City of secrets 24/4/2023 ![]() ![]() It feels much more grounded than the Stormcast-focused Realmgate Wars series, pulling in influences from old-school Warhammer stories as well as non-Warhammer fiction – there’s even a hint of Ankh-Morpork in the cramped streets of the Veins. What that does, beyond ensuring that the narrative is nicely moving along at all times, is allow Horth to spend a decent amount of time exploring Excelsis and looking at how the various groups of its inhabitants find ways to coexist and survive. Nothing new with any of that, and they tread a path that’s pretty much what you expect, but there’s something really enjoyable about watching things play out in a comfortably familiar way. Their enemies at first are human and very grounded, before more fantastical (and more Warhammer-y) antagonists appear later on. Toll, meanwhile, is knowledgeable, well-equipped and connected, and driven by a fierce purpose…but far from infallible. ![]() After stumbling upon a sinister plot and accidentally experiencing a powerful prophecy, Callis finds himself working alongside the Witch Hunter Hanniver Toll as they race against time to prevent the city’s destruction.Ĭallis is a solid, satisfying character brave and capable but not exceptionally so, a relatable sort of everyman who finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time but manages to just about survive through a mixture of skill and luck. ![]() Armand Callis is a corporal in the Coldguard, one of only three Freeguild regiments left behind to defend Excelsis while the majority of its forces march to deal with a vast gathering of Orruks. Nick Horth’s Age of Sigmar book City of Secrets, set in the city of Excelsis in the realm of Ghur, was the first to deal predominantly with mortal characters rather than Stormcast Eternals. ![]()
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