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I Bought MORE Temu Warhammer SCAMS!

20.6K views· 692 likes· 22:31· Dec 23, 2025

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I bought MORE Temu Warhammer scams so you don't have to! In this honest review, I'm testing cheap Warhammer 40k alternatives from Temu to see if they're worth your money or total garbage. I ordered a mystery haul of sci-fi miniatures, hobby tools, and painting accessories to compare them directly against official Games Workshop products. We'll unbox this questionable Temu haul, inspect the casting quality for defects and inspect the overall quality of each item. Are these knock-off figures a budget-friendly hack for your army, or just another waste of cash? I'm breaking down the good, the bad, and the ugly of buying wargaming supplies from discount marketplaces. If you're looking to save money on the Warhammer hobby, watch this before you buy. I'll show you side-by-side comparisons with real Space Marines so you can spot the differences in scale, detail, and material quality. From surprisingly decent resin prints to absolute disasters, find out which items are total scams and which might actually be worth adding to your pile of shame. Subscribe for more Warhammer reviews, miniature painting experiments, and hobby money-saving tips. For business enquiries: chucknerdbusiness@gmail.com Discord: https://discord.gg/SCD58dHcj5

About This Video

Terribly sorry, dear—I’ve done it again. I went on Temu and bought MORE questionable Warhammer hobby bits so you don’t have to, and in this video I’m straight-up calling each item either a scam or a buy. We start small with a £1.66 3m tape measure (surprisingly fine, but it snaps back fast enough to bite), then I grab a set of £1.39 makeup brushes for a future “can I paint with these?” experiment. After that, it’s into the 3D printed stuff: a modular trench terrain set for £20.79 that’s genuinely decent for the tabletop, and more under-£20 crystal/rock terrain that I keep saying is where Temu usually does well. Not everything survives the test, though. The tiny “dreadnought” print turns up still wet/oily and the detail is rough—so that one’s the actual scam of the haul, and I’m also using it as a reminder to wash your hands if anything resin-printed arrives uncured. I also picked up plaster gauze rolls (£6.76) for future board-building, then finished with the big one: a £21.22 handheld airbrush/compressor. It’s not the best on the market (and yes, it sounds how it sounds), but after testing it on paper and a spare mini, I didn’t hate it—meaning for beginners who want cheap basecoats/priming with practice, it’s not a scam.

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