



I'm writing a fanfic where a Space Marine hammerfists a Carnifex over its dome so hard it breaks through the chitin and bone, and exposes it's brain and causes it to start leaking out and cuts it off from the Hivemind, would this be lore accurate or nay?
If they just ate a couple planets worth of biomass, do they take the time to essentially digest it all on their hive ships and in the meantime just ignore any passing ships/planets until they feel hungry again, or is the process too fast for that?
After many millenia of erosion and demolition, the Doom Hunter base had long been forgotten, torn down and replaced with the HQ of the Imperial Inquisition, but after a mild warp storm on the edge of the Sol system, trace waves of warp energy entered the central processing unit of one of the only functional Doom Hunter units left within trace remnants of the permafrost, stirring it awake and sending it into a rampage.
After hours of slaughter of both Inquisition members and in the area Space Marines, an orbiting battle barge belonging to the Ultramarines dispatched an Imperial Dreadnought to quell the disturbance on Holy Terra. Who wins?
I'm a fairly casual PC gamer and mainly stick to stuff like Gmod, Project Zomboid and other games that don't exactly require being a sweat lord to get through the game. I heard that the first Half-Life game was pretty tough so I wanna know what kinda hard it is, is it unfair and annoyingly hard or is it fair? Or are the people I heard from lying and its easy?
I feel it is slightly unfair to ascribe them morality as Orks are quite literally genetically designed and made to fight and kill and wage destruction. Same with the Tyranids, they are more like a force of nature or a virus than something with "morals". Though there are some references to the Hivemind being aware and malevolent, but it still kinda has to do what it does for self preservation.
Let's say during the Vigilante Deku arc after the prison breaks and when Japan is in ruin, Doc Ock and AFO combine forces, can Deku and the Remaining heros stop them?
I feel if I give birth to a child and know that there is a not insignificant chance they may end up eternally tortured in Slaanesh's belly if they die in a way that destroys their soul stone (probably not that uncommon given the sheer amount of explosive ordinance and Dakka humanity and Orks use), I may just opt out of having a child that might suffer that fate. Is there much on the Eldar philosophy on this kind of "moral" dilemma?