![]() I felt the way Horus was coaxed towards the side of chaos was a good way to go about it, I just don’t feel it was executed in a good way. Horus, once a man who loved his father, The Emperor, above all others and saw himself as a shining beacon of Imperial might and righteousness, now finds himself descending down a darker path in which he feels betrayed by his father and that the only course of action open to him is to kill everyone who disagrees with him, basically. Be advised that, reading on from here, there will be mild spoilers.įirstly, False Gods has a fair bit more action and just a general feeling of pushing things forward than Horus Rising did. ![]() ![]() I feel False Gods was a good deal better than the book that came before it (Horus Rising) yet, at the same time, it had some drawbacks. With dark forces rising against them, have the primarch and his warriors been drawn into a trap? Noble captain Garviel Loken harbours misgivings about the clandestine ways adopted by many of his brethren, but when the Legion is sent to reconquer the moon of Davin, it is clear that Horus has a personal stake in the matter which may have clouded his judgement. Putting the debacle with the interex behind him, the Warmaster has become more withdrawnas he struggles to deal with the jealousy of his brother primarchs, and increasingly relies on the council of his advisors as he plans each new campaign. ![]() Far from Terra, the XVIth Legion continue in the Great Crusade as the ‘Sons of Horus’. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |