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		<title>Leagues of Votann</title>
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		<updated>2023-06-05T13:35:05Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2600:387:9:3:0:0:0:4A: Removed first person, dwarfs not dwarves, everything is an STC is boring.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{awesome}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Infobox 40k Nations&lt;br /&gt;
|name=Leagues of Votann&lt;br /&gt;
|image=[[Image:‎NewLeaguetemplogo.jpg|300px|center]]&lt;br /&gt;
|Capital=Decentralized, Greater Thurian League being most powerful&lt;br /&gt;
|Official Languages= Squat Lexicon, High Gothic, Low Gothic &lt;br /&gt;
|Power=Great Power&lt;br /&gt;
|Size=Galactic Core, a third of Segmentum Solar, several thousand Mining Worlds, many Holds of various sizes&lt;br /&gt;
|Head of State=Decentralized, [[Votann|Votanns]] act as Head of State&lt;br /&gt;
|Head of Government=Votannic Councils (Hearthspake)&lt;br /&gt;
|Governmental Structure=Confederated Gerontocratic Supranational Union&lt;br /&gt;
|State Religion/Ideology=Ancestor Worship&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Achievement Ideology&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Mercantilism&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;A variation of Familialism&lt;br /&gt;
|Demographic=Kin ([[Squats]], Ironkin, &lt;br /&gt;
[[Imperium|Humans]])&lt;br /&gt;
|Military Force=Kinhost Forces, [[Leagues of Votann Fleet|Prospector Fleets]]&lt;br /&gt;
}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Right after Mankind’s colonization of the galaxy came its first true golden age. Reared by machine prophets, the survivors of the Oedipal plagues built civilizations that equaled and even surpassed their Solar forbears.| CM Koseman, &#039;&#039;[[All Tomorrows]]&#039;&#039;}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Better a soulless clone... than a souled roach.|David Mitchell, &#039;&#039;Cloud Atlas&#039;&#039;}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|This is very simple. We don&#039;t want your liver, your coin, or that junk you call technology. We want your world. We want the riches you didn&#039;t even realize you had, and that you definitely don&#039;t deserve. Leave while you have the chance. Or don&#039;t. Either way, we&#039;re coming to claim what&#039;s ours.|Ultimatum delivered by the Cthonian Guantlet Consortium, &#039;&#039;Codex- Leagues of Votann&#039;&#039;}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|Rock and stone to the bone!| Warchant of the deeprock league}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The &#039;&#039;&#039;Leagues of Votann&#039;&#039;&#039; or otherwise known as the &#039;&#039;&#039;Squat Homeworlds&#039;&#039;&#039; (Or if you&#039;re in /tg/; as the &#039;&#039;&#039;Domain of Squats, Squat Territories, [[Dwarf Fortress|SPESS DORF FORTRESS]]&#039;&#039;&#039; &amp;amp; &#039;&#039;&#039;Deeprock Galactic&#039;&#039;&#039;) is the areas in which one can find our beloved space midgets in the early days of 40k and its current modern reboot. They could also be called the Leagues of [[Bullshit]] given how utterly ridiculous their lore is and that their technology hasn&#039;t been ripped from them kicking and screaming (literally). However, these are motherfucking dorfs and squats, so they get a pass.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Back in the [[Rogue Trader (Sourcebook)|good old days,]] the then-named Squat Homeworlds, unlike other Imperial-aligned entities in the galaxy, enjoyed a significant degree of autonomy. Whilst de jure, the Squat Homeworlds were part of the [[Imperium of Man]], de facto as is its own self-sustaining and self-sufficient society unlike places such as [[Ultramar]] or the [[Adeptus Mechanicus]] which has an interdependent and semi-autonomous relationship with [[Terra]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Of course, we all know how the Squats were Squatted soon after making the debut, with the [[Tyranids]] [[Derp|&#039;&#039;SOMEHOW&#039;&#039; targeting &amp;lt;u&amp;gt;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;only&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&amp;lt;/u&amp;gt; the Squat worlds whilst leaving the rest of the Imperium-controlled space right next door to the Squats largely untouched.]] This is ridiculous when taking into account that the territories of the Squats weren&#039;t some small specks like the [[Tau Empire]], but rather, a significantly large domain that took up half of the entire Galactic core. This is made worse when taking into consideration that [[Lolwut|it was completely out of character for the Imperium to stop and do nothing against such a large incursion of Tyranid forces in an area considered Astro-strategically important for them.]] [[Games Workshop|Games Workshop&#039;s]] [[Fail|shitty excuse/explanation in removing the Squats from canon]] [[Rage|had never really stood well within the community,]] [[RAGE|much less among the Squat players.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
However, their reintroduction as the Leagues of Votann has somewhat radically changed their origins whilst still keeping some old lore modernised. The &#039;&#039;&#039;Leagues of Votann&#039;&#039;&#039; (also known as the [[Squats|Unsquatted Squats]]) is now a [[retcon|&amp;quot;&amp;quot;new&amp;quot;&amp;quot;]], more fully independent, faction in the [[Warhammer 40,000]] universe. They are gatherings of short abhuman clones called the Kin (more commonly known as Squats by the dirty Necromunda gangers), bound together by the [[Votann]], super-cogitators from the [[Dark Age of Technology]]. Kin originate from far space and no knowledge remains about their origins [[Belegar Ironhammer|though they are increasingly approaching the idea of sending out expeditions rediscovering it]]. Each League has its own Votann, and are organized in strongholds around it. [[Powergamer|They used the data stored to survive among the stars and maintain their culture across generations]]. Of course, since some [[Adeptus Mechanicus|factions]] are touchy about AI, the Leagues are very cautious when dealing with [[Imperium of Man|its nearest relatives]], hence their secretive lifestyle.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
However, because of the [[grimdark|setting]], everything is not that simple. Since Dorf Windows is not regularly updated anymore and issues that have arisen from having remained active for literal millennia, the Votann began to deteriorate. If they want to repair their computer, &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;[[Dwarf Fortress|they must wage war with other shitcoin miners for more processing power]]&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;, the Kin have to once more brave a galaxy full of danger. Aside from that they have a culture valuing wasting nothing, which is a fun way of saying they drain suns of energy and cooled minerals and at best economically forcibly relocate indigenous groups while at their worst they’ll mine your planet to dust around you and respond to resistance with military force. Imagine if Italian Corporatists, the Monopoly Man, and the Evil Mining Heads in fiction were merged with the seven dwarves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Rogue Trader Era Fluff==&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;
Given the sheer extensive history between the old and the new. This section will contain all the fluff from the old Rogue Trader days. For the sake of preventing page bloat, this entire section will be put in a collapsible page.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
===Historical Overview===&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Squat-logo_banner.png|300px|right|thumb|The original emblem of the squats]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Squat Homeworlds were all worlds filled with rich mineral resources, which led the Human ancestors of the Squats to lay down, settle and mine the shit out of. Most of these were located within the galactic core where unique and rare minerals were found in abundance in exchange for being sterile and barren of life of course. But for the early Human colonists, it was a gold mine as [[Terra]] ran out of all of its resources, so the search for raw materials was needed. Their planet&#039;s gravity is great, usually two or three times that of Terra. Their atmospheres are either thin or non-existent. Even those planets with atmospheres are blasted by tremendous storms. But hey? Who gives a shit about all of that when you have all the resources to make you rich, and rich the Squats got.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Like the Gulf States, the Squats quickly took a monopoly on these minerals and started to get wealthy, and with money comes an increase in development and technological advancements. These planets became Mining Worlds and with the coming [[Age of Strife]], the Squats got themselves the good end of the stick by both inhabiting hostile worlds and cranking up the technological kazoo when the rest of humanity plunged into a galactic-wide [[shitstorm]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Squat history can be split into several eras.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Age of Founding====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The first is the Age of Founding, which is the Squat equivalent of the [[Dark Age of Technology]]. This is not technically the first period of the Squats as they had yet to evolve, but it is the time of the founding of the colonies that would become the Squat Homeworlds. Almost twenty thousand years ago contact between these planets and Terra was almost continuous, testament to the importance of these colonies. Terra also kept the worlds well supplied with that which they could not produce for themselves in adequate amounts, primarily food. This period lasted until the [[Age of Strife]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Age of Isolation====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Age of Isolation corresponds with the earlier part of the Age of Strife - around eighteen thousand years ago. The galactic core was cut off from the rest of human space by the devastating Warp storms of the Age of Strife. Many worlds were swallowed by the Warp and disappeared forever, others were trapped in stasis and became lost. Most survived although they were separated from Earth and all contact was lost with the rest of the galaxy. During this time of isolation and danger the Squat worlds still in contact with each other began to organize for their mutual defense. It was at this time that the Squats began to refer to their worlds as the Homeworlds.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Homeworlds remained isolated for thousands of years and their inhabitants learned to survive in a universe that was becoming increasingly hostile. Those that survived grew and prospered. Settlements were enlarged and fortified into impregnable Strongholds. They soon developed alternative technologies to make up for the lack of supplies from Earth.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During the isolation the complex system of Engineer Guilds developed. These Guilds were responsible for preserving technical knowledge and skills as well as training technicians, miners and other specialists necessary for the Strongholds. The Guilds transcended the Strongholds, allowing every Stronghold to benefit from the preserved knowledge as well as new advances in technology.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During this age the Leagues first began to develop from Strongholds allied for trading and defense purposes.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Age of Trade====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Age of Trade took place during a slight abatement of the warp storms during the Age of Strife and led to the Squats encountering other races, including [[Orks]] and [[Eldar]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
At the beginning of the Age of Trade, some strongholds were attacked, but the aliens quickly realized that the Squats [[RIP AND TEAR|were armed to the fucking teeth and prepared to go down fighting]], and that trade was a more practical arrangement. [[Just As Planned|The Squats took full advantage of their tremendous mineral wealth, which they traded for weapons, foodstuffs and high-technology systems.]] To this day, Squat hydroponic plants, [[Heresy|developed with Eldar help]], are among the most efficient food sources in the Imperium. The Squats remained carefully neutral in the numerous conflicts between Eldar and Orks, maintaining trade links with both sides. There were inevitably small wars from time to time, but for the most part the Squats&#039; complex structure of treaties and trade agreements maintained a stable peace.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Age of Wars====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Age of Trade lasted for nearly three millennia, but finally collapsed when an enormous Ork battle-fleet, under the command of Grunhag the Flayer, attempted a full-scale invasion of the Homeworlds. Losses on both sides were astronomical, with vicious tunnel-fights through the mine workings and bloody pitched battles in the Squats&#039; underground settlements. The Squats appealed to their Eldar trading partners for help against the invading Orks, but none was received.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Age of Wars, as it became known, is regarded by the Squats as the blackest chapter in their history, and the double betrayal by Orks and Eldar gave rise to a cultural enmity which still persists. Many strongholds were wiped out by the Orks, and the traditional epic ballad known as The Fall of Imbach commemorates one such destruction. Even today expeditions are mounted from the Squat Homeworlds in search of lost strongholds, and these expeditions are often accompanied by Adeptus Mechanicus priests, eager to rediscover lost Squat technology to [[Blood Ravens|&#039;burrow from&#039;.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Age of Rediscovery====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Age of Rediscovery was the most recent phase of Squat history, corresponding to the Great Crusade and the current Age of the Imperium. As the Imperium recovered from the Age of Strife and began to reunite the scattered worlds of humanity, the Squat Homeworlds were rediscovered and contact with the Imperium was established.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Imperium found that a distinct culture had developed on the Homeworlds, and that the Squats had moved outwards through the galaxy, extending their domains. Often they settled harsh planets similar to their own Homeworlds, but they also occupied more conventional worlds able to support normal Human civilization.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
====Age of the Imperium====&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The current phase in Squat history. It essentially details the various treaties between the Squats and the Imperium.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The experiences of the previous millennia has left the Squats with a strong sense of cultural unity and a fiercely independent nature, and instead of rejoining the Imperium as subject worlds, the Homeworlds negotiated a series of treaties which enabled them to keep their independence. The racial character of the Squats - hard-working, tenacious, honorable, and inimical to alien races - was almost perfect from the Imperial point of view, and the Imperium was content to allow them a great degree of self-government.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A detailed description of their relationship can be read below.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Squat-Imperium Relations===&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Squat-homeworlds-800px.jpg|480px|right|thumb|Galactic map of the Squat Homeworlds.]]&lt;br /&gt;
First contact with the Squats by the Imperium began during the [[Great Crusade]] as the Emperor&#039;s forces reached the worlds near the galactic core. Many of these worlds were the Squat Homeworlds and, Squats being Spess Dorfs and Spess Dorfs being just regular Dorfs with tech, conflict became inevitable. Suffice to say, the [[Space Marine]] legions [[Rape|got their shit kicked in]]. Who would have wondered, that 8-foot tall supersoldiers would have trouble trying to fight in 5-foot by 5-foot tunnels with no cover whatsoever. Here&#039;s a fun hint, Empy&#039;s forces got creamed so hard it led directly to the development of the Mark 3 [[Power Armor]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Emprah with all his infinite wisdom, decided that being on friendly terms with midgets all armed with D-Cannons and rapid-firing plasma machineguns is probably a good idea rather than engaging a war that might as well be the Imperium&#039;s Vietnam. So a treaty was signed to sweep the whole &#039;first-contact shenanigans&#039; under the bus and get back to business.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Squat Homeworlds as aforementioned, have long been part of the Imperium, but enjoy a level of autonomy greater than the ordinary self-governed Imperial world. Hell, the Squats are so autonomous that not even the [[Administratum]] can touch them. Instead, Squat Homeworlds are ruled by strongholds of leagues.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Nonetheless, the Homeworlds, while governing themselves without interference from the Adeptus Terra, are expected to follow Imperial policy on wider issues. Both the Imperium and the Squats benefit from this arrangement: the Homeworlds provide troops for the [[Imperial Guard]]. The Imperial Guard also provides military support to the Homeworlds when necessary, as they would any other threatened Imperial worlds (Space NATO). Additionally the Squats trade their mineral wealth exclusively with the Imperium in return for some sweet, sweet moolah. The [[Adeptus Mechanicus]] are highly interested in the Squats and the Homeworlds for several reasons: Squats possess a high level of technical expertise which seems to come naturally to the race. Additionally, the Homeworlds as a whole possess the greatest amount of surviving [[STC]] equipment in the Imperium. The Squats are said to allow the Adeptus Mechanicus free access to Squat technology. However it is also said the Squats keep their technology from other races, regarding the Adeptus Mechanicus as little more than sorcerers mired in superstition.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The relationship between the Homeworlds and the Imperium is therefore generally peaceful, although through history has been punctuated by bouts of war and bitterness. The Squats and the Imperium trade to their mutual benefit. Both races also share many enemies, especially [[Orks]], making it in their best interests to cooperate. The Squats do not follow the Imperial Cult, rather they revere their ancestors. Squats fighting alongside the Imperial Guard often adopt the Emperor into their beliefs, as a guardian of their ancestors.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Squat technology is based upon the heavy mining equipment they brought with them to the Homeworlds. During their isolation from the rest of humanity they adapted it for other uses, notably exo-armour which was engineered from heavy mining suits. Squats continued to innovate and invent while humanity sank into a Dark Age. As a result, the Squats have developed technologies such as [[Wat|neo-plasma]] and warp cores far in advance of anything the Imperium owns. Some Squat technologies were absorbed into the Imperium, especially tunneling vehicles and weaponry such as the [[Tunneling Transport Vehicles#Termite|Termite.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Strongholds===&lt;br /&gt;
Strongholds are Squat settlement centres. They were generally founded during the original colonisation and those produced later are known as &#039;&#039;Newholds&#039;&#039;. Strongholds also often join together under Leagues to form defensive pacts.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Generally a Stronghold develops around a mine and its associated living quarter although some later developments were not associated with mining. A hereditary Lord ruled each stronghold and was protected and supported by the [[Hearthguard]]. The [[Hearthguard]] were the elite of a Squat army and the servants to the Lord while also protecting the Lord when he went to war. Each Stronghold had a group of [[Squat Trooper|Brotherhood or War-Brethren]] which formed the core of the Squat armed forces for the Stronghold. Every Squat had an obligated 30-70 year service period although they may not be called upon to fight until they had sired two sons and raised them to maturity. This helped protect the continuity of the race from the Stronghold&#039;s military activities. A Squat could then retire from active duty with his honor and probably some wealth and take up a position of responsibility in his family&#039;s business.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Brotherhood was often also seen as a mercenary force. In times of peace warriors were traded for resources to either fight for the Imperium or for other strongholds. Another member of the aristocracy was the [[Squat Warlord|Warlord,]] a close relative of the Lord who was there to be placed in control of the Brotherhood in order to prevent Lords from wielding too much power and sending their troops into battles they should not be fighting. Other Lords would send their Brotherhoods on expeditions which range from locating other ancient and lost strongholds to a campaign against an alien race or piracy. Some Brotherhoods had totally turned to piracy and become known as Squat Reavers. When they returned to their stronghold they distributed the booty between the pirates and the Lord of the Stronghold.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Squats had a requirement to provide forces for the Imperial Guard and this often took the form of a detachment of the Brotherhood.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Leagues===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
So what are Leagues? Well, in a nutshell, they are groups of strongholds working together for a common purpose - usually mutual defense - trade or dealings with the Imperium. Leagues varied greatly in size, the smallest consisting of four Strongholds and the largest consisting of over three thousand. The League of Thor was the most powerful and influential, including over 300 strongholds. The League of Norgyr was the league closest to Holy Terra. Now, under the new lore there exists the [[Leagues of Votann]], each formed around a [[Votann]] ancestor core. Votann-equipped leagues seem to be the only survivors as full scale polities in the Imperium, but at least some clans are known to have survived, usually working as engineers, miners and mercenaries.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A League usually encompassed the Strongholds on more than one planet with the latest extant being 700 known Leagues total. Each League was led and dominated by a single Stronghold. As some Leagues were virtually nations with distinct cultures, Squats often identified themselves with the League their Stronghold belonged to.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Squats had a strong sense of mutual preservation, as it had been known for rival leagues to go to war with each another. Such occasions could lead to lasting enmity, as Squats were inclined to remember deeds of infamy for many generations much like the Book of Grudges from [[Warhammer Fantasy]]. The League of Thor and League of Grindel fought an unusually bitter war around 2,000 years ago when settlers from both sides clashed over the exploration of the Lost Stronghold of Dargon. The war that followed resulted in the destruction of several Strongholds and many key victories for the League of Thor including the capture of two other Leagues. Peace only came with the huge Ork invasion of Grunhag the Flayer which obliged all the Leagues to unify against their mutual foe. Although the war ended with the rout of the Orks, the two Leagues remained distrustful rivals and both sides considered the other side owing them debts of blood and honor.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Reboot Fluff==&lt;br /&gt;
This section details the new and updated fluff from 2022 onwards. This deals with the Leagues and their similar but new background for the modern 40k narrative.&lt;br /&gt;
===History===&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Votann meeting.jpg|500px|thumb|right|[[Star Wars|200,000 clone units are ready with a million more well on the way.]]]]&lt;br /&gt;
Even though the oldest living Kin don’t remember what their earliest days were like, some undeniable “First Truths” remain constant in the Votanns’ data tracks. One such truth is that the First Ancestors departed from ancient Terra prior to the Unification Wars to harvest the untold riches of the galaxy with the first holds being settled near the galactic core. What became of these Ancestors is unknown, but curiously when the Ancestors begun to fade away…the Votann are first mentioned.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A second First Truth is that the Kin have always been a cloned people. The Ancestors used genetic systems called “cloneskeins” to [[Transhumanist|manipulate and modify their race’s molecular structure]], and continue to define their overall division of labor. Over time the Kin became squatter, denser, and stronger, growing no more than five feet tall max. They’ve even been able to artificially neuter their [[psyker|psychic]] footprint to avoid the attention of [[Chaos]], in a not too dissimilar fashion to how the [[Tau]] souls work. Other examples of this engineering can be seen in the Hearthkyn Warriors, who often are also engineered with particular cloneskeins that allow them to specialise in combat – heightened senses, improved stamina, and the ability to see better in the dark, to name but a few (although, maxing out their bodies&#039; capabilities should be standard for all Kin anyway because duh). In contrast, others augment their bodies for battle with mechanical limbs and synthetic organs, with members of the powerful Cthonian Mining Guilds being noted as extensive users of these body modifications. This is not that unexpected as that particular guild (which is noted as being a particularly extreme embodiment of the usual belligerent acquisitiveness of the Kin) is willing to fearlessly locate, secure, and harvest resources for their race from environments so dangerous that even other Kin would balk at their hazards leading to a need for extensive augmentation on their part. Because of all the above, some fans are now speculating that GW is tying the [[Men of Stone]] thread to the modern Squat civilization (either to the Squats themselves or to the Votann) given the [[Men of Gold]] and [[Men of Iron]] have already been speculated to be [[Perpetual]]s and [[Machine Spirit|abominable intelligence]]. It is also revealed the Leagues also have the “Iron Kin,” their fully-mechanical and true AI robot social class, who were designed with a prerogative to help their meaty cousins. This along the mention in some Kin myths of a “group of gleaming golden figures” relative to the first Votann (sometimes referred to as the the Gilded One), means this theory of the Kin being the Men of Stone could bear all the more weight.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
At some point during the reconstruction after the Horus Heresy, the ancestors of the Ironhead Squats arrived from the Leagues to help with rebuilding efforts on Necromunda. However they somehow lost their Votann ancestor core in the process and so they ended up having to stay on the world long after the rebuilding was done so they could try and track it down, a search which still continues to this day and has resulted in them regressing technologically in the mean time. Maybe someone should tell them to go search Van Saar&#039;s basement. Wait...[[Derp|don&#039;t those cores radiate in the Warp like a miniature Astronomican?]]&lt;br /&gt;
On many other Imperial worlds, the Kin have even been states to show up in pre Imperial records, truly showing that the Leagues are a deeply ancient set of orders with even deeper roots that spread all across the galaxy.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
With the formation of the Great Rift, the Leagues had lost a few holds and trade routes, pressuring them into expanding and gaining new trade routes, endorsing new colonization efforts, and slowly withdrawing from their semi isolated state.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During the events of the Arks of Omen, Ark Infernal Threnody was ruthlessly picked apart and dismantled by the Kronus Hegemony league after a failed voyage into the galactic core. Around the same time, one of Abaddon&#039;s battlefleets under Lady Maeve of House Grendyl, arrived in the Polyhadra system with the expectations of easily conquering a world and acquiring a key fragment from the hands of a ramshackle Ork empire. The Greater Thurian League had instead long beaten them to the punch, to the point of having a thriving enclave in the system. Anything resembling ork occupation was reduced to wreckage bolts floating in the void, and the world they sought for was long sliced apart by the Kin. The key fragment itself had already vanished into the churning machineries of the Kin&#039;s colossal mining ships, with the fragments psychic spoor leading into the galactic core. Before she would pursue the fragment however, Maeve&#039;s twisted honor code demanded she punish the Kin for their interference. And soon, savage battle raged across every surviving world in the Polyhadra system.&lt;br /&gt;
There were also Kin mercenaries contracted by Indomitus Fleet Quartus that immediately fled after the murder curse was unleashed.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Culture===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:1657022781779.jpg|300px|thumb|right|&amp;quot;GET IN MAH BELLY!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|So, we&#039;re talking about space dwarfs who need more RAM for their gods?|Anon}}&lt;br /&gt;
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In the modern day of the 41st Millennium, the culture of the Kin seems very egalitarian, with no distinction between male, female, machine or otherwise amongst its members. [[Greater Good|United in the guidance of the Votann, the Leagues of the Kin operate with seeming unity, with the Kin working in unison for the betterment of their Kindreds, or so it would appear to outsiders.]] The truth however is a little more complicated than that though.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Leagues are semi unified conglomerates of &amp;quot;family states&amp;quot; (a cross between nation states and extended family) called Kindreds, guilds, Freelancers, and kinhost armies. While the Leagues are very communal and chummy with their fellow kin, this does not stop the dark influences of a past long gone from seeping into their civilizations.&lt;br /&gt;
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Entire planets and even systems with ecosystems and civilizations stripped to the bone, regardless of the ethics. Global magna extraction and tectonic delving allows the Kin to harvest whole worlds, populated or not. Evacuation may be offered, but not always. Ferocious competition between Guilds and freelancers, who have taken on the mantle from dark age corporations, merc groups, independent contractors, and cartels and follow the philosophy of &amp;quot;When someone has what you want, why not take it.&amp;quot; While the Kin do live to serve their fellow kin, their societies, and their ancestors, they are also filled to the brim with society-wide greed and hunger. As individuals, they may or may not have such hungers, but as communities they will devour entire worlds. Not even the universe itself will be enough for their wants. Negotiation is an alternative when dropping anchor and starting the harvesting would incur more cost in resources from defeating local resistance than a contract would entail, and the Kin have relocated species, traded technology, or taken more careful approaches to resource collection (read: not just shattering the planet and picking through the space dust for the minerals) in the past.&lt;br /&gt;
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This does not mean they are the type to cut corners. Far from it. [[Grungni|Like their many Dwarven counter parts in other media, one of the things they appreciate is fine ass Craftmanship]]. No planned obsolescence, shoddy piss water, and easy to break communicators here. Only the best in quality is acceptable (or at least, the best they can make). And this is not even such a difficult feat for them. High quality mass produced goods is the norm for League society, with their high technology and industrial society. Many of their holds are even live-in factories, constantly churning out master crafted items at a constant pace. The Leagues overall conduct resource extraction, industry, and technology developments on a vastly larger scale, making the Imperium look puny in their developments by comparison. And unlike the imperium, they don&#039;t dig for the ore required, wasting time and lives (unless of course they actually have to occupy a world, then they&#039;ll mine, extract, manufacture, and bunker down to their hearts content on whatever occupied planetary body they are on). The Kin instead sees that whatever asteroid or world they are working on can just be torn apart, and the remnants plucked out the wreckage.&lt;br /&gt;
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But despite all their comforts, riches, and conveniences, they are still a hardy people who revere their ancestors and promote the importance of sacrifice throughout their society, willing to do whatever is needed for their Kin and ancestors.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Morals and Virtues===&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|The stars are ours, bequeathed by the ancestors to us millennia ago. It is our duty, to all those who came before us, to reach out into them and stake our claim. No other race can fashion their resources into the technological marvels we can. It is a waste of their potential for any others to possess them.|Brôkhyr Iron-master Tôryk Farstrydd}}&lt;br /&gt;
The Kin are a highly conservative race who are extremely focused on preserving their territories and secrets, as well as the survival of their entire species. This is the primary driving motivation for the majority of all Kin. They can be implacable enemies and valuable allies, but securing their aid, let alone getting them to change their minds on a subject, is fairly difficult. If they deem the motivation of another group to go against their interests, they will be more likely to treat them as foes rather than make friends.&lt;br /&gt;
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The ancestry of the kin as void-bourne miners has led them to develop an unforgiving moral code. They have no tolerance for laziness, wastefulness, or incompetence. In the cold darkness of space, a filter changed too late, a weak seam missed, or a leaking water tank could kill an entire crew. Despite all their technology, the Kin have retained this perfectionist worldview, and such behaviors are treated as deadly sins. Furthermore, the Kin have adopted an extreme survivalist mindset. Leaving resources unharvested is seen as another form of waste, and they would would rather pause to strip a stellar body bare than leave it behind for someone else to find. This has gained them a reputation as selfish hoarders among some other species, but for the kin its simply prudent.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Kin prize efficiency, and this can be seen in the way they coldly and quickly dispatch targets on the battlefield. [[Book of Grudges |Yet, paradoxically, they will go to extreme lengths in an effort to settle a grudge, as happened during the Five Hundred Years&#039; War against Waaagh! Morbok. The Kin don&#039;t see this as a waste, as leaving a particularly hated or dangerous foe alive is not only a danger to the entire race but an affront to the ancestors.]] While far less touchy than [[The Grudge Of Drong|their Fantasy kin can be]] the key to surviving with the Kin is to [[Thorgrim Grudgebearer|offer enough resistance to be worth talking to]] but [[Ungrim Ironfist|not successful enough to warrant permanent deletion from the universe.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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The Kin are natural explorers, and their culture compels them to return new information to the Votann. The Hernkyn fulfill this duty by plunging into the dark and undiscovered portions of the galaxy. These acts allow the Kin to find new resources to exploit as well as threats to neutralize before they become a danger. Others travel beyond the Galactic Core in search of opportunities for trade or profit.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Kin&#039;s hatred of wastefulness means they see preserving ammo as a priority. As such, weapons such as the HyLas Rotary Cannon, which consumes a vast amount of power to use, is only given to the most trusted Hearthkyn. Which makes no sense as it doesn&#039;t seem to use ammunition.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Technology===&lt;br /&gt;
{{topquote|I saw their ships grind up an entire asteroid cluster in a few hours. I&#039;ve seen them reduce stars to nothing but the echoes of once-existent radiation. Before my eyes have their armies boiled up Ork tribes, cultist hordes and Tyranid swarms. Yet there is one thing I cannot understand - what in the Emperor&#039;s name is it about their systems that lets them tolerate Brü without chucking it all up again? One sip made me feel as if a super-heavy tank was driving over my stomach.|Some Rogue Trader}}&lt;br /&gt;
Let&#039;s not beat around the bush here; League technology is almost always a clear upgrade over the Imperium. While they didn&#039;t retain everything after the collapse of the golden age, they kept far more than their Imperial counterparts, to the point where they can at least echo DAoT society and its tech. While much of the Leagues&#039; tech is reminiscent of the Imperium&#039;s in form and function, it is generally far more advanced, reliable and ubiquitous.&lt;br /&gt;
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Kin gene-technology allows them to make stable mutations, psykers and even alter their souls. [[Cyberpunk|Cybernetic implants and genetic modification is the norm; advanced helper AI citizens walk the streets as equals.]] Albeit, said AI are programmed to be helpful to biological Kin and so &amp;quot;equals&amp;quot; is more like they&#039;re not outright slaves so much as a non-biological species designed to instinctively assist the Kin. They have [[T&#039;au|advanced ion weaponry]], something that terrified the shit out of the Imperium to the point where they just straight up [[Derp|banned it.]] Their guns hit harder and faster, so that even their basic infantry can prove to trouble for your average space marine (Their big muscles, stocky bodies, and genetic and cybernetic augmentations probably puts them physically on par with Astartes at least in strength, too). And unlike the Imperium&#039;s physically and politically unstable hive worlds with their overcrowded, polluted and crime-ridden hive cities, the League&#039;s Holds should be considered closer to actual fortified arcologies. Agri-worlds? Why grow your food using primitive farming methods when you could just grow your [[Meatbread|foodstuffs]] in factories, labs and indoor facilities?&lt;br /&gt;
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[[Doom|Even Chaos avoids their territory.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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Much of the kin arsenal makes use of exotic material not found outside the galactic core. This includes extremely hazardous materials like dark-star ore; the universal dampening field the material emits can halt all mechanical and organic functions making [[Grimdark|even the mildest of wounds lethal]]. Because of its inherent dangers, the material is mined and shaped with exceptional care and only wielded by those who can be trusted with such [[Plasma|tactically valuable yet dangerous weapons]]. Even their teleportation technology is almost flawless, standing in stark contrast to its incredibly risky Imperial counterpart and allowing Kin to be deployed [[Reasonable Marines|safely and tactically]].&lt;br /&gt;
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Many kin weapons are augmented with HunTR modules, which connect to their neural implants to help [[Ork Snipers|bring about the best possible firing solutions.]] Their Brôkhyr have mastered the manufacturing of focusing lenses and other components necessary to produce a sustained stream of energy, leading to focused beam technology that can be used on and off the battlefield, such as their mining and excavation industries. Their exclusive Volkanite weapons are similar to imperial [[Volkite Weaponry|Volkite]] (and may even be closer to the &#039;&#039;original&#039;&#039; technology), with the key difference that they appear to be [[AWESOME|not only more powerful but also more common.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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Ancestor Cores are so [[Bear Lore|big-brained]], in fact, that they actually shine in the warp, fulfilling a similar role to the astronomicon (albeit on a far smaller scale). The Leagues&#039; warp drives and gellar field are also superior to those of the Imperium, but since they don&#039;t dive quite so headlong into the Warp their ships are generally slower than their Imperial counterparts. However, the kin&#039;s methods of warp travel are far safer and more predictable, which they feel outweighs the slower travel speed. And their ships are FUCK HUGE, to the point where they [[Dwarf|dwarf]] even the largest of the Imperium&#039;s interstellar vessels. And it isn&#039;t like they can&#039;t reliably dive deeper into the Warp if they need a speed boost or probably do something more impressive and related to how teleportation technology works.&lt;br /&gt;
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Shielding developments are also prevalent in the physical realm. Unlike conventional [[void shields]], weave-field generators employ techniques to overlap differing energy fields, interlocking over a range of frequencies and exotic energies. Weave field generators are compact, efficient and scalable, and can be used either as personal shields or projected onto entire areas, the latter of which which is useful for mining.&lt;br /&gt;
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Other amazing devices include pan-specular scanners, which allow the Kin to find an enemy’s location not just physical objects, but through the warp. Even the most terrifying of galactic phenomena are reaped through atom-delving and transotheric resubstantiation; [[Tyranids|stellar siphons drain the stars themselves, as the cthonic mining guilds take whatever resources they need.]] They can even [[Necron|move entire planets.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfortunately, despite holding on to far more dark-age technology than most of humanity&#039;s other splinters (just about all of it, if their cores are what we think they are), what the Leagues did lose was typically their knowledge of [[Golden Throne|how to make and maintain the really good stuff]] - things like the Votann themselves. Due to this, while they&#039;re closer to the technological pinnacle of dark-age humanity than the Imperium, the ongoing decay of the Votann cores threatens to sink them back to levels similar to their emperor loving cousins, while already slowing down much of their R&amp;amp;D to a crawl. Which doesn&#039;t really make sense as they build factories and the cores should be able to teach them how to build the things the cores do because, well, the cores do it. As a result, they are stuck behind the Eldar and the Necrons technologically, though it doesn&#039;t seem like a big enough difference to functionally matter. But hey, at least they aren&#039;t on the Imperium’s level of decay, and are straight the Tau&#039;s supplier of Ion weaponry and other technologies all of which are drastically inferior to that of the Kin.&lt;br /&gt;
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Ironically, in comparison to both the adeptus mechanicus and their [[Thorek Ironbrow|Fantasy Counterparts, the Kin don&#039;t have a cultural problem with innovation and research,]] but rather a technical one thanks the Votann decaying and overloading. The traditions of the kin can be traced back to the dark age of technology, a time that was stated to have science as its god. As a result, their traditions call for more innovation and development, not less. Stubborn in favour of progress, not stagnation.&lt;br /&gt;
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They also have variety of beverages called Brü, which range from mainstay nutro-rations for soldiers and miners, to [[Josef Bugman|devastatingly alcoholic recreational beverages]]. None are recommended without a Kin constitution.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Aspects of League society===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Leagues:&#039;&#039;&#039; Conglomerates of family states united for better economic and defensive potential. Competitive, but not to the point of self destruction and to the point where it gets in the way of productivity. Looks down on the Imperium, but trades and sometimes even works with them. Distrusts the Eldar because they are entitled bastards who are bad for business. Some are business partners with the Tau and gives them ion guns and other goodies. Loves their Votann to point of self sacrifice. Their numbers greatly outnumber the populations of the upstart tau and the dwindling Aeldari, yet their population is still far fewer than the Imperium&#039;s obviously (they are still described as having formidable and vast interstellar empires however). Loves their Galactic core due to its crazy amounts of wealth and minerals, and it being quite inhospitable to the other races but quite comfy for the Kin, as they were made from the beginning to live in it. There is no exact number of known Leagues, as the Kin see no use in keeping track of all of them (this is extremely inefficient and would mean easily missing useful trade, though, so they’re probably lying). Can often be in nomadic fleets or living in spacefaring holds. Currently trying to fix up their broken trade routes after the Great Rift appeared. The Leagues are named in honour of the Votann themselves, who are also known variously as the Primal Ancestors, the Gilded Ones, or the Stoneminds. In some Kin myths, Votann was not one being but many, and is sometimes depicted as a group of gleaming golden figures, or a wheel of graven stone faces. In other myths, the Votann fashioned the first crucibles, then raised the Kin up and sent them sailing into the dark void - before oceans of fire and flesh rose to swallow the. Some myths speak of Votann as eldest and wisest of the First Ancestors, themselves shadowy presences ill-defined and shown in many different forms - both humanoid and otherwise - where they are depicted at all. With typical pragmatism, the kin accept that their myths are too contradictory, allegorical, and suspect to be cited as possessing a definite basis of fact.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;First Ancestors:&#039;&#039;&#039; The DAOT colonists (engineers, miners, etc) who journeyed to the galactic mineral-rich core in generation ships as part of a large colonization effort from old Terra. The first ancestors are cited to be agents of change, and held responsible for the majority of the stable mutations - collectively known as cloneskeins - that run through the kin gene pool. Why did they not return to the heartlands of their race is unclear. From the fact that so many Kin fleets plunged into the galactic core within a period of only a few centuries, it might be inferred that a deliberate choice was made. It is during this period that the last references to the first ancestors can be found. Not much else is know about them besides the fact they disappeared when the Votann first appeared...&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Votann]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Super-cogitators, which contain Gestalt repositories of unimaginable inherited wisdom and knowledge, along with [[Spirit stone|Ancestor Cores]] with their self-organizing datastacks and quantum infocores. They communicate with the Kin via a tangle of arcane technology called a &amp;quot;Fane&amp;quot; and through the special class of Kin psyker priests called the Grimnyr. All members of the Leagues after they pass on are returned and recycled by the ancestor cores in somber ceremonies, both mind, and body. Even the ironkin are not immune to this fate, as while they are long-lived, they will eventually slow down to a crawl and breakdown. The minds and uploaded data are kept in the Votann, while the bodies are recycled to make new kin. They are currently breaking down and developing [[Machine Spirit|&amp;quot;personalities&amp;quot;]], with calculations that normally took hours taking decades, if not centuries to complete. However they can still be modified by the Kin (often at the Votann’s request). Curiously, they also serve another purpose of acting as mini [[Astronomican|Astronomicans]] for the Leagues, due to their vast intellect literally shining in the warp. Has been stated that the &amp;quot;Votann belong to the Kin as Kin belong to the Votann&amp;quot;. Often act more like advisors and repositories (none of them have been leaders). Due to their degradation and age, some of the Votann have even lost the ability to produce more Kin (Brokhyrs and Ironkin Guilds can produce more ironkin, but they are of lower quality than what the ancestors could create). The ancestor cores have also been stated to have been on the first generation ships.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Fane:&#039;&#039;&#039; The grimnyr interface in Arcane technological structures called Fanes. A space of timeless devices and quiet contemplation, at the heart of which lies a complex tangle of machinery that is part altar, part interface. It is said that these machines were simply nodes through which the wisdom of the Votann flashed with the speed of thought from one voidcraft to another. They still fulfill this practical purpose. Culturally though, Fanes have taken on a greater spiritual significance to the Kin, so that now they are viewed as places where one stands in full regard of the Ancestors, and where the presence of the Votann lies heavy and Sombre. Indeed, through arcane technological processes that even the Kin do not fully understand, there have been instances recorded of fanes miraculously developing artificial intellect in their own right, and joining the ranks of the Votann themselves. These occurrences of miraculous self awareness are cause for great honour and celebration amongst the Kin in whose Hold they occur. By comparison though, more than one Votann has degenerated in recent centuries until they have become little more than Fanes themselves. To witness such a decline is a terrible tragedy for the Kin.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Grimnyr:&#039;&#039;&#039; Kin psykers that wield massive amounts of power. Capable of accessing &amp;quot;empyrically archived&amp;quot; Votann wisdom. They are probably deeply tied to the Votann and represent them in their wing of the Leagues governments. &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Probably&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Definitely&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; confirmed to have very long beards.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Votannic Council:&#039;&#039;&#039; A League’s ultimate ruling body. Stubborn, and are slow to change their minds or come to decisions. Elections in the Leagues generally are extremely heated. Needed for full on wars (local conflicts excluded). The Votann are generally treated as part of the council, and they and their Grimnyr often serve as advisors. Every Kindred governs itself in a huge spherical chamber known as the Spakerönde. The ruling councils are called Hearthspake. The Hearthspake sees little of the politicking or self interested maneuvering that typifies man species political arenas. The Kin might be hard headed, but they are almost always earnest and honest in their desire to guide their kindred well.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Guild Masters:&#039;&#039;&#039; Guild Leaders who have worked their way up through the Leagues meritocracy. Note that there can be multiple guild masters on the council.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Brôkhyr Forge-Master:&#039;&#039;&#039; The absolute cream of the crop from the forges of the Leagues, they not only have proved their ability to create technological marvels,but over see their development as well. They also bring the fury of the Forge to the battlefield, delivering council to the warriors on the field as well.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Lord Grimnyr:&#039;&#039;&#039; The ultimate representative of the Grimnyr, who embodies wisdom, guidance, and insight. The Lord Grimnyr acts as the voice of the Votann itself, acting as a walking conduit for both their lore and gestalt might. This role is not purely a ceremonial or advisory role, for it is incumbent upon the Lord Grimnyr to walk the battlefield as the eyes, ears, and voice of the Votann, dispensing wisdom to friends and allies, and unleashing the wrath of the Ancestors. It is not known how they are selected for the position.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;High Kâhl:&#039;&#039;&#039; The ultimate military commanders of the kinhost militaries. To be named High Kâhl is both a tremendous honour and a awesome responsibility. To be elected a High Kâhl, the incumbent must go beyond just a tremendously capable warriors ,and a indomitable battlefield leader. They must master the cruel calculus of war itself.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kindreds:&#039;&#039;&#039; A combination between nation state and extended family, essentially the societies that make up the Leagues. Generally lives in holds (although it&#039;s population is encouraged to go travel throughout the galaxy and make their ancestors proud). They are very communal in nature, and their populations range from a couple dozen to the millions. Each one is governed by a Votannic council. Every kindred generally follows one of a handful of naming conventions. Generally, they are either named after the kindred&#039;s Votann or famed member, a geographical aspect of their home world, the kindred&#039;s primary purpose or business, or are simply numerical in their designation. Kindred of Naruun, the Iron Canyon Kindred, Orkbane Kindred, and Kindred Six are examples of each of these. In addition, every kindred shares foundational aspects which are called the Four Pillars:&lt;br /&gt;
*# Hearth: “the heart of the hold,” literally the heat and light their forges, recycle air, and let the kin thrive &lt;br /&gt;
*# Forge: Here everything the Kindred needs is built, from weapons to life-support systems&lt;br /&gt;
*# Fane: Where the Grimnyr interface with the Ancestor Cores&lt;br /&gt;
*# Crucible: Where new flesh and blood Kin are made, if not from a more natural method.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Hearthspake:&#039;&#039;&#039; In a given hold, the Hearthspake is the governing body, no matter how big or small. They are a council comprised of Guild representatives of particular commercial groups, the hold&#039;s attendant Grimnyr, as well as the leaders of the hold&#039;s Kinhost, such as the Kahl.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kinhosts:&#039;&#039;&#039; The militaries/militias of the Leagues, made after the kindreds united and combined their militaries. Soldiers are typically drawn from the civilian populous, but are not restricted to kinhosts only, as depending on their decision (after they completed their oath of service to their Kâhl), the soldier may return to civilian life after they have done their service. Objectives range from protecting colonization efforts, protecting resources extraction operations and other guild/kindred interests, and overall defense to annihilating entire worlds because they know too much. Has a slightly overall civilian look to them (but are still more deadly than Imperial forces). The forces within the kinhosts militaries (called oathbands), are extremely flexible on what they consist of. Some of these oathbands can even consist entirely of mercenaries.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Kinhost commanders/senior Officers:&#039;&#039;&#039; The military leaders of the Kinhost militaries that rank below the High Kâhl.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Guilds:&#039;&#039;&#039; The overall backbone of the Leagues. Independent commercial groups. Builds holds and everything else. Regulates and manages almost everything, and oversees fair competition (but are not necessarily overbearing). Does not like cutting corners. Very competitive and ruthless in general. Is unofficially apart of the government. Typically doesn&#039;t leave their own holds. Does not like Freelancers and outcasts (and the occasional rival guild). Every aspect of life and production is affected by the guilds. Clonskin guilds exist and work to improve upon and stabilize cloneskins. Ironkin Guilds exist as well.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Freelancers:&#039;&#039;&#039; Independent contractors, mercenaries, traders, explorers, plumbers, etc. Does the same thing as the guilds except with less political influence and resources. Not too fond of guilds&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Holds:&#039;&#039;&#039; The homes of the Leagues and its organizations and populous. Typically enclosed and fortified, holds vary in type and size. Can range from underground tunnels and narrows, to fortified bunkers and live in factories, to hive cities and ecumenopolises. Also comes in the form of space stations, asteroid colonies, and ships. Industrial and high tech in nature, yet typically very cozy with a lot of empasis on community, closeness, and interaction. Essentially hive cities except not shit and on steroids. Contains &amp;quot;Hearths&amp;quot;, which act as the hearts of the holds, providing heat, light, and recycled air, and overall let the kin thrive. Hearths also act as reactors for the Kins holds, powering up all their electrical needs.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kin in general:&#039;&#039;&#039; The general population of the Leagues. Mainly consists of ironkin, fleshkin, and clonekin (although, there could be more). Tough as nails, and artificial in nature. Comes from &amp;quot;crucibles&amp;quot; (which they prefer due to regular reproduction diluting the genetic quality of offspring. Generally enhanced by both biological and cybernetic means. Very intelligent and industrious. Loves their ancestors to death. Loves their Kin and kindreds. Loves making their master crafts. Loves living in their fortified holds (but will go out into the galaxy to serve the ancestors, their guilds, and their communities). They get to pick their own names (excluding their family names, which they get from the names the crucibles has attached to it, and its considered rude to change), and gain more throughout their life from fellow kin like &amp;quot;Orkslayer&amp;quot;. Loves their individuality and mutations (although some cloneskin templates and mutations can actually lower the lifespan of a clonkin, along with [[Star Wars|clonekins who had their production accelerated]]). Far from uncommon for them to get plenty of physical alterations. They were also made to resist and endure the warp and its corruptions, dampening their souls (note: they are masking their souls brightness, not actually dimming down their souls) for better protection. They also have high amounts of white blood cells, which allows them to greatly resist disease, imbibe higher amounts of alcohol, and heal swiftly. Some can see in infrared.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Ironkin]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The League have [[Men of Iron]] now, or at least true AIs. Appears to be comparable to a Servitor, although distinctly described as being treated as equal to the fleshy Kin. The Ironkin can mimic their living counterparts’ every behavior and demeanor, but display no sense of ambition and are hard-wired with a desire to be helpful. Their bodies are all built for a unique purpose and cannot be easily replaced should they be damaged. One such purpose are the Wayfinders, which are the supercomputer, squatty equivalent of Imperial [[navigator|navigators]], allowing the Kin to traverse the Warp without the need of psykers, and thus reduce the threat of daemonic incursions. All ironkin have a CU, or Cerebral Unit, and a mechanical body, both of which are unique to each individual ironkin. The CU&#039;s themselves are nigh indestructible (with microfield generators woven into the structure of the unit), and can send out distress beacons. Since Kin are Kin, these are high priority for recovery.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[COG|COGs]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Are essentially the lower forms of AI, automata, and algorithms the Leagues possess. Akin to tau drones (yet still more advanced). Does much of the menial jobs and such in the Leagues, along with being utilized in combat as well, and overall helps automate the Leagues of Votann. Probably still treated better than servitors (especially considering they look like ironkin).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Outcasts:&#039;&#039;&#039; Hippies, lone wolves, academic rejects, illegal experimenters, and other scourges of bureaucracy. They&#039;re either those who have had their entire faction [[Blackshield|wiped out]] or have been cast out of League society. Seeing how the philosophy and religion of the Leagues involve all Kin experience live before returning in mind and body to the Ancestor Cores, it&#039;s considered a death sentence the same way the Path of the Outcast and the Path of Damnation are to the Craftworld Aeldari.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Known Leagues===&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:VotannMap.jpg|450px|right|thumb|Leagues of Votann Astrography of the Galactic Core.]]&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Major Leagues:&#039;&#039;&#039; These are the ones represented the most in the codex, earning unique rules and wider sections of lore. i.e., they&#039;re the pre-built subfactions one can choose when mustering an army.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Greater Thurian League:&#039;&#039;&#039; One of the original founding Leagues and the poster boy League. Has a teal color scheme. Largest of the Leagues, spreading over a wide expanse of the galactic core and very influential on the other Leagues. Includes over 200 allied kindred holds, and it contains the biggest guild. Very wealthy and expansionist, they have a lot of military might and resources at their disposal and they want to expand their reach. Their members think they epitomize what it means to be Kin. Are uncompromising with their mercenary attitude. Apparently, their grim, methodical pragmatism is an inspiration to other Leagues. The Kin’s special character Ûthar the Destined hails from this League, as does the Legends character Yoht Grendok.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Kindreds:&#039;&#039;&#039; [[Deep Rock Galactic|Deep Rock Kindred]], a kindred belonging to the GTL, and participating in War Zone: Orgvayr; the Kindred of Vortun, Uthar the Destined&#039;s very own home, and therefore also part of the GTL &lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Holds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Obsyd Gate, belonging to the Kindred Vortun, and the birthplace of Uthar the Destined; Grand Hall; Hold Silver Six; Demmak&#039;s Haven; Crimson Gulf, known for its size and indomitable walls.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Urani-Surtr Regulates:&#039;&#039;&#039; A determined League constantly being invaded by groups of Orks, Tyranids, and Necrons, despite this the League is determined to fight to the last person standing. Their colors are greens and brown. Their kin live on the minimum and are currently at war with the Necron Dynasty of Samnokh. Are stoic, pragmatic, and abhor waste like most other Leagues, though they are noted for being less concerned with the cost of lives and material for battle to prevent giving up ground. Likes to keep their population counts high for their oathbands. [[Slayers of Karak Kadrin|No kin admitted to the Urani-Surtr Regulates has ever left.]]&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Trans-Hyperian Alliance:&#039;&#039;&#039; The most puritanical in their worship of the Ancestors. Sacrifice has more importance to them than the other leagues. Their colors are mostly orange and white. They enjoy collecting data and new info for their Votanns. They are a nomadic league, spread out not only across the galactic core but beyond, into far space with their 3 Votanns being stored in heavily armed ships. Their prospectors are known for venturing the width and breath of the galaxy in search of resources, and the League’s Hernkyn Pioneer riders are extremely skilled and considered genuinely exceptional by the other Leagues. This lifestyle is driven by the requirement to enrich their Votanns, which for the Trans-Hyperian Alliance is a reward in and of itself.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Kindreds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Nothka&#039;s Kindred, which is based outside of three planets that got slammed into each other, which is metal as fuck; Kindred of Liminus Crag, famous shipwrights who produce swift voidcraft and atmospheric gunships; Ukulak&#039;s Kindred, where every member has served at least a decade as an honored Hernkyn.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Holds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Sunder Stair, home of Nothka&#039;s Kindred.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Kronus Hegemony:&#039;&#039;&#039; Also known as Kôrynn’s Kindred they are the most militaristic and aggressive league (to the point of being aggressive even to other leagues). Their color scheme is yellow and black. They are a relatively new league formed less than millennium ago. [[Awesome|Ork WAAAGH!s, Tyranid swarms, and many other threats have been broken by the mighty kinhost of the Kronus hegemony]]. They are known for having a harsh reputation, due to their strictness and quotas. The formation of their league was due to their League’s Fane (computer systems) achieving self-awareness and transforming into a full blown Votann which has subsequently been demanding the Hegemony should always be gathering resources; Kindreds that join have to pay a hefty price to join and then have to pay hefty tributes through conquest. They also already pissed off the other Leagues in territorial disputes. Despite their reputation, they are still seen as a boon for the other Leagues due to their defensive capabilities.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Ymyr Conglomerate:&#039;&#039;&#039; A massive and ancient power bloc. Has a red color scheme. Few value quality craftsmanship more than the Ymyr conglomerate. They have long ventured beyond the core trading and operating all over the galaxy. They are the richest League, having the best living standards to boot. Even for the other Leagues, they appear decadent. They also have a higher amount of high-quality weaponry and equipment for their kinhosts.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Kindreds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Orkbane Kindred, known to have harnessed super intense spectra from their host star to power their forges, resulting in uber powerful weapons.&lt;br /&gt;
***&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Holds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Brokhfyre, on the world of Tamakh, and owned by the Orkbane Kindred.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Lesser Leagues:&#039;&#039;&#039; These are the ones that exist in the background lore, likely never receiving anything more than the occasional few lines of text and implications to the wider lore.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Seran-Tok Mercantile League:&#039;&#039;&#039; Has risen to prominence and profited greatly from trade with the T’au Empire. &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Probably&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; confirmed to be the Demiurg.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Grand Orion Compact:&#039;&#039;&#039; Their Votann was destroyed by Orks from WAAAGH! Morbok resulting in a grudge against the greenskins and starting a 500 year long war of extermination against the members of that WAAAGH! Known to contain the Hold of Oriakh&#039;s Irongate Kindred, which was also destroyed by the WAAAGH!&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Emberg Agnir Bloc:&#039;&#039;&#039; Destroyed by Tyranids. Their Votann absorbed their biomass to deny the Tyranids their prize as revenge, which drove the Votann mad, turning it into &amp;quot;The Mad Core&amp;quot;, which causes fluctuations in the Warp impeding travel near their former hold, which brings up a lot of fluff questions of its own. How exactly does a mechanical supercomputer &#039;&#039;assimilate&#039;&#039; an entire hold/league? Was it something like [[Forge World|Lucius]], where the Mechanicus holed themselves up underneath the surface, [[Tomb World|using teleportation to send their forces up and retrieving the shatted out mechanical bits back later]]? Or is this some weird techno-vore thing [[Grimdark|where all the dorfs jumped into an acid vat so their biomass could be used by their god?]] Either way, their Votann may have been one of the few Cores left able to react quickly, not that it&#039;ll be of much use now. Probably a callback to the original demise of the Squats.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Ghulo Industrial Complex:&#039;&#039;&#039; This League is forever adding new systems and planets to their impressive holdings, and are skilled in transforming even the most barren of worlds into productive and valuable assets. Pours almost all of their time and energy into maintaining trade routes, and keeping their convoys of heavy haulers and escort ships moving along them. This League contains several extremely large and powerful Cthonian guilds, whose influence in the Hearthspakes is such that they&#039;re virtually the defacto rulers of the Ghulo Industrial Complex as a whole. Also owns the hold of Delvegard.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Typhon-Styx Protectorate:&#039;&#039;&#039; A League that is renowned for their indomitable fortifications. Their oathbands lean towards steady and relentless strategies, advancing from one position to the next, and allowing waves of enemy counter attacks to smash themselves apart against swiftly-raised ramparts and tanks, dug in as temporary bunkers. Their holds are exceptionally [[Imperial Fists|fortified]].&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Grendl Dominance:&#039;&#039;&#039; An overly warlike League.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Jotun-Erydani Combine:&#039;&#039;&#039; A League that is renowned for their Craftmanship and forging. Is a strongly meritocratic and Brôkhyr centric society.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Kapellan League:&#039;&#039;&#039; Had their ancestors degenerate into Fanes. Spent years mourning.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Balor-Attal Conglomerate:&#039;&#039;&#039; Had their ancestors degenerate into Fanes. Spent years mourning. Is in the process of disintegrating.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Tehys Expanse:&#039;&#039;&#039; A extremely wide spread League. It&#039;s Kindreds [[ComStar|maintain contact by means of a singularity potent interstellar communications network, whose proprietary technologies they will only lease to other Leagues for a substantial fee.]]&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Sigma-Drakoni Union:&#039;&#039;&#039; [[Saim-Hann|A martially inclined League that prizes honorable combat greatly. It&#039;s Kinhosts are held to a strict code of conduct at all times, and take an unusual degree of pride in their heraldy and decorative insignia.]]&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Pan-Telluric Commonwealth:&#039;&#039;&#039; A exceptionally egalitarian society.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Kin Space===&lt;br /&gt;
As previously stated, the section of the galaxy most dominated by the Leagues of Votann is predominantly in and around the galactic core, where black holes, dense gravity worlds, and freshly-born stars are frequent. There are many aspects of Kin space that need to be listed, but due to page bloat, they&#039;ll get condensed so as to be be precise with the knowledge.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Unaffiliated Kindreds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Khald&#039;s Star Breaker Kindred; Kindred Crimson; Skalfi&#039;s Kindred; The Kindred of Narunn; Vykat&#039;s Kin; Kindred of Echodark; The Thousand Stars Kindred; Iron Canyon Kindred; Star-Delver Kindred; Kindred of Ork Slayers; Yoht&#039;s Black Pillars Kindred; The Kindred Stoic of Nightgulf; Kindred Six; Kindred Eleven-D; the Void Striker Kindred (Destroyed by Maelstrom Orgvayr); Lakhryr&#039;s Kindred (destroyed by Maelstrom Orgvayr); Karkyr Stellar Nursery; Yenna&#039;s Kindred; Kindred of Aarnok; Sylakh&#039;s Kindred, who are rivals with Kindred Six.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Holds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Broken Triplets (three hold worlds); Sunder Stair Void station hold; Tamâkh; Brôkhfyre; Crimson Gulf; Cynder Span;Delvegard; Demmâk&#039;s Haven; Grandhall; Hold Silver Six; Hyvôk&#039;s Kindred; Jâluk; Obsyd Gate; Ûrvymm&#039;s Bulwark; Vônyk&#039;s Hall of Hammers; Ymus-Solaryn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Mining Worlds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Törg, Darkstar Mines&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Known Guilds:&#039;&#039;&#039; Cthonian Mining Guilds, Yngvary Combined Logistics, Star-Rider Mercantile Confederation, Cthonian Guild of Kadokh.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Enclaves:&#039;&#039;&#039; Human enclave of New Catachan&lt;br /&gt;
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===Regions/Warp storms===&lt;br /&gt;
To most species, the galactic core is uninhabitable. Only the hardiest of species and civilizations could ever dream to live here. But should they survive, the great riches of the core will open to them.&lt;br /&gt;
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In contrast to the Imperium, the Kin do not recognize the name &amp;quot;The Great Rift&amp;quot;, believing it would lend further superstitious menace to a already menacing threat. The appearance of these warp storms has caused much havoc in the galactic core, from swallowing up entire kindreds, to aggravating local core xenos. Some refugees from these swallowed up kindreds were able to make it out thanks to pan-spectral arrays, which gave some small warning to said kindred refugees. Those who escaped told of holds falling into complete madness, and right on their heels were hordes of ravenous Chaos war fleets. These storms have made the already extraordinarily dangerous core even more deadly. Each warp storm within the galactic core is named after a translation of an archaic Terran monster. Örgvayr, meaning &amp;quot;ogre&amp;quot; in low gothic, is the largest and most notable of them, and is located on the north-eastern fringe of the Greater Thurian League&#039;s territory, consuming both the Void Striker and Lakhryr&#039;s kindreds. Other warp storms are Cölosyk, Gëirokh, Töroll, Öggh, and Cyklöp.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Xenos in/near League territory===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Orks:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Orks have long-been an enemy of the Kin, their own species-wide durability and sheer refusal to go away making them perhaps the only other species able to comfortably withstand the crushing weight of the galactic core. Being the main neighbors of the Kin, coupled with Orks being Orks and wanting a good punch up, has resulted in their species perhaps being the only thing the Kin consider to be an arch-enemy. With the Five Hundred Years war with WAAAGH! Morbok resulting in the destruction of a Votann, the stellar fleets of Bogg da [[Freebooterz|Freeboota]] King invading in the lieu of some warpstorms, and the neighboring Ork Empire of Morzag, all these things have solidified the Orks as constant pebble in the Kin&#039;s boot.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyranids:&#039;&#039;&#039; &amp;quot;The Bane&amp;quot;, as the Kin know the Tyranids as, has become somewhat of an intense threat/material opportunity for the Leagues in recent millennium. Hive Fleet Leviathan wiped out the entirety of the Emberg-Aegnir Bloc, resulting in the Mad Votann, and so earning the ire of the species. But at the same time, the Leagues hunt down hive fleet tendrils to harvest them for organic materials (likely their bio-metals and acids). Ultimately, they&#039;re treated more as a hazard than a direct enemy to fight with.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Minor Species:&#039;&#039;&#039; The typical one-off species that exist to pad out the Galactic Core to make it less empty. Nothing is known about them other than their names and that they are taking the Great Rift as an opportunity to get antsy. They include the Septeryx, the Chrobdyr Ferrophagites (rust monsters lol) and the ominous Cult of Ohn.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Other Big Players:&#039;&#039;&#039; With the Great Rift opening and swallowing a shit ton of Holds, many Kindreds and some Leagues have opted to scarper out of the Galactic Core and find new steading elsewhere. This vacuum has allowed an opening for the Imperium, the T&#039;au Empire, and the Craftworld Eldar to move in on the territory, kicking up dust as they do and transgressing on the Kin&#039;s holdings.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Noteworthy Kin===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ûthar the Destined:&#039;&#039;&#039; A great Kâhl from the Greater Thurian League that has a mysterious objective and destiny, prophesied to complete a great task. He’s a ruthless warrior armed with masterfully wrought weapons, including the legendary Blade of the Ancestors (which he got literally the day he was born on), and has a gift for assessing enemy foes.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Yôht Grendok:&#039;&#039;&#039; An eager young up-and-coming Kâhl also from the Greater Thurian league. Yôht is armed with a unique, belt-fed Autoch-pattern combi-bolter and a forgewrought plasma sword. His gear is also noted as being decorated with fine gems, and topped by an ornate rampart crest decorated with leonine imagery. His miniature was among the exclusive merchandise released to commemorate the anniversaries of Games Workshop&#039;s Warhammer Stores in 2023 and Warhammer Legends rules allowed you to use his particular loadout in open, narrative, or matched play – or you could field him as a standard Kâhl.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Kôrv Grudgekeeper:&#039;&#039;&#039; A kâhl of the Leagues of Votann&#039;s Greater Thurian League. He is known to be highly contemptuous of all the other intelligent species of the galaxy. This is largely because Grudgekeeper, as his name implies, keeps a [[Book_of_Grudges|list of grudges]].&lt;br /&gt;
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===Relationship/interactions with other factions===&lt;br /&gt;
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{{topquote|Alright listen to me, you mechadendrite molesting piece of shit. If you go any further with that rust stained trashcan lid you call a face, I&#039;m gonna recycle your arse so hard, you won&#039;t be able to get hard in front of a toaster! I&#039;m gonna shove my foot so far into your exhaust pipe, my foot is gonna have a free shoe polishing. Then I&#039;m gonna shove that red hood in your face, and call you a hobo-copper. I will disassemble you with my fucking beard. And then I will reassemble you without your human parts! Because your flesh is weak, you twat!&amp;quot;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;quot;... Sniff. That was uncalled for.| A typical Kin&#039;s greeting to a Mechanicus Skitarii}}&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Galactic relations in general:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Kin will leave most of the denizens in the galaxy alone, so long as they aren&#039;t getting in-between what the Kin want. The Leagues of Votann trade outside the core through a range of names, though these are rarely of their choosing this has caused confusion and misunderstanding over who these mercenary adventurers really are. To those who are in their way however (unwillingly or not), the Kin are a tough nut to crack. Even far from the more secure area that is the galactic core, the Kin are a armoured, fortified, bunkered down, advanced, and tactical juggernaut. More often than not, the Kin succeed in their conflicts, and even the more major players of the galaxy find them difficult. On occasion, a resistant population may be deemed too strong for any conflict to be worthwhile, but most of the time any resistance will be swept aside or ignored. The Kin have no compunctions about tearing open the crust of a world whilst the population still dwells upon it, however sometimes a evacuation can be negotiated. To those on the kins good side, they are invaluable business partners. To those on their bad side, they are a force of ruthlessness and greed. As for the more esoteric side of things, the Kin look at the Emperor, Khaine, and the Chaos Gods in the same lens: “not my horse, not my race”.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Ironhead Squat Prospectors:&#039;&#039;&#039; See each other as distant cousins who can share a pint in the pub and complain about the Aeldari.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Tyranids:&#039;&#039;&#039; In the Imperium of Man, the Tyranids hunt &#039;&#039;you&#039;&#039;, in the Leagues of Votann, the Leagues hunt &#039;&#039;Tyranids&#039;&#039;. Known to the Leagues as “The Bane” the Kin are wary of the Nids and have gain a grudging respect for their effectiveness and adaptability. Whilst the Nids still view the Kin as biomass ripe for devourment. The nids&#039; themselves also stay clear away from them as the Leagues are known to scout out and hunt down &#039;&#039;entire Tyranid hive fleets&#039;&#039; to harvest their resource bounties. Moreover, the high technological levels and large presence of automatons makes fighting the League a sunk-cost fallacy for the Tyranids such as in one example with the Northstar cluster, where the bioforms exhibited an odd nesting behavior not seen elsewhere. They have proven difficult to eradicate and have brought devastation to the Urani-Surtr Regulates. The Kin see the danger of the Tyranids they pose to their territories, following the destruction of the Emberg Agnir Bloc. It was made up of a few dozen kindred and found themselves in the path of hive fleet Leviathan. The League was wiped out. The Votann was left untouched. It absorbed the bodies of its fallen Kin to deny the Tyranids the biomass, and was driven mad, becoming the mad core, and causing fluctuations in the warp that disrupt travel. Nevertheless, such endeavors still prove too risky for the Tyranids and, given the League&#039;s habit and skillful specialty of hunting their fleets down like giant whalers; the Hive Mind has put the League on the same level as the Necrons in terms of GTFO or DIE!.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Tau:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Spess Dorfs are the China to the Tau&#039;s Japan. The Tau view the Leagues as grand benefactors and business partners of the Greater Good and the Tau Empire - although they could certainly improve their viewpoints and dedication to the cause. They are also really happy with their new technology they received from the Leagues, with their ion technology being extremely popular among the Tau&#039;s forces. The Leagues see the Tau as a very naïve, young and gullible people, although they appreciate some aspects of the greater good as it shares similarities with their own philosophy, values, ethics and principles but in contrast to the intense collectivism of the Tau the Leagues insist on putting the Kin first. The Tau are more than happy to pay the Leagues, though the Kin rarely share their more advanced tech and resources. As an example, the Kin&#039;s ion tech is superior and far more compact than the Tau&#039;s. Thanks to the extreme naivety of the Tau, the Tau actually think the few ships they see from the Leagues are all that is left of the Kin, following a invasion from the Tyranids. And are often led into disadvantageous trade deals that benefit the kin more than the Tau. These rumors have been rebuffed by the Kin, much to the confusion of the Tau. The Kin see no value in enlightening them in this regard so long as they can continue to profit from trade with the naïve civilization. The Kin have also established [[Demiurg|prospecting companies]] within the tau empire itself. With the advances of the empire in the Chalnath expanse, there have been some minor clashes with the various factions of the Kin, which may have somewhat soured some local relations. Kind of. Nothing that money can&#039;t fix, though. Gold settles Grudges as easy as blood, even in space.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;The Imperium of Man:&#039;&#039;&#039; View the Leagues as useful and good enough for trade, yet they think they are sketchy devianted abhumans who stray too far from the holy human form and are probably heretics, though they don&#039;t seem as quick or eager to put these ones down nor whip out any Exterminatus moves on them. On the world of Necromunda at least, they are looked down upon as Squats despite all they&#039;ve done for the world. Likewise, the Leagues view the Imperium as a bunch of disappointing dumbfuck competitors - although they&#039;re still good enough for trade. Will surprisingly be honest about their usage of AI if pressed on it enough to come out and admit it (which of course it naturally pisses the Imperium off especially among the priesthood of the Mechanicus). Despite their independence, the kin actually have quite a bit of influence within the Imperium itself, and on some Imperial worlds like Necromunda, the Kin have been there since their Imperial records started. They have set up various [[Prospect|prospecting companies]] across the Imperium, one of these being the Ironheads who were notably invited to Necromunda around M31 in a deal where the squats would receive priviliged mining rights in exchange for their service in repairing the wartorn world. Rogue traders are also more than happy to deal with the Leagues, though their extravagant lifestyles are considered wasteful by the kin, and deals are made with governors of Imperial worlds and systems, for a suitable fee. The more zealous of the Imperium deem the Kin as entirely sovereign independent state of abhumans, if not Xenos. Despite this, kin and human coexistance is not all too rare, and kin even have atleast one human enclave in their borders. Overall, the Kin treat them as misguided cousins barely above other species but still family.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Aeldari:&#039;&#039;&#039; [[Elf|Guess]]. They like to keep their meetings brief few and far between as the knife-ears aura of xenophobia, arrogance, pretentiousness and entitlement pisses the Kin off to no end, a humorous opinion given how the Kin can be just as greedily entitled towards “their resources” as any Eldar (See the ultimatum at page top).&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Drukhari:&#039;&#039;&#039; [[Dwarf Fortress|Guess again]]. Unlike the Tau who were dumb enough to trust the S&amp;amp;M gimp suit wearing weirdass sick fuckheads at one point, the Kin are smart enough to not have wanted anything to do with the perverted pasty sweat goblins.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Harlequin:&#039;&#039;&#039; Weird creepy murderous chaotic clowns that are to be avoided if they can.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Aeldari Exodites:&#039;&#039;&#039; [[Avatar|Guess thrice]]. Although, the Kin actually do respect them for their more practical nature. Still more than happy to invade for resources though.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Necrons:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Necrons consider the Kin to be another upstart race, though with a level of trepidation. Not only are they considered remarkably dangerous foes to fight, but the Kin also delve deep into their worlds, breaking into tomb complexes, and plundering the rich harvest within. To the Kin, the metallic aliens are easy pickings while they sleep, and vicious foes when roused. Typically shoot on sight levels of diplomacy. They&#039;re already war with the Urani-Surtr Regulates for control over one of its main worlds. The involved Necrons is the Samnokh dynasty.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Orks:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Orks are the Leagues most hated Foe, as not only are they pervasive, but they are also endlessly wasteful, fighting, destructive, mindlessly violent and ravaging what the Kin have built, and The Leagues have been as successful as every other civilization in eradicating the Orks. The Orks are not stopped by the dangers of the core regions, and Ork pirate raids are a particular concern, with Orks like Bogg Da Freeboota king and his numerous fleets pestering the Leagues. The Orks tendency to use whatever scrap they can get has led to the creation of the saying &amp;quot;a prize for a Ork&amp;quot;, used to describe things or ideas that are worthless to the Kin. The 500 years&#039; war was fought against WAAAGH Morbok after they overran the Grand Orion Compact&#039;s Hold of oriax iron gate kindred. The Votann in the hold was torn to pieces, the most widespread grudge in the history of the Kin was called, and the Compact spent the next five centuries hunting down every single Ork from WAAAGH Morbok.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Beastmen:&#039;&#039;&#039; Despite their Abhuman heritage, the Kin despise the Beastmen. The Kin see them in a similar vein as the orks, destroyers and defilers of their technologies.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Chaos:&#039;&#039;&#039; They find the Leagues to be a major pain in the ass as they actually have at least some ideas on how to deal with chaos unlike their Imperial counterparts. They dimmed their souls, use soulless A.I. to pilot through the warp, have top notch security, and live high quality and comfortable lives in their holds. They see little to even no chaos corruption in the Leagues and will probably see more losses than wins with them. The Kin of course are absolutely disgusted by them, and have little time for their gruesome and foolish activities. At one point, the Demiurg had an automated mining facility that was infiltrated by the alpha legion causing massive losses in revenue. Outside that isolated event chaos warbands will usually try to exterminate the kin in order to steal their resources and technology.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;The Adeptus Mechanicus:&#039;&#039;&#039; A series of mental breakdowns and cybernetic overloads occurs when Mechanicus members encounter the Leagues. Whether it&#039;s due to them seeing Heresy in the Leagues, or due to the many shinies the Leagues have, it doesn&#039;t matter. They will see the Leagues as major competition regardless of the reason and move to claim the shinies for themselves. To the Leagues, the Adeptus Mechanicus are rats scurrying around a scrap heap. Superstitious tech cultists living on the successes of their ancient betters whose ignorance makes them dangerous. The Kin avoid them whenever possible and are swift to eradicate them when needed, but only if deemed absolutely necessary. Considering incidents such as that with the ai of the spirit of eternity, this is a viewpoint that has quite a bit of validity to it (with very few known exceptions).&lt;br /&gt;
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===Speculation/Theories===&lt;br /&gt;
The LoV being as new as they are, there&#039;s a lot going on about them that we don&#039;t know about. Particularly, how can certain aspects of the setting be connected to them to better help them conform to the whacky-tobaccy universe that is 40k. Until we get lore confirmations, various speculations and conspiracies will be listed here.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Votann out in the Wild:&#039;&#039;&#039; As the biggest part of the Leagues and their lore, the Votann naturally draw a lot of attention to themselves, especially since some parts of the lore can now be comfortably assumed to be a Votann.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Van Saar STC:&#039;&#039;&#039; A bit of speculation around the Votann is if anything else in the setting will be retconned into/explained as being one. The most obvious candidate is the [[House Van Saar]] STC, described as being &amp;quot;large building&amp;quot; sized and &amp;quot;damaged&amp;quot; in that it&#039;s spewing out radiation, similar to the disrepair some Votann are said to be in albeit more extreme, and if it was a Votann it would explain why Squats are on Necromunda.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;The Votann are fueled by alcohol:&#039;&#039;&#039; Naturally, being dorfs, the dorfs need to fill the dorf computers with dorf juice in order for them to give dorf advice. How else are they supposed to run? Fission batteries and solar energy? That&#039;s [[elf|leaf-lover]] hippy dippy shit.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Basis of the Cult Mechanicus:&#039;&#039;&#039; Considering how old the religion of the Adeptus Mechanicus is, as well as the age of the Votann themselves, its not too far of a stretch to assume that the concept of the Machine God could have sprouted from a Votann built and buried on Mars.&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;Volkanite weapons are reverse engineered:&#039;&#039;&#039; Volkite weapons were created in the age of strife presumably to fight the Men of Iron during the Iron War and were basically that age’s analogue of an AK-47. The Kin’s lore says their original human ancestors set out to the core on sub-light generation ships, which implies they come from the Age of Terra. Which means it should be impossible for them to have volkite weapons. Perhaps they traded with their primitive human kin for them as many [[Feral_World|civilizations post age of strife wouldn&#039;t know the value of said weapons]] or maybe their [[Friends|relationship with the Imperium]] became positive enough for them to be granted manufacturing rights for this advanced machinery to churn them out faster than the snails pace of the [[Mechanicus|cogboys]]. All we know is that they have volkite and those guns are [[awesome]].&lt;br /&gt;
***It could just simply be that they had Volkanite Stc&#039;s from the dark age. Sure some consider this a [[Skub|boring explanation for most human tech in 40k]] but it is the most common. And we don&#039;t see much info on Volkite weapons only being made to combat the men iron. Plus, considering they&#039;re supposed to be space dwarfs, some don&#039;t think gw would undermine them in their technological edge just so they&#039;re stated to be copying from the more backwards and less advanced technobarbarians or the Imperium of Umgi.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Influences/Mythology/Aesthetic/Complaints===&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The greater rage:&#039;&#039;&#039; The 2001 release of the [[Tau]] was spurred with anger, confusion, and revulsion. Even to this day in the year 2022, you&#039;ll still see swathes of the community that seethe at the mere mention of the Tau, deeming them as &amp;quot;weaboo space communists who aren&#039;t grimdark enough&amp;quot;, or simply &amp;quot;another vile xeno who is irrelevant&amp;quot;. And like its predecessor, the LoV is reaching similar levels of division and anger. But much like the decade that it was revealed in, the Leagues bring in a new scale of chaotic and unprecedented changes. This section is to help boil this down, and address complaints and confusion.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Twentieth century futurism:&#039;&#039;&#039; There have been quite a few who have claimed that the LoV is &amp;quot;generic sci-fi&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;inconsistent in its design&amp;quot;. To be quite frank, this is a bunch of nonsense hullabaloo. Anyone who has enjoyed enough fictional settings like that of [[Fallout|Fallout]] is going to tell you that the Leagues is full of [[Isaac Asimov|mid-centrury futurism]] and [[Arthur C. Clarke|classical sci-fi]], with the atv looking like a 1960s moon buggy, and the Hernkyn chopper looking like a mid-century 60s bike ([https://youtu.be/ySxEFuUrdio|for god&#039;s sake, look at its trailer]). While you will find some of dieselpunk in the LoV and its not entirely just mid-century aesthetics, [[atompunk|atompunk]] has asserted its dominance here, Giving them a more civilian look. This also includes the look of the Ironkin (and to a certain extent [[UR-025]] and the [[Kastelan Class Battle-Automata]] which look like mid-century robots). Fact is, the LoV is a love letter to classic sci fi. But that&#039;s not all.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Western/wacky sci-fi:&#039;&#039;&#039; If you haven&#039;t noticed from the bolter revolvers, the abundance of words like &amp;quot;Pioneer&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;frontier&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;rugged&amp;quot;, and &amp;quot;hardy&amp;quot;, along with the fact that the first revealed ironkin looks a lot like a western blacksmith, the amount of &amp;quot;simple&amp;quot; practical tools the Kin often carry, the Leagues have a lot of western influences. They also seem to still retain an air of comedic relief from their previous Squat forms. Expect future [[Firefly|Firefly]] references, and a Votann answering with [[Approved Literature|&amp;quot;42&amp;quot;]].&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Mass produced goodness:&#039;&#039;&#039; Unlike their many Dwarven counterparts, the Leagues are by no means the top technological powerhouse of the galaxy (the Necron and the Aeldari have them beat, along with most of the other species from around the time of the old ones). To be quite honest, they are more about industry as a theme rather than being the most industrious. However, one could say they are still the top non-prehistoric industrial in the galaxy. They could also be said to be the top powerhouse in the galaxy that is both operating at its full capability (Necron sleepiness), and still actively lives and colonizes the galaxy (Eldar and their hidey holes). And in comparison, to their &amp;quot;competitors&amp;quot;, they are probably the most easily accessible due to them generally not wanting to instantly butcher you the second they even glance at you, or just tell you to get lost. As for the lower powers? The Imperium, while it&#039;s very industrial, is also incredibly inefficient and often...dumb with its capabilities in general (Agri-worlds, under use of auto loaders, crappy servitors). And the Tau, while smarter than the Imperium with their industrial capabilities, has far less potential with what they have.&lt;br /&gt;
**Moving on from their position in the galaxy, why the industrial aesthetic? Well, first off, they&#039;re dwarves. Second off, as mentioned above, the other industrial factions are either too insufficient to carry out certain ideas and concepts or are too hidey. The Leagues are in the perfect position to introduce potential new concepts to the universe, like not crap hive cities, dyson spheres that don&#039;t belong to the Necron, megastructures, and potentially much more. it&#039;s a nice change of pace to see an actually efficient industrial that isn&#039;t controlled by ancient aliens.&lt;br /&gt;
**Thirdly, you need a little grime and practicality to that atompunk, and efficient industry is the perfect way to do it. Doesn&#039;t mean you can&#039;t have your cleanliness (and I&#039;m pretty sure they&#039;d prefer to not have pollution in their holds), just adds a tad bit of realistic imagery to it.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cleanliness, kin, and old world blues:&#039;&#039;&#039; Besides the reasons above, there is a reason the Leagues look so clean, organized, and sleek. This comes from the more grimdark and evil side of the Leagues (which is a little weird and unique). As previously stated before, the Leagues are a meritocracy overseen by guilds, wise long-bearded psykers, military commanders, and the mighty moai heads themselves. Said guilds are very competitive and will not hesitate to strip to the bone entire planets with civilizations and ecosystems just to stay ahead.&lt;br /&gt;
**So are they capitalist? Maybe. But while they&#039;ve shown how they can easily have conflicts with themselves, one of their mottos is &amp;quot;Kin are kin&amp;quot;. They also seem to be very egalitarian within their societies. On top of this, we&#039;ve had previous examples of society reaching post scarcity levels of comfort, including even some Imperial worlds, and the friggin lower tech tau. They also seem to put high importance on community and fellow kin. Even the guilds wouldn&#039;t be caught dead cutting corners and making shoddy products (they regulate much of League society).&lt;br /&gt;
**So socialists? Maybe. But really, the answer may be in-between (somewhat). Would certainly suggest looking up the guilds of post classical, classical, and pre-classical history to get a better perspective.&lt;br /&gt;
**Perhaps mercantilism? A pre capitalist economic system would be closer to their ideal they defend their economic interest via specialized guild like organizations and strive to keep their exports above imports while using military force to guard their trade secrets and business partners. &lt;br /&gt;
**But we do know that they generally have a comfortable life and are very egalitarian. The guilds are competitive, meritocratic, regulate much of League society, and still come to blow with each other. What we can tell is that Leagues inner society is generally at least decent for its citizens. As for those who are outside of League society...&lt;br /&gt;
**Expect to see a lot of neocolonialism, colonialism, client states, banana Republics, puppet states, potentially narco states, banana wars, and the 1893 overthrowing of the kingdom of Hawaii except 10x worse (and with more planetary genocide). As with their holds: dirty on the outside, clean on the inside.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The mythological and the fantastical:&#039;&#039;&#039; This one is a total mashup. You got Celtic, Greek, Nordic, and other mythologies mashed in. The Leagues are named after Greek titans, and Nordic gods. The Votann are based off [[Odin]]. The Kin are Geri and Freki, odins greedy wolves. The leadership is based off odins ideal leadership (with the grimnyr being based off one of his disguise names).&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Too Human similarities:&#039;&#039;&#039; Way back in 2008 the now defunct game company Silicon Knights released a game called “Too Human” for the Xbox 360 after over a decade of it being stuck in development hell. The game was based on reimagining Norse mythology through a cyberpunk lens. While the game flopped miserably (so miserably in fact that Silicon Knights tried to sue the engine devs for sabotage, only for that lawsuit to backfire so hard that Too Human had to be deleted from existence) due to its clunky control system, some of its design elements seem suspiciously similar to the Leagues of Votann aesthetic including: exoskeleton-equipped berserkers, combat transports that resemble the Hekaton Land fortress, the whole mega corporation of the Aesir, and the fact that Odin was reimagined in the game as an AI called the “Organic Distributed Information Network” which bears a striking similarity to the idea of the Votann. Maybe someone in GW played the game and used it as inspiration for the Leagues? It wouldn’t be too surprising.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Deep Rock Galactic]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Similar to the above, the game &amp;quot;Deep Rock Galactic&amp;quot; may have spurred on GW&#039;s decision to reinvent the squats in some areas. Notably, the game is based on a company of the same name, which uses actual dwarves as their mercenary-miners to plunder a planet of all its wealth while fighting bugs. Themselves a corporatist, mercantile faction that prefers wealth over civility. Now, this game was released in alpha in early 2018, so it could be a little bit of a stretch to say if it&#039;s fully influenced much on the LoV, considering the lengthy design process GW has. It hasn&#039;t stopped WarCom from throwing in some tongue-in-cheek, potential references to the game, though. Plus, with all the &amp;quot;Rock and Stone&amp;quot;s and &amp;quot;For Kahl!&amp;quot;s that players will throw out, it probably won&#039;t matter anyway. Though the codex does mention an offshoot of the Greater Thurman League known as the Deep Rock Kindred.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Lost Planet:&#039;&#039;&#039; Replace the games space bugs with nids and you have the squats origin that being human prospectors facing alien monsters and inhospitable planets for a mining company.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Starcraft:&#039;&#039;&#039; Seriously their Hearthkyn armor looks like a mini ripoff version of Terran Marine armor. The Einhyr Exo-Suits make that comparison even more blatant.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Transformers:&#039;&#039;&#039; their faction symbol looks like the Autobot logo and they worship giant godlike AIs that would probably get along quite well with Primus…less so with Unicron, despite doing his shtick themselves frequently.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Dwarf]] technology &amp;amp; craftmanship:&#039;&#039;&#039; the Leagues represent a 40k take on the standard fantasy dwarf archetype which more often than not includes them having technology or at least craftmanship superior to all other factions save for “elder/precursor races“ if they are present, so it is no surprise that only the [[Eldar]] and [[Necrons]] beat them with the [[Tau]] being close contenders. Speaking more specifically of [[Warhammer Fantasy|the sister game]] the Dwarfs were the source of the better magic of the [[High Elves (Warhammer Fantasy)|Elves]] and the technology of [[The Empire|The Empire]], have a culture revolving around settling all slights [[Slayers|with blood or gold]], have such reliable magic that they can make doors/walls that even the strongest Daemons can&#039;t pass and Tzeentch himself cannot see through and can [[Arianka|can imprison a Chaos God in a box]], literally use the word human (&amp;quot;Umgi&amp;quot;) as a description for inferior quality, and [[Chaos Dwarfs|even Chaos has to go to them for the good gear]]. In regards to weapons, just ask Warhammer Fantasy players with big expensive models how they feel about Dwarf &amp;lt;strike&amp;gt;sniper missiles&amp;lt;/strike&amp;gt; Cannons.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Forces of the Kin===&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Kâhl]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Taking the place of [[Squat Warlord]]s as leaders in their species’ military roster, they’re experienced battle hardened Generals who proudly wield the Leagues advanced weaponry, and are the final authority over an individual Oathband in the Kinhost militaries, they’re subordinate only to their Kindred’s ruling Votannic Council. Their most important role is to cast the Eye of the Ancestors over their foes — marking out priority targets and ensuring the most dangerous enemies are the first to feel the wrath of the Kin. Equipment wise they carry nifty ornate armor and weapons like the Kin equivalent to storm bolter, plasma axes, and Volkite equipped power fists. FOR KARL!!&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Squat Thunderers|Brôkhyr]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The [[Guildmaster|engineers]] and lead craftsman of the Leagues, named after the dwarf of Norse mythology, Brokkr, who built Mjolnir. They just blow tech priests out of the water on every level, as not only do their (creatively named) A.N-vyl Terminals (just picture a 3D printer but for guns) have MANY full STCs inside that make all their guns all that and a bag of chips in comparison to those of the Imperium, but they&#039;re also not limited by dogma and orthodoxy when it comes to technological advancements, meaning they actively upgrade their shit. That being said while their specialty lies in engineering these folks are also more than willing to throw down with the best of them. When the Oathbands head to battle, the Brôkhyr will strap on powerful exo-frames to become the mighty Thunderkyn. Although not quite as scratch-resistant as the Einhyr Hearthguard’s exo-armour, since the powerful suits they wear were initially adapted from rugged engineering rigs, they can still take a hell of a pummeling and allow the Brôkhyr Thunderkyn to heft the heaviest man-portable weapons the Leagues can muster with ease. Hordes of their enemies fall before salvos unleashed from bolt cannons, while heavy infantry find themselves pierced by the unstoppable lances of SP conversion beamers, prospects that have made more than one enemy think twice before attacking them.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Brôkhyr Iron-Master]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The Brôkhyr are the Leagues’ highly skilled techno-artificers, and the Iron-masters are the cream of their crop. They head into battle with a dutiful Ironkin assistant and a knack for repairing even the most beaten-up vehicles. Helping them are a gaggle of E-COGs – hardy combat and repair drones, lacking the intellect of a true Ironkin.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Living Ancestor|Grimnyr]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; The predominant psykers of the Leagues, dressed like [[weeb|fucking wizards]] in an army full of voidsuits and armor. Wearing robes over their Power Armor to the point that [[Dark Angels]] themselves looks like normies. The Kin now name their dwarf wizards after the false identity Odin took while on a bet from Frigg, from Norse Mythology (or ripping off the WHFB dwarf god [[Grimnir]]). Are essentially the Votanns eyes, ears, limbs, mouth, etc. They are able to access directly the data stores of the Votann using psychic powers, and communicates its will and guidance to their Kindreds and Leagues. They are the closet you will see to a priest in the largely secular Leagues. They also use barrier tech to help them harness the raw power of the immaterium in battle – such as summoning two mechanical CORVs that often hover alongside them as familiars (very similar to the ability of the gene stealer cults to summon familiars). Essentially mystical wise old sages.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Embyr:&#039;&#039;&#039; Mentioned in the codex as a sworn order of warriors who protect the gene-wombs of a hold&#039;s Crucible. In essence, they guard the Cloneskeins, and therefore, the next generation of kin. They&#039;re also marked as being another example of kin who are integrated with barrier tech, like the grimnyr, and are therefore psykers. We don&#039;t know to what extent, however.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Squat Berserkers|Cthonian Berserks]]:&#039;&#039;&#039;Hailing from the Cthonian mining guilds which are noted for venturing to environments even other Kin fear to tread, these furious and heavily augmented murder machines are a sci-fi reimagining of [[Slayer]]s from WHFB. These frontline fighters originally began as Kin who enhanced the physical capabilities of their cloneskeins with cybernetic upgrades and cyberstimms, all the better to extract precious minerals from rad-plagued nebulae, explosive asteroids, and fathomless ocean depths. Now tasked with dealing with their people’s enemies they charge into battle with modified advanced mining gear like heavy plasma axes, concussion mauls, and power fists all while wearing little or no armor besides that which their cyborg augmentations provides. They also have mole mortars/ grenade launchers (for mining purposes of course). The most augmented and hardiest of the Cthonians are known as &amp;quot;luggers&amp;quot;, who compete with each other to see who the most cybernetically jacked are. Think Wilhem from Borderlands, and you have an idea.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hearthkyn Warrior|Hearthkyn Warriors]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Because replacing i&#039;s with y&#039;s is so sci-fi and trademark friendly. The [[Squat Trooper|Hearthkyn]] are essentially identical in terms of origin as the [[Guardian|Guardian Defenders]] of the eldar, in that they are the core infantry force of the Leagues&#039; military that were conscripted from their civilian populations. However, rather than being a militia roused during times of conflict, the Hearthkyn are instead closer to real-world militaries, in that the soldiery serve for an extended period of time before going home to their civilian professions. Serving in the Hearthkyn, anyone can enlist: male, female, flesh or metal, as Kin are Kin, after all. The units themselves are equipped with all manner of hullabaloo Squat guns depending on their specialization, on the lighter end there are the Autoch-pattern bolters used for assault and laying down covering/saturation fire, there are also bolt shotguns, and bolt revolvers. On the heavier side there are volkanite disintegrators, ion blasters (whose technology the Kin apparently gave to the Tau much to the Imperium’s ire) and HYLas auto-rifles all of which are used to sunder the defences of heavily-armoured opponents. Finally there’s also specialized heavy weapons such as L7 missile launchers, EtaCarn plasma beamers, Graviton blast cannons, and magna-rail rifles. All these ranged weapons are supported by smart tech integrated into Kin battlegear. The haptic utility nerve transmission recalibrator modules – HunTR for short – interface with their neural augmetics to establish a feedback loop between firearms and their users. This system projects minute gravitational pulses to maintain a stable firing platform even while running at full pelt – or zooming along on a flying trike. For close combat they got plasma blades, plasma axes, and concussion weapons like gauntlets, hammers, and mauls that amplifies the kinetic energy behind a Kin’s strike enough to launch an Ork boy into the air. As for protection they wear their own brand of power armor called Void armour comprised of hardened jointed segments which are hooked into a void suit beneath. The suit is fashioned from magnaferrite weave, and often reinforced with adamantine and enhanced with microfield generators for a level of protection that any Imperial Guardsman would give their left gonad to have!&lt;br /&gt;
**&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Theyn]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Sci-fi spelling for the old Anglo-Saxon Thegns/Thanes (Fantasy Dwarfs had Thanes as heroes, so another connection there). They are experienced warriors that serve as [[Squat Thunderers|squad leaders]] in Hearthkyn and Einhyr Warrior squads of 10 to 20 warriors and are able to arm themselves with a variety of hand-to-hand combat weapons, including brutal concussion gauntlets, plasma blades, and vicious plasma axes in addition to high quality ranged weapons. Theyns communicate with their squad with the aid of cybernetic implants – relaying strategic instructions from the commanders of the Oathband to their units, and can be differentiated from the other kin by the fancy animal headed crest mounted on the back of their armor which can grant them special abilities like acting as a teleporter.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hearthkyn Salvager]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Masters at the art of recovering prized artifacts and locating precious resources in the depths of hulks and wrecks. They are scouts and explorers foremost, trained to identify items of value, extract as much as possible, and survive – all before clocking out. Each salvager is a hardened warrior, well-acquainted with the dangers of space hulk exploration, and the team also carries a wide assortment of survey equipment to help identify cost-efficient targets. Salvagers often wear heavy armour with in-built &amp;quot;gellar ramparts&amp;quot; and are tethered to their ship by warp-shielded cables, which allows them to scavenge space hulks in the warp. A regular operation in which the Kin loot space hulks is called a Hulk-skim, which involves lasers cutting away large parts of a hulk.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Einhyr Hearthguard|Hearthguard]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Named after the Einherjar of Valhalla, they are the newly-christened [[Hearthguard]] Terminators of old, being the honored warriors selected from a Kinhold&#039;s most accomplished fighters, clad in [[Exo-Armour]]. They&#039;re armed with a shoulder mounted grenade launcher, a hand-held Volkanite Disintegrator, and either a power first with a retractable plasma blade or a Thunder Hammer. Like regular Hearthkyn Void armor the Exo-armor also has the HunTR system of micro gravity field generators built in to help keep their aim steady allowing them to fire on the move.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Einhyr Champion]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Those who climb the ranks of the Einhyr that eventually became Champions. These warriors are clad in modified exo-armour fitted with mass-drivers for jump purposes and armed with vicious close combat weapons. They function as living battering rams, pulverising anything that gets in their way.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Hekaton Land Fortress]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; A 300 point HECKA CHUNKY Heavy support tank that can also serve as a defensive emplacement and troop transport. This vehicle packs overwhelming firepower onto a rugged frame. Transport numbers vary depending on the nature of the troops inside. For instance it can lug around a hefty 12 models of Hearthkyn or Cthonian Berserks on the higher end, but only 6 of the more heavily armored Einhyr, and just 4 troops with the Exo-frame keyword like the Brôkhyr Thunderkyn. Still it can go toe-to-toe with some of the biggest and best battle tanks in the 41st Millennium thanks to its durable void armour. Weapons wise it can be equipped with a variety of hefty weapons for its main gun– from a cyclic ion cannon, to the very nasty heavy magna-rail cannon, or the devastating SP heavy conversion beamer. If needed a missile launcher with 3 different possible classes of devastating warheads (one kind for vehicles, one for bunker busting, and the last for dealing for infantry) can be added in exchange for removing the craft’s default pan-spectral scanner, though it will lose the ability to ignore light cover when firing. And if all that wasn’t enough it also has a rear mounted MATR autocannon, plus 4 bolt cannon ball turrets around the hull for dealing with swarms of smaller foes that can be swapped out for ion beamers if the user desires. As a side note the Hekatons are also mentioned to sometimes draw carriages in the codex.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Magna-Coil Bike|Hernkyn Pioneer]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; THE [[Squat Trike|TRIKES]] RETURN! [[Skub|AS HOVERTRIKES!]] And with a [[-4 Str|female]] driver. It looks like a spider-tank tachikoma from Ghost in the Shell fucked a [[Squat Bike|Harley]] and their baby came out a hoverbike. Hernkyn Pioneers are 35 point vehicles ridden by independently minded Kin who serve as scouts and outriders for the Kinhosts. They exchange the heavier armor of the Hyrthkin for lighter void suits backed up by armored trench coats, an old style pilot’s cap, and when necessary a gas or oxygen mask. Before you make the mistake of thinking they’re outlaw bikers though it should be noted that they are not seen like that at all amongst their own people. Rather in eyes of the Kin the Pioneers willingness to go off alone is considered courageous and selfless as they are putting their own lives at risk for the sake of their families, in effect making them the equivalent of the WFB Dwarf rangers. Anyway, to ensure they can keep riding for as long as possible the Pioneers make sure to carry any all equipment they might conceivably need with them at all times, from bedrolls to digging tools strapped to their rides. To aid them in scouting their trikes come equipped with multiwave comms arrays and pan-spectral scanners which are all quite useful for picking up strategically important data. Weapons-wise the riders can be armed with a bolt pistol, or a bolt shotgun, plus concussion grenades and a plasma blade for backup, while the Trike itself was equipped with a magna-coil autocannon mounted on the front. In addition if the rider is willing to take along a passenger then it’s possible to mount a heavy weapon on the back of the vehicle in the form of a rotary Hy-Las (high yield laser) cannon or an ion beamer. These weapons are linked to the driver and passenger’s implants via the HunTR system so they can fire on the move.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Sagitaur ATV]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; A 130 point six wheeled infantry fighting vehicle, that takes its name from the centaur shaped constellation Sagittarius, the Sagitaur is used for surveying inhospitable alien terrain. The Sagitaur is a rapid-response ATV suited to scouting operations and lightning-fast armoured offensives alongside Hernkyn Pioneers. Its armoured carapace is durable enough to shrug off everything from rockslides to plasma blasts. Sagitaurs usually operate in pairs and are remarkably heavily-armed for their size, with a nose-mounted twin bolt cannon complemented by a swivelling turret weapon, such as a HYLas beam cannon, L7 missile launcher, or MATR autocannon. Once they’re right up in the enemy’s lines they will disgorge their troops in the form of 5 troops from a 10 man squad of infantry with the other half being carried by a second vehicles. These can then go on to seize vital objectives. It should be noted though that the troops the Sagitaur Carrie’s cannot have the Exo-frame keyword so using them for things like Thunderkyn is a no-go unlike with the Hekaton.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Colossus-class war engines:&#039;&#039;&#039; were briefly mentioned in a Warcom article where it’s stated the Ymyr Conglomerate Holds can wield more of them then any other league due to the Holds large number of skilled Craftsman and Engineers. Sadly we don’t have a stat line, nor do we have an image to confirm if these are indeed the same thing as the old Squat [[Colossus War Machine]].&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Ironhead Squat Prospectors]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; An offshoot of the Kin that set up shop on [[Necromunda]] right after the Horus Heresy, and are busy doing dwarrowesque things, while also dealing with the locals that sometimes try to loot their stuff. While they&#039;re only distantly related to the Leagues with no direct affiliation, they&#039;re said to get along. There is a small but not high chance they&#039;ll be options on the table top as well since Kill team has a precedent for a small unit from one box being an option like the sister novitiate, at the very least make a good proxy/conversion.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Cargo-8 Ridgehauler]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; the Squat land trains return! Well they have on Necromunda at least. These huge transport trucks with multiple trailers and strapped on weaponry are used by Squat prospectors and regular human folk to cross the ash wasteland and protect valuable shipments. They aren’t quite up to the standard of the old land trains but at least it’s something.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Chronos Pattern Ironcrawler]]: &#039;&#039;&#039;a gigantic tracked APC/pickup truck hybrid that’s favored by both the Ironhead Squats and the local Necromundans. The vehicle is even more heavily armored than the Ridgehauler and the cab is sealed to protect against radiation and ash storms. It comes standard with a cargo winch, two pintle mounted turrets, and numerous firing ports in the transport cage behind the cab so any extra troops it’s ferrying can fire on any nearby enemies.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Demiurg]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; Outright stated in the League of Votann Codex to be Kin [[Prospect|Prospect fleets]] that have been misidentified by Imperial and Tau observers alike to be a separate race. It’s also a common mistake for Imperial xenologists as said Prospect Fleets have also been misidentified as Grome, Gnostari, or Kreg species. Heck, even the Eldar have known them as the Heliosi Ancients instead of their proper name. WarCom confirmed that the Tau received their ion weapon technology from the Kin, whereas in Battlefleet Gothic they claim that it was from the Demiurg, &#039;&#039;another&#039;&#039; race of dwarf space-miners. Logically, the term &amp;quot;Demiurg&amp;quot; is just be what the Tau call the Kin, with the Demiurg may be another offshoot culture of the wider kin race like prospectors above. After all, their clones-kin’s capability in stressing divergent phenotypes means visibly different strains could possible (like different breeds of dogs or cats) the demiurg simply bring this physical divergence to [[Heresy|extreme]] levels. One example is the Seran-Tok Mercantile Leagues that decided to throw in their lot with the upstart T&#039;au Empire rather than being in the bottom of the Imperium&#039;s to-do list.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Prospector Fleet|Space Craft]]:&#039;&#039;&#039; While a full list of space assets hasn’t dropped yet, the retcon regarding the nature of the Demiurg means we have some idea of what kind of vessels the Kin have. In addition to smaller autonomous mining craft that can be reconfigured as [[Automated Fighting Drone|fighters]], [[Automated Bombing Drone|bombers]], and [[Automated Barge Drone|assault boats]] the Leagues also wield two classes of rather impressive warp-capable ships that many fans have noted look like giant flying hammers. The first class is the [[Bastion-class Commerce Vessel]]s which seems to be an enormous asteroid mining vessel that can also act as a cruiser, though its firepower is enough to let it hold its ground against an Imperial battleship. They are typically manned by a single large clan/brotherhood and their robot navigators. Less common are the larger [[Stronghold-class Commerce Vessel]]s which are typically manned by two or even three clans/brotherhoods and the previously mentioned robot navigators. These massive crafts both serve as stately battleships and factory/processor ships for the Kin mercantile clans. The mining lasers on both craft while short-ranged are noted to be incredibly powerful, something which is to be expected given they were originally used to cut through asteroids. They derive their power through the use of electromagnetic fields around the prow of the ship that serves as a Bussard Scoop that will absorb interstellar hydrogen. This hydrogen then undergoes fusion and whatever energy or particles isn’t used for powering the laser is then accelerated to the rear of the vessel to speeds near that of the speed of light to provide motive force similar to a ram-jet. As a side benefit the complex radiation shielding this process requires evidently produces numerous other defensive benefits for the starship and adds to its protection. The Mechanicus is noted to be very interested in getting their tendrils on this tech, but despite their best efforts they have yet to get a chance to examine it.&lt;br /&gt;
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==See Also==&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Warhammer 40,000/Tactics/Leagues of Votann(9E)]]&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Kharadron Overlords]], their closest Age of Sigmar counterpart&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Dwarfs (Warhammer Fantasy)]]&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Chaos Dwarfs]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
File:VotannTrike.jpg|They see me dworfin, they hatin&#039;, Patrollin&#039;, and tryna catch me ridin&#039; dirty.&lt;br /&gt;
File:CNiuMZPWWNpatQNt (1).jpg|dorfy thicc dorfy brick&lt;br /&gt;
File: FW1NodbWYAA-Gzh.jpg|‘[[StarCraft|Ye want a piece a&#039; me, lad??]]’&lt;br /&gt;
File:Sagitaur ATV.jpg| Sagitaur ATV, the perfect vehicle for dropping off some Hearthkyn at the pub for some brewskies on a moons surface.&lt;br /&gt;
File:LeagueHold.jpg|One of the many holds in the Leagues, in all it&#039;s industrial might&lt;br /&gt;
File:Ironkin.jpg|A humble Ironkin, ready to serve for their civilization&lt;br /&gt;
File:Getbackintheironkinchen.png|&amp;quot;[[Weeb|UWU.exe]]: I wonder if [[Adeptus Mechanicus|our new friends]] will enjoy these muffins I baked for them? I should head over and see what they&#039;re up to!&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
File:Votann Fanart by 流星R.jpg| Even space Dwarves can be cute.&lt;br /&gt;
File:CthonianBerserks.png|[[Cyberpunk 2020|Just another day of cyberstimms and Cyberpsychosis...]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Wrathoftheancestors.jpg| [[Primaris Captain|Where have I seen that before?]] [https://1d4chan.org/wiki/File:Captain1.jpg Oh.]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Kâhl.jpg|Pictured: The &#039;&#039;&#039;real&#039;&#039;&#039; Space Vikings.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Hekaton_Land_Fortress.png|Bunker on wheels + half-a-dozen guns + half-a-dozen pissed space dorfs = a VERY bad day for you.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Gangoftrikes.jpg|If Mad Max had discovered hovercraft technology&lt;br /&gt;
File:VotannPioneer.jpg.webp|A Kin Pioneer negotiating with a Imperial&lt;br /&gt;
File:Leaguemining.jpg|It ain&#039;t no trick to get rich quick If you dig dig dig with a shovel or a pick&lt;br /&gt;
File:Leagueanvil.jpg|Remember Brokyr, the Ancestors are Always Watching&lt;br /&gt;
File:Thunderkyn.jpg|&amp;quot;Hey look buddy, I&#039;m an engineer and that means I solve problems...&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
File:LOV Army Shot.png|A Kin Oathhost about to tell the Black Legion to gtfo their lawn&lt;br /&gt;
File:Votann Grimnyr.jpg|Finally, the [[Space Wolves|fucking furries]] don&#039;t have the monopoly on sweet beards&lt;br /&gt;
File:LoV_shortstack.jpg|Shortstack lovers rejoice!&lt;br /&gt;
File:Power_armor_Kin.png|Gender equality sure look good, eh laddies?&lt;br /&gt;
File:Leagues-of-Votann-Codex-art.jpg|Channeling that good &#039;ol IoM energy, but now with 100% more dorfness.&lt;br /&gt;
File:Clone Mutant Ninja Dwarfs.png|[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles|Yaldi-bunga, dudes!]]&lt;br /&gt;
File:Legotann.png|Color schemes GW wish they&#039;d have thought of.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Dwarves]]&lt;br /&gt;
{{Template:Squats}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{WH40k-Factions}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{40k-Governments}}&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2600:387:9:3:0:0:0:4A</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Pirate&amp;diff=379560</id>
		<title>Pirate</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Pirate&amp;diff=379560"/>
		<updated>2023-06-05T12:43:09Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2600:387:9:3:0:0:0:4A: One of the last pirates before the age of piracy ended.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;{{Topquote|Yar har, fiddle di dee, Being a pirate is all right with me, Do what you want &#039;cause a pirate is free, You are a pirate!|LazyTown}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Oi! You&#039;z lot! You&#039;z part of my crew now. Any problemz with dat, you talk to da complaintz department. Dat&#039;z me gun, by da way.|[[Bluddflagg|Kaptain Bluddflag]]}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Pirate.png|300px|thumb|right|A pirate captain. The lack of limbs and eye just shows how hardcore he is.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; are scavenging sea bandits that raid and loot anyone on their sight. Despite being the seaborn equivalent of muggers and car-jackers, they are a far more glamorous cultural icon. They were known to be pretty cool for having a ship with black skeleton flag, as well as being badass as fuck for fighting heavily armed navy on daily basis (or so the legend goes; while there were a number of impressive battles, pirates preferred easier marks like unprotected merchant convoys). Sadly, it isn&#039;t a profession with the best long-term benefits since they would most likely be hanged by the navy or died of scurvy [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Easton (though there were exceptions of course)]. But if they did succeed, they became famous and feared by everyone, and soon that pirate&#039;s flag became something people fled as soon as they saw it.&lt;br /&gt;
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Pirates, despite being a band of misfits, were quite varied. In real life they were cutthroats and bandits with ships or boats, while during later ages in fiction they were romanticized as something of a concept of freedom despite their infamy.  In all cases, pirates are well known thanks to modern pop-culture depictions as  anarchistic and anti-governmental. They opposed the oftentimes brutal authoritarian life in the navy and wanted to live out their own lives without others telling them what to do. The reasons were many and this resulted in pirates being (ironically) closer to the modern establishment. While in Europe kings and queens ruled through an absolutist system of rule, pirates had something akin to modern democracy (the crew choose a new captain from among themselves by voting). While slavery was normal and nations fought each-other, pirates did not care about racism as a whole as necessity and a desire for freedom meant a pirate crew could be multi-national and include slaves among their ranks. In fact, equality was common among pirates and slaves saw this as one of the few ways to feel free and equal. Some crews did not discriminate if you could do the job. They took in everyone who wanted to join. One particularly famous example was the Brethren of the Coast, a coalition of pirates and privateers who operated in the Caribbean.  However, remember what they are; some pirates would force people to join their crew at times, had brutal punishments for those who broke their rules and some were known to trade slaves if the money was good enough.&lt;br /&gt;
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A free(er) lifestyle is what attracted writers who presented pirates in a romanticized way, as misfits who seek out a life of freedom, portraying them as anti-heroes. This has some basis in truth, as some pirates began their careers as legitimate privateers in the service of their king until political winds changed, usually by end of a war leaving them effectively out of job. Others were genuine legends whose stories impress readers to this day.&lt;br /&gt;
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TL;DR piracy is fucking awesome... unless you actually encounter pirates - usually in places like Burma, Nigeria, and Somalia.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Famous Real Life Pirates==&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Edward Teach&#039;&#039;&#039; - &#039;&#039;&#039;THE&#039;&#039;&#039; Pirate. Also possible Edward Thatch but better known as &#039;&#039;&#039;Blackbeard&#039;&#039;&#039;, one of the original Golden Age pirates known for his [[Night Lords|intimidation tactics, which including exaggerating and weaponizing his fearsome reputation]]. His &#039;&#039;nom de guerre&#039;&#039; came from the fact that he had black hair with a long thick beard, put gunpowder and fuses in said beard and set it off to give himself a terrifying appearance (it helped that he was over six feet tall when most men of the time were about five and a half).  He also often let his victims live to talk about their encounters with him.  He was also quite smart, as he once raided a town (as in, blockaded the entirety of Charleston and held its sailors hostage) for medicine because [[Nurgle|most of his crew was riddled with diseases]] - [[Slaanesh|sexually transmitted ones]], then when some of the crew he sent to negotiate got drunk he marooned them in disgust.  Another claim to fame was his flagship, a captured frigate he renamed &#039;&#039;Queen Anne&#039;s Revenge&#039;&#039;; as an actual warship, this gave him another advantage over other pirates, who mostly used captured merchant ships, slave ships or schooners.  He died in battle, [[awesome|fighting despite five gunshot wounds and nearly 20 sword slashes before being attacked from behind and having his throat cut.  And not before severing three of his killer&#039;s fingers and breaking his sword]]. &lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Henry Avery&#039;&#039;&#039; - The most successful (and mysterious) pirate in history. How successful? He was named the king of pirates after looting the Mughal Emperor&#039;s treasure fleet, which was worth £52 million today, and seriously pissing off the East India Company. Shortly after, though, he vanished. Neither he nor his treasure was seen again. Some vidya speculate that he went on to found the pirate utopia of [[wikipedia:Libertatia|Libertalia]] in Madagascar.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;Calico&amp;quot; Jack Rackham&#039;&#039;&#039;- A fairly unremarkable man by the standards of this list, who didn&#039;t do much major raiding and whose greatest act turned out to be the recruitment of Anne Bonny and Mary Read. While in life he may not have been much more than a mugger with a boat that provided a backdrop for the stories of those two women on his crew, he managed to leave his mark on history by flying one of the best Jolly Rogers out there ([[wikipedia:Calico_Jack#Jolly_Roger_Flag|or maybe not,]] but it&#039;s still a great flag). &lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Anne Bonny and Mary Read&#039;&#039;&#039; - Two of the most famous female pirates. Here they get one entry as they have fairly similar life stories and worked together for a time: born in destitution, were disguised as boys early on in their lives, moved to the Caribbean where they took up piracy, and both became the lovers of Calico Jack plus renowned pirates in their own right.  When Anne and Mary first met, both were disguised as men and Anne was attracted to Mary, so Anne confessed she was a woman, leading Mary to do the same [[PROMOTIONS|with rumors that they became lovers anyway with Calico Jack&#039;s approval]].  Despite their eventual capture, they only avoided execution because both were pregnant (although [[Grimdark|Mary died of a fever while in prison]] while Anne&#039;s fate is unknown except that she wasn&#039;t executed, with her either being released after giving birth to her child or also dying in prison), though that didn&#039;t stop them from [[awesome|fighting off their captors virtually alone, telling off Calico Jack for being a cowardly drunk]] and even [[Commissar|shooting a few of their crewwmates for being too drunk to fight in the battle that led to their capture]] (don&#039;t underestimate pregnant women).&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Edward &amp;quot;Davies&amp;quot; Davis&#039;&#039;&#039; - An English pirate active in the late 1600&#039;s who made a career of raiding Spanish silver shipments.  Noteworthy for his opposition to slavery; Davies and his crew hit a number of slave ships, liberating their prisoners and recruiting some into his crew.  Eventually paid off the British crown for a pardon and retired; part of his haul went into founding the &#039;&#039;College of William &amp;amp; Mary&#039;&#039; in Virginia, the second oldest university in the Americas after Harvard.  Probably discovered Rapa Nui (Easter Island) although the records are disputed since he wasn&#039;t the first to actually report it to anyone.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Walter Raleigh&#039;&#039;&#039; - One of the first English pirates; a minor lord who decided to try multiclassing as an Adventurer-Politician.  Founded Virginia and a few other less successful colonies, and was obsessed with finding the mythical golden city of El Dorado.  He&#039;d rob Spanish treasure ships as needed to fund his antics, and then brag about it in front of the Spanish ambassador in Elizabeth&#039;s royal court.  Even plundered the Queen&#039;s bedchamber, marrying one of Elizabeth&#039;s ladies in waiting.  Eventually went from looting ships to looting Spanish settlements.  The Spanish responded by telling King James that if he didn&#039;t have Raleigh executed, they would treat his attack as a sanctioned act of war.  Raleigh was executed, but comported himself to the point of even chatting with and goading his executioner.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Sir Francis Drake&#039;&#039;&#039; - The best illustration that the line between regular merchant, pirate, privateer and genuine military officer could be very tenuous at times. A full account of his long career can be found elsewhere, but let us just say that he started his career as a regular merchant occasionally getting rowdy with the Portuguese and the Spanish, then realized looting them for silver and gold was profitable and he became a full-fledged (and endorsed) raider. He was so good at liberating riches from them that he was awarded a knighthood by Queen Elizabeth, then later offered the post of vice-Admiral of the Navy when the Spaniards became fed up with the Anglos raiding them and spectacularly failed at trying to get even. Drake earned his warm reception in England (avoiding Raleigh&#039;s fate) by sharing the wealth to a spectacular degree. One time he put into port, the share of plunder he donated to Elizabeth was so vast that it was the &#039;&#039;&#039;largest revenue gain on the crown&#039;s balance sheet for that year&#039;&#039;&#039;. Also something about circumnavigating the Earth (Magellan would&#039;ve been first had he survived the trip) but who cares, it&#039;s not piratey enough.&lt;br /&gt;
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* &#039;&#039;&#039;William Adams&#039;&#039;&#039; - Served under Drake for long enough to get the title. More famous for going to [[Japan]] and becoming one of the few foreign-born [[Samurai]]. How&#039;s that for [[Multiclassing]]?&lt;br /&gt;
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* &#039;&#039;&#039;Miguel Enriquez&#039;&#039;&#039; - Miguel Enríquez was a privateer from San Juan, Puerto Rico who operated during the early 18th century. A mulato born out of wedlock, Enríquez was a shoemaker by occupation before becoming a pirate. After working for the governor as a salesman he was recruited to defend the colonies of Spain, and commanded a fleet that intercepted foreign merchant ships and vessels dedicated to contraband. He was considered a pirate by Spain&#039;s enemies and became one of the richest men in the Spanish Caribbean. High points in his military career include his fleets defense of the antilles in the war of spanish succession and the expulsion of british occupation in the island of vieques. Under the order of King Philip V he was awarded the gold medal of the royal effigy and a royal auxiliary identification document allowing him to request aid from the council of indies. The fact he was commercially successful despite being lowborn irked local nobility. &lt;br /&gt;
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* &#039;&#039;&#039;Amaro Pargo&#039;&#039;&#039; - His full real name is much longer, Amaro Rodríguez-Felipe y Tejera Machado but people called him Pargo as a nickname, so it stuck. He was born in Tenerife, an island province of Spain that is part of the Canary Islands. Before becoming a pirate, he joined the Spanish rush to the Americas and helped develop trade networks between Spanish colonies and Europe through his employment in the Company of Honduras. His career as a pirate began with the capture of the English vessel Saint Joseph. He was accused of piracy by the lawyer Agustin Francisco Ceferino the defendant of captain Alexander Webster, but the Spanish court declared it a legitimate act of defense against a hostile country, so he got off the hook. He would later associate with many corsairs from the Canary Islands, with whom he collaborated directly. By 1740 he, along with the corsair Nicolás María Bignoni would send letters insisting that other captains  such as Bartolomé Sánchez Carta attack English vessels. His areas of operation shifted across the entire Caribbean, going wherever the company needed him and raiding disruptive vessels, but he worked mostly between the cities of Havana and Caracas when in America and his home in Tenerife. After retirement, he would become known to the people of the Canary Islands as a devout Catholic and a philanthropist for his donations to both religious and municipal organizations.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Roberto Cofresí&#039;&#039;&#039; - He was born into a Spanish noble family, but political and economic difficulties forced them into exile to Puerto Rico he became a pirate in the end of the 18th century meaning he became massively infamous due to the emergence of international trade treaties. He was hunted down by a coalition of American &amp;amp; Spanish police.&lt;br /&gt;
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* &#039;&#039;&#039;Kanhoji Angre&#039;&#039;&#039; - An Indian privateer who spent 30 years forcing England and Portugal to pay him taxes.  Probably the closest thing the world has seen to a pirate admiral, and considered today the ancestor of the Indian Navy.  At the height of his career he had Dutch sailors coming to him for work hunting European merchants.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Abduwali Muse&#039;&#039;&#039; - A well-known modern pirate and the only one on this list who&#039;s actually still alive. Isn&#039;t as charming and heroic as previous but he&#039;s the youngest pirate on the list and got media coverage of his actions.  Abduwali led small gang of teenage pirates from Somalia (he was 16-19 at the time and the oldest among them) hijacking the ship Maersk Alabama, an unarmed container ship, from the Port of Salalah in Oman with orders to sail through the Guardafui Channel to Mombasa, Kenya.  Like almost every Somali pirate, he didn&#039;t have a good childhood due to living in extreme poverty, with food and work being scarce and poor quality; he turned to piracy to pay off a local warlord.  When navy ships got involved, the gang took the captain hostage and fled onto a lifeboat, resulting in Phillips&#039; rescue and the deaths of every pirate save Abduwali himself, who got a 33+ year prison sentence in the US (still a serious upgrade in life standards compared to the hellhole of his home country, he even got a GED).  Despite having no achievements that compare with historical pirates, his story did help create the film &amp;quot;Captain Phillips&amp;quot; - named for the Captain of the ship Muse tried to take - and a meme. (Look at him. He&#039;s the captain now.)&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Ching Shih/Cheng I Sao&#039;&#039;&#039; - Chinese Pirate Queen who not only led one of the biggest pirate fleets but also managed to successfully retire. She got her fleet through marrying a pirate, who gave her half his fleet. And when he died she got all of it by way of political maneuvering with her husband&#039;s family. The Chinese government tried to take her down, but she was so good that she stole their ships until they were forced to use fishing boats. She even created a set of pirating laws, including one that made rape of female captives punishable by beheading. She eventually beat the empire so hard that the Chinese Government had to sue for peace. She negotiated for amnesty for herself and any of her pirates that wanted to quit the life, so she retired from piracy to set up a gambling den and brothel.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Cheung Po Tsai&#039;&#039;&#039; - Cheng I Sao&#039;s step-son and second husband, succeeding his stepfather&#039;s role and expanded the fleet. As with Cheng I Sao was granted amnesty and became a navy colonel. Often depicted in dramas and movies.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Wang Zhi / Wu Feng&#039;&#039;&#039; - a famous Wokou pirate who plagued the coast of Ming Dynasty China. He was originally a salt merchant before becoming head of a pirate syndicate that stretched from the East to South China Sea after deciding the Ming can fuck off with their prohibition on private maritime trade. He got acquainted with Dutch merchants after they seized Malacca and is credited to spreading European firearms across East Asia (most famously to daimyo Tanegashima Tokitaka). Seeing how Japan was undergoing the strife of the Warring States Era, he made a hefty profit selling saltpeter to them from China and Siam at a premium. Eventually he got fed up with the corrupt Ming administration’s bureaucracy and their lack of recognition of him before he took over some islands off the coast of southern Japan, rained riches on the locals to win them over, and then raided the coasts off China and Korea to make them take him seriously so they can make him an admiral or professional naval merchant. Unfortunately, his sympathizers in the local Ming administration got caught up in corruption scandals and politics before he got captured and beheaded while trying to negotiate. Post mortem, China and Korea blame him as a symbol of the ills from the Wokou piracy era; his interactions with Japan making him even more of an opportunistic target. He’s more fondly remembered in Japan as the source of the firearm technology imported from the Portuguese and identified in their documents as a Confucian scholar.&lt;br /&gt;
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[[File:Serapis_Flag.png|250px|thumb|right|Totally legit, no pirates here.]]&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;John Paul Jones&#039;&#039;&#039; - An angry Scotsman who sided with the colonists in the American Revolution so he could go on a big piracy spree up and down the English coast.  At one point he showed up in the Netherlands and the Dutch were like &amp;quot;you need a flag or we have to arrest you as a pirate&amp;quot; &#039;&#039;(also the ship was very obviously not his)&#039;&#039;.  But they didn&#039;t like the English either so they looked the other way while Jones found someone to quickly sew a new flag &#039;&#039;([[Counts as|suspiciously like a Dutch flag cut up and sewn back together]])&#039;&#039; and he was free to go. He kicked so much ass and was so popular that one of the places that he raided actually gave him an official pardon in 1999.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Gertrude Walton&#039;&#039;&#039; - A real life ghost pirate! The RIAA claimed that she uploaded pirated copies of over 700 songs despite her &#039;&#039;being dead&#039;&#039;. Immortalized in a Weird Al song.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Stede Bonnet&#039;&#039;&#039; - The &amp;quot;Gentleman Pirate,&amp;quot; Steve was a former plantation owner from Barbados who got fed up with always being in debt and his nagging wife, so he decided to become a pirate. Bonnet is supposedly one of the pirates who originated &amp;quot;Walking the Plank.&amp;quot; [[Noobs|Despite his gross inexperience]], he was able to attract a crew by promising a guaranteed wage as opposed to a share of plunder. Things went relatively well until he got bamboozled by Blackbeard (yes THAT Blackbeard) into giving up command of his ship and effectively became a hostage. He was later bamboozled again by Blackbeard and swore revenge, in which he surprisingly became a more competent pirate. But he was captured before he had the chance. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrGf4nJWVOU Dramatic Reenactment now included!]&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Felix von Luckner&#039;&#039;&#039; - Nicknamed &amp;quot;The Sea Devil&amp;quot;, he is the best example of a Lawful pirate (okay, privateer) in RPG terms. Commissioned as an officer in the k.u.k. Kriegsmarine during WWI, he was given command of a three-master (at a time where most boats had switched to steam) with orders to do some commerce raiding and make himself a pain in the hindquarters of the Allies. And he did so. Beautifully. In less than one year, Luckner captured and sank no less than fifteen ships through guile and superior seamanship. And the best part? he did so barely ever firing a shot. Over his entire career, he and his crew killed only a single enemy soldier (a poor soul unlucky enough to be right next to a steam line that ruptured when Luckner ordered the enemy&#039;s radio shot). For the rest, he made sure everyone was safe and sound before sending his prizes to the bottom. And when he just became overburdened with prisoners, he ordered the latest his prizes to throw the cargo overboard and bring all his prisoners to a neutral country, and then they&#039;d all be free. A pirate and and gentleman indeed, and a bizarre counterpoint to the way in which submarine warfare, the more modern way to attack shipping, was conducted in the 20th century.&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Klaus/Johann Stoertebeker&#039;&#039;&#039;: One of the rare examples of pirates that predate the colonial era considerably and whose story survived the times. A German pirate captain hailing from Wismar, about whom barely anything is known other than that he entered public consciousness in the Hanseatic Cities Scandinavia and Northern Germany around the 1390s, when his gang was driven out of Gotland in the Baltic Sea and soon became a feared legend for Hanseatic seafarers that sailed the routes between Hamburg and Riga. According to legend, he was captured in 1401 by a Hamburgian fleet when a traitor aboard his flag ship disabled the rudder by pouring molten lead into its chains. When the Hamburgians dismantled his ship, they found that the three masts had been cast from Gold, Copper and Silver respectively and they used the metal to form the tip of the St Catherines Church in Hamburg from it. Stoertebeker himself was sentenced to death along with his crew of 77 men and his skull remains on display in Hamburg to this very day.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Famous Fictional Pirates==&lt;br /&gt;
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(For the sake of keeping things brief, we&#039;ll ignore Vidya pirates, and try keep it to Movie and Book pirates that your parents or nephews/nieces are likely to have heard of, depending on your age.)&lt;br /&gt;
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*&#039;&#039;&#039;Long John Silver&#039;&#039;&#039;, from &#039;&#039;Treasure Island&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Captain Hook&#039;&#039;&#039;, from &#039;&#039;Peter Pan&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Jack Sparrow&#039;&#039;&#039; (&#039;&#039;Captain&#039;&#039; Jack Sparrow, if you please), &#039;&#039;&#039;Hector Barbarossa&#039;&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;&#039;Davy Jones&#039;&#039;&#039; from &#039;&#039;Pirates of the Caribbean&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
** For that matter, the ride Pirates are of interest.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Captain Blood&#039;&#039;&#039;, from the book series and movie of the same name.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Captain Harlock&#039;&#039;&#039;, space pirate.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;[[One Piece]]&#039;&#039; has a quite a few. We&#039;ll not list them, as it would take &#039;&#039;forever&#039;&#039;, just like the manga.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Captain Nemo&#039;&#039;&#039;, from &#039;&#039;Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;Pirate Jenny&#039;&#039;&#039;, from the song of the same name. Nemo and Jenny were then linked, as well as &#039;&#039;&#039;Captain Mors&#039;&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;&#039;Captain Robur&#039;&#039;&#039; in &#039;&#039;The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen&#039;&#039; comics.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;One-Eyed Willy&#039;&#039;&#039;, from &#039;&#039;The Goonies&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;The Dread Pirate Roberts&#039;&#039;&#039;, from &#039;&#039;[[The Princess Bride]]&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
*Many, many advertising pirates.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Luthor Harkon]]&#039;&#039;&#039;, from &#039;&#039;[[Warhammer Fantasy]]&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;House Greyjoy &#039;&#039;&#039; and their &#039;&#039;&#039; Iron Islanders&#039;&#039;&#039; from &#039;&#039;[[A Song of Ice and Fire|Game of Thrones]]&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Types of Pirate ==&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Piratepainting.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Why do we bury our treasure? Why don&#039;t we spend it? On nice things? Or things we like?]]&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Buccaneers&#039;&#039;&#039; - The first major Caribbean pirates, operating in large numbers throughout most of the 17th century until the empires became strong enough to drive them out. The buccaneers, or, to de-Anglicize the term, boucaniers, were named not for their raiding but for their use of boucans to smoke and dry meat. Largely situated on the island of Hispaniola, where the most profitable sugar plantations in the New World were situated, they lived in the jungles to the north, out of the reach of Spanish and French authorities. They were the outlaws of the New World, men and women who usually had no world to return to: deserters from warships and colonial militaries, criminals fleeing Europe, escaped slaves, everybody that needed a little bit more than just a job on a ship on a long voyage to hide. Originally, they just hunted and chilled out in the woods, raiding only occasionally when it was convenient, but when the Spanish started trying to wipe out the animals they lived on and trying to drive them off of the land, many of them moved to raiding full time, leading to: &lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;The Pirates of the Caribbean&#039;&#039;&#039; - These guys are a little more complicated, so let&#039;s set the stage first. As soon as Columbus got back and the Spanish Empire, finished with the Moors and looking for someone else to beat up, really got going, the great Atlantic powers of Europe wanted to develop their own colonial empires in the New World. Unfortunately for everyone else, the Spanish and Portuguese crowns claimed everything they could stick a flag on, then claimed everything else just to be safe. This was about as enforceable as a speed limit in Texas. Spain was strong, but not strong enough that it didn&#039;t have to pick and choose what to defend, and England and France soon claimed large, also poorly defended chunks of the New World. While wars would rage between empires until Spain got its final colonial asskicking in the Spanish-American War, there was a constant low-key running battle between anyone and everyone in the Caribbean, as everyone was in easy striking distance of something and commerce raiding was easy. England, France, and whoever else could defend a fort and a flagpole for a few growing seasons relied mostly on commerce and plantation farming for their colonial revenue, but Spain had another, more pressing interest in the Caribbean. One of the first things that the conquistadors did once they got the Aztecs to stop sacrificing Mexicans to the gods was to start sacrificing Mexicans to the gold and silver mines. This revenue travelled across the sea to Spain in massive treasure fleets carrying absurd sums in bullion, coinage, and funny doodads stolen from temples. Stealing this money both funds your own operation and makes the financially unstable Spanish crown even more so, so the English began paying privateers to raid the Spanish whenever they were at war. As soon as the war ended(and, let&#039;s be honest, until it inevitably started again), there was a surplus of heavily armed ships and men who knew exactly how they could get very rich very quickly. Some colonial governors carried on an unofficial policy of &amp;quot;no peace beyond the line,&amp;quot; turning a blind eye to raids as long as they weren&#039;t against their own nation&#039;s shipping. You can see where this is going.&lt;br /&gt;
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A life of piracy in the Age of Sail was not fun. The utter chaos of exchanging fire at three hundred yards with guns that splinter twenty inches of layered oak then boarding another ship and beating the everloving shit out of everyone on it tends to result in nasty injuries of the kind that kill or maim permanently. Life at sea was hard; water and food went bad fast and you were stuck with a couple hundred other stinky fucks in a big wooden box that might sink if something, like a storm or a much bigger warship or some drunk idiot, fucks up the extremely complicated system of ropes and canvas that keeps it moving forward. To top if all off, if you were caught you were hanged, with not much change for reprieve. However, all of this was more or less the same in the merchant or naval service and being a pirate A. meant you wouldn&#039;t get flogged for not saluting some 12 year old kid whose father paid for him to be a midshipman, B. eliminated the danger of being raided by pirates, as you are, in fact, now a pirate, and C. paid WAY more than a sailor&#039;s wages and had a more equal distribution of prize money when a ship was taken than the navies at the time would give. For these reasons, piracy remained popular until the empires got strong enough to put a stop to it by force, and places like Port Royal, Tortuga, and Nassau, beyond the reach of the law, just being conveniently ignored by it or had its govenors bribed, intimidated or otherwise be in on the jig themselves (South Carolina and Virginia were infamous for not giving a single fuck about pirates docking in their harbours, as long as the pirates obeyed the local rules and occasionally threw a sack of dubloons their way), were filled with men who would get kicked out of the Disney Imagineering offices before the interview, even if they could sing perfectly. These are the pirates of pop culture, partly because of our enduring fascination with people who tell the biggest bullies around to suck it and survive, and also because these pirates encouraged ludicrous tales about their atrocities, as they made people surrender without a fuss (and probably impressed the whores), which would eventually blend with reality and become the tales that survive to this day of the lives of real pirates. They often used smaller, shallow-draft vessels that let them hide in swamps and rivers where bigger ships couldn&#039;t chase them, and the romantic images from Pirates of the Caribbean movies exaggerate quite a bit on how well-organized and well-armed they might be, but the flamboyant dress, fueled by frequent theft of expensive cloth bound for the colonial elite, was real, albeit probably extremely dirty. The Jolly Rogers, the black flags that said &amp;quot;Gimme ur shit n00b ill rek ur ass&amp;quot; to all merchant captains unlucky enough to see them, were real as well, coming in many forms but often featuring the same motifs: skulls and skeletons, hourglasses, swords, blood, etc. In regards to the popular legend of successful pirates burying their treasure; this was largely a myth perpetuated by Treasure Island. Pirates ended up taking most of their ill-gotten goods in the form of trade goods which had to be sold or bartered off, and the average pirate hand would piss away most of their gold on boozing and whoring. Occasionally, pirate captains who could accumulate large amounts of solid metal currency &#039;&#039;would&#039;&#039; bury treasure on occasion, usually just for insurance (and even then, it was only done sparingly): in the event that they were captured, they&#039;d use their hidden loot as a bargaining chip to save them from the noose. This didn&#039;t work all the time, as the captors either couldn&#039;t be bribed or didn&#039;t buy the story. Still, the mystique of a lost and forgotten treasure trove just waiting to be discovered made for great stories in taverns full of adventurers, so legends about buried treasure persisted throughout the centuries in fictional writing. Plank walking is hardcore as fuck and cool and dramatic and completely imaginary, invented by authors and artists for those reasons. Why go to all that fuss when you can just stab the bastard and chuck him over the side? King George&#039;s Act of Grace, the actions of Woods Rogers, a pirate hunter as legendary as the pirates themselves, and the increasingly obvious fact that Britannia ruled pretty much every wave from Spithead to Montego Bay, mostly got rid of these guys, but they live on in our imaginations.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Privateers&#039;&#039;&#039; - Not pirates per se, but many pirates started out as privateers, or, in the case of those like Henry Morgan, waffled back and forth as the situation allowed. Roughly the naval equivalent to land-based mercenaries, these sailed on privately, (probably) legally owned ships who were employed by their home country to raid enemy supply lines (or in rare cases, rival nations that are not at war). Typically a privateer carried &amp;quot;Letters of Marque and Reprisal&amp;quot; to show the legality of their actions; it was only if they stepped outside the bounds of the letter or otherwise lost it that they&#039;d become pirates.  Some were even captained by commissioned officers of their host nation and provided access to naval facilities and supplies as de facto navy vessels.  But even so, enemy nations would sometimes ignore the letters of marque (not without justification, since letters would often be rendered invalid or else forged easily enough to fool the illiterate) and hang captured crews as pirates instead of kept as prisoners of war.  Nevertheless, there was rarely a shortage of eager sailors for privateering, as the potential pay for taking a ship as a prize was very lucrative. Of course the opposite was also true; under King George&#039;s Act of Grace, former pirates who renounced their ways would be pardoned and hired as privateers to raid the Spanish. Although they mostly did things like turn Port Royal into Ancapistan, raiding Spanish commerce at the encouragement of English merchants, some captains licensed as privateers did some pretty impressive stuff, usually combining their military obligations with the chances of huge personal enrichment. In a story too long to put here but worth reading, Henry Morgan himself organized multiple raids on Spanish cities, most famously assembling thousands of men and dozens of ships, all legally not pirates under his letters of marque, and sacking the city of Panama, making off with everything not nailed down, and living out a long, happy life retired inland on Jamaica, becoming one of the fat old bastards he once stole from and earning the respect and love of both sides of the law. &lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Vikings]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - Scandinavian pirates with badass beards. Despite common depictions, their helmets did not have horns. Existed long before the Caribbean pirates, and they sure made themselves famous all over medieval Europe. &amp;quot;Vikings&amp;quot; specifically were raiders, but the Norsemen often sailed their great ships through the rivers and seas of Europe on missions of trade and settlement, stealing, selling, and leaving graffiti as far away as Constantinople. Nevertheless, when they went raiding they were brutal, taking slaves, burning villages, and doing unspeakable things to sheep across northern Europe and the British Isles until the early Christian saints finally proselytized them into submission.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Corsairs&#039;&#039;&#039; - Also known as Barbary pirates. They mainly came from North Africa and most of their attacks were focused on capturing slaves rather than stealing loot, although they wouldn&#039;t turn it down if they found it. They operated primarily in the Mediterranean sea, but were known to sail as far north as Iceland, depopulating small islands that have yet to recover centuries later. Nations could avoid having their ships attacked if they paid a steep tribute to the Barbary states; it wasn&#039;t until the early 19th century, after the military revolutions in Europe created navies that could severely limit their operating range, that Western nations decided to fuck that noise and decided to shut them up for good. The young United States in particular participated in a number of campaigns over insults and stolen merchant ships, eventually launching a few attacks against the ports the pirates operated out of (One of these incidents is the source of &amp;quot;The Shores of Tripoli&amp;quot; bit in the US Marines&#039; Hymn). The term usually refers to pirates in service to specific nations, as they were often employed as something in between a navy and a privateer fleet by the various kingdoms of North Africa. Eventually the term corsair became a synonym for privateer internationally  distinguishing itself from the word pirate. Still one mans corsair is another&#039;s pirate having the papers to prove you were a corsair only slightly nudged a case in your favor if you got caught and that depended on the severity of your crimes and the country in which you were being judged.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Wokou&#039;&#039;&#039; - &amp;quot;Japanese&amp;quot; pirates that raided the coastlines of China and Korea from the 13th century to the 16th century. While initially Japanese their crew turned to be from all three mentioned nations (there&#039;s even Portuguese) and later the majority were Chinese. Wokou started dying down with Japan and Korea&#039;s collaboration efforts against pirates signed in the Treaty of Gyehae in 1443 and China&#039;s strengthened operations after the Jiajing wokou raids in the mid-1500s. &lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Sea Peoples&#039;&#039;&#039; -  A hypothesized seafaring confederation that attacked ancient Egypt/Kemet and other regions in the East Mediterranean prior to and during the Late Bronze Age collapse. Nationality unknown, possibly from various places.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Modern Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - [[Grimdark|Mostly just poor 3rd world uneducated people who are survivors of various wars and regimes.]] Not too different from the boucaniers, really, they just got there by a different road. Their makeup is similar too: Former fishermen who had knowledge about the sea, war veterans who specialize in weaponry, or at least know where to get some, as well as technical experts who operates on electronic devices like GPS devices, [[Freebooterz|but they are still too green]] when compare to the [[Imperial Navy|actual navy]]. Not to mention the days when any wannabe pirate could find a merchant ship, arm her with some cannons and then go toe-to-toe with a genuine military ship have &#039;&#039;long&#039;&#039; since past. The US Navy, absurdly large since the end of WWII, is arguably singlehandedly preventing large-scale piracy from happening in the modern world, but even the Burger Fleets can&#039;t be everywhere. Today&#039;s pirates are armed with many modern-day weapons from assault rifles to rocket launchers that were salvaged from the conflict. They raid the Gulf of Aden, the Gulf of Guinea, the Straits of Malacca, and Indian Ocean using just skiffs and can travel hundreds of miles from home. Their targets tend to be two varieties: either slow commercial ships held hostage for steep ransoms, or oil tankers that they siphon raw petroleum to sell on the black market. They tend to be on the skinny side due to the lack of food and health care, and they tend to be serious and extremely determined, since most of them just want to survive and they had to turn to piracy when they have no choice due to the terrible living conditions in the war-torn countries they come from, you have to understand that most people under those circumstances are either begging drifters, ordinary criminals or turn to gang or terror organization membership. It takes a special kind of spiteful determination to go pirate in the Information Era. Modern piracy is still popular in places like Africa and Asia, and actually costs the companies anywhere from hundreds of millions to billions in losses. Due to this, its not uncommon to see heavily armed mercenaries aboard civilian freighters in high-risk shipping lanes to deter pirates from boarding and there are permanent international task forces deployed in areas with chronic problems. The modus operandi ranges from firing warning shots to force a surrender to straight up perforating the boat with CIWS fire. Cargo ships in turn have Private Military Contractors with sometimes better than military issue gear, water cannons and other deterrence factors. Occasionally a navy logistics ship gets mistaken for a cargo ship by pirates, leading to hilarity(for the warship, at least).&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Internet Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - Hackers who &amp;quot;illegally&amp;quot; download foreign internet goods like manga scan, anime, books or newly released video games for free (though sometimes they do hack, acquire and release data that shady corporations want to hide or make certain douches pay for their crimes like Anonymous does from time to time). As technology advanced and the invention of 3D printer came along, the &amp;quot;pirate&amp;quot; is able to download miniature blue prints for 3D printers. These pirates, unlike their predecessors, need no romanticism to make them glorious antiheroes, fighting the reemergence of cable by swinging aboard servers and navigating hidden coves to evade the Copyright Law Navy. Unfortunately they do tend to smell the same.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Porch Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - people who steal other people&#039;s packages. Normally, these are just lazy douchebags who steal a package that&#039;s been left on someone&#039;s doorstep, and more often then not, the package isn&#039;t something worth stealing. More enterprising pirates, however, have gone so far as derailing cargo trains and looting them wholesale.&lt;br /&gt;
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===The &amp;quot;Pirate Accent&amp;quot;===&lt;br /&gt;
We all know and love pirate-speak, what with all its &amp;quot;YAAAAR!&amp;quot;s and &amp;quot;YO-HO-HO!&amp;quot;s and all, but something to keep in mind, at least as far as historical pirates are concerned; most scholars agree that there is no universal &amp;quot;pirate accent,&amp;quot; and that most of today&#039;s perceptions of it stems from the 1950 Disney film &#039;&#039;Treasure Island&#039;&#039;, and the Dorset accent of Robert Newton&#039;s Long John Silver. While the West Country of England certainly has a long maritime history, keep in mind that pirates came from just about any sea-faring society, so you&#039;re more likely to see a blend of accents and even languages around busy trade routes and other piracy hotspots, such as the Caribbean or the East Indies. If you&#039;re doing voices for characters, the &amp;quot;pirate accent&amp;quot; is a good standby, but work up a few more English-speaking accents and throw in a little Spanish, French, West African, etc.&lt;br /&gt;
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== Fictional Pirates ==&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Swashbucklers&#039;&#039;&#039; - The Noblebright side of the Fantasy pirate coin. Swashbucklers actually overlap with genres outside of pirate fiction, such as with the Three Musketeers or Zorro, but there are plenty of pirate examples too. These guys are basically buccaneers who seek adventure and right wrongs. They may be exiled princes or other political fugitives forced into a life of outlawry. They are also masters of swordplay and trickery; so basically, they&#039;re more akin to musketeers or the legendary Zorro, but with ships of their own. Think of Dread Pirate Roberts from the Princess Bride or Captain Blood.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Dread Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - The [[Grimdark]] side of the Fantasy Pirate coin. Not to be confused with the legend that Dread Pirate Roberts cooked up for himself; these guys are the real deal. Take a buccaneer and mix in the supernatural or even eldritch. This type of Pirate frequently appears as the antagonist in the Pirates of the Caribbean movies. See Ghost Pirates for a specific subset below.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Space Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - You know pirates, BUT IN SPACE! A seemingly possible concept. After all, the golden age of piracy happened because the naval powers in those day struggled to maintain power on the edges of their empire (new world) and the vast wealth they were extracting, which meant pirates had a reason to exist. Eventually, the great powers managed to extend control across the fullness of their empires and pirates ran out of room for safe harbors, ports and so on. In space however, it is infinite enough to run around from any Space Navy, and if there are enough valuables goods trades between planets, one could have a reason to do so. On paper piracy in space does seem possible, contingent of course on the idea of there being FTL drive of some sort, else our pirates have to be in stasis 99% of the time. Since space has no oxygen, pirates had to wear concealed power armor to board ships in order to loot and plunder. In some indie games like FTL, the crew can use teleportation device to board enemy ship without space suit, the same goes to the lighting strike ability in battlefleet gothic armada. And instead of making you walk the plank; they&#039;ll just throw you out the airlock. Another common convention is hidden bases on remote asteroids or space stations that don&#039;t orbit anything (which Star Wars dubs a &amp;quot;shadowport&amp;quot;). Despite rumors of this happening already, the only recorded crimes committed in space (aside from littering) is a white-collar crime involving somebody illegally accessing their spouse&#039;s bank records during a divorce dispute, when US astronaut Anne McClain was accused by her estranged wife of &lt;br /&gt;
digital invasion of privacy while on the ISS.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Ghost Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - it is said if some pirates are too badass to die, they become ghost and continue to terrorize ships for fun. Some said it was the cause of some voodoo curses, other thinks they are just too tough to stay in hell. These dead pirate sail in literal ghost ships that are seemly broken pirate ships crawling with mosses and maggots while being seemly impervious to cannon fire. [[Vampire Counts|SPOOOOOKYYY]].&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Airship|Airship Pirates]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - [[AWESOME|Piracy in the sky with steampunk technology]]. They&#039;ll still say &amp;quot;Yarr!&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Avast!&amp;quot; but their clothing is decidedly more Victorian instead of Baroque, with lots of goggles and brass thrown in. [[Kharadron Overlords|Let&#039;s not forget the short-legged version]] for [[Age of Sigmar]]. There is exactly ONE example of [[airship]] piracy in history:  when the German Zeppelin L23 captured a Norwegian schooner during the first world war. An instance of an airship &#039;&#039;privateer&#039;&#039; &#039;&#039;&#039;may&#039;&#039;&#039; have existed with the U.S. World War II blimp Resolute, which was reported in 1946 to have been the last use of the United States&#039; power to issue a letter of marque, as part of a legal wrangling to put a civilian vessel into the chain of command rather than intending it loot anything, but no record of this mark being issued exists.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Warhammer Fantasy Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - A lot of pirates tend to operate either in the seas near Tilea or around Lustria, where there&#039;s always opportunities for gold-hungry adventurers (though death is also a high probability due to disease or dismemberment by dinosaurs). There are several different varieties:&lt;br /&gt;
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* Most famously are the [[Warriors of Chaos|Norscans]] being the fantasy equivalent of Vikings, in that they like to wreck the Empire&#039;s shit by raiding their border and would also take the opportunity to explore the new world for plunder and destruction in the name of their gods. The Norscan are nature born sea faring adventurer that back in the old day, a Norscan by the name &#039;&#039;&#039;Losteriksson&#039;&#039;&#039; being the first old Worlder to settle in Lustria of the new world. There he became famous after plundered the shit out of it and founded a coast settlement named after his daughter that was born on this land: &#039;&#039;&#039;Skeggi&#039;&#039;&#039;, then encourage even more Norscan to have a piece at the place despite its seemly high mortality rate from jungle disease, wild cold ones and Lizardmen. The Skaeling tribe in particular is famed for their seafaring. [[Wulfrik the Wanderer]] uses a magic longship to teleport anywhere whenever he wants or needs (because chaos gods) to go wreck some fools.&lt;br /&gt;
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*[[Dark Elf]] Corsairs using Black Arks (which are city-sized FLYING ships) in their raids and like to take captives hostage to be sold into slavery. [[Lokhir Fellhart]] is a famous example, who likes to wear Cthulhu-looking mask that he likely looted from Lizardmen.&lt;br /&gt;
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*The [[Zombie Pirates]] were a White Dwarf army list under the leadership of [[Luthor Harkon]], who formerly worked for [[Abhorash]] before striking out on his own for Lustria and establishing his own goddamn kingdom called the Vampire Coast. And with all the dead bodies of unfortunate sailors, he&#039;s got plenty of recruiting opportunities. Another undead admiral operating in the area is Captain Noctlis of the [[Dreadfleet]], a Von Carstein vampire who teleported his entire freaking castle into the Galleon Graveyard, and thanks to the mighty technosorceries of vydiagaems they are a fully-fledged faction in the Total Warhammer. &lt;br /&gt;
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*[[Slayer| Long Drong&#039;s Slayer Pirates]] are led by their captain in a rampage across the seas of the old world Long Drong&#039;s crew are for the most part slayers who took the oath because they [[Dwarf_fortress|lost all their ale]] in a storm also [[fail|their ship was wrecked so they had to go thirsty until the ship slammed into beachrock]] after drifting for who knows how long. They occasionally do mercenary work just to keep themselves supplied with rum and blackpowder but they mostly hunt for monsters and raid ships owned by the [[Dark_Elves_(Warhammer_Fantasy)| forces of darkness]].&lt;br /&gt;
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*There are also the Sartosan Pirates of the Principality of Sartosa (aka: AN ENTIRE NATION OF PIRATES) that lies south of Tilea. One of the most famous Sartosan pirates is the sea mutant [[Aranessa Saltspite]], rumored to be the daughter of the sea god himself.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Warhammer 40K]] Pirates&#039;&#039;&#039; - Ranging from [[Red Corsairs|chaos worshiper]], [[Dark Eldar|sadistic spiky ear slave trader]], [[Eldar Corsairs|cunning spiky ear glass cannon]] and the fucking [[Freebooterz|orks]], they are all badasses. [[Rogue Traders]] probably count as pirates too (corsairs would be the most accurate term), but they are first and foremost explorers of the Imperium (otherwise is [[HERESY]] and would probably be anally raped by inquisitions ship&#039;s nova cannon, or an [[exterminatus|cyclonic torpedo]]) but of course, unless they were pillage and plunder a Xeno ship, is fine lol. For /tg/ brewed 40K pirates, see [[Black Locks]] who are both pirates and [[Space Marines]]. There is also at least [[Space Sharks|one known loyalist chapter]] that does pirate things like abducting the entire population of a loyalist planet to bolster the ranks of their recruits and chapter serfs, but they work far from the Imperium, and don&#039;t really have the opportunity for easily recruited manpower. Desperate times...   &lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Manga|One Piece]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - As the pirate king, Gold Roger, was executed, he told everyone that he hid his treasure at the ass-end of the world, kickstarting a golden age of piracy! Some are using this chance to amass riches or oppress the weak, others just want to be free from the dictatorial World Government. The world is vast and uncharted, people get anime superpowers by eating cursed fruit or training really hard, and there exist sea monsters that are bigger than your ship. [[Fun|Have fun]]!&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Samus|Space Pirates from the Metroid Series]]&#039;&#039;&#039; - while not being human and lacking the Caribbean pirate stereotype, [[Rak&#039;gol|they are aliens that like to raid and destroy vessels while trying to be the biggest of dicks to every other species, especially the Federation]]. They are led by Mother Brain with Ridley, a species of cyborg/gargoyle/dragon alien being their military commander. They all got shit on by [[Samus]] unfortunately...non-stop.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Worldbuilding And Moral Considerations==&lt;br /&gt;
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===Morality===&lt;br /&gt;
How evil a Pirate in a given setting defaults to has a few inputs that are worth considering:&lt;br /&gt;
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* [[Slavery]] is a big one. If the people they&#039;re raiding practice slavery and the pirates don&#039;t, that&#039;s a very serious point in the favor of the Pirate (in fact, it was exactly this moral ambiguity that gave the Buccaneers what good press they had) especially if they free slaves. If it&#039;s the other way around (slave raiders on free peoples), the resulting pirates are probably evil villains, full stop.&lt;br /&gt;
**Keep in mind that many people adore Jack Sparrow for simply saying &amp;quot;People aren&#039;t cargo, mate!&amp;quot;, which was Jack Sparrow&#039;s entire descent into piracy to begin with. &lt;br /&gt;
* How badly they treat captured crews. If they let them go once they&#039;ve robbed the cargo holds, they probably are considered more &amp;quot;moral&amp;quot; than if they kill or enslave anybody who sees them. (Hostage taking may or may not count for this purpose; if it&#039;s purely for ransom, it&#039;s in a gray area, with the shade depending on how well the hostage is treated.)&lt;br /&gt;
** Enforced enrollment in the pirate crew is on the evil side, and also somewhat on the stupid side: having a bunch of people who don&#039;t want to be there as crew on a ship is usually a bad idea when mutiny is a problem. However even proper navies were known to do (and in some cases infamous for abusing) exactly that: the war of 1812 began in part over the British going overboard with forced enrollment. (Look up &#039;impressment&#039;, you&#039;ll get the idea.)&lt;br /&gt;
* How badly non-pirate sailors are treated by their captains: when the Navy press-gangs their crew into service and keelhauls/flogs wrongdoers around the fleet; a pirate ship is easily seen as a bastion of freedom in contrast.&lt;br /&gt;
* [https://youtu.be/XaWU1CmrJNc Pirates who don&#039;t do anything] are a thing in media. As they don&#039;t do the pirate thing, they usually don&#039;t count as pirates.&lt;br /&gt;
* How prone they are to mutiny is also a consideration; although any pirate crew is liable to mutiny, the causes of said mutiny can be important in determining morality. If you&#039;re sailing under Bill the Bastard has random crewmen flogged and branded for looking at him funny, stealing his hat while he&#039;s wearing it and original sin while never giving out a fair cut of the pay and hogging all the Grog from himself, mutiny is an extreme if understandable response.&lt;br /&gt;
* What do they spend their plunder on. Most pirates spend their booty on upkeep of their ship, cannons, guns, swords, booze, food, fancy things and, well, [[/d/|booty]]. But some will also spend it on their families while others decide to give some of it to an orphanage or school or something in their home port.&lt;br /&gt;
* Privateers, mentioned above, are usually considered more &amp;quot;moral&amp;quot; than their freelancing counterparts. &#039;&#039;Usually&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
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Note that multiple kinds of Pirates can exist in a given setting, each with their own niche in the Alignment Chart (Even Lawful Good, Neutral Good and Lawful Neutral depending on where you draw the line between lawful navy executing &#039;commerce raiding&#039; and piracy), although given the nature of Piracy, only a few Privateers will be Lawful of any kind.&lt;br /&gt;
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===Worldbuilding Considerations===&lt;br /&gt;
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 &lt;br /&gt;
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The big one: Piracy is never a safe job, even when you&#039;re in port, and every action has a degree of risk to it. Pirates are criminals who endanger shipping, which makes people with money and power annoyed, which in turn leads to a good deal of energy being expended in getting rid of any pirate that causes too much trouble. Unless they&#039;re being backed up by another, similar power, or have decided to transition from just stealing shit to forming a functional republic with a navy and laws and borders, a pirate port is not stable. Even then it&#039;s not particularly stable either, although it&#039;s got a start on the climb to being a nation. Always remember: piracy comes with danger and is affected by politics much bigger than little ships with black flags. You&#039;ll present a more engaging setting if there&#039;s more to a pirate&#039;s life than you can see at Disney World. &lt;br /&gt;
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With that in mind, pirates still need a safe port of some kind to operate. Ships require a lot of maintenance that can only be done when at rest, and the pirates need to be able to sell or trade their captured goods. This has many subtle implications, with a few possibilities:&lt;br /&gt;
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* The Pirates are effectively sponsored by some port. This implies either full state sponsorship of some kind, or a state that effectively doesn&#039;t care about their raiding, usually because the Pirates in question only target the enemies of whoever owns the port.  French Tortuga and Dutch Curacao were like this, being effectively surrounded by a target rich environment full of Spanish and ruled by governors who simply did not give a flip about what happened at sea.  In particular, Curacao&#039;s natural harbor with a tight channel overlooked by a fort on a ridge made it practically impossible to raid from sea, so the Dutch DID NOT care how angry the Spanish got with them over piracy because nothing short of an invasion would dislodge them.  Tortuga otoh got raided by the Spanish repeatedly, but there were just too many French and English on the island to suppress.  &lt;br /&gt;
* The Pirates are disguising where their goods are coming from. This is harder then it sounds, as ships are usually easily identified, and any port that cares about contraband will almost certainly be interested in the origins of whatever goods are coming into it. This will be complicated and will probably require a reliable fence who can move the goods quietly and with the illusion of legitimacy.&lt;br /&gt;
* The Pirates are operating on a frontier, like the boucaniers did.  Small colonies and settlements are usually much less concerned about the legitimacy of cargo if its something they can use.  They may not be able to pay very much for it, but they often can pay in other ways such as provisions and repairs.  &lt;br /&gt;
* Pirates who figure they can operate their own port are usually faced with the fact that most of the people who engage in piracy are not exactly reliable sorts, which is what is desperately needed in order to have a functioning port. &amp;lt;ref&amp;gt;See the (in my opinion, at least) fantastic series Black Sails for an idea of how that might work, or fail to work. If you can get past the first season being about 20% excessively long sex scenes with little plot relevance, that is. Thanks, Michael Bay. Seeing Charles Vane&#039;s sandy cock was not on my bucket list and it didn&#039;t really affect the story all that much.&amp;lt;/ref&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
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For piracy to really catch on somewhere, there needs to be cargo worth capturing. A lot of stuff that gets shipped is very hard to sell, not just because it is the proverbial &amp;quot;hot goods&amp;quot;, but because it is effectively worth money only to the right buyer (who is usually in one of those ports that care about contraband). You need something that is both valuable, and a commodity.  Historically, sugar qualified, as did tobacco and other luxury goods; of particular interest here is exotic pets, such as monkeys and, yes, parrots (really any large feathered birds, since feather quills were used as pens).  Whale oil (used in lamps) was another hot item, with whaling ships often making easy targets returning from hunts. But whatever the cargo, there is a fine line of intersecting interests, between the risks of accepting stolen goods, the risks of stealing them in the first place, and the potential profit.  Of course, there&#039;s always robbing payroll ships, but if they were easy to hit everyone would do it. &lt;br /&gt;
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For a nation whose government is fairly loose and rudimentary, the distinction between &amp;quot;Pirate&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Honest Trader&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Navy&amp;quot; is sometimes difficult to make. Many pirates would prefer to go after foreign prey rather than people from their home ports. A down on his luck merchant captain might try to steal the stuff from a rival ship from a rival country if the choice is &amp;quot;make a profit, pay the crew, eliminate some of the competition and live to sail another day&amp;quot; or &amp;quot;starve to death/have a mutiny for unpaid wages/have the ship founder for disrepair/go bankrupt&amp;quot;. Privateer work was common in times of war when said actions got sanctioned and sometimes a merchantman could have a few extra guns put on her and be made into a ghetto warship. &lt;br /&gt;
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To complicate matters even further, even powerful and well-organized nations like France and England had &#039;prize money&#039; laws in place that made capturing enemy vessels and their cargo a very attractive prospect: any ship captured at sea and its cargo became &#039;&#039;de jure&#039;&#039; property of the crown, but the king would generously compensate the crews with money/valuables once the prize was brought in. On top of that it wasn&#039;t uncommon at all for the winner of a naval engagement to quietly enroll any surviving sailor to replace losses and/or keep manning their now captured ship (the defeated sailors were generally down with this since the alternative was usually sitting in the hold in chains), no matter their nationality; so even a &#039;national&#039; crew from an &#039;official&#039; Navy ship could sound like a weird mix of freebooters hauling their capture in when coming into port.&lt;br /&gt;
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If you get enough pirates in an area, they might come together and found a town. It starts off in some place with a natural harbor to shelter in storms and repair their ships between fights. Then crews begin swapping stuff if one of them has a surplus of gunpowder and the other has a surplus of food and similar. A couple of guys are left behind from each crew (as well as captives who could not be ransomed off) to collect timber, first when it&#039;s expected that there will be some damage taken in the near future and latter more regularly around a growing logging camp. A couple of docks go up to make things go more smoothly, as does a forge or two and a couple of vegetable gardens.  If there are native peoples in the area they start showing up to trade, or occasionally raid necessitating some basic defenses.  &lt;br /&gt;
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Then some enterprising pirate cobbles together a pub, selling plundered Beer, Grog and Rum to passing pirates and shore-side workers at first and soon enough is brewing there own, especially when a few full fledged farms get going to provide produce. A still is not far behind. Soon enough the Pub has some prostitutes and by extension some bastards. Those pirates which had lost limbs to the job may settle down with their compensation package for an easier and steadier life ashore.  Tents and lean-tos are replaced by shacks and shanties, then small cottages and after that houses. Workshops gradually come together and more and more of the population becomes permanent. &lt;br /&gt;
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Soon you get a thriving and lively if disorderly and dangerous new settlement, which attracts the attention of whatever state power claims control over the area.  A governor and garrison will be dispatched who start keeping out the roughest sorts, and things settle down into a more quiet and businesslike place much to the chagrin of old timers who miss the gold old days of loose women, hearty songs, exciting brawls and the odd knifings which made things dangerous and interesting.  Although occasionally a pirate captain will approach the state FIRST asking &amp;quot;Can I haz govnuh hat?&amp;quot;; this happened with Tortuga (Jean Le Vasseur).&lt;br /&gt;
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==[[Pathfinder Second Edition]]==&lt;br /&gt;
{{dnd-stub}}&lt;br /&gt;
An archetype where you master the ins and outs of fighting on ships. It was originally a rather limited archetype that appeared on the 2018 playtest before vanishing. It would show up again in the Advanced Player&#039;s Guide, looking just as small when compared to other archetypes. This is likely because it&#039;s already relying on two other skills with feats that would otherwise overlap with it: Athletics (which helps with rope climbing) and Intimidation. &lt;br /&gt;
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The prerequisites for entry pretty much boil down to &amp;quot;look scary&amp;quot; (read: trained in Intimidation) and in exchange, you can walk on boats without issue, learn lore about sailing and gain a special action that pretty much lets you go [[Errol Flynn]] and swing your sword while swinging on a rope. &lt;br /&gt;
[[List of Archetypes in Pathfinder Second Edition#Acrobat|see more]]&lt;br /&gt;
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{{Pathfinder-2nd-Edition-Archetypes}}&lt;br /&gt;
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==Mordheim Pirate Warbands==&lt;br /&gt;
One of the more popular &amp;quot;semi-official&amp;quot; [[Mordheim]] warbands, pirate warbands are based on the simple facts that a) there have always been pirates in the Empire, b) the Empire relies heavily on river-conducted trade, and c) this meant the titular city was a big port before the [[warpstone]] meteor hit. So now you have plenty of bold and/or crazy pirates sailing up to the ruined dock and daring to launch raids into the city.&lt;br /&gt;
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As a warband, Pirates of Mordheim have the special rules &#039;&#039;Ship-Based&#039;&#039; (if you hire both [[elf]] and [[dwarf]] Hired Swords simultaneously, increase their upkeep by &#039;&#039;&#039;+20 gold pieces&#039;&#039;&#039;, as the tight confines of the ship exacerbate their racial animosity) and &#039;&#039;&#039;Shanghai&#039;&#039;&#039;. This is their mainstay special rule, and what it means is that pirates can actually swell their own ranks by recruiting captured enemies or even the random survivors of Mordheim. Because there are several situations where a pirate crew can successfully shanghai a person, this rule gets complicated...&lt;br /&gt;
*  Firstly: a Pirate Captain can only attempt to shanghai &#039;&#039;&#039;normal human&#039;&#039;&#039; warband members; nonhumans refuse to obey or are too dangerous even for pirates to keep, whilst Hired Swords and Special Characters have no interest in the pirate life.&lt;br /&gt;
* When an enemy Hero is Captured, instead of exchanging/ransoming them or selling them, the Pirate Captain can attempt to convince them to join the crew. Roll 2d6 and add the Leadership of the Captain, then do the same for the captured Hero, adding +1 to he roll of whichever side won the fight. If the Captain wins, then the Hero defects and joins his crew, becoming a normal Crewman - this includes resetting his ability scores and skills if necessary and swapping all his gear for stuff from the Pirate Equipment list. If the Hero wins, then the Captain simply pressgangs him; the Hero retains his original skills and stats, but loses all his gear for stuff from the Swabbie list and can be deployed as a Swabbie in subsequent battles. Presumably, if the Pirates Rout against a shanghaied Hero-turned-Swabbie&#039;s former warband, he rejoins them.&lt;br /&gt;
* When the Pirates win a battle against an enemy warband, roll a d6 for each enemy Henchman that was killed (1-2 on their post-game roll after being taken Out of Action); on a 4+, they actually weren&#039;t killed, but were instead dragged back to the pirate ship and patched up. The Pirate Captain can attempt to shanghai them in the same manner as a captured hero, as described above.&lt;br /&gt;
* If the Pirates discover a Straggler when exploring Mordheim, the Pirate Captain can attempt to shanghai the half-crazed survivor instead of the other options. This requires making a simple Leadership check for the Captain; if he passes, then you gain a free Swabbie (the Straggler is too bonkers to make it as a crewman).&lt;br /&gt;
* Similarly, if the pirates discover Survivors when exploring Mordheim, the Pirate Captain can attempt to recruit them. Roll a d3 to see how many survivors there are, then make a Leadership check for the Captain for each Survivor. If successful, the survivor eagerly joins and becomes a Crewman; they can either start a new unit as a basic Crewman, or be added to an existing unit, whereupon their Exp and Stats match their brethren. If the check fails, however, the Suvivor is reluctantly pressganged, and so becomes a Swabbie.&lt;br /&gt;
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Like all Mordheim warbands, you start with 500 gold pieces to outfit your Pirate Crew, which can be no larger than 15 models.&lt;br /&gt;
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A Pirate Warband&#039;s leader is, of course, the &#039;&#039;&#039;Pirate Captain&#039;&#039;&#039; - you must start with one of these guys! They start with 20 EXP and can gain special skills from all of the standard skill tables (Combat, Shooting, Academic, Strength, Speed) as well as the &#039;&#039;Pirate Skills&#039;&#039; table. They cost 60 gold, have the &#039;&#039;Leader&#039;&#039; rule, and start with M4, WS4, BS3, S3, T3, W1, I3, A1 and LD8.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Ship&#039;s Mates&#039;&#039;&#039; are your standard secondary hero; you can have 0-2 of these in your crew. Ship&#039;s Mates cost 35 gold to hire and start with 8 experience as well as M4, WS4, BS3, S3, T3, W1, I2, A1 and LD7. They have the &#039;&#039;Inheritor&#039;&#039; special rule; if your Captain gets killed, then one of the Mates will take over the warband, just like how the standard Mercenary warband uses Champions to take over. They can learn Combat, Shooting, Strength and Pirate skills.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Cabin Boys&#039;&#039;&#039; are the obligatory &amp;quot;bare-faced recruit&amp;quot; type hero. 0-2 of these guys, who cost 15 gold to hire and start with 0 EXP and M4, WS2, BS2, S3, T3, W1, I3, A1 and LD6. They can learn Combat, Shooting, Speed and Pirate skills.&lt;br /&gt;
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Now, for Henchman... your standard henchmen are, of course, the humble &#039;&#039;&#039;Crew&#039;&#039;&#039; or &amp;quot;Crewmen&amp;quot;. 25 gold to hire, and statted up with M4, WS3, BS3, S3, T3, W1, I2, A1 and LD7. You can have any number of crewmen you like.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Gunners&#039;&#039;&#039; are the ship&#039;s cannoneers and marksmen; you can only have 0-2 of these guys, and they have the same stats and cost as the Crew, but they get access to some more firearms - blunderbusses, handguns and swivel guns (aka miniature cannons), specifically, alongside the pistol and duelist pistols that regular crewmen and Heroes ca take. They technically have a special rule in &amp;quot;Swivel Guns is Dangerous, Matey!&amp;quot; but that&#039;s more a rule about the Swivel Gun - namely, you can only take 1 Swivel Gun in your warband, and the bearer splits off to form an independent unit, because nobody&#039;s stupid enough to stand too close to somebody carrying a miniature cannon that could go off like a bomb at any moment.&lt;br /&gt;
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&#039;&#039;&#039;Boatswains&#039;&#039;&#039; are the ship&#039;s riggers, and make excellent scouts in Mordheim. They cost 32 gold, have the same stats as a Crewman, and you can only take 0-5 of them. They start play with a Rope &amp;amp; Hook and will never, &#039;&#039;ever&#039;&#039; part with it. They also have the special rule &#039;&#039;Expert Riggers&#039;&#039;, which lets them reroll failed Initiative tests made to climb a rope, leap a gap, jump down, or perform a diving charge.&lt;br /&gt;
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Finally, there are the &#039;&#039;&#039;Swabbies&#039;&#039;&#039;. You can have 0-5 of these, and you can only recruit them via the aforementioned Shanghai rule, though in a one-off game you get 2 Swabbies for free. Statwise, they have  M4, WS2, BS2, S3, T3, W1, I3, A1 and LD6. They also have the largest amount of special rules of any model in the warband:&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;Not Hired:&#039;&#039; You don&#039;t pay for Swabbies, you Shanghai them.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;Never Gain Experience&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;Rabble:&#039;&#039; You can give a unit of Swabbies any mixture of weapons that you like. Swabbies gained by capturing heroes do not benefit from spellcasting ablities or skills they had before.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&amp;quot;Blimey, they got away!&amp;quot;:&#039;&#039; If the Pirates Rout, all Swabbies who had left the table on previous turns successfully escape; remove them from the warband roster.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&amp;quot;Don&#039;t mind them mates, they ain&#039;t true pirates!&amp;quot;:&#039;&#039; Swabbies who run or get taken out of action don&#039;t count for the purposes of taking a Rout test.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Pirate skill table consists of:&lt;br /&gt;
#: &#039;&#039;&#039;Sea Shanty Singer:&#039;&#039;&#039; At the start of Close Combat, the Hero can burst into song, forcing one opponent in base contact to pass an LD test or lose 1 attack for the turn. Doesn&#039;t work on non-living targets.&lt;br /&gt;
#: &#039;&#039;&#039;Sea Legs:&#039;&#039;&#039; If the Hero Falls, roll a d3; on a 4+, ignore all hits caused by falling. Additionally, if the hero is knocked down or stunned when within 1&amp;quot; of a precipice, they can reroll their Initiate test to avoid falling.&lt;br /&gt;
#: &#039;&#039;&#039;Cutlass Master:&#039;&#039;&#039; If the Hero is both equipped with a sword and in closed quarters (in cover, in a building, within 2&amp;quot; of a terrain feature, etc), then the Hero can Parry by rolling equal to the To Hit roll, as well as by rolling higher.&lt;br /&gt;
#: &#039;&#039;&#039;Booming Voice:&#039;&#039;&#039; Only Captains can have this skill; reroll for other characters. Once per turn, if on his feet and not engaged in close combat, the Captain can target a single pirate within 8&amp;quot; who has either faileds their test to see if they will flee combat or who failed their test to stop fleeing. The targeted pirate can immediately reroll their test.&lt;br /&gt;
#: &#039;&#039;&#039;Hardy Constitution:&#039;&#039;&#039; When the Hero takes a Critical Hit, roll a d6; on a 5+, the Critical Hit is downgraded to just a normal hit.&lt;br /&gt;
#: &#039;&#039;&#039;Swashbuckler:&#039;&#039;&#039; At the end of any Hand-to-Hand phase in which he is in base contact with an enemy model, his own or the opponent&#039;s, the Hero can make an LD test. If successful, the Hero can immediately make a normal movement away from the enemy without taking any hits.&lt;br /&gt;
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==Gallery==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
buccaneer MCV1.jpg&lt;br /&gt;
buccaneer MM 2e.png&lt;br /&gt;
Capt phip abud.gif| Abduwali Muse, a modern somali pirate, as portrayed by Somali-American actor Barkhad Abdi in film. Also a meme, apparently.&lt;br /&gt;
Abduwali Muse.jpg| The actual Abduwali Muse. Currently serving a 33+ years in U.S. federal prison.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/gallery&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==See Also==&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Dreadfleet]]&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Man O&#039; War]]&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Poison&#039;d]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:History]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2600:387:9:3:0:0:0:4A</name></author>
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