Lovehammer

Stories of Sailor Moon & Warhammer 40,000

IT IS THE 31st Millenium. Stepping out of the shadows,
the Emperor has guided Mankind from the Earth to
domination of the stars. He is master of humanity through
his ceaseless labours since before the dawn of history
and protector of the galaxy through the might of his
inexhaustible armies. He is the burning sun at the heart
of the Imperium, God in deed if not in word.

YET EVEN IN his divine status, the Emperor is not alone.
Unstoppable and magnificent, his followers lead mighty
fleets and legions in Great Crusades across the universe,
against the infinite enemies of humanity. At the forefront
of this are the brotherhood of Primarchs: the pinnacle of
genetic engineering, the ultimate masters of warfare and
progenitors of his Space Marine legions. In the name of
their father they have united a million worlds beneath
their banners. Chief amongst the children of the Emperor
is his daughter, the Silver Moon of the Imperium,
Princess Serenity. She is the vessel of all humanity's
hopes and dreams and her court of Senshi tread the stars
beside her brothers: lanterns of civilisation beside the
torches of war.

TO BE A man in such a times is to stand between
greatness and oblivion. For ten thousand years the
Imperium has teetered between ascencion to greatness
beyond imagining and a long and irreverible
annihilation at the hands of mankind's myriad foes. It is
to live knowing that Gods and Demons walk amongst us,
that every moment battles are fought that will decide the
future of everything, battles waged by both humble
Imperial Guardsman and the great God Machines of the
Adeptus Mechanicum, by the impassioned preaching of
the Ecclesiarchy and by the subtle agency of the Ordos of
the Inquisiton.

THESE ARE THE tales of those times. Forget the power of
faith and technology, for neither religion nor science can
predict the destiny of man. Forget the promise of
inheritance by the meek, for in the grim dark future there
is only struggle. Mankind is a star ascendant, but how
much further can a star rise before it falls?