Issue 110 -pdf-games Workshop - White Dwarf ((hot))

A grainy, four-color spread of winning miniatures. For the modern painter, this is a time capsule of "Tangerine" Orange Gore and Goblin Green bases. The PDF scans reveal the Eavy Metal team’s original dabbing technique, lost to modern layering.

Released in February 1989 (cover price: £1.25), this issue is most famous for one reason: Specifically, it contained the first part of a revolutionary series titled "The General’s Campaign" by Nigel Stillman. While modern players are used to matched play, Issue 110 introduced the concept of a "narrative, role-playing heavy" multiplayer campaign for Warhammer Fantasy Battle 3rd Edition. Issue 110 -PDF-Games Workshop - White Dwarf

Physical copies of Issue 110 are rarer than Squat miniatures. The 80s newsprint paper used by GW has become brittle, yellowed, and acidic. A mint condition copy, if you can find it on eBay, routinely fetches prices between $80 and $150 USD—often missing the critical "Eavy Metal" insert that showed the first painted examples of a Blood Angel Land Speeder . A grainy, four-color spread of winning miniatures

Games Workshop would argue the former. However, unlike a movie or a current software suite, White Dwarf 110 is functionally extinct . You cannot buy it from Warhammer+. You cannot buy it on Kindle. The original plates have likely been melted down or buried under a Nottingham warehouse. Released in February 1989 (cover price: £1

That is the spirit of Issue 110. And it lives on, pixel by pixel, in every search for that elusive PDF. Disclaimer: This article is for educational and historical discussion purposes. Games Workshop and White Dwarf are registered trademarks. You should support official releases where available, but for Issue 110, none exist.

A two-page teaser for the game that would become Advanced HeroQuest (released later in 1989). The layout shows prototype cards that never made it to the final box.