Even after years of development, Warhammer 40,000 fans have no clue when or where Henry Cavill’s shared universe of 40K films and TV shows will actually take place. Thankfully, the one massive clue offered by Cavill has officially been solved after years of mystery, suggesting the most likely glimpse of what story his Warhammer universe will tell. And maybe, just maybe, precisely what the opening shots of Cavill’s series could actually be.
Why The Warhammer Movie & TV Universe Are Such A Mystery
Unlike Star Wars, The Fantasy Setting’s ‘Main Story’ Spans 10,000+ Years
For fans of modern franchises like Star Wars or The Lord of the Rings, the question of ‘when and where a new series will be set’ in the larger timeline is a straightforward one. But when it comes to the timeline of Warhammer 40,000 that question has only grown in rominence from the very beginning, with every month since the official announcement only building the uncertainty and speculation. And for good reason, since Cavill’s team has literally 15,000 years and a galaxy of space to choose from.
It is just as likely, for instance, that the first Amazon MGM series would seek to introduce viewers to the immortal Emperor of Mankind at the start of his story (8,000 BC), as it would to pick up in the ‘current era’ of the 40K lore, 50,000 years later. And with the entire story centering on the Horus Heresy, in which the Emperor’s many Primarch sons were fractured in a massive rebellion, the question was obvious: seek to adapt this epic event, or deem it too confusing a place to launch a 40K universe?
Limit the story to one of the sons, or a handful, or all of them? Focus entirely on the human side of the conflict, or on the famous armored mascots of the franchise, the Space Marines? Needless to say, fans have been desperate for answers. Instead, Cavill delivered an irresistible riddle to tide them over.
Henry Cavill Dropped Just One Massive Clue To His Warhammer TV Show
The Actor’s Cryptic Symbol Teased A Shocking New Era for 40K Lore
Hopefully even casual readers can appreciate the challenge facing Cavill and co., faced with something even broader and more layered than the Star Wars canon, but without one ‘main story’ as prominent as that of Anakin Skywalker. Where does one begin? (Considering Cavill’s extensive knowledge of Warhammer 40K games, novels, and expanded media, speculators could not even claim an ‘obvious’ choice to be more likely than an underrated one.)
And so, Cavill delivered the fans a massive clue… although nobody had any idea it was even happening at the time. When Amazon MGM Studios and Games Workshop struck a deal for the franchise’s rights, executive producer and star Henry Cavill shared his excitement on Instagram, alongside the iconic symbol of the Imperium of Mankind. Or more accurately, a version of the symbol which fans had not actually seen in the canon:
While the symbol of the Emperor’s twin eagles had developed over the course of his millennia-long campaign, the version used to make the announcement by Cavill (and Games Workshop, in a community post on their official website) was ominous. Depicting one glorious eagle looking backwards to history, but its future-facing mate appearing to be skeletal, withering, and decaying into darkness. The symbol would remain a cryptic mystery from December 2022 until Summer 2025, when its meaning was officially revealed.
With the novels detailing the Horus Heresy finally coming to a close, the sigil was finally deployed in marketing for Era of Ruin, the name officially given to the short story collection set in the days immediately following the defeat of Horus, and the end of the Siege of Terra novel seriers. A major hint (if not confirmation) of when and where Cavill was targeting his expansion of Warhammer 40K lore.
And now, the first full novel set in this dark period post-Heresy has given fans the clearest potential setting yet, including the key details, characters, and events to be explored.
Warhammer’s New Series is Too Perfect A TV Show Set-Up To Be Coincidence
The New Novel Could Be The Exact Introduction To Cavill’s TV Show
Without criticizing the stories contained within Era of Ruin, many fans were understandably eager to move into the events immediately following the Horus Heresy in a full length novel, as opposed to a short story collection following a broad range of characters. Thankfully, that’s precisely what GW delivered next, announcing “The Scouring,” a new series devoted to the immediate aftermath of the war, detailing ‘what came next.’ A bold new canon for the Warhammer 40K timeline, seemingly also planned for Cavill’s teased universe of 40K shows and movies.
And the first novel in the line, Ashes of the Imperium by Chris Wraight, wastes no time in laying out the landscape. It’s still speculation at this point, but should Cavill and GW’s tease of a post-Heresy universe be accurate, the opening lines of the novel are a perfect fit for an opening scroll for any TV show or film set within the period:
Horus Lupercal is dead. KIlled by his father in a final, desperate act… The Emperor is entombed on the Golden Throne. Humanity cries out for Him to lead them through the darkness, but the Master of Mankind remains silent.
The Space Marine Legions, once mighty enough to conquer the stars, are shattered and leaderless. Those traitors who survive run for their lives, seeking to escape retribution. Already they turn on each other.
The Imperium’s fate is just as uncertain. The brotherhood of Primarchs, first broken by Horus, begins to fracture further. Some wish for unity, others hunger for vengeance at any cost.
It is a time of reckoning… Ashes of the Imperium are all that remain. The Scouring has begun.
The accompanying artwork is not only a treat for fans, but teases the long-awaited (and long-imagined) gathering of the Primarchs. With the sons scattered across the galaxy, it had previously seemed that any movie or TV show would struggle to include more than one or two, lest it risk growing too complicated, or too detached. Yet the gathering of the heroes for the Horus Heresy posed its own problem, since the story of Horus’ rebellion was always too big to adapt well.
That problem has been solved almost immediately, with the events of The Scouring uniting the loyal Primarchs in one location. The novel itself follows through on the artwork, with internal strife and open debates between the likes of Roboute Guilliman, Rogal Dorn, Vulkan, Leman Russ, Lion El’Jonson, and more. With Custodians, Sisters of Silence, high-ranking members of Terra’s leadership, and more arguing for the fate of mankind, an adaptation to live-action is impossible to ignore while reading.
The challenge of adapting the scale of the Heresy is also solved: instead of repeating the stories already known, pick up in the shocking devastation left behind, writing a new, unknown story. Not to mention getting to include the most compelling traitors being hunted down, as well as the iconic Space Marines being explored in a completely refreshing, disorganized fashion.
Make no mistake: until other evidence arrives, the fact that this exact period in the millennia-spanning Warhammer timeline was teased by Henry Cavill with his announcement of a shared Amazon MGM universe makes perfect sense. All of the pieces are in place for The Scouring, meaning a rough outline for Henry Cavill’s Warhammer 40K universe may finally be resolving into view.