The Daemon's Curse, published in 2005, opens the Malus Darkblade series by Dan Abnett and Mike Lee, adapting and expanding a character who had begun life in the pages of Games Workshop's comics into a full prose saga. It is a rare thing even within Warhammer's morally black universe: a story with a genuinely villainous protagonist, an antihero with almost no redeeming softness, and it dares the reader to follow him anyway.
Malus Darkblade is a highborn of the Dark Elves, the Druchii, a race defined by cruelty, ambition, and the constant lethal scheming of kin against kin. Raised in the shadowed city of Hag Graef and despised by his own family, Malus is grasping, treacherous, and utterly self-interested, and Abnett and Lee make no attempt to soften him. When his hunger for power leads him into a forbidden temple in the frozen wastes, he seizes an artefact he does not understand and is possessed by Tz'arkan, an ancient daemon who devours his soul and offers a single, poisoned bargain.
That bargain drives the series. To reclaim his stolen soul and expel the daemon before it consumes him entirely, Malus must recover five lost relics scattered across the world, and he has only a year to do it. The daemon's whispering presence, mocking, manipulative, and always ready to lend him monstrous strength at a price, becomes the perfect foil, an inner voice that externalises the corruption at the heart of Druchii society. Malus is damned whether he succeeds or fails, and the tension lies in watching how much further he will debase himself to survive.
The novel is also one of the fullest depictions of Dark Elf civilisation in Warhammer fiction. Abnett and Lee render the Druchii as a culture of exquisite, institutionalised cruelty, where slavery, betrayal, and casual murder are simply the texture of daily life, and where family is the most dangerous battlefield of all. For readers curious about the villains among the Old World's elves, it is an immersive and unflinching tour of their worst impulses.
Fast-paced, savage, and shot through with grim wit, The Daemon's Curse succeeds by making its irredeemable lead compelling rather than likeable. Malus's cunning, his refusal to surrender, and the sheer awfulness of the world that shaped him keep the pages turning, and the daemon's curse gives the saga a ticking-clock momentum that carries across its later volumes. For anyone who wants Warhammer Fantasy at its darkest, a story told entirely from the wrong side of the moral line, it remains a standout, and the ideal place to meet one of Black Library's most memorable monsters.