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GW Leaks Another New 40k Starter Set

new 11th starter set leaked by games workshop warhammer 40k

Games Workshop may have leaked a new 11th Edition Space Marines starter set, as the blurry preview has Warhammer 40k players wondering what’s next.

Games Workshop may have just done the most Games Workshop thing possible: accidentally flash a new Space Marines box in the background of an article and let the internet do the forensic hobby work. The blurry image appeared in the recent 11th edition launch products article, and while nothing is confirmed yet, it sure looks like a new Space Marines starter-style set (obviously, there will be at least one).

The interesting part isn’t just that another GW product may have leaked. That happens often enough that hobbyists practically keep magnifying glasses next to their sprue cutters.

What makes this one worth taking a closer look at is the format, because this box doesn’t look like a traditional two-army Warhammer 40k starter set. It appears to be a single-faction Space Marines release, which raises a much better question: is this a new starter product, a Combat Patrol replacement, or GW testing something in between?

The Leaked Space Marines Box Looks Like a One-Faction Starter

TL;DR
  • GW may have “oops’d” a second 40k starter box: a blurry preview is doing the rounds, and it looks like 11th Edition is getting more than just the big launch set.
  • Same war, different price point: this reads like an entry-level starter built for new players, not the full-fat “big box” experience.
  • Expect the usual starter kit staples: push-fit forces, slimmed-down contents, and beginner-friendly extras (rules bits, guides, markers) aimed at getting dice rolling fast.
  • The teaser image is the whole story… for now: details are still fuzzy, so treat anything beyond “another starter is coming” as speculation until GW drops clean pics.
  • Reading between the sprues: if this follows recent edition patterns, it likely means multiple starter sets are on deck again once 11th hits shelves.

new space marine starter set revealedIn the image, the box appears to be branded “Start here” with Space Marines rather than “Combat Patrol”. It’s a little different than normal, because most of GW’s current starter sets are built around two forces, usually with enough rules, dice, and extras to help new players learn the game out of the box. So, we might see an Orks box soon as well, or maybe just the Marines will get this new product. 

Based on our best guess, it looks like it includes around thirteen models (all of which look like the new minis in the big Armageddon starter): five Vanguard Veterans, five Intercessors, a Librarian, a Captain, and a Land Speeder, plus what looks like paint pots. That’s a pretty focused “start collecting Space Marines” bundle with enough hobby supplies to feel beginner-friendly.

For a brand-new player walking into a local game store already sold on the Emperor’s finest, that’s not a bad idea. Plenty of people don’t start 40k because they want a balanced starter experience; they start because Space Marines look cool, their friend already plays, or they saw a painted army in the case, and decided their wallet was doomed.

The Current 40k Starter Set Is Still the Better True Intro Box

Introductory SetThe current $69 Warhammer 40k Introductory Set is still very much a proper beginner product. It includes twenty push-fit miniatures split between Space Marines and Tyranids, along with rules, dice, rulers, a cardboard gaming mat, hobby supplies, and enough structure to actually teach the game.

That makes the leaked box feel like a different kind of on-ramp to the game. It may not be trying to replace this type of starter set. Instead, it could be aimed at players who already know they want Space Marines and don’t need an Ork half, extra army, or full teaching-game setup taking up room in the box.

That’s important because a two-army starter is great for learning, splitting with a friend, or getting a demo game going at home. A single-army starter is better for the customer who says, “I want to play Space Marines, what do I buy first?”

Every store owner and veteran hobbyist has had that conversation more times than they’ve cleaned mold lines off Intercessors.

This Could Still Be the New Combat Patrol Style

Space Marines Combat Patrol

There’s still a very real chance this is just the next Space Marines Combat Patrol with some extra paint included. Some recent launch rumors suggest this could simply be a new branding style for 11th Edition Combat Patrols

The leaked image is blurry enough that reading the packaging is a bit risky. GW boxes can be hard enough to make out when they’re sitting right in front of you, never mind when they’re hiding in the background of an article image.

 

GW May Be Testing a New 40k Entry Product

Armageddon LandspeederThe most interesting possibility is that GW is testing a product that sits between a Combat Patrol and a true Warhammer 40k starter set. Not a full two-army intro box, or a standard patrol. More like a single-faction launchpad for players who already know what army they want.

If that’s the plan, Space Marines are the 100% safest place to start, because they’re iconic, recognizable, and always easy to sell. But the bigger opportunity would be faction-specific starter boxes for armies like Orks, Chaos Space Marines, Aeldari, or Tau at the same price point too.

That kind of range could give new players a cleaner first step without forcing them into a two-army box they only half care about.

Final Thoughts: Pricing Will Decide Whether This Box Works

New Vanguard MiniIf this lands around the current $69 intro starter tier, GW may have something. A focused Space Marines box with infantry, characters, a vehicle, and hobby supplies could be an easy sell for newer collectors and existing players who somehow still need more blue armor.

If it creeps much higher, the value gets rough fast. The current starter products include more miniatures, more gaming tools, and two forces for just $110.

A smaller single-faction box has to win on convenience, savings, or model selection. Otherwise, hobbyists are going to do what they always do: stand in the store, compare the box to individual kit prices, and quietly calculate whether they’re being blessed or mugged by the Omnissiah.

There’s also the usual branding angle here, too. Blood Angels are getting plenty of attention with the current edition launch, and this apparent reveal feels like GW sliding right back to the Ultramarines poster-boy lane. 

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What do you think about this new starter style set for 11th Edition 40k?
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