I grew up reading Deltora Quest by @EmilyRodda, which was pretty dark for a kid's series. Just Google Thaegan's children, or the Glus. You can mix "children's series" with dark fantasy, but it's HARD.
Deltora was about doubting authority, brains over brawn, and optimism... 2/5
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Warhammer Adventures can be good if it takes a similar turn- if it recognizes and deconstructs the darkness of its settings, and shows young heroes who see all of the Imperium's many flaws and defy the status quo at every turn. 3/5
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Show kids who question everything the Imperium stands for - because the Imperium is evil, just a lesser evil in a dismal setting. Show kids with optimism and initiative, who act despite the bias, doubt, and apathy of others. That's a very topical message for today's world. 4/5
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Is it Heresy? Yes, Inquisitor, but if you HAVE to introduce kids to a setting like 40k (because it's definitely just GW trying to sell more minis) you BETTER take the time to explain to kids that the Imperium is not good, war is not glorious, and curiosity is not Heresy. 5/5
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