Authors: Zak Dale-Clutterbuck, Chris Handley, Eleanor Hingley, Elaine Lithgow, TS Luikart, Dominic McDowall, Jonathan Woodhouse and Ross Watson
Artists: Alberto Bessi, Joel Chaim Holtzman, Antonio De Luca, Max Fitzgerald, Mark Gibbons, Diego Gisbert Llorens, Marina Karakatsani, Sam Manley, JG O’Donoghue, Adrián Prado, Stefan ‘Storykillinger’ Ristik, Mikhail Savier, Andrea Tentori Montalto, and Games Workshop
Year: 2020
Genre: Roleplaying game set in the world of Warhammer 40K
Pages: 381 pages
Price: $59.99 for the hardcover (including the PDF) or in PDF alone at DriveThruRPG for $29.99
I bring you my review, as well as a page-through, of Warhammer 40K Roleplay: Wrath & Glory from Cubicle 7 Entertainment. The RPG teleports players to the Gilead system, where the Great Rift has made strange allies out of former enemies. Is this roleplaying game sure to please fans of Warhammer 40K? Or, if you purchase this, is Cubicle 7 simply going to face YOUR wrath? You’ll find out!
2:45 Discussing the game overall and some changes Cubicle 7 made to the original release
18:38 Final thoughts and review score
TGG REVIEW
9TGG SCORE
0VISITORS' SCORE(0 votes)
Summary
Cubicle 7 has done a great job in cleaning up and expanding upon the original Wrath & Glory release. I especially appreciate the fact players don't have to use a character archetype anymore and are free to create their heroes however they'd like. I think the mechanics are the right mix of accessibility and detail although some may wish for more crunch. I think may gamers milage may very with this release, no doubt depending how deeply invested they are into the world of WH40K, but I think this is a great introduction to a slice of the setting and makes for an interesting RPG.
Founder/Editor-in-chief of The Gaming Gang website and host of The Gaming Gang Dispatch and other TGG media, Jeff tackles any and all sorts of games but has a special fondness for strategy, conflict sims, and roleplaying games. Plus, he's certainly never at a loss for an opinion...