Armageddon at Drawbridge Gate: Summer 2025

Armageddon at Drawbridge Gate: Summer 2025

This Summer at Drawbridge Games we’re launching a store-wide Warhammer 40k Crusade Campaign, designed for all players in the community to participate in. The goal is for people to get in games to tell the stories of their own armies whilst being a part of the bigger narrative for the store, culminating in two mega-battles at the end of the campaign to decide things. We’ll be loosely using the 2025 Crusade supplement for Warhammer 40k, but players will not need that to play the games. You’ll find the campaign’s story, procedures, and plan below.

Story

Like Angron’s attack on the planet of Armageddon, the planets in the Drawbridge Gulf system are in a moment of extreme, planet-threatening crisis. In the past, strange causeways formed in the warp between planets in the Drawbridge Gulf (see here for an example: https://youtu.be/RBBMz3_EXn4?si=bT3VybVjBlXamYk5 ), and the machinations of Chaos are yet again playing havoc on the connections between planets in the system. Warp anomalies and rifts have begun forming on the twin planets of Ponte Levatoio and Drifbrú. Ponte Levatoio is a mining world rich with resources, recently partially developed by the tech priests of Mars to begin manufacturing. From scrap to rare resources many factions would love to either control the planet or quickly extract its resources and escape. It’s sister planet of Drifbrú by contrast has the other commodities of the galaxy. Not only is it a lush and prosperous agri-world teeming with life and with a huge population of human workers, but its also an ancient touchstone of the war in heaven, with buried artifacts of both Necron and Aeldari significance forming powerful warp ley-lines to converge on the system. In short, every faction has decided that the moment of the warp instabilities connecting the two of them is the perfect time to strike and get their gains or thwart others’s aims.

Mining World Ponte Levatoio with the serene Agri-World Drifbrú in the distance

Procedures

The Campaign will use the basic 40k Crusade system described in many supplements. Any 10th edition Crusade rules description will get you the basics you need to play–here is the basic version from Warhammer Community which includes the printable roster sheet as well as the cards to track each unit: https://assets.warhammer-community.com/warhammer40000_crusade_crusaderules_eng_24.09-x7lpyyilc9.pdf .

Players have a set maximum number of points you can bring to games based around spending requisition points, and units gain Battle Honors to represent their Upgrades (traits, weapon upgrades, and relics) through experience points (XP), and Battle Scars from defeats. Players should draw up a Crusade Roster and track their units, starting at 1,000 points as usual. The specific Crusade goals of each army from their army book will not be used, as each army will be working on the Armageddon Campaign goal. Note that “goal” is the general term I’m using for the back-of-codex rules for each faction’s own progress toward their own narrative that results in faction Campaign Badges (e.g. Death Guard brewing plagues, Orks accumulating scrap, Eldar doing their absurd weaving three strands of fate book-keeping). Of course players can track their own army progress toward these unique faction goals that yields them their faction-specific Campaign Badges–but that’s for fun only–tho it may affect what your forces do to try and gain XP. No benefits for units are accrued from these–only the unit upgrades from the Armageddon book (awarded by Campaign HQ) will be applied.

Campaign HQ will release a weekly guide for what mission should be played in that week by campaign players, with all the info you’ll need for running that mission. Players additionally get ONE Agenda each game that they can pursue, which can be chosen from the list below from the Armageddon Crusade, or can swap in one of their Codex-specific Agendas if they prefer. There will be bonus chances for unit XP based around players bringing and modeling various Warp Anomalies to represent parts of the missions (a number of missions have strange “neutral antagonist” warp creatures that assail both sides of the battle at random as part of the mission).

Battle Honors Upgrades and Scars will be randomly assigned as part of the Campaign HQ update each week–so you’ll need to tune in to those to see what happened to your forces in the aftermath of the battle. This will make the game more fun because players are not cherry-picking upgrades, and also will give a sense of renown for the units that are becoming either glorious victors or scarred-but-scrappy competitors. You can request the type of Battle Honor Upgrade assigned from the following types: Weapons Modification, Crusade Relic, Faction Battle Trait (found in your army codex), or Armageddon Battle Trait (found in the Crusade: Armageddon book).

After a game, players will submit some short information to the following form: https://tinyurl.com/49k6csun. They must submit their name, the name of their opponent, the campaign mission played, the results of the battle, a photo from the battle of their forces in action, and photos and bit of info on any units that gain new Battle Honor Upgrades or incurred Battle Scars. These will then be featured in the Campaign HQ updates. The rest of the info of Crusade progress, such as Requisition Points and how they’re spent, size of force, Crusade Points, and replacement of units are tracked by each individual on their own as normal for Crusade play.

Players can play more than one game per week, but are encouraged to play them with different armies and opponents to vary things up (see “plan” below for why multiple armies are fine). If you play multiple games in a week just know that the effects of any battle traits or battle scars will not be issued until after the week is finished. To play a game players find an opponent (in the store on Thursday nights or weekends is most likely, but also in the 40k chats on Messenger or the Store Discord–ask to be a part of them if you’re not), agree to a points value that works for both players (remember that Crusade can balance somewhat different points values, but keep things relatively even by generally playing where the lower roster size player is at), select units and play the assigned mission for the week. If two players want to play prior missions from earlier weeks to “Catch Up” then you also can do so during the time frame of the campaign. Those may or may not affect the outcomes of the planetary narrative (e.g. it may be too late to “save the village” if the village was wiped out by last week’s results), but I want people to be able to have fun, play the missions, and feel a part of things so it’s fine to go back and play prior missions.

Painting requirements for Crusade games are a bit more relaxed. We ask that people make a good faith effort in painting their models and follow a “more painted this week than last week” approach to their games. The one rule is that unpainted models cannot be part of the Campaign HQ upates. So they cannot receive Upgrades due to Battle Honors as we’ll want photos of the painted models for those updates. So hopefully getting a unit enough XP to reach these milestones would mean that players are incentivized to put at least battle-ready paint on those models. Likewise, unpainted units that receive a Battle Scar means the player MUST spend a Requisition Point on the Repair and Recuperate action to remove it after the battle (or paint up the models before submitting results). Players can delay submission of the Battle Results to allow painting time if they wish (but the results may not figure in to the planetary narrative in that case (similar to playing prior missions).

Remember: “battle ready” can be as quick as a bit of contrast and a couple of highlights

Team games are also permitted in the campaign, so if you want to play as a group you’re more than welcome to do so. The main thing about these is that only one faction (see below) per side gets advanced with the results of the game, so just be clear about which side is being fought for when submitting results from a team game.

Plan

As part of this campaign, each army represents one of four competing general Alliances seeking control of the pair of planets. Those Alliances are The Imperium, Chaos (including any Guard and AdMech forces that wish to declare themselves as Chaos), Order Xenos (T’au, Drukhari, Aeldari, and Votann), and Annihilation Xenos (Orks, Tyranids, Genestealer Cults, and Necrons). The overall campaign tracks the wins/losses of these forces to determine which end up controlling various aspects of the two planets through the course of the summer campaign. At the end of the Summer/conclusion of the campaign, there will be TWO Mega-Battles on two different days to determine the final outcome of the two planets. These will feature one massive board and be all-day Armageddon Style mega battles with objectives for each player and board elements effected by the games of the campaign. This is why players are encouraged to play a couple of different armies throughout the campaign if they like–as you can take part in any Mega-Battle that you fielded forces for in at least one game. The matchups and which planet they take place on will be determined by the results of the campaign games–so it might be Imperium vs Chaos on Ponte Levatoio while Xenos clash on Drifbrú, but it could also be a harried defense of Pointe Levatoio by the Order Xenos facing Chaos, whilst the Imperium seeks to repel the Annihilation Xenos from the shores of Drifbrú. Either way, both should be fun endcaps to the campaign when taken together, and give people multiple days to be able to participate in at least one of the campaign end events.

Right now the plan is a bit flexible by interest from the community, but we’re thinking 7 weeks of campaign games and then the culminating two mega-battles in early-to-mid August. That means roughly the following schedule:

Hopefully this gives our community a fun way to play some linked 40k games this summer, get some cool stories built, and really go all-out for some big 40k fun. We’ll hopefully do footage of the two Mega-Battles at the end of it to again compose a video about the event that people can look back on to remember the summer of Armageddon!

Update: Campaign HQ Mission Briefing Week One is Now Live

For those who prefer to read, here is the relevant data for how the first week’s mission will run:

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