Contents
Contents
DYNASTY LEDGER · CYCLE 247.SZAREKHANNECRODERMIS ACTIVE
NECRONTYR
Dynasties of the Slumbering Stars
We did not die. We laid down our flesh and took up the eternal alloy. The galaxy will remember.— Ledger of the Silent King · cycle 247.szarekhan
The deathless legions advance beneath the shadow of a Necron Monolith, gauss beams slicing through the darkness
The Necrons are perhaps the most ancient threat to face the galaxy in the 41st Millennium, predating even the Aeldari empire that rose and fell while they slumbered in their stasis-crypts. Sixty million years ago, they were the Necrontyr, a mortal race cursed with short, cancer-riddled lives by the harsh radiation of their dying sun. Consumed by jealousy of the long-lived Old Ones who ruled the galaxy, the Necrontyr waged a war they could not win—until they discovered the C\'tan, star-gods of immense power who offered them the ultimate bargain: immortality in exchange for their souls and flesh, transferred into bodies of living metal called necrodermis. This terrible transformation, known as biotransference, gave the Necrontyr their undying forms but stripped them of emotion, creativity, and the spark of life itself. The cold, mechanical bodies they now inhabit are eternal prisons for minds that remember being mortal.
The War in Heaven that followed saw these ancient machine warriors and their C\'tan masters shatter the Old Ones\' civilization and nearly exterminate several younger races, including the ancestors of the Aeldari and the Orks. Yet in the war\'s final stages, the Necron overlords turned upon their enslaved star-gods, shattering them into shards that could be controlled and wielded as weapons. Victorious but diminished, facing the resurgent psychic races of the galaxy and the growing threat of the Warp entities the war had awakened, the Silent King Szarekh ordered the Great Sleep—a hibernation of millions of years during which the younger races would exhaust themselves while the deathless legions waited to reclaim their dominion.
A winged Overlord stands triumphant atop a shattered monument, the deathless legions spreading across the conquered world
Now, across the galaxy, the Tomb Worlds awaken. Where once their stasis-crypts were undisturbed for eons, the expansion of the Empire, the depredations of the Tyranids, and the stirring of the Chaos gods have triggered the resurrection protocols. These immortal warriors emerge from their tombs not as mindless automatons, but as the inheritors of the greatest civilization the galaxy has ever known. Their legions march in cold silence, their weapons erase targets from existence at the molecular level, and their technology makes even the most advanced Imperial and Aeldari devices seem primitive by comparison.
The undying lords do not hate the younger races that have spread across their galaxy—hatred would require emotion they largely lack. They simply view them as vermin infesting property that belongs to the Dynasties by right of prior conquest. Some overlords seek to negotiate or even ally with useful species; others simply begin the methodical extermination of all life on worlds they consider theirs. The variation stems from the differing amounts of personality retained through biotransference—the highest ranks maintained more of their original selves, while common warriors are little more than automatons responding to cold command protocols.
The technological superiority of these ancient machines is absolute in many domains. Their gauss weapons can strip matter apart at the atomic level, their living metal bodies repair themselves from almost any damage, and their mastery of dimensional science allows them to phase through solid matter and teleport across vast distances. Most terrifyingly, they possess the ability to manipulate time and reality itself through devices like the Celestial Orrery. Yet even this power has eternal limits—the deathless lords no longer possess the creative spark to invent new technologies, only maintain and rediscover what they once built. They are masters of a dead science, heirs to wonders they can replicate but never improve upon.
The relationship between these ancient machines and other galactic powers varies dramatically based on the individual dynasty and overlord involved. The Empire has faced them as implacable destroyers who erase entire worlds, yet has also encountered those willing to negotiate temporary truces against common enemies like Chaos or Tyranids. The Aeldari remember the War in Heaven and view them as ancient enemies, yet both races share an interest in preventing the dominance of the Warp-spawned horrors. The Orks simply see them as excellent opponents worthy of a good fight, oblivious to the ancient history between their races.
As more Tomb Worlds awaken and more Dynasties emerge from the Great Sleep, these deathless legions represent a threat of existential proportions. They cannot be reasoned with by appeals to morality—they have none. They cannot be outpaced technologically—their science is millions of years more advanced. They cannot be defeated through attrition—their warriors simply reassemble from damage that would destroy any organic soldier. The only question remaining is whether these cold, eternal masters will reclaim their empire through measured conquest or simply exterminate the younger races as the vermin they consider them to be. Either way, the galaxy faces a reckoning with its oldest and most powerful rulers.