So I’ve heard some descriptions of the 40,000 lore from a podcast I watch, and it sounds incredible, but there’s an awful lot of options to start from, with people recommending many different book series and youtube summaries. Is there a simpler approach, like just going into one standalone book to ground yourself before a bigger series? Or from a game to a tie-in book of some kind? Many thanks.

  • opossumtriceps@lemmy.one
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    1 month ago

    I started a few years ago, got hooked by the novella I got as an extra in the Mechanicus game. So I started to look where to start, just as you, and ended with this Horus Heresy Spoiler-Free reading order (kind of overwhelming, tbh). You could start with the first 3, then choose your own path (or not, no need to push yourself). Iirc the first book tells you how everything started and ended, and all those books are just deep dives in the point of view of a main character/legion/faction.

    Fast forward to 40k: Einserhorn novels are great too.

    Happy reading!

  • Entropy@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    If you’re interested in reading any of the books, I would recommend starting with the Horus Heresy novels. There are a lot of them, and some are better than others, but the first three are a good place to start. They’re sort of the bigining of everything and lay a good foundation for the lore moving forward. The Lexicanum is a good wiki to rabbit hole on if you just want to ingest raw lore.

  • CyberEgg@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 month ago

    Click yourself randomly through lexicanum and pick a boock based on which stories you find the most intriguing. Or start with the Horus Heresy, they’re noch bad books and it’s chronologically in order

    • scream@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 month ago

      That’s a real neat idea honestly, thank you for the idea as well as the recommendation

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Horus Heresy. Specifically Horus Rising os a good starting point. From a human point of view.

    Not sure beyond that.

  • Strayce@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    I just recently decided to get into the lore myself, from my research the three consistent recommendations on all the lists are (in no particular order):

    Eisenhorn

    Horus Heresy

    Gaunt’s Ghosts

  • statler_waldorf@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    I actually stalled out on the Horus Heresy as my entry point into WH40k. I absolutely devoured Gaunt’s Ghosts though. Military sci-fi told from the perspective of a regiment of Imperial Marines and their commissar/officer, Ibram Gaunt.

  • How_do_I_computah@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Another vote for Horus Rising. They’re also in audiobook format. Just keep in mind the Horus Heresy time period is 10k years before current 40k so it’s kinda WH 30k and there is not a lot of xenos/alien content in there.

    Almost anything by Dan Abnett is gold. I would put Chris Wraight in a very close second place and Aaron Dempski Bowden (ADB) in a close third. There are other good authors too John French and Graham McNeil.

    Good standalone stories set in current 40k are also Armageddon, Dante, Blades of Damocles, And Lords of Silence (Chaos Space Marines)

    Gaunt’s Ghosts is a great series about the Imperial Guard/Astra Militarum

    Eisenhorn is a good Inquisitor series written like James Bond books.

    Ciaphas Cain is for some lighthearted fun in a grimdark universe