Although it’s a big internet out there, the Tabletop digital universe is pretty small and spread out. In Content We Liked, we take a look at the articles, videos, podcasts, and products that caught our eyes or were noteworthy during the prior week you might have missed.
It’s my second week filling in for Steel Mentor, so this week is all about the thing I love most: weird nonsense
On the Internet at Large
More time wasting has occurred
— Andy Hemming (@andyhemming.bsky.social) October 4, 2025 at 4:18 PM
Let’s see those hands! Exactly what I love to see, body parts stuck where they aren’t supposed to be. Simple, effective and replicable, Andy’s done great work here making something that’s both straightforward and deeply unsettling. The belly buttons somehow add a real additional layer of weird to it – these were, once, born…
Googlyeyedskull is the greatest master of the weird that you probably aren’t following. This is a beautiful mess of paper, waste 3d print supports, bits and baking soda. It works horribly well, and is a good reminder that there’s lots of potential in the bits we otherwise chuck out. Oy Oy Saveloy indeed.
There’s a lot to talk about here with this fantastic trench crusade flamethrower tank, with every element of it drawing the eye in weird and interesting ways. Colour, texture, patterns and fantastic use of bits makes this a real lesson in how to do Trench Crusade – it’s not just blood and mud, it’s unsettling, weird and beautiful. Just look how it’s kicking it’s little legs in the air!
Ghoul Queen on Royal Terrorgoose
byu/thatwithtusks inageofsigmar
One of the magical things about Content We Liked is that all of us – writers, staff, patrons, all submit stuff for inclusion in the weekly CWL reel. That means you see stuff there’s no way you’d have run into otherwise – and the Ghoul Queen on Terrorgoose is a fantastic example of that. I love this. It is one of the greatest bits of work I’ve seen in a long time – beautifully executed, well thought through, fantastic balance between palanquin and goose, painted wonderfully in a lovely understated manner. It’s just really, really great work.
Here’s another one that I wouldn’t have otherwise seen – and I’m scurrying down to the nearest religious shop to follow along. Fantastic work from the Commoner’s Mirror, making unique, incredibly beautiful and really characterful terrain. Anything that recommends hitting a model with a hammer and chisel “with reckless abandon” is, in my opinion, really worth listening to. This will be perfect for Trench Crusade weirdoes, but broken and desecrated saint statues are going to work incredibly well for 40k boards and display cases too.
"Yokoyama-pattern" Knight Warden
byu/PaintKobold inImperialKnights
And finally! An amazing knight conversion/total rebuild that marries 40k with Kow Yokoyama and British WW2 camouflage to create something that isn’t just unique but channels a similar-but-different aesthetic in an incredibly pleasing way. A good knight build will always be close to my heart, and there’s something about this much more industrial, curved and weatherbeaten look that is tugging at my wallet to purchase another cerastus. There’s nothing better in this hobby than seeing someone else’s work that inspires you to do something crazy.
This Week on Goonhammer
It’s been one hell of a week on Goonhammer, and the entire writing team has knocked it out of the park. First billing in CWL though has to go to Jake, because wow have we talked a lot about Underworlds:
Warhammer Underworlds Spitewood & Grand Alliance Box Overview
Warhammer Underworlds: Destruction Warbands – Gitz and Goliaths
Those boxes look bloody good for collecting a bunch of general weirdoes, don’t they?
In non-Underworlds news, have you been reading Century of the Vampire? We’ve been making our near-omniscient editor Bernhardt watch a ton of vampire movies and write about them. He’s finishing up (I think?) 80s vampires with the Bill Paxton vehicle Near Dark.
Blood Bowl: it’s the game where your Khemri team beats the snot out of the opposition and never bothers to pick up the ball, right? What if it wasn’t? What if you played elves yourself, instead of thinking all Agility team players are perfidious cowards who need a good stomping? Apparently some people like to play Blood Bowl by passing and leaping, which, I’ll be honest, sounds absolutely disgusting. Morally wrong. I haven’t played this edition of Blood Bowl but the only ethical blood bowl is frenzy and clawpomb.
Tubaglue goes in depth on the Wargames Atlantic Minutemen in what might be the platonic ideal of Historicals kit reviews – what the kit is, what it does, the tiny little attachable pony tails and then a ton of historical context. Lovely paint jobs in this one too.
3D printer guys rejoice! Snafu got his resin-stained hands on the Elegoo Mars 5 Ultra and puts it through the wringer to bring you an authoritative verdict. If you’re on the fence and want to pick up a printer to join in with the whole culture of printer guys, this might be the one.
And finally! We’re firing on with our Historicals Essentials series, and HardyRoach takes a good look at the thorny question of accuracy. How accurate do you need to be? What was the right shade of feldgrau for the Eastern Front in 1943? How do you snap back at a button counting pedant? All the answers are here.
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