Warhammer 40k Wiki
Advertisement
Warhammer 40k Wiki

"The Sons of Fenris they are, hardened in the forge of their harsh world, eager for battle and honour. They are the grey warriors, ashen like the wolf, whose greatest joy is to hear the clamour of steel amidst the din of war."

— The Space Wolves Catechism

The Space Wolves, known in their own dialect of Juvjk as the Vlka Fenryka or "Wolves of Fenris", are one of the original 20 First Founding Space Marine Legions, and were once led by their famed Primarch, Leman Russ. Once the VIth Legion of Astartes raised by the Emperor at the dawn of the Great Crusade, the Space Wolves are renowned for their anti-authoritarian ways and their embrace of their homeworld Fenris' savage barbarian culture as well as their extreme deviation from the Codex Astartes in the Chapter's organisation. After the Horus Heresy and the resultant Second Founding reforms of the Adeptus Astartes, the Space Wolves Legion was divided into two Chapters: the new Space Wolves Chapter, which was not compliant with the dictates of the Codex Astartes and retained the name of its parent Legion, and the second Chapter which took the name of the Wolf Brothers. The Wolf Brothers suffered from rampant mutation of their gene-seed not long after their Founding and were later disbanded. It is currently unknown if there are any other Successor Chapters of the Space Wolves in the Imperium.

Chapter History

Space Wolves Badge1

Chapter Badge of the Space Wolves

SW Chapter Banner

Space Wolves Chapter Banner

SpaceWolvesChapterColours

Space Wolves Chapter Colour Scheme

SW Legionary Mk II

Space Wolves Legion Pre-Heresy Colour Scheme

Since the days of the VIth Legion's inception on Terra, the Space Wolves have remained a Legion apart from its fellows, its origins shrouded as it garnered a fearsome reputation for its warriors' prowess as a shock-assault force as well as tireless pursuers and a peerless hunter-killer force. Unexpected violence was the Legion's calling card, its campaigns unsubtle, but brutally swift. Like their latter-day namesakes, the wolves of old Terra, its warriors assault were calculated exercises in ferocity, aimed to tear and rend until the foe lay in ruins or was driven to its death. Conditioned to hold a near-suicidal disregard for danger and trained to exploit this to the fullest on the battlefield, the heavy infantry that formed the core of the VIth Legion's battalions were a force that had been honed in battle against the countless enemies of Mankind and, it was whispered, against their own wayward brothers. For, unlike their brother Legions, the Space Wolves were kept under the tight control of the Imperial Court and unleashed at the Emperor's command as often to chastise those who would renege on their oaths of service as to destroy those who resisted the offer of Compliance.

The Primarchs

The Space Wolves are one of the greatest of the Chapters of the Adeptus Astartes, their name and honours known throughout the galaxy. As one of the original twenty Space Marine Legions, the Space Wolves were founded by the Emperor Himself over ten thousand standard years ago. The Legions were created to take part in the Great Crusade, the Emperor's reconquest of the galaxy that established the Imperium as it is today. Before the Great Crusade, Terra had endured thousands of years of isolation whilst impenetrable Warp Storms seethed and howled throughout the western part of the galaxy. This dark period of history was known as the Age of Strife. Even the Emperor was trapped upon Terra by the Warp's tumult, and could do little other than secure Humanity's birth planet and prepare His armies for the reconquest to come. Without the Emperor to guide them through this terrible age, the rest of the human worlds throughout the galaxy were left helpless against the predations of aliens and the dread creatures of the Warp. One by one, they fell into anarchy and despair. Humanity, it seemed, was doomed.

During Terra's isolation at the end of the 30th Millennium, the Emperor had striven to create twenty superhuman beings. These Primarchs, as he called them, were genetically-engineered creatures, artificial humanoids with astounding abilities. Each was created differently and with his own unique skills, powers, and in some cases, incredible psychic potential. The Primarchs were made to resemble humanity, but many were mighty in appearance. Yet the Primarch experiment never reached its conclusion. In a disastrous incident, the nascent creatures' incubation pods in the Emperor's gene-laboratories deep beneath the Himalazian (Himalayan) Mountains were swept up by terrible forces that dwelt within the Warp and scattered across the stars. Rather than trying to duplicate the long and arduous work through which he had created the Primarchs, the Emperor instead used the raw material developed during the Primarch project to create the Space Marines. After much toil, the Emperor created a number of artificially-cultured organs, each re-engineered from the genomes of the Primarchs. These organs were designed so that they could be implanted into the body of an ordinary adolescent human. Once implanted, the organs would take root and develop within the host's human tissues, becoming an integrated part of his body. Many of these organs were designed to interact with natural body tissues as they developed, enhancing muscle growth, stimulating mental processes, and transforming the recipient into a superhuman warrior. Compared to the Primarchs whose incredible power they had inherited, the Space Marines were but pale shadows, but they still became the mightiest of men and the greatest of the Emperor's warriors.

The Legiones Astartes

The Emperor created twenty Space Marine Legions, the Legiones Astartes, each utilising residual genetic material derived from one of the Primarchs. Most of the Astartes gene-seed implants were common in type and function to all twenty Legions, but there were also subtle variances in the genetic structure that developed as a result of their different gene-fathers. Thus the warriors of the twenty Space Marine Legions echoed to some degree the particular strengths of the Primarch whose genes were used to develop their own implants. The implants of the Space Wolves were developed from the genetic helix -- later to be known as the Canis Helix -- of Leman Russ. At this time, the Emperor had no idea where the Primarchs were or if they had even survived their ordeal. Only later, during the Great Crusade itself, was the Emperor able to recover the Primarchs, one by one. By then they had grown to adulthood amongst whatever human civilisations existed on the worlds on which their incubation pods had landed. Many Primarchs crashed upon uncivilised worlds or grew up amongst deadly and inhospitable environments.

The Wolf-Child Comes to Fenris

The Primarch of the Space Wolves had landed upon the icy Death World of Fenris, his incubation pod plummeting down into the flank of a vast mountain. Given the harshness of the Fenrisian climate, it is safe to say that a lesser being would have died almost immediately upon his arrival. Emerging from his smoking capsule, the infant Primarch soon encountered a deadly mother Thunderwolf. He was doomed, yet fate, it seemed, had other ideas. Sensing in the feral youth a kindred spirit, the giant she-wolf did not kill the transhuman child, but instead raised him alongside her cubs as one of her own. The Imperium's records concerning the Space Wolves' heritage and Russ' origins owe much to the life's work of Gnauril the Elder, a contemporary of the ancient Fenrisian king Thengir. Gnauril's saga, The Ascension of the Wolf-King, tells of one fateful Helwinter, when the feral wolf-child was discovered by a hunting party of Fenrisian tribesmen. In a vicious confrontation, the wolf-mother was slain by their spears and arrows, along with many of her cubs. The Primarch fought with terrible fury, slaying a dozen warriors with naught but his bare hands to protect his two surviving packmates, Freki and Geri. It was then that fate intervened once more. One of the tribesmen at last recognised the Primarch for what he was -- human, not wolf -- and called for his fellow huntsmen to lower their weapons. The bloodied youth stood his ground, fangs bared, but understood their peaceful gesture and stayed his wrath. Unsure quite what to do, the tribesmen brought the young Primarch and his wolf-kin -- for he would not be parted from them -- before the court of King Thengir of the Russ tribe. The aging chieftain saw the undeniable potential in the young man and ordered that he be given a place within his household, there to be raised as a true Fenrisian -- as a warrior. Though many were left dumbfounded by the king's decision, time certainly proved Thengir wise.

Learning To Be Human

Amongst his own kind for the first time, Leman quickly learned their skills, showing a natural aptitude for the way of the warrior. He learned to speak, and mastered their primitive weapons -- iron axes and swords. Though he was quick to roar with laughter or bellow tunelessly in song, the Primarch slowly realised that he was more human than wolf, but far superior to both. When Russ handed the Champion of the King's Guard his battle-axes during their third sparring session after disarming him, Thengir admitted to himself that the young man was destined for greatness. The Primarch soon spoke the Fenrisian dialect of Low Gothic with powerful eloquence, and one evening, King Thengir deemed him worthy to receive a true name. The King named the former wolf-child Leman of the Russ. As the Primarch grew to maturity, he became the greatest of their number by far, leading the tribe's warriors to a thousand victories and more. Upon King Thengir's death, Leman of the Russ took his place upon the throne of the Russ. So did the Wolf-King become a living legend across Fenris. It was only a matter of time before word of his fame reached the ears of one who desperately sought news of His lost sons.

A Heroic Rise to Power

Much of what is known of Leman Russ' early years is born of hearsay and legend as his fame quickly spread throughout the tribes of Fenris. It was said that he was able to turn back whole armies of the King's enemies by himself without a scratch, to tear whole oak trees from the ground and snap them over his back in twain, and to wrestle Fenrisian Mammoths to the ground and roast one whole for his meal that evening. When King Thengir died, there was no question as to who should succeed him as the monarch of the Russ. Therefore, King Leman of the Russ took the throne. In time, his leadership was recognised by all the tribes of the frigid world, for all sought to benefit from his wisdom and extraordinary skill at arms on a world where the weak did not survive for very long.

The Wolf King

Thus it came to pass that Russ was hailed as King of all Fenris, the Wolf-King, his judgment considered to be as strong as his sword-arm and his authority indisputable. No man nor beast could best the Wolf-King. No tribe could stand against his armies. Within Russ' kingdom a truce existed between man and wolf. His court was attended by the fiercest of warlords and the most beautiful of maidens. Tales of his mighty conquests spread like forest fires, and it was not long before the eyes of Terra turned upon his deeds. When the fleets of the Emperor's Great Crusade neared Fenris, they heard tales of Fenris' extraordinary Wolf-King. The legend of the Wolf-King was quickly identified as the work of a missing Primarch, and the Emperor descended to the planet. And so it was that the great, sky-spanning starships of the Emperor travelled to the center of the sea of stars, settling on the icy world of Fenris scant years after Russ' ascension to the throne he had forged by uniting all the fractious and feral tribes of his world.

The Emperor and the Wolf-King

The Emperor, disguised in a long, plain robe and cloaked in psychic runes of disguise and confusion entered the long hall of Russ. Those few natives that were sharp-eyed and sober, as well as the great Fenrisian Wolves, shrunk from this new, powerful presence. Russ refused to pay him homage as the Master of Mankind. The Emperor had known well that proud Russ would never bow to His rule without being beaten in a contest. The Emperor was convinced of His own power, and knew that such a challenge would be as nothing to Him.

The Three Challenges

The strange wanderer approached the gnarled wood of the Wolf Throne and its gargantuan occupant, and stood firm, staring hard at where Russ was presiding over the feast. It was then that the stranger offered His challenge. The nature of the contest was for the Wolf King to decide. If He won, the stranger asked for nothing but to be allowed to drink at the right hand of Russ during the feast. Russ demanded that should the wanderer fail, He would serve at the king's behest for a year. Grimly, the stranger accepted. Russ challenged the Emperor to a series of tests. The Wolf King did not wish to spoil a good feast; his first challenge was to an eating competition. The stranger ate well indeed, consuming many times more than the stoutest warriors present without pause. But when He looked up from His plate, Russ had already consumed three entire aurochs. The stranger had lost the first challenge. But the king was enjoying his sport. He realised that the brown-cloaked traveller had the spirit of a Fenrisian. And so he challenged the outlander to a drinking bout. But by the time the wanderer had reached His sixth barrel of strong Fenrisian mead, there was no more to drink. The Wolf King had drained the entire feast dry. Once again the Emperor had lost. The light of anger appeared in the wanderer's eye.

Driven by disappointment in His offspring, the wanderer called Leman Russ a drunkard and a glutton, able to achieve nothing more in life than stuffing his face and bellowing hollow boasts. The Wolf-King calmly laid down the consequences of his last challenge, and his court backed away as one. The court grew silent, daring not even to breathe as Russ drew his great sword from its scabbard and stepped onto the long banqueting table. For the third challenge Russ boasted he could defeat the Emperor in combat. The Emperor threw away His cloak, the hood falling from His face, His true form revealed. He stood far taller than any man present, swathed in light and clad in baroque golden Power Armour. This time, the Emperor defeated Russ, felling Him with a mighty blow from his Power Glove. When Leman came back to consciousness within the hour, he admitted defeat and with a bloodied smile and a broken fang, he swore fealty to his true father, the Emperor of Mankind.

The VIth Legion and the Great Crusade

Great Crusade Wolves

The Space Wolves bring a newly discovered world into Compliance with the Imperial Truth during the Great Crusade

Spiriting the great Wolf-King away from Fenris, the Emperor began Russ' tutelage in the ways and technology of his star-spanning Imperium. The Primarch's teaching and training went swiftly; it was only a matter of weeks before the Emperor judged Russ worthy of leading His armies in the Great Crusade across the galaxy. Leman Russ was introduced to the warriors of the VIth Legion of Space Marines who had been created through the implantation of gene-seed organs that had been grown from his own DNA. And so it came to be that Leman Russ became the father, progenitor and Lord of the newly named Space Wolves Legion of the Legiones Astartes and joined the glorious action of the Great Crusade. He was armed with a thrice-blessed suit of Power Armour and his greatsword was replaced with the legendary Frostblade Mjalnar, whose teeth were torn from the maw of the Great Kraken Gormenjarl and were then used in its forging. Reputably, the blade could cleave the ice mountains of Fenris in half. With his mighty Frostblade, Russ plunged headlong into the fighting at the forefront of every battle, vanquishing all before him. Throughout the long and difficult battles of the Great Crusade, the Space Wolves and their lupine allies drawn from amongst the Fenrisian Wolves were always at the front line. Russ strode at the head of his VIth Legion, slaughtering all who dared stand before him, his coming announced by the howling of the pack. Leman Russ fought well during the Great Crusade, gaining a reputation as a cunning and fierce, if slightly unstable, Imperial warrior and Astartes leader. At the time, the warriors of Russ referred to themselves as the Vylka Fenryka ("Wolves of Fenris") or more simply, The Rout. Most Astartes of the VIth Legion bristled at the title "Space Wolves", as it was the foolish name given to them by offworlders who recognised none of their customs and traditions.

During a pacification war to bring a world into Imperial Compliance, the Dark Angels Legion aided the Space Wolves, and the leader of this particular planet insulted Leman Russ' honour. As such, Russ wanted to defeat the leader personally for the insult. The Dark Angels and Space Wolves, both lead by their respective Primarchs, assaulted the tower where the leader was located. Leman Russ burst into the throne room just in time to see the Dark Angels' Primarch, Lion El'Jonson, beheading the world's leader with his mighty blade. Angry that the honour was not his, Leman Russ marched up to the Lion and punched him in the jaw. This lead to a battle that lasted for a day or more, until finally Russ saw how immature their squabble was and started laughing. Lion El'Jonson took this action to be a direct insult to him because he mistakenly believed that Russ was mocking him with laughter and so he punched Leman Russ once more and knocked his brother Primarch into unconsciousness before leaving the planet in a dark mood with his Legion. This fight led to a bitter feud between the Legions (and the subsequent Chapters), which lasts to this day. Although recent events may finally have led to an end to the rivalry, it is still customary for selected champions from both Chapters to engage in a (usually) non-lethal duel whenever they meet in remembrance of this ancient feud.

Horus Heresy

Leman Russ with Sisters of Silence

An ancient pict-capture of Primarch Leman Russ leading his Space Wolves Legion during the Scouring of Prospero

Just prior to the outbreak of the Horus Heresy, the Space Wolves came into conflict with one of their brother Space Marine Legions once again. The Primarch of the Thousand Sons Space Marines, Magnus the Red, had ignored the Imperial proscription against the use of psychic sorcery that had been decided by the Emperor and the other Primarchs at the Council of Nikaea during the Great Crusade so that he could warn the Emperor in astral form that Horus had turned to Chaos. Magnus' psychic intrusion into the Imperial Palace on Terra had disrupted the Emperor's secret Imperial Webway Project and killed thousands of workers, Adepts and Servitors. To make matters worse, the Emperor refused to believe that his favoured son Horus had betrayed him and instead he believed that it was Magnus who had been corrupted by Chaos because of his continued use of sorcery. Leman Russ and the Space Wolves were then ordered by the Emperor to bring Magnus before him on Terra to account for his actions.

Fall of Prospero

Scouring of Prospero2

Primarch Leman Russ leads his Space Wolves Legion against their rivals the Thousand Sons during the Fall of Prospero

However, the treacherous Warmaster Horus had other plans in mind. Ignorant of the changes in his brother Primarch since his corruption by the Chaos Gods, Russ was convinced by Horus' silver tongue to launch an all-out planetary assault on the seditious Thousand Sons rather than attempt to negotiate with them or bring their Primarch Magnus the Red back to Terra peacefully. Horus claimed that the Emperor wanted to punish Magnus, who had already shown himself disloyal by using the psychic sorcery that Horus knew Leman Russ found dishonourable in the extreme and had been absolutely forbidden by the edicts of the Council of Nikaea. The surprise assault upon the Thousand Sons' homeworld of Prospero was ferocious and brutally successful; however, many of the Thousand Sons, including Magnus himself, eventually gave themselves over to the Chaos God Tzeentch in order to save themselves and their precious collected arcane knowledge about the Warp and psychic power on Prospero from being destroyed by the Imperium. After agreeing to give themselves over to the Changer of Ways, the Thousand Sons escaped through his assistance into the Warp rift called the Eye of Terror and found a new home on the Daemon World known as the Planet of the Sorcerers. As a result of the Fall of Prospero, the two Legions came to bear a deep, abiding and eternal grudge against one another. This grudge is still very deep between the Space Wolves and the surviving Astartes of the Thousand Sons, who are now the Chaos Space Marines Traitor Legion dedicated solely to the service of Tzeentch.

Battle of Terra

Siege Imperial Palace

The Traitor Legions lay siege to the Imperial Palace

During the Horus Heresy, the Space Wolves were far from Terra, fighting alongside the Dark Angels, and were unable to assist their Loyalist brethren in the defence of Mankind's homeworld during the Battle of Terra from the attack of the Warmaster's traitorous Forces of Chaos. Knowledge of the imminent arrival of the two Loyalist Legions, which would tip the balance in favour of the Loyalists, pushed Horus at the climax of the Battle of Terra into allowing the Emperor to personally teleport aboard his Battle Barge Vengeful Spirit in orbit over Terra in a desperate gamble to bring the terrible civil war to a swift conclusion. The two Legions arrived just after the battle concluded, with the Warmaster and the Blood Angels' Primarch Sanguinius (killed at the hands of Horus), already dead. The Emperor himself had been mortally wounded and interred within the arcane life support mechanisms of the Golden Throne by Rogal Dorn.

Post-Heresy

Space wolves in the Hunt

A Space Wolf Astartes tracks his prey with the aid of a Fenrisian Wolf

The Emperor's body had breathed its last breath after the Battle of Terra, and His spirit achieved apotheosis and ascended into the Warp as the new God of Mankind after being interred within the Golden Throne. Leman Russ was devastated by his inability to save the Emperor during the final battle of the Horus Heresy aboard the Warmaster Horus' flagship. Following the conclusion of the Horus Heresy, the Imperium set out to quell the Chaotic uprisings against the Emperor's authority that still burned throughout the galaxy and restore order to itself. As word spread of the Warmaster's defeat throughout the Imperium, widespread fighting renewed. Revitalised by the news of the death of Horus and the routing of his Traitor Legions, the Loyalists fell upon the Traitors with a vengeance. The Great Scouring had begun, as Imperial forces bled the Traitors dry as they desperately turned on all within their reach in a final despairing orgy of destruction. The Space Wolves Legion spearheaded the Great Scouring, continuing to wage war on the Traitors for another seven standard years before the last rebel formations were destroyed or exiled to the isolated Warp rift known as the Eye of Terror.

The Disappearance of Leman Russ

"Listen but closely Brothers, for my life's breath is all but spent. There shall come a time far from now when our Chapter itself is dying, even as I am now dying, and our foes shall gather to destroy us. Then my children, I shall listen for your call in whatever realm of death holds me, and come I shall, no matter what the laws of life and death forbid. At the end I will be there. For the final battle. For the Wolftime."

— Last words of Leman Russ, Primarch of the Space Wolves Chapter, taken from the Codicium Imperialis, Vol. VI, Part I of the Liber Honorus

No one knows what happened to Leman Russ. Some say he disappeared in the Eye of Terror whilst searching for his old friend and rival, the Dark Angels Primarch Lion El'Jonson. Others say that, to this day, he walks disguised among Mankind, watching over the people of his Emperor and guarding them from the powers of Chaos. All that is known for sure is Leman Russ vanished in 211.M31, nearly two standard centuries after the Emperor was entombed upon the Golden Throne. At that time, all of the Space Wolves warriors and their Wolf Lords, including the Great Wolf himself, were gathered for a feast on Fenris. The holiday, known as the "Feast of the Emperor's Ascension", commemorated the day the Emperor defeated Horus and "ascended" back into the Immaterium after being entombed upon the Golden Throne. On this occasion, Leman Russ quieted the great hall of his warriors to speak, but then froze in place as his eyes glazed over as if seeing a vision. The assembled Space Wolves looked on in horror as their Primarch fell to his knees and called for his Wolf Guard and closest retainers to attend him, all save the youngest, Bjorn the Fell-Handed. Giving his closest companions his instructions, Russ turned and left the Great Hall with his bodyguard in tow, leaving only Bjorn behind. The tale of his disappearance is retold every thousand standard years by the Dreadnought Bjorn the Fell-Handed, the oldest Astartes Dreadnought still in service in the entire Imperium. It is believed by some Astartes amongst the Space Wolves that Russ left Fenris and journeyed into the Eye of Terror to find the fabled Tree of Life, a font of uncorrupted Warp energy hidden somewhere within the Immaterium that bears fruit said to be able to heal the Emperor and restore Him to full life.

Every standard year after his disappearance, Russ' place was laid at the same feast. Every year his drinking horn was filled should he return. For seven long, painful Terran years the Space Wolves waited patiently for their lost Wolf-King to return to them, but when he failed to do so, Bjorn was elected the new Great Wolf and led the Chapter on their first Great Hunt to search for Russ. The Great Companies took to their voidships and sailed in separate directions across the Sea of Stars. They sought their lord on many worlds and in many places. They fought battles and overcame monsters and the tale of their deeds is too long to recount save on Allwinter's Eve when the Rune Priests gather to chant the sagas. The Space Wolves sought and they sought, and Bjorn eventually took his search to the Eye of Terror itself. There Bjorn was mortally wounded and entombed within the adamantium sarcophagus of a Dreadnought. Of Russ they found no sign till eventually they were recalled to Fenris, bearing nought but a few dismal prophesies and the tale of their adventure. Thus the first Great Hunt ended in failure and in sadness.

The second Great Hunt led to the recovery of Russ' armour from the Temple of Horus on the world of Rudra on the edge of the Eye of Terror. The fourth Great Hunt uncovered the Corellian Conspiracy and foiled its efforts to overthrow the Administratum in a bloody coup. The ninth Great Hunt led to the destruction of the Genestealer-infested worlds of the Gehenna System. Over the various Great Hunts in the millennia since, many glorious victories have been won, each hunt beginning when Russ speaks through visions into the minds of the Chapter's Rune Priests, granting his sons his wisdom from time to time and sending them on new quests. None have succeeded in the final goal of recovering their gene-father, but Russ has assured his sons with his final words that he will return to them in time for the final battle of the Imperium against the Forces of Chaos, a period he called the "Wolftime". Many Space Wolves believe that time will soon be upon them and the Imperium of Man at the end of the 41st Millennium, as various forces all seeking the destruction of Mankind begin their final assault upon humanity. Even now, reports of the 13th Great Company's return from the Eye of Terror during the 13th Black Crusade in 999.M41 may portend the return of the Wolf King.

Reformation of the Imperium and the Second Founding

Seven standard years after the death of Horus, the Second Founding of the Space Marines was carried out on the orders of Roboute Guilliman, the Primarch of the Ultramarines Legion who now became essentially the new Regent of the Imperium in the Emperor and Malcador the Sigillite's absence. The Horus Heresy had revealed weaknesses in the gene-seed of several Space Marine Legions that had made those Astartes unusually susceptible to corruption by Chaos. These defects had been exacerbated by the accelerated gene-seed cultivation techniques needed to keep the Space Marine Legions up to strength during the latter stages of the Great Crusade. The Ruinous Powers were able to exploit the resultant physical and mental corruption and turned Horus and the Traitor Legions under his command against the Emperor.

The first objective of the newly created military treatise known as the Codex Astartes that had been authored by Guilliman as the ultimate expression of his towering tactical understanding of how to best deploy the power of Space Marines, was to reorganise the Space Marine Legions into much smaller military formations and expunge these weaknesses. The Legions were broken down into Chapters, an already extant Astartes military formation in some of the Legions that consisted of 1,000 Battle-Brothers of fighting strength. Never again would one man wield so much power over vast legions of superhuman troops at his command.

However, Leman Russ suffered no interference where his Legion was concerned, and flatly refused to listen to Guilliman. According to the Wolf Lord Bulveye of the Legion's 13th Great Company, Russ once dared strike the Emperor in person when He offered criticism to Russ. What the volatile Primarch would not accept from his Father, he would certainly not tolerate from his brother. Only when the situation almost devolved into another Imperial civil war did Leman Russ seemingly relent. The canny Primarch pulled a sleight of hand on his brother Guilliman, ostensibly agreeing to separate the Space Wolves Legion into thirteen independent Great Companies, each roughly a Chapter in strength. The Great Companies, however, already were semi-autonomous, each with their own armouries, starship support and answering to their Jarl or Wolf Lord only, with all of the Jarls answering only to Russ. In essence, Russ' acquiescence changed nothing in the modus operandi of the Space Wolves Legion save for its official table of organisation. Guilliman, with a whole Imperium to rebuild, never had the time to verify that Russ had indeed implemented the teachings of the Codex, and took the Wolf King at his word. The consequence was that today, when all the Great Companies assemble under the Great Wolf's banner, the Space Wolves Chapter numbers far, far more than a thousand Astartes and is the largest currently in existence, save perhaps for the Black Templars Chapter, which has an eerily similar disregard for the Codex Astartes; and maintains a structure of autonomous Crusades answering only to an officer known as the High Marshal.

However, Guilliman's Reformation of the Imperium gave Russ the occasion to implement another idea of his, namely the creation of the ill-fated Wolf Brothers Chapter. It was Russ' plan to eventually create enough Space Wolves Successor Chapters to encircle the Eye of Terror, and use them as bulwarks against any re-emergence into realspace of the Traitor Legions. Alas, the Canis Helix's genetic instability made the Wolf Brothers suffer from the Curse of the Wulfen to such a degree that the Chapter had to be purged by the Inquisition for genetic deviancy. The High Lords of Terra recognised the problems of genetic instability that would eventually plague the genetic seed of Leman Russ, giving rise in later times to the terrible Curse of the Wulfen, and therefore decided against dividing and further spreading the Space Wolves' genetic base across the newly-Founded Adeptus Astartes of the Second Founding. The Space Wolves' lack of Successor Chapters has often been noted as unusual given its status as a First Founding Legion with a history extending back to the legendary days of the Great Crusade. Russ' idea of ringing the Eye of Terror with guardian Space Marine Chapters, however, was retained by the High Lords of Terra, who created a group of 20 Space Marine Chapters known as the Astartes Praeses to monitor the Eye of Terror and prevent the return of the servants of the Ruinous Powers.

Notable Campaigns

  • Aghoru Campaign (Unknown Date.M30) - The Imperial Compliance of the world of Aghoru (officially codified in Imperial records as Twenty-Eight-Sixteen) was an action carried out by units of the Thousand Sons Legion that was achieved through diplomacy and was considered a success; secondary combat occurred against apparent Warp denizen infestation (beings known to the local population as "Elohim") within the subterranean passages of a titanic peak that stood taller than Olympic Mons on Mars. The Thousand Sons forces were enhanced by a small unit drawn from the Space Wolves Legion during this operation.
  • Ark Reach Cluster Campaign (Unknown Date.M30) - The Ark Reach Cluster had been discovered by the Word Bearers Legion's 47th Expeditionary Fleet; it was a group of binary stars occupied by a number of belligerent planetary empires that rejected the Imperium's offer to become part of the Emperor's growing demesne. This Imperial Compliance action of the Great Crusade was carried out through the combined efforts of the Thousand Sons working in concert with elements from the Space Wolves and the Word Bearers Legions. The first four star systems fell to the Word Bearers and Space Wolves. But the fifth and sixth world, known as Shrike, required the assistance of the Thousand Sons. The return to the XVth Legion of the dreaded mutational "flesh-change" occurred at the conclusion of this campaign and helped to bring on the eternal enmity between the Space Wolves and the Thousand Sons, as the Space Wolves increasingly regarded the Astartes of the XVth Legion as "impure".
  • Compliance of Dulan (Unknown Date.M30) - As the Space Marine Legions pushed back the frontiers of the Imperium, each Primarch strove to excel in the eyes of the Emperor and none more so than Leman Russ, Primarch of the Space Wolves. Only Horus of the Luna Wolves and Lion El'Jonson of the Dark Angels could claim more victories than Russ and this was a constant frustration for him. It was on the world of Dulan where the Space Wolves were fighting alongside the Dark Angels that matters came to a head. The Tyrant of Durath had personally insulted the Emperor, sacrificing thousands of Imperial priests to his patron Daemon, and both Russ and Jonson desired the honour of slaying this fool. The Tyrant Durath insulted Russ, causing him to demand the right to lead the attack on the fortress. Johnson ignored him and led his own carefully planned attack instead, killing the Tyrant personally. After the battle Russ confronted and attacked Johnson, and the two dueled for a day and a night. Russ eventually stopped attacking, seeing the humor of the situation, at which point Johnson knocked him unconscious. Only then did El'Jonson consider his honour to be satisfied. The prostrate Russ was carried from the fortress by his Astartes and, when he regained consciousness, the Dark Angels had already departed to fight in the Alisore Campaign. Russ swore he would avenge the stain on his honour and, to this day, whenever the Space Wolves and Dark Angels meet, one of their number is called upon to refight the ancient duel of the Primarchs in order that honour may be satisfied.
  • Night of the Wolf (Unknown Date.M30) - Imperial records state that two Primarchs came to Angron, both claiming to have been sent by the Emperor in an attempt to stop him from implanting his Astartes of the World Eaters Legion with the cortical implants known as the Butcher's Nails that were transforming his Space Marines into berserk and savage killers. The first arrived soon after Angron joined his Legion after being unwillingly rescued from his homeworld of Nuceria. The second would not come until almost a century later. By then, it would already be too late for the XIIth Legion. The Night of the Wolf is a little known incident that occurred shortly after the World Eaters' massacre of the entire planetary population of the world of Ghenna. The Primarch Leman Russ had been charged by the Emperor to take his Space Wolves Legion to Ghenna to bring the World Eaters to heel. The two Legions met at Malkoya, on the fields beyond the dead Ghennan city of that same name. The World Eaters, battered and bleeding from Ghenna's Imperial Compliance campaign, formed ragged lines before the assembled Space Wolves Legion. The Primarchs stood before their hosts, armed and armoured -- Angron awash with blood and carved up by fresh wounds; Leman Russ in resplendent battle-plate the colour of the storms on his tempestuous homeworld of Fenris. In these early years of the Great Crusade, Angron still carried his first axe, the precursor to all others. He called it Widowmaker. It would break this very day, never to be used again. Russ carried Krakenmaw, his immense Chainblade, toothed by some Fenrisian sea-devil from that blighted world's many myths. Angron refused to recognise his brother's authority, and warned the Wolf King to depart before the situation became something that he would regret. But Russ refused to be cowed by the warlike Primarch. He informed Angron that the implantation surgeries must end, for the Emperor Himself had deemed it so. The massacres of newly discovered human worlds were to end with the fall of Ghenna. The World Eaters were to submit to the Space Wolves as their escorts for their Legion's return to Terra. Once they reached the Imperial Palace, everything would be done to remove the parasitic Butcher's Nails implants from the World Eaters' minds. Angron was not amused by Russ' implied threats. No one ever saw who fired the first shot. In the decades after, the World Eaters claimed it came from the Space Wolves' lines, and the Space Wolves claimed the same of the XIIth Legion. Without either Primarch giving an order, the two Space Marine Legions fought. The Night of the Wolf, it was later called. Imperial archives referred to it as the Ghenna Scouring, omitting the moment the World Eaters and Space Wolves drew blood. A source of pride for both Legions, and a source of secret shame. Both claimed victory. But both feared they had actually lost, and in truth, the battle proved bloody but inconclusive. But the World Eaters did not return to Terra, and Angron refused to stop the implantation of his Astartes.
  • Supression of Kernunnos (Unknown Date.M30) - This was in Imperial Compliance carried out by the Wolf Lord Bulveye of the Space Wolves 13th Company and the Imperial Army contingent known as the Arcturan Dragoons against the world of Kernunnos located in the Lammas Sector. When the 954th Expedition came to the Lammas Sector, they brought good tidings and Imperial Truth from the Emperor. But despite the Wolf Lord's open handed gesture of peace, the twelve ruling self-styled Tyrants of Lammas spat upon his gesture of peace and unity. Seven years later, their fleets lay broken and their armies scattered. During the final engagement of this brutal campaign the Dragoons had spearheaded the attack on the Tyrants' capital and had fought their way first to the battered palace at the centre of the city. Meanwhile, the fleet of the 954th Expedition laid down a constant bombardment of the Tyrants' last refuge bored deep within the Elysians mountain range, a vault bored into the heart of one of the largest peaks that had been built during the Age of Strife, it now lay in rubble. If it had been up to Bulveye, the vault would have been the Tyrants' tomb. But in the Allfather's wisdom, they were spared, stripped of their position of power and all their pilfered wealth would be used to help rebuilding what was lost, and ensure that the worlds of the Lammas Sector became prosperous and stable members of the Imperium. Each planet would have an Imperial Governor to oversee their reconstruction, and they would send Wolf Lord Bulveye regular reports of their efforts. He left them with a warning not to give him a reason to return there ever again.
  • First Kobolt War, Razing of Thuyela (Unknown Date. M30) - During the Great Crusade in the late 30th Millennium, the 40th Expeditionary Fleet encountered a race of humanoid xenos in Kobolt space who were lethal and proud, and had no interest in human affairs. The xenos' base of operations was a great transparent vessel that sparkled as if it was made of glass, and so was nicknamed by the Imperials "Scintilla City". This vessel was in actuality an Eldar Craftworld, and was called Thuyela in the Eldar Lexicon. True to their capricious nature, the Eldar of Thuyela attacked the 40th Expeditionary Fleet without apparent reason or explanation, and managed to fight the Imperial fleet to a standstill. Fleet commanders called for the help of the Space Marines. An unrecorded number or Great Company of Space Wolves Astartes answered the call and quickly overcame the xenos. As "Scintilla City" shattered around them, the desperate Eldar realised that all would be lost if they continued to fight, and the xenos attempted to plead for terms. Imperial commanders involved in the action might have been content to naively negotiate a surrender, but the Space Wolves were not. Thuyela was sacked and its people slaughtered by the Space Wolves. It was so completely destroyed that there was nothing left for the Imperial forces to recover or plunder. The fate of Thuyela's survivors, if any, is not recorded in Imperial records. Senior commanders of the 40th Expeditionary Fleet were so horrified by the incident that they were left with a disinclination to call upon the ferocity of the Space Wolves again, until they were forced to do so in the assault upon the homeworld of the Olamic Quietude not long after.
  • Second Kobolt War, Suppression of the Olamic Quietude (Unknown Date.M30) - The 40th Expeditionary Fleet was an expeditionary force during the Great Crusade that was shadowed by an Astartes complement made up of the Space Wolves' 3rd Great Company ("Tra" Company). During the Second Kobolt War, the 40th Expeditionary Fleet met up with the Space Wolves near Gogmagog Beta, pressing fruitlessly into the territory of the cybernetic Abhumans called the Olamic Quietude. Near the end of the Great Crusade, some time before the Council of Nikaea, the 40th Expeditionary Fleet first encountered the Quietude. The Quietude were immediately hostile and had attacked the 40th Fleet in two separate actions, attempting to drive it out of their space. In the second of these actions, the Quietude captured the crew of an Imperial warship. The Quietude then ignored an Imperial ultimatum to cease hostilities and return the crew, instead subjecting them to torture and vivisection to extract information. The Quietude claimed the information extracted from these unlucky subjects "proved" that the Imperium were simply pretenders to the heritage of Mankind; and that when the Age of Strife ended the Olamic Quietude would return to the wider galaxy and take their rightful place as the true inheritors of the human future. Naturally finding such a contradiction of theImperial Truth unacceptable, but evenly matched by the formidable forces of the Quietude, the 40th Expedition grudgingly called for the aid of the Space Marine Legions in the form of the Space Wolves' 3rd Great Company ("Tra" Company) to assist in the assault on the Quietude's homeworld. The Space Wolves began the attack by assaulting the orbital facility above the planet, and despite the Quietude's martial reputation and advanced technology, easily overcame the formidable onboard defences composed of gracile and robust cybernetic troops. The 40th Expeditionary Fleet then began an orbital bombardment of the planet below, which proved ineffective against the ice caps that the Quietude had extended over their hive cities. Imperial Army ground forces found the going much more difficult when they landed, despite being supported by Titans and super-heavy tanks, with the strange lamp-like beam weapons mounted on the Quietude's defence towers extracting a heavy toll from the Imperial forces. After sustaining heavy casualties, the Imperial Army forces were withdrawn on the request of the Space Wolves, much to the anger of the Imperial Army commanders involved in the assault. Instead of another frontal assault, the Space Wolves used the vast orbital facility they had captured to unleash an orbital bombardment. Forcing the space station out of its orbit, it fell into the world's atmosphere and smashed into the Quietude's cities with the power of tens of thousands of nuclear weapons, breaking through the ice shields and inflicting cataclysmic damage. This unconventional assault was followed by a full scale attack on the now-burning cities from the combined Astartes and Imperial Army force that brutally eradicated the Quietude and purged all trace of their presence from the galaxy. It was later discovered that the orbital space station or "Instrument" as the Quietude called it that the Space Wolves had dropped on the planet was, instead of a weapon or military base, a vast archive that contained the last record of all Quietude culture and technology, causing it to be lost to Mankind forever.
  • The Razing of Prospero (004-005.M31) - The Fall of Prospero was the name given by later Imperial scholars to the sanctioned Imperial military reprisal against the XVth Legion's homeworld of Prospero at the start of the Horus Heresy in the early 31st Millennium. The action was carried out by the Space Wolves Legion and elements of the Legio Custodes and the Sisters of Silence as a punishment for the Thousand Sons' flagrant violation of the Emperor of Mankind's edicts against the use of sorcery made at the Council of Nikaea. Though the Thousand Sons' Primarch Magnus the Red was aware of the impending assault and the vulnerability of orbital attack, he chose not act, as he felt that his sins warranted the Emperor's sanctions against him. The Space Wolves viciously bombarded the surface of planet and then launched a massive orbital strike with devastating results, slaughtering all life on the surface of Prospero. The battle finally concluded with Magnus and Leman Russ facing one another in personal combat, which resulted in the Red Cyclops being cast down and his back broken. Seeing his imminent demise near at hand, Magnus cast a mighty spell that took the great city of Tizca, his remaining Astartes and what precious archives of forbidden lore they could save, to their new homeworld known as the Planet of the Sorcerers, prepared by their patron Chaos God Tzeentch somewhere within the Eye of Terror.
  • The Wolf and the Khan (007.M31) - The White Scars learn of the Warmaster's heresy when they establish contact with Leman Russ in the aftermath of the Space Wolves' destruction of Prospero. Faced with the dilemma of aiding the weakened Space Wolves against a powerful force of Alpha Legion attackers, or returning to Terra as ordered by Rogal Dorn, Jaghatai Khan chooses the higher duty and returns to Terra.
  • Battle of the Adraxxes Nebula (007.M31) - As the Space Wolves are still licking their wounds following their heavy losses during the Razing of Prospero, they are ambushed by a sizable Alpha Legion strike force and are subsequently routed at Yarant. Primarch Leman Russ organises a tactical retreat and flees towards the Adraxxes Nebula. The Alpha Legion gives chase and soon the VIth Legion finds itself in a precarious predicament -- they are effectively cut-off and surrounded. Russ reluctantly sends a distress call to his brother-Primarch Jaghatai Khan, of the White Scars Legion. The Khan declines to assist the Space Wolves and instead sets course for Prospero to determine the truth for himself in regards to the Warmaster's heresy. The Space Wolves are eventually forced to flee in order to survive. A final confrontation eventually erupts between the Loyalist and Traitor forces as the Space Wolves vow to take as many of their foes with them before they are annihilated. The Sons of Russ receive relief from an unexpected quarter, in the form of the Dark Angels Legion, and their mighty Star Fort, the Chimaera. Answering Russ' distress signal, the combined force of Loyalists are able to turn the tide, and inflict serious losses on the Alpha Legion, and force them to withdraw.
  • Fall of Batzel III (008.M31) - Space Wolves strike forces eradicate the entire 39th Millennial of the Emperor's Children during the storming of the Vykstag Winter Palace as part of the Batzel III Campaign for control of the Brozyn-Primaris sector of the Segmentum Obscurus. Leaderless, Batzel succumbs to infighting and ultimately genocidal civil war. While exiting the sector, the Space Wolves strike force clashes inconclusively with an unknown and elusive Legiones Astartes force which bears no recognisable heraldry.
  • The Vannaheim Space Drop (008-009.M31) - The Iron Warriors launch a daring void assault against the orbital hives of Vannaheim, capturing vital facilities after ten days of brutal fighting. A Loyalist force in the Segmentum Tempestus, including isolated elements of the Space Wolves Legion, is drawn into the conflict, launching three successive counter-assaults in order to recapture the orbital hive stations' vital altitudinal control grid, but each fails to achieve its goal and countless thousands of Loyalist lives are lost. The famed Space Wolves grand cruiser, Helicon Spear, is captured and becomes a prize of the Iron Warriors Legion during the last, disastrous attempt.
  • Great Scouring (014-021.M31) - As one of the largest remaining Loyalist Legions that emerged relatively unscathed from the Horus Heresy, the Space Wolves Legion played an instrumental part in the Great Scouring. This was the Imperium of Man's great counter-offensive against the Traitor Legions of the slain Warmaster Horus, following the end of this lamentable civil war after the Battle of Terra. Before actually being confined within the life support mechanisms of the Golden Throne, the Emperor had pronounced judgment on the Traitors: declared Excommunicate Traitoris, they were to be driven into the hellish region of the Warp rift called the Eye of Terror, which would hold them for all eternity. All records and memory of the Traitor Legions were to be expunged from the Imperial archives. Worlds such as Istvaan V and Davin were scoured clean of all life because of their corruption by Chaos. The Traitor Legions' associated troops from the Dark Mechanicus or the regiments and starships of the Imperial Army that had turned to Chaos were to be destroyed or driven into the Eye. It would be as if the Traitor Legions had never existed to sully the Imperium with their betrayal. The fighting would continue for another seven years.
  • First Battle of Garm (Unknown Date.M31) - In the aftermath of the Horus Heresy, the Thousand Sons attacked the Space Wolves' Shrine World of Garm, which was named for a famous Wolf Lord from the earliest days of the Space Wolves Legion who had given his life defending the Primarch Leman Russ from an attack by Magnus the Red. Leman Russ raised a cairn to Garm upon the place of his death and placed the Spear of Russ, the mighty weapon gifted to him by the Emperor Himself, which had wounded the Traitor Magnus, atop Garm's tomb. The Space Wolves were able to fight off the Thousand Sons Traitor Legion and drive them from the world.
  • The Primarch Departs (211.M31) - During the 197th Feast of the Emperor's Ascension on Fenris, Leman Russ is overcome with a mysterious vision. He gathers his closest retainers and departs for the Eye of Terror without explanation, leaving behind the youngest warrior of his Great Company, Bjorn the Fell-Handed.
  • The First Great Hunt (218.M31) - After seven standard years of waiting for their Primarch to return, the Space Wolves elect Bjorn the Fell-Handed -- the only member of Russ' Wolf Guard to be left behind -- as their leader. In his first act as Great Wolf, Bjorn announces the Great Hunt. The entire Space Wolves Chapter sets forth in an attempt to discern the whereabouts of their missing Primarch, though they are ultimately unsuccessful.
  • The Proxima Rebellion (934.M31) - Bjorn the Fell-Handed's heroic career is tragically cut short during the Proxima Rebellion. Bjorn leads a successful raid to free those of his battle-brothers trapped in the Dreadsun Fortress, but his body sustains such terrible injuries that, to preserve his life, what is left of his shattered body is interred in a Dreadnought. Acutely aware that, as a Dreadnought, he can no longer fulfil his duties as master of the Chapter, Bjorn abdicates his position as Great Wolf.
  • First Battle for The Fang (742.M32) - Harek Ironhelm was the Chapter's Great Wolf during the 32nd Millennium. Ironhelm sought for many years to bring the Thousand Sons' Primarch Magnus the Red to battle. Several times Magnus appeared to him in visions amongst the ruins of devastated cities that had been laid to ruin by the Thousand Sons Traitor Legion striking from out of the Eye of Terror and taunted the Great Wolf for his inability to stop him. After many fruitless efforts to catch up with the Chaos Space Marines, Harek became obsessed, and took to searching worlds along the edge of the Eye of Terror itself. Eventually he found what he believed to be the Thousand Sons' secret base on the world of Gangava and launched a full-scale planetary assault against it. This was a deception intended to draw the bulk of the Space Wolves' forces from their homeworld, leaving it undefended; for in truth Gangava was held by a Chaos force allied to Magnus but it served only as a distraction, intended to draw the Space Wolves away from their homeworld so that a massive Thousand Sons' fleet could besiege Fenris itself. The Space Wolves' fortress-monastery, The Fang, was held by only a small force of Space Wolves and their Servitor-thralls. For forty days and forty nights the Thousand Sons assaulted the citadel. Bjorn the Fell-Handed, the most ancient of the Space Wolves' Dreadnoughts, was woken from his long sleep and took charge of the defence. The assault was held at bay as a force of Scout Marines under Haakon Blackwing escaped to Gangava to locate Harek. Shamed and furious, Harek Ironhelm returned to meet Magnus in battle on the slopes of the Fang itself. Although Magnus was terribly wounded, even Harek could not stand against the power of a Primarch who had been further exalted to become a Daemon Prince of Tzeentch. Harek was slain, but the Thousand Sons were ultimately defeated and scattered, the Traitor Legion's warbands forced to return to the Planet of the Sorcerers within the Eye of Terror.
  • Second Battle for The Fang (Unknown Date.M36) - During the Age of Apostasy's Plague of Unbelief, Apostate Cardinal Bucharis of Gathalamore launched an invasion of Fenris on his way to Terra. For three years, Bucharis laid siege to the Fang after the Space Wolves' fleet waged furious battles against the Renegade Imperial Navy forces of Bucharis. Some of the Space Wolves' starships managed to break through, such as the cruiser named the Claw of Russ. However, the fighting saw millions of Fenrisians fall to the invaders as the people of Fenris, the Space Wolves and even the Fenrisian Wolves of the wild waged war against their corrupted Chaotic attackers. Despite numerous efforts to break the siege, the Space Wolves could not get through, until returning from a five-year-long expedition to the Eye of Terror, Kyrl Grimblood and his Great Company smashed through Bucharis' fleet and then launched a devastating assault on the rear of Bucharis' siege forces, killing thousands and sending many fleeing into the wilds of Fenris to die horribly at the claws of the unforgiving creatures and the touch of the deadly weather. With Kyrl's efforts weakening the invaders, the Space Wolves launched a break-out counteroffensive and smashed through their attackers, routing them. Bucharis was forced to flee and while his defeat at the hands of the Space Wolves did not end his reign, others fought against the "Plague of Unbelief" he had unleashed and Bucharis was eventually defeated by a resurgent Imperium. Yet it is due to the efforts of Kyrl Grimblood that the ambitions of the Apostate Cardinal Bucharis were brought to a turning point and the Second Battle for the Fang was won.
  • The Shadows of Russ (313.M41) - The Sky Warriors see greatness in the young Fenrisian warrior Logan Grimnar. A Wolf Priest follows the exploits of the young warrior and the Iron Blood tribe to which he belongs, as Logan fights across the freezing oceans of Fenris. During the Sea of Blades, a host of tribes descend upon the Kraken's Spur to do battle, and the Wolf Priest witnesses the shadow of Leman Russ lingering in the wake of young Grimnar. A potent sign of the Primarch's favour, it is all that the priest needs to induct Logan into the fabled Sky Warriors.
  • The Bloody Crescent (357.M41) - Quickly earning a place in the Great Company of Asvald Stormwrack, Logan Grimnar rises to the rank of Grey Hunter. At the battle of Blood Falls, on the broken world of Hesperia, Logan saves the Wolf Lord's life when the latter is trapped under the mangled wreck of a Helbrute. Logan alone is able to reach Asvald, standing over the broken Chaos machine for long minutes, single-handedly holding back the Chaos Space Marine Renegades of the Bloody Crescent. For the Grey Hunter's bravery, Asvald inducts Logan into his Wolf Guard.
  • Asvald's Final Battle (415.M41) - Asvald Stormwrack meets his end during the war for the Cyclopean Rift on Zylor IX. For over a decade Asvald's Great Company has fought against the pale Orks of the Rift. The Ork Warboss Dakfang leads constant attacks up into the sublevels of the great hive cities of Zylor from the rifts below. Finally, Dakfang and Asvald face each other on the bridge-maze under Zylor Primus, the two warlords mortally wounding each other before plummeting into the dark below. With the death of Asvald, Logan Grimnar is named Wolf Lord, taking command of the Great Company.
  • Mantle of the Great Wolf (440.M41) - Logan Grimnar quickly earns the respect of his fellow Wolf Lords, despite many being centuries older than him. When, on the battlefields of Xor, a Dark Eldar Succubus murders the reigning Great Wolf Sigvald Grimhammer, Ulrik puts Logan's name forward as his successor. Amazingly there is no resistance to Logan's ascension, and when the runestones are counted every vote has been cast in Grimnar's favour.
Heart of Darkness

Space Wolves in combat against the Forces of Chaos during the First War for Armageddon

  • First War for Armageddon (444.M41) - During the First War for Armageddon the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar lead 300 Space Wolves alongside 100 Grey Knights against the World Eaters' Daemon Primarch Angron and a diabolic horde of Khornate Berserkers and Khornate daemons. The Imperial forces eventually proved victorious after the Grey Knights banished Angron back to the Warp from whence he came. The Space Wolves continued to fight in the First War for Armageddon through to its conclusion.
  • Months of Shame (444-451.M41) - Although they had defeated all that the Forces of Chaos had thrown at them during the bloody campaign that was the First War for Armageddom, the victorious soldiers of Armageddon were doomed from the start. They had gained knowledge of the existence of Chaos, and been exposed to its corruption. The Inquisition had no intention of letting the wider Imperium discover the true nature of the daemonic foe that had attacked Armageddon, or of the ways and means victory had been achieved with the aid of the Grey Knights; the Inquisitors present voted to sterilise and quarantine-for-life the remaining population of the Hive World even though it was generally considered untainted, and ignorant of the truth concerning the existence of Chaos. The valiant Imperial Guard, PDF regiments and other human defenders of the world were to suffer the same fate or be liquidated. The Inquisition ordered all of the people who had fought on the planet, except for the Space Marines, to be rounded up at gunpoint, sterilised to prevent any possible Chaos-induced mutations in their offspring and placed in Adeptus Arbites work camps across the galaxy, with their world to be re-colonised by people from other regions of the galaxy with no knowledge of the war. Over the strident protests of the Space Wolves and their Great Wolf Logan Grimnar, the Inquisition followed through with this plan, and the Grey Knights frigate Karabela still in orbit of Armageddon was ordered to destroy the first Imperial Guard troop transport to leave Armageddon as it approached a Warp jump point off-world. Following this first incident, a months-long cat-and-mouse campaign later remembered as the "Months of Shame" took place between the Space Wolves and their human charges from Armageddon on one side, and the Inquisition and Grey Knights on the other. It was characterised by increasingly deadly fratricidal actions by both sides, and rapidly escalated into a full-fledged Imperial civil war between the Space Wolves and the Inquisition. However many of the attached Grey Knights were upset at their involvement in the purge, and were demoralised by having to fight the brother Astartes of the Space Wolves. Grimnar saw the Inquisition's actions following the war as betraying the very people who had honourably fought for their homes and for the Emperor, and if the Imperium did not protect those who fought for it, he did not believe it had any purpose. The Inquisition saw this policy as an unfortunate but necessary part of its mandate and duty in applying the Imperial policy of secrecy concerning Chaos, and it would not suffer the questioning of its authority. Finally, in an attempt to bring the conflict to an end, in 445.M41 the Inquisitor Lord Ghesmei Kysnaros ordered his growing Inquisitorial armada, including Grey Knights Chapter fleet vessels, to Fenris, the Space Wolves' lightly defended homeworld, in a last-ditch gambit to force those Astartes to comply with the Inquisition's wishes concerning the liquidation or imprisonment of Armageddon's survivors. Kysnaros' armada, including a multitude of Inquisition warships, Grey Knights vessels, and the entire Chapter fleet and strength of the Red Hunters Space Marine Chapter, arrived at Fenris and surrounded the planet in high orbit whilst targeting The Fang, the Space Wolves' fortress-monastery, for a devastating orbital bombardment. The planet was virtually undefended as the vast majority of the Space Wolves and their Chapter fleet were dispersed on missions across the galaxy. Kysnaros again asked for a parlay with any ranking Space Wolves present. A delegation consisting of Kysnaros, the Grey Knight Hyperion (who commanded respect amongst the Space Wolves as the "Bladebreaker") and Inquisitor Annika Jarlsdottyr, a native Fenrisian, arrived at The Fang for the meeting. The Space Wolves had awoken the Venerable Dreadnought Bjorn the Fell-Handed to deal with the Inquisitorial party. The ancient warrior who had once fought beside the Primarch Leman Russ during the Great Crusade immediately received the unbidden respect and reverence of the Inquisitorial delegation, and was thought to be a more temperate and wise representative for the Chapter than Logan Grimnar. Kysnaros asked for the Space Wolves' express obeisance to Imperial authority and the chain of command, and a Penitent Crusade to be undertaken to expiate the Chapter's guilt for their attacks upon the servants of the Inquisition. In exchange, the Inquisition and the Imperium at large would take no other action or censure against the Chapter. Before negotiations could go further, to the surprise of everyone, the Space Wolves' Chapter fleet under the command of Logan Grimnar translated from the Warp near Fenris. As the Inquisition delegation made haste to their flagship, a short, brutal fight ensued over the planet. Eventually Grimnar and his Wolf Guard teleported to Kysnaros' flagship's bridge, where the Great Wolf unceremoniously beheaded the Inquisitor Lord. Grimnar then proceeded to maul the last survivor of the Grey Knights' Squad Castian who had survived the conflict on Armageddon. To save his brother, Hyperion confronted Grimnar, and in the duel that followed, he used his psychic powers to crack Grimnar's ancient, venerated Frost Axe Morkai. As Hyperion then confronted Grimnar and twenty Space Wolves alone, Bjorn the Fell-Handed teleported to the bridge and put an end to the fight. Bjorn told Grimnar that the internecine war between the Chapter and the Inquisition on behalf of the survivors of Armageddon had to stop. The Inquisitorial force should be allowed to leave Fenris unscathed, and the Space Wolves should reach an understanding with the Imperium. He then addressed Hyperion and Inquisitor Jarlsdottyr, as the ranking Inquisition representatives present, and told them that no Inquisition vessel should ever again appear above Fenris. Additionally, the Space Wolves who had acquired knowledge of the existence of the Grey Knights would not be mind-scrubbed, as was customary, though the remaining Armageddon survivors would be handed over for mind-wiping and dispersion across the galaxy. The combatants accepted the terms, and shortly afterward, the Inquisitorial force left the system. Yet, the larger institutional dispute between the Inquisition and the Space Wolves was not resolved. As a result of what they continued to believe was a betrayal of the Imperium's core values, the Space Wolves have never again trusted the Inquisition and move to frustrate Inquisitorial designs at every opportunity. Since that time the Space Wolves have had little but hostility to show towards the Inquisition and few indeed are the Inquisitors allowed into The Fang in recent times. Both the Armageddon campaign and its aftermath caused extensive casualties amongst the Grey Knights, which lost almost 200 Astartes engaged in the combat. Several Grey Knights starships were lost or destroyed during the hostilities with the Space Wolves, including at least one capital vessel.
  • Uprising on Palacia (499.M41) - Logan Grimnar proves his reputation as both a great warlord and respected leader during the Palacia Heresy. Taking command of the bickering Astra Militarum regiments, he puts an end to the systematic execution of the planet's population. Under the banner of his Great Company the Loyalists rally, many cities thought lost to the Heresy proving their worth and turning on the Traitors. Word soon spreads of the Great Wolf's victory, but also of the fair and just way in which he treated the people of Palacia.
  • Well of Darkness (539.M41) - Logan Grimnar leads the purge of the Space Hulk Well of Darkness as it drifts past Fenris, his Wolf Guard Terminators cleansing it of alien horrors. During the fighting the Great Wolf falls through a weakened section of deck, plunging down a dozen levels and becoming hopelessly separated from his Battle-Brothers. When he returns to them solar days later, he is covered in alien ichor and filth from countless kills, a savage grin upon his face.
  • War of the Wolf (612.M41) - Logan Grimnar learns of the location of a Wolf Brother Space Marine, one of the long-lost members of the Space Wolves' only Successor Chapter. The Great Wolf leads his Champions of Fenris to rescue the Battle-Brother from the clutches of the Black Legion, before the Arch-Traitor Fabius Bile can use him for some nefarious experiment.
  • Magdelon Confrontation (712.M41) - Wolf Lord Ragnar Blackmane leads his Great Company against a splinter warband of the Renegade Bleak Brotherhood, and the two forces clash in the shattered ruins of the world of Magdelon's Crystal City. Having been ejected from Magdelon, the Bleak Brotherhood flees to the planet of Lycanthos Secundus, where they occupy the mighty bastion known as the Widowmaker. This stronghold withstands repeated assaults by numerous Imperial forces, including a pack of Space Wolves Vindicators, for three standard decades before at last falling to the Astral Claws in 780.M41.
  • The Purging of the Starcrusha (739.M41) - The titanic flagship of WAAAGH! Godstompa burst from the depths of the Warp in a localised nebula of green ectoplasm. Wolf Lord Finn Goresson immediately diverted his fleet's course to engage the Space Hulk and its attending Ork warships. He is victorious in his early engagements, at one point driving the armoured prow of his Strike Cruiser straight into the weak point of the Ork Superkrooza Longtoof and out the other side, breaking it in two. His ships are dwarfed by the Space Hulk Starkrusha, however, and sustain serious losses from its firepower. Finn ploughs on through the ectoplasmic cloud until the side of the Starkrusha looms up ahead. He slams his Strike Cruiser into the maw-like launch bays of the Hulk and leads his Great Company in a sustained boarding action against the Ork horde inside. The resultant war in the bowels of the Orkoid colossus lasts for the best part of six solar months, but nonetheless Finn eventually emerges triumphant, Godstompa's severed head hanging from his belt as a grisly trophy.
  • The Stench of Chaos (741.M41) - Logan Grimnar travels to the besieged world of Vara III to break the deadlock between the Imperium and the separatist forces under Planetary Governor Tor Rex. The Great Wolf quickly realises all is not as it seems and orchestrates a council between Tor Rex and the forces of the Imperium. In respect for Grimnar, Rex attends but is quickly set upon by the incumbent Imperial Commander Keel. Logan catches the scent of Chaos upon Keel and realises the Imperial forces on Vara III are under the thrall of the Dark Gods, while Rex remains loyal to the Imperium. The Great Wolf personally rips Keel's head from his shoulders and in just a few bloody weeks the Space Wolves hunt down and kill every Heretic within the Varan fleet, bringing an end to the war.
  • The Long Vigil (777.M41) - Gunnar Red Moon's Great Company suffers grievous losses against the Orks of WAAAGH! 'Eadbusta. Only the tenacity of the Long Fangs saves their kinsmen after they hold Moonfang Pass for three solar days until reinforcements arrive.
  • Scouring of Gnosis Secundus (787.M41) - In response to the Eldar invasion of Gnosis Prime the Space Wolves are dispatched to defend the planet. Unfortunately they are blown off course by a Warp Storm and arrive a standard year too late. Unable to save the people of Gnosis Prime, Logan Grimnar heads to Gnosis Secundus seeking revenge against the Saim-Hann Eldar still in-system.
  • The Hunter's Hunted (822.M41) - The piratical Dark Eldar Kabal of the Shattered Hand flies unhindered over the defence networks of the Luetin Necropolis. They have barely begun their bloody work when they are ambushed in turn, the Great Company of Erik Morkai hurling themselves from the windows above and boarding the jagged transports of the xenos raiders to cut down the degenerate invaders.
  • The Scrapshire Incursion (830.M41) - Logan Grimnar leads a rescue mission to recover a priceless Standard Template Construct (STC) database from the wreckage of the downed Adeptus Mechanicus vessel Eternal Iron. The ship has crashed on the Ork world of Scrapspire, a dumping ground for rubbish from across the sector. On a sea of scrap metal the Space Wolves fight their way into the great city of the Ork Warboss Krugfist, finally reaching his treasure vaults and recovering the STC Cogitator core. In the fray Grimnar hacks Krugfist's mechanical Power Klaw from his arm, taking it with him as a trophy.
  • Honour's End (837.M41) - During the Eclipse Wars, the Flesh Tearers Chapter fought alongside the Space Wolves and the Angels Vindicant Chapters upon the Shrine World of Lucid Prime. Largely due to a ferocious Flesh Tearers' counter-attack, Imperial forces were able to drive off the Chaos Space Marine forces terrosing Hive Ratspire. However, the Flesh Tearers continued their indiscriminate slaughter of civilians even after the Chaos Renegades had been driven away. Despite Chapter Master Seth's insistence that his men were purging those that had been tainted by the presence of Chaos, the Space Wolves were outraged and attacked the Flesh Tearers at once. The resultant battle saw brother fighting brother, with the death of many hundreds on either side. This terrible event was known forever after as Honour's End.
  • The Ambush of Hel's Ridge (848.M41) - A vast Tyranid swarm surrounds Bran Redmaw's Great Company after their Imperial Guard allies are waylaid and slaughtered to a man. The timely arrival of a dozen Stormfang gunships helps to clear the skies before a savage counterattack led by Redmaw and his Blood Claw Packs turns the tide against the Tyranid ground forces.
  • From Out of the Warp it Came (877.M41) - Engir Krakendoom's Great Company is close to hand when a vast anomaly breaches the yawning Warp Gate of Sloth. Twelve thousand miles of heaving flesh; the entity defies classification until a xenobiologist realises that the anomaly was once a peaceful Void Whale, twisted by the unnatural tides of the Warp. As the monstrosity prepares to engulf the astral stronghold of Perillia, the Space Wolves board it in drill-tipped torpedoes. Fighting amongst frond-forests and gill-chasms, Engir and his men battle through the nightmare products of its hostile ecosystem before planting thermal charges deep within its vital organs. They escape with only solar seconds to spare before the behemoth finally comes apart in a great cloud of tainted blood. The Perillian Gas Belt is born from its remains.
  • The Ecclesiarchy comes to Fenris (886.M41) - A delegation of Ecclesiarchy officials approaches Fenris, intending to assess the Space Wolves after hearing rumours of their worship of false gods. Logan Grimnar refuses to meet their demands when they command him to open the gates of The Fang and undergo interrogation. Foolishly, the Ecclesiarchy decide to press the matter and when their envoy Cruiser is destroyed trying to dock with The Fang the rest of the Adeptus Ministorum officials retreat, finally realising the Great Wolf is not be trifled with. However, it is not a lesson learned, and almost a year later the Ecclesiarchy and three Orders Militant of the Adepta Sororitas attempt to enter Fenrisian space in force. The resultant war lasts for three solar weeks before the Ecclesiarchy decides to let sleeping dogs lie and withdraws its forces.
  • Slaying of the Ice Trolls (892.M41) - Harald Deathwolf -- in mortal life a champion of the Fenrisian Tide Hounds tribe -- hears tales of a migration of ice trolls that has reached his ancestral lands and is devouring his people. In a rage, he makes an unsanctioned return to his mortal roots and leads his savage tribe-kin to victory against the marauding monsters, claiming the enchanted pelt of the largest of their number as a trophy.
  • Bad Blood is Spilled (894.M41) - The Space Wolves and the Dark Angels fight alongside each other for the first time in many years to quell an uprising in the Artemis System. In the wake of the conflict, Ranulf the Strong inadvertently kills the Dark Angels' champion, Balthasar Xaphan, in the traditional contest that reenacts the duel fought by Russ and El'Jonson. Blood is shed on both sides in the ensuing fracas.
  • Betalis III Campaign (894.M41) - The frigid Ice World of Betalis III was the site of the Betalis III Campaign fought in 894.M41 between the forces of the Imperium defending the system and the Eldar who sought to recover the armour of the ancient Phoenix Lord Iryllith, the founder of the Shadow Spectre Aspect Warriors, whose vessel had crash-landed on the world millennia before. An alliance of Eldar forces from the Craftworlds of Mymeara and Alaitoc, as well as Eldar Corsairs from the Void Dragons, Sky Raiders, and Sunblitz Brotherhood, descended on the frigid world to recover their beloved Phoenix Lord's armour before it was discovered and defiled by the human miners present on Betalis III. In this way, the Mymearans hoped that Irillyth might be restored to fight once more for his people, since his spirit would have remained intact within his armour's Spirit Stone. Betalis III was reinforced by Imperial Guard regiments drawn from the Cadian Shock Troops and the Elysian Drop Troops as well as Titans from the Legio Gryphonicus and the Space Wolves Astartes of Bran Redmaw's Great Company. After the Imperial forces fought the Eldar to a bloody standstill, the mysterious xenos vanished as quickly as they had arrived, presumably after they had recovered Irillyth.
  • An Alliance Broken (895.M41) - When the Ork WAAAGH! of Grimtusk Bloodboila looks set to consume the entire Athelaq Sector, it is not only the Great Company of Egil Iron Wolf that stands in its path. An Eldar warhost fights hard to contain the Greenskin invasion to prevent the Space Wolves from becoming surrounded. Egil's tanks take a heavy toll on the Ork vanguard and, after weeks of bitter warfare, Warlord Grimtusk is killed and the WAAAGH! blunted. Later, Autarch Elenduil visits the throne room of Egil Iron Wolf in great ceremony, his bodyguard of Striking Scorpions respectfully bearing the recovered bodies of fallen Space Wolves. Unfortunately, what was supposed to be a parley over a parting gift turns sour at a single stray mistranslation. Insults are exchanged and blades drawn. The sudden violence of the ensuing fight is but a shadow of the destruction that follows as the sector descends into total war between the three factions.
  • The Battle for Montberg Spaceport (897.M41) - Hive Fleet Colossus descend in force upon the civilised world of Thressiax, and the forces garrisoned there prove unable to stop the Tyranid invaders. Imperial High Command calls for all remaining forces to withdraw and leave the settlers of Thressiax to their fate so that the Tyranids can be exterminated from space. Bran Redmaw, resupplying upon Thressiax at the time, objects fiercely to this dictate. He sends two full squads of Grey Hunters to reinforce the vital spaceport of Montberg so that the people of Thressiax can evacuate. Scant solar days before the aliens' impending attack, the Grey Hunters intensively train the menfolk of Montberg, putting the fear of Fenris into any considering desertion. Against all the odds, the Grey Hunters and their new mortal recruits hold the walls of the spaceport against the Tyranid swarms, buying the civilians enough time to escape. When the six surviving Grey Hunters finally withdraw from the spaceport, Imperial High Command demands that they be stripped of all honours for disobeying a direct command. Instead Bran Redmaw promotes all six into his personal Wolf Guard in recognition of their valourous deeds.
  • Battle of Centius Prime (897.M41) - The Ork warlord known as Big Boss Gigabob leads the invasion of the Feudal World of Centius Prime, searching for loot with which to arm his forces for a planned Greenskin WAAAGH! Finding the world has little technology more advanced than a crossbow, he indulges in a campaign of vengeful wrath, only to be halted by a combined force of Space Wolves and Mantis Warriors Space Marines answering the planet's astropathic distress call.
  • The 30th Great Hunt (900.M41) - The Great Wolf leads the 30th Great Hunt to find the Chapter's lost Primarch, Leman Russ. For over a standard decade Logan Grimnar's Great Company and scores of the Space Wolves' mightiest warriors travel the void, having bloody adventures and fighting glorious battles. While no definitive clues to the whereabouts of Russ are uncovered, the Great Hunt sees a host of threats to the Imperium destroyed and many more quelled before they can grow to become a danger.
  • Draxian Incursion (Unknown Date.M41) - The Space Wolves entered the fray against the forces of the xenos Draxians during the Draxian Incursion into Imperial territory on the world of Medes 841.
  • Hesperida Campaign (Unknown Date.M41) - The Space Wolves met the Forces of Chaos on the world of Hesperida. Portions of Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company saw action in this conflict.
  • Corinthus V (Unknown Date.M41) - Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company was deployed to the Imperial world of Corinthus V to aid the regiments of the Imperial Guard in throwing back the Forces of Chaos.
  • Second Battle of Garm (Unknown Date.M41) - During the 41st Millennium, the Thousand Sons Traitor Legion once again assailed the Shrine World of Garm. Led by the foul Thousand Sons Chaos Sorcerer Madox, a Chaos Cult uprising on a planetary scale provided the necessary cover for the sorcerer to steal the sacred Spear of Russ. Soon a great portion of the Space Wolves Chapter was deployed to Garm (11 Great Companies) to help quell these massive uprisings. One of these Great Companies was under the command of Wolf Lord Berek Thunderfist. During a climatic battle between the Chaos Sorcerer and Ragnar Blackmane, the young Space Wolf hurled the sacred Spear of Russ into a Warp portal to prevent the summoned Daemon Prince Magnus the Red from entering realspace and turning the tide of battle. Though even the Space Wolves' Great Wolf Logan Grimnar believed that Ragnar's actions had saved the Chapter from a potential disaster, many Space Wolves believed Ragnar had dishonoured himself and his fellow Battle-Brothers by losing one of the Space Wolves' greatest relics.
  • Battle for Midgardia (933.M41) - A Necron fleet led by Trazyn the Infinite descends upon the jungle-covered Death World of world of Midgardia in the Fenris System. The Necron Overlord seeks a shard of the C'tan Nyadra'zatha that slumbers in the core of the Fenrisian planet. Angered by the audacity of his foes, Logan Grimnar leads a huge force against the Necrons, turning the toxic jungles and subterranean cities of Midgardia into a bitter and brutal warzone.
  • The Abomination of Cyriax (954.M41) - Legends come to life in the underhive as, deep in the night-shrouded bowels of the Hive World of Cyriax's Hive Necros, something huge and terrible stirs within the stygian darkness. Though it kills hundreds of underhive dwellers over several nightmarish solar months, the call for help is only issued when a member of the hive's aristocracy is messily devoured. Logan Grimnar bids his elite Thunderwolf Cavalry mount up and hunt the much-feared Abomination of Cyriax until death. The myth of giant warriors riding metal-skinned wolf-daemons soon spreads across the entire planet.
  • Murderfang's Rampage (960.M41) - On the hell world of Omnicide, Logan Grimnar's Great Company stumbles upon a feral Space Wolf Dreadnought carving its way through a force of Chaos Space Marines. After a fierce struggle, the murderous machine is captured and frozen in stasis, before being taken back to The Fang for study.
  • War of Infamy (962.M41) - When the Tau raid Imperial shipyards at Ethron's Harbour, destroying numerous escort vessels and crippling the battleship Pretorius Rex, Logan Grimnar's Great Company leads a retributive strike against the nearest Tau outpost world. Taking advantage of a localised Warp anomaly to cross the sector in a matter of hours, the Space Wolves fall upon the unsuspecting Tau even as they refuel and recover from their raid. Though the battle is brutal and bloody, costing the Space Wolves dozens of their Battle-Brothers, the Great Wolf is determined to send a clear message to the Tau and leaves no survivors.
  • The War Under the Ocean (966.M41) - The Tau Empire, encroaching ever further into Imperial space, mines the bed of the Ocean World of Kvariam Alpha. It takes a full Terran decade for the domes and corridors that stretch along the ocean floor to be discovered by an Imperial Augur probe. With the Imperial Guard unable to engage the Tau forces so far below the sea, the Space Wolves are called in. Gunnar Red Moon's Great Company makes planetfall upon Kvariam's meagre land mass and takes the fight to the Fire Warriors stationed there. Having established a beachhead, Gunnar and his men split off from the main invasion force and launch a massed armoured assault into the depths. They drive deep into the ocean along the sea bed, the adamantium hulls of their Land Raiders proof against the terrible pressures of the ocean. As the tanks near the alien domes and spires of the Tau cities to disgorge their Terminator-Armoured passengers, circular portals in each section fan open and teams of graceful, propeller-tailed Battlesuits move to intercept the slowly approaching armoured column. A desperate, silent undersea battle erupts, but despite the bewildering array of sleek torpedo-armed craft brought to war against them, the Space Wolves still manage to shatter the domes of the Tau mining operations. The sea around them is choked with corpses before the Tau finally flee.
  • The Hungering Void (972.M41) - Logan Grimnar's Great Company chances upon a Tyranid splinter fleet deep within the void. Not content to leave the Tyranids to continue on their path deeper into the Imperium -- even though they are still centuries from the nearest system at sub-light speeds -- the Great Wolf launches an assault. Focusing on the Hive Ship in the centre of the cluster, Grimnar leads a boarding party to plant a powerful Vortex Mine in the beast's synaptic core. The Wolf Guard fight their way through the nightmarish body of the beast as it awakens around them, disgorging thousands of Tyranid organisms to devour them. Finally, Grimnar is able to plant the charge and escape, detonating it even as his Stormwolf lifts off. With the Hive Ship destroyed, the Space Wolves eradicate the remaining disorganised and scattered Tyranid vessels with ease.
  • The Avenging of Berek Thunderfist (983.M41) - Ragnar Blackmane slays his liege's killer, Chaos Champion Ghorox Bloodfist, in single combat. The vengeful Blackmane and his hand-picked strike force later hunt down and defeat Bloodfist's Word Bearers allies during the Gravespite Massacre. The young Ragnar is subsequently elected as the fallen Wolf Lord's successor in recognition of his heroic deeds.
  • Riders of the Storm (988.M41) - Logan Grimnar, majestic atop his gravitic chariot, Stormrider, leads his Great Company in the charge that finally breaks the Necron phalanxes of Imotekh the Stormlord on Vhaloth IV. Though a great victory over the Necrons, it is a hollow one for the Great Wolf, as the hunt that brought him to Vhaloth IV was intended to locate Trazyn the Infinite to deliver retribution for the attack on Midgardia.
  • An Oath Fulfilled (989.M41) - After more than 350 Terran years, Ulrik the Slayer avenges the Aspirants lost to the Dark Eldar Haemonculi coven, the Hex, after Erik Morkai's Wolf Scouts track the elusive coven to their latest "living art" gallery. Khaeghris Xhakt, the Haemonculus Ancient who masterminded the atrocities so long ago, is betrayed by an ambitious underling, who leaves his ghoulish overseer to face Ulrik alone. Xhakt's head soon adorns a spike in the Trophy Hall of The Fang.
  • A Jest Too Far (990.M41) - Lukas the Trickster rouses the volcanic wrath of Bjorn Stormwolf by soiling the Wolf Lord's Terminator Armour with a swarm of microscopic bloodlice. Bristling with indignation -- and no small amount of uncontrollable itching -- Stormwolf batters the sniggering Jackalwolf unconscious. Fortunately for the Blood Claw, Ragnar Blackmane intercedes before the giant can land a finishing blow, claiming the mischievous warrior for his own Great Company and, in doing so, saving Lukas' life.
  • Third War for Armageddon (998.M41) - The Space Wolves fielded 5 Great Companies in the defence of the Hive World of Armageddon during the Third War for Armageddon and acquitted themselves admirably in the successful defence of this strategically vital hive world from the Orks of WAAAGH! Ghazghkull.
  • The Battle for Alaric Prime (998.M41) - After the destruction of the Magnir's Revenge, the Great Wolf himself leads the Sons of Russ to the Sanctus Reach Sub-sector, only to dive headlong into battle on the beleaguered Knight World of Alaric Prime against Ork Warlord Grukk face-Rippa's Red WAAAGH!.
  • The Great Devourer comes to Shadrac (998.M41) - A Tyranid splinter fleet falls upon the isolated Ice World of Shadrac. The frostbitten Imperial Guard stationed there need a miracle to survive, but when a Pack of Space Wolves appears out of nowhere, there remains a glimmer of hope. Led by Skold Greypelt, the Space Wolves join the remaining Guardsmen in a desperate fight. Only a handful of warriors escape, leaving much of the swarm to be annihilated in a devastating explosion. Shadrac still falls to the Tyranids, though the Hive Mind learns to be wary of the Sons of Russ.
  • The Kraken Awakes (999.M41) - The fifty-foot long, leather-skinned "Kraken's Egg" held in the Trophy Hall of The Fang splits open to disgorge a slithering swarm of tentacled beasts. Harald Deathwolf's Fenrisian Wolves smell their acrid stench first, and lead the Wolf Lord himself to investigate. Together with Canis Wolfborn and a warband of Battle-Brothers, Harald messily butchers the abominations in a series of devastating charges. It is a hard-fought victory, however, and none of the combatants escape without the circular scars of the kraken-spawns' tentacles somewhere upon their body.
  • 13th Black Crusade (999.M41) - When Abaddon the Despoiler spilled forth from the Eye of Terror to launch the 13th Black Crusade, the Space Wolves were one of the first Chapters of the Space Marines to meet the challenge. Logan Grimnar and the Space Wolves were among the first Imperial defenders to arrive in the Cadian System to stem the tide of Chaotic filth. The entire Chapter deployed to support the Cadians, as the Space Wolves committed all 12 of their Great Companies against the Forces of Chaos. As Grimnar was among the oldest and wisest Space Marine commanders in the Imperium and possessed a stalwart reputation, he was elected to overall command of the Imperial defenders for the conflict. The Space Wolves are one of only four Space Marine Chapters to have fought in both the Third War for Armageddon and the 13th Black Crusade.
    • Battle of Kasr Tyrok (999.M41) - The Dark Angels and the Space Wolves set aside their ancient vendetta as Supreme Grand Master Azrael and Great Wolf Logan Grimnar come to a mutual, but temporary, understanding. Both Chapters take to the field together, in the defence of Kasr Tyrok upon the world of Cadia against a substantial force of Chaos mutants. The combined force of Dark Angels and Space Wolves smashed into the rear of the mutant mob, cutting them down without mercy, as each Chapter sought to outdo the other in their skill at arms. As the last few mutants were dispatched, the rival Space Marines' friendly banter soon turned to insults. Victory had been achieved, but the Sons of the Lion and the Sons of Russ parted ways, their long-time rivalry rearing its ugly head once again.

Chapter Organisation

"You will be faster than they are, stronger, quicker to sense corruption and with full sanction to destroy it. You will be girded in the armour of gods and carry the blades of ruin. You will never age, never wither, never weary. And yet, in all of this, what remains your greatest gift? Only this: while you are a brotherhood, you are unbreakable. While you form the shieldwall, guarding your packs-mates as if they were your own kin-blood, you cannot be resisted. Solely by treachery can this power be undone, as we have learned. We emerge from the lesson stronger, tempered by the knowledge of how low our species can sink. We now know what waits for us should we fail, and that is well, for it is better to know your enemy's face than for it to remain hidden by shadow. Never forget this. When night comes again, as it surely will, only your brotherhood will protect you. Preserve it, and you will endure. Let it fracture, let if fail, and I tell you truly: our time, humanity's time, will be over."

— The Primarch Leman Russ, words recorded on Ialis III, ca. 170.M31, incorporated into Liber Malan; source-data lost

Pre-Heresy

Kolbyr Hunter Support Squad2

Space Wolves during the Battle of Prospero

The Space Wolves Legion was known across the galaxy for its martial exploits. Of all the Space Marines, the Space Wolves were most like their Primarch in character. Uncouth, undisciplined and barbaric by comparison to the other Legions, they were nonetheless a powerful force of arms, admired by their allies, feared by their foes. Leman Russ was never one for following rules; as long as his Space Marines were prepared to fight and die for him, he was satisfied. He knew his troops had superb battlefield instincts and he trusted them to achieve their objectives without being burdened with a host of what he regarded as petty regulations. Because of this, the organisation and structure of the Space Wolves was quite different from that of the other Legions. The Space Wolves Legion was organised into thirteen Great Companies, each one a sizeable army numbering many thousands of warriors. The Great Companies were more akin to barbarian warbands than to formal military organisations, each led by a mighty Wolf Lord.

The Space Wolves Legion was a close-knit brotherhood and there was a great deal of respect and comradeship between the Space Marines from Terra and the warriors of Fenris. Although the latter troops were organised into their own distinct squads, known as Fenris Bloods and Fenris Hunters, they also led some of the squads of Terran Space Wolves (the Hunter, Claw and Long Fang squads). The officer corps and the elite Wolf Guard were drawn from the ranks of both Terrans and Fenrisians. Both Terran and Fenrisian Space Wolves could succumb to the curse of the Wulfen. This condition was usually diagnosed during the process of surgically and psychologically modifying a normal man to become a Space Marine, but it could also strike later in a Space Wolf's life. The curse was akin to lycanthropy -- the smitten warrior would become savage and beastlike in behaviour, unable to quell the rage inside. The Wulfen were remarkably hirsute, even by Space Wolves standards, and their canine teeth grew into large dagger-like fangs. All of the Wulfen were assigned to the 13th Great Company and fought together in feral groups known as Wulfen Packs.

Post-Heresy

SpaceWolvesWargear

Weapons and Wargear of the Space Wolves

The Space Wolves are known for their fiercely anti-authoritarian behaviour. They strongly resist the central command structure of the Imperium, organising themselves into Packs instead of the normal Squads and continue to refuse the dictates of the Codex Astartes, the standardised guide to Space Marine and Imperial Guard tactics created by the Ultramarines' Primarch Roboute Guilliman. The Space Wolves only accept some standard Imperial tactics that were considered useful for their own preferred style of warfare. As such, they have a reputation for being as ill-disciplined as they are fearless. It is often said that the best way to get a Space Wolf to do something is to tell him not to do it.

Wolf Packs

Bloodclaw

A Space Wolves Swift Claw on his Assault Bike

Grey Hunter

A Space Wolves Grey Hunter in battle

Long Fangs

A Veteran Space Wolves Long Fang armed with a Plasma Cannon

Wolf Guard

Elite Space Wolves Veterans of the Wolf Guard charge into the fray

Instead of organising into the Tactical, Assault and Devastator Squads as the Codex Astartes dictates, the Space Wolves form their Battle-Brothers into Packs. Each Pack will generally be made up of Astartes who have fought together for some time and will work together as a pack of Fenrisian Wolves do on the hunt. For the Space Wolves their finely honed senses of smell and hearing are just as important to them as their keen eyesight. Packs will work together to sniff and sound out their foes, hunting their prey like the wolves of Fenris, identifying the locations of their comrades as much by their enhanced sense of smell as by any technological means. The Space Wolves have four primary types of Packs in the Chapter, including the Blood Claws, Grey Hunters, Long Fangs, and the Wolf Guard. There are also Wolf Scouts, who are an oddity among the Adeptus Astartes.

  • Blood Claws - A Blood Claw is a newly inducted Astartes of the Space Wolves Chapter and the equivalent of a Codex Astartes-compliant Chapter's Neophytes or Scout Marines. Still struggling to control the spirit of the Wulfen within, Blood Claws are notoriously savage and fiercely aggressive. These hot-headed young warriors cannot wait to prove themselves, charging in howling packs at the front lines of the enemy in their efforts to garner personal glory. They prefer to fight at close quarters and are armed with melee weapons such as Chainswords and Bolt Pistols. The Blood Claws are the shock troops of the Space Wolves and spearhead the majority of assaults. If they survive to become mature and capable warriors, they will eventually be elevated to the veteran ranks of the Grey Hunters.
    • Swift Claws - A subset of the Blood Claws, the Swift Claws are culled from the ranks of the Blood Claws when the Chapter needs a swift, hard-hitting assault force comprised of Bike Squads or Land Speeders. The young and ambitious Blood Claws are well suited to this role. In addition to forming a lightning assault force, Swift Claws will occasionally be tasked with a dangerous quest to track down and slay a particularly powerful enemy. Given the opportunity to sow the maximum amount of carnage and disruption possible, these young warriors apply themselves with particular relish in the performance of their duties. Some Blood Claws are so taken by this role -- not to mention the opportunities for raising havoc that come along with it -- that they demand the right to a permanent position as a Swift Claw. Unlike other Chapters that use their Bike Squads primarily for forward reconnaissance, the Space Wolves use their bikes in a demolitions and close assault role.
    • Skyclaws - The Skyclaws are a subset of Blood Claws. This specialist unit is composed of the most headstrong troublemakers from each Blood Claw pack and are often "rewarded" by reassignment to a Skyclaw Assault Pack and thus serve as the Chapter's equivalent of Assault Marines. Entrusted with a Jump Pack, this vital piece of wargear provides the young warrior with the opportunity to indulge in their desire to charge headlong into the thick of battle. It is said amongst the more experienced Battle-Brothers of the Chapter that if the youngsters wish to slake their reckless bloodthirst, let them, and if they die in the process then they will still learn a valuable lesson. Though considered a dubious honour by their more mature brethren, the Skyclaws are bound and determined to prove themselves in the eyes of their elders. Unafraid and uncaring, they soar fearlessly through the skies in great leaps, taking great joy in watching the enemy crumble beneath the reckless fury of their airborne assault. Truly the most rebellious and free-spirited of all the Space Wolves, the Skyclaws are constantly trying to prove themselves. They are known to compete against Packs of Blood Claws through friendly contests of athletic prowess, drinking and eating. Impetuous and foolhardy, the Skyclaws are known for their fondness for practical jokes. Although transgressions that cost the lives of their fellows are punished severely, even their Wolf Lords admit that they were young once, and so they overlook these offenses. It is rare for a Skyclaw to be exiled for their reckless deeds. But those that push their luck too far and commit an offence that is anathema to their Chapter are assigned a punishment that fits the crime. One who has caused the death of a senior member of the Space Wolves may be struck down, only to awaken to a new life as a Med-Servitor.
  • Grey Hunters - If Blood Claws survive long enough to mature into seasoned Astartes, they are promoted to the ranks of the Grey Hunters. These veteran Astartes are the equivalent of a Codex Astartes-compliant Chapter's Tactical Marines. The Grey Hunter packs form the greater mass of the Space Wolves' warriors. They are strong and resolute fighters, tempered by battle but as hungry for honour as any proud warrior of Fenris. They are experienced warriors, dour and sombre, proud of their skills, and rightly honoured by their younger brethren.
  • Long Fangs - Long Fangs form a cadre of veteran warriors within the Chapter. Hoary with age, proud and wise, they are quite literally endowed with long fangs, for as a Space Wolf ages his canines lengthen and his hair grows course and grey. After centuries of long wars, their esteem stands as a mountain, commanding awe and respect from those of lesser years. There are relatively few Long Fangs within the Chapter, for many warriors die in battle so only a minority survive to reach a venerable age. Their saga is almost complete. These veteran warriors are disciplined and steady even in the heat of battle, and hence entrusted with the Great Company's heavy weapons. They are the equivalent of a Codex Astartes-compliant Chapter's Devastator Marines. Having fought and survived so many wars the Long Fangs are rarely unsettled even by the most serious set-back. There are many accounts within the Chapter's history that recount the deeds of the stalwart Long Fangs, who have held the field against overwhelming odds, even after all others have fled or been slain.
  • Wolf Guard - Some Space Wolves, having achieved feats of exceptional valour and martial prowess, may become members of the Chapter's Wolf Guard. These mighty Astartes can lead smaller forces of Space Wolves drawn from other Packs, serve as the Space Wolves' version of an Honour Guard for the most experienced warrior in a deployed Space Wolves force or serve as the Pack leader for a Great Company's squads, imparting their knowledge and experience to their younger charges and serving as the equivalent of standard Space Marine Sergeants. In addition to access to the best suits of Power Armour and the most advanced wargear available to the Chapter, the Wolf Guard have earned the right to wear Terminator Armour. Unlike other Chapters, entrance into the elite ranks of the Wolf Guard is not the result of seniority or Veteran status but is an honour earned directly through merit, through the display of extraordinary acts of courage and heroism under fire. Eventually, it is possible for a Wolf Guard to rise to the position of Wolf Lord, the mighty officers equivalent to standard Space Marine Captains who command one of the 12 Great Companies that comprise the entirety of the Chapter.
    • Thunderwolf Cavalry - Thunderwolf Cavalry units are a sub-group of the Wolf Guard. According to official Imperial records, the Thunderwolf Cavalry doesn't exist and the Space Wolves keep them as a closely guarded secret. Thunderwolves are giant Fenrisian Wolves that stand about the height of a Terran rhinoceros and are used as mounts by the most elite members of the Wolf Guard. Thunderwolves are used in the near-mythical Thunderwolf Cavalry, and are often augmented with adamantium jaws, Imperial bionics, and back-jointed metal limbs that end in razor-sharp blades. The havoc that these creatures are capable of wreaking is said to be startling to even a hardened Veteran Space Wolf. The taming of a Thunderwolf is often used as a ritual trial for a Space Wolves Astartes who wishes to rise into the ranks of the Wolf Guards.
  • Wolf Scouts - For some Space Wolves Astartes, the close-knit and boisterous brotherhood of the Pack (squad) is not well suited to their personality, as they yearn for the open spaces and isolation of the Fenrisian tundra. These Space Marines are selected to become part of a Great Company's Wolf Scout force, providing reconnaissance and disrupting enemy movements. These Space Marines are often already Veterans, as opposed to the raw Neophytes commonly used in other Chapters' Scout Marines Squads.
  • Lone Wolves - Over time, as Space Wolves Packs take casualties and gain experience, they pass through the ranks, and eventually the last few survivors make it into the vaunted ranks of the Wolf Guard. However, sometimes a Pack will suffer particularly harsh casualties, leaving a lone survivor who has not yet earned a place in the Wolf Guard. These last standing Lone Wolves will take on an air of vengeance and doom, determined to regain the honour of their Pack in combat or die trying. Those who succeed in their quests to seek out and slay dangerous or potent enemies and survive are accepted into the Wolf Guard, while the rest have at least earned an honourable death in combat like their Packmates.
  • Wolfblade - The Wolfblade is an ancient honour guard of Space Wolves that are sent to Terra to protect the ancient Navigator House of Belisarius, long-time allies of the Chapter. They train the Celestarch of Belisarius's House troops and lead them into battle. They act as his strong right arm when there is need. They slay his enemies in open battle and by stealth if need be. This pact's origins are lost to legend, but the most commonly accepted version of the story dates it from the time of the Great Crusade and the friendship between Primarch Leman Russ and Alexander Belisarius. Belisarius was a Navigator of genius, who aided Russ on many of his adventures. On the day of the Feast of the Founding they are said to have sworn a pact of eternal friendship. As a sign of this friendship, the Belisarius family agreed to provide Navigators for the Chapter in perpetuam, in return for the Space Wolves' martial aid. An entire Pack of Space Wolves would accompany the Celestarch of the House Belisarius as his bodyguard. Given the fractious nature of the Navigator Houses of the Navis Nobilite, and a commercial rivalry which, at that time, could result in conflicts as large as wars, this was an alliance of vast importance for the Navigators. The Space Wolves still enjoy a close bond to House Belisarius, an alliance between a Navigator House and a Chapter of the Adeptus Astartes shared only by the Blood Ravens, White Scars, and Blood Angels Chapters.

Specialist Ranks

Great Wolf Logan Grimnar

The Space Wolves' current Great Wolf, Logan Grimnar

Wolf Lord

Space Wolves Wolf Lord in Artificer Terminator Armour

Ulrik The Slayer

Space Wolves Wolf Priest - The venerable Ulrik the Slayer

  • Great Wolf - The Great Wolf is the Space Wolves' equivalent of a Chapter Master. The Great Wolf is generally considered only a steward of the Chapter rather than its true lord, since he is only awaiting the return of the Primarch Leman Russ who has always been the Space Wolves' only true leader. The Great Wolf leads the Chapter in Russ' absence. Chosen from among the Chapter's Wolf Lords, the current Great Wolf is Logan Grimnar, who has lead the Chapter for over eight standard centuries as of 999.M41.
  • Wolf Lords - A Wolf Lord is the Space Wolf officer who is the equivalent of a standard Space Marine Captain and who commands one of the 12 Great Companies that comprise the full Space Wolves Chapter's military force. A Wolf Lord may be accompanied by the huge Fenrisian Wolves and is always protected by a contingent of Wolf Guard specifically loyal to him. The Chapter's Great Companies are led by the 12 current Wolf Lords, a number that includes the current Great Wolf, Logan Grimnar. Much of the time the attrition rate for Wolf Lords is fairly significant because of the Chapter's preference for close combat. However, some Wolf Lords have managed to see their thousandth year pass in service to the Emperor. Ragnar Blackmane is one of the Chapter's current Wolf Lords and is in fact the youngest Astartes to have ascended to the rank of Wolf Lord in the Chapter's history. The current Wolf Lords of the Chapter include:
  • Iron Priests - The Iron Priests are the Chapter's equivalent of Techmarines. Sent off for training at Mars with the Adeptus Mechanicus like all Techmarines, the Iron Priests maintain the Chapter's equipment and forge all necessary replacement wargear. Iron Priests are traditionally attached to the Great Wolf's Company and re-assigned to other fighting forces on a situational basis. Iron Priests also have a place in the transformation and initiation of new recruits.
  • Wolf Priests - Wolf Priests are a unique officer class within the Chapter. A combination of the roles of Chaplain and Apothecary found in Codex-compliant Chapters, the Wolf Priests administer to the physical and mental well-being of the Chapter's warriors and also choose the Aspirants to the Chapter from among the feral barbarian tribes of Fenris. Ulrik the Slayer is a famous Wolf Priest who mentored many notable members of the Chapter, including Logan Grimnar and Ragnar Blackmane.
  • Rune Priests - The Space Wolves do not have Librarians as such because of their great abhorrence of psychic abilities, which they equate with foul sorcery; instead the Chapter maintains a number of Rune Priests -- potent psykers who examine the minds of all Aspirants to the Chapter for any sign of Chaotic taint or treachery. Armed and equipped differently from Librarians, Rune Priests do not wear the Psychic Hoods of Librarians, and do not always carry Force Weapons, what the Space Wolves prefer to call Runic Weapons. The Rune Priests, however, are actually quite potent psykers in their own right and as fierce warriors as any man born of Fenris.
  • Venerable Dreadnoughts - The Dreadnoughts of the Space Wolves are generally ancient and wise warriors, who spend a great deal of time in dreamless sleep beneath The Fang. They are only awakened from their deep slumber in times of great need. The Venerable Dreadnoughts of the Space Wolves may sometimes even lead forces of their fellow Astartes into battle in the absence of another capable war leader, or sometimes in deference to their ancient wisdom and extensive tactical experience.

The Great Companies

WolfLords

The current Wolf Lords of the Space Wolves

Grand Annulus detail

The current Company Badges of the 12 Great Companies, as displayed on the Grand Annulus of the Chapter; notice the missing badge of the 13th Company

Due to Russ' defiance in the wake of the Horus Heresy, the structure of his Chapter owes more to his personality and Fenrisian culture than to the formal dictates of the Codex Astartes, which he essentially rejected, though never formally. The Space Wolves are divided into twelve Great Companies (a Great Company being closer in size to an entire normal Space Marine Chapter than the company of 100 Astartes that normally comprises a Chapter's constituent units), with a 13th Company named in honour of a large group of Space Wolves who had disappeared during the Horus Heresy. This 13th Great Company came to represent all the Great Companies in the Space Wolves' history that had been destroyed, lost on campaign or had recanted their oath of loyalty to the Great Wolf. Each of these Great Companies are ruled over by a Wolf Lord (Captain), a warrior-king who in turn is advised by a council of elders, just like the native tribes of Fenris.

Each Great Company is a free-standing body of troops in almost all respects, occupying its own territory in the massive fortress-monastery of the Space Wolves that is built inside a huge mountain known as The Fang, possessing its own equipment, forges and spacecraft, and following its own customs, traditions, and heroes. Each Great Company takes its name from its current Wolf Lord, and also takes the mythological Fenrisian symbol the new Lord associates with. When a Wolf Lord dies, another is chosen to replace him from the slain leader's Wolf Guard, causing the Great Company to reinvent itself. Thus, unlike the companies in other Space Marine Chapters, the Great Companies of the Space Wolves do not have fixed heraldry, but change through the ages.

A Great Company takes its name from its Wolf Lord -- Bjorn Stormwolf's Great Company, for example, is also known as the Stormwolves. There is no fixed size for a Great Company, but each has its own headquarters, spacecraft, armoury, forges and other facilities within the Chapter's massive citadel. In almost all respects, it is a separate, self-sufficient brotherhood of warriors, with its own ancient customs, traditions and renowned heroes. When a Wolf Lord is slain, a successor is elected by the old Lord's retinue of Wolf Guard (Honour Guard), and the Great Company takes on his name instead. When elevated to the rank of Wolf Lord, each new commander chooses a symbol from the ancient legends of Fenris as his emblem. This image is borne on the Great Company's banner and repeated on the armour of members of the company. It is not unheard of for a Wolf Lord to change his name to echo the symbol he has taken for his own; for instance, Egil Silverhand took the name Egil Iron Wolf when he chose the mythical beast that lies beneath the mountains as his totem. Though there have been thousands of Wolf Lords over the Space Wolves' long history, many have chosen to repeat sigils used by famous precursors. Amongst the most favoured emblems is that of Drekan the Thunderwolf, who in Fenrisian legend was defeated by Leman Russ. Currently, Bjorn Stormwolf's Great Company carries this device, though it will no doubt recur long after Bjorn has passed into legend.

The Company of the Great Wolf

Grimnar Sigil

The sigil of Logan Grimnar's Great Company prior to him becoming Great Wolf

Unlike most Chapter Masters, the Great Wolf commands his own company. The company of the Great Wolf is effectively another Great Company in itself, but differs from the others in some important respects. This company is host to the Chapter's priesthood -- its Wolf Priests, Iron Priests and Rune Priests -- and other auxiliary elements. These assets and figures of legend are added to other Great Companies as and when the Great Wolf deems it necessary. When a Great Wolf dies, his Great Company first elects a new Wolf Lord -- then the entire Chapter selects his successor from amongst the twelve existing Wolf Lords. To vote, each Space Wolf casts a stone inscribed with a name-rune into the Dragon's Skull in the heart of The Fang. Whichever Lord has the most runestones at the stroke of midnight is elected as the new Great Wolf. These votes are usually carried by a huge margin in favour of one candidate or another, for the Space Wolves value courage, strength and honour over blind loyalty to their Wolf Lord, but should two Lords accrue the same amount of stones, they will fight a duel upon the feasting table of the Great Hall, as Russ and the Emperor once did. The victor, helping his opponent back to his feet, is hailed as the new Great Wolf. The Great Wolf's sigil is always the same -- the Wolf That Stalks Between Stars; the ancient badge of Leman Russ himself and the symbol proudly emblazoned on the Chapter's banner.

Order of Battle

The Space Wolves have a unique organisational structure that is quite different from that of a Chapter that follows the dictates of the Codex Astartes. Rather than being made up of 10 companies of 100 Astartes each, the Space Wolves consist of 12 Great Companies which contain Astartes of varying and often irregular strengths. Each Great Company is based in The Fang, the Space Wolves' fortress-monastery on Fenris and is led by an officer known as a Wolf Lord, equivalent to a standard Space Marine Captain, who answers only to the Great Wolf, the Chapter Master of the Space Wolves.

Each Great Company is a fully self-contained army, with all the troops, vehicles and wargear necessary to make war, as well as the spacecraft required to transport its troops and vehicles. Each Great Company is far more autonomous than a Codex-compliant Astartes company, and maintains its own forges, traditions and customs. The size of each Great Company is unknown but the Space Wolves Legion was said in ancient times to be one of the smaller Space Marine Legions, which may have affected the present-day Space Wolves if they maintained a similar structure to their forebears of the Great Crusade and Horus Heresy eras. As each Great Company now serves as an independent, largely autonomous military force from its fellows, they each maintain a much larger number of Astartes than a Codex-compliant company, which accounts for why the Space Wolves Chapter is far larger than most other Adeptus Astartes units.

Wolf-Force-Organisation-Chart

Example Order of Battle of a Space Wolves Great Company, in this case, Wolf Lord Erik Morkai's Great Company

Each Great Company is made up of a number of Packs that function much like a standard Space Marine Squad. However, their tactical usage varies greatly. Each Pack is unique in that it does not ever receive reinforcements, making the more veteran Packs smaller in number compared to a Pack of inexperienced Blood Claws. Many Blood Claw Packs start with as many as fifteen Astartes. However, losses take their toll, and by the time the members of a Blood Claw Pack become Grey Hunters, normally only 9 or 10 Space Marines are left. As they age, further losses limit the Pack sizes of Long Fangs to just 5 Astartes or less.

One of the 12 Great Companies is that of the Great Wolf, the Space Wolves' Chapter Master. The Company of the Great Wolf has a similar organisation to the other Great Companies, but additionally includes the Chapter's Wolf Priests, Wolf Scouts and Dreadnoughts. Vehicles and aircraft are not listed in each Great Company's organisation as the Space Wolves maintain all of the Chapter's vehicles in a common pool at The Fang, dispensing them as needed to each Great Company depending on the tactical profile of their various assignments. Note: In earlier editions of Warhammer 40,000, the Company of the Great Wolf was a separate body that existed in addition to the 12 Great Companies and essentially acted as a headquarters unit.

The following represents the established order of battle of the Space Wolves Chapter as of 999.M41. Unlike other Adeptus Astartes orders of battle, exact numbers cannot be given, due to the constantly shifting and irregular numbers that are a result of the Space Wolves' unique traditions and way of war.

Grimnar Sigil
Bloodied Maw Sigil
  • Bran Redmaw's Great Company (The Bloodmaws): Wolf Lord Bran Redmaw - Bran Redmaw's personal icon is the Bloodied Hunter. The savagery of his company is legend. Some say the curse of the Wulfen haunts their ranks, for their enemies are often found literally torn to pieces. Yet they are also cunning -- Bran's numerous Grey Hunters will often lie in wait for the foe after the fury of his frontal attack forces their retreat.
Krakendoom Sigil
  • Engir Krakendoom's Great Company (The Seawolves): Wolf Lord Engir Krakendoom - Engir Krakendoom's sigil is that of the Sea Wolf. Chosen from the kraken-hunting islanders of the south, his men are dark of skin and temperament. They go to war in armoured transports and assault craft, their Swiftclaw outriders ensuring they reach the foe as an unstoppable tide. Engir has led many a successful quest across the Sea of Stars.
Morkai Sigil2
  • Erik Morkai's Great Company (The Sons of Morkai): Wolf Lord Erik Morkai - Named after the wolf-god long before he took the sign of the two-headed beast, Erik Morkai has always been grim and stern of aspect. His company has a great many Wolf Scouts, fellow veterans who appreciate their master's taciturn demeanour and no-nonsense approach. Erik was elected more for his terrifyingly effective methods than his personality -- he invariably solves the problems that come his way with swift and bloody acts of violence.
Red Moon Sigil
  • Gunnar Red Moon's Great Company (The Red Moons): Wolf Lord Gunnar Redmoon - The Wolf of the Red Moon is a skeletal beast that prowls the seven hells, devouring the bodies of the unworthy and yet never growing fat. The Wolf Lord who bears it as his personal symbol, Gunnar Red Moon, is as broad as a menhir and as boastful as a bard. A roaring bear of a man, Gunnar favours his Long Fangs -- veterans possessed of a similar appetite for violence and feasting alike.
Deathwolf Sigil
  • Harald Deathwolf's Great Company (The Deathwolves): Wolf Lord Harald Deathwolf - Harald Deathwolf takes the symbol of the Ravening Jaw, icon of the Wolftime -- when Morkai will eat the sun and eternal night will shroud the stars. Harald himself rides to war upon Icetooth, a great grey Thunderwolf. He is the Chapter's foremost hunter, for his senses are so sharp he can smell fear. Harald's Great Company includes a host of lupine beasts, be they flesh and blood or cybernetic construct.
ThunderwolfBadge
  • Bjorn Stormwolf's Great Company (The Stormwolves): Wolf Lord Bjorn Stormwolf - Bjorn Stormwolf is a ruddy mountain of muscle and bellowed impatience. He has taken Thunderwolf as his symbol, for he too is a creature of ferocity over stealth. When the Stormwolves go to war, they field many heavy weapons, Bikes and Vindicators, for they rejoice in the din of battle more than any other Company.
Egil Iron Wolf Totem2
  • Egil Iron Wolf's Great Company (The Ironwolves): Wolf Lord Egil Ironwolf - Egil Iron Wolf is a cog-toothed brute made more of metal than flesh. His Great Company is replete with metallic beasts of war. The armoured assaults of Egil's company are famous throughout the Imperium, typified by great roaming packs of vehicles that cut off the prey's escape routes whilst Egil's heavily-armed tanks deliver the fatal blow.
Dragongaze Sigil 2
  • Krom Dragongaze's Great Company (The Drakeslayers): Wolf Lord Krom Dragongaze - Krom Dragongaze has a presence of will so strong that his fiercely loyal Wolf Guard say only the mythical Sun Wolf has a hope of staring him down. Krom loves taking part in all kinds of contests, from the Trial of the Bladed Eye to the rivalries he fosters within his Great Company and without.
Blackmane Sigil
  • Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company (The Blackmanes): Wolf Lord Ragnar Blackmane - Perhaps the most talented Wolf Lord of all, Ragnar Blackmane's sheer ferocity is the stuff of legend. Though he is comparatively young, he is a without doubt a warrior born -- Ragnar frequently has the honour of leading the Space Wolves' planetary invasions, for his packs are the undisputed masters of the Drop Pod assault.
Bloodhowl's Sigil
  • Sven Bloodhowl's Great Company (The Firehowlers): Wolf Lord Sven Bloodhowl - Sven Bloodhowl's warriors tattoo themselves not only with their volcanic icon, the Fire Breather, but also with runes and scenes from their own sagas. Sven himself is tattooed from head to toe, yet still he requires more room, for his kin prefer to win their victories in the glory of close combat.
Grimblood Sigil
  • Kjarl Grimblood's Great Company (The Grimbloods): Wolf Lord Kjarl Grimblood - In Fenrisian myth, the Fire Wolf burns hot without being consumed. Some whisper Kjarl Grimblood bears a gift from his sigil; that he can read the future in the fires of war. True or not, his Company uses many Flamer Weapons, exulting in the smell of cooked flesh.
Wulfen Sigil
  • 13th Great Company (The Wulfen): Wolf Lord Bulveye - The blank obsidian name-stone set into the Grand Annulus was once that of Jorin Bloodhowl's Great Company, known as the Wulfenkind; they who hounded the Thousand Sons into the Warp during the Horus Heresy. It represents all of the Great Companies across history that have been destroyed in battle, lost on campaign or claimed by dishonour. Only a handful of outsiders know of its existence. The 13th Great Company was lost to the Warp during the Horus Heresy; yet elements of the 13th Great Company survived within the Immaterium and reemerged into realspace during the 13th Black Crusade in 999.M41. However, the 13th Company is no longer considered to be an official part of the Chapter's order of battle, though its survivors will always be considered Space Wolves.
  • Grey Slayers Packs
    • Storm Claws Packs
    • Wulfen Packs

Chapter Homeworld

Fenris updated

Departmento Cartographicae image of the icy Death World of Fenris

Fenris is the Imperial Death World in the Segmentum Obscurus that is the homeworld and recruiting ground for the Vlka Fenryka, as the Space Wolves are known in their native tongue. It was also the homeworld of the Space Wolves' Primarch Leman Russ. Fenris is the location of The Fang, the Space Wolves' massive fortress-monastery, considered by many Imperial savants the greatest bastion of the Imperium of Man outside of the Imperial Palace on Terra itself. Fenris takes its name from the mythical Norse wolf fathered by the god of tricksters Loki that would assault the Norse gods during the Final Battle of Raganarok. Most of the names of locations on Fenris are also drawn from Norse mythology and the lost languages of Old Earth.

Fenris is situated in the galactic south of the Segmentum Obscurus, at the end of the Warp rift known as the Eye of Terror, from which come the Forces of Chaos to raid and pillage. Fenris thus lies at the forefront of the Imperium's defence against Chaos. The Space Wolves maintain the vigil that began many millennia ago at the close of the Horus Heresy and watch over a hundred other worlds besides. Their demesne stretches far and wide across the scattered stars that girdle the Fenrisian star system, but it is the bitterly cold Death World at its heart that the Space Wolves proudly call home. A planet of fire and ice, dominated by extremes of climate, Fenris is listed in the Apocrypha of Skaros as one of the three most deadly and turbulent worlds inhabited by humanity in the Milky Way Galaxy. Its surface is mostly covered by water and its tiny land masses are no more than islands scattered sparsely upon the ever-churning sea. The single sizable continent, Asaheim, lies at the world's northern polar region. Fenris follows a highly elliptical orbit around its pale K-class sun, called the Wolf's Eye, that takes approximately 2 Terran standard years to complete. This period of time is known as a "Great Year" to the people of Fenris.

For much of each long year the world is remote from even this feeble star and its surface remains deeply frigid. The oceans, known as the Worldsea, freeze over as Fenris draws away from its sun and at its farthest point even the equatorial seas are covered with ice, making the planet appear to be a frozen snowball from orbit. The volcanic activity of the bleak mountains that punctuate the waters are stilled so that at the height of the Fenrisian winter a man can walk between the many isles upon which the Fenrisians dwell. Towards the end of the year, as the planet sweeps close to its sun once more, the Wolf's Eye swells in the sky and the brief spring warms the surface. During this period, the ice retreats to the world's poles and the gargantuan dwellers of the deep waters emerge to enjoy the bounty of sun-spawned plankton, bladefish and other short-lived aquatic fauna. As Fenris reaches the point at which it is closest to its sun, the passage of the planet near the star produces tidal forces that break and twists the sub-oceanic crust, exposing Fenris' molten mantle to the frigid waters. It is then that the time of fire and water has arrived.

With explosive violence the world is torn asunder. Blazing islands rise from the steaming sea spewing flames, with lava pouring down their slopes. Below the surface the waters boil into steam that engulfs Fenris with its sulphurous fumes. Great tidal waves scour the coastlines of Asaheim and the islands. Islands created in the upheavals of preceding years are cast into turmoil by this global transformation. Some endure, but many are broken apart or swallowed by the seas, engulfed in the churning waters and casting their unlucky inhabitants into the deeps. But the great lump of solid granite the Fenrisian tribesmen know as Asaheim always stands fast, a single, changeless continent on a world of fire, ice, ruin and torment. This extreme geography has resulted in the human population of Fenris becoming one composed largely of primitive, nomadic barbarian tribes. The tribes constantly seek secure territory, and as a result skirmishes and feuds over land between rival tribes are common. The people are hardened to the changes in temperature and environmental extremes, and so is the fauna.

Of the resources available on Fenris the most valuable is the land itself. No man knows how much the land will change with the turning of the Great Year. Sometimes old islands survive the changing seasons and good fortune may preserve a tribe's territory intact for many Great Years, but it is more likely that the archipelagos will be broken and destroyed, submerged beneath the oceans by the vast upheavals of Fenris' crust. When this happens there will be vicious wars between the tribes and only those who succeed in finding new land and establishing themselves on it will survive. Once the time of fire and water has passed, the Fenrisians must settle the newly formed lands quickly, for soon their supplies will run out. If they can find no new land they must resume their wars for the territories of other tribes. So it is that the life of a Fenrisian is one of constant seaborne migration and warfare. The people of Fenris speak their own distinct dialect of Low Gothic called Juvjk which is very similar to the ancient Scandinavian languages of Terra and represents the culture of the world's original colonists.

The Fang

The Fang

The Aett (aka The Fang) - The mighty citadel of the Space Wolves Chapter

Native Fenrisians are used to the pattern of destruction that engulfs their planet every Great Year and have learned to love the endless mutability of their lands with a fierce warrior pride. Only on the northern polar continent of Asaheim are the human populations of Fenris protected from the extreme climate. Here there are many unique creatures not able to live elsewhere on the world. These include massive ice bears, gigantic elk and shaggy mastodons as well as stranger creatures such as the snow trolls, shape-changing doppegangrels and the great white wyrms that burrow through the glaciers and fjords. The deadliest creatures are the native semi-sentient Fenrisian Wolves themselves, for their wits are as sharp as their teeth and the largest of their number is the equal of any of the great predators that slither and stalk through the icy Fenrisian wastes. Yet Asaheim is remote, surrounded by towering cliffs that rise thousands of feet into the air above the seas and separate it from the oceans. Its fabled land mass provides no refuge for those that live beyond its rocky confines. To a Fenrisian tribesman, it is truly the land of the gods.

The Space Wolves' fortress-monastery, known widely across the Imperium as The Fang and the Aett by its inhabitants, is a massive citadel built atop the tallest mountain of Asaheim. This mountain is known by many names, including The Shoulder of The Allfather, and volda hammarki, the World Spine. The Fang is the home base of the Space Wolves and extends into the surrounding mountain range as well as into orbit, drawing energy from the geothermic source of the planet's molten core. The complex includes huge ground-based anti-ship orbital defence laser weapons concealed as nearby peaks, docks at the summit for the Space Wolves' Battle Barges and Strike Cruisers, numerous shrines to the Emperor along the lower slopes, and massive fusion and geothermal reactors deep underground. Outside of Terra itself, the Fang is considered one of the most impregnable fortresses in the galaxy, constructed by the Adeptus Mechanicus during the Great Crusade using technology that has long since been lost. It has never been conquered, although the Thousand Sons Traitor Legion, the Space Wolves' most hated foes, did manage to briefly occupy the outer slopes of The Fang after luring the bulk of the Space Wolves' forces away during the First Battle for The Fang in the 32nd Millennium.

Recruitment of a Space Wolf

The act of turning a mortal man -- even one who has managed to thrive in the harsh environs of Fenris and therefore cannot be considered typical -- into one of that world's "Sky Warriors" is a long, arduous and incredibly perilous process. Many that undertake this trial perish. To survive is to prove one's cunning, strength and fortitude beyond question, and to be a worthy successor of Leman Russ' gene-heritage. Like all Astartes, new Space Wolves are recruited in early adolescence, selected from the most able youths of the feral tribes of their homeworld of Fenris. Unlike other Chapters, the Space Wolves have one of the longest and most arduous series of Trials ever crafted to test their Aspirants. On Fenris, strangers stalk the lands of men. In the long halls, tales are told of mysterious, fur-clad wanderers who arrive in the depths of winter and challenge the strongest and most boastful of the Fenrisian tribesmen to bouts of strength and drinking. They are a frightening sight -- huge, burly warriors with burning eyes, who always outwrestle the strongest warriors and outdrink the staunchest. Once they have fought every challenger they pick the most worthy and take them away into the dark, never to be seen again.

When the native tribes of Fenris clash for settling rights of the new islands that have risen from the churning seas, the same strangers can often be seen standing imperiously atop a nearby hill. If a warrior shows the signs of greatness during battle, the strangers may descend from on high and approach him, to the awe of all who witness it. Even should the chosen be on the point of death, the strangers care not. They take their prize with them away into the blizzards, and the youth is never seen again. The tribesmen do not mourn the loss of such a valiant warrior, for they know he has been chosen to live among the gods. The mysterious strangers that select these warriors are actually the Wolf Priests of the Space Wolves, Choosers of the Valiant. The youths they pick will be tested sorely, for if they have true steel in their souls, the legacy of Leman Russ will be implanted in their bodies, and they will ultimately become Space Marines. But such a gift is never given lightly.

The Gate of Morkai

Many are the trials which a young warrior must endure before he can join the ranks of the Space Wolves. Each test will try the Fenrisian's wit as well as his strength, and place him in mortal dangers from which he must emerge alive if not unscathed. If an Aspirant survives the first few solar months of training, he must undertake the two Trials of Morkai -- one for each of the wolf-god's heads. For the first of these trials, he will be brought before the council of Rune Priests, who will test his mind as keenly as the Wolf Priests challenged his body. In the very bowels of The Fang lies the Gate of Morkai, a vast portal surrounded by fiery rivers of lava. The wolf-god's image crowns this mighty gate and its carven flanks bear enchanted runes of great power. Once the young warrior has seen the ancient archway, he must pass through it; to back down is as good as admitting weakness or deceit, and the Sky Warriors do not suffer those without purity of heart and purpose to live. As soon as he steps through the Gate of Morkai, the Aspirant's mind belongs to the Rune Priests. They will scour his soul for doubt, impurity and buried temptations -- anything that may be used against a Space Wolf or his Battle-Brothers by the fell and alien powers they will one day face. Only one who can steel himself against such horrors is worthy to call himself a Son of Russ. The exact means by which a candidate is tested will vary according to the individual. Most commonly, an Aspirant will find himself faced with impossible odds in a number of conjured scenarios. Under the spell of the Rune Priests, the young warrior will believe the situation to be reality, and react according to his heart's instincts. Those who fail this test will never wake up from their dreams, for the Rune Priests will scrub their minds and hand them over to the Iron Priests to serve out their lives as Thrall-Servitors. For those that pass, the toughest trial is yet to come.

The Test of Morkai

Trial of Morkai

A Space Wolves Aspirant successfully returns to the Fang from the brutal ordeal known as The Test of Morkai or The Blooding

Although the length and nature of any further trials an Aspirant must endure will differ, the final test is always the same. This is the Test of Morkai, and it will challenge even the hardiest Aspirant to the very limit of his endurance. Some fail this final test and are claimed by Morkai and forgotten. The trial is long, for the warrior is taken a thousand miles into the barren wastes beyond the fortress of The Fang. The Aspirant begins his trial by drinking a strange, heady mixture from the Chapter relic known as the Cup of Wulfen. An ancient legend of the Chapter tells how Leman Russ gave the Cup to his original followers, the first men from Fenris to join the VI Legion, telling them to drink from the Cup. The first man who drank, named Wulfen, was secretly jealous of Russ, drank, and became the first canine mutant known as the Wulfen, an angry amalgamation of the Wolf Spirit and the secret darkness that resided within the heart of the man. He leapt to attack Russ, who throttled him with one hand. Russ then declared that all those who were unworthy of becoming a Space Wolf would become a Wulfen after they drank from the Cup. Russ would allow any of those who had come to turn back from the path before drinking, but none did. Those who drank and survived became the first Space Wolves to be recruited from Fenris.

In truth, when the Aspirant drinks from this Chapter relic, his body absorbs the first and most deadly gene-seed of the Space Wolves -- the unique Canis Helix, the Spirit of the Wolf, which is actually a genetic cocktail drawn from the genome of Leman Russ and used as a catalyst to activate the viral machinery of the Aspirants' gene-seed implants, much as the Blood Angels Chapter's Aspirants drink a minute portion of the blood of their Primarch Sanguinius from the Red Grail to begin their transformation into Space Marines. The frightening potency of the Canis Helix is legendary, and has accounted for the lives of millions of Aspirants as their bodies writhe and churn in anguish. Those it does not kill it transforms into slavering monsters. The Canis Helix is necessary, however, as without this essential part of Leman Russ' heritage the other gene-seed helices cannot be implanted at all. In reality, those Aspirants who are likely to fall prey to the Wulfen mutation inherent within the gene-seed of Leman Russ do not do so after immediately imbibing the Canis Helix mixture, but usually over the solar weeks and months of training that follow afterwards.

Whilst in the throes of transformation, the Aspirant is cast out into the wilderness to make his own way back to The Fang. The introduction of the Primarch's genome and viral machines work hideous changes on the warrior's mind and body; he reverts to a primal state where his bones split and buckle, thick hair sprouts from across his body and his only desire is to gorge on fresh meat and glut himself on blood. His body mass grows by up to eighty percent, many of his bones fuse, and fangs sprout from his gums. Whilst his body is wracked with pain, the warrior must overcome the shadow within him lest it possess him entirely. If he does not, he will become one of the giant, feral mutant creatures known as the Wulfen, those who failed to overcome the curse. To become one of the Wulfen is to fall from grace, and to roam the wilderness for evermore as a creature of the darkest night, or be captured by his former brothers and held as a caged beast until the time is right for them to be set loose in battle.

If the Aspirant manages to find his way back to The Fang despite the ravages wrought upon him and the many perils that lie between him and his goal, he is implanted with the remainder of the Space Wolves' gene-seed, stabilising the genetic sequences of the Canis Helix and completing his apotheosis into a fully-fledged Sky Warrior. The newly-inducted warriors are gifted with the ancient Power Armour of a fallen Wolf-Brother and welcomed into the ranks of one of the 12 Great Companies as a full Battle-Brother. For the Space Wolves, no Astartes is considered a Neophyte, instead each new man has been accepted into their ranks as a full Initiate known as a Blood Claw. With time, it becomes clear that some of these warriors have not completely conquered the Canis Helix's original effects, and in times of great stress they will alter into the bestial state that haunts their soul like a ghastly shadow. This is the Curse of the Wulfen, and it is rightly feared. However, as Space Marines these successful Aspirants will live for hundreds of standard years, if they do not die in battle, and they will voyage through the stars to fight in the Emperor's name. They will battle monstrous Orks and hideous daemons. They will encounter the horrors of the Tyranids and they will endure the indescribable perils of Warpspace. To a man born and raised amongst the barbarian warrior tribes of Fenris, this is indeed a life amongst the gods.

Deathwatch Service

Deathwatch-SW2

A Space Wolves warrior seconded to the Deathwatch

For some Space Wolves, service in the Deathwatch, the Chamber Militant of the Ordo Xenos, offers a unique opportunity to compose new passages in the ongoing saga of their life. While in the ranks of the Deathwatch, the Space Wolf travels to undreamed of places to battle against enemies from nightmare. Often, such enemies are entirely unknown to the Imperium and to the Space Wolf's home Chapter, and he may therefore be the only Space Wolf ever to face one, a proud boast to tell in the mead-halls of The Fang on his return to Fenris. Though many great heroes of the Deathwatch have been drawn from the Space Wolves, it takes a special type of Battle-Brother to leave the extremely close-knit Packs of Fenris to serve alongside strangers from other Astartes Chapters. It is not uncommon therefore for two or more Space Wolves to join a Watch Fortress together, so that they might witness one another's deeds and one can tell the other's tale should he fall in battle. Though Space Wolves are extremely gregarious, if somewhat uncouth to some, they soon come to regard the members of their Kill-team as brothers, treating them as if they too were born of the savage tribes of Fenris. Most Deathwatch Astartes learn to accept the Space Wolves' rough ways, and some even acquire a taste for the Fenrisian Ale invariably brought along. The presence of one or more Space Wolves in the complement of a Watch Fortress can be discerned by the sound of raucous feasting and drinking on the eve of battle, savagely joyous boasts and bold oaths echoing down the usually silent passageways and cloisters. Some find such displays disruptive, but most Watch Commanders soon learn to let the matter be, for Kill-teams including Space Wolves amongst them often become the most effective and coordinated squads the Deathwatch can field.

The 13th Company

13th Company Space Wolves
Primarch: Leman Russ
Battlecry: "For Russ and the Allfather!" or an ancient and feral howl.

"Guard your tongue, whelp, lest I cut it out. I care not for your moon-touched ramblings, nor for the tales of your grandmother. Mark this well - of the 13th Company we do not speak."

—Ulfric Hoodclaw
Wulfen Icon

Company Badge of the 13th Great Company of the Space Wolves

The Space Wolves' most coveted legend states that the group that came to be known as the Space Wolves' 13th Company was ordered by their Primarch Leman Russ to pursue the Thousand Sons Legion into the Warp, after the failed attempt to eliminate that Traitor Legion on their homeworld of Prospero at the very start of the Horus Heresy. The 13th Company vanished from Imperial records, and their loss is honoured by a black stone in the Grand Annulus (the record of Space Wolf Great Companies).

Just before the outbreak of the Horus Heresy, the Primarch of the Thousand Sons Legion, Magnus the Red, sent his astral body through the Warp using the Eldar Webway to reach Terra and warn his father the Emperor of Mankind of the Warmaster Horus' turn to Chaos and his betrayal of the Imperium. Magnus had by then already been unwittingly corrupted by the Chaos God Tzeentch and his psychic intrusion destroyed the psychic barriers around Terra and the Golden Throne. Magnus' arrival on Terra killed all of the human cult members on Prospero who had initiated the spell that allowed Magnus to enter the Webway, drove thousands of people involved in the Emperor's Webway Project on Terra insane because of the phenomenal energies released upon his arrival, killed all of the workers, Adepts and Servitors working on the psychic amplifier known as the Golden Throne and opened dangerous portals through the Warp to Terra, through which daemons and other Warp entities could invade the homeworld of Mankind.

Unfortunately, Magnus' continued use of sorcery was a direct violation on the ban of its use within the Imperium imposed at the Council of Nikaea during the Great Crusade. The Emperor also refused to believe that his beloved son Horus could possibly betray him and mistakenly believed that it was Magnus, not Horus, who had truly betrayed him. The Emperor ordered Leman Russ and his Space Wolves to bring Magnus to Terra to face judgment for his defiance of the Council of Nikaea's ban on the use of sorcery. Horus convinced Leman Russ that it would be a waste of time bringing Magnus to Terra and that he should be killed on Prospero for his defiance of the Emperor's will. The Space Wolves were accompanied by the Sisters of Silence and the Adeptus Custodes and their attack on Prospero proceeded smoothly largely because Magnus refused at first to join the fray, believing that his world and Legion should fall because he had inadvertently allowed himself to become a pawn of the Chaos Gods.

In the final moments of the Battle of Prospero, the Thousand Sons were already reduced to a force of only about 1,000 Space Marines and the Space Wolves, Adeptus Custodes and Sisters of Silence possessed approximately 3,000 warriors combined. The Thousand Sons took shelter in the Pyramid of Photep, the Sanctum of Magnus on Prospero, while their Primarch dueled with Leman Russ outside. The battle between Leman Russ and Magnus was quick and brutal. Magnus drove his fist into Russ' chest, the icy breastplate cracking open with a sound like planets colliding, and shards of ceramite stabbed the Wolf King's heart. In return, Russ snapped Magnus' arm back, and the Thousand Sons sorcerer Ahriman heard it shatter into a thousand pieces. A blade composed of pure psychic energy unsheathed from Magnus' other arm, and he drove it deep into Russ' chest through his shattered Power Armour. The blade burst from Russ' back and the Wolf King loosed a deafening bellow of pain.

Magnus and Leman Russ found themselves locked in battle high above the causeway, the furious horror of their struggle obscured by ethereal fire and bursts of lightning. A flare of black light erupted and Russ cried out in agony. His blade lashed out blindly and struck a fateful blow against his foe's most dreaded weapon: his eye. In an instant, the pyrotechnic cascade of light and fire was extinguished and a stunning silence swept outwards. All motion ceased, and the titans battling on the causeway were no more, each Primarch now restored to his customary stature. Magnus reeled back from the Wolf King, one hand clutched to his eye as his shattered arm crackled with regenerative energies.

As broken and bloodied as Leman Russ was, he was warrior enough to seize his opportunity. He barreled into Magnus and gripped him around the waist like a wrestler, roaring as he lifted his brother's body high above his head. All eyes turned to Russ as he brought Magnus down across his knee, and the sound of the Crimson King's back breaking tore through every Thousand Sons' heart. With the last of his strength, Magnus turned his head, and his ravaged eye found Ahriman. Leman Russ' blade swept down, but before its lethal edge struck, Magnus whispered unnatural syllables. Magnus' body underwent an instantaneous dissolution, its entire structure unmade with a word, and Ahriman gasped as vast and depthless power surged into his body. Then the Thousand Sons, each carrying a crystal from the refracting caves on Prospero, vanished into the Warp at Ahriman's word and were transported to the Planet of the Sorcerers, a Daemon World prepared for them by Tzeentch. Leman Russ then ordered the 13th Company of the Space Wolves to be sent into the Eye of Terror to pursue the Thousand Sons and put an end to their threat to the Imperium once and for all.

The 13th Company's reappearance at the beginning of Abaddon the Despoiler's 13th Black Crusade returned them to realspace for the first time in over 10,000 years. They appear to still be in pursuit of the goal Leman Russ set for them and still desire the destruction of the Thousand Sons at all costs and possess an abiding hatred for sorcery and all forms of psychic powers.

The 13th Company's organisation departs heavily even from the already-independent Space Wolf norms, due to their lack of reinforcements and new recruits, the inability to train members in specialist roles, the lack of heavy equipment, and the effect of having to exist within the Eye of Terror for 10,000 standard years. The core of a 13th Company warband are the Grey Slayers. Similar to Grey Hunters but far beyond them in skill, they fulfill the same tactical roles in battle. Because of the impossibility of recruiting new brethren, there are no Blood Claws in the 13th Company. Each and every Blood Claw of the 13th Company has long since advanced to a higher rank. The Company's assault specialists are the Storm Claws. They are equally experienced, but still more hot-headed and aggressive than the Grey Slayers. The key to the 13th Company's movement through the Warp were its Rune Priests. Because the Eye of Terror unlocked hidden psychic powers in many of the 13th Company's original Astartes, the Company had no shortage of these highly gifted individuals.

The Wulfen

Blood Claws 3

A pack of feral Wulfen attack their terrified foes

The Space Wolves suffer from a flaw in their gene-seed found in the Canis Helix gene sequence of Leman Russ, the genetic catalyst which every Space Wolf Aspirant imbibes from the Cup of Wulfen to begin their transformation into full Astartes. This flaw often leads them to take on many canine traits as they age, such as enlarged canine teeth, yellow eyes and abnormal growths of hair. Unfortunately, in some Space Wolves the mutation proceeds too far and transforms them during the heat and passion of battle into more bestial, wolf-like humanoids. These Space Marines are said to bear the "Mark of the Wulfen" by the other members of the Chapter because they grow elongated canine teeth and bestial claws. The only time that the Space Wolves turn into fully wolf-like humanoid mutants called the Wulfen is when they are exposed to large amounts of Warp energy (such as the Space Wolves' 13th Company in the Eye of Terror). In this case, the metamorphosis is not a Chaotic mutation, but rather a defensive mechanism induced when the Space Wolves' altered DNA is flooded by the power of Chaos, for such bestial mutants actually possess more resistance to Chaotic corruption than standard Astartes.

Curse of the Wulfen coverart

A rare pict-capture of a Wulfen during the 13th Black Crusade

The Space Marines who mutate into Wulfen bear a dim resemblance to the werewolves of ancient human myth in much the same way that certain members of the Blood Angels Chapter who suffer from the Red Thirst desire to ingest blood like the legendary vampire. Space Marines who fully mutate into Wulfen usually escape to the hinterlands of Fenris, or are locked up or sorrowfully put down by their fellow Battle-Brothers. The "Mark of the Wulfen" normally manifests itself at the Neophyte stage of Space Marine development and thus new Space Wolves must spend time during their training in scenarios designed to determine which of their number will suffer from the change.

Though the Space Wolves sometimes use individual Wulfen in battle, the legendary 13th Company use entire packs of the mutants. Each and every member of the 13th Company carries this genetic flaw, and it manifests itself in these Space Wolves at different times. The flaw has manifested itself so strongly in the 13th Company because it was suffused with the influence of Chaos which was rampant in the Warp where the 13th Company was trapped for the last ten millennia. Yet, as noted above, this flaw can also serve as a form of spiritual and biological defence mechanism since beings whose sentience has been compromised tend to be corrupted far less easily by Chaos. As a result, the Space Wolves are exceptionally resistant to the malign influence of Chaos compared even to other Space Marines. It is believed by members of the Adeptus Mechanicus that the 13th Company were only able to remain uncorrupted during their 10,000 year sojourn in the Eye of Terror precisely because they all carried this "flaw".

Notable Space Wolves

  • Leman Russ - Leman Russ was the Primarch of the Space Wolves who led his Legion to uncounted victories during the Great Crusade and the Horus Heresy. After the Heresy, Russ disappeared during the Feast of the Emperor's Ascension 197 standard years after the Emperor was entombed within the Golden Throne. Overcome by a mysterious vision, Russ gathered his Wolf Guard, save for the youngest, Bjorn the Fell-Handed, and departed The Fang. It is believed by some Astartes amongst the Space Wolves that Russ left Fenris and journeyed into the Eye of Terror.
  • Bjorn the Fell-Handed - Bjorn the Fell-Handed is the oldest Venerable Dreadnought in the Imperium. Bjorn fought alongside Leman Russ during the Horus Heresy and was the only member of Russ' retinue left behind by the Primarch when he disappeared. He became the first Great Wolf of the Chapter after Russ disappeared and led the Space Wolves on the first Great Hunt, the Chapter's epic but fruitless quest to find its lost Primarch, and it was he who reluctantly gave the order to cease the hunt after he was mortally wounded within the Eye of Terror. He believes that Russ will one day return to their Chapter, and he plans on being there to meet the Primarch in person.
  • Great Wolf Logan Grimnar - Logan Grimnar is the current Great Wolf of the Space Wolves Space Marines Chapter. He is one of the most belligerent and headstrong Chapter Masters in the Imperium of Man, as well as perhaps the greatest Wolf Lord of all time. He remains loyal to the Emperor of Mankind and the great Primarch of the Space Wolves, Leman Russ. Grimnar has been the Chapter Master of the Space Wolves for over 700 standard years and is one of the oldest Chapter Masters of a Loyalist Space Marine Chapter. Like his fellow Space Marines, Grimnar is a fearsome warrior with great martial pride. He has led his Great Company against many enemies of the Imperium and has shown a renowned thirst for battle, which some say, even rivals that of their legendary Primarch Leman Russ. Logan, or the "Old Wolf" as he is known by his brethren, is an extremely powerful warrior who will always fight to the end in pursuit of what he believes in; both in the name of the Emperor and for the lives of his beloved Space Wolves.
  • Great Wolf Sigvald Grimhammer - Sigvald Grimhammer was Logan Grimnar's direct predecessor as as the Great Wolf of the Chapter. The reigning Great Wolf was murdered upon the battlefields of Xor by a Dark Eldar Succubus. Wolf Priest Ulrik puts Logan Grimnar's name forward as his successor. Despite many of his fellow Wolf Lords being centuries older than him, amazingly there is no resistance to Logan's ascension, and when the runestones are counted every vote has been cast in Grimnar's favour.
  • Great Wolf Anakron Silvermane - Anakron Silvermane was the reigning Great Wolf of the Space Wolves Chapter four centuries earlier (during the 500's-M41). His final stand took place nearly four Terran centuries ago on the world of Melkior where his command post came under a surprise assault by an Eldar warhost. Logan Grimnar and Wolf Guard Pack Leader Hakon both participated in the battle.
  • Great Wolf Ulrik Grimfang - Ulrik Grimfang was the reigning Great Wolf during the Macharian Crusade era (392-399.M41). During this time, he was approached through his Chapter's connections to the Navigator House Belisarius to form an alliance with Lord Solar Macharius to lend their military and political support to the great Imperial commander's ongoing crusade. Wishing to cement his alliance with the Space Wolves, Macharius gifted the Chapter with an ancient artefact he believed to be the Fist of Russ. Unfortunately, the relic had been stolen by the insidious Dark Eldar. Once the Great Wolf learned this, he agreed to take part in the liberation of a beleaguered Imperial world in the Procrastes System that the Dark Eldar were currently ravaging. A Great Company of Space Wolves, under the command of Wolf Lord Logan Grimnar, were sent to Macharius to take part in the campaign. Ironically, the Space Wolves would have been more than willing to join Macharius' cause with the promise of glory and conquest and the reaping of souls for the Allfather, rather than extravagant gifts or backroom dealings, which were unnecessary to win their support. Ultimately, the so-called Fist was not the actual relic.
  • Great Wolf Fenrik Grimheart - Great Wolf Grimheart led the Space Wolves to victory in the Battle of Balinor, one of the Chapter's most renowned battles of the 38th Millennium.
  • Great Wolf Harald Stormwolf - Harald Stormwolf was the reigning Great Wolf during the Second Battle for The Fang in the 36th Millennium. He famously defended the Space Wolves' home world of Fenris from the invading forces of the Apostate Cardinal Bucharis during the bleak era known as the Plague of Unbelief. For three standard years the fanatical armies of Bucharis pounded upon the gates of The Fang. When they faced the final assault by Bucharis' forces, they were saved from certain death by the timely arrival of Wolf Lord Kyrl Grimblood and his Great Company, who smashed into the flanks of the enemy forces and decimated the invaders.
  • Great Wolf Oberik Kelman - The 23rd Great Wolf of the Space Wolves Chapter, Oberik Kelman was a famously temperamental man, given to terrifying rages when frustrated. A statue of him resides within The Fang's great Hall of Battles.
  • Great Wolf Arvek Hren Kjarlkskar - Great Wolf successor of Harek Ironhelm following his death during the First Battle of The Fang in the 32nd Millennium.
  • Great Wolf Harek Eireik "Ironhelm" Eireiksson - Harek Eireik Eireksson was a Great Wolf of the Chapter during the 32nd Millennium. He was also known as "Ironhelm" due to the cybernetic implants he received within his skull. Throughout his years as Great Wolf, Harek became obsessed with hunting down Magnus the Red, for Magnus was able to escape him time and time again. Ultimately, Eireksson fell in battle against that Daemon Primarch during the final day of the First Battle of The Fang.
  • Wolf Lord Ragnar Blackmane - Ragnar Blackmane is the youngest Wolf Lord in the Space Wolves' history and the protagonist of the Space Wolf novel series. Blackmane's Great Company frequently has the honour of leading the Space Wolves' planetary assaults, a role at which Ragnar and his warriors excel, for his packs are the undisputed masters of the Drop Pod assaults known as the Claws of Russ. He is the only Space Wolf to become a Wolf Lord without first becoming a Grey Hunter. Blackmane is the current Champion of the Chapter and bearer of the Wolf Helm of Russ, which he presented to Ulrik the Slayer as a sign of respect. Blackmane prevented the return of the Thousand Sons Legion to the world of Garm, a planet sacred to the Space Wolves because it was the home of the Shrine of Garm's Skull, by casting the Spear of Russ into a Warp Gate, an action which for a time earned him the bitter enmity of his fellow Battle-Brothers before his actions earned redemption.
  • Wolf Lord Berek Thunderfist - Berek Thunderfist was the Wolf Lord of the Great Company to which Ragnar Blackmane was originally assigned and served as a teacher and an inspiration for the young Blood Claw at the time. Berek was a legendary warrior within the Chapter, named after his bionic hand and his preferred use of an overcharged Power Fist that crackled with lightning in battle.
  • Wolf Lord Sigrid Trollbane - The principal rival of the popular Berek Thunderfist, Sigrid was a more devious political animal and tactician and did little to hide his desire to attain the rank of Great Wolf.
  • Wolf Lord Kvalnir Silverclaw - Kvalnir Silverclaw was the Wolf Lord of the Silverclaws Great Company. One of the longest serving Wolf Lords in the history of the Space Wolves, his long and distinguished career spanned five centuries. As a Blood Claw and Grey Hunter, Kvalnir performed with the honour and valour worthy of a Space Wolf. But he hardly looked like Wolf Lord material, that is until he was promoted to the venerable ranks of the Long Fangs. Only then did it seem the spirit of Russ seemed to flow through Kvalnir with renewed vigour. Kvalnir quickly rose to the rank of Sergeant, spending a century leading his own Long Fang pack. During the Fifth Great Hunt, the Space Wolves pushed the foul hordes of Chaos further into the Eye of Terror. The Space Wolves were in embittered fighting with their hated enemy, the Thousand Sons. During the height of the campaign, the Silverclaws, then led by Jaegar Silverclaw, were driving the Thousand Sons with the spirit of Russ behind them. But they were led into a cunning trap, for out of the Warp, the Daemon Primarch Magnus the Red appeared. Summoning foul denizens of Tzeentch from the Empyrean, the Silverclaws were soon beset and were forced to fall back. The Wolf Lord fought valiantly, but was eventually slain by the eldritch magic of the Crimson King. Though faced with overwhelming numbers, Kvalnir knew if the attack failed the entire Space Wolf campaign would be at risk. Kvalnir ordered his Long Fangs to stand firm, and from their position they poured heavy weapons fire upon the innumerable Chaos Spawn. Slowly the fell creatures began to retreat, while Runepriests managed to close the summoned Warp gate. The rest of the Silverclaws rallied around Kvalnir and resurged to win the battle and drive the Thousand Sons further into the Eye and evict them from yet another world. Due to the tragedy of losing the entire Wolf Guard, Logan Grimnar bestowed the honour of Wolf Lord upon Kvalnir for showing great courage and leadership and saving the Wolves of Fenris from almost certain defeat. Allowed to chose his own totem, Kvalnir opted to instead keep the name of Silverclaw for the Great Company. Since he had led his Great Company to victory in the Great Hunt, so the Silverclaws they would remain.
  • Wolf Lord Jaegar Silverclaw - Former Wolf Lord of the Silverclaws Great Company. He, along with the entirety of his Wolf Guard, were slain during the Fifth Great Hunt by Magnus the Red after his Great Company was led into a cunning trap by the Space Wolves' hated enemies, the Thousand Sons.
  • Wolf Lord Sven Bloodhowl - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Sven has embraced the sign of the Fire Breather, a volcano that lies a hundred leagues north of The Fang. Bloodhowl goes to war amidst a great horde of close combat specialists, breathing flame into the ranks of their foe. The warriors of Bloodhowl's Great Company tattoo themselves with runes, interlacing designs and scenes from their own sagas. Sven's own saga is so extensive that every inch of his body is tattooed. He has taken to using the skins of his victims as a canvas with which to chronicle his latest deeds.
  • Wolf Lord Harald Deathwolf - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Deathwolf has taken the symbol of the Ravening Jaw, which symbolises the Wolftime -- the end of all things -- when Morkai will eat the sun and eternal night will shroud the stars. Harald himself rides to battle upon the great grey wolf, Icetooth. It is said that Harld's senses are so sharp he can smell the fear of his prey from several leagues distance. His Great Company goes to war accompanied by a host of lupine beasts, be they flesh and blood, cybernetic construct or even the spirits of loyal companions.
  • Wolf Lord Krom Dragongaze - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Krom's sigil is that of the Sun Wolf, who makes the belly of the sun his lair, and attacks Fenris anew with every dawn. Known as the "Fierce-eye", his presence and sheer force of will can be petrifying to a lesser man. He keeps a great many Wolf Guard in his Company, for the Fierce-eye believes that valour should be rewarded wherever it is to be found.
  • Wolf Lord Kjarl Grimblood - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Kjarl Grimblood is a fierce rival of Sven Bloodhowl. He and his Great Company bear the sigil of the Fire Wolf. In Fenrisian myth the Fire Wolf burns without being consumed, and it is his voice of flame that melts the snows and thaws the glaciers before each season. They say that Kjarl's foresight is so supernaturally acute that it is whispered that he possesses the Gift, able to see the future in the flames. His Great Company favours a great many flame weapons, boasting no fewer than twelve Land Raider Redeemers. His Grey Hunters have a special rite of passage -- once they have killed his prey with flame, they have earned the right to paint their face with blood before each battle, the crimson flames upon their countenance marking them as a Red Hunter for all to see.
  • Wolf Lord Egil Iron Wolf - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Egil has taken the totem of the Iron Wolf. In Fenrisian mythology, the Iron Wolf lies dormant beneath the continent of Asaheim, a beast so vast that the mountains are the fur on his back and the seams of metal within them are his veins. Egil's company is famous across the Fenris System for its armoured assaults, with the Iron Wolf himself riding at the head of each assault in a personalised Land Raider.
  • Wolf Lord Engir Krakendoom - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Born of hardy stock, his people are dark of skin and temperament. Engir comes from a proud line of warlords who rule over the southernmost isles of Fenris. Accomplished explorers and oarsmen, they ply the infested oceans of Fenris in search of sea monsters. It is said Engir was given the name Krakendoom after he was borne under the waves by a giant, many-limbed sea devil. When they eventually surfaced, Engir alone roared in triumph. He has taken the sigil of the Sea Wolf. His Great Company prefers to go to war in armoured transports, and boasts many Swiftclaws that act as outriders for the main force. His Great Company excels in ship-to-ship conflicts and boarding actions.
  • Wolf Lord Erik Morkai - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Named after the Deathwolf long before he took the sign of the two-headed beast, Erik has always been grim and stern of aspect. His Great Company boasts many Wolf Scouts. Fellow Veterans appreciate their master's taciturn demeanour and no-nonsense approach. He has a tendency to solve problems with swift and bloody acts of violence. His more stable twin, Irnist the Wise, left Erik's side to serve as a Rune Priest to the Great Wolf; an act for which Erik has never truly forgiven him.
  • Wolf Lord Bran Redmaw - Known as the Curs'd Lord, Wulfen-Kin and The Bloodied Hunter, Bran Redmaw serves as the current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. He and his Great Company are looked upon with suspicion by the other 11 Wolf Lords, for they are regarded as tainted. More Space Wolves bearing the Curse of the Wulfen serve alongside Redmaw's company than in any other. The unspoken truth is that Redmaw has risen to become a Wolf Lord despite himself being afflicted with the curse.
  • Wolf Lord Gunnar Red Moon - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. The Wolf of the Red Moon is a terrible god of vengeance in Fenrisian society; a great skeletal beast that prowls the Seven Hells, eternally devouring the bodies of the unworthy and yet never growing fat. A broad, roaring, laughing bear of a man, Gunnar favours his Long Fangs more than most, for he reasons that Veterans make the best companions in the feast hall as well as upon the battlefield. Red Moon's Great Company saw considerable service in the Jericho Reach. They were especially active along the Eastern Fringe for several years, and at the opening of the Achilus Crusade, a detachment was sent to bolster Space Marine numbers in the opening battles. The Packs of this force took part in dozens of operations over the course of three standard years, before being recalled to their Great Company to counter Chaos incursions coreward of the Calixis Sector.
  • Wolf Lord Bjorn Stormwolf - Current Wolf Lord of one of the Chapter's Great Companies. Bjorn's Great Company is notable for their noisy, intimidating splendour on the battlefield. He has taken the Thunderwolf as his symbol, for he too is a creature of might and ferocity over stealth. This Wolf Lord's spectacular assaults reflect his impatient and aggressive nature, and invariably include lots of heavy weapons, Bike Squads and Vindicators. The Great Wolf employs Bjorn's company for frontal assaults rather than stealth missions.
  • Wolf Lord Gnyrll Bluetooth - In 999.M41, Bluetooth was the commander of the Strike Cruiser Wolf of Fenris. Lured into a trap, the Renegade Space Marines warband known as the Red Corsairs ambushed the Space Wolves' warship and boarded it. Wolf Lord Gnyrll Bluetooth fought the infamous Chaos Lord Huron Blackheart in hand-to-hand combat on the bridge of the Strike Cruiser. Unfortunately, Gnyrll was no match for the Chaos Lord and was torn apart by Huron's Power Claws. The Wolf of Fenris became one of Huron Blackheart's greatest prizes.
  • Wolf Lord Sigvald Deathgranter - A Wolf Lord who played a crucial role in capturing the vital manufactoria of Junkatta during the Imperial campaign known as the Crusade of Fire during the late 41st Millennium. Fighting alongside the Imperial Fists Chapter, Deathgranter led his Space Wolves into the heart of the traitorous Forces of Chaos, battling both Chaos Space Marines and Traitor Guardsmen. Following the success of this battle, the Space Wolves next descended upon the world of Alfrost, but were attacked by a large Dark Eldar raiding party. Though Deathgranter slew the Dark Eldar Succubus, he was captured by her vile handmaidens and taken back to Commorragh. However, the wily Wolf Lord managed to escape his brutal captors and would eventually return to the Imperial lines to lead his Space Wolves during the Crusade once more.
  • Wolf Lord Hrothgar Ironblade - Wolf Lord Ironblade captured the Mars-class Battlecruiser The Resolute, an Imperial warship that had formerly served in the Battlefleet Obscuras but had joined the Arch-Heretic Vortigern during the Alphalus Insurrection of the late 39th Millennium. With his great voidship lost, Lord Ironblade took control of the Resolute during the Battle of Sestus Proxima and returned it to the service of the Imperium under the new name Fist of Russ. Despite the objections of the Imperial Navy, the Space Wolves retained the vessel and it continued to serve the Great Company up through the command of Berek Thunderfist.
  • Wolf Lord Svengar the Red - In 912.M41, Svengar the Red and his Great Company sailed through a wyrmhole in search of their lost Primarch, but soon found themselves beyond the rim of the galaxy, past even the Ghost Stars. Pressing on through the empty void, they eventually discovered a distant orb. Expecting trouble, they instead found a civilisation of tall, fair people who lived in an opulent luxury of their own making, far from war and the confusion of the galactic core. Though initially they were relieved to find a base of operations, their elation soon turned to terror when the Space Wolves realised that their hosts were not human at all. Though they fought bravely, Svengar and his men were never seen again.
  • Wolf Lord Sven Ironhand - In 815.M41, Wolf Lord Ironhand led his Great Company into exile in the Eastern Fringe, forswearing his oaths. The Great Wolf Logan Grimnar declared Ironhand Renegade and ordered a new Great Company formed to replace the Ironhand Great Company. Sven Ironhand is only one of many Wolf Lords that have led their Companies away from The Fang and become "Lost" but he is noted as the most recent to have done so.
  • Wolf Lord Finn Goresson - Known for being famously stubborn and ferocious, despite being vastly outnumbered, Goresson immediately diverted his meagre fleet to face the titanic flagship of WAAAGH! Godstompa, a converted Space Hulk, in 739.M41. Finn was initially victorious in his early engagements, at one point driving the armoured prow of his Strike Cruiser straight into the weak point of the Ork Superkrooza Longtoof and out the other side, breaking it in two. His warships were dwarfed by the Space Hulk Starkrusha, however, and suffered serious losses from its firepower. The Wolf Lord valiantly ordered his flagship to slam into the maw-like launch bays of the Hulk and lead his Great Company in a sustained boarding action against the Ork horde inside. The resultant war in the bowels of the Starkrusha lasted for the best part of six solar months, but nonetheless Finn eventually emerged triumphant, Godstompa's severed head hung from his belt.
  • Wolf Lord Kyrl Grimblood - A mighty Wolf Lord during the 36th Millennium, Kyrl Grimblood held a place of honour within the Chapter's Hall of Heroes, for it was he and his Great Company that saved Fenris at a time of ultimate peril. Though Grimblood fought in a thousand or more battles and personally slew countless enemies of Mankind, in delivering The Fang, and by extension all Fenris, from the clutches of Cardinal Bucharis' Renegade armies during the Plague of Unbelief, Kyrl restored hope to the floundering Imperium and heralded the end to the tyranny and oppression that had been ravaging the Emperor's domain.
  • Wolf Lord Hef Icenheart - Wolf Lord during the Age of Apostasy in the 36th Millennium.
  • Wolf Lord Borek Salvrgrim - Wolf Lord of the 2nd Great Company during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Wolf Lord Morskarl - Wolf Lord of the 3rd Great Company during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Wolf Lord Egial Vraksson - Wolf Lord of the 5th Great Company during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Wolf Lord Rekki Oirreisson - Wolf Lord of the 7th Great Company during the 32nd Millennium, a hirsute monster with a heavy jawline and bunched shoulders.
  • Wolf Lord Vaer "White Wolf" Greyloc - Vaer Greyloc was the Wolf Lord of the 12th Great Company during the 32nd Millennium. Nicknamed the "White Wolf" for his especially pale skin, Greyloc led the defence of The Aett during the First Battle of The Fang but was slain by the Thousand Sons' Daemon Primarch, Magnus the Red.
  • Wolf Lord Osric Three-Fists - Osric was as famed for the ugliness of his mien as he was for his victories in battle. He had the honour to lead a Great Hunt, which was ambushed by a massive Chaos warfleet as the hunt neared its end. Osric's ship, Voidfang, was crippled by the Chaos flagship Storm of Hate. Despite the severe disadvantage, Osric led his warriors out the Voidfang's airlocks and assaulted the Chaos flagship. Despite barely thirty warriors making it to the hull of the Chaotic ship, the Space Wolves succeeded in hammering their way inside, slaughtering a path to the bridge and turning the Chaos vessel's guns against the rest of the Chaos fleet. This act of insane bravado secured victory from certain defeat and is the epitome of the tenacity and determination displayed by the Space Wolves in the face of extreme odds.
  • Wolf Lord Gunnar Gunnhilt, Shieldbearer of Russ - Gunnar Gunnhilt, also remembered by his surname of "Lord Gunn" was a mighty Wolf Lord and the Jarl of Onn, the VIth Legion's First Great Company. As Shieldbearer of his Primarch he was the second-in-command of the entire Legion, a solemn duty he carried out with great honour and pride. Gunnar Gunnhilt was justly famed for his aptitude in naval warfare although his tactics always relied upon delievering Space Wolves boarding parties to other vessels and destroy them from within or possibly capture them. From the bridge of his flagship, the mighty Ragnarok, Lord Gunn had proven his worth countless time, but his singlemindedness and sense of honour would see him fail during the fatefull battle in the Adraxxes Nebula. Harried, hunted and cornered by the superior fleet of the Alpha Legion, Gunnhilt's tactics failed to turn the tables on their enemy and his frustration upon this almost led him to disobey the orders of his Primarch. Harbouring considerable ill-will against Bjorn the Fell-Handed whom he considered a rival for Russ' favours, Gunnar Gunnhilt tried to use the Primarch's seclusion to bring the fleet about and engage the Alpha Legion in a glorious, if doomed, last charge. Returning just in the right moment, Russ countermanded his Shieldbearer's orders -- which would have seen the end of the VIth Legion -- but understanding that Gunnhilt's heart could not be swayed, he released Gunnar from his oath of servitude. Thus liberated, Gunnar Gunnhilt returned to his ship and ordered his warrior to abandon it and seek refuge onboard the Hrafnkel before sacrificing the Ragnarok on the Alpha Legion's guns. Such was his skills that he destroyed countless smaller vessels and hindered the entire enemy fleet from further pursuing the Space Wolves. With the Ragnarok ablaze from prow to stern, Gunnar ordered it to ram the biggest enemy ship he could locate, tricking it into full-stop which made it for a perfect target. Lord Gunnar Gunnhilt perished onboard the Ragnarok as its engines drove it and its final victim deeper into the corrosive gas-clouds of the Adraxxes Nebula.
  • Wolf Lord Ogvai Ogvai Helmschrot - Jarl of Tra, the 3rd Company during the Great Crusade and nominal Commander of the Space Wolves Legion after the Battle of the Adraxxes Nebula, for Leman Russ had chosen to depart for Terra and seek the council of Malcador the Sigilite.
  • Wolf Lord Amlodhi Skarssen Skarssensson - Wolf Lord of the 5th Company during the Great Crusade. Fought alongside the Thousand Sons Legion on Heliosa during the Ark Reach Campaign. Later, participated in the Burning of Prospero.
  • Wolf Lord Hvarl Red-Blade - Jarl of Sepp, the 7th Great Company at the time of the Great Crusade and the Horus Heresy.
  • Wolf Lord Laughing Jaurmag - Jarl of Tolv, the 12th Great Company of the Space Wolves Legion at the times of the Great Crusade, Chapter Master of the Cry of the Grieving Dragon. Laughing Jaurmag renounced his position as Jarl to accompany a lone squad of Space Wolves, Howl of the Hearthworld, to Terra to watch over the Primarch Rogal Dorn, a task that was perceived as a dishonnour and equal to banishment. Jaurmag got his nickname for his appearant lack of sense of humor for he seldomly participated in the raukous laughter of the Space Wolves.
  • Wolf Lord Bulveye, Axeman of Russ - Bulveye is the Wolf Lord of the lost 13th Great Company. Bulveye is 10,000 standard years old and fought at the side of Leman Russ during the Great Crusade. Reemerging from the Eye of Terror in the late 41st Millennium, Bulveye and a warband of the 13th Company aided a young Ragnar Blackmane, who was serving as a member of the Wolfblade, in the recovery of the Spear of Russ from the Thousand Sons Chaos Sorcerer Madox, staging a distraction to allow Ragnar and his companions to reach the stronghold of the Thousand Sons while most of the Traitor forces were engaged with the 13th Company. Bulveye spoke of Russ, as only one who knew him in life could, and together with his warriors spoke of ten thousand years of struggle within the Eye of Terror, fighting the Forces of Chaos and the daemonic beasts within as they searched for Magnus the Red.
  • Wolf Lord Jorin Bloodfang - Ancient contradictory accounts state that it was Jorin Bloodfang who led the fabled 13th Great Company -- given command by none other than the Primarch, Leman Russ himself. Whether or not this is fact, the truth remains unknown due to the passage of time, missing lore and and contradictory accounts. Though Jorin Bloodfang may well be a Wolf Lord of the 13th Great Company, it is unknown if he is the senior Wolf Lord, and therefore the true leader of this Great Company.
  • Wolf Lord Hirkon Grail - Ancient contradictory accounts also state that it was Hirkon Grail who led the fabled 13th Great Company. But once again, the truth cannot be ascertained with any certainty. He is more than likely one of the remaining Wolf Lords of the original 13th Great Company, when it was at its original Chapter-sized strength.
  • Wolf Lord Garm - Garm is one of the first and greatest of the Wolf Lords who rose to fight alongside Leman Russ during the Great Crusade. Garm fell in battle on the world that carries his name to defend the Space Wolves' Primarch. He was honoured with a shrine-tomb on that world called the Shrine of Garm's Skull. The Spear of Russ was entrusted to the Shrine of Garm's Skull and worked into the ornate sarcophagus of Garm himself. It is said that the shrine still carries a measure of the Primarch's power and many of the Space Wolves who make the pilgrimage to the shrine leave changed in mind, heart and soul. The shrine has a permanent garrison of Space Wolves to protect it from looters and invaders. It is a great honour within the Chapter to be selected to serve for a time as an honour guard for the shrine.
  • Renegade Wolf Lord Svane Vulfbad - Svane Vulfbad was a Renegade Wolf Lord of the Space Wolves Space Marine Chapter. He became so disillusioned with the grinding workings and soul-killing bureaucracy of the Imperium that he turned to the worship of Chaos, and more particularly the faith of the Blood God Khorne. Wolf Lord Harald Deathwolf and his Great Company were charged in 913.M41 by the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar to track down and execute the notorious Traitor. Deathwolf and his company eventually uncovered Vulfbad in the Cliedes System, tracking their elusive quarry to the storm-wracked moon of Gallimius. Deathwolf rode his ferocious Thunderwolf through the planet's ferrite dust storms at the head of a small strike force of Wolf Scouts. The visibility was so bad that Deathwolf had to track his quarry purely by scent, but he later claimed the stink of rank sweat and treachery was so strong it was child's play to follow. It has been said that Harald's senses are so sharp he can smell the fear of his prey from several leagues distance. After weeks of stalking their prey, Deathwolf's hunting party cornered Vulfbad atop a dust-crowned mountain just as the vile Traitor was completing a sorcerous summoning ritual that would have seen his traitorous forces thronged with Daemons. The Renegade Space Wolf fought like a madman even after his allies had been slain, badly wounding Harald's Thunderwolf in the process, but he was ultimately outmatched. As Harald brought his axe around to deliver the deathblow, a bolt of lightning struck them both. When the dust settled all that remained of Vulfbad was his Frost Axe, a shard of which now juts from the cybernetic jaw of Harald's Thunderwolf. The beast has been known as Icetooth ever since.
  • Rune Priest Njal Stormcaller - Called the Tempest that Walks, Njal Stormcaller is the Space Wolves' greatest Rune Priest (Librarian). He has proven to be of unparalleled ability both as an Astartes warrior and a formidable psyker without peer. In battle he is accompanied by his companion Nightwing, the Psyber-Raven.
  • Rune Priest Irnist the Wise - A Rune Priest of the Chapter, Irnist the Wise is the twin brother to Erik Morkai and advisor to the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar.
  • Rune Priest Hrothgar - Rune Priest who currently serves with Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Rune Priest Lauf Cloudbreaker - Rune Priest during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Rune Priest Skalf Halfhand - Rune Priest during the 32nd Millennium, he helped defend the Space Wolves' fortress-monastery during the First Battle of The Fang from the hated Thousand Sons Traitor Legion. Skalf's role within the Chapter would go on to far outlive Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm, who died at the hands of the Daemon-Primarch Magnus the Red.
  • Rune Priest Odain Sturmhjart - Rune Priest during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Rune Priest Torvald - Rune Priest of the 13th Great Company. Known as Torvald the Reaver of Red Kraken Hold. This mighty Son of Russ was one of the Space Wolves' first Rune Priests. He fought by the side of Russ himself during the Great Crusade and has been Wolf Lord Bulveye's lieutenant since that bygone era.
  • Rune Priest Ohthere Wyrdmake - Rune Priest of the Space Wolves during the Great Crusade and the Horus Heresy. Ohthere befriended Ahriman of the Thousand Sons in an attempt to learn about the sorcerous tenets of the Legion and spoke against the Thousand Sons on that basis during the Council of Nikea.
  • Rune Priest Kva "Who-is-Divided" - Kva was a powerful and experienced Rune Priest who had the ear of Leman Russ himself during the time of the Horus Heresy, and especially during the fateful battle in the Adraxxes Nebula. Far too old to be made a Space Marine, the broken form of Kva was augmented as best as could be done to allow him to follow and guide his Primarch amongst the stars. Kva was always accompanied by his two guardians, the Runewardens, two twin Astartes that were also his trainees in the matters of the runes. It would be Kva who would capture Ormand and thus uncover the Dark Angels presence in the Adraxxes Nebula. It was also Kva that finally convinced Leman Russ to take Bjorn the Fell-Handed into his inner circle.
  • Wolf Priest Ulrik the Slayer - Also known as Grandfather Lupus and the Guardian of the Sons of Russ, Ulrik is the Wolf High Priest of the Space Wolves Chapter and is the oldest of all living Space Wolves other than the Chapter's venerable Dreadnoughts. His great mane is white as the slopes of Asaheim on the Space Wolves' Chapter homeworld of Fenris. Legend has it that Ulrik is older even than the mighty Logan Grimnar, the current Great Wolf of the Chapter, who has fought in the name of the Emperor for over 700 Terran years.
  • Wolf Priest Ranek Icewalker - Wolf Priest of the Chapter. Ranek was the Wolf Priest who chose Ragnar Blackmane to become a Neophyte of the Chapter and first saw greatness in him. Ranek was Blackmane's friend and mentor and was one of the few Space Wolves to praise Blackmane for losing the Spear of Russ to prevent the emergence of the Thousand Sons Daemon Primarch, Magnus the Red, from the Warp on the world of Garm. He has remained the youngest Wolf Lord's close mentor and confidante.
  • Wolf Priest Sigurd - A young Wolf Priest, Sigurd fought alongside Ragnar Blackmane during his time in the Wolf Blade and would later fight alongside him when he became the Wolf Lord of his own Great Company. While initially at odds with Blackmane, Sigurd learned to value Ragnar's abilities as a warrior and a leader and is now amongst that Wolf Lord's most trusted officers.
  • Wolf Priest Vagnai Ravenmane - Wolf Priest who recorded the re-telling of Russ' disappearance by Bjorn the Fell-Handed in the 35th Millennium.
  • Wolf Priest Thrar "Wyrmblade" Hraldir - Haldir was a Wolf Priest during the 32nd Millennium. He was instrumental in the creation of the genetic alteration program known as The Tempering -- the effort to expunge the genetic deficiencies of the Space Wolves' gene-seed, in particular the Canis Helix, in order to create new Successor Chapters. He had come closer than any other since the time of the Emperor himself at understanding the nature of the Canis Helix. During the First Battle of The Fang, he confronted the Thousand Sons Daemon Primarch Magnus the Red and was slain. With his death, the secrets of the Space Wolves' gene-seed and how to remove the taint of the Curse of the Wulfen died with him.
  • Wolf Priest Sternhammer, Warden of the Lost - A warrior known only as Sternhammer to the defenders of the Cadian Gate came to represent all the actions of the Space Wolves' lost 13th Company during the 13th Black Crusade in 999.M41 falling on the foul Forces of Chaos mercilessly and then withdrawing before any Imperial force could make successful contact. Sternhammer was reported to have been in a great many different war zones light years apart from each other, leading a band of bestial warriors that he would unleash like giant hunting hounds upon the foe. He was reported to have saved the 143rd Cadian Regiment at Cadmus Binary. Alongside a powerful Wolf Lord, this Wulfen Guard slew the Night Lords Chaos Lord Sinax. Only a few days later and five light years away, Sternhammer was reportedly sighted once more, leading a boarding action aboard an Imperial Navy vessel that resulted in the scuttling of the Light of Fatidicus, so that the enemy would not capture it. More than a hundred victories were attributed to Wolf Priest Sternhammer and his warbands. Whether they were the same band, or many, and whether Sternhammer led them all himself is unknown, but the Defenders of the Cadian Gate remain both heartened and terrified at the memory of the mournful howls of the Wulfen he led into combat.
  • Forgemaster Slejek Blademaker - Slejek Blademaker was the Space Wolves' Master of Forges and senior Iron Priest at the times of Leman Russ and the Horus Heresy. As such, his domains were the forge-levels of Hrafnkels -- the Space Wolves' flagship -- where he would toil to arm and equip the Astartes of the Vlka Fenryka. He is remembered as a talented weaponmaker and a pragmatic person whose dry voice was prompt to give into laughter. He remains famed for having refused to interrupt his works to forge a new weapon for Bjorn the Fell-Handed, even mocking him for his lack of patience and telling him to get in line like the others who had need of his crafts.
  • Iron Priest Rorik - A senior member of the Chapter's Iron Priests, Rorik serves as an advisor to the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar.
  • Iron Priest Jurgen - Iron Priest currently serving with Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Iron Priest Ulf Blackbrow - At the Battle of Rust World, the Rune Priest Njal Stormcaller saved the life of Iron Priest Ulf Blackbrow from the jaws of Morkai with a deadly accurate axe throw. The great blacksmith, a fierce man who did not like to owe anything to anyone, repaid the debt by forging Njal the psyber-raven Nightwing that has saved Njal's life more than once, pecking out the eyes of those enemies that dare attack his master.
  • Iron Priest Harl Greyweaver - Harl Greyweaver is an Iron Priest who has been seconded to the elite xenos-hunting Deathwatch -- the Chamber Militant of the Ordo Xenos. He has been the Forge Master of Watch Fortress Erioch in the Jericho Reach since his predecessor answered a summons to serve the Achilus Crusade a decade ago. He is notoriously intolerant of other Chapter's brands of tech-craft, but his efficacy in conjuring the tools of war is so great that no one has yet been able to oust him. Every piece of xenotech adopted into the Deathwatch arsenal since his arrival has been so grudgingly.
  • Iron Priest Garjek Arfang - Iron Priest that served in the 12th Great Company during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Iron Priest Horgan Steelsoul - A Space Wolves Iron Priest who served during the 32nd Millennium. He helped to defend The Fang during the First Battle of the Fang against the hated Thousand Sons Traitor Legion. The duty of awakening the ancient and revered Bjorn the Fell-Handed fell to Steelsoul, who at that time, was a young Iron Priest who shadowed the noble Bjorn since his awakening during the defence of The Fang.
  • Iron Priest Berensson Gassijk Rendmar - Senior Iron Priest during the 32nd Millennium.
  • Iron Priest Fergus Forgrim - Legendary Iron Priest who crafted the first Frost Blade, called Frostfang, which is currently wielded by Wolf Lord Ragnar Blackmane. Renowned as a master craftsman and worker of metals, Forgrim fashioned the chain blade of Frostfang from a rare and unknown metal, which increased its lethality in battle. Unfortunately with the death of the revered and ancient Iron Priest, the secret of his techniques in the blade's forging were lost to the Chapter for all time.
  • Wolf Guard Arjac Rockfist - Arjac Rockfist, also known as The Man-Mountain, Grimnar's Champion and the Anvil of Fenris, is the personal champion of the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar. Arjac was formally a blacksmith of the Bear Claw tribe of Fenris, whose true skills lie not in the forge, but in the crucible of battle. His incredible strength and fortitude so impressed the Great Wolf that he was made his personal champion even before he was inducted into the Space Wolves.
  • Wolf Guard Havard - Member of Logan Grimnar's Bodyguard.
  • Wolf Guard Holger - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in Logan Grimnar's Great Company.
  • Wolf Guard Per - Member of Logan Grimnar's Bodyguard.
  • Wolf Guard Lars Helltongue - Personal Herald of the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar.
  • Wolf Guard Red Erik - Member of Ragnar Blackmane's bodyguard, killed fighting the Thousand Sons on Hesperida.
  • Wolf Guard Liet - Member of Logan Grimnar's Bodyguard.
  • Wolf Guard Olaf - Member of Logan Grimnar's Bodyguard.
  • Wolf Guard Mikal Sternmark - Wolf Guard Champion to Wolf Lord Berek Thunderfist, Mikal had to take charge of the Thunderfist Great Company during the Charys Campaign. At the height of the fighting and the sorcerous influence of the Thousand Sons Mikal succumbed to the call of the Wulfen and in a fit of rage slaughtered the Imperial General Lady Commander Athelstane. He was placed under the care of the Wolf Priests for some time, but returned to serve as Berek's Champion one last time in his final stand and died at the side of his Wolf Lord. Mikal wielded the relic Power Sword Redclaw.
  • Wolf Guard Thorin Shieldsplitter - Former Champion of the Thunderfist Company, the aging Thorin was replaced by the upcoming Mikal Sternmark but remained a loyal and dependable warrior. During the Charys Campaign it was Thorin who stood over the bier of the Wolf Lord Thunderfist with his two-handed Power Axe, prepared to defend the comatose Wolf Lord with his life if need be, and should he recognize death as imminent, his task was to trigger the Melta-charges planted within Berek's bier and make sure that the enemy would not get the chance to sully the body of the Wolf Lord.
  • Wolf Guard Horgrim - Wolf Guard to Berek Thunderfist.
  • Wolf Guard Bjorn - Member of Mikal Sternmark's Wolf Guard Terminator Pack during the Charys Campaign.
  • Wolf Guard Haakon - Member of Mikal Sternmark's Wolf Guard Terminator Pack during the Charys Campaign. Haakon was armed with a massive Cyclone Missile Launcher mounted to his back and after it ran out of missiles used the targeter built into his left fist to guide his Battle-Brothers' aim.
  • Wolf Guard Ranulf Ironfang - Ranulf Ironfang currently serves as one of Grimnar's elite Kingsguard. Ranulf was a member of the Iron Blood tribe before the Sky Warriors took him, and grew up on stories of the legendary Captain Grimnar and his fearless crew of raiders. Ranulf first came to the attention of Logan Grimnar on the battlefields of Rygan II, the Space Wolves arriving to defend the planet from a massive Dark Eldar raid. Then a Grey Hunter, Ranulf was among a handful of Space Wolves thought lost during the frenzied fighting in Rygan's Maze-city. Only some solar months later did the Chapter discover that the foul Eldar had taken their Battle-Brothers to Commorragh and subjected them to unimaginable trials of blood and death. From this hell Ranulf escaped, something virtually unheard of in the sparse Imperial records of that forbidden realm, and a feat that earned him a place in the ranks of Grimnar's Wolf Guard. In the near ceaseless gladiatorial bouts of the arenas he had received countless scars and injuries, among them the loss of one of his fangs, smashed from his mouth by an enraged Ork Warboss. Thereafter, its iron-forged replacement would become his namesake. With over four centuries of war under his belt, Ranulf has seen it all, done it all, and killed most of it to boot. His crackling frost blade has tasted the blood of thousands, but his greatest foe -- and the one that almost finished him -- was the Chaos Champion known as Voidheart. The traitor took Ranulf's eye, though the old Wolf Guard lopped off his foe's arm in trade. Voidheart is still out there somewhere, and Ironfang swears there will be a reckoning.
  • Wolf Guard Gunnar Redhammer - Gunnar Redhammer currently serves as one of the Great Wolf's personal Kingsguard. The skjalds say of Gunnar Redhammer that the fiery heart of a Blood Claw still beats in his breast. Certainly this massive, feral warrior has a temper that would cause an ice troll to quail, and is never shy about setting it loose. Though he must, on occasion, be restrained by his cooler-headed comrades, in battle Redhammer lives up to his name. Gunnar carves a red path of ruin through his enemies with his Thunder Hammer's every meteoric swing.
  • Wolf Guard Ulli Dragonsmote - Ulli Dragonsmote currently serves as one of the Great Wolf's personal Kingsguard. From a young age, the warrior who would become known as the Dragonsmote had a fascination with fire. Before ascending to the ranks of the Sky Warriors, Ulli would fight his tribe's foes with a flaming axe, dipping its blade into kraken's oil before battle and setting it alight. It was this spectacle that first caught the eye of Ulrik the Slayer on the day of Ulli's choosing. This fascination with fire persisted throughout Dragonsmote's time as a Blood Claw and then as a Grey Hunter, where he wielded his squad's Flamer with unsettling glee. When his ascension to the Wolf Guard came, it seemed only fitting this perennial fire-wielder be accorded the honour of bearing his squad's Heavy Flamer. This he has done ever since, bathing his foes in searing death and responding to their frantic screams of pain with his own joyous howls.
  • Wolf Guard Skard Frostmane - Skard Frostmane currently serves as one of the Great Wolf's personal Kingsguard. Frostmane was so named for his preference for fighting amid the fury of the Fenrisian snows. An expert hunter and tracker, Skard prefers to do battle as the Thunderwolf does, his crackling wolf claws taking the place of his totem-beast's claw-jagged paws. In battle, Frostmane will circle his foes searching for a weakness, using concealing snows or dense mists whenever possible to veil his approach.
  • Wolf Guard Ingvarr Thunderbrow - Ingvarr Thunderbrow currently serves as one of the Great Wolf's personal Kingsguard. The skjalds claim that Thunderbrow has never once smiled, words his packmates can well believe. Grim of aspect, Thunderbrow rarely speaks. Yet the Claws of Grimnar know that they can rely absolutely on their seemingly sullen packmate, for he will never, ever let them down -- Ingvarr Thunderbrow is the unbending iron backbone of his veteran pack, and his storm bolter's roar is voice enough.
  • Wolf Guard Karl - Member of Mikal Sternmark's Wolf Guard Terminator Pack during the Charys Campaign.
  • Wolf Guard Nils - Member of Mikal Sternmark's Wolf Guard Terminator Pack during the Charys Campaign.
  • Wolf Guard Snurri - Member of Mikal Sternmark's Wolf Guard Terminator Pack during the Charys Campaign.
  • Wolf Guard Morgrim Silvertongue - Wolf Guard and Skald of Wolf Lord Berek Thunderfist's Great Company.
  • Wolf Guard Volkbad Wulftongue - When Volkbad was a Blood Claw he claimed to be able to speak with wolves. Much to the mocking of his Battle-Brothers, the young Space Marine would bark and growl at the Chapter's packs of Fenrisian Wolves or even try and stare down the hulking Thunderwolves they used as mounts. When the animals would invariably snap back at him or pay him no mind, Volkbad simply claimed they were either not interested in what he was saying or had taken offence. For all his eccentricity, Volkbad is a formidable warrior that earned a place in Logan Grimnar's Wolf Guard through exceptional bravery and fighting prowess. Volkbad's favoured weapons are the Thunder Hammer and Storm Shield, a combination that suits the Wolf Guard's preferred combat style -- namely knocking his enemies to the ground and then caving in their skulls with a single devastating blow. Volkbad's bullish aggression and quick wit have earned him a small following within the Wolf Guard, and when he marches to battle with the Great Wolf he often does so leading a squad of hammer and shield-armed Terminators.
  • Wolf Guard Jurgen Whitemane - Jurgen Whitemane commanded the Space Wolf garrison on Garm. Whitemane was one of the oldest living Space Wolves of the time and amongst the few surviving contemporaries of the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar and the Wolf Guard Pack Leader Hakon. His death was a serious blow to the Chapter and a slight that would not go unavenged.
  • Wolf Guard Torfin Daggerfist - Torfin Daggerfist has carved out a bloody legend for himself among Logan Grimnar's Wolf Guard. He is the current Pack Leader of the Void Claws -- Wolf Guard Terminators armed with paired Wolf Claws for brutal close combat engagements. Blood Claws swap stories of how Torfin once single-handedly slew a massive Ork Squiggoth. When the beast rampaged through his Wolf Guard he thrust his claws into its hide and began hacking away at its heart. A gore-soaked mile later, the story goes, the creature finally collapsed and Torfin got to his feet covered in its blood. Such is Grimnar's trust in Daggerfist that the Wolf Guard is often given command of detachments in the Great Wolf's absence, and bears the banner of the Great Wolf.
  • Wolf Guard Alrik Doom-Seeker - Void Claws are often chosen for their recklessness as much as their skill at arms. Alrik Doom-Seeker embodies a measure of this wild bravery, hurling himself across the void between closing warships or charging out across the burning hull of a cruiser. In these chaotic space battles, the Void Claws will often find their battlefield bereft of atmosphere or gravity. In these instances their claws may come to the fore, something Alrik has proven more than once, anchoring and dragging himself along with his Wolf Claws to get at his enemies.
  • Wolf Guard Hagrik Wyrdfang - Hagrik Wyrdfang currently serves in the Great Wolf's elite Void Claws. It seems that the wolf gods of Fenris may well have blessed Hagrik Wyrdfang, such is the luck that surrounds him. During the battle for the scrap world of Tyrbor XV, when Orks triggered an avalanche of debris upon Hagrik's squad he somehow escaped harm, rising out of the wreckage to tear apart the barbaric xenos. Likewise when his Boarding Torpedo was cut down by turret fire Hagrik somehow leapt free, crashing into the hull of the enemy vessel and using his Wolf Claws to cut his way inside.
  • Wolf Guard Kvarl Hammerfist - Kvarl Hammerfist currently serves in the Great Wolf's elite Void Claws. When he lost his hands to a Tyranid Warrior, Kvarl did not even scream out, but merely growled in rage before cracking the thing's skull open with a thunderous headbutt. Since that battle, his replacement augmetic hands have come in useful on numerous occasions, and work just as well when encased by his Wolf Claws. However, the Wolf Guard often underestimates the strength of his prosthetics, and has a healthy pile of crushed tankards, broken weapon hilts and bruised Battle-Brothers to show for it.
  • Wolf Guard Leifvar Twice-Slain - Leifvar Twice-Slain currently serves in the Great Wolf's elite Void Claws. Leifvar has a reputation for stubbornly refusing to die. The first time he was thought dead was when the Chaos Lord Krag'kar impaled Leifvar upon the prow of his corrupted Land Raider as a trophy. Much to Krag'kar's surprise, when Leifvar recovered consciousness he pulled himself free and destroyed both tank and the Renegade. The second time Leifvar was presumed killed was when his voidship was destroyed. Leifvar was found drifting in the void amidst the debris, still alive within his frost-covered Power Armour.
  • Wolf Guard Bran One-Eye - Bran and his Grey Hunters squad, the Wolfkin, helped defend The Fang during the First Battle of The Fang against the hated Thousands Sons Traitor Legion in the 32nd Millennium. Reputedly, Bran had half of his face torn away by an Ice Troll, which made his demeanour increasingly dark over time.
  • Wolf Guard Kaarlson - Kaarlson is a legend within the Chapter, having reputedly survived being stepped upon by a Titan.
  • Wolf Guard Durfast of Mordrak - While investigating the Dead World of Mordrak, the Space Wolves found themselves thinly stretched when attacked by a massive force of Ork raiders. Durfast took command of three packs of Space Wolves to defeat the incursion of Orks that numbered several hundred. Thanks to Durfast, the surviving Space Wolves made it out alive. He later succeeded to the leadership of his Great Company and went on to fight many more battles.
  • Wolf Guard Ranulf - Ranulf is supposedly the largest Space Wolf in the Chapter's entire history, said to have rivalled even the mighty Leman Russ in size. Ranulf was a legend in his day as a member of the Wolf Guard Terminators and remains a legendary figure in the Chapter even now. His specially-customised Terminator Armour rests in the Hall of Heroes in The Fang, towering over all who view it.
  • Wolf Guard Brynngar Sturmdreng - Wolf Guard Brynngar was a senior officer of the Legion during the later days of the Great Crusade and the beginning of the Horus Heresy. Brynngar was stationed on the Vangelis way-station awaiting pick up along with a scattered group of Space Marines from other Legions including some of the grizzled Veteran's contemporaries from the Ultramarines Legion. Captain Cestus of the Ultramarines was fighting alongside the Space Wolves on Carthis against the Kolobite xenos. Brynngar had saved Cestus' life during that battle but had lost an eye in the process, though in true Space Wolf fashion, he had the mandible of the creature that took his eye fashioned into the Rune Axe Felltooth.
  • Wolf Guard Grimnr Blackblood - Grimnr Blackblood was a mighty warrior of the VIth Legion that had made it to the rank of Huskarl of Leman Russ' honour guard.
  • Thunderwolf Rider Canis Wolfborn, The Lone Wolf - Canis Wolfborn is a loner, a warrior who is more at home in the company of Fenrisian Wolves than men. Though he is a member of the Wolf Guard of Harald Deathwolf's Great Company, Canis Wolfborn's saga is utterly different from those of his peers, and his prowess in combat is unmatched. He rides a Fenrisian Thunderwolf into battle.
  • Wolf Guard Thunderwolf Rider Hagni - Hagni rode the Thunderwolf Warg, but he fell to the Curse of the Wulfen and presumably killed his own mount as well as his Brother Barak and his Thunderwolf mount. The Thunderwolf Pack of Skaeln Icefang chased him across the frozen surface of Skorbad until he led them to a last member of the Scions of Pestilence who was possessed by a Greater Daemon who had somehow avoided the other hunters.
  • Wolf Guard Thunderwolf Rider Skaeln Icefang - Skaeln rides the Thunderwolf Fenrir and led the Thunderwolf Pack deployed to Skorbad to fight against the Death Guard Traitor Legion warband known as the Scions of Pestilence. For three weeks the pack hunted the Scions and killed them one by one, leaving just a mass of leaderless Plague Zombies for the Imperial Guard to mop up. Skaeln wields a rune-etched Power Axe. Fenrir was killed during an attack on a Plague Zombie-infested Cadian Bastion. An Autocannon tore the Thunderwolf apart just as the Space Wolves reached the gates.
  • Wolf Guard Thunderwolf Rider Afgar Ironmane - Afgar rides the Thunderwolf Skoll. Skoll drowned when it and Afgar fell through the ice whilst crossing a frozen lake. Afgar was dragged to safety by his Battle-Brothers but Skoll was far too heavy and sunk to the frigid depths. Afgar succumbed to his many and severe wounds after he and Skaeln had cleansed the Plague Zombie-infested Bastion.
  • Wolf Guard Thunderwolf Rider Thorgard - Thorgard rides the Thunderwolf Magni. Magni was killed by a daemon-possessed Traitor Marine of the Scions of Pestilence. Thorgard himself fell trying to slay Hagni who had become overcome by the Curse of the Wulfen. The stealthy and jovial Thorgard wielded a pair of Wolf Claws.
  • Wolf Guard Thunderwolf Rider Barak Thunderborn - Barak rode the Thunderwolf Garrik, and both were killed during the Skorbad Campaign.
  • Deathwatch Champion Attalus Fellhand - Attalus Fellhand is another recent arrival to Watch Fortress Erioch in the Jericho Reach. Attalus has won renown as a great slayer of Orks amongst his Battle-Brothers in the Space Wolves Chapter -- a tremendous accolade in a Chapter so well-known for its fierce love of hand-to-hand combat. He has been sent from the Great Company currently serving in the Orpheus Salient to learn the ways of Tyranid fighting at Erioch so that he can return and teach them to his Battle-Brothers. In truth, Attalus makes a poor student and a worse teacher, a fact he's painfully aware of and deeply worried about. Attalus covers his fear of failure with brash antagonism, much preferring to work out his frustrations in duels or challenges. He has gained a reputation for impulsiveness and disorderly conduct that has strained the nerves of the Chamber of Vigilance more than once. Unsurprisingly, Harl Greyweaver is vociferous in support of his Chapter-brother. Greyweaver insists that the "young-pup", as he calls him, will shape up with time. Mordrigael has struck a balance by assigning Attalus just about any Deathwatch mission involving even a scent of Tyranids. It is hoped that Attalus will be more successful at learning by doing in the company of Deathwatch Battle-Brothers knowledgeable in the ways of the Tyranid. As a side effect, the policy serves to keep the troublesome Attalus away from the fortress for lengthy periods of time.
  • Deathwatch Watch Captain Haakon Draugrsbane - Assigned for secondment to the xenos-hunting Deathwatch, Watch Captain Draugrsbane is a formidable warrior who wields a mighty Thunder Hammer, Doombringer, in battle.
  • Dreadnought Alrik - One of the Chapter's mighty and revered Dreadnoughts.
  • Dreadnought Grendel - One of the Chapter's most ancient and Venerable Dreadnoughts who participated in the Battle of Granica.
  • Dreadnought Gymir the Ice-Fisted - One of the Chapter's Ancients (Dreadnoughts) who participated in the Battle for Hyades with the Wolf Lord Berek Thunderfist's Great Company.
  • Dreadnought Helgan Umberclaw - One of the Chapter's Ancients, Helgan is one of the Chapter's more ancient Dreadnoughts. When a Dreadnought grows old, as Helgan has done, often his mind slips away until only his sense of honour and hunger for war remain. Unaware of all but the battle raging around him, Helgan's sense of duty and thirst for blood are all that drive him on.
  • Dreadnought Horthgar Frostskull - One of the Chapter's Ancients, Horthgar's saga is one of revenge and bloody retribution. Mortally wounded by the Daemon Prince Gorehide, he would spend many long centuries hunting down his foe. Eventually Frostskull brought Gorehide to battle, in his new form as a Dreadnought.
  • Dreadnought Murderfang - Murderfang the Curseborn is one of the Chapter's Ancients (Dreadnoughts). It was Logan Grimnar's Great Company that discovered the metal-skinned monster in 960.M41 on the hell world of Omnicide. Grimnar's warriors stumbled upon the feral Space Wolf Dreadnought carving its way through a force of Chaos Space Marines. After a fierce struggle, the murderous machine was captured and frozen in stasis, before being taken back to The Fang for study. Though the mysterious Dreadnought mentioned in the Curseborn Prophecy must once have had a name, the identity of the once-noble hero within its sarcophagus is long lost, consumed by the bestial thing that now leers from its facade. Named Murderfang by the Space Wolves, it is a force of untamed destruction. In times of great strife, the machine-beast is released from its glacial prison and set upon the foe, and it will claw and stamp and bite until nothing is left but ruin. At battle's end, the Space Wolves will freeze it with helfrost technology, hoping that Murderfang's wrath can be stayed for long enough to see it contained once more in the caverns beneath The Fang. Yet all know that as the Time of Ending approaches, the white heat of its rage will be needed more than ever. In battle, Murderfang utilises The Murderclaws -- fearsome claws of enchanted alien ice that can carve through flesh and armour with equal ease.
  • Dreadnought Skvald Warbringer - One of the Chapter's Ancients, Skvald was the only Space Wolf to survive the destruction of the Land Raider Hel's Fury. Found badly crushed underneath the vehicle's wreckage, he stubbornly defied death's call and was eventually given new life and purpose as a Dreadnought.
  • Dreadnought Svard Bloodfang - One of the Chapter's Ancients, Svard has always been more than a little reckless, his furious attacks and wild charges legendary even among the Company of the Great Wolf. During the battle on Gnosis Secundus Svard joined the ranks of those few to have brought down an Eldar Wraithknight.
  • Dreadnought Thorik Crowbane - One of the Chapter's Ancients (Dreadnoughts), his thread was severed when he was cut in two during the Battle for Gethrom's Reach in the Great Crusade. Honoured for his service, Thorik was interred within a mighty Dreadnought chassis, from which he continued to serve the Chapter with his battle-lore. He helped defend the Space Wolves' fortress-monastery during the First Battle for The Fang in the 32nd Millennium.
  • Dreadnought Thorir - One of the Chapter's Ancients (Dreadnoughts) that fought alongside Kyrl Grimblood's Great Company during the Second Battle of The Fang in the 36th Millennium.
  • Dreadnought Aesir - Chapter Dreadnought in service during the Horus Heresy.
  • Dreadnought Ymir - Chapter Dreadnought in service during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Master Arvan Woundweaver - With the treachery of four Primarchs confirmed at the beginning of the dark days known as the Horus Heresy, Leman Russ and Malcador the Sigilite decided to despatch several squads of "honour guards" of the fiercest warriors the Space Wolves could offer to ensure the remaining Primarch's loyalties. Arvan Woundweaver was one of those tasked with this mission, he and his pack were charged by the Wolf King himself to join the XIXth Legion and watch over Corvus Corax; however the Raven Guard being famed for their stealth, Woundweaver could not locate the Primarch and erred for five long years aboard his ship. The VIth Legion had established a series of well hidden and well-defended outposts in several dead systems that were being used as armouries and it was during one of their resupply stops that the enemy reared its ugly head in the form of a Cruiser of the heretic Sons of Horus, the Warmaster's own scum. With three members of his squad choosing this ill-fated moment to fall prey to the curse of the Wulfen, Woundweaver had no other choice than to put them down and seclude himself in the outpost's central keep. Sending his abandonned ship on an automated course as a bottle into a fathomless ocean, the seven remaining Space Wolves entrenched themselves in the station's keep and battled the Sons of Horus which had landed their own troops. Fortunately for Woundweaver, his drifting ship was discovered a few weeks later by the Fearless, a Raven Guard Light Cruiser commanded by Lieutenant Navar Hef of the Raptors-contigent. Arvan Woundweaver's saga was abruptly cut short when the plan he had devised to slay the besieging Sons of Horus backfired. He and his squad are believed to have become locked down in combat and thus unable to evacuate the compound before its Plasma Reactor went critical and vaporised Traitors and Space Wolves alike.
  • Pack Leader Dagmar - One of Bulveye's Pack leaders in the 13th Company.
  • Pack Leader Ragnild - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in Egil Ironwolf's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Anders - Pack Leader in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Einar - Leader of Sven's Grey Hunter Pack in the Thunderfist Great Company. Lost an arm to an Eviscerator and entered the Red Dream during the Battle for Charys. He appears to have survived his injuries and continues to lead packs of Space Wolves in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Hogun - Pack Leader of Ragnar's Blackmane Great Company, Hogun lost himself to the Curse of the Wulfen and killed several members of his pack. Rather than killing him, Ragnar got him under control and returned him to the Company to serve as a warrior Marked by the Wulfen. He was placed in the care of Wolf Priest Sigurd.
  • Pack Leader Leif - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Magnus - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Ranulf - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Stiggar - Leader of a Long Fang Pack in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Tor - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in the Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Uller - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in the Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Urlec - Pack Leader in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company. Promoted to command of a pack after the death of Pack Leader Vitulv, the young Urlec questioned Ragnar's decisions as Wolf Lord in private quite often until he saw the true prowess of the Wolf Lord in close combat with a Chaos Sorcerer of the Thousand Sons.
  • Pack Leader Vitulv - Former Leader of Urlec's Pack in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Petur - Leader of a Wolf Scout Pack in Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Joris - Pack Leader Joris replaced Hakon as the commander of Ragnar Blackmane's Blood Claw Pack during the Campaign for Garm.
  • Pack Leader Hakon - Senior officer entrusted with training and leading new packs of Blood Claws. Critically wounded on Garm, the venerable Astartes lived but was badly injured and would never fight again.
  • Pack Leader Ferek - Pack Leader of Berek Thunderfist's Great Company who participated in a boarding action against a Chaos warship during the Garm Campaign. Ferek's squad nearly managed to fight their way into one of the Chaos warship's magazines but were at last repelled by heavy weapons fire. This was somewhat fortunate for if Ferek and his squad had succeeded they might well have blown the entire ship apart and the Thunderfist Great Company with it.
  • Pack Leader Hengist - Leader of Ragnar's Blood Claw Pack during their first deployments on Fenris, Hengist was killed by the Thousand Sons fighting in a rearguard action to give Ragnar and his companions time to reach the surface with a warning for the Chapter.
  • Pack Leader Urlek - Leader of a Blood Claw Pack despatched into the rugged wilds of Asaheim to investigate a potential meteor impact. Instead of a routine piece of rock the pack discovered an infiltration force of the Thousand Sons and were overwhelmed. The fate of Urlek's pack was discovered later by Wolf Guard Hengist's Pack and the news of the Thousand Sons' presence cost many of his pack's lives as well as that of Hengist himself.
  • Pack Leader Hef - Pack Leader of Berek Thunderfist's Great Company. Hef's pack participated in a boarding action against a Chaos warship during the Garm Campaign. Hef's pack came under heavy assault and would have been overrun, but the crafty Space Wolves escaped through ventilation ducts and left proximity mines to kill their attackers when they eventually got the courage to investigate the abandoned position. Hef's pack acted as the rearguard for the Space Wolves' fighting withdrawal to the Fist of Russ but could not stay ahead of the mutants attempting to run down the Space Wolves. Hef's pack then turned and made a last stand, sacrificing themselves to allow the rest of the Great Company to escape the doomed Chaos warship.
  • Pack Leader Krom - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack in Berek Thunderfist's Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Thorvald - Leader of a Grey Hunter Pack of the Thunderfist Great Company.
  • Pack Leader Varig - Pack Leader of Berek Thunderfist's Great Company. Varig's pack participated in a boarding action against a Chaos warship during the Garm Campaign during which Varig led his squad in attacking a sizable horde of Chaos mutants from two directions and kept them pinned within a large corridor. Varig's men then used demolition charges to collapse both ends of the tunnel and trap the mutants inside.
  • Pack Leader Njan "Greyflank" Anjeborn - Grey Hunter during the 32nd Millennium who commanded the Strike Cruiser Skraemar. He was left behind on void duty when the entirety of his Chapter, under the command of Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm, departed to confront the Thousand Sons on Gangava. When the Thousand Sons appeared in-system with a sizable attack fleet, he bought valuable time for the defenders on Fenris to prepare for the inevitable assault by the Traitor Legion, sacrificing himself and destroying four enemy vessels in the process.
  • Pack Leader Mjollnir - Leader of a Wolf Guard Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Thorlief - Leader of a Wolf Guard Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Skirnir - Leader of a Wolf Guard Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Guntor - Pack Leader of the Fenris Bloods during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Kolbyr - Pack Leader of a Hunter Support Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Sigfasti - Pack Leader of a Seeker Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Thorbrand - Pack Leader of a Hunter Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Ragvard - Pack Leader of a Sky Claw Assault Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Horgun - Leader of a Blood Claw Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Jorlund - Pack Leader of a Hunter Support Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Garan - Leader of a Blood Claw Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Jortan - Leader of a Stalker Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Davyn - Leader of a Fire Team during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Ansuarr - Leader of a Blood Claw Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Leiknir - Leader of a Wulfen Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Tammikk - Leader of a Wulfen Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Ornulfer - Pack Leader of a Hunter Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Aldrim - Pack Leader of a Hunter Squad during the Horus Heresy.
  • Pack Leader Leiknir - Leader of a Wulfen Pack during the Horus Heresy.
  • Patrekr the Great Fanged - Hero of the Space Wolves during the Horus Heresy.
  • Sergent Kargir - Kargir was the Sergent of the 19th squad of the 12th Company, or as a native Fenrisian would say Thirteen Stars Falling, then of Howl of the Hearthworld, the most veteran squad of Tolv. Thirteen Stars Falling was a remnant of a forgotten age, the last of the first generation of Fenrisians to have stayed a squad-commander and fought hard to remain so. When Leman Russ selected Kargir's squad to act as bodyguards and watchers over Rogal Dorn, the Primarch of the Imperial Fists Legion, Kargir voiced his discontent with this decision but dared not disobey an order from his own Primarch.
  • Grey Hunter Sven Dragonfire - Sven Dragonfire was a Grey Hunter in Berek Thunderfist's Great Company. He was one of Ragnar Blackmane's original pack brothers during his days as a Blood Claw. Short and stout for a Space Wolf, Sven eventually became one of Ragnar's closest friends before his exile to Terra.
  • Grey Hunter Strybjorn Grimskull - Grey Hunter in Berek Thunderfist's Great Company. One of Ragnar Blackmane's original pack brothers during his days as a Blood Claw. Before being chosen to become a Sky Warrior, Strybjorn was a member of the raiding party that wiped out the Thunderfist Clan. As a result of this, there was enmity between him and Ragnar during their training days at Russvik and also during their first mission as Blood Claws.
  • Blood Claw Lukas the Trickster - Lukas the Trickster is a notorious character amidst the ranks of the Space Wolves, a raucous and ebullient figure who defies authority just as willingly as he defies the enemies of the Chapter. He is a Blood Claw, and will forever be a member of that immature group of Space Wolves.
  • Blood Claw Lars - Lars was a Blood Claw of the Chapter. He was one of Ragnar Blackmane's original pack brothers during his days as a Blood Claw. Lars was regarded as a strange, fey youth who would one day join the ranks of the Rune Priests. He was killed on the planet Galt by an Ork Warlord during the mission to reclaim an ancient Eldar talisman.
  • Blood Claw Nils - Nils was a Blood Claw of the Chapter. He was one of Ragnar Blackmane's original pack brothers during his days as a Blood Claw. Nils fell to the Nurgleite daemon known as Botchulaz on the planet Aerius during the mission to reclaim an ancient Eldar talisman.
  • Blood Claw Drenn Redblade - Young, loud, brash and undeniably gifted in the art of close-combat fighting. It is whispered that Drenn's secondment to the Deathwatch was a ploy by his Wolf Lord, so he might be free of the youth's incessant boasting, but the Space Wolf keeps an impressive kill tally all the same. He fights in the style of most Space Wolves, head bared to the elements, clutching his combat blades so he can revel in the joy of fighting face-to-face.
  • Wolfblade Valkoth - A senior member of the Wolfblade and superior to Ragnar, Haegr and Torin, Valkoth was well-versed in the politics of the Navigator Houses on Terra and just how dangerous their competition with each other could prove.
  • Wolfblade Haegr the Mountain - Haegr's legendary size was matched only by his legendary appetite. Friend and comrade to Ragnar Blackmane and fellow member of the Wolfblade bodyguard assigned to the Navigator House Bellisarius, Haegr was a Space Wolf of immense size whose bulk was the result of an aberrant mutation in his development in which he simply did not stop growing. Although many saw Haegr as a strange simpleton, Haegr was nevertheless relentless, loyal and fiercely potent in combat. Haegr met his end during the Charys Campaign, but in doing so saved the Chapter with his sacrifice, using his last moments of life to wrest the Spear of Russ from the grasp of the Thousand Sons and thwarting their attempt to destroy the Space Wolves.
  • Wolfblade Magni - A young and impetuous Astartes recently assigned to the Wolfblade, Magni fought with distinction but was killed during the Battle for Hyades.
  • Wolfblade Skander Bloody-axe - Skander was a member of the Wolfblade. He was the previous bearer of the Frost Blade now wielded by Ragnar Blackmane. Skander was a Space Marine who went through initiation and basic training with Logan Grimnar and was one of the few remaining members of Grimnar's original Pack of Blood Claws. There were few left from that generation in the Chapter by the late 41st Millennium, and Grimnar and Skander were amongst the last. Skander was killed during the assassination of the Patriarch of the Navigator House Bellisarius. Ragnar Blackmane replaced him in the ranks of the Wolfblade and, after losing his Chainsword while fighting to save the new Patriarch from another assassination attempt, was gifted Skander's Frost Blade as a replacement and reward.
  • Wolfblade Torin the Wayfarer - The second companion and friend of Ragnar Blackmane in the Wolfblade, Torin was a cunning if eccentric Space Wolf, who had the rare talent of understanding foreign cultures and politics. His service with the Wolfblade was exemplary, but like many Astartes of the Chapter sent to serve in the Wolfblade, he was not well suited to life with the rest of the Chapter. He was the only Space Wolf to voluntarily become a member.
  • Lone Wolf Torvald Fellhammer - During the heavy fighting against the Orks of Warboss Grukk Face-Rippa on Alaric Prime, Torvald and his Blood Claw Pack attempted to keep up with their Wolf Lord Ragnar Blackmane's reckless charge into the Ork horde, but soon found themselves isolated and grievously outnumbered. By the time relief finally arrived, in the guise of Logan Grimnar and his battle-hardened Veterans, Torvald was the last survivor of his Pack. Having grabbed a Thunder Hammer from a fallen mentor, he was still swinging it in mighty sweeps, slaughtering a handful of Orks with each murderous impact. Now fighting as a Lone Wolf, Torvald strides fearlessly into battle, clad in a formidable suit of Terminator Armour, still bearing the very same Thunder Hammer he first claimed on Alaric Prime. His tally grows with every battle, and his wrath has yet to be sated.
  • Lone Wolf Olaf Silvermane - White of hair and long of tooth, this gnarled Veteran is one of the oldest warriors in the Chapter, and remembers the days when even Ulrik the Slayer was but a young whelp, hungry for glory. Over the centuries, Olaf has witnessed the death of each and every member of his Pack, feeling the loss of each kinsman more keenly than the last. Olaf now stands alone, the last Long Fang of his Pack. Yet it was two long standard years after the death of his last kinsman before Olaf became a fully-fledged Lone Wolf. During a brutal campaign against the vile Death Guard, the brutal campaign dragged on for many more solar months than expected, and Olaf never truly expected, nor even wanted, to survive the war that had claimed the last of his packmates. Yet as the war continued to grind on, Olaf became increasingly frustrated and reckless, often discarding his Missile Launcher and advancing to take on the loathsome Chaos Space Marines in close combat. However, no foe was up to the task of granting Olaf the glorious death he sought, and when the war was finally won, he was forced to take measures into his own hands in order to join his packmates in death, becoming a Lone Wolf.
  • Lone Wolf Bulveye the Berserker - A notable Lone Wolf, Bulveye first came to the attention of the Chapter's Wolf Priests when he slew a stalking Ice Bear with his bare hands during his Trial of Morkai. Even after being transformed into a full-fledged Space Wolf, Bulveye became renowned for his berserk rages in the heat of battle. It was clear to the Wolf Priests that Bulveye bore the Mark of the Wulfen. It was during the Assault on Hellmaw Spire, however, where Bulveye's career took on a wildly different path. His Blood Claws Pack had become separated from the rest of his Great Company as they relentlessly charged into the hordes of daemons. Bulveye was discovered alone, drenched in blood and ichor, surrounded by the dismembered bodies of Daemonettes. But his entire Pack had also been slain -- messily torn apart, but whether by the daemons or the hand of Bulveye was uncertain. From that time forth, Bulveye swore to avenge his fallen packmates as a Lone Wolf, bathing his hands in the blood of his enemies. Now he rushes headlong into enemy lines, never once bearing a weapon, tearing into his foes in a shower of gore with his elongated claws. Behind his back his detractors call him "kin-slayer", but none would dare call him this to his face. The Wolf Priests keep a close eye on Bulveye lest his inner beast thrive and consume him entirely. Few would be surprised if such an outcome is indeed his wyrd, yet Bulveye's dedication to his oath remains strong enough to control the beast -- for now at least.
  • Long Fang Freyr - A Space Wolves Long Fang during the Horus Heresy.
  • Skold Greypelt - Greypelt is a Space Wolves Astartes of unknown rank and company. Greypelt led a detachment of Space Wolves against the Tyranids on the Ice World of Shadrac.
  • Wolf Scout Haakon "Blackwing" Gylfasson - Haakon Gylfasson was a Wolf Scout of the Chapter during the 32nd Millennium. He did not speak like a typical Space Marine, and had none of the overt, bristling threat about him that most Astartes did. His colouring was dark, and his facial hair thick and matted. He was slighter than most Pack members, even when kitted out in his full array of Scout Carapace Armour. He was left behind on void duty in command of the Scout Ship Nauro when the entirety of his Chapter, under the command of Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm, departed to confront the Thousand Sons on Gangava. When the Thousand Sons appeared in-system with a sizable attack fleet to unleash the First Battle of The Fang, he was ordered to flee the system to bring word to the Great Wolf of the attack on Fenris by the Thousand Sons, and successfully accomplished this mission.

Chapter Fleet

Spear of Russ Battle-Barge

The Space Wolves Battle Barge Spear of Russ

The Space Wolves always possess and maintain 15 starships in their Chapter fleet, one for each Great Company and 3 held in reserve. Each of the 15 vessels is unique unto itself, and the fleet includes many different classes and configurations of Imperial starships. Unlike other Chapters, the Space Wolves have no Space Marine Captain in overall charge of the Chapter's fleet of warships as the Master of the Fleet. Instead, each Great Company maintains its own flagship, which is manned by Chapter Serfs. The Chapter Serf who bears the rank of Helmsmaster serves as the Captain of the Great Company's flagship, and is trusted by the Space Wolves to deliver them safely to their objective, often in the midst of the enemy. The following list includes any starship that is known to have served as a part of the Space Wolves' Legion fleet during the Great Crusade and Horus Heresy or the Chapter Fleet after the Second Founding and is not to be considered a full list of the Chapter's current complement in the late 41st Millennium.

As of the end of the 41st Millennium, the Space Wolves Chapter Fleet is known to be composed of 8 Battle Barges, 30+ Strike Cruisers, 20+ Hunter-class Destroyer squadrons, 20+ Gladius and Nova-class Frigate squadrons and 2 Ramilies-class Starforts.

  • Hrafnkel (Gloriana-class Battleship) - A massive vessel that served as the flagship of the VIth Legion and the Primarch Leman Russ during the Great Crusade and Horus Heresy in the early 31st Millennium.
  • Fenrysavar (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - Survivor of the Adraxxes Nebula.
  • Holmgang (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - Starship of an unknown class that served as the flagship of the Thunderfist Great Company during the Charys Campaign.
  • Nidhoggur (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - The Nidhoggur was a mighty vessel that had served the Space Wolves since the Great Crusade. Traditionnally, it has always been the ship of Tra -- the 3rd Great Company -- and was commanded by the great Ogvai Ogvai Helmschrot during the Horus Heresy. The Nidhoggur was a survivor of the great space battle in the Adraxxes Nebula.
  • Ragnarok (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - A mighty vessel that served as the flaghip of Gunnar Gunnhilt, Jarl of Onn during the Great Crusade and Horus Heresy. The Ragnarok was perhaps the most powerful vessel in the Space Wolves fleet after the Hrafnkel itself and was rightly feared as a terrible adversary in naval battles. The Ragnarok met its fate in the Adraxxes Nebula. While being hunted by the XXth Legion, the Ragnarok alone veered off course and confronted the approaching fleet. Intended on delaying the Alpha Legion's Fleet to save its own, the Ragnarok expended her munitions on its enemies, destroying several escorts before sacrificing itself in a glorious last charge, ramming one of the Alpha Legion's capital ships -- the Delta -- and plonging it into the Nebula itself, where the corrosives gases would do their work of destruction as surely as any broadside.
  • Retribution (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - Unknown class of starship in the Space Wolves' Chapter fleet.
  • Vengeance (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - One of the Chapter's starships of an unknown class lost above the world of Jytor.
  • Voidfang (Capital Ship, Unknown Class) - Warship of an unknown class under the command of Osric Three-Fists.
  • Iron Wolf (Battleship, Unknown Class) - The Iron Wolf is currently the second largest starship of the Chapter fleet and a former Battleship of the Imperial Navy, under the command of Egil Ironwolf.
  • Pride of Fenris (Retribution-class Battleship) - The Pride of Fenris is the flagship of the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar and the largest warship of the Space Wolves' Chapter fleet in the late 41st Millennium.
Allfather's Honour SW Flagship

Allfather's Honour, current flagship of the Space Wolves

  • Allfather's Honour (Battle Barge) - Personal vessel of the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar, and current flagship of the Space Wolves Chapter.
  • Ironwolf (Battle Barge) - Vessel in service to the 13th Great Company and flagship of the 954th Expeditionary fleet during the latter days of the Great Crusade. Likely destroyed by Dark Eldar over the world Antimon in the Lammas subsector.
  • Gylfarheim (Battle Barge)
  • Herald of Morkai (Battle Barge)
  • Russvangum (Battle Barge) - The Russvangum was present at the beginning of the Space Wolves Legion and served its Legion faithfully throughout the entire Great Crusade and Horus Heresy. It was in the thick of the fighting during the infamous space battle of the Adraxxes Nebula and would survive the Horus Heresy where other ships failed to do so. After the departure of Leman Russ, it served as the Chapter's flagship during the 32nd Millennium under the command of the Great Wolf Harek Ironhelm.
  • Spear of Russ (Battle Barge)
  • Wolf Spirit (Battle Barge) - This vessel saw service with the 13th Great Company during the Horus Heresy.
  • Fist of Russ (Mars-class Battlecruiser) - This Mars-class Battlecruiser was formerly commanded by Berek Thunderfist. Lost in the Charys Campaign.
  • Gotthammar (Strike Cruiser) - Vessel under the command of Wolf Lord Arvek Hren Kjarlskar, Jarl of the 4th Great Company in the 32nd Millennium.
  • Seawolf (Strike Cruisr)
  • Skraemar (Strike Cruiser) - Vessel saw service to the 12th Great Company in the 32nd Millennium.
  • Stormblade (Strike Cruiser) - Vessel saw service to the 13th Great Company during the latter days of the Great Crusade.
  • Stormwolf (Strike Cruiser) - Vessel that is currently in service to Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company.
  • Wolf of Fenris (Strike Cruiser) - This ship was captured in the Parenxes System by the infamous Huron Blackheart and his Red Corsairs Renegade Space Marines.
  • Wolfborn (Strike Cruiser)
  • Blood Eagle (Frigate, Unknown Class) - Rapid strike Frigate of the Space Wolves that was responsible for inserting the Space Wolves' Scout Teams onto the Forge World of Cambion.
  • Icebitten (Frigate, Unknown Class) - The Icebitten was a Fast Attack Frigate of Tra which participated in the great space battle of the Adraxxes Nebula. Bjorn the Fell-Handed and his squad launched from the Icebitten towards the Alpha Legion vessel identified as the Iota Malephelos which they would subsequently conquer.
  • Runefyre (Gladius-class Frigate) - Vessel which was boarded and presumably destroyed by daemons.
  • Frostborn (Hunter-class Destroyer) (Destroyed) - An Escort vessel belonging to the Space Wolves.
  • Svart-Sól (Destroyer, Unknown Class) - A veteran from the opening days of the Great Crusade, the Svart-Sól was lost in the Adraxxes Nebula, caught up in a tongue of corrosive gases vomited by the Nebula which caused its generator to go critical.
  • Veregelt (Hunter-class Destroyer) - A Hunter-class Destroyer belonging to the Space Wolves.
  • Nauro (Scout Vessel, Unknown Class) - Scout ship of unknown class in service to the 12th Great Company in the 32nd Millennium, under the command of Wolf Scout Haakon Blackwing.

Chapter Appearance

Physical Appearance

Due to an unusual mutation in the gene-seed inherited from their Primarch Leman Russ through the Canis Helix mixture taken by every Space Wolf Astartes during their recruitment, as a Space Wolf warrior grows older his hair turns a particular shade of grey and his canines lengthen into true, wolf-like fangs. Even his skin becomes thicker and more leathery like a wolf pelt and all Space Wolf Marines are usually quite hirsuite. These traits in their fully matured form are usually emblematic of a Space Wolf who has become a Grey Hunter, the name given to the Veteran Marines of this unusual Chapter. Of course, in a few Space Wolves this mutation proceeds too far and results in the ultimate transformation of the individual into a feral Wulfen mutant, as noted above.

Chapter Colours

Prior to the Horus Heresy, the Space Wolves Legion wore grey Power Armour, with a red snarling wolf as the Legion's badge. In the 41st Millennium, the Space Wolves' Power Armour is a blue-grey, with other colours as highlights, most commonly red and yellow. The armour is often adorned with tokens taken from Fenrisian wolves, such as pelts, tails and teeth. Great Company symbols vary, but are taken from Fenrisian mythology and are always related in some way to the Twelve Wolves of Fenris. The 13th Company Space Wolves Marines retain the old, darker grey and red Legion badge and markings, although the different warbands vary their precise markings along (albeit similar) red wolf themes.

As one might expect from a Chapter with such disregard for authority and the dictates of the Codex Astartes, the iconography used by the Space Wolves is an eclectic mix with few hard and fast rules. There is a general colour code, and warriors usually bear their Pack markings on their right shoulder plate and their Great Company designator marking on the left. However, within these guidelines there is much variety -- a range of examples are shown below:

Pack Markings

The Space Wolves keep to the honoured tradition of displaying their individual pack markings emblazoned across their right shoulder pads and may be repeated on a knee guard. The armoured vehicles of the Space Wolves bear much of the same ritualised iconography as the warriors themselves. Transports share the pack marking of their passengers, while battle tanks and support vehicles often bear the pack symbols of their crewmen. Individual honour markings are displayed on a grey background field.

Wolf Scouts Livery

Wolf Scouts Pack Markings

Blood Claws Pack Markings2

Blood Claws Pack Markings

Grey Hunters Pack Markings

Grey Hunters Pack Markings

Long Fangs Pack Markings

Long Fangs Pack Markings

Wolf Guard Pack Markings

Wolf Guard Pack Markings

Great Company Markings

Great Company Marking in colours of matching Pack markings

Chapter Badge

Current great company icons

Current Great Company Badges of the Space Wolves

The Space Wolves' Chapter badge is a black wolf's head on a yellow background. A more elaborate wolf's head badge worked in silver and laced on a silver diamond background is also sometimes used. Most Space Wolves Marines wear the chosen sigil of their Great Company rather than that of the Chapter as a whole, which is only worn by the Great Wolf and the elite warriors of his Great Company.

The Space Wolves use a radically different system of markings than that used by Codex-compliant Chapters. Rather than using the company markings as laid down in the Codex Astartes, the Space Wolves use a number of different wolf badges to denote the different Great Companies that make up the Chapter. These include some form of a stylized wolf sigil denoting some aspect of the native Fenrisian mythology. These are chosen by a new Wolf Lord upon his election from the ranks of the Wolf Guard, and are adopted by all of the Space Wolves within the Great Company as a mark of fealty. They are also woven onto the various Great Company banners. The badge remains with the Great Company until the Wolf Lord falls in battle, whereupon a new Wolf Lord is chosen, and so the badge changes.

Even these badges bow to the Space Wolves' reputation for nonconformity, and hence lack of any formal system for determining the nature of the Great Company badges. There is never only one way to represent a Great Company badge, and within a Great Company it is likely to find a number of variants of the badge being used at the same time. Indeed, there are currently three different stylizations of the Blakmane Wolf emblem (currently used by Ragnar Blackmane's Great Company) in Imperial records. Indeed, over the centuries many hundreds of different styles of badges have been recorded by Imperial scribes.

The one Great Company that does not change its badge when its leader falls is the household of the Great Wolf. The household uses "The Wolf That Stalks Between Stars", the badge of Leman Russ himself, as its emblem. This badge is perhaps unique within the Space Wolves, as there are no recorded variants of it, a testament to the respect that the Space Wolves have always possessed for their Primarch. It is this badge that represents the Space Wolves as a Chapter, and is woven on the Chapter's banner.

Also, many of the Space Wolves most honoured and treasured relics carry this badge, having been in the possession or service of the Chapter (and hence the Imperium) since the days when Russ walked among the stars. Many of the Chapter's most sacred banners have a rendition of this badge on them, a tangible link to the time when Russ still led his Space Wolves into battle. Whilst many of these are treasured in their own right, perhaps the most treasured of all is the Dreadnought Bjorn the Fell-Handed, who fought alongside Russ during the Great Crusade 10,000 standard years ago. He carries the mark on his Dreadnought shell to show his unique status in the Chapter.

Honour Markings

Honour Markings

Space Wolves honour markings

The Space Wolves most appreciate acts of bravery, courage and skill among their comrades and proudly display markings and personally chosen badges that denote these acts. These markings are normally painted or carved into the Power Armour and personal weapons of the Space Wolf. Where a vehicle or its crew have performed extraordinary feats of bravery or sacrifice, it will be marked by an honour badge. These badges take many forms. In some, ancient Fenrisian runes tell of a great victory won. In others, a stylised heraldic symbol is used to honour both vehicle and crew. There is no formal system of honour awards in the Chapter, all that matters is that the Space Wolf's Pack understands the significance of the symbol to him. However, some honour markings have acquired a special significance to the Space Wolves over time, and the Sergeant and Veteran badges used by the Chapter are good examples of this. The Chapter utilises a rudimentary system of symbols that are repeated in many honour markings, including badges with bones that tend to signify wounds suffered in battle; knife and claw sigils that represent ferocity and bravery in combat and wolf tails that signify an event when the Space Wolf displayed exemplary courage under fire.

Task Force Markings

It is common for units from several different Great Companies to be deployed together to serve during a particular campaign. Every Space Wolf Astartes and every Space Wolf vehicle in this task force often displays a special badge on their armour which designates service within it. Of particular note is that used by the current task force of Ragnar Blackmane: a fanged wolf skull superimposed over two crossed bones, mounted on a black lozenge. This particular badge has appeared many times in the past, and therefore probably has some special significance to the space wolves.

Chapter Relics

  • Anvil Shield - The Anvil Shield is a relic Storm Shield. This large slab of Obstinite laced with Adamantium is wielded by Arjac Rockfist, the personal Champion of Great Wolf Logan Grimnar. It is as much a weapon as a form of protection, and has been used to crush the skulls of numerous foes.
  • Armour of Asvald Stormwrack - When Logan Grimnar was a Wolf Guard in the Great Company of Asvald Stormwrack, the Wolf Lord gifted him a suit of ancient Terminator Armour. A relic of the Chapter, it was the armour that Asvald had worn as a Wolf Guard to his lord and which his lord had worn before him, in a line stretching back many thousands of standard years. A remarkable piece from the Dark Age of Technology, the armour hides a host of nanotechnological mechanisms beneath its ceramite plates, able to repair damage and heal rents caused by powered blade or plasma bolt. Following the tradition, Grimnar grants the armour to worthy warriors that serve and protect him.
  • The Armour of Russ - During the Second Great Hunt, the Space Wolves recovered an ancient suit of Artificer Armour from the Temple of Horus on the world of Rudra near the Eye of Terror. The Space Wolves believe that this armour is none other than that once worn by Russ himself, though Imperial scholars scoff at these claims. What is beyond question, however, is that the armour is of exceptional quality, and ever surrounded by a freezing aura of hoarfrost, as was Russ' armour of old. In its presence, those not born of Fenris are chilled to their very core.
  • Axe Morkai - This mighty weapon is borne into battle by the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar. The Axe Morkai is an ancient artefact, thrumming with the power of the Warp, and was a battlefield trophy taken from a defeated Chaos Champion by the Great Wolf himself. Once he had acquired it, Grimnar had the Chapter's Iron Priests reforge the deadly axe into the likeness of the twin-headed wolf-god Morkai, the guardian of the gates of the afterlife in the myths of the people of the Space Wolves' homeworld, Fenris.
  • Belts of Russ - Each Great Company has in its Armoury a single Belt of Russ. These are powerful girdles incorporating potent gravitic force fields that protect the wearer. Forged by the master Iron Priest Stef Blacksoul after the disappearance of Russ, these belts are important relics of the Chapter.
  • Bite of Fenris - The Bolter known as the Bite of Fenris visits the extreme seasons of the Space Wolves' homeworld upon those under its crosshairs. The gun's bark heralds one of two deadly fates, for its auto-selector breech can bear two different kinds of mass-reactive bolt. The gun's ice-blue Helwinter Bolts contain heat-thief charges that leave their targets as brittle statues. Its Flametide Bolts instead bring the red-hot wrath of Fenris's midsummer, their contents exploding a split second before impact, engulfing the foe in a deadly burst of superheated Bolter-shards and wrathful flame.
  • Black Death (Banisvatr) - It is said amongst the Space Wolves that the Frost Axe known as Banisvatr -- "Black Death" in the tongue of Fenris -- is amongst the deadliest weapons ever forged. Several sagas surround the blade's deeds, recounting the monsters that have fallen beneath its bite, and the piles of slain foes left in its wake. All the tales refer to the baleful runic enchantment bound into its ebon blade, the power of which is believed to turn the Black Death's wielder into a relentless killing machine in battle, but none ever mention who originally carved the runes, or for what purpose.
  • Blacksnow Charm - When an Ork WAAAGH! ravaged the heavily colonised Ice World of Geot, it was the Space Wolves that turned the tide. It is said that the snow itself was turned black by the ash and filthy smoke of thousands of burning Ork vehicles. The Blacksnow Charm contains a few crystals of the blackened ice kept at permanently frozen temperatures by an internal miniature refrigeration coil, as a reminder of that great victory.
  • Cup of Wulfen - An object older than the Aett, the Cup of Wulfen was an artefact forged in the dawn of time by the servants of the Allfather. This chalice was carried by the VIth Legion all through the Great Crusade and was part of the Space Wolves' heritage during the dark times of the Horus Heresy. The hands of Russ himself were clasped around this chalice and offered to the first Fenrisians to become true Sons of Russ. The ancients who made this vessel imbued it with potent magics, for whoever drank from this vessel would, it they were worthy, take upon themselves the mark of Russ, and with it a portion of the Primarch's abilities. Even after ten millennia, the Space Wolves still use the Cup of Wulfen in the ritual of creation of their Aspirants' transformation into full-fledged Astartes.
  • Fangsword of the Ice Wolf (Svellbandr) - The earliest tales of Leman Russ speak not only of Morkai's defeat at the hands of the Wolf-King, but also those of his dread lieutenants. The creature known as the Ice Wolf was amongst the most fearsome, but it too was slain by Russ in a terrible battle and cast into the Wolf's Eye. In the wake of the deadly struggle, all that remained of the Ice Wolf was a sword-like tooth embedded in Russ' leg. It is testament to the Primarch's fortitude that he survived, for the blood of a lesser being would instantly have been frozen by its chilling touch. Russ ordered the fang forged into a blade so that its power could be used to battle the Allfather's enemies. Named Svellbrandr -- "Fangsword of the Ice Wolf" in the Fenrisian tongue -- this sword can slay the hardiest foes with but a single blow.
  • Foehammer - A potent relic of the Space Wolves wielded by Logan Grimnar's Champion Arjac Rockfist, Foehammer is a rune-inscribed Thunder Hammer with an in-built teleportation device that returns the weapon to Arjac's hand should he throw it at a foe or lose it in combat.
  • Fellclaw's Teeth - Logan Grimnar's saga tells of his defeat of the legendary Thunderwolf, Fellclaw, many years ago. Though he keeps the giant beast's skull as a trophy to this day, the Great Wolf had a necklace of teeth made from the fangs of its lower jaw. This he grants to a deserving member of the Champions of Fenris as a token of his favour. To be held in such high honour by the Old Wolf himself is a sign of immeasurable esteem, and the warrior who bears Fellclaw's Teeth will fight all the harder to be worthy of the gift bestowed upon him.
SW Frost Blade colour

Frost Blade

  • Frost Blades - Frost Blades are potent weapons, unique to the Space Wolves Chapter, that can carve through the heaviest armour with ease. Frost Blades usually take the forms of Chainswords or Chainaxes, though they can exist in the form of any type of Imperial melee weapon. Frost Blades are master works from the Space Wolves Iron Priests -- each is incredibly rare and prestigious. The teeth of these icy Chain Weapons are always cut from nigh-unbreakable substances such as Ice Kraken fangs or tempered diamond. The unique power fields enveloping Frost Blades have a distinctive blue cast. A Frost Blade combines the best qualities of a Chain Weapon and a Power Weapon. Some Frost Axes have blades of energised diamond that give the weapons the appearance that they have been carved from a single, lethal shard of ice.
  • Frostfang - Frostfang is a mighty Frost Blade crafted centuries ago by the Iron Priest Fergus Forgrim, a famed master craftsman of the Space Wolves. Its chainsaw blade is fashioned from a rare metal, the secret construction technique of which has died with the ancient Iron Priest.
  • Great Wolf Pelts - Among the wargear of the Space Wolves are wolf pelts from some of the greatest Fenrisian Wolves that have served the Chapter. Some of these pelts are large even for a Space Marine, trailing behind them and hanging over their armour like a tide of fur. A Battle-Brother wearing such a pelt honours the memory of the wolf by carrying it once more into battle.
  • Frostfury - Over millennia of campaigning and fighting for the Imperium, the vaults of The Fang have become filled with rare and potent weapons. The Storm Bolter known as Frostmodr, or Frostfury in Low Gothic, is just such an example -- a weapon crafted long ago by the skilled hands of an unremembered Tech-adept. Re-chambered to fire bolt rounds tipped with Helfrost warheads, it is the only known example of such a weapon, the secrets of its creation lost. In battle, the glittering rounds impart their freezing payload as they explode deep in the flesh of their victims. Few enemies can survive both the destructive force of a detonating bolt shell and the frigid blast of the shattering glimmerfrost crystal.
  • The Helm of Durfast - Durfast's saga names him as the saviour of Mordrak, a long-dead world that was once home to a race of techno-savants. Many technological marvels were discovered amid the ruins of Mordrak after the Ork WAAAGH! that had threatened the planet was defeated by Durfast's Great Company. One such device was bound within Durfast's wolf-head helm by the Iron Priests on his return to The Fang, and it has since become an heirloom of the Chapter. The Helm of Durfast incorporates temporal archeotech that endows the wearer with an awareness of the immediate past, present and future. Its precognitive powers gives him momentary insight into his own wyrd, enabling him to anticipate his target's movements with seemingly preternatural speed and accuracy. The temporal technology used in this relic has long been lost to the Imperium and may even predate its existence.
  • The Hood of Gnyrll - The Hood of Gnyrll is a special crafted Psychic Hood said to gift a Rune Priest with additional and more potent psychic abilities as well as protecting him from the psychic assaults of others.
  • Hrulf's Hood of Darkness - The Hood of Darkness is an ancient device of obscure alien origin. In battle, when activated, this device cloaks the wearer in interdimensional darkness. It also provides the wearer protection from psychic powers whilst cloaked, though he may not use his own psychic powers either.
  • Krakenbone Sword - Years when the Kraken's Spur rises from the seas of Fenris are times of plenty for the world's tribes. In the dripping grottos and shallow pools can be found the remains of ancient kraken, from whose bones priceless blades can be crafted. In his youth, Logan Grimnar had one such blade made for him by a smith of the Iron Blood tribe after recovering a suitable shard of bone from the Kraken's Spur. Though its edges were as sharp as the day it was first made, Arjac Rockfist reworked the blade into a deadly Frost Sword before presenting it to his liegelord once more. It has since become a powerful heirloom of the Champions of Fenris, for no armour can resist its bite.
  • Mantle of the Fallen Wolf - Wolf Priests are the spiritual leaders and counselors of the Chapter and well-respected by all Battle-Brothers. The mantles of the Wolf Priests are usually crafted from the furs of the great wolves of Fenris, and are adorned with tokens and fetishes of the Chapter. The Mantle of the Fallen Wolf is one such item, passed to the Jericho Reach Deathwatch by its previous owner who fell defeating a Greater Daemon in the Hadex Anomaly. To wear such a cloak is a great honour and marks out a Battle-Brother as a trusted member of his Chapter and a respected member of the Adeptus Astartes.
  • Morkai's Claws - Named for the legendary Fenrisian two-headed wolf Morkai, it is said that a master Artificer of Mars, whose name has long since been forgotten, was inspired by the story of the wolf-god's defeat at the hands of Leman Russ. He presented the mighty Primarch with a pair of Wolf Claws that he had forged especially to honour the victory. Imbued with all the bestial fury for which the wolf-god was renowned, to wield Morkai's Claws in battle is to unleash the wrath of the caged beast and tear every foe to bloody ruin.
  • The Psyber-raven Nightwing - Njal the Stormcaller saved Iron Priest Ulf Blackbrow's life during the Battle of Rust World. Blackbrow was not one to owe others favours and so the accomplished smith crafted a particularly sophisticated psyber-raven named Nightwing for Njal. Nightwing has since saved Njal's life many times and is ever swift to aid the legendary Rune Priest in combat.
  • The Pelt of Balewolf - The pelts of wolves are plentiful trophies amongst the Champions of Fenris, as each is an able and fearless hunter. However, some of these mantles are rare indeed and steeped in legend, belonging to one of the ferocious near-mythical Blackmaned Thunderwolves that, so the stories claim, escape from Morkai's realm once every generation to terrorise the slopes of the Fenrisian continent of Asaheim. The Pelt of Balewolf is one such relic. Still soaked in the scent of the long-dead creature, beasts instinctively cower before the wearer, sensing the presence of an alpha predator upon the wind.
  • The Pelt of the Dopplegangrel - Lukas the Trickster is the only individual in the Space Wolves' history who has managed to track and slay one of the legendary chameleonic Dopplegangrels of Fenris. Lukas wears the pelt as a trophy and uses its innate abilities to assist him in battle, and probably any mischief he undertakes.
  • Runic Terminator Armour of Njal Stormcaller - Njal alone has the skill to craft Runic Terminator Armour and his suit is currently the only one of its kind in the Chapter.
  • The Pelt of the Wulfen - This ancient pelt is from a massive Wolf of Fenris, the largest ever slain by a warrior of the Space Wolves. This ancient and venerable hide has been interwoven with a modified cameleoline web.
  • Runic Staffs - Runic Staffs are mighty artefacts carried by Rune Priests that are imbued with the most powerful psychic wards the Rune Priests can devise that protect the wielder from the psychic attacks of his enemies.
  • Runic Totems - The Sons of Russ have many traditions that are unique to their Chapter, and at the heart of Fenrisian mysticism stand the Rune Priests. Using their arcane arts they craft rune totems to call upon the powers of Fenris' mythic beasts, and Space Wolves fiercely believe that these talismans can lend the bearer power from the spirit whose name is inscribed upon it.
  • Spear of Russ - The Spear of Russ was an ancient Chapter relic once wielded by the Primarch Leman Russ of the Space Wolves Legion during the glory days of the Great Crusade. It had been kept for millennia at a sacred shrine on the planet Garm, waiting for the day Russ would return for the Last Battle. But an arch-heretic named Sergius had stolen the spear during a bloody uprising on Garm, and Ragnar Blackmane, then a Blood Claw in Berek Thunderfist's Great Company, had been among the warriors sent to crush the revolt. After numerous battles, Ragnar came face-to-face with his old nemesis Madox, who had manipulated Sergius into taking the spear in an effort to summon Magnus the Red, the Thousand Sons Legion's infernal Primarch, into the physical realm. The foul sorcerer nearly succeeded, but just as Magnus began to cross the threshold from the depths of the warp, Ragnar seized the spear from Sergius and hurled the legendary weapon at the fearsome primarch. The spear struck Magnus like a thunderbolt and the Daemon Prince was hurled back into the raging maelstrom of the warp. Garm had been saved, but the Spear of Russ had been lost, possibly forever. As "punishment", Ragnar was sent to Terra in exile by the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar to serve in the Wolfblade, an ancient Honour Guard comprised of Astartes from the Space Wolves Chapter who protect the Navigators' House Belisarius on Terra, in accordance with an ancient pact forged at the time of the Great Crusade over ten millennia ago. With the aid of his fellow Wolfblades, Ragnar later managed to also recover the Spear of Russ on the Daemon World of Charys with the aid of the Space Wolves' long-lost 13th Great Company. This act redeemed Ragnar in the eyes of his Battle-Brothers and he was reinstated as a member of Berek Thunderfist's Great Company after he returned from his time as a Wolfblade.
  • Staff of the Stormcaller - The Runic Staff wielded by Njal Stormcaller, the Staff of the Stormcaller is a venerable weapon and relic of the Space Wolves that enhances the psychic abilities of its wielder.
  • Teeth of the Blizzard - The Teeth of the Blizzard is a relic Frost Blade of the Chapter. During a Space Wolves deployment to drive back splinter elements of Hive Fleet Behemoth, the leading Pack, led by none other than the Great Wolf Logan Grimnar, became surrounded when hundreds of voracious Tyranid bio-organisms burst from the ground behind them. The Pack fought ferociously to defend their Lord, and one Wolf Guard named Ralaff leapt on the back of a monstrous Trygon to slice its throat with his Frost Blade. Ralaff died from his injuries, but his actions allowed reinforcements to reach the Great Wolf in time. His Frost Blade became a revered relic of the Chapter in testament to Ralaff's valour.
  • Torgarl's Plasma Blade - Though this weapon appears to be an ancient and finely decorated knife, it actually houses a plasma generator in the handle. When thrown, the blade generates an intense plasma field which can penetrate most armour.
Wolf Claw

A Wolf Claw pattern Lightning Claw

  • Wolf Claws - Wolf Claws are a variant of the Lightning Claws used by other Space Marine Chapters. This particular pattern is primarily utilised exclusively by the savage warriors of the Space Wolves Chapter. Wolf Claws are heavily armoured gauntlets with curved, razor-edged talons sheathed in a rippling power field of pure energy. Used most effectively in pairs, Wolf Claws are angled to echo the talons of the wolf. They allow the wielder to cut four times instead of once with each strike, either slashing to maximise a warrior's chance of hitting the foe or stabbing deep to ensure a swift kill.
  • Wolf Helm of Russ - The Wolf Helm of Russ is an ancient artefact of the Chapter said to have been worn by their Primarch Leman Russ himself. Legend has it that this ancient helm was fashioned by the Emperor's Artificers and given to his Primarch son. The Wolf Helm is awarded to a Great Company after a tournament of champions. The last winner was Ragnar Blackmane who then presented the Helm to the Wolf Priest Ranek as a sign of respect.
  • Wolf Pelts - Fenrisian Wolves are renowned across the galaxy for their viciousness. They are respected creatures, and greatly entwined with Space Wolf beliefs. Unarmed hunting rituals exist on Fenris to prove a warrior's prowess. Should a Battle-Brother succeed on such a hunt, he typically displays the pelt of the animal thereafter.
Wolf Tooth Necklace

Wolf Tooth Necklace

  • Wolf Tooth Necklaces - Created from the teeth of Fenrisian Wolves, a Wolf Tooth Necklace is reputed to grant the wearer strength and ferocity in combat like that of the wolf it was taken from. Whether or not there is any true power in such tokens (like those talismans crafted by the Chapter's Rune Priests), the effects on a Space Wolves Battle-Brother's morale and ferocity cannot be denied.
  • The Wulfen Stone - The Space Wolves fear and revere this gem in equal measure, for it represents both the greatest strength of their gene-heritage and their most terrible curse. Bound within a large blood diamond like a caged animal lies the raging spirit of the Wulfen -- the inner beast that lurks within the heart and soul of every Space Wolf. This ancient gem was found by Wolf Lord Jorin Bloodfang on an Eldar Crone World during the 13th Great Company's sojourn into the Eye of Terror. It was worked into a suit of Power Armour by the great artificer and one of the Company's few surviving Iron Priests, Fengri. The Wulfen Stone has the unusual property of amplifying a bearer's Wulfen rage to far beyond that of the rest of their kin. Its horror can be borne by few creatures and as a result, most foes will break and run in absolute terror before the fell creature before them. Though this dire relic is one of the Space Wolves' greatest treasures, the Wulfen Stone is a relic carried to battle in only the most extreme circumstances. Its presence triggers violent urges within the Sons of Russ, an uncontrollable rage to spill blood that any who bear the Canis Helix cannot deny.

Chapter Inspiration

The most recent incarnation of the Space Wolves is described as "a fantasy-style army in a science fiction universe". The backstory and "character" of the army is inspired by Germanic and Celtic barbarian mythology with a strong focus on the mythology of the Norse Vikings. The Space Wolves are reluctant to use some forms of "advanced" technology in a desire to fight in the style of their Primarch and feral homeworld. This is, of course, reflected in the Chapter's army list and specialist rules used by Space Wolf players. They are often (mistakenly) perceived to be an all-out assault army, like the Blood Angels or Black Templars; this is, however, erroneous, for the Space Wolves have a much more flexible and balanced play style and a greater behavioural reliability than either of the above mentioned Chapters. They do favour shorter-ranged confrontation than the traditional "shooty" Codex Astartes-compliant Chapters like the Ultramarines, however.

Sources

  • Champion's of Fenris - A Codex: Space Wolves Supplement (7th Edition)
  • Citadel Journal 2, "Wolf Lords Kvalnir Silverclaw & Berek Thunderfist" by Ian Pickstock, pp. 22-25
  • Citadel Journal 7, "Space Wolf Vehicles: Converting Space Wolves Tanks" by Ian Pickstock, pp. 12-17
  • Codex: Armageddon (3rd Edition)
  • Codex: Chaos Space Marines (4th Editon), pp. 58-59
  • Codex: Eye of Terror
  • Codex: Grey Knights (5th Edition), pg. 28
  • Codex: Space Marines (5th Edition)
  • Codex: Space Marines (4th Edition)
  • Codex: Space Wolves (7th Edition)
  • Codex: Space Wolves (5th Edition)
  • Codex: Space Wolves (3rd Edition)
  • Codex: Space Wolves (2nd Edition)
  • Companies of Fenris: A Space Wolves Painting Guide (Digital Edition)
  • Deathwatch: Core Rulebook (RPG), pp. 47-49
  • Deathwatch: First Founding (RPG), pp. 57-66
  • Deathwatch: Rites of Battle (RPG), pg. 237
  • Epic Armageddon, pg. 70
  • The Horus Heresy: Collected Visions, pp. 33, 195
  • How To Paint Space Marines
  • Imperial Armour Volume Two (Second Edition) - War Machines of the Adeptus Astartes, pp. 20-21
  • Imperial Armour Volume Eleven - The Doom of Mymeara
  • Index Astartes II, "Wolves of Fenris - The Space Wolves Space Marine Chapter"
  • Warhammer 40,000: Chapter Approved - The Book of the Astronomican, pg. 8
  • Warhammer 40,000 Compilation (1st Edition), "Leman Russ"
  • Warhammer 40,000 Rogue Trader (1st Edition)
  • Warhammer 40,000 Rulebook (6th Edition)
  • Warhammer 40,000 - Sanctus Reach: Stormclaw (Campaign Supplement)
  • Warhammer 40,000 - Sanctus Reach: Hour of the Wolf (Campaign Supplement)
  • White Dwarf 387 (US), "The Saga of Harald Deathwolf" by Phil Kelly, pp. 56-59
  • White Dwarf 286 (UK), "Index Astartes - The Eye of the Storm
  • White Dwarf 284 (UK), "Humanity's Shield: Chapters involved in the defence of Cadia"
  • White Dwarf 283 (AUS), "Index Astartes - 13th Company"
  • White Dwarf 282 (US), "Mark of the Wulfen: Matt Hutson's Wulfen force"
  • White Dwarf 281 (US), "Mark of the Wulfen"
  • White Dwarf 275 (US), "Chapter Approved: Heroes of the Imperium"
  • White Dwarf 259 (AUS), "Index Astartes - The Space Wolves"
  • White Dwarf 258 (US), "Index Astartes First Founding: Wolves of Fenris"
  • White Dwarf 251 (US), "The Final Days of Armageddon", pp. 6-27
  • White Dwarf 248 (UK), "Emperor's Shield: Space Marine Chapters of the Armageddon War"
  • White Dwarf 247 (AUS), "Codicium Imperialis - The Space Wolves"
  • White Dwarf 246 (US), "The Great Wolf: Wolf Lord Logan Grimnar" and "Fangs of Fenris Kitted Out: Long Fangs", pp. 34-37
  • White Dwarf 245 (US), "Lone Wolves", "A Company Wolves", pp. 32-35, 37-39
  • White Dwarf 244 (US), "Codex Space Wolves", "Sons of Russ - Codex Space Wolves", "Super-Interchangeable Space Wolves" and "The Battle of the Fang", pp. 7-19
  • White Dwarf 231 (US), "Chapter Approved - Codex Space Wolves (Preview)", pp. 71-77
  • White Dwarf 205 (US), "Lurking Horror: Battle Report - Tyranids vs. Space Wolves", pp. 90-105
  • White Dwarf 200 (US), "Fangs of Fenris: Space Wolves Campaign", pp. 85-91
  • White Dwarf 185 (US), "Wolves of Fenris: Space Wolves Army by Kim Syberg of 'Eavy Metal Team", pp. 51-57
  • White Dwarf 177 (US), "Hold the Line: Battle Report - Eldar vs. Space Wolves", pp. 52-72
  • White Dwarf 166 (US), "Space Marines: Codex Imperialis Extract - Legions of Adeptus Astartes", pp. 8-19
  • White Dwarf 158 (US), "Njal Storm Caller: Rune Priest of Ragnar Blackmane's Space Wolf Great Company", "Ragnar Blackmane, Njal Storm Caller & Ulrik The Slayer in Space Marine: Space Wolves" and "'Eavy Metal: Space Wolves", "Return to Kalidus: Campaign for The Wolf Guard, Space Wolf Terminators" & "Fangs of the Wolf: Battle Report - Space Wolves vs. Orks", pp. 4-7, 9-13, 30-35 46-61
  • White Dwarf 157 (US), "Space Wolf Army List: Space Marines Space Wolves", pp. 2-21
  • White Dwarf 156 (US), "The Space Wolves", pp. 8-25
  • White Dwarf 147 (US), "Wolf Lair: Campaign - Uses Rules from Space Hulk, Deathwing and Genestealer", pp. 56-71
  • White Dwarf 126 (US), "Epic Space Marines: How to Design Space Marine Regiments in the Horus Heresy", pp. 12-27
  • White Dwarf 119 (US), "Space Marine Painting Guide", pp. 32-39
  • White Dwarf 117 (US), "Codex Titanicus: Preview", pp. 8-26
  • White Dwarf Weekly Magazine #109 (27 Feb 2016) "The Deathwatch: Kill Team Cassius" pg. 5
  • False Gods (Novel) by Graham McNeill
  • Battle for the Abyss (Novel) by Ben Counter
  • A Thousand Sons (Novel) by Graham McNeill
  • Prospero Burns (Novel) by Dan Abnett
  • Tales of Heresy (Anthology), "Wolf at the Door" (Short Story) by Mike Lee, pp. 61-157
  • Betrayer (Novel) by Aaron Dembski-Bowden, pp. 62, 91-95, 165-167
  • Legacies of Betrayal (Anthology), "Wolf's Claw" (Short Story) by Chris Wraight, pp. 309-315
  • Battle of the Fang (Novel) by Chris Wraight
  • Blood of Asaheim (Novel) by Chris Wraight
  • Bringers of Death (Anthology), "Even Unto Death" by Mike Lee
  • Engage the Enemy (Novella) by Lee Lightner
  • Failure's Reward (Ebook) by Chris Wraight
  • Kraken (Ebook) by Chris Wraight
  • Legends of the Space Marines (Anthology), "Twelve Wolves" by Ben Counter
  • Lone Wolves (Graphic Novel) by Dan Abnett and Karl Richards
  • Sons of Russ (Ebook) by Chris Wraight, Ben Counter, Nick Kymes, and Andy Smillie
  • The Emperor's Gift (Novel) by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
  • Thunder from Fenris (Audio Book)
  • Twelve Wolves (Ebook) by Ben Counter
  • Warrior Brood (Novel) by C.S. Goto
  • War Without End (Anthology), "Howl of the Hearthworld" by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
  • Wolf King (Novel) by Chris Wraight
  • Wulfen (Novella) by Chris Wraight
  • Deathwolf (Audio Book) by Andy Smillie
  • Doomseeker (Audio Book) by Nick Kyme
  • Raptor (Audio Book) by Gav Thorpe
  • The Space Wolves series:
    • Space Wolf (Novel) by William King (1999)
    • Ragnar's Claw (Novel) by William King (2000)
    • Grey Hunter (Novel) by William King (2002)
    • Wolfblade (Novel) by William King (2003)
    • Sons of Fenris (Novel) by Lee Lightner (2007)
    • Wolf's Honour (Novel) by Lee Lightner (2008)

Gallery

Advertisement