Warhammer 40K: Chaos Gen 2 Demon Engine - Flogger

Chaos Gen 2 Demon Engine - Whiplasher

CHAOSDECIMATORDAEMONENGINE

The Flogger is a cruel and abominable creature, and in order to adapt more quickly to the war environment on the planet with evil conditions, the Chaos Alpha Legion has developed a new generation of demon mecha - the Flogger based on the first generation of demon engines. The essence www.biquge.info of this subspace creature is confined and bound in the armored giant of the bipedal war machine. Large, heavy shoulder armor made of tainted reinforced ceramic and pure gold, as well as the lower "head", give the whipper a distinctive hunched posture that exudes a disturbing and vicious sense of coercion.

The Inquisitor's scholars are unsure how evil it would take to bear such a heinous invention and to defend vast areas of armed arms like the Floggers: rapid-firing ButcherCannons, multi-barrelled Stormlasers, and giant rake-like siege claws... The cluster is too busy to be loaded. The Flogger is a small to medium-sized weapon of war, far superior to the powerful defiant dreadnought mechs used by the Order of Astatsu, and is believed to be built to augment the ranks of ancient equipment that still serve the Legion of Betrayal. If true, it would be a source of fear for the Lashers as many Imperial warriors were lost at the hands of these deadly war machines.

Plague flying insects

During the final and most terrifying phase of the Siege of Hualakar, the Plague Legion unleashed many terrifying and dark engines of war into the ravaged world. The engines are all of a strange shape, and their filthy shapes are constantly showing their evil, and some of them have long been enemies of the Demon Inquisition, and they will undoubtedly be a great disaster when they arrive in Hualakar. But the tiniest of the other are unheard of (or that no one will live to tell a story about them after encountering them), and the most terrifying and peculiar of these are the plague flies.

The Plague Flying Insects looked like a hybrid of insects, flying machines, and demons, and they quickly became a terrifying sight that hung in the sky with the poisonous smoke of Valakana. As they fly, the humming sound of their rotors echoes across the smoke-strewn battlefield, and is seen by the Imperial Guard soldiers as a harbinger of death. Most of the soldiers who survived the battle with the plague flew were crippled or decomposed, and terrible rumors from their mouths would soon spread among the ranks. The fear of such rumors can have a significant negative impact on the morale of the troops, and this threat to morale is of deep concern to the commissars. Until the end of the campaign, any soldier caught spreading such stories will face arrest and be sent to the Camp of Atonement...

The Plague Insects have a terrifying ability to live up to their deadly reputation, which has been proven on the battlefield, and this is undoubtedly a great misfortune for the Empire. Armed with a rapid-fire cannon and a mouth-like weapon, they shoot a corrosive, poisonous bile that can consume metal and flesh in a matter of moments, making them lethal to defending infantry and light vehicles, and these troops rarely have a chance to resist when attacked by biters. The stubby, rotting bodies of these plague insects made of rusty plate armor and life-like muscles had the ability to rebound against shrapnel that hit them. At the same time, the actions of the plague flying insects seem to be driven by some kind of dark intelligence...

Shortly after encountering the Plague Bugs, the Plague Bugs were often described by terrified and often severely disabled soldiers as some kind of flying vehicle or some subspace-corrupted insect, but this is not true. Based on the research conducted by Inquisitor Yi Cong and the Think-Tank Clerk, we can accurately define the Plague Flying Worm as a kind of demonic engine. Blood and corpses are like "orders" to the plague insects, and if they smell the slightest trace, they will gather in swarms like scavenging flies or birds of prey and go to battle. The Empire's psykers and Inquisition's watchers can easily trace the rancid trail left behind by the Nurgle. Where these demons have appeared, the air is filled with a thick smoke of poison, and the soil blisters and slowly rots as pus seeps out of their rotten bodies and drips onto the land of Hualakar.

According to some unconclusive reports, plague flies will land on carrion corpses for "provisions", and they will cause the dead or dissolve the bodies of the dead and suck the melted liquid out, perhaps in order to fuel themselves or maintain their form in the physical world. However, some are skeptical, arguing that there is no evidence that the plague flies can be stopped or need to be restocked.

In Hualakar, we recorded our first encounter with this demonic engine and named it the Plague Flying Worm, but the Empire still doesn't know the origin of this object. They appear in several later battles in Hualakar, and are often accompanied by rebels known as the "Cleaners" and several detachments of plague warriors. In addition to this, there is some dubious evidence that they are also present in the ongoing Charadis Rift Warzone and the Dark Crusade.