Para Bellum Games is unleashing the Weaver Courts on November 25, and the faction arrives with an entire slate of new units, creatures, and eerie fae constructs. From the Scaile Dancers’ shimmering violence to the haunting glow of the Will-o’ Wisps, this release marks the Weaver Courts’ true entry into Conquest.
TL;DR
The Weaver Courts debut with a full launch lineup on November 25, including elite dancers, monstrous Draics, spectral Wisps, and armored court-knights. This wave introduces a fast, deadly, supernatural faction steeped in eerie Summer-Court energy.
Five new releases, all shipping November 25
Mix of elite melee, spectral support, and monstrous attackers
Strong crossover potential as Fey in Chronicle skirmish play
The New Releases
Will-o’ Wisps
Floating fae spirits woven from light and misdirection. In Conquest, they appear as support and disruption pieces, guiding units or luring enemies out of position. They’re ideal for narrative scenarios or supernatural encounters in skirmish-scale play.
Scoth Draic & Coill Draic
A dual-kit featuring two very different fae beasts.
The Scoth Draic embodies twisted woodland hunger, prowling with predatory grace.
The Coill Draic leans into the Court’s vibrant but dangerous Summer energy.
Both add a monstrous presence perfect for mid-sized skirmish battles.
Scaile Dancers
Iridescent wings, insectlike eyes, and whip-swords define these elite fae duelists. They slice through light infantry with impossible speed, dancing through enemy lines before slipping away. Their fragility keeps them high-risk, high-reward. In Chronicle, they slot perfectly as Fey blade-dancers or elite trickster warriors.
Gemred Knights
Heavy armor meets shimmering fae aesthetics. These warriors offer the Weaver Courts a more durable hammer unit compared to the Dancers’ precision. Their crystalline armor and ornate weapons help anchor charges or hold objectives.
Why This Matters for Skirmish Gamers
The Weaver Courts bring a high-mobility, high-style faction built around supernatural trickery and Summer-Court violence. Their sculpts have dynamic posing, unusual silhouettes, and a fae-creature look rarely seen in rank-and-flank games.
For Gangfight and Chronicle, this entire release wave is perfect for building a Fey warband.
The Dancers work as elite assassins, the Knights as armored fae guardians, the Wisps as support spirits, and the Draics as monstrous centerpieces. The aesthetic cohesion makes them an easy drop-in for any fae-themed campaign or skirmish map.
These models broaden the palette for hobbyists who want supernatural forces without leaning into undead or demons—bringing a folklore-driven style that feels both fresh and dangerous.






