Deathshrieker Rocket Battery
EntriesDeathshrieker Rocket Battery is backordered - Items typically arrive to our warehouse in 7-10 business days.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Description
Description
Witness the devastating power of the Deathshrieker Rocket Battery, where infernal warfare meets tactical superiority. These instruments of destruction unleash the Bullfather's wicked fire—a daemonic chemical flame that ignites upon contact and sweeps across the battlefield with relentless hunger. The Hashu-Zharr consumes all in its wake, yet reserves its most terrible wrath for massive targets and monsters, leaving them consumed by lingering infernos that transform flesh into blazing ruin. Command the field with a weapon so fearsome that even hardened Zharrdron artillerists cannot hide their grim satisfaction. Dominate your enemies with uncompromising force.
This multipart plastic kit builds a Deathshrieker Rocket Battery, a terrifying siege engine for your Helsmiths of Hashut armies in games Warhammer Age of Sigmar. Ingeniously designed by the chaos-touched duardin, these rockets fuse daemonic energies with potent warheads, capable of taking down even the largest targets. The kit includes two duardin and a hobgrot to crew your devastating war engine, which is adorned with Hashutite runes and the bull motif, making for an excellent painting project.
This miniature can alternatively be built as a Tormentor Bombard, an infantry-roasting mortar.
This kit is supplied with one Helsmiths of Hashut Transfer Sheet, containing 450 high-quality waterslide transfers. These include symbols for the Ur-Zorn, Muspelzharr, Zharr Vyxa, and The Forge Anathema ziggurats, along with other cursed sigils and runes to decorate your miniature.
This kit comprises 50 plastic components and 1x Citadel 100mm Round Base. This miniature requires assembly and is supplied unpainted
Payment & Security
Payment methods
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

