Parravon. His forces overwhelm the Grail Knights and forcing Gilles to retreat, but not before he kills Sigvald&#039;s right hand man. Chaos Joffrey then goes on to take a break from fighting and turns Parravon into his own personal paradise, feasting on the finest flesh Bretonnia has to offer. Much to his dismay, the Chaos Gods pick him up and put him in Middenheim, where he is one of the few chaos champions worth a name still living. He throws a hissy fit about not having his mirror eunuchs, and offers [[Mannfred von Carstein|Mannfred]] a spot as a replacement. He was one of the warriors tasked with killing [[Valten]] before he reached [[Archaon]], alongside [[Valnir]] and [[Wulfrik the Wanderer|Wulfrik]], but lounges on the stairs preening himself while the other 2 duel. He makes an excuse that he doesn&#039;t want to fight Valten because he deserves to fight the real Sigmar, and prances off to parts unknown.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
He is still alive during the final battle, leading forces of [[daemonette|daemonettes]] against [[Nagash]]&#039;s army. Archaon had ordered him to fight alongside the troll king [[Throgg]], a prospect that horrified Sigvald due to Throgg&#039;s hideous appearance (with Throgg teasing Sigvald over his foppishness and squeamishness). So he tried to kill Throgg and split their forces up. Sigvald fought [[Krell]] in a badass battle, and was doing badly at first since Krell is stronger (despite Sigvald being S5 while Krell is S4, though Krell&#039;s axe gives him +2S, never mind) and more durable. Then Krell cut his pretty face and broke his sword. Sigvald saw his reflection with the one eye Krell didn&#039;t ruin and went absolutely berserk, beating Krell down with his bare fists and mangling his perfect hands in the process. After stabbing Krell through the eye with the remains of his sword and killing him, Sigvald&#039;s rage was spent. In that moment of clarity Sigvald saw in his mirrored shield that his face was ripped to shreds and his hands were mangled to the point where he couldn&#039;t use a weapon (though Sigvald&#039;s armor meant that his injuries would heal, all Sigvald cared about was that at the present moment he wasn&#039;t pretty) &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
While Sigvald sat next to Krell crying over his temporarily ruined beauty, Throgg the Evertrollsen approached. He had survived Sigvald&#039;s attempt on his life and wasn&#039;t happy. Throgg bashed Sigvald&#039;s skull in then lifted his loincloth and urinated on Sigvald&#039;s corpse.  Thus Sigvald&#039;s final moment in the End Times was [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsWndfzuOc4&amp;amp;ab_channel=JordanBPeterson a well-dressed professional who got blindsided and pissed on by a smelly troll]...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Age of Sigmar==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Horny.png|400px|thumb|Just when you thought he couldn&#039;t get more horny.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
He&#039;s back and even hornier than before! Evidently Slaanesh has missed our favorite Fabio look-alike and decided to elevate him into  a full-fledged [[Daemon Prince]].  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
After the End Times, Slaanesh refused to claim Sigvald’s soul because he/she was ashamed of Sigvald for the degrading end he&#039;d suffered at Throgg&#039;s hands.  Nagash, seeking vengeance for Krell&#039;s death, found Sigvald&#039;s soul but refused to destroy it because he loves long-lasting punishments.  Sigvald&#039;s soul was shoved into a shadeglass mirror by Nagash, who also cursed it to reflect an idealized version of the viewer so Sigvald would (literally) never be seen again, then chucked it into Shadespire.  Later, the city itself later ended up in Uhl-Gysh for unrelated reasons (see [[Warhammer Underworlds]]).  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unfortunately, Nagash didn&#039;t know Uhl-Gysh was also where Slaanesh was imprisoned.  Being so close to his patron allowed Sigvald to regain some awareness and power over his broken soul, and grew stronger suckling on motes of Slaanesh&#039;s power.  The mirror was discovered by an expedition of Kharadron dwarves, who were overcome by reflections of themeslves becoming filthy rich, as per the mirror&#039;s curse.  They took the mirror to a desert in Shyish, and obsessed over it to the point of letting themselves waste away like Narcissus from Greek mythology.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
By this point Sigvald had regained enough power to influence his prison, and soon the mirror was found by an army of Godseekers called the Scarlet Cavalcade, led by a Chaos Lord named Reshevious.  Sigvald used his power to show Reshevious the most twisted and grotesque reflection Sigvald could imagine, and the proud and vain Reshevious shattered the mirror in offended outrage.  But this action caught Slaanesh&#039;s attention and, impressed by Sigvald&#039;s cleverness and resourcefulness, Slaanesh gained new interest in Sigvald and gave him another chance, not only restoring Sigvald but empowering him.  The Scarlet Cavalcade, including Reshevious, fell to their knees in adoration and pledged themselves to the reborn Sigvald.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Sigvald then slaughtered one in six of each member of the Scarlet Cavalcade to test his new power, but the fanboy/fangirl-ism was so strong the survivors followed him anyway.  His first order of business was a killing spree against Troggoths in revenge for the death (and golden shower) that Throgg gave him in the World-That-Was.  Since every Slaanesh-worshipping Chaos Lord and their mum now had pieces of Slaanesh&#039;s sword as weapons, Sigvald wanted better, so he went to Slaanesh&#039;s palace and got the deity&#039;s favorite daemon-smith to forge him a new sword made from the shards of the mirror that once imprisoned him.  Taking up the title Geld-Prince, probably for his golden armor and not because he had his balls cut off, but with Slaanesh you never know... he is now gathering his hordes in preparation for the Dark Prince’s return.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Despite this, Sigvald has a secret shame.  He has a scar hidden on his body from his death in the World-That-Was.  Since Krell and Throgg are dead - and you can bet Sigvald doesn&#039;t care that he&#039;d already killed Krell - Sigvald shifted the blame to Krell&#039;s master, Nagash.  But Nagash is beyond his power, and even Sigvald won&#039;t risk the Shyish Nadir.  As a result, Sigvald found a new target for his revenge boner (pun intended),  the empire of the [[Ossiarch Bonereapers]].  Sigvald wants to destroy the Ossiarch Empire, and is leading an army towards it, only pausing to make other servants of Nagash suffer undignified fates, wanting to harm Nagaash&#039;s realm as much as possible.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Sigald Total War.jpg| I am Sigvald, the Scion of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Sigvald 8ª.png| KILL ALL PLEBEIANS!! I AM BEAUTIFUL AND THEY ARE NOT!!!&lt;br /&gt;
File:Sigvald vs Krell.png| ME KRELL CRUSH WEAK PINK SISSY WITH MY AXE!!! &lt;br /&gt;
File:CNgRtgx9BhaFoL7f_Sigvald.jpg|I arrive at the gates of &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Valhalla&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Slaanesh&#039;s palace, shiny and &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;chrome&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; gold!&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Chaos-Champions}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Daemons-Characters}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Ossiarch_Bonereapers&amp;diff=372389</id>
		<title>Ossiarch Bonereapers</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Ossiarch_Bonereapers&amp;diff=372389"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:54:42Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Broken Realms */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Ossiarch Bonereapers|Logo=Immortis-WC2.jpg|Alliance=Death|Motto=The Skeleton War is upon us! We ride against the [[Stormcast Eternals|fuckboys]]!}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Two can play at that game!|Likely Nagash after learning how Sigmar makes Stormcast}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Debt, an ingenious substitute for the chain and whip of the slavedriver.|Ambrose Bierce}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|The bones of the skeleton which support the body can become the bars of the cage which imprison the spirit.|J. Ruth Gendler}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The latest addition to [[Nagash]]’s ever growing hordes (designed and sculpted by [[Maxime Corbeil]], a former dentist), the &#039;&#039;&#039;Ossiarch Bonereapers&#039;&#039;&#039; &lt;br /&gt;
(Also known as &#039;&#039;&#039;The Boney Boys&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;Bonecast&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;Tomb Kings 2.0&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;Bonechads&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;Nagash&#039;s Taxmen&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;The Boney Bean Counters&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;Ossiarch Bean Counters&#039;&#039;&#039; or &#039;&#039;&#039;The IRS&#039;&#039;&#039;) are the result of an eons old plan by Big Bone Daddy.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Likely inspired by the [[Stormcast Eternals]], the Bonereapers are not mere skeletons given life by necromancy, but massive constructs of bone and countless warrior souls, making them all look impressively robust for undead. Since the Legions of Nagash are the  mainstay, the Nighthaunt are the shock troops and the Flesh-Eater Courts are completely insane, these buff bone boys are the elite vanguard of the Grand Alliance.  Given their themes of bones, undead constructs priest characters, architect characters and skull-throwing catapults... they&#039;re currently the closest thing we&#039;ve got to [[Tomb Kings]] in AoS.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They also carry out the Bone Tithe; in addition to going out and killing shit to get their bones, the Ossiarchs give settlements they encounter a contract: Give up a set amount of bones whenever we stroll by, or face annihilation now.  Understandably, most choose the former.  Being unable to pay or even being rude to them also provokes a slaughter.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Visually-speaking, they&#039;re what happens when Games Workshop decides to mix [[Tyranids]], [[Tomb Kings]], and [[Necrons]] into one army. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Slaves to Darkness vs Ossiarch Bonereapers 01.jpg|right|300px|thumb|SKULLS FOR &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;THE SKULL THRONE&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Nagash!  And all the other bones too!]]&lt;br /&gt;
When Nagash was helping Sigmar build his cities he secretly began experimenting on undead, combining their bones and souls into newer, stronger undead warriors; the [[Morghasts/Hammurai|Morghasts]] and the first Bonereapers.  Most were put into massive underground crypts Nagash secretly had built beneath the cities, but others were kept on the surface and brought into battle.  The other gods saw the Bonereapers and really didn&#039;t like them because of how unnatural they were.  In response, Nagash sent these Bonereapers to the edge of Shyish to lay low until he called on them (these Bonereapers who would go on to form the Null Myriad).  He also sent at least twenty of them to wander the Realms on a long-forgotten mission (these would go on to become the Petrifex Elite).  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Strangely, none of the Order groups noticed until however long its been since the start of the Age of Myth that there were crypts full of undead warriors beneath their cities.  Especially since they know about and need to defend against [[Skaven|enemies who specialize in creating massive complexes beneath your cities that they then invade from.]]  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
The Age of Chaos only affected the Bonereapers garrisoned at the edge of Shyish.  By that time they had become resistant to magic, and they fought against demonic armies, their actions blunting the assault of Chaos on Shyish.  During this time, Katakros led an army against Sigmar himself on Nagash&#039;s orders while the former was pursuing the latter for his betrayal.  The battle resulted in the loss of Katakros&#039; army, the Mortarch&#039;s defeat and subsequent confinement to a Stormvault.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Malign Portents===&lt;br /&gt;
During this time, Katakros was freed from the Stormvault by fellow Mortarch, Lady Olynder.  The Bonereapers on the edge of Shyish acted as a military force protecting the skeletal work crews who carried grains of Shyishan realmstone to Nagashizzar for Nagash to use to build the Black Pyramid.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Soul Wars===&lt;br /&gt;
After the Necroquake, Nagash decided the time was right to wake up everyone beneath these cities, who (according to the most recent Stormcast) apparently marched back home, making them relatively pointless. In that respect, these tombs seemed to mirror the Stormvaults Sigmar had strewn about the Realms to contain various dangerous contraband like [[Katakros|a certain Mortarch]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
When the Bonereaper legions arrived in Shyish, Nagash got back to his pet-project of making super-skellies, and perfected the process.   This involves taking souls and distilling them down to their most choice elements.  This involves ripping apart their identity and keeping parts considered useful (suck as skills and knowledge) while discarding the parts that aren&#039;t useful (such as fears and loyalties to anyone but Nagash) and replacing those parts with something better (like loyalty to Nagash), with the strongest-willed soul among them becoming the identity of the new Bonereaper.  Then these fragmented souls are put into specially crafted bone constructs.  By doing so, he artificially created individuals who were warriors, leaders, bodyguards, artisans, architects, philosophers and sculptors all in one, [[Adeptus Custodes|which sounds a little familiar.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Bonereapers subsequently had a meteoric rise, making their mark - and several enemies - across the realms.  After establishing their powerbase in Shyish, the Ironjawz Warclan the Kryptboyz have focused their efforts on fighting the Bonereapers due to wanting to destroy their settlements and wear their bones as trophies.  In Chamon, the Null Myriad encountered the Seraphon of the Thunder Lizard Constellation and got embroiled in wars for control of the realm&#039;s edge.  The Ivory Host legion have gotten a foothold in Ghur, and in building their cities they&#039;ve positioned themselves for conflict with several Mawtribes and the free city of Excelsis.  The Ivory Host also clashed with a [[Sons of Behemat|Mega-Gargant and indirectly led him to become the mercenary known as One-Eyed Grunnock]].  They have also sent forces into Hysh that came into conflict with the Lumineth. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
This was followed by the Bonereapers most notable conflict; starting the War for the Eightpoints.  Katakros led the Mortis Praetorians and detachments from other Legions into the Eightpoints alongside Olynder and a Nighthaunt army to take the Eightpoints for Nagash.  They succeeded in capturing and fortifying the realmgate leading to Shyish, and have established a fortified citadel around it as a base of operations.  However, Katakros&#039; campaign was halted by the return of Archaon, who defeated him in battle.  Following Katakros&#039; restoration, the conflict has become a war of attrition.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
When Morathi entered the Eightpoints in her plan to secure Varanite, she secretly sent an envoy to Katakros, giving him several tonnes of bones infused with the magic of Ulgu in exchange for a Bonereaper attack on Archaon&#039;s holdings to distract the forces of Chaos.  Knowing the forces of order will take losses in their unknown (to Katakros and the Stormcast) endeavor, Katakros accepts the bargain.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Around this time, the Lumineth launched an invasion of Shyish to attack the Ossiarch Empire.  The Lumineth proved a force that could match the Bonereapers in battle, winning numerous conflicts and destroying citadels before &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;fleeing&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; going back to Hysh as the battles were to send the message that the Bonereapers aren&#039;t unbeatable.  But they didn&#039;t count on the Bonereapers using the dead of both sides to replenish their losses, and eager for payback.   Soon a Bonereaper force led by Arkhan himself invaded Hysh to press-gang the Mordant Courts hiding in Avalenor&#039;s mountains to join Nagash and &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;give the Lumineth a right proper boning&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; help conquer Ymetrica.  The Ossiarch Empire also becomes a target of a reborn [[Sigvald]], who seeks to destroy it as revenge for Nagash imprisoning him in a Shadeglass mirror.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Later, Shyish gets some uninvited guests in the form of a Lumineth army led by Teclis himself.  They seek to end the Soul Wars and make Nagash pay for unleashing the Necroquake... but not if the Bonereapers have anything to say about it.  More to come soon.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Ossiarch Bonereapers Society.jpg|right|300px|thumb|Adds a whole new meaning to the phrase &amp;quot;pyramid scheme&amp;quot;.]]  &lt;br /&gt;
All Ossiarch Bonereapers are built for a specific purpose and assigned a role based on the souls from which they’re formed. This is codified through a caste system, with Nagash at the top, then Mortarchs Katakros and Arhkan, then the highest ranking Ossiarchs underneath and various ranks beneath that.  The Bonereaper caste system has a cartouche representing each caste (though Nagash&#039;s is just to symbolize him).  While there is a Mortarch cartouche, only Katakros wears it because Arkhan predates the Bonereaper system (and everyone but Nagash) by several eons, and despite their alliance he&#039;s too proud to wear Katakros&#039; symbol.  While they&#039;re all obedient to Nagash and fearless, the Bonereapers used in battle are sapient and the characters at least have enough individuality to have names and some personality, though they tend to be pragmatic, work-oriented and elitist.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
While many Ossiarch Bonereapers are warriors, there are castes of groups such as crafters and preachers. There is movement between castes, but only downwards, and as a punishment for failure.  A Liege Kavalos who fails in their mission, for example, may be remade as a Kavalos Deathrider.  If the offense was major, they might get remade as a steed.  The lowest caste are the exiles collectively referred to as Parrha, consisting of the worst offenders who get broken and remade into warped skeletal aberrations incapable of fighting and the Bonereapers value them less than the Imperial Guard values the life of its rank and file soldiers (for the uninitiated, that&#039;s really saying something).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Ossiarch Bonereapers can be found all across the Mortal Realms, aiming to conquer everything from Azyr to the Eightpoints. At present, the majority of the Ossiarch Bonereapers are concentrated in Shyish, inhabiting the  nations that surround the Shyish Nadir.  This allows them easy access to a vast source of magical power and establishes them as a permanent garrison around this most valuable of territories.  Apart from Shyish, the largest concentrations of Bonereapers are in Ghur and Chamon.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Ossiarch Bonereapers build according to principles laid down in the Principia Necrotopia, a set of guidelines that ensure optimal construction: &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In the first stages of colonizing a new region, the Ossiarchs will establish tithing sites. Presumably, this involves mapping out surrounding settlements and segments of the region into their own tributaries, with each section&#039;s inhabitants made to sign a contract to begin paying the Tithe. They contruct shrines known as Bone-Tithe Nexus, which act as locations for vassals to dump their bones and are enchanted to give out powerful curses to ward off any scavengers seeking to steal from it. &lt;br /&gt;
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Next, they will fortify key territories with small fortifications, following up with a number of Mortisan workshops to fuel the next stage of their expansion. These small holdings will eventually develop into vast and imposing fortresses, growing ever upward as the Bonereapers’ numbers grow. These are not just barracks, but places of culture for the Ossiarchs.&lt;br /&gt;
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Ossiarch scholars will endlessly study scrolls in charnel libraries, recording the details of cultures in the Mortal Realms they have subjugated and those they seek to subjugate. These vast citadel-states eventually resemble Nagashizzar itself.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===The Bone Tithe===&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Bone tithe.jpg|left|300px|thumb|Put your spines into it.  Literally!]]&lt;br /&gt;
The Bone Tithe is instrumental to their society and Nagash&#039;s way of setting himself up as mob boss of the realms.  Upon arriving in an area, the Ossiarchs send out scouts to get the lay of the land.  When they find a settlement they want tribute from, a representative - in practice usually a Mortisan - approaches and makes them an offer they can&#039;t refuse; give &amp;quot;x&amp;quot; by the deadline at regular intervals, or we kill you all and takes your bones and souls for our use.  To communicate, the Bonereapers draw on prior research for the local language; it doesn&#039;t matter if the vernacular&#039;s out of date by a few centuries or so, as long as they can be understood.   If that doesn&#039;t work, the Bonereapers use other means, including killing a local and using their spirit as a translator if all else fails.  If the locals refuse, attack them or are rude enough, [[Grimdark|the Bonereapers make good on their threat, slaughtering everything in the settlement that has bones, right down to the last child and stray animal]].  If they are feeling &amp;quot;nice&amp;quot;, the Bonereapers might only kill the dissenters.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
When demanding the Bone Tithe, what/who the bones come from plus the amount and condition required depends on the situation and Bonereaper legion in question.  Human bone is the most widely used with ogor bones being a close second for their size and toughness, duardin bones are liked for their durability but aren&#039;t common enough, aelf bones are slightly more common but don&#039;t replenish fast enough, and greenskin bones are coarse, porous and prone to spontaneous fungal growth unless treated properly.  While animal bones are also used, such as to repair Kavalos steeds or make Gothizzar Harvesters, that&#039;s not always the case and it depends on what animal they&#039;re from (Rhinoxen and Bleaklake crocodiles are some of the popular choices).  The Bonereapers (though inbuilt or learned ability, it&#039;s not clear) CAN tell the difference between what race or species a specific bone comes from, so trying to cheat them by mixing in different kinds of bones doesn&#039;t work.  They also respond to trickery the same way they respond to failure or refusal - immediate slaughter (as a human town learned to their cost when they tried to trick the Bonereapers by mixing pig bones in with human bones).  Even other Death factions aren&#039;t immune to the Bone Tithe, as the Bonereapers consider their charge from Nagash to supersede any camaraderie with his other factions (callous elitism isn&#039;t good for alliances, reflected in the rules by the Bonereapers not being able to take allies outside Drogg Fort-Kicka).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Sometimes things are even worse.  A particularly war-horny leader, most often from the Stalliarch Lords (more on them below), will give nigh-impossible demands to increase the chance of failure.  What kinds of demands?  How about asking the population for detailed records on the city&#039;s family lineage going back to the founders and the condition of every bone in the city &#039;&#039;including those bones still inside the living inhabitants&#039;&#039;.  Or maybe they ask for just one ton of bones &#039;&#039;every day&#039;&#039; (for extra lulz, the offer is made at night and has to be completed the next day).  They might instead, or also, [[That Guy|arrive early to extract the Tithe just to get a good slaughter out of it]].  However it ends, the bones of the Ossiarch&#039;s victims are sorted through, the good bones taken for future use the sub-par ones discarded (same with their victims souls).  Strips of skin and flesh from these unfortunates are hung from the Bonereapers&#039; spears as a warning to anyone who considers not paying the Tithe.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ultimately, they have a term related to the Bone Tithe called the “Terminus Concept”.  This refers to the point where a society can&#039;t provide enough bones so they get slaughtered and their bones are taken.  For the truth is that the Bone Tithe is ultimately unsustainable for the payers, and the Bonereapers know it.  This all proves that, while Nagash is a pragmatic sort of fellow, he&#039;ll always find a way to be a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;boner&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; [[Eldrad|huge skeletal dick]] about it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Forces==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Bonereaper army.jpg|right|500px|thumb|&#039;&#039;&#039;Angry Dooting Intensifies&#039;&#039;&#039;]]&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mortek Guard:&#039;&#039;&#039; Rank and file infantry of the Bonereapers.  Well armored and shielded, they have the choice of swords or spears and optional greatswords as weapons. Their primary role is to create massive shield walls to protect their leaders.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Morghast Harbingers and Archai:&#039;&#039;&#039; You know em, you love em. Nagash&#039;s original sculpted bone construct based on not-angels from the World-That-Was now served as prototypes to the current regime of spoopy skeltals. Flying blenders armed with either halberds (take these) or twin swords (dont take these).  Harbingers are your chargey bois, while the Archai are bodyguard bois.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Necropolis Stalkers:&#039;&#039;&#039;  Four-armed skeletal constructs the size of Kurnoth Hunters with four faces, each one has the soul of four warriors, and switches between which one is dominant, altering their fighting style accordingly.  Their name&#039;s ripped from the Necropolis Knights and the Tomb Stalkers. &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Immortis Guard:&#039;&#039;&#039; Four-armed &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Grave Guard&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Tomb Guard&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; elite skellingtons armed with a halberd in one set of hands and a shield in the other.  Like the Morghasts, Immortis are the bodyguard bois to the Stalkers&#039; chargey bois.  &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kavalos Deathriders:&#039;&#039;&#039; Essentially bony knights somewhere between Black Knights and Varanguard in power level, and who serve Bone Daddy.  Each one has the soul of dozens of warriors to draw on their knowledge and is proportionately arrogant.  They have undead birds roosting on their banner poles that act as spies and messenger birds.  For added creep factor, these guys normally walk at a slow and ominous trot, only sprinting when going into a headlong charge.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mortek Crawler:&#039;&#039;&#039; Screaming Skull Catapult 2.0 with an obligatory patent-friendly rename.  In addition to flaming skulls, it can also hurl a cauldron of Death Magic that works based on bravery or a cursed stone that gets more powerful the more damage the Crawler takes.  It&#039;s also powered by a bone-made hamster wheel and multiple legs.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gothizzar Harvester:&#039;&#039;&#039; A big monster construct with weapon hands and half a skeleton for a codpiece that helps harvest bones.  The Harvester uses them to make new constructs on the fly or repair damaged ones.  Their weapon arms come with either enchanted maces or scything blades for hands.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mortisan Soulreaper:&#039;&#039;&#039; Your offensive caster for the Bonereapers with a scythe that doesn&#039;t like hordes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mortisan Boneshaper:&#039;&#039;&#039; The healers/builders of the Bonereapers. Formed from the souls of artists, they’re in charge of building the extravagant bone cities and other architecture of the legions. They all possess a friendly rivalry with each other that pushes them to one up another’s artwork.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mortisan Soulmason:&#039;&#039;&#039; Miniature Arkhans with four arms who are in charge of hunting and fusing souls for their various constructs.  They ride into battle on bony [[Fyodor Karamazov|thrones with chicken legs]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Liege-Kavalos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Field generals with skeleton mounts placed in charge of leading the Bonereaper armies. They are forged as a cruel mockery of Sigmar’s Lord-Celestant on Dracoth.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Famous Legions===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mortis Praetorians&#039;&#039;&#039;: The 10,000 strong personal army of Katakros, created out of the souls of those he personally knew in life.  They have gained a fearsome reputation for their tactical acumen, especially in Shyish.  [[Ultramarines|The poster boys who are a jack-of-all-trades, big on tactics and led by an ancient leader who was the basis for future generations]].  They also have the only two Bonereapers with a single original soul; Katakros himself and Zandtos.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Petrifex Elite&#039;&#039;&#039;: Made up of nomadic armies crafted from prehistoric fossilized bones, they are known for being slow-moving and a near impenetrable wall of bone.  While fossilized bone tends to be fragile, the Petrifex Elite enchant them to be tough and also include already supernaturally tough bones  among them (ie; the bones of godbeasts).  Led by Mortisans, [[Necrons|they only exist to slay and find ancient bones to build more of themselves and make themselves even deadlier]].  They have forgotten why Nagash wants them to do this, and their leaders eschew personal identity to the point of using titles instead of names, as mandated by their leader and most senior Mortisan, the Grand Necromystic.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Null Myriad&#039;&#039;&#039;: The first Ossiarch Bonereapers made during Nagash&#039;s experiments in the Age of Myth.   The Null Myriad were later refined and bolstered using the bones and souls of the countless dead who helped construct Nagash’s Black Pyramid and the best of Arkhan&#039;s Black Disciples.  They are a solemn yet prideful lot with high resilience to magic and were given to Arkhan to be his personal legion; they&#039;re so loyal to Arkhan that they defer to him even over Katakros himself.  Their resistance to magic extends to the power of Chaos, so they&#039;re used to inhabit the most inhospitable parts of the realms.  Recently Arkhan made an alliance with Katakros, and the Null Myriad&#039;s job is to secure magic-heavy locations in the realms so Katakros can control the sources of their magic.  The Null Myriad forces in Chamon have come into conflict with the Seraphon of the Thunder Lizards Constellation who also dwell there.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ivory Host&#039;&#039;&#039;: Outwardly, they appear as honorable warriors, but hidden away in their bodies is a monstrous frenzy that turns them into clawing slavering beasts. Fitting considering they are constructed from beast and monster bones.  Tasked by Nagash to conquer Ghur, they overcompensate for their bestial anger by being meticulously clean and making everything of theirs as much of a work of art as possible.  Also known for [[Tomb Kings|being the only Ossiarchs who build ships, use the color gold regularly in their attire and are led by a monarch]]. Currently they’ve claimed the realmgate of Greedmouth and established the Ivory Citadel in the southwestern corner of the Ghurish Heartlands, putting them awfully close to numerous [[Ogor Mawtribes]] and the [[Cities of Sigmar|free city]] of Excelsis.  &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Stalliarch Lords&#039;&#039;&#039;: A cavalry centric force who are [[Creed|skillful tacticians]] and like to make impossible demands so they have an excuse to raze cities and slaughter people (on the rare occasion that someone meets their outrageous demands they keep their word... but remember the Terminus Concept).  They take the freshest remains whenever possible to maximize how much they&#039;re infused with essence of the slain, which gives them more speed and vitality than other Bonereaper Legions and often a blood-slicked appearance.  Basically [[That Guy]] as a cavalry-loving undead legion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Crematorians&#039;&#039;&#039;: These Bonereapers are burning with an internal fire to the point where some of them literally explode when killed. Some of them have recently realized that they don&#039;t really have a purpose other than to fight and explode, and aren&#039;t too happy about that.  In fact, their leaders [[Noblebright|have made pacts of friendship to repair each other if any of them are destroyed and the chief Liege-Kavalos scours the libraries of everyone they encounter in the hopes of finding a way to undo their fiery curse, and is implied to be on the verge of a breakthrough]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Significant Skeletons==&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;[[Katakros|Orpheon Katakros]], [[Mortarch]] of the Necropolis&#039;&#039;&#039;: In life he was the greatest strategic genius in all the Mortal Realms, and undeath has done nothing to dull his mastery of military tactics.  He&#039;s been given a new body of enscrolled bone by Nagash himself which looks like a [[Jojo&#039;s Bizarre Adventure|JoJo stand]] rather than a skeleton.  He goes into battle surrounded by various attendants; the Liege-Immortis, the Aviarch Spymaster, the Gnosis Scrollbearer, and the Prime Necrophoros.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Arch-Kavalos Zandtos&#039;&#039;&#039;: Both in life and in death, Patru Zandtos has been Katakros’ most trusted lieutenant.  In life he was a refined, death-obsessed assassin who treated killing as a sacred art that should be as clean as possible and thus hated the loud, messy butchery of battle.  In undeath, through the manipulations of Nagash and Katakros, he’s now a death-purist who wishes to “cleanse” Shyish of anything still living.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Vokmortian, Master of the Bone-tithe&#039;&#039;&#039;: The grim tallyman in charge of recording/judging the Tithe. He carries the severed heads of those foolish enough to refuse to pay the Tithe and has a coffin on his back, making him look like a giant beetle. Though officially he’s under Katakros in the OBR hierarchy, he’ll only receive/carry out orders from Big Bone Daddy himself.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Arkhan the Black]]&#039;&#039;&#039;: Yeah, he&#039;s part of the army despite technically being just an &amp;quot;average&amp;quot; liche as opposed to a bone golem thing. Likely because apart from Nagash, he&#039;s the most privy to understanding how they are made without being one.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Spooky Melodies for your Bony Boys==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DsZivjop_s Spooky Scary Skeletons! a remix for a revamp]&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKHAX1K4sKQ The Dead March returns for AoS!]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Trivia==&lt;br /&gt;
* The architecture of the Ossiarch Bonereapers was likely inspired by the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedlec_Ossuary Sedlec Ossuary] in the Czech Republic.  The Sedlec Ossuary is a Roman Catholic church where the bones of thousands of people have been artistically arranged to form the decorations and the furnishings of the chapel (it&#039;s also called &amp;quot;the Bone Church&amp;quot;).  This was done several centuries ago for creative interment reasons with many dead and not enough space to bury them on holy ground.&lt;br /&gt;
* On a comical note, &amp;quot;Kavalos&amp;quot;, the name for Bonereaper cavalry, translates to &amp;quot;crotch&amp;quot; in Greek (the Greek word is &amp;quot;kaválos&amp;quot;). Makes more sense when you think of [[Katakros]]&#039; defining trait lookswise, and how his name even sounds like the Greek word.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Bonereaper vs Kharadron.jpg|Sky Pirates vs Bone Golems.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Cavalry-bonereapers.jpg|As if Blood Knights weren&#039;t bad enough, Bone Daddy brings out Kavalos Deathriders too.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Gothizzar Harvester.jpg|&amp;quot;Oh those bones, oh those bones, oh those skeleton bones.  Oh mercy how they scare!  With the toe bone connected to the foot bone...&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Bonereaper city.jpg|right|300px|thumb|Welcome to Necrotopia.  Please remember to remove all skin and flesh before you reach customs.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==See Also==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Nagash]], their jerk of a god whom they give their undisputed loyalty to (yes, really!)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Lumineth_Realm-Lords&amp;diff=316051</id>
		<title>Lumineth Realm-Lords</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Lumineth_Realm-Lords&amp;diff=316051"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:54:00Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Great Nations */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Lumineth Realm-Lords|Logo=Eltharion&#039;s essence.jpg|Alliance=Order|Motto=FOR &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;ULTHUAN&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; HYSH!!!!!}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|The phoenix must burn to emerge.|Janet Fitch}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Have you heard of the High Elves?|LaFave Bros Oblivion youtube video}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|We must be swift as the coursing river. With all the force of a great typhoon. With all the strength of a raging fire. Mysterious as the dark side of the moon!|Be &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;a Man&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; an Aelf}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!|Avalenor, the Stoneheart King}}&lt;br /&gt;
The Lumineth Realm-lords (also known as &#039;&#039;&#039;High Elves 2.0&#039;&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;&#039;Loony Meth-Heads&#039;&#039;&#039;, and &#039;&#039;&#039;Lu-methheads&#039;&#039;&#039;. Officially &amp;quot;Realm-lords&amp;quot;, without the second capital.) are a bunch of stone and crystal obsessed elves residing in the Realm of [[Hysh]] and led by Teclis.  Forced onto the defensive by Chaos, they harness the magic of their realm and refuse to go down without a fight... just like the High Elves of old, but without the &amp;quot;dying race&amp;quot; element (and the accompanying lore inconsistencies) and a surprising amount of Dorfiness, given their love of hammers, runic magic and elementals. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
With a heavy Greek aesthetic, new model and the return of [[Eltharion]], good times are abound if you were a fan of the High Elves back in the world that was.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Origins/Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
Once upon a time, [[Teclis]], [[Tyrion]], and [[Malekith|Malerion]] found a previously assumed dead [[Morathi]] who was very much alive, who then led the odd trio to the morbidly obese [[Slaanesh]] in a cave where they beat the shit out of him until he coughed up all of the Elven souls he had consumed after [[The End Times]]. A good chunk of these souls were given to Teclis, in order to recreate the High Elves of old and bring their race back to their former glory. The initial race that came from Teclis&#039;s attempts were the [[Idoneth Deepkin]] and, well... [[FAIL|He tried]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
This new batch of Aelves seem to have come out of the oven much better, far more sane and stable than any other Aelf so far.  Given the Idoneth&#039;s hostile estrangement from Teclis while the Lumineth worship and fight side-by-side with him, relations between the two are... strange.  In the Lumineth Battletome the Idoneth Deepkin are their only ally option, while in the Allegiance Matrix for multiplayer games in the General&#039;s Handbook they are listed as a Desperate Coalition (to put that in perspective, that&#039;s worse than the relationship between Khorne/Slaanesh or Tzeentch/Nurgle and is the only Desperate Coalition that isn&#039;t between factions from two entirely seperate Grand Alliances.  Even Drycha the crazy, genocidal racist can act nicer to other factions). Best explanation is that they do utterly despise each other, but realize there are WAY bigger threats to their own societies, so they grudgingly tolerate each other for now.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Lumineth society was built on self-improvement, absurdly impractical headgear and the accumulation of wisdom, fueled by using the power of Aetherquartz to amplify their bodies and minds. However, in the typical elven arrogance, they assumed that because Slaanesh was imprisoned they no longer had to worry about Chaos and decided to abuse the Aetherquartz like [[Skaven]] to [[Warpstone]], leading them to be the butt of many jokes about drugs.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
Unfortunately for the Lumineth, in conjunction with the elves&#039; own hubris, Tyrion and Teclis were very hands-off about godhood after the civilization was built.  As a result, the subtle whispers of the Dark Gods entered their minds, causing envy and bitter rivalry. The subsequent campaigns of defamation and sabotage culminated in a massive civil war called the Ocari Dara, or Spirefall. The entire realm of Hysh was devastated, as the Lumineth had a habit of inventing uber-spells and doomsday devices just to see if they could, justifying it by claiming they were too enlightened to ever use such weapons for evil (which they obviously weren&#039;t). To make matters worse, the overflow of passion, pride and obsession from the war became a beacon for Slaaneshi daemons, who then invaded Hysh and would&#039;ve wiped them out if Tyrion hadn&#039;t personally intervened to save the last survivors.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Teclis searched for some way to save his race from themselves, and found it when he managed to commune with Celennar, the spirit of Hysh&#039;s moon. He taught the Lumineth a new way of self-discipline, where they would bond with the elemental spirits to gain their power and wisdom. This rearrangement of Lumineth society was called the Reinvention Wars, which lasted the remaining years of the Age of Chaos and is widely credited with preventing them from becoming extinct altogether.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
The Lumineth were mostly unseen during the Age of Sigmar, being too focused on rebuilding their own realm in order to care about the other races. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During the Time of Tribulations, Teclis predicted the upcoming Necroquake, and ordered the construction of Aetherquartz towers in order to mitigate its effects. While this helped protect the Lumineth cities from undead invasion, Teclis failed to predict the arrival of Endless Spells, which would become a common plague upon the already magically battered landscape of Hysh. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During a meeting between Teclis and the other Aelven gods, Morathi started claiming that Slaanesh will inevitably escape. While the other Aelven gods dismissed this as the rantings of a madwoman, Teclis took this seriously and decided that the Lumineth must end their isolationism in order to purge Chaos from other realms. This hasn&#039;t endeared them well with the other races of Order, as they tend to deploy their legions without permission or warning out of the arrogant assumption that the lesser races can&#039;t be trusted to solve their own problems (arrogant &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; hypocritical coming from the Lumineth, who [[Eldar|nearly caused their own extinction through selfish obsessions]]).  Adding to the fact that they have no problem with killing civilians and allies if they view it as necessary to cleanse Chaos, it’s understandable why some people don’t like it when they arrive unannounced.  While the Stormcast have also used this approach, unlike them the Lumineth haven&#039;t earned a good reputation beforehand, plus the Lumineth are a bunch of Johnny-Come-Latelys compared to the Stormcast&#039;s Big Damn Heroes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
At some point, Teclis had found the remnants of [[Eltharion]]&#039;s spirit as he was way too badass to be claimed by Nagash. After putting his soul back together, Teclis ordered armor and weapons made in the Yvressian style, found a dude who looked near identical to Eltharion, created a soulless clone of that guy&#039;s body and tried to shove our old boy&#039;s soul right in.  Sadly, [[Arkhan the Black|Arkhan]] evidently cursed Eltharion so bad that any body his soul is put in crumples to dust, starting with the aforementioned souless clone. As Teclis cried like a bitch, he noticed that Eltharion&#039;s soul was able to inhabit the armor, turning him into [[Thousand Sons|a hollow suit of armor powered by light]]. Since then, Eltharion became one of the leaders of the Lumineth, as Teclis tries to figure out how to give him a normal body.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As Morathi attempted to gain godhood and accidentally loosened the chains of Slaanesh, Teclis started pushing his army against the forces of the undead and [[Nagash]].  He plans on bringing an end to The Soul Wars and clap Nagash&#039;s boney cheeks for unleashing the Necroquake. Of course, bone daddy won&#039;t take this laying down.  More to come soon.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Lumineth themselves are split between numerous different kingdoms withing Hysh, known as the Ten Paradises. These Kingdoms each reside on a separate Island, which used to be one landmass before it was sundered in the Age of Chaos. The center Island is Xintil, where Teclis awoke in the Age of Myth and where most of the Sigmar worshiping mortals of Hysh live. Xintil is surrounded by eight islands, each ruled by a separate kingdom. Syar, Iliatha, Ymetrica and Zaitrec are known as the Teclian nations, essentially the Athens compared to the more Spartan Oultrai, Aurathrai, Helon and Alumnia who emulate Tyrion. Each has their own culture, such as Iliatha being matriarchal and doing some cloning shit.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
These Lumineth have also come to treasure Aetherquartz, a crystal mineral native to their realm. These crystals gave their wearers great knowledge and power, but it also involves [[Eldar|sucking out their emotions and personalities - a sacrifice they consider worthwhile since unfettered emotions are the Dark Prince&#039;s favorite snack]]. In this way, they&#039;re similar to [[Stormcast Eternals|Sigmar&#039;s golden bois]] in that they&#039;re constantly approaching that point where they become effectively logic-driven, uncreative and unfeeling automatons except these guys see it as an acceptable ending compared to the Stormcast&#039;s mad search to end the flaw. The emotions drained into the Aetherquartz are used as a source of power by the mages known as Scinari &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Crack Whores&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Cathallars, weaponizing their suppressed negative emotions to spread terror and despair among their enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
After the Reinvention Wars, an important part of their society has become the Aelementari Temples, cults dedicated to bonding with the landscape of Hysh, in the form of the rivers, winds, mountains or even the light of Hysh&#039;s sky (Zenith). To join these cults is extremely difficult; first one must abandon all worldly possessions, then spend years meditating and seeking oneness with the spirit of their chosen location. The final trial is fatal if the spirit deems the aspirant unworthy: those dedicated to the rivers must weigh themselves down and jump into the water, while those dedicated to the mountains must let themselves get buried alive. Yet if they survive, they gain new powers ([[Avatar: The Last Airbender|please tell me there is some legendary Aelf who has the powers of all the Aelementari.]]) While the mages get elemental magic, the warriors get more subtle powers, like the Stoneguard who can enter the &amp;quot;mountain stance&amp;quot; to become immovable bulwarks in battle. The Aelementari can also be petitioned to possess a construct body and directly fight with their disciples. The only Aelementari temple playable on tabletop so far are the mountain worshippers of the Alarith, who have taken a mountain yak called the &amp;quot;Ymetrican Longhorn&amp;quot; as their symbol, resulting in them being the butt of many cow jokes. The second temple to be officially revealed is the Wind Temple, which as of writing has no official name (Given the new model&#039;s name, seems to be Hurakan; get it, Hurakan = Hurricane, GET IT!). They too were met with a barrage of memery due to their troops riding on creatures known as the Treerunners which very closely resembled Kangaroos. Aelementari Temples were intended to teach the Lumineth humility, and it half-worked; although their civilization no longer has the unchecked hubris that led to the Spirefall, many Lumineth have become humblebraggers under the impression that after the Reinvention they have successfully overcome all their flaws and created a perfect society. It seems that the arrogance of the (A)elves is the one flaw they can never overcome.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In terms of combat strategies and tactics, their design and combat is heavily reminiscent of Ancient Greek warfare combined with a bit of Roman. The traditional Spearmen, called the Vanari Auralan Wardens, are essentially hoplites, who form phalanxes to hold the enemy in place while the archers, mages and cavalry get set up to do their stuff. Each of these phalanxes are lead by a High Warden, essentially a Lochagos, who stands at the rear to make sure shit isn&#039;t going wrong. Most of these hoplites also adorn their shields with runes. These runes represent learning and enlightenment for the Realm Lords, but seem to be more for decoration than serving an actual battlefield purpose. These Wardens are also capable of forming into phalanxes called Shining Legions, difficult to harm but also slow. These legions are also present among their brethren who wield swords and bows. The battletome also mentions unseen scout, artillery and chariot units, as well as &amp;quot;Loreseekers&amp;quot; who are trained in both magic and melee. If you&#039;re familiar with the old High Elves roster you can probably predict what they&#039;re gonna be like.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Great Nations==&lt;br /&gt;
Given the Teclis focus of their current lore, only the Teclian nations have been expressed in any detail.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ymetrica:&#039;&#039;&#039; A mountainous kingdom with a great dedication to the Alarith Temple. Were the first Lumineth kingdom to succesfully discover how to bond with the Aelementari, which they won&#039;t hesistate to remind you at any moment. Form the vanguard of Teclis&#039; campaign to purify the Mortal Realms. Currently about to get a massive [[Ossiarch Bonereapers|boning]] at Arkhan&#039;s command.  (Essentially Caledor, but replace Dragons with cow-headed earth elementals).  &lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Syar:&#039;&#039;&#039; The greatest craftsmen of the Lumineth, and the richest nation too. Created a lot of horrible weapons for the Ocari Dara, and swore to never create weapons again...until Teclis persuaded them that Chaos would win without their help. Just when they thought they were out, Chaos pulled them back in. (Most likely suppose to resemble Eataine due to the focus on wealth, though instead of trade they got it through weapon dealing AND trade).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zaitrec:&#039;&#039;&#039; The land of master wizards, and thus the place where Teclis likes to hang out most. They worship Celennar even more than Teclis though, and if they ever get to meet Teclis they&#039;re more interested in what the spirit has to say, claiming &amp;quot;it is better to learn from the source&amp;quot;.  Teclis is secretly [[butthurt]] over this having learned from  an older source himself in the World-That-Was, much to Tyrion&#039;s amusement (for if you miss Saphery, with Celennar filling in for Lileath).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Iliatha:&#039;&#039;&#039; This &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;simp&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; matriarchal kingdom revered women due to their belief that creating life was holy. However, they decided that the traditional method of childbirth was too gross for them, and invented a method to create clones by splitting souls. This lead to horrible excesses during the Ocari Dara, which were so dark that the other nations refuse to speak about it. Afterwards the technology was strictly regulated so that only one copy could be created per person, resulting in Iliatha having the largest population of the nations, the majority of whom are soul-bound twins (Avelorn, only with magic cloning).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Soulbound==&lt;br /&gt;
Coming in 2021 with the Champions of Order supplement.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Aelve Spearmen.jpg|AELVES, WHAT IS YOUR PROFESSION!?&lt;br /&gt;
File:Aelve Cav.jpg|Gee, I wonder what ancient civilization these guys where based on.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Elf_elite_guard.jpg|Heavy armor, hammers and a stone motif... [[Dwarfs (WFB)|where have I seen this before?]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Eltharion AOS.jpg|I&#039;LL GET YOU FOR THIS, ARKHAN!&lt;br /&gt;
File:Befriending furries.jpg|&#039;&#039;&#039;Asserting dominance&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Realm Lord Runes.jpg|No one tell the Dwarfs that the Elgi figured out how runes work....&lt;br /&gt;
File:Sitting Bull.jpg|An Alarith Stonemage.  I wonder how Dwarfs would react to an elf controlling stone with magic.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Alarith.png|Alarith, Spirit of the Mountain. And you thought [[Settra the Imperishable|Settra]] had a lot of titles/aliases.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Scinari.jpg|A Scinari Cathallar.  That&#039;s pronounced SIN-ar-ee CATH-ull-arr, according Geedubs themselves.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Sad Lady.jpg|She feels your pain.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Lumineth vs Khorne.jpg|A fun game of Whack-a-reaver&lt;br /&gt;
File:Minotaur mountain.jpg|Avalenor in all his red, stony glory.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Elf with heavy burden.jpg|[[Snowflame|Weaponized magic Crystal Meth]] (Doomrider approves).&lt;br /&gt;
File:Lumineth Box.jpg|Available now (quartz not accepted as an alternative to money)&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Games Workshop]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167655</id>
		<title>Daughters of Khaine</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167655"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:52:14Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Sects */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Daughters of Khaine|Logo=Daughters_of_Khaine_battletome_art.jpg|Alliance=Order|Motto=Much bloodier and less NSFW than it appears.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|She could never take an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.  The weak and flaccid parity would make her nearly puke. She wants an eye for a tooth, and a life for an eye.|Helen Zahavi - Dirty Weekend}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Let&#039;s show the gutless pigs how the warriors of Pah-Dishah can fight! By Tarim, we&#039;ll give the devils scarlet wine to drink this dawn...|Red Sonja}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;&#039;Daughters of Khaine&#039;&#039;&#039; are a nation of aelves (though closer to a collection of scattered religious communes than a nation) led by Morathi who combine the Khainite religion with shadow magic.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They are an army, with a few exceptions, of [[PROMOTIONS|armed aelven women and monstergirls in bikinis]].  As they worship Khaine, to them the clash of arms is the height of their religion, holy rites practiced and perfected with all the high-level skill and grace of aelf-kind.  As blades flash, they shed their visage of cold and distant beauty, how they tend to be when not in battle, their ecstatic faces lighting up with each fresh kill.  In contrast to even other aelves, especially the Idoneth Deepkin, many Daughters of Khaine have lived far beyond the average aelf lifespan, which is already longer than that of other races (except the males - see below). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
Being a theocracy founded by [[Morathi]] and given her character, Morathi is behind or involved in every pivotal moment of the Daughters of Khaine in history.  After leaving the Great Alliance because [[Nagash]] outed her true monstrous form, Morathi sought to establish her own dwellings in Ulgu.  Her son Malerion cruelly rejected her suggestion of splitting the rule of the thirteen Dominions, for he claimed of all Ulgu as his own.  Morathi persisted until, as either a joke or a plot to get rid of her, Malerion granted his mother a small parcel of land in the middle of the Umbral Veil.  This was the darkest and most impenetrable region in all Ulgu, so dangerous that only Malerion himself had ever returned from those cloying mists with their sanity intact. Morathi went there and exceeded her son&#039;s expectations.  She bent the shadows into a protective shroud around her new land and led settlers there.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Her only followers were the aelven witch-cults that had maintained their worship of [[Khaine]].  While Morathi knew Khaine was dead, since the blood rituals no longer rejuvenated her, she supported the religion to get people to help her.  To ensure their loyalty, Morathi built a temple to Khaine, naming it Hagg Nar, and over time a city grew up around it.  Morathi taught them the secrets of navigating the murky currents.  Hagg Nar began as a pitiful kingdom, and Morathi brooded over her mean existence.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As she sought power, she soon found a hint of Khaine&#039;s power in her dreams while scrying.  Though Khaine was dead, she knew the elven gods were cyclial and could be reborn given enough power.  Morathi began a secret quest that was long and difficult, but eventually brought her to the literal heart of Khaine himself.  The heart was intact and throbbing with resurgent power, but it was guarded by Kharbytr, the godbeast father of Kharibdysses.  Morathi suspected Kharbytr would be resistant to sorcery, and was despearte to claim the heart before anyone else could, so she used seduction instead (yes, really), but angered Kharbytr when she tried to grab the heart.  The fight between them was an epic clash that lasted thirteen days and ended when Morathi constricted Kharbytr in her coils.  The godbeast dealt her a lethal blow before losing consciousness, but Morathi survived by drawing energies from Khaine&#039;s heart to sustain herself.   &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Heading back to Hagg Nar with her prize, Morathi declared herself Khaine&#039;s High Oracle, claiming that she spoke for the god of murder and that she was his voice in this world.  With that she solidified her hold over the Khainites and reshaped the society into the Daughters of Khaine.  The Daughters of Khaine would often be sent out to hunt for fragments of their missing deity on Morathi&#039;s orders (unbeknownst to them, these were snipe hunts for the most part).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
She continued this way for a time until Malerion arrived.  He said that he and the other aelf gods had had, at last, found the lost aelf-souls from the world-that-was, and they needed her shadow magic and knowledge of Slaanesh in their grand plan.  For the first and only time, Morathi spoke of the unspeakable horrors inside Slaanesh and how she&#039;d escaped.  Using this knowledge and themselves as bait, the four lured Slaanesh into a trap and started extracting elven souls from the deity.   &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
For her role, Morathi was allowed to take souls for herself to shape into elves, who went into swelling the numbers of the Daughters of Khaine.  However, some of them had been [[monstergirls|altered by their time with Slaanesh]].  There were those with [[Lamia|serpentine mutations akin to Morathi]], these became the [[Medusa|Melusae]].  Others had bat-like wings and long tails, these became the [[Harpy|Khinerai]].  Around this time Morathi reintroduced the Cauldrons of Blood and created the Mathcoir, the master cauldron, in Hagg Nar.  Secretly, she made it as a repository of power only she could access.  To start this, Morathi [[Drow|cursed every male born to the Daughters of Khaine to have part of their soul siphoned away and stored in the Mathcoir]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unbeknownst to her erstwhile allies, Morathi had added her own deceptive magics to the undertaking, so that the soul division was skewed slightly out of the agreed proportions, with extra spirits siphoned to Hagg Nar.  This subterfuge was subtle, but slowly, inevitably, [[Not as Planned|altered the eldritch balance that kept the Dark Prince perfectly imprisoned between Hysh and Ulgu]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
As Chaos invaded the Mortal Realms, the Daughters of Khaine marched out from Hagg Nar to ambush them, using shadowshifting magics to reach Realmgates to travel anywhere the forces of Order needed them.  Although Morathi and her followers weren&#039;t liked, beggars could not be choosers and they were one of the few allies the Sigmarites had during this time.  To keep the more mutated members of her coven secret, the spellcasters and priestesses of the Khainites used shadow glamors to make them look like ordinary elves (how this worked when the Khinerai were flying is anybody&#039;s guess).  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine were bold and fearless in battle - willing to cross blades with any enemy, no matter how numerous or monstrous.  Despite heroics by Khainite forces at many battles, the forces of Order were on the backfoot, the final retreat happening after Nagash betrayed Sigmar at the Battle of Burning Skies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As the Chaos invasions set about their task of destroying and enslaving entire civilisations, the Shadowlands of Ulgu suffered the least after Azyr.  Khorne, Nurgle and Tzeentch all devoted the greater portion of their forces to different realms, the minions that were sent into Ulgu boasted none of the most fearful greater daemon commanders and Malerion himself sent Archaon packing with his tail between his legs.  This gave the Daughters of Khaine plenty of time to prey on the Chaos forces that made it to their realm; reavers of Khorne, magic-seeking conclaves of Tzeentch or followers of Slaanesh tracking calls from their god that only they could sense.  They reaped a large harvest of Chaos minions, leaving mass graves from all the sacrifices (this would come back to haunt them - pun intended - in the Soul Wars, see below).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
But Morathi&#039;s trickery with the soul extraction came back to bite her.  Taking too many souls caused Slaanesh&#039;s prison to drift towards Ulgu and weaken it.  This enabled Slaanesh&#039;s most faithful servants catch the scent of their missing god/dess.  More and more Slaaneshi armies penetrated the Shadowlands searching for their lost god.  So began what the aelves of Ulgu named the Cathtrar Dhule - the War of Shadows.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
For the major battles of the War of Shadows, Morathi led the Daughters of Khaine from the front.  She cast down the Keeper of Secrets Glittus and his Legion of Excess, and the whip-handed Krulla Sha&#039;vhr and her Flayerhost.  Battle was not her only recourse, however, for against the unbeatable six warhosts of the betentacled Bovaxx the Despoiler, Morathi&#039;s coven of Medusae summoned a gaiste-maze - a shadow labyrinth that still covers part of the Umbral Veil, a dark cloud in which those hordes presumably still wander.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Yet the Daughters of Khaine did not win every battle.  As larger and more-powerful armies invaded, Morathi called the first of the Caillich Covens - the gathering of forces from all the sects.  This was required to defeat Luxcious, a Keeper of Secrets so powerful that many Slaaneshi considered her a replacement for the missing Dark Prince.  The daemon was defeated, but not until after the exalted fiend destroyed the Temple of Druchxar.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
Luxcious may well have continued her scouring search of Ulgu had Sigmar not begun his war to reclaim the Mortal Realms, drawing off many Chaos forces. The Cathtrar Dhule paused, before once more erupting anew in the bitterly fought War of the Shadowpaths.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine win more allies during this time, for despite their brutality in battle (and occasional team-killing among their allies) they&#039;re just &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; good at kicking Chaos.  The Stormcast, Idoneth and Sylvaneth to name a few ally with the Daughters of Khaine.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During this time, some elves start to [[Heresy|worship Morathi alongside Khaine, which causes dissent]] (an uncommon case of a heresy charge in a warhammer setting that fits the actual definition).  Ironically, those who disapprove get [[Blam|quickly silenced]] by Morathi or the Medusae as [[Heresy|heretics]] (usually by a knife in the vitals or getting turned into living crystal by a Melusai).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Soul Wars===&lt;br /&gt;
Prior to the Soul Wars there are increasing build-ups of death magic.  Whenever there is a large gathering of Scathborn, the spirits of the dead rise up and attack them.  Also, remember those mass graves full of sacrificed Chaos worshippers?  Now they&#039;re fodder for armies of vengeful skeleton warriors and/or ghosts who attack the Khainites.  When Nagash sent vamires and necromancers into Ulgu as a diversion tactic, they were all too happy to exploit these mass graves for armies.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine were also called on by the forces of Order in other realms to help fight off the increasing undead attacks.  Morathi herself extolled the Daughters of Khaine to greater zeal, for she remembers the taste of Nagash&#039;s pimp hand and is eager to avenge the slight.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine worked with Scourge privateers to get information about the Idoneth Deepkin the same way as their kin in the World-That-Was; lots of torture and mind-invading magic.  From this they learn the location of a valued Deepkin artifact, the Ocarian Lantern; made by - and stolen from - Teclis, it acted as a lure for souls.  Morathi sent sixty of her best soldiers to get it from its heavily guarded underwater temple; two survived, one now an Idoneth prisoner and the other returned to Morathi with the lantern.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
She fused with Khaine&#039;s heart and became the goddess Morathi-Khaine.  Thus Khaine as he was is gone forever, and Morathi - now Morathi-Khaine - is their goddess instead of just their High Oracle (albeit now split into two bodies, Morathi-Khaine and the Shadow Queen after [[Aenarion|her hubby&#039;s soul]] [[Rip and Tear|took exception]] to Morathi&#039;s plan while in Slaanesh).  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Morathi&#039;s first action was to broker an alliance with the [[Idoneth Deepkin]], offering Volturnos the souls of his fellow Cythai elves to sweeten the deal.  She then ended her alliance with Sigmar by launching a coup that brought Anvilgard under her rule and renaming it Har Kuron.  The Daughters of Khaine/Morathi-Khaine now fight with a newfound zeal as they launched a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;crusade&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;jihad&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; holy war to expand Morathi&#039;s empire.  When Sigmar found out, he sent a Stormcast army to re-take Har Kuron, the fighting raging until the Celestant-Prime arrived and offered to parley with Morathi.  The two disappear for a night, and when they returned an agreement had been reached.  Morathi was be allowed to keep the city, and what she promised in return is unknown.  Morathi&#039;s also [[1984|slowly re-writing the Daughters&#039; scriptures and records of history to put herself at the center of everything]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Religion==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Morathi,_the_Shadow_Queen_from_DaughtersofKhaine_.jpg|300px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;Charge, Daughters of Khaine!  For my...uh, I mean, for Khaine&#039;s glory!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike some other factions within Age of Sigmar, but very much like others, the Daughters of Khaine are a theocracy.  There are many sects of Daughters of Khaine, each worshiping a different aspect of the aelf god of battle and bloodshed. Although the rites and rituals might differ, all the Khainites follow a strict hierarchy in their organisation.  They worship Khaine and Morathi is his High Oracle, the one who discerns his will and their overall leader.  Though they know about the other gods of Order, they pay no homage to them.  Beneath Morathi are the High Priestesses, which include the Slaughter Queens, Hag Queens and Bloodwrack Medusae. They are the keepers of each shrine’s most sacred artefacts, and commanders of the Sisterhood of Blood.  The degree of authority held by each of these figures, along with their specific title, varies between the sects, but a single word from Morathi can alter the influence of any other ranking.     &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Of all the warriors of the temples, the Scáthborn – the Melusai and Khinerai – are closest to Morathi herself, yet they often remain hidden from those outside the cult. The Medusae are made from Aelves converted by Morathi herself; though this is seen as an immense honor Morathi binds them with the most binding of magical oaths, but none among the Khainites would dare question her in this.  This is partially due to their forms resulting from daemonic taint which would cause negative sentiment among their allies and the fact that Morathi uses them as something of a secret police.  The most public-facing Khainites are the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter.  Their most important shrines are the Cauldrons of Blood, gifts from Khaine himself (at least, what Morathi’s claims each time she gifts one of the great iron cauldrons to the temple of a newly founded Khainite sect).  The covenites see it as a sign of their god’s favour that the cauldrons never seem to overflow, no matter how much blood is poured within them following a battle – all assume Khaine himself takes the surplus as an offering.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
War covens are the most important organisations to the Daughters of Khaine, their structure laid out by Morathi herself.  It is through violence that the Khainites expand their territories, defend their temples and worship their god.  Weapons practice and mock duels take up the majority of their daily lives, yet these are not mere military drills, but religious ceremonies, treated with all the gravitas that others might use when reading their most holy of tomes or offering prayers to their god.  From their temples in various realms, the Daughters of Khaine scour the Mortal Realms for blood sacrifices.  At Morathi&#039;s edict, they also search for the shards of their god, scattered across the Realms.  They do this for the glory of Khaine and to see him reborn.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Just As Planned|But they are nearly all of them deceived]].  &lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
Morathi claims to speak for Khaine, and she does wield his unbreakable iron heart, but none know that Morathi’s power is a lie and that Khaine is dead.  While their devotions to Khaine could one day lead to his rebirth, Morathi is deliberately preventing that.  The reason for this is that she is siphoning the power - either by co-opting it before it reaches the heart or pulling it from Khaine&#039;s heart - to reach godhood herself.  The prayers that her daughters scream and the ritual offerings they make only serve to enhance her own power, not Khaine’s.  Outside Morathi herself, only a handful of the &amp;quot;altered&amp;quot; members of the Daughters of Khaine are aware of this deception, and they, willingly or otherwise, are bound by the most binding of oaths and magic to serve Morathi and keep this secret.  Also, the blood surplus poured into the Cauldron&#039;s doesn&#039;t go to Khaine.  It flows back to Hagg Nar through Morathi’s magics, to the Mother of all Cauldrons, the Máthcoir, from which The High Oracle absorbs and repurposes the blood’s energies for her own nefarious gain.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
Their society is brutal, especially given that it&#039;s leader is [[Morathi]] and they worship [[Khaine]].  They serve Khaine with fanatical devotion, which is especially problematic considering that Khaine is the god of murder.  While the Daughters of Khaine crave bloodshed and murder, they serve alongside the forces of Order – albeit tenuously.  Given their tendency towards collateral damage (and rumors of kidnapping innocents and gruesome rituals), they are less respected allies and more tolerated because they&#039;re useful.  Their views on the other major groups are varied.  As builders of cities and civilizations, the Daughters of Khaine are at odds with the forces of Destruction.  While it is said that they have an aversion to the Death faction because of a dislike for anything death-related since they nearly went extinct, it&#039;s more likely that this due to Morathi&#039;s personal grudge against Nagash for striking her and outing her true from to the rest of the pantheon.  Despite their distaste for the other two, the one faction they truly hate is Chaos; they could give the Stormcast Eternals a run for their money in hating Chaos, and prosecute their crusades with particular violence against the servants of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re wondering why Morathi is mentioned so often that&#039;s deliberate; Morathi keeps as much of a stranglehold on Khainite society as she can.  It would be out-of-character for her to do anything less (she kind of a control freak).  All Khainites are either warriors that serve in their religious order, or they are leathanam (see below).  Temples are found only in some realms; confirmed realms are Ulgu, Azyr and Ghyran.  When they are not fighting, the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter usually participate in ritualized gladiator matches or shady pit fights.  They also partake of a form of bladed dancing for the entertainment of others.  Despite being a theocratic society, the Daughters of Khaine don&#039;t proselytize or win converts; the adherents are themselves the result of a breeding program, choosing their partners in line with the aims and desires of their leaders.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re wondering &amp;quot;where are the men?  They have to reproduce somehow&amp;quot;, well... remember that leathanam class mentioned earlier?  Apart from the Doomfire Warlocks, this class is made up exclusively of &#039;&#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039;&#039; the males in this faction; the men are disregard menials, worker drones who do the non-fighting stuff that keeps society going in a literal gender-based [[Slavery|slavery]] system (we know what you&#039;re thinking.  Something, something, feminist fantasy... and we know how [[SJW|certain groups]] would react if the genders were swapped).  While the women outnumber the men, this is not the paradise [[/d/|some]] think it would be; Morathi deliberately made only a few male aelves, and then only from the weakest and most broken of souls retrieved from Slaanesh.  Even male aelves a Daughter of Khaine gives birth to are literally cursed with weakness as Morathi siphons part of their souls to power the Cauldrons of Blood... and yes, Morathi instituted the rule that the males are slaves.  Surprisingly, the women are not misandric or female supremacists towards outsiders except for individual cases.  This makes sense when you remember that, as a society, the Daughters of Khaine respect strength above all else and a lot of the mistreatment of their own males is based on their innate weakness... but on the other hand, their males are weak because Morathi deliberately handicapped them, so female supremacy and/or misandry could still be at work.  While in theory they worship Khaine, who is male, this was always superficial; when limited to his heart Khaine had no actual say over their actions, and with Morathi merging to become the goddess Morathi-Khaine he might be gone for good.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Among the men, the Doomfire Warlocks are an interesting case.  They&#039;re stronger due to their mastery of shadow magic, but receive limited training, and Morathi has them branded with mind-control runes ([[Grimdark|while deceiving them into thinking they&#039;re protection against Slaanesh]]).  They are treated far better than other leathanam and actually join the females in battle, but are still lower status purely because they&#039;re male, and are rarely seen by - or ackowledged to - non-Khainites.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They&#039;re also a rare example of a Warhammer society whose attitude towards sex is actually fleshed out (ironic, since Slaanesh is their greatest foe), all from the anthology novel &#039;&#039;Covens of Blood&#039;&#039;.  Contrary to expectations, they&#039;re mostly open about it.  They&#039;re free to mingle, fine with bisexuality, polyamory and homosexuality plus rank&#039;s not an issue.  There are a few caveats; it can&#039;t interfere with fighting or their duties, males can neither proposition nor reject a female, and if two women want the same man/men, they bargain or duel each other.  Naturally, this gives females complete choice over who fathers their children.  The women can even fuck outsiders and captives if they choose ([[Grimdark|the captives don&#039;t get a choice]]), but affection towards them or having a child with them is considered shameful (the novella also all but confirms human/elf hybrids are possible in Age of Sigmar).  Sex is a popular way to celebrate or spend their downtime.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The female aelves tend to dye their hair with blood and, in a throwback to Warhammer Fantasy, have rituals of rebirth keep the covenite sisters youthful in appearance and supple in body.  Even among their ranks, there are some who are considered extremists; the Sisters of Slaughters&#039; are members who graft masks of living metal to their faces with boiling blood.  While the aelven members are accepted by others, the Melusae and Khinerai are not.  When fighting alongside, they are concealed by a glamour so they too appear to be aelves; this could also explain some of their teamkilling tendencies among alliances with other Order factions, as they&#039;re keeping the existence of these mutated elves secret.  After Morathi&#039;s apotheosis, the Melusai and Khinerai have openly appeared, and are touted as proof of Morathi&#039;s divinity.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
tl;dr: They&#039;re a matriarchal elven society with penchants for violence, scheming, ruthlessness, misandry and skimpy outfits who originate from a dark realm and follow the commands of a female figure who sometimes mutates her followers to resemble her.  [[Drow|Sound familiar]]?  (moreso now that Morathi has successfully become a goddess).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Sects==&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine are divided into Sects (previously known as Temples in past lore), in a manner similar to Stormcast Chambers or Sylvaneth Wargroves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Hagg Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Hagg Nar lies deep in the Umbral Veil, the darkest region of the Shadowlands.  The first and largest of the Daughters of Khaine temples, it was built atop the Hellelux, a geyser of shadow magic that spews shrouding mists. It is home to hundreds of warcovens that are [[Drow|always at each other’s throats for the attention of Morathi, who encourages this “rivalry” as a means of weeding out the weak]].  &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Draichi Ganeth:&#039;&#039;&#039; Draichi Ganeth, which translates as ‘the bladedkillers’, are the Khainite Aelves most commonly seen by other Order factions. Their main temple is found in the northern barrens of Fuarthorn in Ulgu, but their war pilgrimages and lesser shrines can be found across the realms. Every [[Cities of Sigmar|free city]] has seen or is host to a small troupe of the Draichi Ganeth, who look down upon the subterfuge and deception of their sister sects. They are known to the Freeguilds as the Executioners Cult due to their blunt and forward style of combat, as well as their penchant for decapitation.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Kraith:&#039;&#039;&#039; The sect known as the Kraith, also called the Crimson Cult, are true disciples of slaughter, and have earned a reputation as the least compromising of all the Daughters of Khaine. Arrogant and nomadic, they have no true temple home, instead traveling from one war to the next as they believe Khaine’s one and only temple is the blood stained battlefield. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Khailebron:&#039;&#039;&#039; This sect has learned well the arts of concealment, stealth and obfuscation.  Those who worship at the temples of Khailebron revere the assassin and the unseen killer, and strive to be masters of ambushes and sudden strikes. Where these temples are is known only to Morathi and the Khailebron themselves. Otherwise, they masquerade as wandering performers who showcase an elegant “bladed-dance” for the local populace, while their top killers secretly slit the throats of their targets (including anyone who shows too much disrespect to the dancers).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khelt Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Khelt Nar has become the fastest growing of the sects established by Morathi. It began as Ironshard, a single Khainite shrine founded by the High Oracle atop a flat-topped mountain of iron known as the Rothtor.  Since then it has expanded to other Realms, including a stronghold in Ghyran, and have been tasked by the High Priestess with clearing out the rampant [[Orruk Warclans|Bonesplitterz]] that plague their territories. Khelt Nar is best known for being composed of deliciously brown dark aelves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zainthar Kai&#039;&#039;&#039;: This reserved sect was born in the Age of Chaos when Morathi (desperate to get a leg up on the Ruinous Powers) decided to infuse a new brood of Scáthborn with three drops of Khaine’s blood. The result is a temple of veritable demi-gods who can call upon the god of murder’s strength in haze of battle, becoming the Shadow Queen’s go-to temple for making her more despised enemies disappear. The temple is mostly led by/comprised of Scáthborn, but there are contingents of Witch Aelves who function as (disposable) work horses (also maybe getting a little taste of what they put the Lethanamn through).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Soulbound==&lt;br /&gt;
In [[Age of Sigmar Roleplay]], it&#039;s established that Daughters of Khaine are selected to become Soulbound when Morathi decides that a potentially stray from the ranks of her faithful is too dangerous or too useful to just dispose of outright. Soulbound Daughters are selected from the overly ambitious, those who secretly yearned for freedom, and even those who had begun to doubt Khaine&#039;s divinity, basically serving as a way to remove potential threats to Morathi&#039;s control over the faction. Despite their origins, though, Morathi often goes out of her way to maintain a good relationship with &amp;quot;her&amp;quot; Soulbound (in fact, the Binding actually servers the magical restrains that Morathi uses to control the Daughters as a whole), because, whatever else they may be to her, they are both useful as powerful yet neutral arbiters and as ambassadors of her &amp;quot;good intentions&amp;quot; to the other powers of Order. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Normal Daughters of Khaine are unsure of how to regard their Soulbound &amp;quot;sisters&amp;quot;, since they are simultaneously very dangerous, but not rivals due to being forever outside the hierarchy of the temples, apparently favored by the High Oracle but yet also deeply connected to and regularly traveling alongside &amp;quot;outsiders&amp;quot; who shouldn&#039;t be privy to the secrets of Khaine&#039;s temples. They tend to default to &amp;quot;respectful suspicion&amp;quot; when interacting with Soulbound Daughters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine have the fewest dedicated Archetypes in the Age of Sigmar Roleplay corebook, with only the &#039;&#039;&#039;Hag Priestess&#039;&#039;&#039; and the &#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Aelf&#039;&#039;&#039; open to them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Medusae Shrine.jpg|&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Boobflash&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Bloodwrack Shrine in all its glory.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Temples of Khaine.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters of Khaine Slaughter.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters-of-khaine-4.jpg|Dark Elves, now with 50% more [[Snek|Sneks]].&lt;br /&gt;
File:I might you never know.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drkelf.png|A typical Khelt Nar aelf.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
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{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Dark Elves]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167654</id>
		<title>Daughters of Khaine</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167654"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:44:29Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Society */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Daughters of Khaine|Logo=Daughters_of_Khaine_battletome_art.jpg|Alliance=Order|Motto=Much bloodier and less NSFW than it appears.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|She could never take an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.  The weak and flaccid parity would make her nearly puke. She wants an eye for a tooth, and a life for an eye.|Helen Zahavi - Dirty Weekend}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Let&#039;s show the gutless pigs how the warriors of Pah-Dishah can fight! By Tarim, we&#039;ll give the devils scarlet wine to drink this dawn...|Red Sonja}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;&#039;Daughters of Khaine&#039;&#039;&#039; are a nation of aelves (though closer to a collection of scattered religious communes than a nation) led by Morathi who combine the Khainite religion with shadow magic.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They are an army, with a few exceptions, of [[PROMOTIONS|armed aelven women and monstergirls in bikinis]].  As they worship Khaine, to them the clash of arms is the height of their religion, holy rites practiced and perfected with all the high-level skill and grace of aelf-kind.  As blades flash, they shed their visage of cold and distant beauty, how they tend to be when not in battle, their ecstatic faces lighting up with each fresh kill.  In contrast to even other aelves, especially the Idoneth Deepkin, many Daughters of Khaine have lived far beyond the average aelf lifespan, which is already longer than that of other races (except the males - see below). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
Being a theocracy founded by [[Morathi]] and given her character, Morathi is behind or involved in every pivotal moment of the Daughters of Khaine in history.  After leaving the Great Alliance because [[Nagash]] outed her true monstrous form, Morathi sought to establish her own dwellings in Ulgu.  Her son Malerion cruelly rejected her suggestion of splitting the rule of the thirteen Dominions, for he claimed of all Ulgu as his own.  Morathi persisted until, as either a joke or a plot to get rid of her, Malerion granted his mother a small parcel of land in the middle of the Umbral Veil.  This was the darkest and most impenetrable region in all Ulgu, so dangerous that only Malerion himself had ever returned from those cloying mists with their sanity intact. Morathi went there and exceeded her son&#039;s expectations.  She bent the shadows into a protective shroud around her new land and led settlers there.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Her only followers were the aelven witch-cults that had maintained their worship of [[Khaine]].  While Morathi knew Khaine was dead, since the blood rituals no longer rejuvenated her, she supported the religion to get people to help her.  To ensure their loyalty, Morathi built a temple to Khaine, naming it Hagg Nar, and over time a city grew up around it.  Morathi taught them the secrets of navigating the murky currents.  Hagg Nar began as a pitiful kingdom, and Morathi brooded over her mean existence.    &lt;br /&gt;
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As she sought power, she soon found a hint of Khaine&#039;s power in her dreams while scrying.  Though Khaine was dead, she knew the elven gods were cyclial and could be reborn given enough power.  Morathi began a secret quest that was long and difficult, but eventually brought her to the literal heart of Khaine himself.  The heart was intact and throbbing with resurgent power, but it was guarded by Kharbytr, the godbeast father of Kharibdysses.  Morathi suspected Kharbytr would be resistant to sorcery, and was despearte to claim the heart before anyone else could, so she used seduction instead (yes, really), but angered Kharbytr when she tried to grab the heart.  The fight between them was an epic clash that lasted thirteen days and ended when Morathi constricted Kharbytr in her coils.  The godbeast dealt her a lethal blow before losing consciousness, but Morathi survived by drawing energies from Khaine&#039;s heart to sustain herself.   &lt;br /&gt;
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Heading back to Hagg Nar with her prize, Morathi declared herself Khaine&#039;s High Oracle, claiming that she spoke for the god of murder and that she was his voice in this world.  With that she solidified her hold over the Khainites and reshaped the society into the Daughters of Khaine.  The Daughters of Khaine would often be sent out to hunt for fragments of their missing deity on Morathi&#039;s orders (unbeknownst to them, these were snipe hunts for the most part).&lt;br /&gt;
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She continued this way for a time until Malerion arrived.  He said that he and the other aelf gods had had, at last, found the lost aelf-souls from the world-that-was, and they needed her shadow magic and knowledge of Slaanesh in their grand plan.  For the first and only time, Morathi spoke of the unspeakable horrors inside Slaanesh and how she&#039;d escaped.  Using this knowledge and themselves as bait, the four lured Slaanesh into a trap and started extracting elven souls from the deity.   &lt;br /&gt;
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For her role, Morathi was allowed to take souls for herself to shape into elves, who went into swelling the numbers of the Daughters of Khaine.  However, some of them had been [[monstergirls|altered by their time with Slaanesh]].  There were those with [[Lamia|serpentine mutations akin to Morathi]], these became the [[Medusa|Melusae]].  Others had bat-like wings and long tails, these became the [[Harpy|Khinerai]].  Around this time Morathi reintroduced the Cauldrons of Blood and created the Mathcoir, the master cauldron, in Hagg Nar.  Secretly, she made it as a repository of power only she could access.  To start this, Morathi [[Drow|cursed every male born to the Daughters of Khaine to have part of their soul siphoned away and stored in the Mathcoir]].&lt;br /&gt;
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Unbeknownst to her erstwhile allies, Morathi had added her own deceptive magics to the undertaking, so that the soul division was skewed slightly out of the agreed proportions, with extra spirits siphoned to Hagg Nar.  This subterfuge was subtle, but slowly, inevitably, [[Not as Planned|altered the eldritch balance that kept the Dark Prince perfectly imprisoned between Hysh and Ulgu]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
As Chaos invaded the Mortal Realms, the Daughters of Khaine marched out from Hagg Nar to ambush them, using shadowshifting magics to reach Realmgates to travel anywhere the forces of Order needed them.  Although Morathi and her followers weren&#039;t liked, beggars could not be choosers and they were one of the few allies the Sigmarites had during this time.  To keep the more mutated members of her coven secret, the spellcasters and priestesses of the Khainites used shadow glamors to make them look like ordinary elves (how this worked when the Khinerai were flying is anybody&#039;s guess).  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine were bold and fearless in battle - willing to cross blades with any enemy, no matter how numerous or monstrous.  Despite heroics by Khainite forces at many battles, the forces of Order were on the backfoot, the final retreat happening after Nagash betrayed Sigmar at the Battle of Burning Skies.&lt;br /&gt;
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As the Chaos invasions set about their task of destroying and enslaving entire civilisations, the Shadowlands of Ulgu suffered the least after Azyr.  Khorne, Nurgle and Tzeentch all devoted the greater portion of their forces to different realms, the minions that were sent into Ulgu boasted none of the most fearful greater daemon commanders and Malerion himself sent Archaon packing with his tail between his legs.  This gave the Daughters of Khaine plenty of time to prey on the Chaos forces that made it to their realm; reavers of Khorne, magic-seeking conclaves of Tzeentch or followers of Slaanesh tracking calls from their god that only they could sense.  They reaped a large harvest of Chaos minions, leaving mass graves from all the sacrifices (this would come back to haunt them - pun intended - in the Soul Wars, see below).&lt;br /&gt;
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But Morathi&#039;s trickery with the soul extraction came back to bite her.  Taking too many souls caused Slaanesh&#039;s prison to drift towards Ulgu and weaken it.  This enabled Slaanesh&#039;s most faithful servants catch the scent of their missing god/dess.  More and more Slaaneshi armies penetrated the Shadowlands searching for their lost god.  So began what the aelves of Ulgu named the Cathtrar Dhule - the War of Shadows.&lt;br /&gt;
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For the major battles of the War of Shadows, Morathi led the Daughters of Khaine from the front.  She cast down the Keeper of Secrets Glittus and his Legion of Excess, and the whip-handed Krulla Sha&#039;vhr and her Flayerhost.  Battle was not her only recourse, however, for against the unbeatable six warhosts of the betentacled Bovaxx the Despoiler, Morathi&#039;s coven of Medusae summoned a gaiste-maze - a shadow labyrinth that still covers part of the Umbral Veil, a dark cloud in which those hordes presumably still wander.&lt;br /&gt;
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Yet the Daughters of Khaine did not win every battle.  As larger and more-powerful armies invaded, Morathi called the first of the Caillich Covens - the gathering of forces from all the sects.  This was required to defeat Luxcious, a Keeper of Secrets so powerful that many Slaaneshi considered her a replacement for the missing Dark Prince.  The daemon was defeated, but not until after the exalted fiend destroyed the Temple of Druchxar.  &lt;br /&gt;
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===Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
Luxcious may well have continued her scouring search of Ulgu had Sigmar not begun his war to reclaim the Mortal Realms, drawing off many Chaos forces. The Cathtrar Dhule paused, before once more erupting anew in the bitterly fought War of the Shadowpaths.  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine win more allies during this time, for despite their brutality in battle (and occasional team-killing among their allies) they&#039;re just &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; good at kicking Chaos.  The Stormcast, Idoneth and Sylvaneth to name a few ally with the Daughters of Khaine.  &lt;br /&gt;
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During this time, some elves start to [[Heresy|worship Morathi alongside Khaine, which causes dissent]] (an uncommon case of a heresy charge in a warhammer setting that fits the actual definition).  Ironically, those who disapprove get [[Blam|quickly silenced]] by Morathi or the Medusae as [[Heresy|heretics]] (usually by a knife in the vitals or getting turned into living crystal by a Melusai).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Soul Wars===&lt;br /&gt;
Prior to the Soul Wars there are increasing build-ups of death magic.  Whenever there is a large gathering of Scathborn, the spirits of the dead rise up and attack them.  Also, remember those mass graves full of sacrificed Chaos worshippers?  Now they&#039;re fodder for armies of vengeful skeleton warriors and/or ghosts who attack the Khainites.  When Nagash sent vamires and necromancers into Ulgu as a diversion tactic, they were all too happy to exploit these mass graves for armies.  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine were also called on by the forces of Order in other realms to help fight off the increasing undead attacks.  Morathi herself extolled the Daughters of Khaine to greater zeal, for she remembers the taste of Nagash&#039;s pimp hand and is eager to avenge the slight.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine worked with Scourge privateers to get information about the Idoneth Deepkin the same way as their kin in the World-That-Was; lots of torture and mind-invading magic.  From this they learn the location of a valued Deepkin artifact, the Ocarian Lantern; made by - and stolen from - Teclis, it acted as a lure for souls.  Morathi sent sixty of her best soldiers to get it from its heavily guarded underwater temple; two survived, one now an Idoneth prisoner and the other returned to Morathi with the lantern.&lt;br /&gt;
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She fused with Khaine&#039;s heart and became the goddess Morathi-Khaine.  Thus Khaine as he was is gone forever, and Morathi - now Morathi-Khaine - is their goddess instead of just their High Oracle (albeit now split into two bodies, Morathi-Khaine and the Shadow Queen after [[Aenarion|her hubby&#039;s soul]] [[Rip and Tear|took exception]] to Morathi&#039;s plan while in Slaanesh).  &lt;br /&gt;
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Morathi&#039;s first action was to broker an alliance with the [[Idoneth Deepkin]], offering Volturnos the souls of his fellow Cythai elves to sweeten the deal.  She then ended her alliance with Sigmar by launching a coup that brought Anvilgard under her rule and renaming it Har Kuron.  The Daughters of Khaine/Morathi-Khaine now fight with a newfound zeal as they launched a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;crusade&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;jihad&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; holy war to expand Morathi&#039;s empire.  When Sigmar found out, he sent a Stormcast army to re-take Har Kuron, the fighting raging until the Celestant-Prime arrived and offered to parley with Morathi.  The two disappear for a night, and when they returned an agreement had been reached.  Morathi was be allowed to keep the city, and what she promised in return is unknown.  Morathi&#039;s also [[1984|slowly re-writing the Daughters&#039; scriptures and records of history to put herself at the center of everything]].&lt;br /&gt;
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==Religion==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Morathi,_the_Shadow_Queen_from_DaughtersofKhaine_.jpg|300px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;Charge, Daughters of Khaine!  For my...uh, I mean, for Khaine&#039;s glory!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike some other factions within Age of Sigmar, but very much like others, the Daughters of Khaine are a theocracy.  There are many sects of Daughters of Khaine, each worshiping a different aspect of the aelf god of battle and bloodshed. Although the rites and rituals might differ, all the Khainites follow a strict hierarchy in their organisation.  They worship Khaine and Morathi is his High Oracle, the one who discerns his will and their overall leader.  Though they know about the other gods of Order, they pay no homage to them.  Beneath Morathi are the High Priestesses, which include the Slaughter Queens, Hag Queens and Bloodwrack Medusae. They are the keepers of each shrine’s most sacred artefacts, and commanders of the Sisterhood of Blood.  The degree of authority held by each of these figures, along with their specific title, varies between the sects, but a single word from Morathi can alter the influence of any other ranking.     &lt;br /&gt;
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Of all the warriors of the temples, the Scáthborn – the Melusai and Khinerai – are closest to Morathi herself, yet they often remain hidden from those outside the cult. The Medusae are made from Aelves converted by Morathi herself; though this is seen as an immense honor Morathi binds them with the most binding of magical oaths, but none among the Khainites would dare question her in this.  This is partially due to their forms resulting from daemonic taint which would cause negative sentiment among their allies and the fact that Morathi uses them as something of a secret police.  The most public-facing Khainites are the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter.  Their most important shrines are the Cauldrons of Blood, gifts from Khaine himself (at least, what Morathi’s claims each time she gifts one of the great iron cauldrons to the temple of a newly founded Khainite sect).  The covenites see it as a sign of their god’s favour that the cauldrons never seem to overflow, no matter how much blood is poured within them following a battle – all assume Khaine himself takes the surplus as an offering.    &lt;br /&gt;
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War covens are the most important organisations to the Daughters of Khaine, their structure laid out by Morathi herself.  It is through violence that the Khainites expand their territories, defend their temples and worship their god.  Weapons practice and mock duels take up the majority of their daily lives, yet these are not mere military drills, but religious ceremonies, treated with all the gravitas that others might use when reading their most holy of tomes or offering prayers to their god.  From their temples in various realms, the Daughters of Khaine scour the Mortal Realms for blood sacrifices.  At Morathi&#039;s edict, they also search for the shards of their god, scattered across the Realms.  They do this for the glory of Khaine and to see him reborn.  &lt;br /&gt;
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[[Just As Planned|But they are nearly all of them deceived]].  &lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
Morathi claims to speak for Khaine, and she does wield his unbreakable iron heart, but none know that Morathi’s power is a lie and that Khaine is dead.  While their devotions to Khaine could one day lead to his rebirth, Morathi is deliberately preventing that.  The reason for this is that she is siphoning the power - either by co-opting it before it reaches the heart or pulling it from Khaine&#039;s heart - to reach godhood herself.  The prayers that her daughters scream and the ritual offerings they make only serve to enhance her own power, not Khaine’s.  Outside Morathi herself, only a handful of the &amp;quot;altered&amp;quot; members of the Daughters of Khaine are aware of this deception, and they, willingly or otherwise, are bound by the most binding of oaths and magic to serve Morathi and keep this secret.  Also, the blood surplus poured into the Cauldron&#039;s doesn&#039;t go to Khaine.  It flows back to Hagg Nar through Morathi’s magics, to the Mother of all Cauldrons, the Máthcoir, from which The High Oracle absorbs and repurposes the blood’s energies for her own nefarious gain.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
Their society is brutal, especially given that it&#039;s leader is [[Morathi]] and they worship [[Khaine]].  They serve Khaine with fanatical devotion, which is especially problematic considering that Khaine is the god of murder.  While the Daughters of Khaine crave bloodshed and murder, they serve alongside the forces of Order – albeit tenuously.  Given their tendency towards collateral damage (and rumors of kidnapping innocents and gruesome rituals), they are less respected allies and more tolerated because they&#039;re useful.  Their views on the other major groups are varied.  As builders of cities and civilizations, the Daughters of Khaine are at odds with the forces of Destruction.  While it is said that they have an aversion to the Death faction because of a dislike for anything death-related since they nearly went extinct, it&#039;s more likely that this due to Morathi&#039;s personal grudge against Nagash for striking her and outing her true from to the rest of the pantheon.  Despite their distaste for the other two, the one faction they truly hate is Chaos; they could give the Stormcast Eternals a run for their money in hating Chaos, and prosecute their crusades with particular violence against the servants of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re wondering why Morathi is mentioned so often that&#039;s deliberate; Morathi keeps as much of a stranglehold on Khainite society as she can.  It would be out-of-character for her to do anything less (she kind of a control freak).  All Khainites are either warriors that serve in their religious order, or they are leathanam (see below).  Temples are found only in some realms; confirmed realms are Ulgu, Azyr and Ghyran.  When they are not fighting, the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter usually participate in ritualized gladiator matches or shady pit fights.  They also partake of a form of bladed dancing for the entertainment of others.  Despite being a theocratic society, the Daughters of Khaine don&#039;t proselytize or win converts; the adherents are themselves the result of a breeding program, choosing their partners in line with the aims and desires of their leaders.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re wondering &amp;quot;where are the men?  They have to reproduce somehow&amp;quot;, well... remember that leathanam class mentioned earlier?  Apart from the Doomfire Warlocks, this class is made up exclusively of &#039;&#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039;&#039; the males in this faction; the men are disregard menials, worker drones who do the non-fighting stuff that keeps society going in a literal gender-based [[Slavery|slavery]] system (we know what you&#039;re thinking.  Something, something, feminist fantasy... and we know how [[SJW|certain groups]] would react if the genders were swapped).  While the women outnumber the men, this is not the paradise [[/d/|some]] think it would be; Morathi deliberately made only a few male aelves, and then only from the weakest and most broken of souls retrieved from Slaanesh.  Even male aelves a Daughter of Khaine gives birth to are literally cursed with weakness as Morathi siphons part of their souls to power the Cauldrons of Blood... and yes, Morathi instituted the rule that the males are slaves.  Surprisingly, the women are not misandric or female supremacists towards outsiders except for individual cases.  This makes sense when you remember that, as a society, the Daughters of Khaine respect strength above all else and a lot of the mistreatment of their own males is based on their innate weakness... but on the other hand, their males are weak because Morathi deliberately handicapped them, so female supremacy and/or misandry could still be at work.  While in theory they worship Khaine, who is male, this was always superficial; when limited to his heart Khaine had no actual say over their actions, and with Morathi merging to become the goddess Morathi-Khaine he might be gone for good.&lt;br /&gt;
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Among the men, the Doomfire Warlocks are an interesting case.  They&#039;re stronger due to their mastery of shadow magic, but receive limited training, and Morathi has them branded with mind-control runes ([[Grimdark|while deceiving them into thinking they&#039;re protection against Slaanesh]]).  They are treated far better than other leathanam and actually join the females in battle, but are still lower status purely because they&#039;re male, and are rarely seen by - or ackowledged to - non-Khainites.&lt;br /&gt;
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They&#039;re also a rare example of a Warhammer society whose attitude towards sex is actually fleshed out (ironic, since Slaanesh is their greatest foe), all from the anthology novel &#039;&#039;Covens of Blood&#039;&#039;.  Contrary to expectations, they&#039;re mostly open about it.  They&#039;re free to mingle, fine with bisexuality, polyamory and homosexuality plus rank&#039;s not an issue.  There are a few caveats; it can&#039;t interfere with fighting or their duties, males can neither proposition nor reject a female, and if two women want the same man/men, they bargain or duel each other.  Naturally, this gives females complete choice over who fathers their children.  The women can even fuck outsiders and captives if they choose ([[Grimdark|the captives don&#039;t get a choice]]), but affection towards them or having a child with them is considered shameful (the novella also all but confirms human/elf hybrids are possible in Age of Sigmar).  Sex is a popular way to celebrate or spend their downtime.&lt;br /&gt;
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The female aelves tend to dye their hair with blood and, in a throwback to Warhammer Fantasy, have rituals of rebirth keep the covenite sisters youthful in appearance and supple in body.  Even among their ranks, there are some who are considered extremists; the Sisters of Slaughters&#039; are members who graft masks of living metal to their faces with boiling blood.  While the aelven members are accepted by others, the Melusae and Khinerai are not.  When fighting alongside, they are concealed by a glamour so they too appear to be aelves; this could also explain some of their teamkilling tendencies among alliances with other Order factions, as they&#039;re keeping the existence of these mutated elves secret.  After Morathi&#039;s apotheosis, the Melusai and Khinerai have openly appeared, and are touted as proof of Morathi&#039;s divinity.    &lt;br /&gt;
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tl;dr: They&#039;re a matriarchal elven society with penchants for violence, scheming, ruthlessness, misandry and skimpy outfits who originate from a dark realm and follow the commands of a female figure who sometimes mutates her followers to resemble her.  [[Drow|Sound familiar]]?  (moreso now that Morathi has successfully become a goddess).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Sects==&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine are divided into Sects (previously known as Temples in past lore), in a manner similar to Stormcast Chambers or Sylvaneth Wargroves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Hagg Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Hagg Nar lies deep in the Umbral Veil, the darkest region of the Shadowlands.  The first and largest of the Daughters of Khaine temples, it was built atop the Hellelux, a geyser of shadow magic that spews shrouding mists. It is home to hundreds of warcovens that are [[Drow|always at each other’s throats for the attention of Morathi, who encourages this “rivalry” as a means of weeding out the weak]].  &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Draichi Ganeth:&#039;&#039;&#039; Draichi Ganeth, which translates as ‘the bladedkillers’, are the Khainite Aelves most commonly seen by other Order factions. Their main temple is found in the northern barrens of Fuarthorn in Ulgu, but their war pilgrimages and lesser shrines can be found across the realms. Every [[Cities of Sigmar|free city]] has seen or is host to a small troupe of the Draichi Ganeth, who look down upon the subterfuge and deception of their sister sects. They are known to the Freeguilds as the Executioners Cult due to their blunt and forward style of combat, as well as their penchant for decapitation.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Kraith:&#039;&#039;&#039; The sect known as the Kraith, also called the Crimson Cult, are true disciples of slaughter, and have earned a reputation as the least compromising of all the Daughters of Khaine. Arrogant and nomadic, they have no true temple home, instead traveling from one war to the next as they believe Khaine’s one and only temple is the blood stained battlefield. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Khailebron:&#039;&#039;&#039; This sect has learned well the arts of concealment, stealth and obfuscation.  Those who worship at the temples of Khailebron revere the assassin and the unseen killer, and strive to be masters of ambushes and sudden strikes. Where these temples are is known only to Morathi and the Khailebron themselves. Otherwise, they masquerade as wandering performers who showcase an elegant “bladed-dance” for the local populace, while their top killers secretly slit the throats of their targets (including anyone who shows too much disrespect to the dancers).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khelt Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Khelt Nar has become the fastest growing of the sects established by Morathi. It began as Ironshard, a single Khainite shrine founded by the High Oracle atop a flat-topped mountain of iron known as the Rothtor.  Since then it has expanded to other Realms, including a stronghold in Ghyran, and have been tasked by the High Priestess with clearing out the rampant [[Orruk Warclans|Bonesplitterz]] that plague their territories. Khelt Nar is best known for being composed of deliciously brown dark aelves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zainthar Kai&#039;&#039;&#039;: This reserved sect was born in the Age of Chaos when Morathi (desperate to get a leg up on the Ruinous Powers) decided to infuse a new brood of Scáthborn with three drops of Khaine’s blood. The result is a temple of veritable demi-gods who can call upon the god of murder’s strength in haze of battle, becoming the Shadow Queen’s go-to temple for making her more despised enemies disappear. The temple is mostly led by/comprised of Scáthborn, but there are contingents of Witch Aelves who function as (disposable) work horses.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Soulbound==&lt;br /&gt;
In [[Age of Sigmar Roleplay]], it&#039;s established that Daughters of Khaine are selected to become Soulbound when Morathi decides that a potentially stray from the ranks of her faithful is too dangerous or too useful to just dispose of outright. Soulbound Daughters are selected from the overly ambitious, those who secretly yearned for freedom, and even those who had begun to doubt Khaine&#039;s divinity, basically serving as a way to remove potential threats to Morathi&#039;s control over the faction. Despite their origins, though, Morathi often goes out of her way to maintain a good relationship with &amp;quot;her&amp;quot; Soulbound (in fact, the Binding actually servers the magical restrains that Morathi uses to control the Daughters as a whole), because, whatever else they may be to her, they are both useful as powerful yet neutral arbiters and as ambassadors of her &amp;quot;good intentions&amp;quot; to the other powers of Order. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Normal Daughters of Khaine are unsure of how to regard their Soulbound &amp;quot;sisters&amp;quot;, since they are simultaneously very dangerous, but not rivals due to being forever outside the hierarchy of the temples, apparently favored by the High Oracle but yet also deeply connected to and regularly traveling alongside &amp;quot;outsiders&amp;quot; who shouldn&#039;t be privy to the secrets of Khaine&#039;s temples. They tend to default to &amp;quot;respectful suspicion&amp;quot; when interacting with Soulbound Daughters.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine have the fewest dedicated Archetypes in the Age of Sigmar Roleplay corebook, with only the &#039;&#039;&#039;Hag Priestess&#039;&#039;&#039; and the &#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Aelf&#039;&#039;&#039; open to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Medusae Shrine.jpg|&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Boobflash&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Bloodwrack Shrine in all its glory.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Temples of Khaine.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters of Khaine Slaughter.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters-of-khaine-4.jpg|Dark Elves, now with 50% more [[Snek|Sneks]].&lt;br /&gt;
File:I might you never know.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drkelf.png|A typical Khelt Nar aelf.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
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{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Dark Elves]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167653</id>
		<title>Daughters of Khaine</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167653"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:32:27Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Society */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Daughters of Khaine|Logo=Daughters_of_Khaine_battletome_art.jpg|Alliance=Order|Motto=Much bloodier and less NSFW than it appears.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|She could never take an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.  The weak and flaccid parity would make her nearly puke. She wants an eye for a tooth, and a life for an eye.|Helen Zahavi - Dirty Weekend}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Let&#039;s show the gutless pigs how the warriors of Pah-Dishah can fight! By Tarim, we&#039;ll give the devils scarlet wine to drink this dawn...|Red Sonja}}&lt;br /&gt;
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The &#039;&#039;&#039;Daughters of Khaine&#039;&#039;&#039; are a nation of aelves (though closer to a collection of scattered religious communes than a nation) led by Morathi who combine the Khainite religion with shadow magic.  &lt;br /&gt;
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They are an army, with a few exceptions, of [[PROMOTIONS|armed aelven women and monstergirls in bikinis]].  As they worship Khaine, to them the clash of arms is the height of their religion, holy rites practiced and perfected with all the high-level skill and grace of aelf-kind.  As blades flash, they shed their visage of cold and distant beauty, how they tend to be when not in battle, their ecstatic faces lighting up with each fresh kill.  In contrast to even other aelves, especially the Idoneth Deepkin, many Daughters of Khaine have lived far beyond the average aelf lifespan, which is already longer than that of other races (except the males - see below). &lt;br /&gt;
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==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
Being a theocracy founded by [[Morathi]] and given her character, Morathi is behind or involved in every pivotal moment of the Daughters of Khaine in history.  After leaving the Great Alliance because [[Nagash]] outed her true monstrous form, Morathi sought to establish her own dwellings in Ulgu.  Her son Malerion cruelly rejected her suggestion of splitting the rule of the thirteen Dominions, for he claimed of all Ulgu as his own.  Morathi persisted until, as either a joke or a plot to get rid of her, Malerion granted his mother a small parcel of land in the middle of the Umbral Veil.  This was the darkest and most impenetrable region in all Ulgu, so dangerous that only Malerion himself had ever returned from those cloying mists with their sanity intact. Morathi went there and exceeded her son&#039;s expectations.  She bent the shadows into a protective shroud around her new land and led settlers there.  &lt;br /&gt;
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Her only followers were the aelven witch-cults that had maintained their worship of [[Khaine]].  While Morathi knew Khaine was dead, since the blood rituals no longer rejuvenated her, she supported the religion to get people to help her.  To ensure their loyalty, Morathi built a temple to Khaine, naming it Hagg Nar, and over time a city grew up around it.  Morathi taught them the secrets of navigating the murky currents.  Hagg Nar began as a pitiful kingdom, and Morathi brooded over her mean existence.    &lt;br /&gt;
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As she sought power, she soon found a hint of Khaine&#039;s power in her dreams while scrying.  Though Khaine was dead, she knew the elven gods were cyclial and could be reborn given enough power.  Morathi began a secret quest that was long and difficult, but eventually brought her to the literal heart of Khaine himself.  The heart was intact and throbbing with resurgent power, but it was guarded by Kharbytr, the godbeast father of Kharibdysses.  Morathi suspected Kharbytr would be resistant to sorcery, and was despearte to claim the heart before anyone else could, so she used seduction instead (yes, really), but angered Kharbytr when she tried to grab the heart.  The fight between them was an epic clash that lasted thirteen days and ended when Morathi constricted Kharbytr in her coils.  The godbeast dealt her a lethal blow before losing consciousness, but Morathi survived by drawing energies from Khaine&#039;s heart to sustain herself.   &lt;br /&gt;
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Heading back to Hagg Nar with her prize, Morathi declared herself Khaine&#039;s High Oracle, claiming that she spoke for the god of murder and that she was his voice in this world.  With that she solidified her hold over the Khainites and reshaped the society into the Daughters of Khaine.  The Daughters of Khaine would often be sent out to hunt for fragments of their missing deity on Morathi&#039;s orders (unbeknownst to them, these were snipe hunts for the most part).&lt;br /&gt;
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She continued this way for a time until Malerion arrived.  He said that he and the other aelf gods had had, at last, found the lost aelf-souls from the world-that-was, and they needed her shadow magic and knowledge of Slaanesh in their grand plan.  For the first and only time, Morathi spoke of the unspeakable horrors inside Slaanesh and how she&#039;d escaped.  Using this knowledge and themselves as bait, the four lured Slaanesh into a trap and started extracting elven souls from the deity.   &lt;br /&gt;
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For her role, Morathi was allowed to take souls for herself to shape into elves, who went into swelling the numbers of the Daughters of Khaine.  However, some of them had been [[monstergirls|altered by their time with Slaanesh]].  There were those with [[Lamia|serpentine mutations akin to Morathi]], these became the [[Medusa|Melusae]].  Others had bat-like wings and long tails, these became the [[Harpy|Khinerai]].  Around this time Morathi reintroduced the Cauldrons of Blood and created the Mathcoir, the master cauldron, in Hagg Nar.  Secretly, she made it as a repository of power only she could access.  To start this, Morathi [[Drow|cursed every male born to the Daughters of Khaine to have part of their soul siphoned away and stored in the Mathcoir]].&lt;br /&gt;
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Unbeknownst to her erstwhile allies, Morathi had added her own deceptive magics to the undertaking, so that the soul division was skewed slightly out of the agreed proportions, with extra spirits siphoned to Hagg Nar.  This subterfuge was subtle, but slowly, inevitably, [[Not as Planned|altered the eldritch balance that kept the Dark Prince perfectly imprisoned between Hysh and Ulgu]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
As Chaos invaded the Mortal Realms, the Daughters of Khaine marched out from Hagg Nar to ambush them, using shadowshifting magics to reach Realmgates to travel anywhere the forces of Order needed them.  Although Morathi and her followers weren&#039;t liked, beggars could not be choosers and they were one of the few allies the Sigmarites had during this time.  To keep the more mutated members of her coven secret, the spellcasters and priestesses of the Khainites used shadow glamors to make them look like ordinary elves (how this worked when the Khinerai were flying is anybody&#039;s guess).  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine were bold and fearless in battle - willing to cross blades with any enemy, no matter how numerous or monstrous.  Despite heroics by Khainite forces at many battles, the forces of Order were on the backfoot, the final retreat happening after Nagash betrayed Sigmar at the Battle of Burning Skies.&lt;br /&gt;
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As the Chaos invasions set about their task of destroying and enslaving entire civilisations, the Shadowlands of Ulgu suffered the least after Azyr.  Khorne, Nurgle and Tzeentch all devoted the greater portion of their forces to different realms, the minions that were sent into Ulgu boasted none of the most fearful greater daemon commanders and Malerion himself sent Archaon packing with his tail between his legs.  This gave the Daughters of Khaine plenty of time to prey on the Chaos forces that made it to their realm; reavers of Khorne, magic-seeking conclaves of Tzeentch or followers of Slaanesh tracking calls from their god that only they could sense.  They reaped a large harvest of Chaos minions, leaving mass graves from all the sacrifices (this would come back to haunt them - pun intended - in the Soul Wars, see below).&lt;br /&gt;
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But Morathi&#039;s trickery with the soul extraction came back to bite her.  Taking too many souls caused Slaanesh&#039;s prison to drift towards Ulgu and weaken it.  This enabled Slaanesh&#039;s most faithful servants catch the scent of their missing god/dess.  More and more Slaaneshi armies penetrated the Shadowlands searching for their lost god.  So began what the aelves of Ulgu named the Cathtrar Dhule - the War of Shadows.&lt;br /&gt;
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For the major battles of the War of Shadows, Morathi led the Daughters of Khaine from the front.  She cast down the Keeper of Secrets Glittus and his Legion of Excess, and the whip-handed Krulla Sha&#039;vhr and her Flayerhost.  Battle was not her only recourse, however, for against the unbeatable six warhosts of the betentacled Bovaxx the Despoiler, Morathi&#039;s coven of Medusae summoned a gaiste-maze - a shadow labyrinth that still covers part of the Umbral Veil, a dark cloud in which those hordes presumably still wander.&lt;br /&gt;
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Yet the Daughters of Khaine did not win every battle.  As larger and more-powerful armies invaded, Morathi called the first of the Caillich Covens - the gathering of forces from all the sects.  This was required to defeat Luxcious, a Keeper of Secrets so powerful that many Slaaneshi considered her a replacement for the missing Dark Prince.  The daemon was defeated, but not until after the exalted fiend destroyed the Temple of Druchxar.  &lt;br /&gt;
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===Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
Luxcious may well have continued her scouring search of Ulgu had Sigmar not begun his war to reclaim the Mortal Realms, drawing off many Chaos forces. The Cathtrar Dhule paused, before once more erupting anew in the bitterly fought War of the Shadowpaths.  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine win more allies during this time, for despite their brutality in battle (and occasional team-killing among their allies) they&#039;re just &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; good at kicking Chaos.  The Stormcast, Idoneth and Sylvaneth to name a few ally with the Daughters of Khaine.  &lt;br /&gt;
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During this time, some elves start to [[Heresy|worship Morathi alongside Khaine, which causes dissent]] (an uncommon case of a heresy charge in a warhammer setting that fits the actual definition).  Ironically, those who disapprove get [[Blam|quickly silenced]] by Morathi or the Medusae as [[Heresy|heretics]] (usually by a knife in the vitals or getting turned into living crystal by a Melusai).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Soul Wars===&lt;br /&gt;
Prior to the Soul Wars there are increasing build-ups of death magic.  Whenever there is a large gathering of Scathborn, the spirits of the dead rise up and attack them.  Also, remember those mass graves full of sacrificed Chaos worshippers?  Now they&#039;re fodder for armies of vengeful skeleton warriors and/or ghosts who attack the Khainites.  When Nagash sent vamires and necromancers into Ulgu as a diversion tactic, they were all too happy to exploit these mass graves for armies.  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine were also called on by the forces of Order in other realms to help fight off the increasing undead attacks.  Morathi herself extolled the Daughters of Khaine to greater zeal, for she remembers the taste of Nagash&#039;s pimp hand and is eager to avenge the slight.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine worked with Scourge privateers to get information about the Idoneth Deepkin the same way as their kin in the World-That-Was; lots of torture and mind-invading magic.  From this they learn the location of a valued Deepkin artifact, the Ocarian Lantern; made by - and stolen from - Teclis, it acted as a lure for souls.  Morathi sent sixty of her best soldiers to get it from its heavily guarded underwater temple; two survived, one now an Idoneth prisoner and the other returned to Morathi with the lantern.&lt;br /&gt;
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She fused with Khaine&#039;s heart and became the goddess Morathi-Khaine.  Thus Khaine as he was is gone forever, and Morathi - now Morathi-Khaine - is their goddess instead of just their High Oracle (albeit now split into two bodies, Morathi-Khaine and the Shadow Queen after [[Aenarion|her hubby&#039;s soul]] [[Rip and Tear|took exception]] to Morathi&#039;s plan while in Slaanesh).  &lt;br /&gt;
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Morathi&#039;s first action was to broker an alliance with the [[Idoneth Deepkin]], offering Volturnos the souls of his fellow Cythai elves to sweeten the deal.  She then ended her alliance with Sigmar by launching a coup that brought Anvilgard under her rule and renaming it Har Kuron.  The Daughters of Khaine/Morathi-Khaine now fight with a newfound zeal as they launched a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;crusade&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;jihad&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; holy war to expand Morathi&#039;s empire.  When Sigmar found out, he sent a Stormcast army to re-take Har Kuron, the fighting raging until the Celestant-Prime arrived and offered to parley with Morathi.  The two disappear for a night, and when they returned an agreement had been reached.  Morathi was be allowed to keep the city, and what she promised in return is unknown.  Morathi&#039;s also [[1984|slowly re-writing the Daughters&#039; scriptures and records of history to put herself at the center of everything]].&lt;br /&gt;
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==Religion==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Morathi,_the_Shadow_Queen_from_DaughtersofKhaine_.jpg|300px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;Charge, Daughters of Khaine!  For my...uh, I mean, for Khaine&#039;s glory!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike some other factions within Age of Sigmar, but very much like others, the Daughters of Khaine are a theocracy.  There are many sects of Daughters of Khaine, each worshiping a different aspect of the aelf god of battle and bloodshed. Although the rites and rituals might differ, all the Khainites follow a strict hierarchy in their organisation.  They worship Khaine and Morathi is his High Oracle, the one who discerns his will and their overall leader.  Though they know about the other gods of Order, they pay no homage to them.  Beneath Morathi are the High Priestesses, which include the Slaughter Queens, Hag Queens and Bloodwrack Medusae. They are the keepers of each shrine’s most sacred artefacts, and commanders of the Sisterhood of Blood.  The degree of authority held by each of these figures, along with their specific title, varies between the sects, but a single word from Morathi can alter the influence of any other ranking.     &lt;br /&gt;
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Of all the warriors of the temples, the Scáthborn – the Melusai and Khinerai – are closest to Morathi herself, yet they often remain hidden from those outside the cult. The Medusae are made from Aelves converted by Morathi herself; though this is seen as an immense honor Morathi binds them with the most binding of magical oaths, but none among the Khainites would dare question her in this.  This is partially due to their forms resulting from daemonic taint which would cause negative sentiment among their allies and the fact that Morathi uses them as something of a secret police.  The most public-facing Khainites are the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter.  Their most important shrines are the Cauldrons of Blood, gifts from Khaine himself (at least, what Morathi’s claims each time she gifts one of the great iron cauldrons to the temple of a newly founded Khainite sect).  The covenites see it as a sign of their god’s favour that the cauldrons never seem to overflow, no matter how much blood is poured within them following a battle – all assume Khaine himself takes the surplus as an offering.    &lt;br /&gt;
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War covens are the most important organisations to the Daughters of Khaine, their structure laid out by Morathi herself.  It is through violence that the Khainites expand their territories, defend their temples and worship their god.  Weapons practice and mock duels take up the majority of their daily lives, yet these are not mere military drills, but religious ceremonies, treated with all the gravitas that others might use when reading their most holy of tomes or offering prayers to their god.  From their temples in various realms, the Daughters of Khaine scour the Mortal Realms for blood sacrifices.  At Morathi&#039;s edict, they also search for the shards of their god, scattered across the Realms.  They do this for the glory of Khaine and to see him reborn.  &lt;br /&gt;
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[[Just As Planned|But they are nearly all of them deceived]].  &lt;br /&gt;
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Morathi claims to speak for Khaine, and she does wield his unbreakable iron heart, but none know that Morathi’s power is a lie and that Khaine is dead.  While their devotions to Khaine could one day lead to his rebirth, Morathi is deliberately preventing that.  The reason for this is that she is siphoning the power - either by co-opting it before it reaches the heart or pulling it from Khaine&#039;s heart - to reach godhood herself.  The prayers that her daughters scream and the ritual offerings they make only serve to enhance her own power, not Khaine’s.  Outside Morathi herself, only a handful of the &amp;quot;altered&amp;quot; members of the Daughters of Khaine are aware of this deception, and they, willingly or otherwise, are bound by the most binding of oaths and magic to serve Morathi and keep this secret.  Also, the blood surplus poured into the Cauldron&#039;s doesn&#039;t go to Khaine.  It flows back to Hagg Nar through Morathi’s magics, to the Mother of all Cauldrons, the Máthcoir, from which The High Oracle absorbs and repurposes the blood’s energies for her own nefarious gain.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
Their society is brutal, especially given that it&#039;s leader is [[Morathi]] and they worship [[Khaine]].  They serve Khaine with fanatical devotion, which is especially problematic considering that Khaine is the god of murder.  While the Daughters of Khaine crave bloodshed and murder, they serve alongside the forces of Order – albeit tenuously.  Given their tendency towards collateral damage (and rumors of kidnapping innocents and gruesome rituals), they are less respected allies and more tolerated because they&#039;re useful.  Their views on the other major groups are varied.  As builders of cities and civilizations, the Daughters of Khaine are at odds with the forces of Destruction.  While it is said that they have an aversion to the Death faction because of a dislike for anything death-related since they nearly went extinct, it&#039;s more likely that this due to Morathi&#039;s personal grudge against Nagash for striking her and outing her true from to the rest of the pantheon.  Despite their distaste for the other two, the one faction they truly hate is Chaos; they could give the Stormcast Eternals a run for their money in hating Chaos, and prosecute their crusades with particular violence against the servants of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re wondering why Morathi is mentioned so often that&#039;s deliberate; Morathi keeps as much of a stranglehold on Khainite society as she can.  It would be out-of-character for her to do anything less (she kind of a control freak).  All Khainites are either warriors that serve in their religious order, or they are leathanam (see below).  Temples are found only in some realms; confirmed realms are Ulgu, Azyr and Ghyran.  When they are not fighting, the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter usually participate in ritualized gladiator matches or shady pit fights.  They also partake of a form of bladed dancing for the entertainment of others.  Despite being a theocratic society, the Daughters of Khaine don&#039;t proselytize or win converts; the adherents are themselves the result of a breeding program, choosing their partners in line with the aims and desires of their leaders.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re wondering &amp;quot;where are the men?  They have to reproduce somehow&amp;quot;, well... remember that leathanam class mentioned earlier?  Apart from the Doomfire Warlocks, this class is made up exclusively of &#039;&#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039;&#039; the males in this faction; the men are disregard menials, worker drones who do the non-fighting stuff that keeps society going in a literal gender-based [[Slavery|slavery]] system (we know what you&#039;re thinking.  Something, something, feminist fantasy... and we know how [[SJW|certain groups]] would react if the genders were swapped).  While the women outnumber the men, this is not the paradise [[/d/|some]] think it would be; Morathi deliberately made only a few male aelves, and then only from the weakest and most broken of souls retrieved from Slaanesh.  Even male aelves a Daughter of Khaine gives birth to are literally cursed with weakness as Morathi siphons part of their souls to power the Cauldrons of Blood... and yes, Morathi instituted the rule that the males are slaves.  Surprisingly, the women are not misandric or female supremacists towards outsiders except for individual cases.  This makes sense when you remember that, as a society, the Daughters of Khaine respect strength above all else and a lot of the mistreatment of their own males is based on their innate weakness... but on the other hand, their males are weak because Morathi deliberately handicapped them, so female supremacy and/or misandry could still be at work.  While in theory they worship Khaine, who is male, this was always superficial; when limited to his heart Khaine had no actual say over their actions, and with Morathi merging to become the goddess Morathi-Khaine he might be gone for good.&lt;br /&gt;
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Among the men, the Doomfire Warlocks are an interesting case.  They&#039;re stronger due to their mastery of shadow magic, but receive limited training, and Morathi has them branded with mind-control runes ([[Grimdark|while deceiving them into thinking they&#039;re protection against Slaanesh]]).  They are treated far better than other leathanam and actually join the females in battle, but are still lower status purely because they&#039;re male, and are rarely seen by - or ackowledged to - non-Khainites.&lt;br /&gt;
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They&#039;re also a rare example of a Warhammer society whose attitude towards sex is actually fleshed out (ironic, since Slaanesh is their greatest foe), all from the anthology novel &#039;&#039;Covens of Blood&#039;&#039;.  Contrary to expectations, they&#039;re mostly open about it.  They&#039;re free to mingle, fine with bisexuality, polyamory and homosexuality plus rank&#039;s not an issue.  There are a few caveats; it can&#039;t interfere with fighting or their duties, males can neither proposition nor reject a female, and if two women want the same man/men, they bargain or duel each other.  Naturally, this gives females complete choice over who fathers their children.  The women can even fuck outsiders and captives if they choose, but affection towards them or having a child with them is considered shameful (the novella also all but confirms human/elf hybrids are possible in Age of Sigmar).  Sex is a popular way to celebrate or spend their downtime.&lt;br /&gt;
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The female aelves tend to dye their hair with blood and, in a throwback to Warhammer Fantasy, have rituals of rebirth keep the covenite sisters youthful in appearance and supple in body.  Even among their ranks, there are some who are considered extremists; the Sisters of Slaughters&#039; are members who graft masks of living metal to their faces with boiling blood.  While the aelven members are accepted by others, the Melusae and Khinerai are not.  When fighting alongside, they are concealed by a glamour so they too appear to be aelves; this could also explain some of their teamkilling tendencies among alliances with other Order factions, as they&#039;re keeping the existence of these mutated elves secret.  After Morathi&#039;s apotheosis, the Melusai and Khinerai have openly appeared, and are touted as proof of Morathi&#039;s divinity.    &lt;br /&gt;
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tl;dr: They&#039;re a matriarchal elven society with penchants for violence, scheming, ruthlessness, misandry and skimpy outfits who originate from a dark realm and follow the commands of a female figure who sometimes mutates her followers to resemble her.  [[Drow|Sound familiar]]?  (moreso now that Morathi has successfully become a goddess).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Sects==&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine are divided into Sects (previously known as Temples in past lore), in a manner similar to Stormcast Chambers or Sylvaneth Wargroves.&lt;br /&gt;
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* &#039;&#039;&#039;Hagg Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Hagg Nar lies deep in the Umbral Veil, the darkest region of the Shadowlands.  The first and largest of the Daughters of Khaine temples, it was built atop the Hellelux, a geyser of shadow magic that spews shrouding mists. It is home to hundreds of warcovens that are [[Drow|always at each other’s throats for the attention of Morathi, who encourages this “rivalry” as a means of weeding out the weak]].  &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Draichi Ganeth:&#039;&#039;&#039; Draichi Ganeth, which translates as ‘the bladedkillers’, are the Khainite Aelves most commonly seen by other Order factions. Their main temple is found in the northern barrens of Fuarthorn in Ulgu, but their war pilgrimages and lesser shrines can be found across the realms. Every [[Cities of Sigmar|free city]] has seen or is host to a small troupe of the Draichi Ganeth, who look down upon the subterfuge and deception of their sister sects. They are known to the Freeguilds as the Executioners Cult due to their blunt and forward style of combat, as well as their penchant for decapitation.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Kraith:&#039;&#039;&#039; The sect known as the Kraith, also called the Crimson Cult, are true disciples of slaughter, and have earned a reputation as the least compromising of all the Daughters of Khaine. Arrogant and nomadic, they have no true temple home, instead traveling from one war to the next as they believe Khaine’s one and only temple is the blood stained battlefield. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Khailebron:&#039;&#039;&#039; This sect has learned well the arts of concealment, stealth and obfuscation.  Those who worship at the temples of Khailebron revere the assassin and the unseen killer, and strive to be masters of ambushes and sudden strikes. Where these temples are is known only to Morathi and the Khailebron themselves. Otherwise, they masquerade as wandering performers who showcase an elegant “bladed-dance” for the local populace, while their top killers secretly slit the throats of their targets (including anyone who shows too much disrespect to the dancers).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khelt Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Khelt Nar has become the fastest growing of the sects established by Morathi. It began as Ironshard, a single Khainite shrine founded by the High Oracle atop a flat-topped mountain of iron known as the Rothtor.  Since then it has expanded to other Realms, including a stronghold in Ghyran, and have been tasked by the High Priestess with clearing out the rampant [[Orruk Warclans|Bonesplitterz]] that plague their territories. Khelt Nar is best known for being composed of deliciously brown dark aelves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zainthar Kai&#039;&#039;&#039;: This reserved sect was born in the Age of Chaos when Morathi (desperate to get a leg up on the Ruinous Powers) decided to infuse a new brood of Scáthborn with three drops of Khaine’s blood. The result is a temple of veritable demi-gods who can call upon the god of murder’s strength in haze of battle, becoming the Shadow Queen’s go-to temple for making her more despised enemies disappear. The temple is mostly led by/comprised of Scáthborn, but there are contingents of Witch Aelves who function as (disposable) work horses.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Soulbound==&lt;br /&gt;
In [[Age of Sigmar Roleplay]], it&#039;s established that Daughters of Khaine are selected to become Soulbound when Morathi decides that a potentially stray from the ranks of her faithful is too dangerous or too useful to just dispose of outright. Soulbound Daughters are selected from the overly ambitious, those who secretly yearned for freedom, and even those who had begun to doubt Khaine&#039;s divinity, basically serving as a way to remove potential threats to Morathi&#039;s control over the faction. Despite their origins, though, Morathi often goes out of her way to maintain a good relationship with &amp;quot;her&amp;quot; Soulbound (in fact, the Binding actually servers the magical restrains that Morathi uses to control the Daughters as a whole), because, whatever else they may be to her, they are both useful as powerful yet neutral arbiters and as ambassadors of her &amp;quot;good intentions&amp;quot; to the other powers of Order. &lt;br /&gt;
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Normal Daughters of Khaine are unsure of how to regard their Soulbound &amp;quot;sisters&amp;quot;, since they are simultaneously very dangerous, but not rivals due to being forever outside the hierarchy of the temples, apparently favored by the High Oracle but yet also deeply connected to and regularly traveling alongside &amp;quot;outsiders&amp;quot; who shouldn&#039;t be privy to the secrets of Khaine&#039;s temples. They tend to default to &amp;quot;respectful suspicion&amp;quot; when interacting with Soulbound Daughters.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine have the fewest dedicated Archetypes in the Age of Sigmar Roleplay corebook, with only the &#039;&#039;&#039;Hag Priestess&#039;&#039;&#039; and the &#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Aelf&#039;&#039;&#039; open to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Medusae Shrine.jpg|&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Boobflash&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Bloodwrack Shrine in all its glory.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Temples of Khaine.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters of Khaine Slaughter.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters-of-khaine-4.jpg|Dark Elves, now with 50% more [[Snek|Sneks]].&lt;br /&gt;
File:I might you never know.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drkelf.png|A typical Khelt Nar aelf.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
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{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Dark Elves]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167652</id>
		<title>Daughters of Khaine</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167652"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:21:53Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Society */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Daughters of Khaine|Logo=Daughters_of_Khaine_battletome_art.jpg|Alliance=Order|Motto=Much bloodier and less NSFW than it appears.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|She could never take an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.  The weak and flaccid parity would make her nearly puke. She wants an eye for a tooth, and a life for an eye.|Helen Zahavi - Dirty Weekend}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Let&#039;s show the gutless pigs how the warriors of Pah-Dishah can fight! By Tarim, we&#039;ll give the devils scarlet wine to drink this dawn...|Red Sonja}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;&#039;Daughters of Khaine&#039;&#039;&#039; are a nation of aelves (though closer to a collection of scattered religious communes than a nation) led by Morathi who combine the Khainite religion with shadow magic.  &lt;br /&gt;
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They are an army, with a few exceptions, of [[PROMOTIONS|armed aelven women and monstergirls in bikinis]].  As they worship Khaine, to them the clash of arms is the height of their religion, holy rites practiced and perfected with all the high-level skill and grace of aelf-kind.  As blades flash, they shed their visage of cold and distant beauty, how they tend to be when not in battle, their ecstatic faces lighting up with each fresh kill.  In contrast to even other aelves, especially the Idoneth Deepkin, many Daughters of Khaine have lived far beyond the average aelf lifespan, which is already longer than that of other races (except the males - see below). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
Being a theocracy founded by [[Morathi]] and given her character, Morathi is behind or involved in every pivotal moment of the Daughters of Khaine in history.  After leaving the Great Alliance because [[Nagash]] outed her true monstrous form, Morathi sought to establish her own dwellings in Ulgu.  Her son Malerion cruelly rejected her suggestion of splitting the rule of the thirteen Dominions, for he claimed of all Ulgu as his own.  Morathi persisted until, as either a joke or a plot to get rid of her, Malerion granted his mother a small parcel of land in the middle of the Umbral Veil.  This was the darkest and most impenetrable region in all Ulgu, so dangerous that only Malerion himself had ever returned from those cloying mists with their sanity intact. Morathi went there and exceeded her son&#039;s expectations.  She bent the shadows into a protective shroud around her new land and led settlers there.  &lt;br /&gt;
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Her only followers were the aelven witch-cults that had maintained their worship of [[Khaine]].  While Morathi knew Khaine was dead, since the blood rituals no longer rejuvenated her, she supported the religion to get people to help her.  To ensure their loyalty, Morathi built a temple to Khaine, naming it Hagg Nar, and over time a city grew up around it.  Morathi taught them the secrets of navigating the murky currents.  Hagg Nar began as a pitiful kingdom, and Morathi brooded over her mean existence.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As she sought power, she soon found a hint of Khaine&#039;s power in her dreams while scrying.  Though Khaine was dead, she knew the elven gods were cyclial and could be reborn given enough power.  Morathi began a secret quest that was long and difficult, but eventually brought her to the literal heart of Khaine himself.  The heart was intact and throbbing with resurgent power, but it was guarded by Kharbytr, the godbeast father of Kharibdysses.  Morathi suspected Kharbytr would be resistant to sorcery, and was despearte to claim the heart before anyone else could, so she used seduction instead (yes, really), but angered Kharbytr when she tried to grab the heart.  The fight between them was an epic clash that lasted thirteen days and ended when Morathi constricted Kharbytr in her coils.  The godbeast dealt her a lethal blow before losing consciousness, but Morathi survived by drawing energies from Khaine&#039;s heart to sustain herself.   &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Heading back to Hagg Nar with her prize, Morathi declared herself Khaine&#039;s High Oracle, claiming that she spoke for the god of murder and that she was his voice in this world.  With that she solidified her hold over the Khainites and reshaped the society into the Daughters of Khaine.  The Daughters of Khaine would often be sent out to hunt for fragments of their missing deity on Morathi&#039;s orders (unbeknownst to them, these were snipe hunts for the most part).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
She continued this way for a time until Malerion arrived.  He said that he and the other aelf gods had had, at last, found the lost aelf-souls from the world-that-was, and they needed her shadow magic and knowledge of Slaanesh in their grand plan.  For the first and only time, Morathi spoke of the unspeakable horrors inside Slaanesh and how she&#039;d escaped.  Using this knowledge and themselves as bait, the four lured Slaanesh into a trap and started extracting elven souls from the deity.   &lt;br /&gt;
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For her role, Morathi was allowed to take souls for herself to shape into elves, who went into swelling the numbers of the Daughters of Khaine.  However, some of them had been [[monstergirls|altered by their time with Slaanesh]].  There were those with [[Lamia|serpentine mutations akin to Morathi]], these became the [[Medusa|Melusae]].  Others had bat-like wings and long tails, these became the [[Harpy|Khinerai]].  Around this time Morathi reintroduced the Cauldrons of Blood and created the Mathcoir, the master cauldron, in Hagg Nar.  Secretly, she made it as a repository of power only she could access.  To start this, Morathi [[Drow|cursed every male born to the Daughters of Khaine to have part of their soul siphoned away and stored in the Mathcoir]].&lt;br /&gt;
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Unbeknownst to her erstwhile allies, Morathi had added her own deceptive magics to the undertaking, so that the soul division was skewed slightly out of the agreed proportions, with extra spirits siphoned to Hagg Nar.  This subterfuge was subtle, but slowly, inevitably, [[Not as Planned|altered the eldritch balance that kept the Dark Prince perfectly imprisoned between Hysh and Ulgu]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
As Chaos invaded the Mortal Realms, the Daughters of Khaine marched out from Hagg Nar to ambush them, using shadowshifting magics to reach Realmgates to travel anywhere the forces of Order needed them.  Although Morathi and her followers weren&#039;t liked, beggars could not be choosers and they were one of the few allies the Sigmarites had during this time.  To keep the more mutated members of her coven secret, the spellcasters and priestesses of the Khainites used shadow glamors to make them look like ordinary elves (how this worked when the Khinerai were flying is anybody&#039;s guess).  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine were bold and fearless in battle - willing to cross blades with any enemy, no matter how numerous or monstrous.  Despite heroics by Khainite forces at many battles, the forces of Order were on the backfoot, the final retreat happening after Nagash betrayed Sigmar at the Battle of Burning Skies.&lt;br /&gt;
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As the Chaos invasions set about their task of destroying and enslaving entire civilisations, the Shadowlands of Ulgu suffered the least after Azyr.  Khorne, Nurgle and Tzeentch all devoted the greater portion of their forces to different realms, the minions that were sent into Ulgu boasted none of the most fearful greater daemon commanders and Malerion himself sent Archaon packing with his tail between his legs.  This gave the Daughters of Khaine plenty of time to prey on the Chaos forces that made it to their realm; reavers of Khorne, magic-seeking conclaves of Tzeentch or followers of Slaanesh tracking calls from their god that only they could sense.  They reaped a large harvest of Chaos minions, leaving mass graves from all the sacrifices (this would come back to haunt them - pun intended - in the Soul Wars, see below).&lt;br /&gt;
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But Morathi&#039;s trickery with the soul extraction came back to bite her.  Taking too many souls caused Slaanesh&#039;s prison to drift towards Ulgu and weaken it.  This enabled Slaanesh&#039;s most faithful servants catch the scent of their missing god/dess.  More and more Slaaneshi armies penetrated the Shadowlands searching for their lost god.  So began what the aelves of Ulgu named the Cathtrar Dhule - the War of Shadows.&lt;br /&gt;
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For the major battles of the War of Shadows, Morathi led the Daughters of Khaine from the front.  She cast down the Keeper of Secrets Glittus and his Legion of Excess, and the whip-handed Krulla Sha&#039;vhr and her Flayerhost.  Battle was not her only recourse, however, for against the unbeatable six warhosts of the betentacled Bovaxx the Despoiler, Morathi&#039;s coven of Medusae summoned a gaiste-maze - a shadow labyrinth that still covers part of the Umbral Veil, a dark cloud in which those hordes presumably still wander.&lt;br /&gt;
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Yet the Daughters of Khaine did not win every battle.  As larger and more-powerful armies invaded, Morathi called the first of the Caillich Covens - the gathering of forces from all the sects.  This was required to defeat Luxcious, a Keeper of Secrets so powerful that many Slaaneshi considered her a replacement for the missing Dark Prince.  The daemon was defeated, but not until after the exalted fiend destroyed the Temple of Druchxar.  &lt;br /&gt;
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===Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
Luxcious may well have continued her scouring search of Ulgu had Sigmar not begun his war to reclaim the Mortal Realms, drawing off many Chaos forces. The Cathtrar Dhule paused, before once more erupting anew in the bitterly fought War of the Shadowpaths.  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine win more allies during this time, for despite their brutality in battle (and occasional team-killing among their allies) they&#039;re just &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; good at kicking Chaos.  The Stormcast, Idoneth and Sylvaneth to name a few ally with the Daughters of Khaine.  &lt;br /&gt;
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During this time, some elves start to [[Heresy|worship Morathi alongside Khaine, which causes dissent]] (an uncommon case of a heresy charge in a warhammer setting that fits the actual definition).  Ironically, those who disapprove get [[Blam|quickly silenced]] by Morathi or the Medusae as [[Heresy|heretics]] (usually by a knife in the vitals or getting turned into living crystal by a Melusai).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Soul Wars===&lt;br /&gt;
Prior to the Soul Wars there are increasing build-ups of death magic.  Whenever there is a large gathering of Scathborn, the spirits of the dead rise up and attack them.  Also, remember those mass graves full of sacrificed Chaos worshippers?  Now they&#039;re fodder for armies of vengeful skeleton warriors and/or ghosts who attack the Khainites.  When Nagash sent vamires and necromancers into Ulgu as a diversion tactic, they were all too happy to exploit these mass graves for armies.  &lt;br /&gt;
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The Daughters of Khaine were also called on by the forces of Order in other realms to help fight off the increasing undead attacks.  Morathi herself extolled the Daughters of Khaine to greater zeal, for she remembers the taste of Nagash&#039;s pimp hand and is eager to avenge the slight.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine worked with Scourge privateers to get information about the Idoneth Deepkin the same way as their kin in the World-That-Was; lots of torture and mind-invading magic.  From this they learn the location of a valued Deepkin artifact, the Ocarian Lantern; made by - and stolen from - Teclis, it acted as a lure for souls.  Morathi sent sixty of her best soldiers to get it from its heavily guarded underwater temple; two survived, one now an Idoneth prisoner and the other returned to Morathi with the lantern.&lt;br /&gt;
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She fused with Khaine&#039;s heart and became the goddess Morathi-Khaine.  Thus Khaine as he was is gone forever, and Morathi - now Morathi-Khaine - is their goddess instead of just their High Oracle (albeit now split into two bodies, Morathi-Khaine and the Shadow Queen after [[Aenarion|her hubby&#039;s soul]] [[Rip and Tear|took exception]] to Morathi&#039;s plan while in Slaanesh).  &lt;br /&gt;
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Morathi&#039;s first action was to broker an alliance with the [[Idoneth Deepkin]], offering Volturnos the souls of his fellow Cythai elves to sweeten the deal.  She then ended her alliance with Sigmar by launching a coup that brought Anvilgard under her rule and renaming it Har Kuron.  The Daughters of Khaine/Morathi-Khaine now fight with a newfound zeal as they launched a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;crusade&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;jihad&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; holy war to expand Morathi&#039;s empire.  When Sigmar found out, he sent a Stormcast army to re-take Har Kuron, the fighting raging until the Celestant-Prime arrived and offered to parley with Morathi.  The two disappear for a night, and when they returned an agreement had been reached.  Morathi was be allowed to keep the city, and what she promised in return is unknown.  Morathi&#039;s also [[1984|slowly re-writing the Daughters&#039; scriptures and records of history to put herself at the center of everything]].&lt;br /&gt;
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==Religion==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Morathi,_the_Shadow_Queen_from_DaughtersofKhaine_.jpg|300px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;Charge, Daughters of Khaine!  For my...uh, I mean, for Khaine&#039;s glory!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike some other factions within Age of Sigmar, but very much like others, the Daughters of Khaine are a theocracy.  There are many sects of Daughters of Khaine, each worshiping a different aspect of the aelf god of battle and bloodshed. Although the rites and rituals might differ, all the Khainites follow a strict hierarchy in their organisation.  They worship Khaine and Morathi is his High Oracle, the one who discerns his will and their overall leader.  Though they know about the other gods of Order, they pay no homage to them.  Beneath Morathi are the High Priestesses, which include the Slaughter Queens, Hag Queens and Bloodwrack Medusae. They are the keepers of each shrine’s most sacred artefacts, and commanders of the Sisterhood of Blood.  The degree of authority held by each of these figures, along with their specific title, varies between the sects, but a single word from Morathi can alter the influence of any other ranking.     &lt;br /&gt;
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Of all the warriors of the temples, the Scáthborn – the Melusai and Khinerai – are closest to Morathi herself, yet they often remain hidden from those outside the cult. The Medusae are made from Aelves converted by Morathi herself; though this is seen as an immense honor Morathi binds them with the most binding of magical oaths, but none among the Khainites would dare question her in this.  This is partially due to their forms resulting from daemonic taint which would cause negative sentiment among their allies and the fact that Morathi uses them as something of a secret police.  The most public-facing Khainites are the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter.  Their most important shrines are the Cauldrons of Blood, gifts from Khaine himself (at least, what Morathi’s claims each time she gifts one of the great iron cauldrons to the temple of a newly founded Khainite sect).  The covenites see it as a sign of their god’s favour that the cauldrons never seem to overflow, no matter how much blood is poured within them following a battle – all assume Khaine himself takes the surplus as an offering.    &lt;br /&gt;
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War covens are the most important organisations to the Daughters of Khaine, their structure laid out by Morathi herself.  It is through violence that the Khainites expand their territories, defend their temples and worship their god.  Weapons practice and mock duels take up the majority of their daily lives, yet these are not mere military drills, but religious ceremonies, treated with all the gravitas that others might use when reading their most holy of tomes or offering prayers to their god.  From their temples in various realms, the Daughters of Khaine scour the Mortal Realms for blood sacrifices.  At Morathi&#039;s edict, they also search for the shards of their god, scattered across the Realms.  They do this for the glory of Khaine and to see him reborn.  &lt;br /&gt;
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[[Just As Planned|But they are nearly all of them deceived]].  &lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
Morathi claims to speak for Khaine, and she does wield his unbreakable iron heart, but none know that Morathi’s power is a lie and that Khaine is dead.  While their devotions to Khaine could one day lead to his rebirth, Morathi is deliberately preventing that.  The reason for this is that she is siphoning the power - either by co-opting it before it reaches the heart or pulling it from Khaine&#039;s heart - to reach godhood herself.  The prayers that her daughters scream and the ritual offerings they make only serve to enhance her own power, not Khaine’s.  Outside Morathi herself, only a handful of the &amp;quot;altered&amp;quot; members of the Daughters of Khaine are aware of this deception, and they, willingly or otherwise, are bound by the most binding of oaths and magic to serve Morathi and keep this secret.  Also, the blood surplus poured into the Cauldron&#039;s doesn&#039;t go to Khaine.  It flows back to Hagg Nar through Morathi’s magics, to the Mother of all Cauldrons, the Máthcoir, from which The High Oracle absorbs and repurposes the blood’s energies for her own nefarious gain.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
Their society is brutal, especially given that it&#039;s leader is [[Morathi]] and they worship [[Khaine]].  They serve Khaine with fanatical devotion, which is especially problematic considering that Khaine is the god of murder.  While the Daughters of Khaine crave bloodshed and murder, they serve alongside the forces of Order – albeit tenuously.  Given their tendency towards collateral damage (and rumors of kidnapping innocents and gruesome rituals), they are less respected allies and more tolerated because they&#039;re useful.  Their views on the other major groups are varied.  As builders of cities and civilizations, the Daughters of Khaine are at odds with the forces of Destruction.  While it is said that they have an aversion to the Death faction because of a dislike for anything death-related since they nearly went extinct, it&#039;s more likely that this due to Morathi&#039;s personal grudge against Nagash for striking her and outing her true from to the rest of the pantheon.  Despite their distaste for the other two, the one faction they truly hate is Chaos; they could give the Stormcast Eternals a run for their money in hating Chaos, and prosecute their crusades with particular violence against the servants of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re wondering why Morathi is mentioned so often that&#039;s deliberate; Morathi keeps as much of a stranglehold on Khainite society as she can.  It would be out-of-character for her to do anything less (she kind of a control freak).  All Khainites are either warriors that serve in their religious order, or they are leathanam (see below).  Temples are found only in some realms; confirmed realms are Ulgu, Azyr and Ghyran.  When they are not fighting, the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter usually participate in ritualized gladiator matches or shady pit fights.  They also partake of a form of bladed dancing for the entertainment of others.  Despite being a theocratic society, the Daughters of Khaine don&#039;t proselytize or win converts; the adherents are themselves the result of a breeding program, choosing their partners in line with the aims and desires of their leaders.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you&#039;re wondering &amp;quot;where are the men?  They have to reproduce somehow&amp;quot;, well... remember that leathanam class mentioned earlier?  Apart from the Doomfire Warlocks, this class is made up exclusively of &#039;&#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039;&#039; the males in this faction; the men are disregard menials, worker drones who do the non-fighting stuff that keeps society going in a literal gender-based [[Slavery|slavery]] system (we know what you&#039;re thinking.  Something, something, feminist fantasy... and we know how [[SJW|certain groups]] would react if the genders were swapped).  While the women outnumber the men, this is not the paradise [[/d/|some]] think it would be; Morathi deliberately made only a few male aelves, and then only from the weakest and most broken of souls retrieved from Slaanesh.  Even male aelves a Daughter of Khaine gives birth to are literally cursed with weakness as Morathi siphons part of their souls to power the Cauldrons of Blood... and yes, Morathi instituted the rule that the males are slaves.  Surprisingly, the women are not misandric or female supremacists towards outsiders except for individual cases.  This makes sense when you remember that, as a society, the Daughters of Khaine respect strength above all else and a lot of the mistreatment of their own males is based on their innate weakness... but on the other hand, their males are weak because Morathi deliberately handicapped them, so female supremacy and/or misandry could still be at work.  While in theory they worship Khaine, who is male, this was always superficial; when limited to his heart Khaine had no actual say over their actions, and with Morathi merging to become the goddess Morathi-Khaine he might be gone for good.&lt;br /&gt;
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Among the men, the Doomfire Warlocks are an interesting case.  They&#039;re stronger due to their mastery of shadow magic, but receive limited training, and Morathi has them branded with mind-control runes ([[Grimdark|while deceiving them into thinking they&#039;re protection against Slaanesh]]).  They are treated far better than other leathanam and actually join the females in battle, but are still lower status purely because they&#039;re male, and are rarely seen by - or ackowledged to - non-Khainites.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They&#039;re also a rare example of a Warhammer society whose attitude towards sex is actually fleshed out (ironic, since Slaanesh is their greatest foe), all from the anthology novel &#039;&#039;Covens of Blood&#039;&#039;.  Contrary to expectations, they&#039;re mostly open about it.  Fraternization is fine, even between aelves of different ranks, with the caveat that it can&#039;t interfere with fighting or their duties.  Of course there&#039;s another caveat for the males; they can neither proposition nor reject a female, and if two women want the same man/men, they bargain or duel each other.  Naturally, this gives females complete choice over who fathers their children.  They&#039;re e even allowed to fuck outsiders and captives if they choose, but affection towards them or having a child with them is considered shameful (the novella all but confirms human/elf hybrids are possible in Age of Sigmar).  They&#039;re also fine with bisexuality, polyamory and homosexuality, though it&#039;s somewhat uncommon, plus sex is a popular way to celebrate major events if they have some downtime.&lt;br /&gt;
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The female aelves tend to dye their hair with blood and, in a throwback to Warhammer Fantasy, have rituals of rebirth keep the covenite sisters youthful in appearance and supple in body.  Even among their ranks, there are some who are considered extremists; the Sisters of Slaughters&#039; are members who graft masks of living metal to their faces with boiling blood.  While the aelven members are accepted by others, the Melusae and Khinerai are not.  When fighting alongside, they are concealed by a glamour so they too appear to be aelves; this could also explain some of their teamkilling tendencies among alliances with other Order factions, as they&#039;re keeping the existence of these mutated elves secret.  After Morathi&#039;s apotheosis, the Melusai and Khinerai have openly appeared, and are touted as proof of Morathi&#039;s divinity.    &lt;br /&gt;
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tl;dr: They&#039;re a matriarchal elven society with penchants for violence, scheming, ruthlessness, misandry and skimpy outfits who originate from a dark realm and follow the commands of a female figure who sometimes mutates her followers to resemble her.  [[Drow|Sound familiar]]?  (moreso now that Morathi has successfully become a goddess).&lt;br /&gt;
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==Sects==&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine are divided into Sects (previously known as Temples in past lore), in a manner similar to Stormcast Chambers or Sylvaneth Wargroves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Hagg Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Hagg Nar lies deep in the Umbral Veil, the darkest region of the Shadowlands.  The first and largest of the Daughters of Khaine temples, it was built atop the Hellelux, a geyser of shadow magic that spews shrouding mists. It is home to hundreds of warcovens that are [[Drow|always at each other’s throats for the attention of Morathi, who encourages this “rivalry” as a means of weeding out the weak]].  &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Draichi Ganeth:&#039;&#039;&#039; Draichi Ganeth, which translates as ‘the bladedkillers’, are the Khainite Aelves most commonly seen by other Order factions. Their main temple is found in the northern barrens of Fuarthorn in Ulgu, but their war pilgrimages and lesser shrines can be found across the realms. Every [[Cities of Sigmar|free city]] has seen or is host to a small troupe of the Draichi Ganeth, who look down upon the subterfuge and deception of their sister sects. They are known to the Freeguilds as the Executioners Cult due to their blunt and forward style of combat, as well as their penchant for decapitation.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Kraith:&#039;&#039;&#039; The sect known as the Kraith, also called the Crimson Cult, are true disciples of slaughter, and have earned a reputation as the least compromising of all the Daughters of Khaine. Arrogant and nomadic, they have no true temple home, instead traveling from one war to the next as they believe Khaine’s one and only temple is the blood stained battlefield. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Khailebron:&#039;&#039;&#039; This sect has learned well the arts of concealment, stealth and obfuscation.  Those who worship at the temples of Khailebron revere the assassin and the unseen killer, and strive to be masters of ambushes and sudden strikes. Where these temples are is known only to Morathi and the Khailebron themselves. Otherwise, they masquerade as wandering performers who showcase an elegant “bladed-dance” for the local populace, while their top killers secretly slit the throats of their targets (including anyone who shows too much disrespect to the dancers).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khelt Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Khelt Nar has become the fastest growing of the sects established by Morathi. It began as Ironshard, a single Khainite shrine founded by the High Oracle atop a flat-topped mountain of iron known as the Rothtor.  Since then it has expanded to other Realms, including a stronghold in Ghyran, and have been tasked by the High Priestess with clearing out the rampant [[Orruk Warclans|Bonesplitterz]] that plague their territories. Khelt Nar is best known for being composed of deliciously brown dark aelves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zainthar Kai&#039;&#039;&#039;: This reserved sect was born in the Age of Chaos when Morathi (desperate to get a leg up on the Ruinous Powers) decided to infuse a new brood of Scáthborn with three drops of Khaine’s blood. The result is a temple of veritable demi-gods who can call upon the god of murder’s strength in haze of battle, becoming the Shadow Queen’s go-to temple for making her more despised enemies disappear. The temple is mostly led by/comprised of Scáthborn, but there are contingents of Witch Aelves who function as (disposable) work horses.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Soulbound==&lt;br /&gt;
In [[Age of Sigmar Roleplay]], it&#039;s established that Daughters of Khaine are selected to become Soulbound when Morathi decides that a potentially stray from the ranks of her faithful is too dangerous or too useful to just dispose of outright. Soulbound Daughters are selected from the overly ambitious, those who secretly yearned for freedom, and even those who had begun to doubt Khaine&#039;s divinity, basically serving as a way to remove potential threats to Morathi&#039;s control over the faction. Despite their origins, though, Morathi often goes out of her way to maintain a good relationship with &amp;quot;her&amp;quot; Soulbound (in fact, the Binding actually servers the magical restrains that Morathi uses to control the Daughters as a whole), because, whatever else they may be to her, they are both useful as powerful yet neutral arbiters and as ambassadors of her &amp;quot;good intentions&amp;quot; to the other powers of Order. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Normal Daughters of Khaine are unsure of how to regard their Soulbound &amp;quot;sisters&amp;quot;, since they are simultaneously very dangerous, but not rivals due to being forever outside the hierarchy of the temples, apparently favored by the High Oracle but yet also deeply connected to and regularly traveling alongside &amp;quot;outsiders&amp;quot; who shouldn&#039;t be privy to the secrets of Khaine&#039;s temples. They tend to default to &amp;quot;respectful suspicion&amp;quot; when interacting with Soulbound Daughters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine have the fewest dedicated Archetypes in the Age of Sigmar Roleplay corebook, with only the &#039;&#039;&#039;Hag Priestess&#039;&#039;&#039; and the &#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Aelf&#039;&#039;&#039; open to them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Medusae Shrine.jpg|&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Boobflash&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Bloodwrack Shrine in all its glory.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Temples of Khaine.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters of Khaine Slaughter.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters-of-khaine-4.jpg|Dark Elves, now with 50% more [[Snek|Sneks]].&lt;br /&gt;
File:I might you never know.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drkelf.png|A typical Khelt Nar aelf.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Dark Elves]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167651</id>
		<title>Daughters of Khaine</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Daughters_of_Khaine&amp;diff=167651"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T13:15:17Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: /* Society */&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Age of Sigmar Faction|Faction=Daughters of Khaine|Logo=Daughters_of_Khaine_battletome_art.jpg|Alliance=Order|Motto=Much bloodier and less NSFW than it appears.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|She could never take an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.  The weak and flaccid parity would make her nearly puke. She wants an eye for a tooth, and a life for an eye.|Helen Zahavi - Dirty Weekend}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Let&#039;s show the gutless pigs how the warriors of Pah-Dishah can fight! By Tarim, we&#039;ll give the devils scarlet wine to drink this dawn...|Red Sonja}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;&#039;Daughters of Khaine&#039;&#039;&#039; are a nation of aelves (though closer to a collection of scattered religious communes than a nation) led by Morathi who combine the Khainite religion with shadow magic.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They are an army, with a few exceptions, of [[PROMOTIONS|armed aelven women and monstergirls in bikinis]].  As they worship Khaine, to them the clash of arms is the height of their religion, holy rites practiced and perfected with all the high-level skill and grace of aelf-kind.  As blades flash, they shed their visage of cold and distant beauty, how they tend to be when not in battle, their ecstatic faces lighting up with each fresh kill.  In contrast to even other aelves, especially the Idoneth Deepkin, many Daughters of Khaine have lived far beyond the average aelf lifespan, which is already longer than that of other races (except the males - see below). &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Myth===&lt;br /&gt;
Being a theocracy founded by [[Morathi]] and given her character, Morathi is behind or involved in every pivotal moment of the Daughters of Khaine in history.  After leaving the Great Alliance because [[Nagash]] outed her true monstrous form, Morathi sought to establish her own dwellings in Ulgu.  Her son Malerion cruelly rejected her suggestion of splitting the rule of the thirteen Dominions, for he claimed of all Ulgu as his own.  Morathi persisted until, as either a joke or a plot to get rid of her, Malerion granted his mother a small parcel of land in the middle of the Umbral Veil.  This was the darkest and most impenetrable region in all Ulgu, so dangerous that only Malerion himself had ever returned from those cloying mists with their sanity intact. Morathi went there and exceeded her son&#039;s expectations.  She bent the shadows into a protective shroud around her new land and led settlers there.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Her only followers were the aelven witch-cults that had maintained their worship of [[Khaine]].  While Morathi knew Khaine was dead, since the blood rituals no longer rejuvenated her, she supported the religion to get people to help her.  To ensure their loyalty, Morathi built a temple to Khaine, naming it Hagg Nar, and over time a city grew up around it.  Morathi taught them the secrets of navigating the murky currents.  Hagg Nar began as a pitiful kingdom, and Morathi brooded over her mean existence.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As she sought power, she soon found a hint of Khaine&#039;s power in her dreams while scrying.  Though Khaine was dead, she knew the elven gods were cyclial and could be reborn given enough power.  Morathi began a secret quest that was long and difficult, but eventually brought her to the literal heart of Khaine himself.  The heart was intact and throbbing with resurgent power, but it was guarded by Kharbytr, the godbeast father of Kharibdysses.  Morathi suspected Kharbytr would be resistant to sorcery, and was despearte to claim the heart before anyone else could, so she used seduction instead (yes, really), but angered Kharbytr when she tried to grab the heart.  The fight between them was an epic clash that lasted thirteen days and ended when Morathi constricted Kharbytr in her coils.  The godbeast dealt her a lethal blow before losing consciousness, but Morathi survived by drawing energies from Khaine&#039;s heart to sustain herself.   &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Heading back to Hagg Nar with her prize, Morathi declared herself Khaine&#039;s High Oracle, claiming that she spoke for the god of murder and that she was his voice in this world.  With that she solidified her hold over the Khainites and reshaped the society into the Daughters of Khaine.  The Daughters of Khaine would often be sent out to hunt for fragments of their missing deity on Morathi&#039;s orders (unbeknownst to them, these were snipe hunts for the most part).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
She continued this way for a time until Malerion arrived.  He said that he and the other aelf gods had had, at last, found the lost aelf-souls from the world-that-was, and they needed her shadow magic and knowledge of Slaanesh in their grand plan.  For the first and only time, Morathi spoke of the unspeakable horrors inside Slaanesh and how she&#039;d escaped.  Using this knowledge and themselves as bait, the four lured Slaanesh into a trap and started extracting elven souls from the deity.   &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
For her role, Morathi was allowed to take souls for herself to shape into elves, who went into swelling the numbers of the Daughters of Khaine.  However, some of them had been [[monstergirls|altered by their time with Slaanesh]].  There were those with [[Lamia|serpentine mutations akin to Morathi]], these became the [[Medusa|Melusae]].  Others had bat-like wings and long tails, these became the [[Harpy|Khinerai]].  Around this time Morathi reintroduced the Cauldrons of Blood and created the Mathcoir, the master cauldron, in Hagg Nar.  Secretly, she made it as a repository of power only she could access.  To start this, Morathi [[Drow|cursed every male born to the Daughters of Khaine to have part of their soul siphoned away and stored in the Mathcoir]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unbeknownst to her erstwhile allies, Morathi had added her own deceptive magics to the undertaking, so that the soul division was skewed slightly out of the agreed proportions, with extra spirits siphoned to Hagg Nar.  This subterfuge was subtle, but slowly, inevitably, [[Not as Planned|altered the eldritch balance that kept the Dark Prince perfectly imprisoned between Hysh and Ulgu]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Chaos===&lt;br /&gt;
As Chaos invaded the Mortal Realms, the Daughters of Khaine marched out from Hagg Nar to ambush them, using shadowshifting magics to reach Realmgates to travel anywhere the forces of Order needed them.  Although Morathi and her followers weren&#039;t liked, beggars could not be choosers and they were one of the few allies the Sigmarites had during this time.  To keep the more mutated members of her coven secret, the spellcasters and priestesses of the Khainites used shadow glamors to make them look like ordinary elves (how this worked when the Khinerai were flying is anybody&#039;s guess).  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine were bold and fearless in battle - willing to cross blades with any enemy, no matter how numerous or monstrous.  Despite heroics by Khainite forces at many battles, the forces of Order were on the backfoot, the final retreat happening after Nagash betrayed Sigmar at the Battle of Burning Skies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As the Chaos invasions set about their task of destroying and enslaving entire civilisations, the Shadowlands of Ulgu suffered the least after Azyr.  Khorne, Nurgle and Tzeentch all devoted the greater portion of their forces to different realms, the minions that were sent into Ulgu boasted none of the most fearful greater daemon commanders and Malerion himself sent Archaon packing with his tail between his legs.  This gave the Daughters of Khaine plenty of time to prey on the Chaos forces that made it to their realm; reavers of Khorne, magic-seeking conclaves of Tzeentch or followers of Slaanesh tracking calls from their god that only they could sense.  They reaped a large harvest of Chaos minions, leaving mass graves from all the sacrifices (this would come back to haunt them - pun intended - in the Soul Wars, see below).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
But Morathi&#039;s trickery with the soul extraction came back to bite her.  Taking too many souls caused Slaanesh&#039;s prison to drift towards Ulgu and weaken it.  This enabled Slaanesh&#039;s most faithful servants catch the scent of their missing god/dess.  More and more Slaaneshi armies penetrated the Shadowlands searching for their lost god.  So began what the aelves of Ulgu named the Cathtrar Dhule - the War of Shadows.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
For the major battles of the War of Shadows, Morathi led the Daughters of Khaine from the front.  She cast down the Keeper of Secrets Glittus and his Legion of Excess, and the whip-handed Krulla Sha&#039;vhr and her Flayerhost.  Battle was not her only recourse, however, for against the unbeatable six warhosts of the betentacled Bovaxx the Despoiler, Morathi&#039;s coven of Medusae summoned a gaiste-maze - a shadow labyrinth that still covers part of the Umbral Veil, a dark cloud in which those hordes presumably still wander.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Yet the Daughters of Khaine did not win every battle.  As larger and more-powerful armies invaded, Morathi called the first of the Caillich Covens - the gathering of forces from all the sects.  This was required to defeat Luxcious, a Keeper of Secrets so powerful that many Slaaneshi considered her a replacement for the missing Dark Prince.  The daemon was defeated, but not until after the exalted fiend destroyed the Temple of Druchxar.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Age of Sigmar===&lt;br /&gt;
Luxcious may well have continued her scouring search of Ulgu had Sigmar not begun his war to reclaim the Mortal Realms, drawing off many Chaos forces. The Cathtrar Dhule paused, before once more erupting anew in the bitterly fought War of the Shadowpaths.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine win more allies during this time, for despite their brutality in battle (and occasional team-killing among their allies) they&#039;re just &#039;&#039;that&#039;&#039; good at kicking Chaos.  The Stormcast, Idoneth and Sylvaneth to name a few ally with the Daughters of Khaine.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During this time, some elves start to [[Heresy|worship Morathi alongside Khaine, which causes dissent]] (an uncommon case of a heresy charge in a warhammer setting that fits the actual definition).  Ironically, those who disapprove get [[Blam|quickly silenced]] by Morathi or the Medusae as [[Heresy|heretics]] (usually by a knife in the vitals or getting turned into living crystal by a Melusai).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Soul Wars===&lt;br /&gt;
Prior to the Soul Wars there are increasing build-ups of death magic.  Whenever there is a large gathering of Scathborn, the spirits of the dead rise up and attack them.  Also, remember those mass graves full of sacrificed Chaos worshippers?  Now they&#039;re fodder for armies of vengeful skeleton warriors and/or ghosts who attack the Khainites.  When Nagash sent vamires and necromancers into Ulgu as a diversion tactic, they were all too happy to exploit these mass graves for armies.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine were also called on by the forces of Order in other realms to help fight off the increasing undead attacks.  Morathi herself extolled the Daughters of Khaine to greater zeal, for she remembers the taste of Nagash&#039;s pimp hand and is eager to avenge the slight.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Broken Realms===&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine worked with Scourge privateers to get information about the Idoneth Deepkin the same way as their kin in the World-That-Was; lots of torture and mind-invading magic.  From this they learn the location of a valued Deepkin artifact, the Ocarian Lantern; made by - and stolen from - Teclis, it acted as a lure for souls.  Morathi sent sixty of her best soldiers to get it from its heavily guarded underwater temple; two survived, one now an Idoneth prisoner and the other returned to Morathi with the lantern.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
She fused with Khaine&#039;s heart and became the goddess Morathi-Khaine.  Thus Khaine as he was is gone forever, and Morathi - now Morathi-Khaine - is their goddess instead of just their High Oracle (albeit now split into two bodies, Morathi-Khaine and the Shadow Queen after [[Aenarion|her hubby&#039;s soul]] [[Rip and Tear|took exception]] to Morathi&#039;s plan while in Slaanesh).  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Morathi&#039;s first action was to broker an alliance with the [[Idoneth Deepkin]], offering Volturnos the souls of his fellow Cythai elves to sweeten the deal.  She then ended her alliance with Sigmar by launching a coup that brought Anvilgard under her rule and renaming it Har Kuron.  The Daughters of Khaine/Morathi-Khaine now fight with a newfound zeal as they launched a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;crusade&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;jihad&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; holy war to expand Morathi&#039;s empire.  When Sigmar found out, he sent a Stormcast army to re-take Har Kuron, the fighting raging until the Celestant-Prime arrived and offered to parley with Morathi.  The two disappear for a night, and when they returned an agreement had been reached.  Morathi was be allowed to keep the city, and what she promised in return is unknown.  Morathi&#039;s also [[1984|slowly re-writing the Daughters&#039; scriptures and records of history to put herself at the center of everything]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Religion==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Morathi,_the_Shadow_Queen_from_DaughtersofKhaine_.jpg|300px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;Charge, Daughters of Khaine!  For my...uh, I mean, for Khaine&#039;s glory!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike some other factions within Age of Sigmar, but very much like others, the Daughters of Khaine are a theocracy.  There are many sects of Daughters of Khaine, each worshiping a different aspect of the aelf god of battle and bloodshed. Although the rites and rituals might differ, all the Khainites follow a strict hierarchy in their organisation.  They worship Khaine and Morathi is his High Oracle, the one who discerns his will and their overall leader.  Though they know about the other gods of Order, they pay no homage to them.  Beneath Morathi are the High Priestesses, which include the Slaughter Queens, Hag Queens and Bloodwrack Medusae. They are the keepers of each shrine’s most sacred artefacts, and commanders of the Sisterhood of Blood.  The degree of authority held by each of these figures, along with their specific title, varies between the sects, but a single word from Morathi can alter the influence of any other ranking.     &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Of all the warriors of the temples, the Scáthborn – the Melusai and Khinerai – are closest to Morathi herself, yet they often remain hidden from those outside the cult. The Medusae are made from Aelves converted by Morathi herself; though this is seen as an immense honor Morathi binds them with the most binding of magical oaths, but none among the Khainites would dare question her in this.  This is partially due to their forms resulting from daemonic taint which would cause negative sentiment among their allies and the fact that Morathi uses them as something of a secret police.  The most public-facing Khainites are the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter.  Their most important shrines are the Cauldrons of Blood, gifts from Khaine himself (at least, what Morathi’s claims each time she gifts one of the great iron cauldrons to the temple of a newly founded Khainite sect).  The covenites see it as a sign of their god’s favour that the cauldrons never seem to overflow, no matter how much blood is poured within them following a battle – all assume Khaine himself takes the surplus as an offering.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
War covens are the most important organisations to the Daughters of Khaine, their structure laid out by Morathi herself.  It is through violence that the Khainites expand their territories, defend their temples and worship their god.  Weapons practice and mock duels take up the majority of their daily lives, yet these are not mere military drills, but religious ceremonies, treated with all the gravitas that others might use when reading their most holy of tomes or offering prayers to their god.  From their temples in various realms, the Daughters of Khaine scour the Mortal Realms for blood sacrifices.  At Morathi&#039;s edict, they also search for the shards of their god, scattered across the Realms.  They do this for the glory of Khaine and to see him reborn.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Just As Planned|But they are nearly all of them deceived]].  &lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
Morathi claims to speak for Khaine, and she does wield his unbreakable iron heart, but none know that Morathi’s power is a lie and that Khaine is dead.  While their devotions to Khaine could one day lead to his rebirth, Morathi is deliberately preventing that.  The reason for this is that she is siphoning the power - either by co-opting it before it reaches the heart or pulling it from Khaine&#039;s heart - to reach godhood herself.  The prayers that her daughters scream and the ritual offerings they make only serve to enhance her own power, not Khaine’s.  Outside Morathi herself, only a handful of the &amp;quot;altered&amp;quot; members of the Daughters of Khaine are aware of this deception, and they, willingly or otherwise, are bound by the most binding of oaths and magic to serve Morathi and keep this secret.  Also, the blood surplus poured into the Cauldron&#039;s doesn&#039;t go to Khaine.  It flows back to Hagg Nar through Morathi’s magics, to the Mother of all Cauldrons, the Máthcoir, from which The High Oracle absorbs and repurposes the blood’s energies for her own nefarious gain.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Society==&lt;br /&gt;
Their society is brutal, especially given that it&#039;s leader is [[Morathi]] and they worship [[Khaine]].  They serve Khaine with fanatical devotion, which is especially problematic considering that Khaine is the god of murder.  While the Daughters of Khaine crave bloodshed and murder, they serve alongside the forces of Order – albeit tenuously.  Given their tendency towards collateral damage (and rumors of kidnapping innocents and gruesome rituals), they are less respected allies and more tolerated because they&#039;re useful.  Their views on the other major groups are varied.  As builders of cities and civilizations, the Daughters of Khaine are at odds with the forces of Destruction.  While it is said that they have an aversion to the Death faction because of a dislike for anything death-related since they nearly went extinct, it&#039;s more likely that this due to Morathi&#039;s personal grudge against Nagash for striking her and outing her true from to the rest of the pantheon.  Despite their distaste for the other two, the one faction they truly hate is Chaos; they could give the Stormcast Eternals a run for their money in hating Chaos, and prosecute their crusades with particular violence against the servants of Slaanesh.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re wondering why Morathi is mentioned so often that&#039;s deliberate; Morathi keeps as much of a stranglehold on Khainite society as she can.  It would be out-of-character for her to do anything less (she kind of a control freak).  All Khainites are either warriors that serve in their religious order, or they are leathanam (see below).  Temples are found only in some realms; confirmed realms are Ulgu, Azyr and Ghyran.  When they are not fighting, the Witch Aelves and Sisters of Slaughter usually participate in ritualized gladiator matches or shady pit fights.  They also partake of a form of bladed dancing for the entertainment of others.  Despite being a theocratic society, the Daughters of Khaine don&#039;t proselytize or win converts; the adherents are themselves the result of a breeding program, choosing their partners in line with the aims and desires of their leaders.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
If you&#039;re wondering &amp;quot;where are the men?  They have to reproduce somehow&amp;quot;, well... remember that leathanam class mentioned earlier?  Apart from the Doomfire Warlocks, this class is made up exclusively of &#039;&#039;&#039;all&#039;&#039;&#039; the males in this faction; the men are disregard menials, worker drones who do the non-fighting stuff that keeps society going in a literal gender-based [[Slavery|slavery]] system (we know what you&#039;re thinking.  Something, something, feminist fantasy... and we know how [[SJW|certain groups]] would react if the genders were swapped).  While the women outnumber the men, this is not the paradise [[/d/|some]] think it would be; Morathi deliberately made only a few male aelves, and then only from the weakest and most broken of souls retrieved from Slaanesh.  Even male aelves a Daughter of Khaine gives birth to are literally cursed with weakness as Morathi siphons part of their souls to power the Cauldrons of Blood... and yes, Morathi instituted the rule that the males are slaves.  Surprisingly, the women are not misandric or female supremacists towards outsiders except for individual cases.  This makes sense when you remember that, as a society, the Daughters of Khaine respect strength above all else and a lot of the mistreatment of their own males is based on their innate weakness... but on the other hand, their males are weak because Morathi deliberately handicapped them, so female supremacy and/or misandry could still be at work.  While in theory they worship Khaine, who is male, this was always superficial; when limited to his heart Khaine had no actual say over their actions, and with Morathi merging to become the goddess Morathi-Khaine he might be gone for good.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Among the men, the Doomfire Warlocks are an interesting case.  They&#039;re stronger due to their mastery of shadow magic, but receive limited training, and Morathi has them branded with mind-control runes ([[Grimdark|while deceiving them into thinking they&#039;re protection against Slaanesh]]).  They are treated far better than other leathanam and actually join the females in battle, but are still lower status purely because they&#039;re male, and are rarely seen by - or ackowledged to - non-Khainites.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They&#039;re also a rare example of a Warhammer society whose attitude towards sex is actually fleshed out (ironic, since Slaanesh is their greatest foe), all from the anthology novel &#039;&#039;Covens of Blood&#039;&#039;.  Contrary to expectations, they&#039;re mostly open about it.  Fraternization is fine, even between aelves of different ranks, with the caveat that it can&#039;t interfere with fighting or their duties.  Of course there&#039;s another caveat for the males; they can neither proposition nor reject a female, and if two women want the same man/men, they bargain or duel each other.  The aelves are even allowed to fuck outsiders and captives if they choose, but affection towards them or having a child with them is considered shameful (the novella all but confirms human/elf hybrids are possible in Age of Sigmar).  They&#039;re also fine with bisexuality and homosexuality.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The female aelves tend to dye their hair with blood and, in a throwback to Warhammer Fantasy, have rituals of rebirth keep the covenite sisters youthful in appearance and supple in body.  Even among their ranks, there are some who are considered extremists; the Sisters of Slaughters&#039; are members who graft masks of living metal to their faces with boiling blood.  While the aelven members are accepted by others, the Melusae and Khinerai are not.  When fighting alongside, they are concealed by a glamour so they too appear to be aelves; this could also explain some of their teamkilling tendencies among alliances with other Order factions, as they&#039;re keeping the existence of these mutated elves secret.  After Morathi&#039;s apotheosis, the Melusai and Khinerai have openly appeared, and are touted as proof of Morathi&#039;s divinity.    &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
tl;dr: They&#039;re a matriarchal elven society with penchants for violence, scheming, ruthlessness, misandry and skimpy outfits who originate from a dark realm and follow the commands of a female figure who sometimes mutates her followers to resemble her.  [[Drow|Sound familiar]]?  (moreso now that Morathi has successfully become a goddess).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Sects==&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine are divided into Sects (previously known as Temples in past lore), in a manner similar to Stormcast Chambers or Sylvaneth Wargroves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Hagg Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Hagg Nar lies deep in the Umbral Veil, the darkest region of the Shadowlands.  The first and largest of the Daughters of Khaine temples, it was built atop the Hellelux, a geyser of shadow magic that spews shrouding mists. It is home to hundreds of warcovens that are [[Drow|always at each other’s throats for the attention of Morathi, who encourages this “rivalry” as a means of weeding out the weak]].  &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Draichi Ganeth:&#039;&#039;&#039; Draichi Ganeth, which translates as ‘the bladedkillers’, are the Khainite Aelves most commonly seen by other Order factions. Their main temple is found in the northern barrens of Fuarthorn in Ulgu, but their war pilgrimages and lesser shrines can be found across the realms. Every [[Cities of Sigmar|free city]] has seen or is host to a small troupe of the Draichi Ganeth, who look down upon the subterfuge and deception of their sister sects. They are known to the Freeguilds as the Executioners Cult due to their blunt and forward style of combat, as well as their penchant for decapitation.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Kraith:&#039;&#039;&#039; The sect known as the Kraith, also called the Crimson Cult, are true disciples of slaughter, and have earned a reputation as the least compromising of all the Daughters of Khaine. Arrogant and nomadic, they have no true temple home, instead traveling from one war to the next as they believe Khaine’s one and only temple is the blood stained battlefield. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;Khailebron:&#039;&#039;&#039; This sect has learned well the arts of concealment, stealth and obfuscation.  Those who worship at the temples of Khailebron revere the assassin and the unseen killer, and strive to be masters of ambushes and sudden strikes. Where these temples are is known only to Morathi and the Khailebron themselves. Otherwise, they masquerade as wandering performers who showcase an elegant “bladed-dance” for the local populace, while their top killers secretly slit the throats of their targets (including anyone who shows too much disrespect to the dancers).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Khelt Nar:&#039;&#039;&#039; Khelt Nar has become the fastest growing of the sects established by Morathi. It began as Ironshard, a single Khainite shrine founded by the High Oracle atop a flat-topped mountain of iron known as the Rothtor.  Since then it has expanded to other Realms, including a stronghold in Ghyran, and have been tasked by the High Priestess with clearing out the rampant [[Orruk Warclans|Bonesplitterz]] that plague their territories. Khelt Nar is best known for being composed of deliciously brown dark aelves.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Zainthar Kai&#039;&#039;&#039;: This reserved sect was born in the Age of Chaos when Morathi (desperate to get a leg up on the Ruinous Powers) decided to infuse a new brood of Scáthborn with three drops of Khaine’s blood. The result is a temple of veritable demi-gods who can call upon the god of murder’s strength in haze of battle, becoming the Shadow Queen’s go-to temple for making her more despised enemies disappear. The temple is mostly led by/comprised of Scáthborn, but there are contingents of Witch Aelves who function as (disposable) work horses.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Soulbound==&lt;br /&gt;
In [[Age of Sigmar Roleplay]], it&#039;s established that Daughters of Khaine are selected to become Soulbound when Morathi decides that a potentially stray from the ranks of her faithful is too dangerous or too useful to just dispose of outright. Soulbound Daughters are selected from the overly ambitious, those who secretly yearned for freedom, and even those who had begun to doubt Khaine&#039;s divinity, basically serving as a way to remove potential threats to Morathi&#039;s control over the faction. Despite their origins, though, Morathi often goes out of her way to maintain a good relationship with &amp;quot;her&amp;quot; Soulbound (in fact, the Binding actually servers the magical restrains that Morathi uses to control the Daughters as a whole), because, whatever else they may be to her, they are both useful as powerful yet neutral arbiters and as ambassadors of her &amp;quot;good intentions&amp;quot; to the other powers of Order. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Normal Daughters of Khaine are unsure of how to regard their Soulbound &amp;quot;sisters&amp;quot;, since they are simultaneously very dangerous, but not rivals due to being forever outside the hierarchy of the temples, apparently favored by the High Oracle but yet also deeply connected to and regularly traveling alongside &amp;quot;outsiders&amp;quot; who shouldn&#039;t be privy to the secrets of Khaine&#039;s temples. They tend to default to &amp;quot;respectful suspicion&amp;quot; when interacting with Soulbound Daughters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Daughters of Khaine have the fewest dedicated Archetypes in the Age of Sigmar Roleplay corebook, with only the &#039;&#039;&#039;Hag Priestess&#039;&#039;&#039; and the &#039;&#039;&#039;Witch Aelf&#039;&#039;&#039; open to them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Medusae Shrine.jpg|&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Boobflash&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Bloodwrack Shrine in all its glory.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Temples of Khaine.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters of Khaine Slaughter.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Daughters-of-khaine-4.jpg|Dark Elves, now with 50% more [[Snek|Sneks]].&lt;br /&gt;
File:I might you never know.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drkelf.png|A typical Khelt Nar aelf.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:Playable Factions in Warhammer: Age of Sigmar}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Age of Sigmar]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Dark Elves]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Drow&amp;diff=186443</id>
		<title>Drow</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Drow&amp;diff=186443"/>
		<updated>2021-02-25T12:54:53Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E: &lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Promotions}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:45308.jpg|400px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;Okay ladies, which one of you let their manslave out of the kitchen?&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Drow&#039;&#039;&#039;, more commonly known as &amp;quot;Dark Elves&amp;quot;, are a common reoccurring type of [[elf]], first introduced in [[Dungeons &amp;amp; Dragons]] as a matriarchal society of black-skinned and white-haired subterranean elves who are literally allergic to sunlight. Unlike real-life underground species that develop pale skin, drow have black skin due to the curse laid upon them when their demon-goddess [[Lolth]] turned them away from the other elven gods. They produce adamantine equipment (which falls apart in sunlight, yet is bad-ass underground), take slaves, are ruled by an abusive matriarchy that likes S&amp;amp;M, have magic resistance, really like spiders and hate most other elves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In short, they&#039;d be fucking cool, were it not for the fact that 90% of all player character Drow will be Chaotic Good and be Rebelling Against The Evils Of Their Race, thanks to the raging hard-on underages and other tryhards have for [[Drizzt]]. As a result, even though dark elf pr0n is A) common, B) totally acceptable given their canon behavior, and C) totally relevant when somebody asks for dark elf pictures (see B), people still get whiny on /tg/ at anything moderately crude. Sure, we&#039;re trying to hold back the tide of cancer, but where dark elves are concerned, it&#039;s totally good.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Designers have mooted plenty other visions of subterranean elf, sometimes superficially looking like drow, sometimes even &#039;&#039;called&#039;&#039; &amp;quot;drow&amp;quot;, that bend the definition given above. Largely because of that anti-Drizzt constituency we mentioned. We&#039;ll get to those, below.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==History==&lt;br /&gt;
Drow were first mentioned in the second, 1978 hardback of the [[Monster Manual]] for [[Advanced Dungeons &amp;amp; Dragons]] 1st edition, under &amp;quot;Elf&amp;quot;. Here: &amp;quot;The &#039;Black Elves,&#039; or drow, are only legend. They purportedly dwell deep beneath the surface in a strange subterranean realm. The drow are said to be as dark as faeries are bright and as evil as the latter are good. Tales picture them as weak fighters but strong magic-users.&amp;quot; Contemporaneously they are fleshed out in &#039;&#039;[[Against the Giants|G3: Hall of the Fire Giant King]]&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They truly sprang onto the world in the followup [[Drow Trilogy]] [[Adventure Path]] which, with its sequel [[Queen of the Demonweb Pits]], fleshed out the [[Underdark]], drow culture, and [[Lolth]]. They subsequently entered the [[Fiend Folio]], and Gygax himself gave them PC stats in &#039;&#039;Unearthed Arcana&#039;&#039;.  (More on that in a minute.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The already-popular villains exploded in popularity as a PC race following the release of the Drizzt novels to the point of parody, oversaturation, and backlash, though all three have died down with time and distance. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The race has been an occasional target of attack because, like many things can if described in a deliberately-misleading-and-reductive way, the broad strokes of &amp;quot;darker-skinned elves are ruled by evil feminazis and have a savage, half-civilized culture of betrayal&amp;quot; sounds &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; bad. To tell you what you already know, there&#039;s some grains of truth to the unfortunate implications, but it was the occasional source of bad-faith trolling before people who didn&#039;t know anything about them but the memes took it seriously - if nothing else, drow are almost never described as having &#039;&#039;any&#039;&#039; human skin tones in any sources outside of Japan (where they tend towards the coffee with cappuccino end of the skin spectrum), and their facial features are usually drawn to resemble a white or Asiatic appearance rather than an African. It also didn&#039;t help that the porny &#039;&#039;Queen of the Spiders&#039;&#039; cover had their skin as an ashen dark tan &#039;&#039;a la&#039;&#039; South India, rather than pure black, or that their hair was originally described as &amp;quot;curly.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As of the [[5e|present]], the drow have seemingly moved past the backlash to hit the most popular spot they&#039;ve ever been in. They were introduced as a &#039;&#039;core&#039;&#039; PC race for the first time in 5e (albeit the only one at launch to have a built-in penalty), the second major adventure line for the edition took place in the Underdark and gave them a ton of focus (and was retconned to be a massive plot by their patron goddess to boot), and they tend to cameo in most other adventure lines or collections and get new monster versions added with each new Monster Manual equivalent.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In-universe, the drow backstory mostly boils down to them being victims of the bitter breakup between [[Corellon]] and [[Lolth]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Much like how [[Duergar]] have the long-forgotten &amp;quot;good but still [[Underdark]]-dwelling&amp;quot; counterpart of Grey Dwarves, so too do Drow have such a counterpart race: the [[Rockseer Elf]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==(A)D&amp;amp;D==&lt;br /&gt;
===First Edition===&lt;br /&gt;
There never were Drow in the BXCMI line. This line did spin up some underworld elves incompatible with surface elves - the Shadow Elves, the Schattenalfen - but those were Aztec or post-Aztec. Shadow Elves farm spiders in, like, one city only. LEAVE THEM ALONE!!&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Where Drow did exist, starting at Greyhawk, Gygax (at first) restricted them to the role of monsters, due to their in-game lore. Both [[Drizzt Do&#039;Urden]] (in Icewind Vale, not Greyhawk ... and arguably not Forgotten Realms at first, either) and [[Viconia de&#039;Vir]] were exceptions, with backstories to explain why they&#039;re on the surface instead of down in the Underdark.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
That said, Gygax wasn&#039;t entirely ignorant to his audience. PC stats for drow elves appeared, alongside the other [[Underdark]] [[Demihuman]]s ([[duergar]] and [[svirfneblin]]) in the original [[Unearthed Arcana]] for AD&amp;amp;D 1e. They were still quite strong, but nerfed from their appearance in the Drow Trilogy for instance knocking out that spell-resistance. They were also less powerful than their 2e incarnations:&lt;br /&gt;
::No ability score penalties or modifiers.&lt;br /&gt;
::Sunlight Sensitivity: -2 penalty to Dexterity and &amp;quot;to hit&amp;quot; rolls and enemies gain a +2 bonus to saves vs. drow attacks when both the drow and their opponent are in bright light. If the dark elf is in shadow and the opponent is brightly lit, this changes to a -1 to hit penalty/+1 save bonus instead.&lt;br /&gt;
::Unlike drow NPCs, drow PCs do &#039;&#039;not&#039;&#039; have 50% magic resistance. They cannot regain this trait without a Wish spell.&lt;br /&gt;
::Drow do not gain the weapon bonuses of normal elves, but instead are ambidextrous.&lt;br /&gt;
::Drow have Infravision 12&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
::Drow females have movement rate 15&#039;, whilst males have movement rate 12&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
::Drow have the Stealth and Detect Secret Doors abilities of [[elves]], and the Stonecunning ability of [[dwarves]].&lt;br /&gt;
::Drow have access to the spell-like abilities of Dancing Lights, Faerie Fire and Darkness 5&#039; Radius. They gain access to Detect Magic, Know Alignment and Levitate at 4th level, with female drow also gaining Clairvoyance, Detect Lie, Dispel Magic and Suggestion at that level. All spell-like abilities are usable 1/day.&lt;br /&gt;
::Available classes: [[Cleric]], Warrior ([[Fighter]], [[Ranger]], [[Cavalier]]), [[Rogue]] (Thief, [[Acrobat]], [[Assassin]]), [[Wizard|Magic-User]].&lt;br /&gt;
::Class levels for Drow Males: [[Cleric]] 7, [[Fighter]] 10, Magic-User 18, [[Thief]]/[[Acrobat]] Unlimited, [[Assassin]] 12, [[Ranger]] 14&lt;br /&gt;
::Class levels for Drow Females: [[Cleric]] Unlimited, [[Fighter]] 12, Magic-User 11, [[Thief]]/[[Acrobat]] Unlimited, [[Assassin]] 12, [[Ranger]] 14&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Naturally, when 2e rolled along, [[The Complete Book of]] [[Elves]] [[splatbook]] also provided new rules for playable Drow and holy &#039;&#039;fuck&#039;&#039; were they powerful... IF you were playing in the Underdark.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
+2 Dex, +1 Int, -1 Constitution, -2 Charisma for initial ability score modifiers, and with racial maximums of 18, 20, 17, 19, 18 and 16 for Strength, Dexterity, Constitution, Intelligence, Wisdom and Charisma respectively. They have a bunch of spell-like abilities, all usable once per day; Dancing Lights, Faerie Fire, and Darkness by default, with Levitate, Know Alignment and Detect Magic gained at level 4. Drow [[Cleric]]s get even more, in the form of Clairvoyance, Detect Lie, Suggestion and Dispel Magic. Also, they &#039;&#039;start&#039;&#039; with Magic Resistance 50% and increase it by +2% per level, to a max of 80%, and get a +2 bonus on all saves involving magic.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
So, what&#039;s the drawback? Aside from the sensitivity to light (-2 penalty to Dexterity and Attack Rolls, enemies are +2 bonus to saves vs. drow spells), they also lose their powers if they spend more than two weeks outside of the Underdark, losing 10% Magic Resistance and one spell-like ability each day. If they go back to the Underdark, they get their powers back if they spend 1 day for each week they spent on the surface. Also, they get a -4 penalty to Reaction rolls against other elves, and increase their experience costs by +20%.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===3rd edition===&lt;br /&gt;
3E managed to make it almost a whole year before caving in and making the Drow a full and proper player character race in the 2001 &#039;&#039;Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting&#039;&#039;. They had the usual elf boni and flaws, plus: +2 Int, +2 Cha; Darkvision 120&#039; instead of elf-normal lowlight vision; Spell resistance of 11 + character level; +2 to will saves against spells; the ability to cast dancing lights, darkness, and faerie fire as spell-like abilities 1/day; proficiencies with hand crossbow, rapier, and shortsword instead of elf-normal; sudden bright sunlight will blind a drow for 1 round; and the drow will be dazzled until they leave the bright light.  Male drow have [[wizard]] as their favored class, female drow have [[cleric]] (of [[Lolth]]) as favored class.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The larger array of spell-like abilities they had in AD&amp;amp;D, such as Levitation, are retconned in this edition as being exclusive to drow nobility only. That&#039;s not to say mechanics to let a PC have access to these powers were completely unavailable.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
They had an article on their culture in [[Dragon Magazine]] #298 that really emphasized the darker side of drow culture. Want a sample? According to this lore, drow don&#039;t die out because, despite their tendency to murder and torture each other, they&#039;re as fertile as [[orc]]s, with females normally conceiving twins and triplets. They normally only birth a single baby, though, because the strongest usually kills and absorbs the others in the womb; these prenatal struggles actually produce orgasms more intense than anything a drow female might feel elsewhere. This sensation, &#039;&#039;chad-zak&#039;&#039;, is explicitly called out as the main reason why drow women are willing to get pregnant at all, considering the selfish power-hungry bitches they generally are.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Eberron]] has a drow sub-race called the Umbragen, who possess strange, mystical powers connecting to the darkness. Mechanically, this is represented by replacing their spell saving throw bonus with a + 2 racial bonus to Hide &amp;amp; Move Silently checks, swapping their weapon proficiencies for longbow, shortbow, longsword &amp;amp; rapier, and making their [[Favored Class]] into [[warlock]], plus a racial-restricted set of variant abilities for [[soulknife]] and a bevy of racial feats. All of this appears in [[Dragon Magazine]] #330.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===4th edition===&lt;br /&gt;
The 4E Monster Manual had some explicit monsters-as-races in the back, and the Drow were one of them, although they got an identical repost in the 4e [[Forgotten Realms]] Player&#039;s Guide alongside the [[Genasi]] -- fittingly, since FR basically created the idea of Drow PCs.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
For Drow, +2 Dex and +2 Cha or +2 Wis, Darkvision, +2 Intimidate, +2 Stealth, Fey Origin, Trance, and one racial encounter power (Llothtouched) that could be used as a minor action for one of two effects that last until the drow&#039;s next turn: a close-burst-1 darkness spell the drow can see through, or a faerie-fire spell that gives combat advantage against the target.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Drow had a couple of [[Dragon Magazine]] articles available to them. Issue #367 featured the article &amp;quot;Children of Darkness&amp;quot;, a setting-neutral (in that it was equally applicable to both the [[Nentir Vale]] and the [[Forgotten Realms]]) guide to drow with new racial feats, a racial [[Paragon Path]] (the Curseborn) and a racial [[Epic Destiny]] (the Redeemed Drow). Ironically, it brought back the idea of drow having greater racial magic without touching upon the old mechanics; a paragon level racial feat called Highborn Drow gave the drow a third effect to their Lolthtouched racial power; Webs of Darkness creates blinding webbing of solidified shadow that ensnare all enemies in a close blast 3. This was then followed by issue #413, which abounded in new racial themes for drow; the Bregan D&#039;Aerthe Mercenary, the Elderboy, the Melee-Magthere Champion, the Sorcere Adept, the House Priestess, the Widow of Arach-Tinilith, the Ooze Master, the Secret Apostate, and the Skulker of Vhaeraun.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===5th edition===&lt;br /&gt;
Drow are &#039;&#039;&#039;finally&#039;&#039;&#039; an outright core PC racial option in the Player&#039;s Handbook, as an elven subrace.  The usual elf advantages, along with +1 Cha, 120&#039; darkvision, automatic knowing some spells: the &#039;dancing lights&#039; cantrip at 1st, the &#039;faerie fire&#039; 1/day at 3rd level, and &#039;darkness&#039; 1/day at 5th level.  Automatic weapon proficiencies are hand-crossbows, rapiers and shortswords.  They are also the &#039;&#039;only&#039;&#039; core race to receive an explicit &#039;&#039;penalty&#039;&#039; in the core book: if the drow or the drow&#039;s target are in direct sunlight, the drow has disadvantage on attack rolls and perception rolls.  It&#039;s not as crippling as it sounds in practice, but it &#039;&#039;is&#039;&#039; annoying as hell. Better hope you fight indoors a lot, and/or play them in an adventure designed around spelunking or limited sun exposure, like &#039;&#039;Out of the Abyss&#039;&#039; or &#039;&#039;Curse of Strahd&#039;&#039;.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Xanathar&#039;s Guide gave them a boost with a new racial feat; Drow High Magic. Reflecting the &amp;quot;noble drow&amp;quot; spell-like abilities of AD&amp;amp;D, this feat grants a drow the ability to cast Detect Magic at will and both Levitate and Dispel Magic once per long rest without a spell slot.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Pathfinder==&lt;br /&gt;
Pathfinder ditches the [[Lolth]] aspect and instead makes Drow aligned to assorted [[Demon Prince]]s instead. They got playable templates for the first time in their Bestiary entry, and updated versions thereof in the Advanced Races Guide. Pathfinder goes back to really, really freaking old Drow lore by stating that there&#039;s two kinds of Drow; normal Drow, and Noble Drow, who&#039;re even tougher and nastier, with a lot more magical powers. These were handled as separate races in the Bestiary, but ARG instead changed it to a Drow race with a bunch of racial feats to simulate Noble Drow abilities, which is arguably more balanced.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Fluff-wise, they&#039;re tied into the weird sf-bent of the [[Golarion]] setting, being the descendants of elves who refused to flee the planet in the face of a catastrophe, and turned to demon worship to survive.  First-generation drow are actually the result of elves who&#039;ve broken really bad physically and psychologically transforming into dark elves.  Natural-born drow aren&#039;t actually innately evil, but their culture, which engages in the traditional practices of slavery, human sacrifice, etc., with the lovely addition of [[fleshcrafting]], is so hideously corrupt that almost all of them end up bad anyway.  They aren&#039;t matriarchal like classic drow either.  Just assholes.  Their [[drider]]s are... well, see that page.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Drow===&lt;br /&gt;
* Ability Score Modifiers: +2 Dex, +2 Cha, -2 Con&lt;br /&gt;
* Size: Medium&lt;br /&gt;
* Speed: 30 feet&lt;br /&gt;
* Darkvision 120 feet&lt;br /&gt;
* Drow Immunities: Drow are immune to Magic Sleep Effects and get a +2 racial bonus to saves vs. Enchantments.&lt;br /&gt;
* Keen Senses: +2 Racial Bonus on Perception checks.&lt;br /&gt;
* Spell Resistance: 6 + class level&lt;br /&gt;
* Spell-Like Abilities: Dancing Lights, Darkness and Faerie Fire, each 1/day.&lt;br /&gt;
* Light Blindness: Abrupt exposure to bright light blinds a drow for 1 minute and leaves them dazzled on all subsequent rounds until they get out of the light.&lt;br /&gt;
* Poison Use: Drow don&#039;t risk poisoning themselves when they apply poison to weapons, etc.&lt;br /&gt;
* Weapon Familiarity: Free proficiency in Hand Crossbow, Rapier and Shortsword.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Noble Drow===&lt;br /&gt;
* Ability Score Modifiers: +4 Dex, +2 Int, +2 Wis, +2 Cha, -2 Con&lt;br /&gt;
* Size: Medium&lt;br /&gt;
* Speed: 30 feet&lt;br /&gt;
* Darkvision 120 feet&lt;br /&gt;
* Drow Immunities: Drow are immune to Magic Sleep Effects and get a +2 racial bonus to saves vs. Enchantments.&lt;br /&gt;
* Keen Senses: +2 Racial Bonus on Perception checks.&lt;br /&gt;
* Spell Resistance: 11 + character level&lt;br /&gt;
* Spell-Like Abilities: &lt;br /&gt;
** Constant: Detect Magic&lt;br /&gt;
** At-Will: Dancing Lights, Deeper Darkness, Faerie Fire, Feather Fall, Levitate&lt;br /&gt;
** 1/Day: Divine Favor, Dispel Magic, Suggestion&lt;br /&gt;
* Light Blindness: Abrupt exposure to bright light blinds a drow for 1 minute and leaves them dazzled on all subsequent rounds until they get out of the light.&lt;br /&gt;
* Poison Use: Drow don&#039;t risk poisoning themselves when they apply poison to weapons, etc.&lt;br /&gt;
* Weapon Familiarity: Free proficiency in Hand Crossbow, Rapier and Shortsword.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Pathfinder-Races}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{D&amp;amp;D4e-Races}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{D&amp;amp;D5e-Races}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Starfinder==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
With Alien Archive 1, the Drow are back.  While they&#039;re still socially divided into normals and nobles, the stat difference is gone.  They&#039;re still assholes, they&#039;re still into slavery and puppy-kicking cruelty, but now they&#039;ve diversified into the wholesome and socially conscious industry of interstellar arms trafficking.  Drow society is matriarchal again, although gunrunning males form something of a &#039;&#039;nouveau riche&#039;&#039;.   &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Drow===&lt;br /&gt;
* Ability Score Modifiers: +2 Dex, +2 Cha, -2 Con&lt;br /&gt;
* Size and Type: Medium humanoid with elf subtype&lt;br /&gt;
* Darkvision 60 feet&lt;br /&gt;
* Drow Immunities: Drow are immune to Magic Sleep Effects and get a +2 racial bonus to saves vs. Enchantment spells and effects.&lt;br /&gt;
* Keen Senses: +2 Racial Bonus on Perception checks.&lt;br /&gt;
* Light Blindness: A drow exposed to bright light is blinded for 1 round and dazzled as long as they remain in areas of bright light.&lt;br /&gt;
* Drow Magic: Dancing Lights, Detect Magic; In addition drow count as having the Minor Psychic Power feat for the purpose of meeting prerequisites, and if a drow takes the Psychic Power feat, they can add the drow&#039;s limning light supernatural ability to the list of spell-like abilities they have available.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Eberron ==&lt;br /&gt;
Drow in [[Eberron]] have unique fluff. Like all elves, drow were formerly slaves to Xen&#039;drik&#039;s [[Giant]] Empire, but they remained when the now light skinned elves having split and left their native land of Xen&#039;drik for Aerenal 38,000 years ago. By culture &#039;&#039;they&#039;&#039; are the original and &amp;quot;normal&amp;quot; elves are the offshoot. Most of them live in the jungle or ruins of giant civilization on Xen&#039;drik instead of underground, they speak Giant instead of Undercommon, and they aren&#039;t associated with spiders, with the largest group of drow preferring Scorpions instead. &lt;br /&gt;
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There are a handful of known types of drow, with each tribe being of one of these types, but the published material explicitly states more exist beyond the known areas. The Qualtiar are nomadic tribes that love scorpions. The Sulatar are giant loyalist who have really ancient magic and are obsessed with fire. The Hantar&#039;kul or &amp;quot;Blood Hunters&amp;quot; believe they are destined to rule Xen&#039;drik and seek to remove the foreigners, who they see as the biggest obstacle to their rule. The Umbragen avoided the dragon by settling underground and selling their soul to a dark power known as &amp;quot;Umbra&amp;quot;. The Umbragen are fighting, and losing, a battle with a daelkyr lord&#039;s army and seek weapons to aid in that fight, as they are too prideful to ask for help. &lt;br /&gt;
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While the campaign setting says &amp;quot;sahuagin and drow are not ideal races for player characters&amp;quot;, they actually make more sense than most campaign settings. In Eberron, most drow aren&#039;t crazy religious cultists and come into conflict with heroes because they are simply territorial people that believe that, as they were servants of the giant empire when it fell, the remains of giant civilization belong to them and all the &amp;quot;archaeologists&amp;quot; from the north are robbers. Typical NPC Drow are still typically evil though. &#039;&#039;City of Stormreach&#039;&#039; states that &amp;quot;a few drow exiles have found their way to the city, and others have chosen to abandon their old ways and settle among humanity&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;drow who don’t subscribe to their race’s ruthless ways come to the city to escape the cruel life of the wilds&amp;quot; and that Drow often come to the city to trade. This seems to have been a fairly decent number, as the demographics of Stormreach state Drow, Goblinoids, Giants and other monsters combine to make 5% of the 11,650 population, so there are &#039;&#039;hundreds&#039;&#039; of Drow that aren&#039;t actively hostile to humanity. Further &#039;&#039;Secrets of Xen&#039;drik&#039;&#039; explicitly states that Drow tribes beyond the known ones are likely out there past the &amp;quot;charted&amp;quot; parts of the continent, so there may be non-hostile tribes of drow out there.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Exandria ==&lt;br /&gt;
Like in many other settings, the drow of Exandria delved into the Underdark at the command of the goddess Lolth. Unfortunately for these dark elves, though, the Underdark of Exandria is apparently quite a bit more dangerous. The types of civilizations the drow might live in beneath the surface of other settings seem to be constantly beset by abberations and other monsters to a overwhelming degree. As a result, Lolth is actually becoming increasingly unpopular with the drow race, who turn to alternative gods. Most prominently is an entity called the Luxon worshiped by the people of the Kryn Dynasty of the continent of Wildemount. Because the Luxon reincarnates those who die into newborns within a certain range regardless of the baby&#039;s race, it&#039;s led to a situation where a goblin could have been a drow noble in a past life, or vice versa. Though some drow still remain loyal to the Spider Queen, things have gotten so dire for Lolth that most of her faithful in Wildemount are goblinoids, with the drow head matron mother in the continent of Wildemount reduced to hiding out in a goblinoid fortress.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Half-Drow==&lt;br /&gt;
You may be curious; given that the [[drow]] are still [[elves]], even if they are evil slave-taking bastards, can they [[Half-Elf|interbreed with humans]] too? Well, ironically, D&amp;amp;D never really gave that angle much attention - even though Gygax probably would have agreed if you&#039;d pointed it out that half-drow would make far more believable PC options than pure-blooded drow, being neither as overpowered as old-school drow were nor able to advance in the drow&#039;s twisted society and thus less likely to drink the kool-aid &amp;amp; be evil themselves. So, for the most part, half-drow have been ignored throughout D&amp;amp;D&#039;s history.&lt;br /&gt;
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The very first mention of the idea was as &amp;quot;half-casts&amp;quot; (&#039;&#039;sic&#039;&#039;) in D3 for AD&amp;amp;D 1e; leaving unspoken if these be drow/human or - more likely just from the dating-pool - drow/elf, or even drow/bugbear. The half-drow are subsequently expanded in that edition&#039;s [[Unearthed Arcana]]. They&#039;re (human) [[half-elves]], but with the drow&#039;s sunlight vulnerability trait slapped on top (in short, whilst exposed to sunlight, you suffer -2 dexterity and a -2 penalty on your to-hit rolls, and your foes get a +2 bonus to their saving throws against your attacks - this decreases to a -1 to hit penalty and a +1 save bonus if you&#039;re in shadow but your victim is in direct sunlight). Not exactly the kind of thing to make people interested.&lt;br /&gt;
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The half-drow seemed destined to be forgotten... and then came [[Ed Greenwood]], who, amongst his many &#039;&#039;other&#039;&#039; [[Magical Realm|&amp;quot;inspirations&amp;quot; from his belief in the Free Love movements of the 60s]] that he slipped into the [[Forgotten Realms]], found the drow to particularly tickle his fancy. So, after coming up with things like [[Eilistraee]], naturally, he needed a place to put in half-drow. Enter Dambrath, a region in the &amp;quot;Shining South&amp;quot; that he decided to make ruled over by the Cintri; a race of half-drow descended from the ancient drow conquest of Dambrath under the reign of a particularly foolish human king... well, alright, technically, the Cintri are a melting pot of half-drow and [[half-elf]] bloodlines, since they descend as much from the half-elf [[cleric]]s of [[Loviatar]] who helped the drow conquer the place - after all, Loviatar is basically the Realm&#039;s goddess of evil BDSM and femdom, so she&#039;s got that in common with [[Lolth]], to the point that Lolth even lets Loviatar&#039;s faith be the state religion of Dambrath - but they&#039;re still mixed human and drow bloodlines, so it counts.&lt;br /&gt;
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Ironically, despite the Cintri, no 2e version of the half-drow statblock ever debuted, not even in the Shining South [[splatbook]] that introduced Dambrath to the Realms&#039; fanbase. But it did mean that half-drow made it into 3rd edition in a [[Forgotten Realms]] [[splatbook]] - [[Races of X |Races of Faerun]], to be precise. Of course, like their 1e counterparts, they were not particularly well-differentiated mechanically from their half-elf roots; a 3e half-drow is, officially, a [[half-elf]] with Darkvision 60 feet and replacing Elf Blood with Drow Blood, so they&#039;re treated as Drow for race-targeting stuff instead of [[Elf]]. &lt;br /&gt;
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Eberron, likewise, states half-drow exist, typically results of trysts in Stormreach, but doesn&#039;t actually do anything with them or give them stats. The implication is that Half-Drow exist but are exceptionally rare and with the drow population that interacts peacefully with humans being the mere hundreds their rarity likely &#039;&#039;is&#039;&#039; exceptional. Still, Eberron works on the idea that player characters are &#039;&#039;supposed&#039;&#039; to be exceptional in general, and playing one isn&#039;t off limits.&lt;br /&gt;
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A more mechanically invested version of the 3e half-drow didn&#039;t come to be until towards the end of the edition&#039;s lifespan, when the 3e version of the [[splatbook]] &amp;quot;Drow of the Underdark&amp;quot;. It states &amp;quot;Half-drow have the standard racial traits of half-elves given in the Player’s Handbook, except that their favored class is the class in which they have the most levels. In addition, rather than elf blood, they have drow blood. Since drow is a subrace of elf, the net effect is that they have elf blood as well. The specification of drow blood means that for all special abilities and effects particular to a drow, a half-drow is considered a drow.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
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Additionally, both properly half-Drow characters AND half-elf characters with only a little bit of Drow heritage, like the Drow equivalent of a Tiefling or Aasimar, could take the following feat during character-creation:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;DROW LEGACY&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
::The drow blood in your veins runs true and grants you some abilities from that heritage.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Prerequisite:&#039;&#039;&#039; Half-elf with drow ancestry.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Benefit:&#039;&#039;&#039; You have a +2 racial bonus on Will saves against spells and spell-like abilities. You have darkvision out to 60 feet. You receive Exotic Weapon Proficiency (hand crossbow), as well as, Undercommon and the drow dialect of Elven as automatic languages.&lt;br /&gt;
::If you have an Intelligence score of 13 or higher, you also gain the following spell-like abilities, each usable once per day: dancing lights, darkness, and faerie fire. Your caster level equals your class level.&lt;br /&gt;
::&#039;&#039;&#039;Special:&#039;&#039;&#039; Taking this feat also causes you to have light sensitivity: You are dazzled (–1 circumstance penalty on attack rolls, saves, and checks) in bright sunlight or within the radius of a daylight spell.&lt;br /&gt;
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In Pathfinder, half-drow are represented by alternate racial traits for stock half-elves. Half-Elves can trade their superior multiclassing ability for darkvision, which is strictly better if that character isn&#039;t multiclassing anyways, or low-light vision for darkvision and light blindness. They can trade their bonus feat and multiclassing bonuses for dancing lights, darkness, and faerie fire as spell like abilities, which absolutely isn&#039;t worth it. Finally they can trade their bonus feat for proficiency in hand crossbow, rapier, and shortsword, which &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; isn&#039;t worth it since anyone who would bother with those weapons is already proficient with those weapons or is playing half-elf in the first place to get the bonus feat.&lt;br /&gt;
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Perhaps the best the poor half-drow have ever had it has been in 5th edition, where a half-elf can trade their two free skill proficiencies for the drow&#039;s racial spell-like abilities; it&#039;s not much, but at least it&#039;s something to represent drow ancestry, and it&#039;s decently beefy compared to the AD&amp;amp;D and Races of Faerun depictions. Once again, it was a [[Forgotten Realms]] sourcebook that brought them out of the darkness - the Sword Coast Adventurer&#039;s Guide.&lt;br /&gt;
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Drow-elf crossbreeds are given the briefest of mentions in the original Vault of the Drow as part of an encounter with &amp;quot;rakes&amp;quot; (think outcast punks) in the (under)city [[Erelhei-Cinlu]]. They have never been statted in any form, but are probably close enough to half-drow to use that template. Still, there&#039;s possibilities here for a creative DM.&lt;br /&gt;
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==See also==&lt;br /&gt;
Dark Elves exist in [[Ptolus]] as NPC characters. They worship a [[Galchutt]] named [[Gorgoth-Lol]], which means &amp;quot;totez not Lolth LOL&amp;quot; in the elvish tongue. &lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Seldarine]] - The gods of the [[Elf]] and [[Drow]] pantheons.&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Drizzt|Drizzt Do&#039;Urden]] - A... [[skub|polarizing character]], but still the most famous and iconic drow hero in &#039;&#039;D&amp;amp;D&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Viconia de&#039;Vir]] - A [[cleric]] of Shar in the &#039;&#039;[[Baldur&#039;s Gate]]&#039;&#039; games, and a good example of a &amp;quot;PC-friendly&amp;quot; drow who &#039;&#039;isn&#039;t&#039;&#039; a chaotic good Drizzt clone. Also [[Bioware]]&#039;s first &amp;quot;sexy, mildly-evil-but-mostly-misunderstood lady love interest&amp;quot; character, setting the template for all those that followed. (Looking at you, Bastila, Morrigan, Isabela, Jack...) Had an incredibly complex, tragic and deep story in the sequel involving brotherly love and sacrifice. Her template may have set off a series of dominoes resulting in the next entry...&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Drowtales]]: When an admittedly-skilled bunch of [[drawfag|artists]] with the mental maturity of a blighted potato make a webcomic series financed by sponsor-avatar insertion, porn requests, and (the worst) &#039;&#039;plot dictation&#039;&#039;, and slather copious amounts of [[Skub]] onto it. Said artists also have an axe against humanity/BDSM lesbian fetish to grind. &#039;&#039;Mostly&#039;&#039; the latter.&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Unified Setting/Drow]] - Arctic merchant vikings who ride giant lobsters, but still have black skin and white hair.&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Sandwich Stoutaxe]]: 1d4chan&#039;s take on the heroic Drow, she was abandoned by her family and raised by a Dwarf. So named because said dwarf found her in a basket that he thought was full of sandwiches.&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Dungeons &amp;amp; Dragons 3rd Edition races]]&lt;br /&gt;
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==Official Art Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Queen of the Spiders.jpg|Looks like a trashy 80&#039;s Manowar album but OK.&lt;br /&gt;
Drow MM 2e.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Spiderbound Drow Warrior.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow mistress and her man slave.jpeg|Drow gender relations in a nutshell&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Adventurer vs Carrion Crawlers.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:3e Drow Demon-Binder (Marilith).jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:4e Drow Demon-Binder (Marilith).jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:4e Drow Priestess.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow of the Underdark 3e Cover.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:3e Drow Warleader.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Priestesses (DotU).jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Starfinder Drow.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Bathing Drow Noble.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Prosthetic (DotU).jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drizzt by Todd Lockwood.jpg|did I mention the [[Drizzt|Mary Sues]] yet?&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow scouts by jonhodgson.jpg|[[Meme|Welcome to the jungle]], where you can play a Drow however you want&lt;br /&gt;
File:Xendrik Drow.jpg|Xen&#039;drik&#039;s drows like to tattoo themselves with scorpion venom.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Fanart==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:drow_blackface.jpg|not racist; or at least not THAT kind of racist&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drows_in_SPEEES.jpg|in the skin darkness of the future, there is only Mary Sues. A.k.A [[Drowtales]]: How to be a mangaka-faggot with cognitive dissonance.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Yafgc drow matriarchy advantages.png|drow men have [[Rule 34|a place]] in their matriarchy&lt;br /&gt;
File:Throne of the Drow.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:The Scarlet Tarantula (Drow Monk).jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:TgplaysDrow.png|In surface world, adventurers are always looking for a party. In matriarchal Underdark, matron makes a party out of you!&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Monstergirls==&lt;br /&gt;
{{Monstergirls}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:MGE Dark Elf.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The Dark Elf maiden is an alluring creature, if in a different way to her light-skinned cousin.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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Given that female elves are practically canon [[monstergirls]] in [[Dungeons &amp;amp; Dragons]] to begin with (where do you think [[Half-Elves]] come from? Human women pouncing on cute elven men? Pah!), and that the drow are both female led &#039;&#039;and&#039;&#039; have a long tradition of cheesecake/pin-up tier femdom-heavy artwork for their females - there&#039;s a reason drow are often mocked on nu-/tg/ as a culture made up of cheesy BDSM pin-up art - it should be no surprise that drow feature in works of erotica just as frequently as their surface cousins. Indeed, the talk of D&amp;amp;D sessions everywhere must have had since the late 90&#039;s, inevitably, sexualized Drow raids owing to Greenwood&#039;s [[Magical Realm]]. Often called &amp;quot;Dark Elves&amp;quot;, their skin tone ranges from the actual drow onyx/blue/purple to more dusky brown colors, which leads to the nickname &amp;quot;chocolate elves&amp;quot; being used for erotic female drow characters.&lt;br /&gt;
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Given the heavy BDSM themes in actual drow society, it should be no surprise that drow monstergirls are usually portrayed as dominatrixes in the same way. Asian hentai artists, however, like to subvert the idea by portraying them as submissives instead of dominatrixes; chocolate elf slaves and maids are as old as [[Elf slave, wat do?]] threads. Might have something to do with [[/pol/|dark skin being considered inferior in Asian cultures]].&lt;br /&gt;
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In the [[Monster Girl Encyclopedia]], the Dark Elves have willingly embraced [[succubus]]ization, unlike their Light Elf kindred. This has turned them into a perverse culture of dominatrixes, who take human men as their sexual slaves. They were some of the setting&#039;s earliest [[skub]] when it was confirmed that they actually do practice incest, with young dark elves being taught the arts of sexual dominance, bondage and sado-masochism by using their fathers as their subs, yeesh.&lt;br /&gt;
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==MonsterGirl Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:CestreeandDrow.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Dark elf.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Fertile Drow Sorceress.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Chocolate elf.jpg|Because chocobutt best butt.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Dark elf vs High elf.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Pink Haired Drow.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Dark Elf Butt.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Dark Elf Matriarch.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow and Broken Mirror.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Cleric.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Duelist.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Dark Elf Sorceress.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Fantasy Armor.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Harpist.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Queen Valsharess Fanart.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Matron Mother.jpeg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Sorceress.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Sorceress 2.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Vampiress.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Violinist.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Drow Swordsinger.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
File:Skimpily Clad Drow Sorceress.png&lt;br /&gt;
File:Shortstack Dark Elf.png|This height is canon in [[Dungeons &amp;amp; Dragons|D&amp;amp;D]]&lt;br /&gt;
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&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:ED7F:8475:BE31:7E6E</name></author>
	</entry>
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