And about half of the fallen Orks got up again a few minutes later and walked it off. "Boss, me arm's come off. Anywun got a staple gun I can borra ta gerrit back on?"
2:34 Jesus, is this ragebait? Apparently, only one Eldar Titan is being destroyed, quite obviously by the surviving Knight charging into it! Seriously, wtf man...
It is a powerful symbolic imagery that fits perfectly with the concept of the Immaterium: The way the statue of the Emperor (in darkness I shall be light) transforms into a horde of charging Orks (in times of doubt, I shall keep faith) is simply brilliant. The prologue highlights the contrast between unwavering faith and paralyzing doubt. While some Space Marines, symbolically swept away by the storm of their enemies, break under their own uncertainty and lose their faith, the Space Marine with the distinctive scar on his face remains steadfast to the very end. Though he falls, his faith in the Emperor remains unshaken. He dies unbroken and finds peace in his sacrifice. Even in the face of overwhelming odds, he emerges victorious-not through physical triumph, but through his ultimate sacrifice for the Emperor. How can you not see that?
And about half of the fallen Orks got up again a few minutes later and walked it off.
"Boss, me arm's come off. Anywun got a staple gun I can borra ta gerrit back on?"
Those are some thin space marines...
They were natty back then
Wow... eldar vs orks vs french fries...
Epic
Skinny Jean space marines
Now that's intro alright in Dawn of War 3. This is best on battlefield ever!
A perfect intro
Looks good if you know nothing about warhammer 40K.
who kill the eldar´s titan ?
NO idea
I think it was an Imperial Knight. Which class of Knight, idk, but most likely one of them
2:34 Jesus, is this ragebait? Apparently, only one Eldar Titan is being destroyed, quite obviously by the surviving Knight charging into it! Seriously, wtf man...
Опять орки, эльдар и космодес. А можно наконец-то некронов, тау
The epilogue makes no sense
Exactly what I was thinking
It is a powerful symbolic imagery that fits perfectly with the concept of the Immaterium: The way the statue of the Emperor (in darkness I shall be light) transforms into a horde of charging Orks (in times of doubt, I shall keep faith) is simply brilliant. The prologue highlights the contrast between unwavering faith and paralyzing doubt. While some Space Marines, symbolically swept away by the storm of their enemies, break under their own uncertainty and lose their faith, the Space Marine with the distinctive scar on his face remains steadfast to the very end. Though he falls, his faith in the Emperor remains unshaken. He dies unbroken and finds peace in his sacrifice. Even in the face of overwhelming odds, he emerges victorious-not through physical triumph, but through his ultimate sacrifice for the Emperor.
How can you not see that?
Bullshit, to be fair