Warhammer reveals new plastic Titan kits for Legions Imperialis painters
Two new Warlord Titans and a Reaver landed in plastic, with separate upgrade kits and alternate heads that make them ripe for showpiece builds.

Warhammer Community put two new Warlord Titan kits and one new Reaver Titan kit on the table for Legions Imperialis, all in plastic and all carrying the sort of weapon loadouts that turn a build into a display project. For painters, the real story was not just damage output. It was the way these kits invited oversized trim, deep panel lines, and the kind of hard-edged weathering that makes a Titan read from across the cabinet.
The headline Warlord build paired a Quake Cannon with a Conversion Beam Extirpator, with carapace options for paired gatling blasters or paired turbo-laser destructors. The Quake Cannon was described as bringing a Quake effect and a 5" Blast, which suits the visual language of a siege engine meant to feel like it is shaking the table as well as the game board. The second Warlord swapped in a Volkite Destructor and Macro-gatling Blaster, then added a graviton ruinator and a carapace-mounted Vulcan mega-bolter array. The Reaver Titan came armed with a Graviton Obliterator and Volkite Annihilator, with a choice of Vulcan mega-bolter or conversion beam dissolutor on the carapace.
The kits mattered for hobby work because the weapons were also split into three separate upgrade sets, giving builders more room to plan magnets, swap options, and break assemblies into cleaner sub-assemblies for painting. Each Titan kit also included an alternate head, a small but welcome detail for anyone who likes to push a machine from stock battlefield hardware into a true centrepiece. That matters on a model this size, where a faceplate, a carapace weapon, or even a different stance can change how the whole engine reads on the shelf.

Legions Imperialis itself is built around vast, epic-scale battles with miniatures smaller than standard Horus Heresy scale, and that context has always made Titans feel like anchors for an army rather than isolated showpieces. The launch box arrived with 223 plastic miniatures and two Warhound Titans, while Games Workshop said support for Adeptus Titanicus and Aeronautica Imperialis would continue alongside the system. Put next to that history, the new plastic Warlords and Reaver looked aimed straight at painters who want one more reason to reopen an already impressive Titan case and make the next engine louder, brighter, and more brutal than the last.
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