Answer 40K is a mini war game were two or more people collect miniatures and then assemble, paint and battle them.
AnswerAt the moment, GW do not make a set of rules for matches like that, so no, 40k armies can not play FB armies.== ==
AnswerThe Warhammer universe is set on one planet but in the same time as Warhammer 40K. This is because it is a primitive planet left behind by modern humans (the Imperium) and they started becoming primitive - it is not the Earth.
A summary of the blind rule in Warhammer 40K is when shooting USR, the target will take an initiative test, if the target fails the test then the WS & BS are set to 1 until the end of their next turn.
The first box set of 40k was a game called Warhammer:40,000 Rogue Trader, the original name of Warhammer 40k. Later the name Rogue Trader was removed and became a specialty role-playing game similar to that of D&D (Dungeons & Dragons) in terms of character creation.
Either whatever orks come in the Assault on Blackreach set for the confident or a couple of boxes of ork boyz for the ones that believe they have a shakey hand. Just remember to view a few how to youtube videos.
No, unless you buy a paint set obviously.
From what I have seen in stores in terms of selection and availability and forums with both subjects it looks that Warhammer 40k is more popular. Though their difference in popularity does not seem to be much.
AnswerWarhammer 40,000 (informally known as Warhammer 40K or simply 40K) is a tabletop miniature wargame produced by Games Workshop, set in a science fantasy universe. Warhammer 40,000 was created by Rick Priestley in 1987 as the futuristic companion to Warhammer Fantasy Battle, sharing many game mechanics. Expansions for Warhammer 40,000 are released from time to time, often to facilitate a certain sort of game, such as Cities of Death, Planet Strike and Apocalypse, which give rules for urban, planatary siege and large-scale combat, respectively.
The mob special rule allows a unit to ignore leadership tests as long as the squad strength remain above a set level.
Check the Games Workshop website for prices, I'm not sure if they sell it anymore.
You can play Necromunda/Inquisitor/Epic with Warhammer 40k models, as they are both set in the same universe. You could use the models as proxies for others- other than that, there are no spcecific rules made for playing with models out of Games Workshops domain.