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Warhammer: The End Times #2

The Fall of Altdorf: Warhammer Chronicles: The End Times, Book 2

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Book 2 of The End Times

When the Emperor is lost, it falls to Reiksmarshal Kurt Helborg to return to Altdorf, capital of the Empire, and prepare to meet the forces of the Ruinous Powers in a final battle for that ancient city.

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Not only does this novel chart the apocalyptic battle for the very heart of Sigmar's realm, but it brings back heroes and villains from across the Warhammer mythos and reunites the Empire in a most unexpected way…

THE STORY

The End Times are coming.

With the hordes of Chaos marshalling in the north, Emperor Karl Franz leads his armies in defence of his realm. But when the worst happens, Reiksmarshal Kurt Helborg must return to Altdorf, the capital of the Empire. There, he must steel himself and prepare his soldiers to defend the jewel of the Empire from the corrupted advance of the forces of Chaos.

As plague spreads and the defences weaken, all seems lost—until help arrives from a most unexpected source... if Helborg can bring himself to accept it.

Written by Chris Wraight. Narrated by Andrew James Spooner. Running time 13 hours 18 minutes (approx).

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First published October 31, 2014

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About the author

Chris Wraight

220 books386 followers
Chris Wraight is a British author of fantasy and science fiction.

His first novel was published in 2008; since then, he has published books set in the Warhammer Fantasy and Stargate:Atlantis universes, and has upcoming titles in the Warhammer 40K setting.

He is based in the south-west of England.

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5 stars
127 (27%)
4 stars
212 (45%)
3 stars
97 (20%)
2 stars
24 (5%)
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9 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for Jason Ray Carney.
Author 40 books78 followers
January 2, 2026
I’ve just finished The Fall of Altdorf by Chris Wraight, and--to my own surprise--I liked it. I approached the novel with reluctance. I love the Warhammer Fantasy setting, and encountering its canonical end felt almost frightening. That may not be too strong a word. I knew, intellectually, that figures like Karl Franz and Louen Leoncoeur were doomed, but I didn’t want to experience that knowledge in narrative form. Avoiding the End Times novels allowed me, in a strange way, to pretend that the Old World simply continued on, frozen in an eternal present.

Only now, after Games Workshop’s return to the setting via the paradoxically named Old World, does it feel emotionally permissible to read this book. The End Times can now be framed as an ending rather than an annihilation. The setting survives, and grows, and that makes all the difference.

What struck me most forcefully is how different these final Warhammer Fantasy novels are from earlier Black Library fiction. I recently reread Drachenfels, which feels almost alien by comparison: baroque, gothic, formally strange, aesthetically risky. Earlier novels--William King's Gotrek and Felix novels, for example--are visceral, sword-and-sorcery narratives, grounded in bodily peril, beer-soaked taverns, trashy alleys, and battlefield grime. The Fall of Altdorf, by contrast, is unmistakably epic fantasy, polished and elevated in register, closer in spirit to The Horus Heresy than to pulp fantasy. It is about fate, civilization, and extinction rather than immediacy or survival.

Once I accepted the novel on those terms--once I stopped asking it to be something else--I found it compelling. The Glottkin are genuinely effective villains, grotesque and mythic. Festus the Leechlord, undermining Altdorf from within, is particularly memorable. Most compelling of all is the uneasy relationship between Vlad von Carstein and Reiksmarshal Kurt Helborg, the latter effectively standing in for the absent Karl Franz. The alliance between vampire and Empire is morally fraught, politically fascinating, and emotionally rich.

The novel’s conclusion is unabashedly epic, even approaching the level of deus ex machina, but it works. Without spoiling anything, the ending gestures clearly toward the metaphysical logic of Age of Sigmar. I found that gesture oddly moving rather than cynical. Martak, as the new Supreme Patriarch, is a surprising and inspired choice.

I understand why many readers--especially Bretonnian players--were upset by Louen Leoncoeur’s death, which can feel abrupt and anticlimactic. Yet I found his end noble, particularly in his defense of the priestess of Shallya. It is not the heroic crescendo one might want, but it is consistent with the novel’s bleak moral universe.

Stylistically, Wraight writes with confidence and clarity. The prose is clean, modern, unmistakably shaped by mid-2010s commercial fantasy norms. The dialogue is sharp, the pacing effective, and the narrative momentum there. What I did miss, however, was atmosphere. Altdorf is one of the most iconic cities in Warhammer Fantasy. Through novels, games, and sheer imaginative accumulation, I feel as though I know its crooked streets and looming towers. Yet the novel rarely lingers there. The city is treated more as a symbolic site than as a lived-in space. For a story about its destruction, I wanted more time to breathe in the textures of the city before it fell.

In the end, The Fall of Altdorf succeeds as what it sets out to be: a grand, terminal myth rather than a ground-level fantasy novel. It marks not just the end of a setting, but the end of a particular mode of Warhammer storytelling--one I still mourn, even as I admire the Age of Sigmar spectacle that replaces it.
Profile Image for Patt.
201 reviews
September 20, 2017
Absolute fucking garbage so all the empire forts and castles would lay waste to the chaos besiegers BUT "the hordes of chaos were too many and kept coming" so everlasting chaos troops and spells that completely destroyed castle fortifications oh yea and how about this Vlad Von Carstein doing what he NEVER does and licking the blood of his enemy off his blade when that said enemy WAS A CHAMPION OF FUCKING NURGLE!!!
I think Vlad is alot smarter than this and his undead horde would have mopped the floor with the nurgle host the only good bit in this book was the Bretonnian part which was actually one of the most moving tales of heroism I have ever read gave me a new appreciation for Bretonnia...
703 reviews7 followers
June 7, 2018
Disgusting and bloody battles rage across the Empire, and force unthinkable alliances. Can the Empire survive? Has the Emperor fallen? Is this the End? Good story, with lots of famous characters, many who fall, check it out.
28 reviews
August 7, 2015
The book was easier to read than the first book in "The End" series. That comes down to the different writing style of the various authors in the 5 book series.

The characters in book 2 are developed to a greater degree than the overwhelming number of characters in book 1. The characters are well rounded but the author fails in one sense, the description of their demise (where applicable). It felt rushed and a bit of a let down especially after a hefty amount of character development.

It's as if there's a word cap placed my the publishers on the book and there's no words left to finish the job.

Am interested now to move on to Book 3 and see what Gav Thorpe comes up with.

Finally, this is an enjoyable read, but the end seemed to be a rush job.
Profile Image for Nick.
Author 4 books21 followers
December 22, 2014
the main reason i gave it three stars? it copies the main battle of minas tirith in lord of the rings. The depleted garisson, the neglected wisdom of the wizard from the wilds, the returning king from the north, the dead to aid the city, the unexpected arrival of the cavalery army...; anyone who saw the lord of the rings movies will recognise this. But having said that, it does not mean this is a bad book, far from it nor is the reuse of the plot of the lord of the rings badly done. It does however not live up to the first book of the end times series; the return of nagash. So a fun and tense book to read but don't expect anything extraordinary.
Profile Image for Berylek.
28 reviews1 follower
March 6, 2025
It was really good! Except for that part with Vlad at the end. I know that maybe the author wanted to show us something... But I don't think that Vlad would do such a thing
Profile Image for Nathan Major.
85 reviews2 followers
January 3, 2026
It's better than the first one, though only a little. Enough to earn an extra star I suppose.
The Fall of Altdorf does a much better job focusing on just a few key figures rather than jumping all over compared to the Nagash book. It also primarily focuses on both the Empire and Brittonia, as expected from the title.
Nurgle's hordes are coming for the Empire, laying waste to pretty much everything until they get to Altdorf, the capital. Karl Franz is presumed dead and the undead are also at their doorstep, so things ain't great.
The latter half of the book is basically just the siege. Nurgle's minions build rot from within while waiting outside for the siege to break. The remaining empire leaders, without Franz, make some really bad decisions. Vlad makes an extra stupid decision when he finally shows up to help since he also hates chaos. And the Brittonian knights are actually pretty cool in this one.
It still struggles from uneven writing. Weirdly enough, descriptions that are scene-setting are usually pretty good, but once you get into actual interactions the adverbs take over. The dialogue is better than the previous book, and the pacing overall is also much better.
My biggest complaint is the ending, which is a literal deus ex machina combined with just some...really stupid decisions from the characters. Also like the previous book it's frustrating when one group just always wins, over and over. You can have as many heroic charges and last stands as you want, but you gotta give the good guys a win or two at some point to keep the tension up.
Though to be fair the book is called "The Fall of Altdorf" so I guess it the writing was on the wall. Ah well.
No dwarfs or elves in this book if you care about that, I assume their in the next one. Onward to the end times.
Profile Image for Wren.
217 reviews4 followers
April 27, 2020
CAUTION HERE MAY BE SPOILERS

Let me start by saying that I have high HIGH hopes for this 5 part series. And I still do. This book had some big shoes to fill because book one The Rise Of Nagash was amazing and don't get me wrong this book follows through with the promise of greatness. Not going to lie the first half was a little bit...I don't want to say it was bad because it wasn't. It was good Warhammer, just not what I'd call End Times worthy Warhammer. I mean these are the End Times novels, go in hard or past the job onto someone else. It can't be good Warhammer here we need Great Warhammer. And the first half just wasn't it. But the second half? Wow. That end battle with the Emperor? The God like figure that is eluded to appear after the Emperor sacrifices himself pretty much upon the alter? That was what pulled this book from a high 3/low 4 to good solid 5.

The Good Stuff

- As I said the second half made this book but that doesn't mean there wasn't some good stuff in the first half that shined through. First of all we have the new Grand Patriarch who's somewhat sees the future. He's great in that he's not your average Empire man in power who thinks that the best way to deal with any threat is to throw as many people at it as possible. He actually cares for the people of the Empire, so much so that he even visits a priestess to try and comfort her.

- The Emperor is one of those characters that's always mentioned but never seems to get enough (or any) screen time so it was great to see him actually play a part in this book, and his sacrifice to somehow be the conduit to allow some sort of god to enter back into the mortal realm was epic.

- Who is this mysterious god like being who breaks through? Well we have to live with suspense. But I'm going to call it, its definitely Sigmar. Has to be.

Not going to say there was a bad part to this book because even the first half was good, plus The Rise Of Nagash was such a high that anything that came after was going to suffer. But that aside this book was great, it kept the momentum going and I'm all but frothing at the mouth in anticipation for the 3rd one.

Spoiler alert i have all of them, I'm just spacing them out because I want to enjoy them at my own pace. 🙌🏻🙏🏻
24 reviews
September 11, 2025
I see now why so many people are upset at how the end times series was handled.
first off, for a positive; the combat scenes are well done. I felt immersed in the great battles, the mighty duels, and the outlettings of magic and skill. the writing us competent and descriptive. if you have no connection to the characters or just really like the nurgle faction will enjoy it for these reasons. that being said....
the characters are the issue. Basically if you liked any of the old world characters, this book feels like a slap in the face. they are all beaten, humiliated and crushed by new characters that seem made up just for this series. if they had just allowed the big bads like archaon, belakor, or any of the established named enemies to be the antagonist it might have escaped this criticism, since there would be attachment established to both sides. but as it is I had to see alot of my favorite characters get chumped by a group of saturday morning enemies that wouldnt have been a problem to beat in any other story. it feels lazy, itt rips away my investment, and it doesnt even impart gravitas. more like a new kid showed up to the playground game of make-believe and said "yeah, well I have an everything proof shield, so I beat all of you"
Profile Image for Michael T Bradley.
997 reviews6 followers
January 26, 2018
I'll admit, it's been a couple of months since I read this & my memory is hazy, so this will be a lazy review.

There are quite a few plotlines and quite a few characters. I felt like Wraight juggled them all pretty deftly. I'll admit, I ALMOST didn't make it through the first section, a giant battle with Karl Franz and the two hirsuite men that seem to command so much of the Old World's attention (I can't stand either of them). Once that's over and we move into the defense of Altdorf, things get far more interesting. Wraight has some fun with the baddies (the three brothers were a hoot), but I think got a LITTLE too attached to some characters to be as bloodthirsty as the story called for, so it's a bit of a mixed bag, but still fun.

Vampire politics, Chaos turning on itself, insane transformations - it's the End Times, for sure.
173 reviews3 followers
April 19, 2020
This has the same problem as every other book in this series, namely that you know what is going to happen at the end and therefore most of the well desctibed battles are Chaos curb stomps. That results in very little narrative tension but is inevitable given the strictures placed on this series.

Having said that Chris Wraight does handle the book well. The characterisations are interesting and, although I am much more a WH40K aficionado that Fantasy battle. seem right for the characters and situations described. The fighting is well described and you are drawn into the combat well. I was suddenly struck as the story began the main fighting around Altdorf itself that what Wraight has done is play with the battle of Pellenore Fields in "Return of the King. That added a whole new level to my enjoyment of the story.

All in all a worthy addition to the series and a decent read
Profile Image for OldFisben.
151 reviews7 followers
March 5, 2020
Ну, да, спешка по убийству Старого Мира заметна невооруженным взглядом. Логика прихрамывает, множество иконических персонажей вселенной вынужденно кучкуются на квадратном метре и им явно тесновато, некомфортно. По-хорошему, здесь бы романов десять а ля "Осада Терры", чтобы расписать все спокойно, с чувством, с толком, с расстановкой, как говорится.
Но даже так... эх, старый-добрый гримдарк, превозмогание, эпик и здоровый вархаммеровский пафос - все то, что требовалось. Империя это я, бейтесь за честь людей, ну и каноничное и такое родное для меня бретонское chaaaaaaaarge! Ах, как жаль, как жаль.
Profile Image for Kevin Collett.
211 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2019
I like Chris Wraight as a writer and normally really enjoy his books but I found this book a real grind to get through.

I think my issue with this book and the first in the End Times series is they are so relentlessly miserable in terms of the “heroes” that it’s like watching an episode of The Walking Dead!

I have now conceded that the End Times series is not for me so will avoid the final two books and read something else as life is too short to read books that you don’t enjoy.

I will happily read other novels from Chris Wraight in the future though - he is still an excellent writer.
Profile Image for Robert Bridgewater.
161 reviews2 followers
June 30, 2021
As a devoted servant to Sigmar and a citizen of the Empire, the title of this book and the synopsis on the back pained me. I feared what I would read. It is the End Times, but could that really mean the death of everything I love and hold dear? I have really been enjoying all of the books in the End Times event. I thought Chris did a great job with the characters, and places. Really enjoyed his battles and the build up. Brought me joy to read about all the characters I saw spring up as new miniatures. Makes me eager to paint them all!
Profile Image for Frederick Finch.
62 reviews15 followers
November 12, 2021
Of all 5 novels, I liked this the most. The way Mr. Wright plays with the setting, the pacing, the character development, their secrets and thrivings, it is just perfect . Well, at least I experienced it that way.
Portraiture of the Emperor, and of the Reiksmarshal, as well as of the whole chaos horde, this time accentuating the aspect of Father Nurgle, had it for me. I'm sad that there is no more of it.
Perhaps they shold've invade Altdorf one more time :)
Profile Image for Йордан.
7 reviews
February 6, 2023
Not the best of Wraight, but still good, especially when considering what he has to work with - End Times isn't exactly the best of narrative environments. Character portrayal is top notch, albeit the prolonged descriptions and settings might not be to everyone's taste.

Leoncoeur steals the show, but all the Empire characters are well-written with the theme of sacrifice running throughout the book, and Wraight does a great job to show it from different angles.
Profile Image for Matthew Hipsher.
100 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2024
I wasn't a WHFB player, I'm reading this for the build up to the rerelease and the story is ok. There's not much character development, most of that happens in the individual army books, this book is more here to continue the story of the end times and begin the wrap up to the death of this GW universe.
Profile Image for Gordon Ross.
234 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2025
The Old Word End Times continue in the hands of Chris Wraight, who does a decent job bringing the followers of Plague God Nurgle to center stage, but otherwise this is a fairly pedestrian affair. I'd almost certainly enjoy it more if I weren't skipping straight to the end of the many works written in this world.
Profile Image for Sebastiaan Vanbesien.
134 reviews4 followers
December 17, 2025
This book was a wild ride. It started off with a huge bang (or blow if you’re the Empire of Man) and it just kept going and becoming better (or again, worse if you’re the Empire of Man). This a rollercoaster of never ending battles, gutwrenching magics and an ever encroaching apocalypse! I loved every second of it!
Profile Image for Rob.
426 reviews6 followers
May 25, 2020
Cracking story. Chris Wraight brings the epic storytelling he is known for to the battle for Altdorf. The Glotkin are explored here and each of their personalities comes across, and the defenders of the city have a couple of supremely cast characters. This series continues to impress me.
Profile Image for Rodrigo Matas.
4 reviews
January 5, 2024
Segundo de la Saga. Inicio increíble, y desarrollo calmado, pero épico. La trama de Bretonia me gustó especialmente, aunque en el final hay algún momento decepcionante en torno a personajes que parecían que podían dar más de si, y parece que quedan desperdiciados (Vlad concretamente).
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
509 reviews2 followers
July 20, 2017
The city of Altdorf is destroyed. The emperor is sacrificed with the invasion Chaos army vanquished.
Profile Image for Kikerz.
31 reviews2 followers
March 10, 2024
Ni Karl Franz ni Louen se merecían ese destino, qué menos que un Archaón cara a cara :(
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
6 reviews
June 29, 2025
Excellent

A brilliant follow up to the previous book of this series. Great detail on the explanation of all the thing going on in the world too.
Profile Image for Aserdiaz.
1 review
August 4, 2025
el peor libro de Warhammer que he leído (palabras de un fanático del lore)
Profile Image for Tarl.
Author 25 books82 followers
October 4, 2016
Wraight has penned an amazingly epic novel in The Fall of Altdorf, however the end left me sorely disappointed.

Overall, this is an amazing book that takes some of the largest players of the Warhammer Fantasy world and brings them to the forefront. Wraight handles each person with great care and keeps their stories interesting, be they the Emperor or Vlad, each is given a personality and personal goals the reader can relate to. When one falls, the reader feels it and genuinely gets behind each of the characters as they strive for what they desire.

The mass combats are also handled well. Each battle that leads up to the final siege is a treat to read and I found myself swept up into the action with each sentence I read. The siege itself was handled with a skilled pen as the reader doesn't get too bogged down in minute details while it also doesn't gloss over the major moments of the conflict.

What I did have an issue with though, was the ending of the entire book. The fact that it all ends with a deus ex machina cheats the reader from what could have been a glorious ending. Hell, the very thing one of the protagonists spends the last few moments of the novel doing gets left hanging and forgotten about. For a reader who has gone through this large novel expecting a grand showdown, this novel ended on a very disappointing note.

Still, I did rather enjoy this novel and it was a fun read. I recommend you pick it up if you are interested in anything Nurgle related and want to see the Empire at its finest. (and Bretonnia as well) Well worth reading, even with the terrible ending.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews

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