Hamilcar: Champion of the Gods, published in 2020, is David Guymer's showcase for one of Age of Sigmar's most entertaining creations, and one of the few comic protagonists to stride out of the ranks of the Stormcast Eternals. Hamilcar Bear-Eater, Lord-Castellant of the Astral Templars, narrates his own adventures in the first person, and his defining trait is a bottomless, unshakeable conviction that he is the greatest warrior the Realms have ever produced. The joke, sustained with real skill, is that he is boastful, vain, and shamelessly self-promoting, and also, inconveniently for the reader's scepticism, genuinely magnificent.
The book gathers and connects a run of Hamilcar's exploits into a larger arc, and its central engine is a delicious reversal of the usual Stormcast anxiety. Where most such warriors dread the soul-scouring cost of Reforging, Hamilcar's problem is that his soul is too desirable: Nagash, the Great Necromancer and God of Death, has taken a particular interest in claiming it for himself. As a result the legions of undeath, spectral Nighthaunt, remorseless bone-constructs, and worse, hound him across the Mortal Realms, and Hamilcar must survive by a mixture of prowess, luck, and the sheer refusal to believe he can lose.
Guymer's craft lies in what he smuggles in beneath the swagger. Hamilcar's narration is hilarious, but it is also a mask, and the novel quietly reveals the loneliness, doubt, and buried decency underneath the performance. His relationships with his long-suffering Liberators, his exasperated fellow commanders, and the mortals he protects give the comedy weight, so that the boasting reads less as arrogance than as a man talking himself into the courage his role demands. It is a warmer, more human portrait than the golden demigods of the setting usually receive.
The tone is a deliberate counterpoint to the epic solemnity of most Stormcast fiction. Where the range's launch titles treat the God-King's warriors as tragic instruments of eternal war, Hamilcar insists they can also be funny, boisterous company, without ever suggesting the wider setting is any less deadly. People die, campaigns fail, and the cost of immortality remains grim; Hamilcar simply narrates it all with an irrepressible grin.
For readers who want to sample Age of Sigmar without committing to its heaviest mythic register, Hamilcar: Champion of the Gods is an ideal on-ramp: fast, funny, self-contained, and anchored by a narrator you will either love immediately or come to love against your will. It is proof that the Mortal Realms, for all their apocalyptic grandeur, have room for a hero who is his own biggest fan.