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'''Nippon''' (日本) is the Japan analogue of the [[Warhammer Fantasy Battle]] universe. It is an archipelago nation to east of [[Cathay]] (of course). Also, "Nippon" is literally the Japanese word for "Japan", [[Games Workshop| because of course.]]


'''Nippon''' is the Japan analogue of the [[Warhammer Fantasy Battle]] universe. It is nearby [[Cathay]].  
== Meta-History ==
Nippon appeared all the way up in the 1st edition of WFB, and can be considered one of the oldest created  human factions, alongside [[Norsca]] and similarly abandoned [[Albion]], some years before [[The Empire (Warhammer Fantasy)|The Empire]] was introduced. It was a prominent faction in the first three editions, although due to the lore being less important in the Oldhammer and the lack of proper rulebooks at the time (no faction ones, all armies are in one book) Nippon never was really fleshed out. And then it was abandoned, and most of the lore was [[Squat|squatted]].  


Here the [[Skaven]] learned how to be ninjas.
Graeme Davis explains the squatting of Nippon like this:
 
''The East was never officially opened up by GW. They stuck a toe in the water – after Kagemusha, the Shogun miniseries and the 80s fashion for Japanese characters on T-shirts, there was a lot of interest in feudal Japan among 80s geeks. There was the short-lived Oriental Heroes range, and the Perrys did a few ninja minis, but almost nothing in the way of text. I proposed an Oriental Heroes vs. Hobgoblins battle box (working title: Bakemono’s Revenge) but the battle boxes were dropped after McDeath. What Mark found is the mortal remains of the Tetsubo project. Dave Morris and Oliver Johnson, authors of the “Way of the Tiger” gamebooks, were commissioned to create a Nippon supplement for WFRP1. I was one of the people who looked over the original "manuscripts" when they turned it in, and everyone agreed it didn’t nail the WFRP tone. It was more like an adaptation of FGU’s Bushido to use WFRP1 rules. It languished in a “to be developed” pile for a long time, but nothing happened with it. As time went on it was getting harder and harder to get a green light for a new Enemy Within adventure, let alone opening up a whole new region. Then the fashion for Japanese stuff faded and that was that.''
 
So, if you're wondering about Fantasy Squats, they're pretty much these guys.
 
== Old Lore (pre-4th Edition) ==
Nippon is pretty much just a Tokugawa-era Japan with some minor fantasy stuff and only a little bit of somewhat good ideas. They were apparently united as a nation for the first time in 1IC by some guy named Yamayakyuki I who promptly dropped dead a few years later in 12 IC and since then the position of Emperor (known as the Divine Sun) has become mostly ceremonial similar to how the emperor position was in real life Japan during the Tokugawa Shogunate.
 
Nipponese (like other Oriental guys in Oldhammer) worship a Buddha-like deity known as the Orange Simca which was named after one of the Warhammer developers' car. The truly hilarious thing is that Simca isn't even Japanese brand, but a [[Bretonnia|French one]]. Simcaism has a martial version called Vim-to, that is worshipped by crazy, but skilled monks and mages that fight [[Awesome|with bare hands]]. There are also a bunch of [[Tzeentch|Tsien-Tsin]] cults, which is not unusual for [[Eastern Lands]].
 
The little official info on their land army pretty much shows it as being the same as what real-life Japan had during the latter half of the Shogunate (arquebus wielding ashigeru, peasant foot soldiers, samurai and ninja etc.) plus, rocket artillery, magic sorcerers, magic kung-fu monks and...suicide bombers called Kamikaze. Out of all the possible magical creatures they could of had, for some reason Nippon only got Ki-Rin and Temple Dogs, which were shared with [[Cathay]]. 
 
There were almost no named characters in Nippon back then. "The tale of Sanyo Kawasaki" scenario told the story of a Samurai who had a [[Butthurt|butthurt]] over the fact that the government [[Grimdark|let a foreign ship pass near the Nipponese coast (not even landing there) and made no attempts to sink it]]. He gathered an army under the command of his retainers with similarly stupid names ([[Derp|Honda Suzuki, everyone?]]) and marched to the capital, but failed to take it and ritually killed himself [[Derp|by standing on his head in a bowl of cold water]]. Yeah. This was the only Nipponese scenario before the squatting happened, by the way.
 
[[Genevieve Sandrine du Pointe du Lac Dieudonné]] also apparently went there once. Probably. If she exists. Honestly, this wouldn't be worth mentioning except that we don't know shit about Nippon so it's like 5% of what we know.
 
== Current lore (post-4th Edition) ==
 
Nippon is still the same old Tokugawa-era Japan, but less satyral and/or stupid and more... nothing. At least we know that there the [[Skaven]] learned how to be ninjas, right? Nah, not really, other lore states that [[Clan Eshin]] rats learned to be ninjas in ''Cathay''. On a less stereotypical note, [[Ogre Kingdoms|Ogres]] also apparently exist there somehow and are known as Oni, so you could probably convert some Ogre kingdom units in order to help support a homebrew Nippon army.
 
[[Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay]] 1st Edition (which almost got the Nippon supplement, by the way), states that there are three known characters from Nippon: Lady Katsui Okumoto, wife of the den Euwe merchant clan's leader in [[Marienburg]]; Toko and Masahito, a ninja and a bouncer in a service of [[Kingdoms of Ind|Indan]] merchant. The last one is named after a real-life Japanese prince, it seems.
 
According to the [[End Times]], they've got the best fleet ever, but they don't do shit with it. It's the best fucking fleet in the world. That's right, not druchii black arks or asur dragonships, ''fucking Yamato-Class Battleships''.


This is literally everything we know about Nippon.
This is literally everything we know about Nippon.


There is also an awesome fan-made armybook for it with Oni, Lightning spewing dragons, ninjas and Samurai monks.
Andy Hall recently confirmed that they aren't planned [[Total War: WARHAMMER|Total War: Warhammer 3]], so yeah, sorry...until the prototype combined map was found in the game files that included Ind, Khuresh...[[RAGE|BUT NO NIPPON]]. Then again, they also said they wouldn’t do Vampire Coast and Andy also said that while the early plans for additional Total Warhammer 3 content is solidly planned out it get looser as it goes and nothing is strictly off the table so anything could happen.
The Norse armybook is better though, it would be even better if it weren't based on outdated, contradictory fluff.
 
It turns out that Nippon exists in an [https://www.artstation.com/artwork/RngoLE Immortal Empires Cathayan map prototype], and is even mentioned in the notes as a '''Kingdom''' of Nippon, severely downplaying the status of this nation, it seems. Will it also mean that new Nippon can probably use a different Japanese history era? Probably not, but we'll see.
 
==Nippon's Army Through The Ages==
Rooted firmly in the days of Oldhammer, the Nipponese army appears only in the first three editions of the game, which means it was never particularly fleshed out compared to some of the other armies that similarly emerged from that era.
 
===1E===
The 1e version of the Nippon force found in ''Forces of Fantasy''' names them as the '''Men of the Orient'''... which is a bit redundant since they'd already called the [[Araby]] forces "Men of the East".
 
In this edition, they have a fairly small army list; [[Samurai]] in infantry and cavalry forms, Ashiguru as regular troopers, Kamikazes (Samurai with Frenzy), and Vim-to Monks (for the non-British; Vimto is a Coca-Cola-esque soft drink). They can also field Samurai Heroes, Martial Arts Heroes, and Vim-to Mages.
 
===2E===
In the 2e corebook, Nippon didn't get much lore to shine; most of the "Orientals" portion of the Human ethnic writeup was actually devoted to [[Cathay]], with Nippon just getting a few passing mentions - they have [[samurai]], death-seeking samurai [[berserker]]s called Kamikazes, and warrior-monks who practice a martial art called Vimto, sacred to a god called ''The Orange Simca'' and whose worship was common to both Nippon and [[Cathay]].
 
Nippon could at least claim superiority in one field; the ''Ravening Hordes'' army book featured a full Nippon army list, but had no such list for [[Cathay]] or [[Araby]]. In this edition, aside from the generic Heroes and Magicians, a Nipponese army could field Samurai, Samurai Cavalry, Regular Cavalry, Mounted Archers, Mounted Crossbowmen, Warrior Monks, Ashigaru, Archers, Crossbowmen, Arquebusiers, Peasants, [[Ninja]]s, Kamikaze Suicide Warriors (who in this edition are guys who run into enemy formations with a keg of [[Gunpowder (Warhammer Fantasy)|gunpowder]] strapped to their back with a burning fuse), Skirmishers, Cannons, Rocket Launchers, Stone Throwers and Bolt Throwers. Also, they could take [[Ogre]]s and [[Giant]]s as mercenaries.
 
Honestly? Pretty generic, but then, most of the armies in 2e were.
 
===3E===
The Nippon forces began their slide into obscurity in this edition; in the corebook, they don't even warrant a separate entry as a nation in the basic writeup of the setting, being instead folded into the Cathay writeup - the book promises that "a complete guide to the lands of Nippon is already under development", but it never appeared.
 
''Warhammer Armies'' saw them downgraded from their own independent fighting force to simply a [[Mercenary]] force. In this edition, [[Dark Elves (Warhammer Fantasy)|Dark Elf]] armies could take a single Samurai Lord commanding a single [[Ninja]], up to 60 [[Samurai]] and up to 60 Ashigaru... why were Dark Elves the only army that could take Nipponese allies? Who knows!
 
===Warhammer Army Project===
Naturally, the [[Warhammer Army Project]] was quick to seize the opportunity that [[Games Workshop]] abandoned and made their own Warhammer Armies: Nippon army book for their 9th edition project. And it is '''massive''', with one of the ''biggest'' army lists of their project! Seriously, this is on par with their [[Warriors of Chaos]] and [[Skaven]] 9e rewrites for terms of sheer content!


*Nippon Fandex [https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_Redi9cZJ5iYXlDT0xjcGxOaVE/edit]
==Links==
* [[Warhammer Army Project/Nippon|Nippon fandex]]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-EaoVgSTdw Nippon lore in a video]<s> only barely parodied</s>


{{Regions and areas of the Old World}}
[[Category:Warhammer Fantasy]]
[[Category:Warhammer Fantasy]]

Latest revision as of 08:32, 22 June 2023

This article related to Warhammer Fantasy Battle is a stub. You can help 1d4chan by expanding it.

Nippon (日本) is the Japan analogue of the Warhammer Fantasy Battle universe. It is an archipelago nation to east of Cathay (of course). Also, "Nippon" is literally the Japanese word for "Japan", because of course.

Meta-History[edit]

Nippon appeared all the way up in the 1st edition of WFB, and can be considered one of the oldest created human factions, alongside Norsca and similarly abandoned Albion, some years before The Empire was introduced. It was a prominent faction in the first three editions, although due to the lore being less important in the Oldhammer and the lack of proper rulebooks at the time (no faction ones, all armies are in one book) Nippon never was really fleshed out. And then it was abandoned, and most of the lore was squatted.

Graeme Davis explains the squatting of Nippon like this:

The East was never officially opened up by GW. They stuck a toe in the water – after Kagemusha, the Shogun miniseries and the 80s fashion for Japanese characters on T-shirts, there was a lot of interest in feudal Japan among 80s geeks. There was the short-lived Oriental Heroes range, and the Perrys did a few ninja minis, but almost nothing in the way of text. I proposed an Oriental Heroes vs. Hobgoblins battle box (working title: Bakemono’s Revenge) but the battle boxes were dropped after McDeath. What Mark found is the mortal remains of the Tetsubo project. Dave Morris and Oliver Johnson, authors of the “Way of the Tiger” gamebooks, were commissioned to create a Nippon supplement for WFRP1. I was one of the people who looked over the original "manuscripts" when they turned it in, and everyone agreed it didn’t nail the WFRP tone. It was more like an adaptation of FGU’s Bushido to use WFRP1 rules. It languished in a “to be developed” pile for a long time, but nothing happened with it. As time went on it was getting harder and harder to get a green light for a new Enemy Within adventure, let alone opening up a whole new region. Then the fashion for Japanese stuff faded and that was that.

So, if you're wondering about Fantasy Squats, they're pretty much these guys.

Old Lore (pre-4th Edition)[edit]

Nippon is pretty much just a Tokugawa-era Japan with some minor fantasy stuff and only a little bit of somewhat good ideas. They were apparently united as a nation for the first time in 1IC by some guy named Yamayakyuki I who promptly dropped dead a few years later in 12 IC and since then the position of Emperor (known as the Divine Sun) has become mostly ceremonial similar to how the emperor position was in real life Japan during the Tokugawa Shogunate.

Nipponese (like other Oriental guys in Oldhammer) worship a Buddha-like deity known as the Orange Simca which was named after one of the Warhammer developers' car. The truly hilarious thing is that Simca isn't even Japanese brand, but a French one. Simcaism has a martial version called Vim-to, that is worshipped by crazy, but skilled monks and mages that fight with bare hands. There are also a bunch of Tsien-Tsin cults, which is not unusual for Eastern Lands.

The little official info on their land army pretty much shows it as being the same as what real-life Japan had during the latter half of the Shogunate (arquebus wielding ashigeru, peasant foot soldiers, samurai and ninja etc.) plus, rocket artillery, magic sorcerers, magic kung-fu monks and...suicide bombers called Kamikaze. Out of all the possible magical creatures they could of had, for some reason Nippon only got Ki-Rin and Temple Dogs, which were shared with Cathay.

There were almost no named characters in Nippon back then. "The tale of Sanyo Kawasaki" scenario told the story of a Samurai who had a butthurt over the fact that the government let a foreign ship pass near the Nipponese coast (not even landing there) and made no attempts to sink it. He gathered an army under the command of his retainers with similarly stupid names (Honda Suzuki, everyone?) and marched to the capital, but failed to take it and ritually killed himself by standing on his head in a bowl of cold water. Yeah. This was the only Nipponese scenario before the squatting happened, by the way.

Genevieve Sandrine du Pointe du Lac Dieudonné also apparently went there once. Probably. If she exists. Honestly, this wouldn't be worth mentioning except that we don't know shit about Nippon so it's like 5% of what we know.

Current lore (post-4th Edition)[edit]

Nippon is still the same old Tokugawa-era Japan, but less satyral and/or stupid and more... nothing. At least we know that there the Skaven learned how to be ninjas, right? Nah, not really, other lore states that Clan Eshin rats learned to be ninjas in Cathay. On a less stereotypical note, Ogres also apparently exist there somehow and are known as Oni, so you could probably convert some Ogre kingdom units in order to help support a homebrew Nippon army.

Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay 1st Edition (which almost got the Nippon supplement, by the way), states that there are three known characters from Nippon: Lady Katsui Okumoto, wife of the den Euwe merchant clan's leader in Marienburg; Toko and Masahito, a ninja and a bouncer in a service of Indan merchant. The last one is named after a real-life Japanese prince, it seems.

According to the End Times, they've got the best fleet ever, but they don't do shit with it. It's the best fucking fleet in the world. That's right, not druchii black arks or asur dragonships, fucking Yamato-Class Battleships.

This is literally everything we know about Nippon.

Andy Hall recently confirmed that they aren't planned Total War: Warhammer 3, so yeah, sorry...until the prototype combined map was found in the game files that included Ind, Khuresh...BUT NO NIPPON. Then again, they also said they wouldn’t do Vampire Coast and Andy also said that while the early plans for additional Total Warhammer 3 content is solidly planned out it get looser as it goes and nothing is strictly off the table so anything could happen.

It turns out that Nippon exists in an Immortal Empires Cathayan map prototype, and is even mentioned in the notes as a Kingdom of Nippon, severely downplaying the status of this nation, it seems. Will it also mean that new Nippon can probably use a different Japanese history era? Probably not, but we'll see.

Nippon's Army Through The Ages[edit]

Rooted firmly in the days of Oldhammer, the Nipponese army appears only in the first three editions of the game, which means it was never particularly fleshed out compared to some of the other armies that similarly emerged from that era.

1E[edit]

The 1e version of the Nippon force found in Forces of Fantasy' names them as the Men of the Orient... which is a bit redundant since they'd already called the Araby forces "Men of the East".

In this edition, they have a fairly small army list; Samurai in infantry and cavalry forms, Ashiguru as regular troopers, Kamikazes (Samurai with Frenzy), and Vim-to Monks (for the non-British; Vimto is a Coca-Cola-esque soft drink). They can also field Samurai Heroes, Martial Arts Heroes, and Vim-to Mages.

2E[edit]

In the 2e corebook, Nippon didn't get much lore to shine; most of the "Orientals" portion of the Human ethnic writeup was actually devoted to Cathay, with Nippon just getting a few passing mentions - they have samurai, death-seeking samurai berserkers called Kamikazes, and warrior-monks who practice a martial art called Vimto, sacred to a god called The Orange Simca and whose worship was common to both Nippon and Cathay.

Nippon could at least claim superiority in one field; the Ravening Hordes army book featured a full Nippon army list, but had no such list for Cathay or Araby. In this edition, aside from the generic Heroes and Magicians, a Nipponese army could field Samurai, Samurai Cavalry, Regular Cavalry, Mounted Archers, Mounted Crossbowmen, Warrior Monks, Ashigaru, Archers, Crossbowmen, Arquebusiers, Peasants, Ninjas, Kamikaze Suicide Warriors (who in this edition are guys who run into enemy formations with a keg of gunpowder strapped to their back with a burning fuse), Skirmishers, Cannons, Rocket Launchers, Stone Throwers and Bolt Throwers. Also, they could take Ogres and Giants as mercenaries.

Honestly? Pretty generic, but then, most of the armies in 2e were.

3E[edit]

The Nippon forces began their slide into obscurity in this edition; in the corebook, they don't even warrant a separate entry as a nation in the basic writeup of the setting, being instead folded into the Cathay writeup - the book promises that "a complete guide to the lands of Nippon is already under development", but it never appeared.

Warhammer Armies saw them downgraded from their own independent fighting force to simply a Mercenary force. In this edition, Dark Elf armies could take a single Samurai Lord commanding a single Ninja, up to 60 Samurai and up to 60 Ashigaru... why were Dark Elves the only army that could take Nipponese allies? Who knows!

Warhammer Army Project[edit]

Naturally, the Warhammer Army Project was quick to seize the opportunity that Games Workshop abandoned and made their own Warhammer Armies: Nippon army book for their 9th edition project. And it is massive, with one of the biggest army lists of their project! Seriously, this is on par with their Warriors of Chaos and Skaven 9e rewrites for terms of sheer content!

Links[edit]

Regions and Areas of the Warhammer World
Areas of The Old World: The Empire of Man - Bretonnia - Albion - Estalia - Tilea - Kislev - Norsca - Border Princes - Worlds Edge Mountains - Karak Eight-Peaks
Areas of The New World: Naggaroth - Lustria
Areas of The Eastern Lands: Cathay - Nippon - Ogre Kingdoms - Dark Lands - Kingdoms of Ind - Khuresh - Eastern Steppes
Areas of The Southlands: Nehekhara - Araby - Badlands - Marshes of Madness
Other Areas of the world: Ulthuan - Athel Loren - Chaos Wastes - Skavenblight - Lost Isles of Elithis
Main bodies of Water: The Great Ocean - The Far Sea - The Sea of Dread - Inner Sea of Ulthuan