So you’ve cracked open that fresh Games Workshop Drukhari Combat Patrol box, and you’re looking at a Haemonculus with greasy surgical hands, a pair of grotesque biomechanical horrors (Cronos and Talos), and ten Wracks stitched together like hobby project leftovers. Your first instinct? “This is way too many models for a pickup game.” We get it. But here’s the thing: Games Workshop just handed you a skirmish player’s fever dream. These aren’t your typical army-fodder models—they’re weird, horrifying, deeply customizable centerpieces that live in small-scale games where personality matters.
TL;DR Summary
The 2025 Drukhari Combat Patrol is a treasure trove for skirmish and narrative gaming. With 13 kits featuring wild conversion options, pain-themed weapons, and grotesque sculpts, you can build a terrifying raiding party without ever painting 2,000 points. Run a tight 5–8 model band using Gangfight rules, convert some Wracks into specialized roles, and you’ve got a game that feels like a surgical strike, not a slog.
- 13 versatile plastic models with tons of customization options (heads, weapons, backpacks)
- Narrative-driven gameplay perfect for skirmish scenarios and diorama-heavy campaigns
- Excellent conversion material for building unique characters and specialists
- Actually plays fast in small-scale games (much faster than 2,000-point lists)
Who’s This For?
Painters who dig macabre aesthetics, kitbashers who want grotesque donor models, Gangfight players hunting an elite alien kill-team, collectors of weird resin and plastic, and anyone who watched a Game Workshop video and thought: “I could build a twisted pleasure cult.” If you’ve ever painted skin tones and wondered how far you could push the horror on a single model’s face, this box is your audition.
What’s in the Box?
This Combat Patrol contains 1 Haemonculus, 1 Cronos (buildable as a Talos), 1 Talos (buildable as a Cronos), and 10 Wracks—13 highly customizable multipart plastic models total. Each kit ships with Citadel bases, transfer sheets, and enough interchangeable bits to make every model look unique: different masks for the Wracks, multiple weapon loadouts for the heavy creatures, alternate heads for the bigger kits.
The real gold is the modular design. The Wracks alone can sport torturer’s tools, liquifier guns, ossefactors, hexrifles, and stinger pistols. The Talos can be armed with haywire blasters, heat lances, splinter cannons, or liquifier guns. You’re not gluing and praying here—Games Workshop gave you options.
How These Models Fit into Skirmish Games with Gangfight Rules
Here’s where it gets fun. In large-scale Warhammer 40K, this box is one detachment in a bigger army. In skirmish? It’s a complete raiding party. Let’s map these models into Gangfight’s Aeon setting (sci-fi), since Drukhari absolutely live in that aesthetic space.
The Haemonculus → Specialist / Operative
The Haemonculus leads with surgical precision and dark alchemy. In Gangfight terms, map this to a Specialist role—high intelligence, field medic capabilities, and dark tech mastery. The model’s ornate weaponry and robes scream authority without needing a squad banner. On the table, you’d equip them with Medkit and Beam Rifle (those splinter weapons are pure sci-fi pain).
Traits: Healing, Alchemy (homebrew reskin of poison/pain effects), Quick Draw
The Cronos / Talos → Heavy
These bulking pain-engines are your squad’s backbone. The Cronos is smaller but still a tank; the Talos is a walking siege gun. Both clock in at Large (40–60 mm) bases in Gangfight sizing, or Huge (75–120 mm) if you really want them to tower. Either way, they scream Heavy role.
The Talos especially—with twin heavy weapons and a melee gauntlet—maps perfectly to a Heavy with a Beam Rifle (twin haywire blaster) or Grenade Launcher (liquifier gun). The Cronos works better as a support heavy with Medkit (it’s designed to repair and drain souls, which is basically healing turned inside out).
Traits: Fearless, Cybernetics (these things are part-organic horror), Grit
Homebrew Suggestion: Give the Talos an extra upgrade slot due to its grotesque armoring, simulating that extra layer of twisted biomech.
The Wracks → Operatives / Scouts / Specialists
Ten Wracks gives you options. Drop a few on the table as Operatives (speed and ranged pain), build one or two as Specialists (they’ve got torture tools and weird tech—map to field medics or demolitions experts), and consider one as a Scout with ranged weapons for aggressive boarding actions.
The modular weaponry is perfect for Gangfight’s equipment rules. A Wrack with stinger pistol + hexrifle? That’s your Operative with SMG + DMR loadout. A Wrack with a liquifier gun and cultist robes? Specialist with anti-armor loadout.
Traits: Quick Draw (Drukhari live on precision and reflexes), Mounted (if you’re using raiding-party lore, some can be on jetbikes—homebrew this as a modifier)
Gangfight Adaptation Table
Model | Role | Loadout | Traits | Setting |
---|---|---|---|---|
Haemonculus | Specialist | Beam Rifle + Medkit | Healing, Alchemy | Aeon |
Talos | Heavy | Beam Rifle (twin) + Targeting Upgrade | Fearless, Cybernetics | Aeon |
Cronos | Heavy | Medkit + Beam Rifle | Fearless, Cybernetics | Aeon |
Wrack (Leader) | Operative | Beam Rifle + Grenade Launcher | Quick Draw, Grit | Aeon |
Wrack (Specialists, ×2) | Specialist | Beam Rifle + Medkit or Grenade Launcher | Quick Draw | Aeon |
Wrack (Operatives, ×6) | Operative | SMG + Beam Rifle (hexrifle option) | Quick Draw | Aeon |
Why These Models Are Conversion Gold
Games Workshop’s Drukhari kits—especially the Wracks—are designed for frankenstein energy. Every body part feels wrong on purpose. Mix and match heads, arms, and weapons across kits, and you’ve got a raiding party that looks like no two members were ever meant to work together. That’s perfect for skirmish narratives.
Swapping a Wrack arm with a spare bit from a different Games Workshop sci-fi kit? Done. Using a Talos head on a proxy Heavy? The grimdark aesthetic absorbs it. These models want to be weird, so lean in.
Kitbash Idea: Take a Wrack’s torso and grafts onto a different-sized base with custom legs from a bitz box or other kit. Suddenly you’ve got a one-off infiltrator or mutated specialist.
How to Paint Them for Maximum Impact
Drukhari thrive on contrast. Here’s how to make these twisted surgeons look genuinely menacing on the table:
Skin Tones: Start with a pale grey-white base (Celestra Grey, Ulthuan Grey). Wash with Carroburg Crimson or a diluted pink wash to suggest pain, infection, or ritual scarification. Drybrush lighter grey-white back on to pop muscle definition. The result: sickly, emaciated frames that ooze trouble from every stitch of flesh.
Weapons: Metallics are your friend. A mix of Leadbelcher, Ironbreaker, and Runelord Brass on the surgical tools creates a “lived-in surgery” vibe. Wash with Nuln Oil, then drybrush light silver on edges. Add small spots of Carroburg Crimson or Druchii Violet around the blade edges to suggest dried blood or alchemical residue.
Fabric/Robes: These sadistic cultists love deep blacks, purples, and reds. Base with Abaddon Black, layer up with Incubi Darkness (for purples) or Mephiston Red, then drybrush edges with lighter shades. A gloss varnish on selected details (blood spatters, glistening organs) sells the horror.
Bases: Grim grey concrete with rust streaks, blood pools, or surgical waste. Drybrushing Dryad Bark onto edges and pooling Carroburg Crimson in the cracks makes even a flat base look like a crime scene.
Pro Tip: Use a airbrush for skin if you’ve got one—thin coats of watered-down Kislev Flesh, then Carroburg Crimson as a glaze, then light gloss varnish on select areas. The smoothness sells the alien wrongness.
Is This a Good Value Set for Skirmish Players & Collectors?
The box retails for $170 and contains 13 highly detailed, multipart plastic models. For skirmish gaming, that’s excellent value. You’ll use maybe 6–8 models in any given small game, leaving you with customization leftovers or models for a second band.
For collectors, the sculpts are phenomenal—especially the Talos and Cronos, which are absolute centerpieces. The Wracks have personality in spades, and the detail on weapons/armor rivals anything Games Workshop puts out.
Downside? The older 2021 Drukhari Combat Patrol (with Archon, Kabalite Warriors, Incubi, Raider, and Ravager) is genuinely a better value for army-building players due to its balanced unit mix. The 2025 Coven box is specialized—great for narrative play and skirmish, less ideal if you want a “traditional” balanced Drukhari force.
Verdict: If you’re building for skirmish, small-scale dioramas, or painting centerpieces, buy it today. If you’re trying to field a full Warhammer 40K army, research both boxes and grab whichever aligns with your larger collection goal.
Scenario Hooks: “Realspace Raid” & “Surgical Extraction”
Scenario 1: Realspace Raid
Engagement: Your Haemonculus and three Wracks assault a colonial outpost for test subjects. Opposing force: five hired mercenaries with pulse rifles and a leader.
Complications: The outpost has a plasma reactor. If it overloads, both sides take damage. One merc is a veteran with Grit who won’t retreat. Reinforcements arrive on turn 4.
Conclusion: First side to extract three objectives (prisoners, data cores, or just survive) wins. Drukhari win big if they grab the merc leader alive.
Scenario 2: Surgical Extraction
Engagement: The Talos and Haemonculus hunt a high-value target in a urban environment. Enemy gang (8 Operatives with SMGs) has entrench in ruins.
Complications: The target is guarded by a drone. Destroying the drone alerts all remaining enemies. Friendly Wracks can flank via alleys.
Conclusion: Grab the target and escape via the board edge. Drukhari win if Haemonculus extracts with target intact. Enemies win if they pin the Haemonculus in place for 3 rounds.
Mini Guide: Converting Wracks into Custom Specialists
Wracks are blank canvases. Here’s how to hack them into unique skirmish roles:
- Grab a Wrack torso and a Wrack head from a spare kit (or borrow from a friend’s sprue).
- Choose a weapon loadout based on your Gangfight role: SMG arm (stinger pistol + liquifier gun), Heavy arm (ossefactor + hexrifle), or Medic (torturer’s tools + medkit proxy).
- Swap legs to a different Wrack kit or use spare Necron / Genestealer bits to create height variation.
- Paint with intention: If it’s a leader, use a brighter accent color. Specialists get more ornate robe details. Operatives stay grimmer.
Result: A squad where no two models are identical, and each one tells a story of surgical horror. Perfect for Gangfight’s narrative focus.
FAQs
Q: Can I use just 5–6 models from this box for a Gangfight skirmish game? A: Absolutely. Grab the Haemonculus, one Heavy (Talos or Cronos), and 3–4 Wracks. You’ve got a tight, flavorful 5-person squad that’s fast to play.
Q: Do I need to magnetize the Talos/Cronos weapons? A: For skirmish, no—pick one loadout and paint it. But if you’re rotating between Warhammer 40K and Gangfight, magnetizing the arms takes an hour and saves grief later.
Q: How many Wracks would make a “full” skirmish band? A: 6–8 is ideal for Gangfight. You’ve got the Haemonculus + Heavy (2 models), then 6 Operative/Specialist Wracks = 8-model squad. Perfect for tight engagements.
Q: Are the Wracks easy to paint for a beginner? A: Yes. Their weird anatomy reads well with simple basecoat → wash → drybrush. Even sloppy paint jobs look intentional on grotesque models.
Q: Can I use Drukhari models for other sci-fi skirmish rulesets? A: Totally. These miniatures work in Kill Team, Necromunda (with proxy rules), or any 28–32mm sci-fi skirmish game. Gangfight is just our recommendation.
Q: Should I buy the 2025 Coven box or the older 2021 Drukhari Combat Patrol? A: For skirmish: 2025 Coven (weird, specialized, perfect for narratives). For army-building: 2021 box if you can find it (better unit balance). For collectors: both (they’re different aesthetically).
Q: What’s “SquID Armor” and why does it matter? A: In Gangfight’s Aeon setting, SquID Armor is a small-mech option (+5 Armor, extra upgrade slots, increases model size). The Cronos/Talos can proxy as these if you homebrew it—they’re already bulky enough.
Glossary
Kitbash: Mixing plastic bits from multiple kits to create a custom model. Drukhari Wracks are designed for this.
Drybrush: Dragging a nearly-dry brush over raised surfaces to highlight texture. Essential for grimdark Drukhari.
Wash: A thin, pigmented liquid that pools in recesses to add shadow and definition. Carroburg Crimson does heavy lifting here.
Operative: A mid-tier Gangfight role—fast, flexible, lightly armed. Wracks fit perfectly.
Specialist: A Gangfight role for unique, mission-critical models like medics, hackers, or—in this case—torturing Haemonculi.
Heavy: A Gangfight role for durable, high-damage models. The Cronos and Talos are textbook Heavies.
Skirmish: Small-scale tabletop gaming (5–10 models per side) focused on narrative and individual character moments rather than army composition.
Haemonculus: A Games Workshop Dark Eldar / Drukhari master torturer and flesh-crafter. In lore, basically a sadistic mad scientist.
Wrack: Drukhari apprentices-turned-test-subjects. Heavily modified with surgical augmentations.
Author & Updates
Tim Kline — Founder of SkirmishGames.com and Gangfight Games. 15+ years painting Warhammer and indie skirmish games. When he’s not writing, he’s airbrushing skin tones on Drukhari Operatives.
Last Updated: October 2025
- Added Scenario Hooks (Realspace Raid, Surgical Extraction)
- Expanded painting guide with airbrush tips
- Clarified difference between 2021 and 2025 Combat Patrol boxes
Final Thoughts
Games Workshop’s 2025 Drukhari Coven Combat Patrol isn’t just another army box—it’s a statement piece for skirmish players. These models ooze personality, horror, and conversion potential. Whether you’re running them through Gangfight scenarios, painting dioramas, or just kitbashing nightmares, you’ve got 13 miniatures that punch way above their points value in narrative impact.
Grab a box, clear a space on your hobby desk, and start thinking like a twisted Haemonculus surgeon. Your next skirmish awaits.
Ready to launch your own realspace raid? Pick up the Combat Patrol, grab a copy of the Gangfight ruleset, and let us know how your first skirmish goes in the comments below. Pin your best painted Wrack to the SkirmishGames Discord—we’re giving away conversion bits for the gnarliest conversions this month.
Happy hunting, commandos.