Summary

So here’s the thing about collectingWarhammer 40Kfigures—you start small, maybe grab a Space Marine or two, tell yourself you’re just dipping your toes in. Next thing you know, you’re eyeing a 21-inch-tall war machine that costs more than my rent and wondering if your shelves can handle so much aura.

This is the first mass-market 1/18-scale Imperial Knight. At 53.7 cm tall, this House Raven Knight Errant dominates your entire room. Pique your interest yet? Let’s talk about specifics.

The Imperial Knight Errant: What Makes It Tick?

The articulation count hits 48 points, with what looks like independent pistons in the knees, double-hinge elbows, and full hip rotation. The whole carapace lifts on a four-bar linkage system to reveal a fully detailed cockpit, complete with a 10.8 cm pilot that has his own articulation and spare parts.

The electronics package is surprisingly restrained too. Instead of going full RGB disco mode, they kept it simple with twin red LEDs behind the eye lenses, just enough to give it that menacing mech glow without looking like a gaming PC. The switch cleverly hides under the chin armor so it doesn’t mess with your display photos, and the CR927 button cells are user-replaceable with tweezers.

Now, I know the $699 price tag is quite a bit. The plastic kit from Games Workshop runs about $170, so you’re paying roughly four times that for the convenience of having it pre-built, pre-painted, and loaded with features.

Is it worth it? I’d say that depends on how much you value your sanity and free time. Building and painting a Knight properly can take anywhere from 40–50 hours if you get everything right, and that’s assuming you don’t mess up the hazard stripes or spend three weeks agonizing over weathering techniques.

The House Raven Story Worth Telling

House Raven areone of the largest Imperial Knight houses in the 40K universe, founded way back in M24 on the world of Kolossi. Their thing is being incredibly prolific thanks to an STC fragment they’ve got locked away somewhere in their planet’s crust, which basically means they can churn out Knight chassis faster than most houses can count them.

JoyToy even tampo-printed the hazard stripes instead of using decals, so you don’t get that annoying silvering effect that makes cheaper figures look, well… cheap. The Knight Errant pattern itself is basically the hot-headed younger sibling of the Knight family. It’s built for aggressive tank-hunting with that Thermal Cannon for liquefying armor at range and the Reaper Chainsword for finishing whatever’s left standing.

Things You Should Probably Kow

There are some practical considerations you need to think about before dropping seven hundred bucks on what’s essentially a very expensive action figure. First off, the thing weighs 8.5 kg and ships in a 53 cm cube that most couriers are going to classify as oversized. If you’re ordering from anywhere that isn’t local, factor in some hefty shipping costs.

Secondly, the chainsword wingspan means it does not fit in most standard display cases. Lastly, the deposit you’re paying is non-refundable, and the order doesn’t start shipping until October 2025.

Whether it’s worth it really comes down to what you’re looking for. If you want a centerpiece that commands attention and respect, something that makes visitors to your collection go “holy crap, what is that thing,” then yeah, the Knight Errant is your guy.

If you’re more of a budget-conscious collector who prefers quantity to individual impact pieces, the regular 1/18 infantry figures are quite awesome as well. But if you’ve been waiting for someone to make atrulypremium Imperial Knight figure, well… JoyToy just called your bluff.