The more official sources and/or the better quality and better fitting sources you list, the more I'm likely to pick and accept your answer. What I'm interested in of the spectrum is those worlds that are at least on the same tech level as Earth IRL is, currently. In this twisted alternate timeline Warmaster Horus was able to cast off the daemonic influences that sought to possess. Of course, the worlds of the empire have a wide variety of tech levels. The Dornian Heresy Wiki is a community of fans of the beloved Bolter & Chainsword forums fan-created alternate universe - the Dornian Heresy - where familiar Primarchs and Space Marine Legions have met very different fates.
But then what do they look like? What would I see on a journalistic street photo?) (Obviously, their dresses won't have all the embroidery, ornamentation etc that the elite's outfit tends to have. Dark Heresy Second Edition is a roleplaying game of danger, mystery, and brutal violence set in the decaying far future of Warhammer 40,000. Cheap Games Workshop, Cheap Warhammer 40K, Cheap Warhammer, Cheap Age of Sigmar, Cheap Fantasy, Cheap Magic, Cheap Malifaux, Warhammer 40k, Cheap X-Wing, Fast. However, we're usually shown only the elite (well, in a certain sense, anyway), which makes (re)constructing a mental image of the average city and its inhabitants quite hard. Dark Heresy Second Edition: Core Rulebook. In Dark Heresy players take on the roles of Acolytes of the Inquisition, aiming to. Having scoured the net for sources, Ive found that - not too surprisingly - it is widely known that the Adeptus Arbites, the planetary police force of the Warhammer 40k universe was heavily inspired by Judge Dredd - and that the same goes for the cities as well: Your average WH40k city/planet (that is, the kind I specified in the Q) is. The setting of Warhammer 40,000 is a dark, gothic future where the Imperium of Man is beset by dangers within and without.
I really find the imagery of the WH40k universe. Dark Heresy is a roleplaying game based upon the universe of Games Workshops Warhammer 40,000. In case there are no official sources, please recommend sources/artists (online) whose works you've actually used during play to show your players the "backdrop" of their urban adventures. Which (rpg) books related to the Warhammer 40k universe have images depicting the "average" citizenry and cities of the Empire and their daily lives?