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Tabletop Battles app adds 11th edition Warhammer 40,000 support

Tabletop Battles now tracks 11th edition games, scoring, and missions for free, giving players a ready-made way to test lists before the rest of the launch tools settle in.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Tabletop Battles app adds 11th edition Warhammer 40,000 support
Source: assets.tabletopbattles.com
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The new edition of Warhammer 40,000 did not wait for the rest of the hobby’s software stack to catch up. Goonhammer updated Tabletop Battles on June 12 with 11th edition support, giving players a free way to record games with primary and secondary scoring and built-in recommended mission pairings.

That matters immediately for test games, league nights, and event prep. Instead of forcing players to wedge the new edition into old tracking fields or handwritten notes, Tabletop Battles now matches the current mission structure closely enough to make early results useful. Detachment support and terrain layouts, including deployments, were promised for the next few days, which means the app is already moving toward the full shape of the new rules environment as more reference material becomes available.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The other easy-to-miss advantage is how little friction the app adds. Tabletop Battles is completely free and does not require a login, while Administratum accounts can be used as Tabletop Battles logins for players who already have one. That lowers the barrier for anyone who wants to run a few practice games, compare scoring habits across lists, or keep a clean record of a club ladder without building yet another account first.

The timing lined up with Games Workshop’s launch-week rollout. Warhammer Community said new Event Companions were available to download on June 12 and Imperial faction packs were available on June 11, while the new edition was also being positioned around Armageddon, the boxed set that includes 61 plastic push-fit miniatures. Warhammer.com listed Armageddon for a June 20 launch date, with pre-orders shipping on or after that day.

The broader support package is just as revealing. Warhammer Community described the Chapter Approved Mission Deck 2026-27 as an 88-card pack with enough for two players, six terrain-objective tokens, and a rules pamphlet, while framing the new edition around clearer rules language, terrain changes, objectives, and mission selection. Tabletop Battles now slots into that same system as the place where those missions can actually be lived on the table, not just read off a preview page.

For players trying to see how 11th edition really plays, that is the point. The app gives the community a way to start logging the new game in the new format right now, and that makes the first round of list-building, practice, and event planning feel a lot less like guesswork.

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