![]() Little does he know that he’s about to set forth events in motion with this task, and these events will rock the Imperium to its core. So, when Horus gets a chance to lead from the front again he jumps on it like a Tyranid jump every unsuspecting guardsman in this setting. The reader sees Horus in the closest thing to a desk job that a Primarch could hold. Horus’ is starting to show cracks in his charismatic and powerful nature as the stress of being Warmaster is slowly starting to wear him down with every choice he has to make and every fumble he has to cover. Without further ado, let’s talk about just how well False Gods acts as a new entry into the Black Library meta.įalse Gods takes place shortly after Horus Rising, and what we see is a legion still reeling from the aftershocks of the horrid catastrophe of the failed negotiations of the Interex. ![]() ![]() ![]() McNeill had a Herculean task set upon him in following the classic in the Black Library mythos that is Horus Rising would have been a gargantuan understatement. This time, we have False Gods by Graham McNeill. Time for book number two in my overarching series of Horus Heresy reviews. ![]()
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