Warhammer 40K Kill Team: Killzone Volkus

Games Workshop

£72.99 £82.50 Save £9.51

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Recommended Paint

Key Features:

  • Enhance your games with a multilevel urban Killzone
  • Includes a double-sided game board and 14 pieces of plastic terrain
  • Contains everything you need to shake up your games with new tactical options

Volkus is a large and mineral-rich world, home to sprawling hive cities, mining and logging complexes, and vast manufacturing facilities that produce vital materials required across the Imperium. Now, teams of elite operatives clash in the rubble-strewn hive streets, and Imperial forces attempt to secure crucial objectives from alien invaders.

This set includes a game board and a multipart plastic kit that builds 14 terrain pieces to create Killzone: Volkus – an urban battlefield to enhance games of Kill Team. Featuring ruined buildings and structures of various sizes alongside strongholds for cover, and themed rubble scatter terrain, the kit recreates the ruined, multi-leveled industrial complexes of Volkus, and supports vertical play.

This kit contains:

  • 1x 30" by 22" double-sided game board
  • 2x Buildings
  • 8x Scatter terrain pieces
  • 2x Large ruins
  • 2x Small ruins

This kit contains 35 plastic components. The terrain pieces are supplied unassembled and unpainted. We recommend using Citadel Plastic Glue and Citadel Colour paints.

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.

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