Warhammer 40,000 is three hobbies in one: collecting models, painting them, and playing games with them. That depth is what keeps people hooked for decades, but it can make the first step feel daunting. This guide breaks the start down into simple, manageable choices so you spend money on the right things and enjoy the process.
Understand the three parts of the hobby
You do not have to do all three at once. Plenty of people focus mainly on painting, while others are drawn to the strategy of the tabletop game. Knowing what attracts you helps you spend wisely:
- Collecting. Building a force of models you find cool.
- Painting. The relaxing, creative side many hobbyists love most.
- Gaming. Tactical battles against friends or at a local club.
Choose a faction you love the look of
The most reliable way to pick an army is simple: choose the one whose models and theme appeal to you most. You will spend many hours assembling and painting them, so visual appeal matters more than which faction is currently strongest in the game. Space Marines are a popular starting point because of the wide range of kits and beginner support, but any faction you are excited about is the right choice.
What to buy first
It is easy to overbuy at the start. A focused first purchase keeps costs down and avoids a pile of unbuilt models. A sensible starter list looks like this:
- A starter or combat patrol set. The best value way to get a themed group of models in one box.
- Plastic glue and clippers. For removing parts cleanly and assembling them.
- A small core paint set. A few base colours, a wash, and a brush to begin.
That is genuinely enough to build, paint and start learning the rules.
If you want a clear run-through of a sensible first shop, this video is a helpful watch:
The tools that make a difference
A handful of inexpensive tools transform the experience. Sharp clippers give clean cuts, a hobby knife tidies up parts, and a cutting mat protects your table. For painting, one good general brush beats a cheap multipack. Add these gradually rather than all at once.
What a first session at the table looks like
It helps to know what to expect from your first game. A small game uses just a handful of units a side and takes around an hour. You take turns moving your models, shooting, and fighting in close combat, rolling dice to see what happens. You will forget rules and that is completely normal. Keep a printed reference sheet to hand, agree with your opponent to play in a relaxed way, and treat the first few games as practice. Nobody plays cleanly at the start, and most opponents are glad to help you learn.
