Games Workshop has unveiled its annual event-exclusive commemorative miniatures for 2026, replacing last year’s Skaven warlord and Genestealer Cults operative with two character models built for smaller-scale play. The new releases include a Cadian Castellan frozen in tactical observation and a weathered Cities of Sigmar Sergeant-at-Arms, both of which slot naturally into skirmish-scale systems like Kill Team, Warcry, and flexible rulesets such as Gangfight.
Both models debut at AdeptiCon on March 25th and will roll out to conventions and Warhammer Events throughout 2026 before rotating out ahead of next year’s AdeptiCon.
TL;DR
Games Workshop revealed two new 2026 commemorative event miniatures: “Cadia Unbroken,” a Cadian Castellan, and “Dawner’s Reward,” a Cities of Sigmar Sergeant-at-Arms. Both launch March 25th at AdeptiCon and will be available at select conventions through early 2027. These limited-release character sculpts are designed with narrative detail and skirmish-friendly basing.
The Cadian miniature, titled “Cadia Unbroken,” depicts a senior officer in mid-observation—one hand holding her scabbard strap, the other gripping a glove behind her back. She stands on sculpted rubble and a discarded sandbag, offering a rare moment of calm leadership rather than action heroics. For Astra Militarum players, this fills a specific gap: characterful regimental command options that don’t involve barking orders or brandishing pistols.
The Cities of Sigmar model, “Dawner’s Reward,” shows a Steelhelm Sergeant-at-Arms mid-rest after combat. Blood drips from his blade, a Kruleboy’s severed head lies half-buried at his feet, and his armor shows heavy wear. It’s positioned as a campaign veteran rather than parade-ground material, reflecting the grueling nature of Dawnbringer Crusades in Age of Sigmar lore.
Neither model includes rules at launch, though Games Workshop noted they “may be made available through other routes in the future,” suggesting these could eventually see wider retail or online releases after their convention exclusivity ends.
Why This Matters for Skirmish Players
Event-exclusive miniatures historically appeal to collectors and tournament players, but these sculpts work particularly well for narrative skirmish games. The Cadian Castellan reads immediately as a scenario objective or high-value leader in Kill Team operations—her pose suggests reconnaissance or tactical decision-making, not frontline combat. That makes her useful as a non-combatant character in narrative campaigns or as a customizable officer proxy.
The Cities Sergeant benefits even more from skirmish context. His exhausted, post-battle stance fits the grinding attrition of Warcry or small-scale Age of Sigmar narrative play, where individual models carry weight and battle damage tells a story. For kitbashers, the detailed base and weathered armor provide strong conversion fodder.
Both models follow the trend of single-character sculpts with strong environmental storytelling—something that plays better at skirmish scale than in ranked units. Players running systems like Gangfight or homebrewed rulesets gain characterful centerpiece models without paying for boxed sets they don’t need.
Availability and What Comes Next
These miniatures launch exclusively at AdeptiCon on March 25th, then travel to other conventions where the Warhammer Events team appears through the end of 2026. They’ll remain available at qualifying events until AdeptiCon 2027, at which point new commemoratives will replace them. Games Workshop’s statement about “other routes in the future” leaves room for eventual online sales, though no timeline was confirmed.
For context, previous commemorative miniatures have occasionally appeared in limited online releases months after their convention window closed, but this isn’t guaranteed. Players interested in either model should plan to attend a qualifying event or arrange secondary-market purchases if they miss the convention circuit.
The shift from last year’s aggressive character choices—a Skaven warlord mid-leap and a Genestealer cultist in combat stance—to more contemplative poses suggests GW is testing whether collectors respond better to narrative moments than action shots. That could influence future commemorative design if sales data supports it.

