Veteran: Squad Leader - Build for Darktide (2024)

GUIDE UPDATED: Path of Redemption, 15APR2024
(i may tweak talent nodes every so often)

Support Veteran build that provides you and your team with excellent crowd control options and a metric kark-ton of team buffs and coherency bonuses: toughness regen, ammo efficiency, and several sources of team dmg boosts, all while still allowing for enough personal damage to perform as the team's traditional backline. More than anything, this talent mixture allows a diligent Veteran to flex between frontline fights and high-threat management as necessary, enabling you to become the crux member of every auric-operative team.

This build will serve as an excellent stepping stone for newer players while staying mostly optimal in terms of damage and utility; once you're more experienced, start tweaking some of the talent picks per your needs and playstyle, further details under 'Alternative Talents' section.

Strengths:

  • Access to the most team buffs compared to other 'support' classes (dmg + regen)
  • Excellent crowd control
  • Team role flexible (frontline/backline)
  • Melee/Ranged loadout flexible

Weaknesses:

  • CD dependent (don't waste ability/grenades all at once)
  • Positioning dependent (don't tunnel vision + don't rush/lag behind)
  • Somewhat struggles without a dedicated frontliner (in full vet/psyker comps, you become the frontline)

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BLITZ: SHREDDER GRENADES

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This blitz is used less for damage and more for it's ~8m AoE bleeds and stagger, which if used properly, can create clutch openings or even prevent deaths and damage in high pressure fights. The closer to the initial blast's epicenter the higher the impact, which will face-to-floor everything but mutants and monstrosities. As such, the best practice is landing the shredder nearest the toughest targets in a horde (ragers, maulers, crushers, etc.) to maximize that crowd control potential.

  • The shredder's three maximum capacity paired with the regen from Demolition Stockpile makes for some free and fairly consistent options of CC, with enough uptime to last you throughout a mission.
  • The applied bleed stacks are effective for softening chaff and non-heavy armored targets, but will also synergize with any allied Ogryns and Zealots who utilize bleed talents for extra crit chance and toughness dmg reduction!
  • Fill in the gaps for every fight - the blitz by itself is a wonderful filler in case of ability downtime or a general lack of hard CC options. It's ease of use, larger effective radius, and respectable damage makes it a tool to be used both offensively and defensively, and is something you can and should abuse for every fight.
  • Make sure to read about the Shredder's bleed damage near the end of this guide if you want to make the most out of it!

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ABILITY: VOICE OF COMMAND

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A core defining ability for every support Veteran build, which staggers all enemies within 9m and instantly replenishes your toughness to full, even when it's completely spent. Similar to shredder grenades but without the harsh range falloff, and sporting stagger that can better affect mutants and monstrosities, a VoC shout will instantly floor and otherwise interrupt everything that threatens your team.

  • Duty and Honor enables VoC to overheal toughness by +50 while additionally providing that bonus to your team, essentially converting the ability into a team 'heal' similar to Zealot's chorus relic.
  • For the Emperor is another excellent modifier that grants the team a 10% damage buff, better enabling them to follow up on the opening you've just made.
  • Use this reflexively and often - with a short 30s cooldown and further reduction earned from Tactical Awareness, it's the ultimate all-in-one tool to create space, replenish toughness, and buff team damage with very little downtime.

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KEYSTONE: FOCUS TARGET

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An amazing keystone that alters the Veteran's default tag function: any specialist/elite/boss enemies that you tag will now be marked by a golden outline and skull, as opposed to the default red. Not only does this help more visually challenged teammates prioritize these threats better alongside you, it applies a debuff which the entire team benefits from. Higher 'focus' stacks will apply a stronger debuff for even greater damage bonuses.

  • The Focused Fire modifier increases your total focus stacks from 5 to 8, effectively increasing bonus dmg from 20% to 32%. This higher maximum is best applied against tougher targets like crushers and monstrosities, but isn't super necessary for most other threats.
  • Securing a kill on a focused target will grant further coherency bonuses through Target Down (toughness and stamina regen) and Redirect Fire (base damage). So long as targets are being marked, even teammates can secure the kill for both bonuses to trigger, allowing for easy and consistent regen/dmg throughout a fight.
  • Maintain focus marks on targets of high priority - the moment a focus mark is applied to another enemy, the previous target will instantly lose all stacks and the debuff. As such, there is a delicate balance between keeping a mark applied to the tankiest enemies so as to gain full damage benefits, and shifting it to those new and immediate threats that could potentially ruin a run. There are no wrong choices really, but the faster you decide what's most important in those moment to moment changes, the better this keystone will serve you.

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ALTERNATIVE TALENTS

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  • SHREDDER GRENADES > KRAK GRENADES
    • Krak grenades have some reputation of being more impactful compared to Shredders, which requires a bit of knowledge on bleed mechanics to show similar results. It's your preference on consistent single-target damage vs. consistent AoE damage, respectively.
    • I'd recommend loading Kraks if you want extra damage for monstrosities, or you're looking to cover anti-armor options elsewhere in your loadout.
  • SURVIVALIST > FIRE TEAM
    • Survivalist is a priority pick for T5+ difficulties, where Special/Elite spawns are frequent enough to proc a consistent ammo return, and is often the difference for an entire team never being too low on ammo.
    • Fire Team can be considered if it helps push a breakpoint, if you're practicing below T5+, and/or you're playing with another Vet who can cover Survivalist.
      • As of the Path of Redemption update, the Survivalist aura now requires a 5s cooldown in between each successful proc. This means that the ammo return is much less effective when facing elite/specials in groups, such as during hazard missions with the Shock Troop Gauntlet modifier. Regardless of the nerf, a team will still benefit from a Veteran who stays locked in on elite/special kills throughout a mission.
  • LONGSHOT > ANY
    • A simple damage boost that works off a minimum 8m distance from your target, to a maximum of 30m.
    • Unlike Kill Zone, this will still take effect even while under pressure from a horde, and a good Veteran can and will take those opportunities to take out HVT's long before they can join the fight (though having a good frontline to help create space is always welcome).
    • Optional if you're more of a close range/melee Veteran and looking for damage/utility elsewhere.
  • CHARISMATIC > ANY
    • A nice QoL coherency boost to help spread the absurd amount of bonuses you're able to provide, though optional if you'd prefer to push your damage/utility elsewhere.
  • GET BACK IN THE FIGHT > CATCH A BREATH
    • Get Back in the Fight! activates when your toughness is broken, and will essentially help Veterans under high pressure reposition much easier.
    • Catch a Breath can be noticeably helpful when under constant fire during shooter-heavy missions, mitigating some of the damage with constant regen, and may otherwise provide passive regen if outside of team coherency.
    • Both will see far less value if you're generally good about your defensive play and positioning in the first place, and the problems posed by either situation can often be mitigated by the swiss army knife that is VoC lol.
    • GBITF has the slight win in my case, as I'd rather stay mobile when forced to soak damage, like wading through bomber flames or while taking heavy gunner fire.
  • RENDING STRIKES > ANY
    • 10% Rending is essentially another free damage boost, but can be optional if it doesn't negatively affect any breakpoints and you're wanting more utility from the talent tree.
    • Rending will stack with the Penetration stat found on some melee and ranged weapons.
    • Rending TL;DR: will negate an equal value of enemy dmg resistance, and affects all enemy types.
    • Ex: if you only deal 20% damage to Carapace, with 10% rending you now deal 30%
    • Any rending added after reaching 100% penetration will continue to add damage, but at a reduced value. (source: patch 13 notes)
  • TARGET DOWN! > ANY
    • Target Down will replenish 5-40% toughness/stamina, and can be a steady supply of regen if used properly in high density fights. That much regen can be invaluable for stubborn randoms who don't know how to dodge, but is a little less important for a premade team that can reliably defend themselves.
  • TALENTS TO CONSIDER
    • Any minor talent node (melee damage, crit chance, etc.)
    • Marksman for extra ranged dmg on VoC
    • Close Quarters Killzone for extra close dmg on VoC
    • Competitive Urge for an rng dependent dmg boost; only good on T5+
    • Grenade Tinkerer, Twinned Blast, Demolition team for better grenades
    • Field Improvisation for better team grenade economy and corruption cleanse
    • Deadshot & Shock Trooper for crit chance and lasgun ammo efficiency
    • Only In Death Does Duty End... if you really want the auto-revive function (it's wasted if you're with good players!)

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LOADOUT

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First and foremost: Nothing wrong in using what you like.

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RANGED:

Though this build lacks Executioner's Stance and additional precision damage from Marksman's Focus, there's enough damage talent picks and coverage from Focus Target to boost a majority of the Veteran's arsenal into relevancy.

  • Mk II Plasma Gun | Blaze Away & Gets Hot | +Maniacs +Unyielding +Carapace
    • The PG excels in far too many categories to consider most other weapons in the current meta, boasting excellent damage, effective anti-armor, and insane cleave relative to it's short draw speed. This is offset by the PG's unique heat management mechanic and an extremely long reload, which can understandably be off-putting to the uninitiated.
    • The trick to using a PG effectively is firing non-charged shots almost exclusively, which minimizes ammo consumption and heat generation without much loss in DPS, if any; charged shots are good burst damage against threats like crushers and mutants, but is otherwise unnecessary for a majority of the things you're shooting at.
    • Heat Management: Manually venting via the special action key should be considered the 'reload' adjacent function of the PG. Proper heat management with the PG's high capacity means you can keep shooting for long periods without needing to eat the long reload - as such, generally try to reload when in-between fights.
      • Firing a charged shot above 100% heat will overload the PG, resulting in an explosion that damages nearby enemies while downing the Veteran with a wound (or killing them outright if on a single wound).
      • Attempting to fire a non-charged shot above 100% will instead automatically vent 20% heat.
      • Reloading the fuel cell itself is about a ~7s reload time without modifiers, and will vent all currently accumulated heat.
      • You can actually sprint cancel parts of the animation to reduce that reload time if you're desperate or you're a sweat: first when the ammo counter vanishes, next when the cartridge makes a second 'click', and lastly when the ammo counter refreshes as full.
      • Manually venting to 0% heat will always last five ticks (or ~3s total) whether you're venting from 15% heat or 100%.
      • With a high ammo stat, you're able to fire upwards of 50 non-charged shots before needing to reload on empty.
      • With a high thermal resistance stat, you're able to fire ~8 non-charged shots in quick succession before needing to manually vent.
  • Mk IIa Revolver | Surgical & Hand-Cannon | +Flak +Maniacs +Unyielding
    • A lightweight and easy-to-use meta option that requires almost zero talent investment to perform well, clearing most special/elite threats in 1 - 2 shots.
    • The Rending Strikes talent can help a revolver with a high penetration stat and a minimum T3 Hand-Cannon reach ~100% rending, effectively bypassing the 'armor' of enemies like Crushers and Maulers.
    • A good revolver is essentially a PG-lite, with comparable damage packed into a smaller magazine, better ammo efficiency, slightly less cleave, and most importantly a reload that doesn't take three business days to complete.
  • Mk IIb Bolter | Pinning Fire & Surgical/Shattering Impact | +Maniacs +Unyielding +Carapace
    • RIP the Bolter :(
    • Currently far outclassed by the previously listed weapons, though whenever FS decides to buff this weapon I'm sure it'll find a home in this build.
  • MG Ia, MG IV, MG XII Infantry Lasgun | Headhunter & Deadly Accurate | +Flak +Maniacs +Unyielding
    • The tried and true workhorse that I'm sure every Veteran keeps a copy of in their inventory. Recent patches have balanced all variants to perform very similar to each other DPS-wise, so you can't go wrong with the classics if you're not looking for anything fancy.
  • Mk II, Mk X Heavy Laspistol | Infernus & Reassuringly Accurate/Dumdum | +Flak +Maniacs
    • If you really want to cosplay a commissar.

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MELEE:

As above, choices for melee weapons are largely up to preference, though I'd still advise planning with specific goals in mind. (i.e. coverage for hordes, elites, etc.)

  • Mk III Power Sword | Power Cycler & Slaughterer | +Flak +Unyielding +Carapace +Elite
    Mk VII Power Sword | Power Cycler & Brutal Momentum | +Flak +Unyielding +Carapace +Elite
    • Mk III with Slaughterer enables it's vanguard moveset to better handle hordes.
    • Mk VII with Brutal Momentum becomes an effective Elite killer, especially with the push stab + L1 combo.
  • Standard Issue Sapper Shovel | Decimator & Skullcrusher/Uncanny Strike | +Flak +Unarmored +Infested
    Mk III, Mk VII Sapper Shovel | Uncanny Strike & Thrust/Decimator | +Flak +Unyielding +Carapace +Elite
    • The Standard Issue's faster strikedown lights lends to better chaining of Decimator against hordes.
    • Both variants come with a special activated attack that has extra penetration, which can benefit from both Uncanny Strike and Thrust to become an effective Elite killer.
  • Mk IV, Mk XIIIg Assault Chainsword | Savage Sweep & Rampage | +Flak +Unarmored
    • The Mk IV has mixed strikedown lights and vanguard heavies.
    • The Mk XIIIg is the inverse, with mixed vanguard lights and heavy strikedowns.
  • Mk IV, Mk XII Assault Chainaxe | Headtaker & Slaughterer | +Flak +Unyielding +Carapace +Elites
    • The Mk IV uses vanguard heavies for hordes, and strikedown lights that bite through armor.
    • The Mk XII has relentless lights for hordes, while it's heavy vertical strikedowns will rip through heads.
  • Mk II Combat Axe | Brutal Momentum & Headtaker | +Flak +Unyielding
    • Simple strikedowns coupled with innate penetration and Brutal Momentum makes for a weapon that can reliably break the heads of the toughest enemies.
  • Mk IV Devil's Claw | Savage Sweep & Rampage | +Flak +Unarmored
    • If you like parrying.

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CURIOS:

In my opinion, the defensive/utility picks of curios should be less beholden to any meta and should really just suit your particular needs and playstyle.

That said, the standard setup for most Veterans can be x3 Toughness OR x2 Toughness & x1 Health. Frontloading your Veteran with toughness will synergize with Close Order Drill and Iron Will, providing more value to those damage reduction talents.

CURIO BLESSINGS:

  • Build for more Toughness if you have trouble with chip damage (i.e. horde melee and shooters).
  • Build for more Health if you struggle defending against bigger attacks and/or take damage all at once (i.e. Snipers, Elites, Bosses).
  • Wounds are like training wheels, especially if you're a newer player venturing into T5+ missions. As a Vet, you should never take more than one, and be sure to replace it once you're confident you can defend yourself proper!
  • Stamina is a hard sell to make for most Veterans, and is often memed as the 'optimal' pick for players who just never take damage. If you're reading this, I'm sorry - you're not that guy lol

CURIO PERKS:

  • +Toughness/+Health as above.
  • +Toughness Regeneration Speed only affects passive regen when in team coherency, but x3 of this perk can improve the speed by a ridiculous amount. With Charismatic's +50% aura radius, you stand to gain plenty of return from this perk by simply playing for your team.
  • +Stamina Regeneration Speed will obviously benefit your ability to sprint, block, and push more often, but can be especially useful when using Deadshot, or when paired with 'Stamina Delay Reduction' talent nodes.
  • +Sniper Resistance is recommended by many in the community, and is often cited as insurance against being one-shot. This can be optional if you're able to defend against them well enough, and especially considering Veterans are often the best equipped to deal with them quickly.
  • +Gunner Resistance will actually cover dreg/scab gunners and Ogryn reapers, and is equally recommended by the community as insurance given they're some of the most common elite spawns. This perk may also be optional if you can defend against and/or are equipped to deal with them quickly.

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General guide ends here.

Tips, tricks, and useful stat breakdowns for the big nerds below

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Shredder Grenades:

  • Shredders have three acting components in that single ~8m detonation: stagger, blast damage, and bleed.
  • Both the shredder's stagger and blast damage have an effective range of ~5m, with major falloff around ~2m.
  • The Shredder's bleeds have zero falloff range, and will inflict full damage/bleed application within the default max radius of ~8m.
  • BLEED DAMAGE is not a simple additive value, and instead scales with higher bleed stacks (to a total of 16 bleed stacks).
  • If that doesn't make sense, here is a simple example:
    • A single Shredder applies 6 bleed stacks, totaling for 302 bleed damage.
    • Two Shredders will apply 12 bleed stacks, totaling for 1442 bleed damage.
    • (This isn't even considering the damage enhanced by Grenade Tinkerer btw)
  • With the above in mind, Shredders can then be used in two ways:
    • delaying between each detonation to make use of stagger animations, grounding tougher enemies for longer
    • chaining them more closely to massively increase bleed damage, clearing any surrounding chaff while softening tougher targets. A lucky proc of Twinned Blast can do just the same!
  • Another important note: bleeds have differing damage values on all armor types, but I won't get into that here. Instead, Ryken has more in-depth testing on Shredder damage values if you're that curious: https://youtu.be/lS_CmIQzYhc?si=g4266z1p9-Ue3_Ov&t=34
    • Some info in the video, like Longshot affecting grenade damage, have since been patched. insofar as I know and from my own testing, the stagger, blast damage, and bleed values all function the same as was in patch 13. I'll update as I learn more/any changes come.

Voice of Command:

  • It's worth reminding that while Duty and Honor and For the Emperor both function off of VoC, both are still coherency bonuses that can exceed the ability's default 9m radius, depending on if you've invested into Charismatic or not.
  • VoC will still replenish the Veteran's maximum toughness and the full +50 overheal even when completely empty. Teammates will only receive a standard toughness heal of +50.
  • This overheal can also stack with another Veteran's VoC and Zealot's Chorus Relic.
  • This overheal alone is often enough to protect health from moderate forms of chip damage, such as the mutant body slam, the kaboom from a Bomber, or the initial pounce of a hound.
  • With that in mind, the best practice when using this ability is preventing damage, not replenishing toughness after the fact. Shield teammates when they're about to take a hit or push through a threshold into risky open spaces, or better yet, stagger the enemies just before they can land the blow.

Focus Target:

  • A focus mark stays applied for ~25s (default tags only stick for ~10s). That's more than enough time to secure a kill on tougher elites, but also a generous window of bonus damage to inflict on monstrosities.
  • Once a focus mark is applied, the focus target will always retain the highest focus stacks.(ex: if the first focus mark applies 8 focus stacks, then it cannot be overridden by any lower value, if say, you were to accidentally re-mark the target sooner than you wanted).
  • Conversely, if you were to mark a target too early with low stacks, you are able to 'refresh' the mark to get that higher damage bonus. Note that applied focus stacks are not additive. (ex: the first focus mark applies 3 stacks, but is followed up with another 5 stacks. This does not suddenly yield 8 total stacks on the focus target, and will instead refresh with the higher 5 stack debuff.)
  • If the above is looking a touch complicated, I wouldn't worry too much. In the grand scheme of things, this is really only important to remember for monstrosities, the one enemy type where you'll always want to maximize Focus Target's bonus damage.
  • TL;DR if you want full bonus damage on an enemy, you must always apply at full stacks, period.
  • The Redirect Fire modifier has a curious if not confusing disconnect from the normal behavior of the keystone, and does actually work as an additive buff, meaning that any kills that which reward stacks of Redirect Fire will refresh the duration and cumulatively reach the 8 total stack maximum.

Misc:

  • Aside from the lads and ladies in the official Darktide discord, a lot of the information I get to supplement my own buildcrafting comes from Ryken XIV and cashcrop on youtube, both of whom elaborate on more obscure details and generally offer useful breakdowns on all class features. I highly suggest giving them a follow if you're interested!
    • Ryken: https://www.youtube.com/@rykenxiv
    • cashcrop: https://www.youtube.com/@cashcrop_

final author note: I try to update my guides often as I earn better rolls and learn more about talents and breakpoints, and especially after patch specific changes, so stay tuned if you like. I had originally used this just for personal planning and quick reference, but thanks for upvoting the guide nonetheless. have fun gang :)

Veteran: Squad Leader - Build for Darktide (2024)

FAQs

What is the best weapon in veteran sharpshooter Darktide? ›

For the best single-target damage potential, use the Lucius Mk III Helbore Lasgun. This gun can take down Crushers in one hit if it has the right combination of stats and Blessings. Ideally, players should be using a Helbore rifle with the following: +25% Damage against Carapace.

What is the best build for zealot in Darktide? ›

Easily the best build for Zealot at the moment IS a Combat Knife build. You stack crit blessings (bleed on crit, crit chance on dodge). You spec into Holy Idol (or whatever it's called, the support ability), then go down the left tree and spec into "reduce cooldown on crit".

What is the veteran ability in Warhammer 40k Darktide? ›

The Veteran is capable of doing very high amounts of ranged damage to the more dangerous enemies among the ranks of the heretics - particularly elites, specials and bosses. The Veteran's Volley Fire ability gives you short bursts of even higher ranged damage, and also allows you to spot dangerous foes through cover.

What is a fury build in Darktide? ›

A Zealot 'fury' build is one that capitalizes on a combination of increased damage, swing-speed, and/or crit to do maximum damage as fast as possible. You'll usually see it paired with high-cleave (hits a lot of enemies at once) weapons like the Eviscerator for maximum crowd-clearing or group-staggering potential.

What is the highest weapon power in Darktide? ›

380 is max "base" stats on a Grey Item. 540 is the absolute max a weapon can be. 380 base weapon stats. No one uses chainsword and no one cares about chainsword.

Does your homeworld matter in Warhammer Darktide? ›

The first option is choosing a home-world, all except Cadia are worlds of the Moebian Domain. The home-world chosen only dictates the backstory options for the player-character's childhood. All of the following backstory options are dictated by the player-character's chosen class.

What is the best feat in Darktide? ›

Best Ability Talent

Wield a holy relic that releases pulses of energy every 0.8 seconds. While channeling, Allies in Coherency have Stun immunity and Invulnerability. Each pulse Replenishes 45% Toughness to Allies in Coherency.

Is Sharpshooter good Darktide? ›

The Sharpshooter, in particular, has trained long and hard in ranged combat, drawing preference for longer-range weapons such as the lasgun or autogun. Upon activating their ability, their movement is slowed in a trade for increased weak spot damage, accuracy, and handling.

What is the veteran ranged stance in Darktide? ›

When in Ranged Stance, the Veteran instantly equips a ranged weapon and deals +25% Ranged Damage and +25% Weakspot Damage. The Veteran's Spread and Recoil are also greatly reduced.

What is the max level in Warhammer Darktide? ›

Yeah level 30 is technically the max, at least in terms of talent points. Most of your time after that is spent optimizing your gear, playstyle, and general skill.

What is Soulblaze Darktide? ›

Soulblaze is a DoT (like burn or bleed) coming from some source. The most reliable source of Soulblaze is the purgatus staff, wich does DoT on all of its attacks (primary and secondary).

What skill does psyker Darktide have? ›

A Psyker: Psykinetic gains Warp Charges by killing their enemies – growing more powerful but rapidly increasing their Peril. In place of the grenades carried by the other classes. The Psyker: Psykinetic's power is Brain Burst … which does pretty much what it says.

What is the Ogryn in Darktide? ›

Ogryns are massive, powerful abhumans, often used as shock troops for the Astra Militarum. They are strong and loyal, but have limited intelligence. Subtlety isn't in a Ogryn's limited vocabulary.

What is the highest weapon modifier in Darktide? ›

Modifiers. All weapons have 5 modifiers that can have a value up to 80%, each percent counting as 1 rating point. The lowest rating is 85 (that of a character's starter weapons) and the best is currently 380 (with all modifiers but one at 80%).

What is the best weapon for the ogre in Darktide? ›

1 Gorgonum Mk IV Twin-Linked Heavy Stubber

There are few weapons as synonymous with ogryn as much as the heavy stubber is, and there's no better heavy stubber than the Gorgonum model. It's a huge two-barreled machine gun that chews through ammo as much as it does heretics.

References

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