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==In Warhammer 40,000== Mr. K.M. Khaine is one of the three Eldar gods that survived the [[Fall of the Eldar]] (the other two being [[Cegorach]] and [[Isha]]), although he was trampled and pushed out of the [[Warp]] and into realspace while [[Khorne]] used his body as a bat to lay the (un)holy beatdown on [[Slaanesh]] all over Eldar heaven. Because of this, he's no longer "alive" in a spiritual sense and is now shattered into a bajillion physical pieces. These pieces made their way into the [[Craftworld]]s, where they can be used to summon a manifestation of Khaine when the need arises. He's also the angriest god of the Eldar pantheon, although he can't really contest with the [[RAGE]] of [[Angron]] and [[Doombreed]]. It has been [[Xenology|Theorised]] by members of the fandom, that Khaine (as well as the rest of the Eldar pantheon) might have at some point been one of the [[Old Ones]], and so strictly speaking is not exclusively an Eldar deity. He was also the Bloody-Handed God of War for the [[Hrud]]; but considering that the Eldar ruled the galaxy for millions of years it wouldn't be a surprise that other species adopted the Eldar Pantheon as their own. It is also straight up stated that the ancient Eldar created them originally as Warp constructs, that would eventually grow into the first true gods of the Warp. Regardless, the Eldar and their Pantheon of gods share an almost symbiotic relationship with each other, never displayed by any other species in the setting. Khaine wasn't always the raging murder-hobo that he would later become; he was, if you can believe it, an honourable and proud warrior once upon a time. During the War in Heaven Khaine would do battle against the full unshattered might of the Nightbringer, the conclusion of which would see Khaine shatter the Nightbringer's physical form and throw its "true" scythe into the deepest depths of the Warp where the C'tan could never reach it. Shards of the Nightbringer stabbed into Khaine's form, fusing with the very soul of the War god. The essence of the Nightbringer would poison/taint Khaine; and so Khaine gained the aspect of the Reaper- the destroyer. Neither Khaine or the Nightbringer walked away from the battle whole, the Nightbringer, who had invested such a vast amount of its power into it's lost scythe, was greatly reduced (it would never be able to regain its lost power), and the noble warrior that was Khaine was no more. ===The story of the single angriest Eldar entity ever=== Long ago, when the Eldar were the most powerful race in the universe and they hadn't raped themselves yet, Khaine heard from [[Lileath]], the prophecy-giver of the Eldar pantheon, that the Eldar would one day kill him. Khaine, never one for subtlety, decided to [[Exterminatus|murder every last one of the pansies]] to ensure that never happened. However, [[Isha]], the mother-goddess of the Eldar, wept for them because no sane mother would want her own children butchered to death by a maniacal god of war. Khaine's rage gets pretty visible at this point because he had the hots for Isha and still completely ignored her, even after she immediately used her common sense and said she was not getting with a genocidal manifestation of pure wrath (per the book ''Path of the Eldar''. Speaking of which, this book basically says that Eldar [[Exarch|Exarchs]] and Khaine have severe psychological problems. Too bad the only gods who come close to being psychologists are [[God-Emperor of Mankind|this warmongering atheist]], [[Tzeentch|this squawking politician-patron]] of [[Sorcerer (Dungeons & Dragons)|spontaneous casters]], and [[Malal|this nutter]] who doesn't believe that you (or he) exists.) Anyway, that's where [[Asuryan]], the Phoenix King of the Eldar gods, intervened and decided to spare the Eldar from their would-be fate at the bloody hands of Khaine and Isha from having to witness it, by creating a barrier to separate mortals from gods for all eternity. This ensured that the mortal Eldar would never have the chance to kill Khaine and that Khaine would never be able to enter the mortal realm and kill all of the Eldar. This solution worked for Khaine, but not so well for Isha. Isha missed talking to her children and so cheated through the whole barrier deal by having [[Vaul|Vaul the Artificer]] (the best craftsman of the Eldar gods and soon-to-be Hephaestus expy) make spirit stones to communicate with them. Khaine however, discovered this, and cried foul on Isha and her husband [[Kurnous]]. Asuryan, not wanting to look like a biased dick, told Khaine that he could do whatever he wanted with the two, so naturally Khaine [[grimdark|chose eternal torment because he's a psychotic arsehole.]] Vaul got pissed at this and bargained with Khaine that he would make a hundred of his finest swords in a year in exchange for Isha and Kurnous' release, which Khaine agreed to. However, because Vaul decided to jerk off on the last day rather than work, he couldn't make the last sword in time and instead tried to trick Khaine by putting one normal sword among the bunch of ninety-nine epic swords he made, thinking that Khaine, with his short attention span and inability to count beyond 10, wouldn't notice and would just accept the fuckhuge pile of swords as is. Which is exactly what seemingly happened at first, and Khaine released Isha and Kurnous. [[Just as planned|Situation over]]. [[Not as planned|However, Vaul didn't count on Khaine being incredibly anal whenever he's weaponwhoring]], and so Khaine got [[RAGE|almighty pissed when he discovered that he got tricked]]. Yeah, a lot of people reeeaaallly love to screw with Khaine. Too bad the guy has a terrible sense of humour. This trickery had unfortunate consequences for the whole Eldar pantheon, who after Asuryan shrugged the matter off started to take sides: some agreed with Khaine, others told him to calm the fuck down and grow up; and things snowballed from there and boiled over into the mortal realm (simply having Vaul fashion a replacement sword [[derp|apparently never occurred to anyone]]). Exactly what the hell happened then is unclear but a couple of things are set in stone. At one point, Khaine got his hands on Vaul and beat the shit out of him before chaining him to his anvil. Another certainty is that he eventually murdered Eldanesh, an Eldar champion, although why he did it is unclear since multiple reasons have been put forward (there's lore on this in multiple sources and they are contradictory as fuck): *Eldanesh challenged Khaine to an honorable duel for the freedom of Vaul, armed with the last blade the Artisan-God should have finished in time (and did before his capture). (Original lore from 2ed. Codex: Eldar.) *Eldanesh, as nominal leader of the mortal Eldar, was just tired of his shit and told Khaine to calm the fuck down because he and the [[War in Heaven]] were royally fucking things up for the Eldar. (More recent lore.) *Eldanesh and Khaine actually collaborated during the war against the [[Necrons]], but at the end he gave Khaine the middle finger when he tried to convince him to keep killing for the sake of killing and generally having violent fun. And Eldanesh did it in vain because his murder triggered the internecine [[War in Heaven]] anyway. (''Path of the Eldar'' by [[Gav Thorpe]].) Anyway, whatever the exact reason, what is certain is Khaine got [[rage|a little angry]] at Eldanesh and slapped a bitch, and since said bitch wasn't a god it [[Blam|really didn't end well]]. That's the point where Asuryan got '''really''' tired of everyone's shit so he told everyone to shut the fuck up and condemned Khaine to have blood eternally drip from his hands to remind him of his crime, earning him the title "Khaela Mensha" (or Bloody-Handed). When the [[Chaos Gods|Chaos god]] [[Slaanesh]] was birthed from the accumulated Warp energy of the Eldar's galactic empire of excess and decadence, Khaine tried to battle the newborn god and managed to put up a pretty good fight, despite the fact The Great Hermaphrodite had already consumed the other Eldar gods. In the end, however, Khaine was overpowered and on the verge of being consumed by Slaanesh, when help came from an unexpected source. [[Khorne]] came charging in, pissed off that Slaanesh was trying to steal power he saw as belonging to him (due to Khaine being a war god), and promptly began fighting with the newborn Prince of Pleasure. During this punch-up (possibly because he was a convenient object for Khorne to piledrive Slaanesh into) Khaine was "shattered" into a thousand smaller spiritual shards of himself; each of these came to rest in the heart of a Craftworld's Infinity Circuit, where they lurk until summoned to battle by a complex sacrificial ritual. So in the end, Lileath's prophecy did come true in a sense. The Eldar were responsible for the birth of Slaanesh, who killed Khaine - except not totally because technically he is still "alive". It's just that he's not up and about anymore, like [[Cegorach]] and [[Isha]], and now has to live with the fact that he, the Eldar god of war and destruction, was himself destroyed. Either way, it was either [[Just As Planned]] by [[Tzeentch]], who was the only Chaos God who didn't directly intervene during the fall of the Eldar, or Cegorach, because that hilarious son of a bitch just HAD to do it to put Khaine in his place before he slipped back into the [[Webway]]. Hell, for all we know, the two could have orchestrated the entire Fall of the Eldar just to be the only two entities who managed to successfully screw with Khaine and get away with it. ===The Avatar of Khaine=== [[File:Avatar vs Lorgar.jpg|thumb|350px|right|The Avatar of Khaine in its natural state of existence: dying horribly to make whatever character or faction GW is currently trying to sell look awesome. (In this instance, [[Lorgar]] mercy killed it.)]] The '''Avatar of Khaine''' is a unique Eldar [[daemon]] unit. The Avatar is basically a small fragment of Khaine's power given form through one of his fragments present in a Craftworld. The Eldar will only summon the Avatar into battle under the most dire of circumstances when there is no other choice. This is because in order to summon the Avatar, the Eldar must sacrifice one of their [[Exarch]]s, known as the "Young King", in order to bring him into existence, and this only lasts for a limited amount of time. Like any daemon, after some time, the Avatar will eventually degenerate and disappear, taking the sacrificed Exarch with it back to the shrine from whence it came. For the Exarch in question this is the ultimate honour, as this and becoming a [[Phoenix Lord]] are the only ways an Exarch can find release in death. There is an alternative method of awakening the Avatar, but it requires no less than six [[Phoenix Lord]]s to show up on a craftworld simultaneously and place their weapons at the Avatar's feet. The concentration of psychic energy is enough to not only awaken the Avatar without needing a sacrifice, but [[Apocalypse|supercharge him]]. He <s>used to be</s> '''IS''' really strong, but [[Games Workshop]]'s authors have taken a liking to murdering Avatars every chance they get depending on marketing needs. Because of this, the Avatar has been: *Killed hilariously by [[Marneus Calgar]] in hand-to-hand combat in the 5th edition [[Space Marine]] codex. This can be chalked up to the ridiculous levels of [[Matt Ward|Wardian Wankery]] in the 5th Ed codex, and can be retconned/explained as an in-universe propaganda piece to reinforce the 'unstoppable angel of death' image of Astartes that the average Imperial will know about. *Possessed by Heartslayer, a [[Keeper of Secrets]] (oh, the [[Irony|irony]]), during the invasion of the Eldar Craftworld Kher-Ys. *Trampled to death by twelve stampeding [[Carnifex|Carnifexes]] during the battle between [[Craftworld Iyanden]] and the [[Hive Fleet Kraken]]. What happened was that the Avatar goaded the swarm's [[Hive Tyrant]] into a duel. What the Avatar failed to realize was that this wasn't tabletop and that the [[Tyranids]] are a pragmatic instead of an idealistic lot who have no concept of honourable or dirty fighting, so the Hive Tyrant just raised his brow at this and sent twelve Carnifexes to run the Avatar over. (Weirdly, [[Matt Ward]] gave him a more dignified death than this bullshit.) *Strangled (WTF?)/neck crushed by [[Fulgrim]]. Let us remind you that Avatars are living metal statues, and they neither breathe nor have bones. Unless Fulgrim full-on [[Rip and Tear|crushed its neck until the head popped off]], which would've pretty thoroughly killed it. *Killed by the [[Sanguinor]]. *"Put out of his misery" by [[Lorgar Aurelian|Lorgar]] (who was, at the time, considered to be the worst fighter out of all the [[Primarchs]]). Though the Avatar was heavily damaged even before the fight, unable to even stand and driven mad by centuries spent in the Warp, and this was just a few pages before Lorgar proved to be a top level badass as he battled and bested Anggrath, the uber-[[Bloodthirster]] of Khorne who can eat Avatars and [[Titans]] like cookies. *Stabbed in the heart by [[Maugan Ra]] to temper his Maugetar. See? Even in its own faction, the thing gets killed anticlimactically. *Abandoned on a [[Maiden World]], where its connection to the Eldar was severed, reducing it to a mindless state of rage. The now-unbound Avatar consequently called out to the [[Orks]] of the nearby Octarius system, which were [[Looted|happy to answer it]]. It's kind of sad that the only time the Avatar isn't being a jobber is when he's being used by someone else entirely. *Killed by the [[Legion of the Damned]] when assisting the [[Invaders]] in their assault on Craftworld Idharae. When the Legion realized their flaming bolters did squat against the Avatar, they instead brought the roof down on it. This one's slightly less [[fail]]-worthy than the others, since destroying the dome literally blasted the Avatar out into the void of space. Plus, the Invaders were seriously mauled by doing this, which is a good deal more realistic than much of this list. *Slain by a Battlewagon whilst leading Ulthwe's forces in a near suicidal attempt to defeat a powerful Ork Warboss. *Somehow able to achieve a mutual kill against [[Skarbrand]], most likely the closest thing to a victory any Avatar has ever achieved; it should be noted that, as the Avatar of the Craftworld with the greatest devotion to Khaine, it may have been stronger than normal. Sadly, with the death of the Craftworld and Infinity Circuit, this Avatar is most likely no more. *Somehow fused with a Genestealer Patriarch who took its body over on the Craftworld Zaisuthra. Once again, the Avatar is a living '''metal statue''', leaving the question of how the hell a biological creature fused with it unanswered. *A purer shard of the Avatar of Khaine, called the Warshard, was killed rather quickly by the Yncarne possessing Yvraine which, considering the Yncarne itself was easily defeated by Ahriman, [[Fail|does not say good things about Khaine]]. *If you thought by 2021 GW might consider throwing the old loser a bone, you couldn't be more wrong. Khaine's latest sad end happened recently on [[Warhammer Plus|Warhammer+]], the episode '''In the Garden of Ghosts''' - which was meant to be a story about the Eldar - has the Avatar getting its ass crumped by a bunch of [[Intercessor]]s, a [[Redemptor Dreadnought]] and a [[Gladiator Lancer]]...[[What|yeah]]; it did manage to kill a handful of Marines and the Dreadnought before getting surrounded and killed by regular, bog-standard bolter fire, so that slightly better then usual (apparently it was already heavily damaged and almost dead at this point, after fighting nonstop for days- probably got held up by a marine scout for most of the battle). This also comes in the backdrop of an entire [[Craftworld]] getting invaded (again) and it's population slaughtered effortlessly by (you guessed it) Ultra Marines/ Smurfs... [[Fail|''somehow'']] (destroying Craftworlds isn't even a notable achievement anymore, everyone gets to do it; it's just such an easy and effortless thing to do) The entire episode is just a quick re-telling of Gav's Path series (although this one is actually much better); the three main characters are literally a scorpion, seer and outcast (the Scorpion is awesome by the way, proper deadly bastard). He's also used by a boss fight whenever Eldar show up in [[Dawn of War]]. These are among his more dignified deaths because he's actually got the high-level stats he ''should'' have, on par with greater daemons, yet encountered much earlier: *Killed by [[Gabriel Angelos]]' 3rd company without the aid of anything heavier than a [[Dreadnought]] during the [[Dawn of War|Tartarus Campaign]]. The presence of [[Isador Akios]], though he was already descending towards [[heresy]], probably helped too. *Killed in a break-dancing competition by a Khornate [[Bloodthirster]] during the Eldar's incursion on Lorn V (this one's non-canon). *In Dark Crusade, destroying the Eldar Stronghold during the Kronus Campaign shows you a loving rendition of the Avatar getting punk'd in ''single combat'' by the tallest unit your army has to offer. This includes: **A Chaos Bloodthirster. **A Squiggoth. **A Necron [[C'tan|Nightbringer shard]]. **A Tau [[Great Knarloc]]. **If the [[Imperial Guard]] under [[Governor-Militant Lukas Alexander|Lukas Alexander]] defeat the eldar on Kronus, then the avatar gets killed by a MOTHER FUCKING [[sentinel|SENTINEL]]. **And last but not least, the tallest unit [[Blood Ravens|the canonical winners]] have to kill the Avatar is Epistolary Anteas. Yep, Papa Smurf himself just got outdone by a [[Librarian]]. In the after-action report Anteas is credited with stealing the pieces of the Avatar's armor, showing early-onset signs of the Blood Ravens' kleptomania. *Possibly defended [[Caerys|Farseer Caerys']] last base on Kaurava III only to be blown away by <strike>[[Vance Stubbs|VANCE MOTHERFUCKING STUBBS]] and his 100 [[Baneblade|Baneblades]] after they refused to fuck off.</strike> <span style='color:green;font-size:115%'> KRUMPED BY GORGUTZ! QWIT WHININ' DIS IZ KANNON YA 'UMIE GROT!</span> *Killed ''twice'' by [[Blood Ravens Force Commander|Force Commander Hair Gel's]] squad during the fighting to pacify the Eldar in subsector Aurelia. Though to be honest, both of these battles are really fucking hard if you don't have a well-managed squad, and nothing short of [[Ulkair|greater daemons]] is more than a speedbump for [[Tarkus]] or [[Cyrus]]. One rare example of an Avatar of Khaine not being used as a punching bag is in the Fracture of Biel Tan, where one ties with an injured Skarbrand. It has gotten to the point that the question isn't who could beat an Avatar, but who ''hasn't'' beaten an Avatar. Another good showing for the Avatar of Khaine is at the climax of the Ciaphas Cain book Choose Your Enemies where one gets airdropped onto a Slaaneshi daemon twice its size and proceeds beat the shit out of it. Up until the avatar appeared, the daemon prince had shrugged of melta and lasgun fire like it was nothing. Based on how the end of the fight is written in the book, it might've perma-killed it too. Eventually, even GW realized just how much the Avatar's reputation had been shredded, and when it got a new model for 9th edition, they [https://www.warhammer-community.com/2022/02/23/dreadnought-chaos-warband-and-a-primarch-is-there-anything-the-avatar-of-khaine-cant-beat/ did a round of playtesting to try and build up its street cred]. Time will tell if they succeeded. ===On the Tabletop=== [[File:LatestKhaine.jpg|thumb|right|300px|FOOL! YOU DARE QUESTION THE SIZE OF MY LOINCLOTH?! ([[Mark Gibbons|MG]])]] The Avatar of Khaine took a bit of a beating with 8th edition. For starters, the Avatar now costs 220 points while not improving too much. What you get for that cost is a whopping WS2+ A5 monster that hits at S8 AP-4 D6 damage, with an ability that lets you roll two dice and take the highest to determine damage. This means that the Avatar of Khaine can punch holes in tanks and monsters like it's nobody's business. Do note that it has only 5 attacks and it deals no Mortal Wounds, so it can kill a maximum of 5 models per turn. If you really want all your attacks to hit, give him an Autarch buddy for rerolls for your To Hit rolls. On top of that it can also shoot with that profile as an 12" Assault 1 weapon, and thanks to Battle Focus does not get -1 to hit if it advanced the same turn. Paired with its 7" movement and a re-roll on failed charge rolls one of the Avatar's largest problems in earlier editions, its low speed, has been kind of addressed. As for saves it gets a 3+, a 5++ due to being a Daemon and its Molten Body ability has been reworked into granting yet another 5++ save instead of immunity to flamers and melta weapons. With the advent of multi-wound weapons this is quite useful and it would be one hell of a job to write down exactly which guns count as flamers or melta now that the keywords regarding them are gone, it is still sad to see such a flavorful ability disappear. With T6, W8 and no degrading of its abilities as it gets hurt the Avatar can stay in the fight long enough, but two lucky Lascannon shots can put it down for the count with frightening ease (although if you lose a character to shooting in 8th edition you probably don't know what you're doing). Don't forget that it's a Character, so as long as it remains screened by other units it should be able to get close enough to the enemy to deal damage. Be wary of flyers with powerful weapons, for they can easily assassinate your Avatar because of the high speed of the rest of the Eldar army compared to it. If you're not running a Saim-Hann list the Avatar's '''12"''' aura (which allows units to re-roll failed charges and makes them immune to morale) can be pure rape. Use him to propel Howling Banshees up the table, or to lead a horde of Guardian blobs. When using Power Ratings instead the Avatar clocks in at 13 points, the second-most expensive unit behind the [[Wraithknight]]. Nothing much changes about it, so stick it in combat as soon as you can to get the most out of it. 9th Edition Codex is here. My god... after all this time, the face of the Craftworlds got a glow up and my god does it bring a tear to the eye. Now towering over the mere mortal Aspect Warriors, the Avatar of Khaine has finally become something to behold. Not just aesthetically either. His Piercing Strike profile is tailor made to ruin the day of elite or single model units; 7 attacks at S14 AP-5 and d6+2 will indeed lay low practically everything without a solid invuln save or some ability that prevents damage altogether (like your Phoenix Lords' Favoured of Khaine ability, for example). Alternatively, his Sweeping Blows (like the name suggests) trades sheer strength and damage to double the number of strikes he makes, going from 7 to 14 separate S7 AP-2 D2 attacks. Though TEQ units may be able to shake off a glancing blow, the staggering number of attacks hitting on a 2+ will almost assuredly doom the "lucky" son of a bitch anyways. Now, that ranged profile he used to have? Instead of a random d6 hits, the Avatar instead picks a target at 12" away (if it's a unit with multiple models, he has to pick the one closest to him) and strikes. If it hits (pretty likely with that BS2+), that unit and every unit between the Avatar and them is hit by the attack. Unfortunately, this does reduce the total potential output against a unit (only killing one model per unit), but at S12 and d6+2 damage, any multi-wound unit isn't walking away scratch free. Defensively, the Avatar lost his FNP rule, but in exchange received a full 2+/4++ save at T8. Should something manage to make it through that statline, the Avatar halves the damage of every attack that lands true (rounding up). Needless to say, don't put him up against targets that can reliably proc mortal wounds or have him strike them down first, you don't want that 4++ and halving damage to be wasted. Long story short? This guy has become an absolute beast on the battlefield and is a solid pick to form the core of a Craftworld Deathstar. There are a couple drawbacks that do warrant consideration though. The first (and obvious) issue; his price point. This towering monstrosity is pretty pricey at 270pts and may find it challenging to fit into smaller armies without severely limiting the number of boots on the ground. Second, his upgraded statline, while extremely beefy, does now degrade. While his accuracy with the blade in combat never depreciates, he does become slower and lose attacks as he brackets. Coupled with being much bigger and freely targetable, as well as not having any healing options for him, this can be a major problem if you can't get him stuck in. Which brings up the next major con: While 10" is respectably quick, it's not ideal when your massive melee monster needs to spend a turn or two slogging across the battlefield. You have zero options for speeding him up and if your opponent doesn't need to guard anything in particular, they can potentially spend the whole day kiting this thing from one end of the table to the other. The last major downside? The Avatar of Khaine can no longer take any Warlord Traits or equipment what-so-ever (so never make him your Warlord). Regardless, his upgraded base kit more than makes up for these flaws and if you need something to drop kick an enemy Landraider or Imperial Knight equivalent off the table, you can't go wrong with the Avatar of Khaine.
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