Warhammer 40K Kill Team: Inquisitorial Agents

Games Workshop

£31.99 £36.00 Save £4.01

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Recommended Paint

Key Features:

  • Secret acolytes who guard the Imperium
  • Unleash seven agents, including a cyborg Gun Servitor and floating Tome-skull
  • Includes a sheet of 39 tokens for use in games of Kill Team

Inquisitorial Agents are secret teams featuring customised servitors, and soldiers seconded from any and every military branch. They're backed up by dangerous psykers, convicted killers with skills too ‘useful’ to waste, and religious zealots whose fervour shields them from experiences that would drive more rational souls into madness.

This multipart plastic kit builds seven Inquisitorial Agents, loyal acolytes of an Imperial Inquisitor. These miniatures can be used as Inquisitorial Agent operatives in games of Kill Team or as part of Imperial Agents armies in Warhammer 40,000. Most models in this hugely varied kit can be built as two completely different specialists – an Interrogator or Enlightener, a Questkeeper or Pistolier, a Mystic or Hexorcist, and a Death World Veteran or Penal Legionnaire. You'll also find an Autosavant, a Tome-skull, and a Gun Servitor that can be built with one of three weapons.

Inside the box, you will also find a set of 39 Inquisitorial Agents tokens, so you can easily keep track of your equipment and in-game effects in the heat of battle.

This set comprises 73 plastic components and is supplied with 6x Citadel 25mm Round Bases and 1x Citadel 32mm Round Base. These miniatures are supplied unpainted and require assembly – we recommend using Citadel Plastic Glue and Citadel Colour paints.

Note that you will need to requisition additional operatives to use these models in games of Kill Team – either a second Kill Team: Inquisitorial Agents set or models from Kill Team: Death Korps, Kill Team: Exaction Squad, Kill Team: Imperial Navy Breachers, Kill Team: Kasrkin, Sisters of Silence, or Tempestus Scions kits – all available separately.

An alternative Warhammer 40,000 version of this kit, without the token sheet, is also available.

Games Workshop have two broad methods for painting their models. Both are entirely viable options, though have significant differences in the paints required (detailed below). You can find all of the required paints in the 'recommended paint' section below, whether you simply want to get it out onto the tabletop ASAP (i.e. 'Battle Ready'), or want to take your time and make it a masterpiece (i.e. 'Parade Ready'):

1. Classic Method - uses acrylic paints to build layers of colour and depth. Usually topped off with a shade paint to really make the shadows pop. Probably the most beginner friendly method as mistakes are often easy to fix.

2. Contast Method - uses ink-like contrast painsts which sink into recesses, providing depth in highlights and shadows with a single layer of paint. It can take some practise to get this method to look great, but it's highly satisfying when it does work. Less forgiving when mistakes happen, though arguably the quicker method of the two options.