
NECRONS DESIGNERS' NOTES
In the Necrons Designers' Notes, the Warhammer 40,000 Games Development team individually discuss their perspectives on the Necrons. Follow the author's links below.
Andy Chambers | Pete Haines | Graham McNeill, Andy Hoare & Phil Kelly
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Andy Chambers |
ORIGINS OF THE NECRONS
Andy C: It's hard to go back far enough to put a finger on
really where the Necrons originated from. They first appeared in WD217 as a
set of miniatures. This initial outing was in an effort to introduce a new force
of alien raiders with a very limited selection of miniatures - just Necron Warriors
and Scarabs by master fabricator Dave Andrews. The background story for these
early Necron raiders revealed them to be the remnants of an unbelievably ancient
race known as the Necrontyr.
The ruins of their tomb-temples had been discovered on many worlds as the last apparent remains of a highly advanced race which had become extinct tens of millions of years before. Such scattered clues as could be found about the Necrontyr revealed little about them, and the explorations of their dead worlds had been filed away in the immense data stores and repositories of the Adepts of Terra and Mars and forgotten. Only when the depredations of skeletal raiders at the fringes of Imperial space came to light was the connection made to an alien race which should be, by all rights, long dead.
All went well and the Necrons proved rather popular, leading to the addition of the heavily armoured Immortals, fast moving Destroyers and a commander in the shape of a Necron Lord. Then came Warhammer 40,000 3rd edition and a long, fallow period for the Necrons while the other races had their Codexes updated with lots of new miniatures. Through all this the Necron players have persisted with rather appropriate implacability, doubtless knowing that they were onto something good.
Chapter Approved got a steady trickle of reports on fighting with Necrons and suggestions for the army, leading to several Chapter Approved updates in White Dwarf. All the while, the Necron Codex and plastic Necron Warriors lurked on the edge of the virtual event horizon that is our long-range plan. Fortunately, even before the Tau were fully underway, plans were being drawn for the return of the ancient Necrontyr.
OUT OF THE TOMB IT CREPT
The
contrast between the Necrons and the Tau couldn't have been greater. The Tau,
a young dynamic race with a kind of optimism, which is frankly out of place
in the Warhammer 40,000 universe. The Necrons; ancient beyond belief, the unquiet
vestige of a long-forgotten race which ruled the galaxy when mankind still thought
bashing rocks together was a really smart idea. For the Tau we had emphasised
the near-future feel of their technology and outlook to give them a distinct
feel. With the Necrons we considered the same things. They were evidently unthinkably
old, inhumanly patient and their technology could achieve miracles unapproachable
even by the Eldar. Their background as raiders had included various dark hints
about their motivations and origins but nothing concrete was known.
I tried writing a short story, Deus Ex Mechanicus, centring around an Adeptus Mechanicus explorator team investigating Necron tombs. As part of this I hit on an idea of why the Necrons looked the way they did - the death mask face and skeletal bodies would give a clear message to any race:
The foe was terrible to see, their shining metal skulls and skeletons too symbolic to be missed. HERE IS DEATH, they had been built to communicate, in any language, across any gulf of time and to any race.
That was not the worst of them. These harbingers seemed to live in a horrible sense. Each was a mechanism to be sure, but one with a fierce anime, like the idol of some ferocious, primitive god.
Not only were they death, but they manifest a horrible sense of passion, even joy in their work.
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Jes Goodwin |
But this all still left the most fundamental questions about the Necrons unanswered; who made them, what did they want, and where were they now?
THE C'TAN

The
original Emperor of the Warhammer 40,000 universe, Rick Priestley, taught me
an invaluable lesson early in my career. When you have a big, ever-expanding
back story, it never pays to be too tidy with it. If you leave some plot threads
unfinished and some enigmatic mentions unexplained you always have new elements
to bring forward at a later date and players have plenty of material to bring
into their own games if they like.
A good example of this is the C'tan. Back in the second edition Rick included a mention of the 'quiescent perils of the C'tan' nothing more than that, except that 'they lay beyond the gates of Varl.'
There was something which I always liked about that little phrase so I gleefully dropped other little mentions of the C'tan here and there with the vague notion of doing more about them one day, most notably the C'tan phase sword of the Callidus assassin and its mythic power to defeat any kind of armour or force field protection. To be honest I do this a lot and it's one of the real pleasures of the ever-expanding Warhammer 40,000 universe when one of these seeds bears fruit.
Anyway,
I'm getting ahead of myself. In writing Deus Ex Mechanicus (published in Inferno!
#20) I had put in a villain of unsurpassed power to really bring home the capabilities
of the ancient Necrons, and to show a little of their potential contempt for
the races which had inherited the galaxy. In the course of writing, this entity
grew to be more than just another Necron, rather it was the master and they
were its slaves. When we were making proposals for a new Warhammer 40,000 race
(Tau and Kroot winning out in the end), I had included one
for the C'tan, masters of the Necrons.
Inevitably, the two ideas merged and the C'tan popped into full existence as the Necrons' 'gods', the powerful beings that had transformed the ancient Necrontyr into the Necrons. This gave the Necrons what they needed, a motivating force and a sense of personality - the kind lent by a potent Necromancer or Vampire Count to a Fantasy Undead army. The last few blocks were falling into place and the Necrons were becoming more and more of a fully rounded race.
To cement the C'tan and Necrons into the Warhammer 40,000 background we worked up a suitably cosmic struggle for supremacy at the dawn of time. The C'tan and their Necron slaves had battled against the Old Ones for the fate of the galaxy millions of years ago, a war in heaven that shattered star systems and wiped out entire species. The C'tan were victorious but forces unleashed in the conflict threatened to rob them of their prize. To avoid the ensuing cataclysm, the Necrons and their gods withdrew into their stasis tombs to wait in the shadows until their time came to rise again.
Andy Chambers | Pete Haines | Graham McNeill, Andy Hoare & Phil Kelly


