Warhammer 40,000 – Build Your Army & Command the Battle.
Welcome to the Warhammer 40,000 collection at Hearns Hobbies. If you love detailed miniatures, grimdark lore, and strategy-on-the-table, you’ll feel right at home here. Whether you're painting, collecting, or battling, this is where you get all the pieces—codices, models, rulebooks, accessories—to bring your army to life.
WARHAMMER 40K
59 products
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A Brief History of Warhammer 40K Editions
- Rogue Trader / 1st Edition (1987): The origin. A hybrid of RPG and tabletop wargame, lots of freeform stuff, high model customisation, and lots of charts.
- 2nd to 5th Editions (1993–2008): Streamlining begins. Army “codices” introduced. Rules become more balanced and clearer. Issues like line-of-sight refined; more use of unit-based combat over individual hero power.
- 6th & 7th Edition (2012–2018): More modern design. More scenarios, more options. Psychic powers, flying units, and stronger use of terrain. Rules get tweaked and refined.
- 8th Edition (2017): A big reset. Simpler core rules, more flexible play styles (Narrative, Matched, Open). Primaris Space Marines introduced.
- 9th Edition (2020): Refines 8th. More polish, better balance. Starter sets updated.
- 10th Edition (2023): Latest major changes. New units, updated lore (e.g. 41st Millennium), rules tweaks. Battle phases reorganised, indexes replacing some codices, structure streamlined.
Pros & Cons of the Current System (10th Edition) and Recent Systems
Accessibility / Ease of Entry
- What’s Great: New rules are more streamlined; starter sets are better packaged; greater clarity in indexes.
- What’s Challenging: Some legacy codices or older miniatures may need updates; newer rules mean older strategies or builds might be less viable without adaptation.
Lore & Model Variety
- What’s Great: GW keeps expanding lore; new units (e.g. updated Primaris, new Tyranids etc.); visually impressive models and detail.
- What’s Challenging: Model production cost is higher; some older models are out of production or “retired”. Collecting a full classic army may be tricky.
Balance & Competitive Play
- What’s Great: Meta is more stable; stratagem caps; rules more consistent in performance across armies.
- What’s Challenging: Power creep remains a concern; popular armies sometimes get nerfed or changed, which can affect investment; updates might shift the meta.
Flexibility & Play Styles
- What’s Great: Multiple ways to play (Narrative, Open, Matched) so players can choose what fits; narrative events more supported.
- What’s Challenging: Constant changes sometimes force players to keep buying new books or rules; learning curve with changes if you return after a break.
Community & Hobby Side
- What’s Great: Painting, converting, modelling still central; a strong community that values hobby as art as well as war game.
- What’s Challenging: Costs—both time and money—can be high; patience needed for painting, assembly etc.
Why Choose Warhammer 40,000 from Hearns Hobbies
- We stock the latest codices, sets, and starter boxes so you can jump in immediately.
- Access to hobby tools, paints, and modeling accessories to kit out your army to a tabletop-ready standard.
- Advice and support: we help newer players understand rules, painting, and army building.
- Genuine products, updated stock, clear knowledge of rule changes—no guessing.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. You need only the current edition rulebook and the current codex (or index) for the faction(s) you play. Older codices are mostly obsolete, though they’re great for collecting or modelling.
Yes. Starter sets offer everything you need to begin—models, rules, and sometimes paints. As you grow, you can build your collection. The hobby is incremental.
You can use older plastic/resin models in many cases, but make sure their stat profiles or datasheets are legal under the current edition. Converting older figures to align with new rules may require you to use updated datasheets.
Rules tend to be updated each edition (major changes), plus mini-updates via errata, FAQs, and balance changes. While changes can affect competitive balance or army effectiveness, the hobby side (painting, modelling) remains more stable—what you build is what you show, even if the rules shift.
Check that the set includes instructions, that parts are in good shape; that the codex or datasheet is the current version; and if you’re investing, look for units with model support (if spare parts are available). You’ll also want proper tools and paint to build and finish them which we supply.