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  • What Makes A Place A Hive City?
  • What Places Make Up A Hive City?
  • What's Life Like In A Hive City?
  • Notable Examples

The universe of Warhammer 40,000 is a dark one to be sure, and while humanity is constantly at war with various enemies in the 41st Millennium, it has also colonized planets across star systems. The ways people live on these planets are as incredibly varied as the people that occupy them.

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From futuristic towns, small feudalistic villages, and even archaic monasteries, the human civilizations of Warhammer 40K reflect the important aspects of the imperium itself. But, none are so grim and foreboding as the imperial hive city.

What Makes A Place A Hive City?

Hive City Necromuna via Bell Of Lost Souls

There are plenty of cities throughout the imperium, few of which are classified as proper hive cities, although they often have the same makeup of citizens, manufactories, and other things that make the imperium what it is.

The difference between a hive city and any other imperial enclave comes down to one thing really: size.

How Large Are They?

When you think of a large city in Warhammer 40K, it is probably safe to say you aren't thinking big enough when considering how large hive cities are.

They are in some ways the pinnacle of the imperium's architectural design, and in other ways the worst. Hive Cities are often large enough to be seen from orbit rather easily. Huge swathes of continents are razed to be covered in ferrocrete and plasteel.

These designs are often "form meets function", with buttresses, gargoyles, and the ever-present symbols of the emperor built in, especially as you move to higher levels.

They usually require incredibly sturdy bases to support how large they are, with their foundations sometimes reaching deep into a planet's crust to stabilize it. Hive Cities are often broken up into levels, each the size of the largest modern cities, but all stacked on top of each other.

The tallest peaks of a hive city oftenreach into the stratosphere, far taller than modern skyscrapers. They often resemble huge mountains from afar.

These tallest structures are often antennas, homes for the upper crust and prominent religious leaders, or docks for spacefaring craft.

What Places Make Up A Hive City?

Hive City Tertium Concept Art via Warhammer 40K: Darktide

With so many neighborhoods, and levels flowing into one another, hive cities often change drastically from one location to another quickly.

Most of the city is often made up of manufactories(places that create food, materials, and supplies for the imperium and their armies) and living spaces for the denizens. However, with so many people living there, any facet of life can be found inside the walls.

Chapels, businesses of all types, clubs, factories, and even high-end manors can all be found on the various levels of a hive city. Not to mention incredibly large areas that often take up caverns underground that are dedicated to water, energy (often nuclear, plasma, or geothermal), and the hive city's defenses.

Hive Cities that find themselves on the frontline planets, or ones that consider themselves high-priority targets often have shield generators that cover the city. These not only protect the city from attack, but also the harsh weather that often results in the city's abuse of the atmosphere and terrain.

What's Life Like In A Hive City?

Necrumunda Ash Waste Art via Games Workshop

The short answer: not ideal. Death, disease, and poverty are common in hive cities. The thing is, they are so populous that they can afford to lose countless people every day to workplace accidents, gang violence, and other preventable causes without seeing the scales tip either way.

The Levels: Upper Crust To Underhives

Life in the spires and higher levels is often quite nice. Parks, well-maintained roads, businesses, and other amenities are easy to come by. These citizens also often have access to private security forces, transport around and off the planet, and age-defying surgeries.

The average folk live in the middle to lower levels. Here work and toil are the main, with little time to relax in-between. Small apartments are the norm, but some businesses allow for houses, while others mean living in a bunk in a large dormitory shared by dozens of other people.

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The underhives are the levels below ground. They are lawless places where gangs and illicit dealings are the way to survive.

Wars are fought daily by the various gangs that call the underhives home and this is also where dark forces often enter and gain power in a hive city.Mutations are also common down here

Strike forces of peacekeeping arbiters and other forces will enter the underhives when the ongoings of the people there threaten the life of the hive city as a whole. To mixed results.

Notable Examples

Necrumunda Diagram via Warhammer Community

Necromunda

Of all the hive cities, Necromunda is probably the most poignant example. It has popped-up in 40K lore many times over the decades, and even has various board games, and video games where it is the setting.

These include Necromunda: Hired Gun, Necromunda: Underhive Wars, the self-titled board game, and the offshoot Necromunda: Underhive.

Necromunda is Games Workshop's go-to setting to discuss the underhive gangs that often call these places home. The main hive city is surrounded by ash wastes and deserts that make the hive city both an oasis in an unforgiving planet, and a hotbed of death and war.

Tertium

The hive city of Atoma Prime in the Moebian Domain of the galactic northwest. Tertium is the setting for Warhammer 40k: Darktide, notably the lower levels.

Tertium is just as varied as any hive city is, although with seemingly less gang activity than Necromunda. It is remarkable for the manufactories that make Leman Russ tank parts for the imperium's armies.

Tertium is a great example of how a chaos incursion can eat away at a hive city from the inside out.

Armageddon

Armageddon is a common location forthe Warhammer 40k novels. It is a world of industry, with people either working in the large factories that dot the planet, or joining into service for the Armageddon Steel Legion.

Armageddon is unique for having nearly a dozen hive cities, something that planets usually can't support due to population, materials, and the well-being of the planet's atmosphere. This has caused Armageddon to be the location of multiple wars at the hands of orks and chaos forces.

The result of this has turned Armaggedon into a wasteland ofradiation, deserts, and volatile leftovers from the wars, making the hive cities some of the only livable places on the planet.

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