24 years ago, GW launched the T’au Empire, and the game has never been the same. Take a look at their original minis and unexpected concept art.
We are headed back 24 years to October 2001 and White Dwarf 262. Games Workshop was looking to shake up the game and had a very different army in mind that was unlike anything that resided in the Grimdark. The Tau (now T’au Empire) were an entirely fresh concept. Unburdened by the legacy of previous editions of Warhammer 40,000 or even Warhammer Fantasy.
It was clear that GW was looking for a very different aesthetic. One that drew heavily from Japanese influences, both culturally and in their legacy of manga and mecha. Cracking open the cover, we get the initial Tau launch miniatures.
Tau Original Minis
Here the T’au are in all their glory. Let’s run these down:
- Tau Codex
- Etherial
- Kroot Shaper
- Kroot Carnivore Squad
- Kroot Hounds
- Devilfish
- Pathfinder Team
- Pathfinder Shas’ui
- Fire Warrior Team
- Tau Battleforce
- Tau Army boxed set
Note the Crisis Suits, Broadsides, Hammerheads, and teensy Original XV-15 Stealth Suits would be along soon, but not this very first month. Even back in 2001, you had GW leveraging the “get models early in the big army set” thing going on.
T’au First Impressions
The army was amazing, with an extremely high level of quality and detail for the era. The original Kroot Carnivore kit, just redone in 2024, for example, was dripping with detail and still holds up to this day.
The suits and vehicles had that manga hard tech look that was quite different from the organic-looking tech of the Eldar, and made the Imperial stuff look crude by comparison. GW had a long designer’s article where they laid out some of their design goals, and a lot of very interesting formative concept art from Jes Goodwin and John Blanche.
Tau Concept Art
Here, we see Jes’ designs on the left and Blanche’s on the right. I have to say Blanche makes the meanest, most hulking, brutal-looking T’au I’ve ever seen—with a little samurai overtone!
It is interesting to note the overt GW desire for a Manga-hard edged design for the T’au with the Kroot range designed as an in-faction counterpoint.
Here’s more Blanche working out details of the old original (and teensy) Stealth Suits, which were about the same size as Fire Warriors.
Pathfinders with some super complex helmet designs that were scrapped. Also, note that funky walker that never made it off the drawing board on the far right background.
The original T’au Fire Warrior, upon which the entire infantry range is built. My biggest surprise in the White Dwarf was the very early internal GW conversation on the entire Tau range. Internally, the staff liked both the Tau and Kroot ranges, but went back and forth over which one would be the main “Tau race” with the other as the minor allies.
If things had gone the other direction, Warhammer 40K today would have a giant Kroot faction with a handful of T’au auxillia allies. Wow!
Some original vehicle designs. These look very spacecraft-y to me, with a lot of things that look like they could have flown right out of Star Wars’ Mos Eisley or Battletech’s Inner Sphere.
In this panel, we see the Devilfish taking shape – still perhaps with some Star Trek USS Defiant vibes …but it’s getting quite close to its final form.
~And there you have it. I can’t believe the Tau turn twenty-four years old this year! We’ve come a long way since 3rd Edition!
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Dad, Gamer, Publisher, Pilot, Texan. All games all the time since junior-high.
I started BoLS Interactive in 2006. I’m a lifelong tabletop & RPG gaming enthusiast, and internet publisher working to entertain and inform my readers every day.
I’ve been playing RPGs and Tabletop Games since the 1970s. I’m been playing and covering Warhammer and Warhammer 40K for over 35 years.
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