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The sickly green that defines Nurgle's chosen — Death Guard Green is a desaturated, muted olive.
The closest Death Guard Green equivalent is Green (AK Interactive) (ΔE 3.0).
For the Death Guard Green equivalent Vallejo, Olive Green (70.967) (Vallejo Model Color) (ΔE 4.0).
The best Death Guard Green Army Painter equivalent is Army Green (Army Painter) (ΔE 3.9).
These 5 substitutes are ranked by Delta-E accuracy. Each entry includes a behaviour comment.
The closest cross-brand equivalent to Death Guard Green in the current local catalogue is Army Green from Army Painter (Delta-E 3.93).
Matches are computed from the local paint catalogue with Delta-E CIEDE2000. Lower values mean a closer visual match on the miniature.
Finish, opacity, flow, and bottle format are not captured by Delta-E alone. Test the substitute if the recipe relies on a specific behaviour.
Before adopting a substitute, check these points specific to this base paint:
Death Guard Green is a base paint from Citadel (Games Workshop). Its specific pigment load, drying behaviour, and finish set it apart from other paints in the same category, which is why a direct substitute needs to match more than just the colour value.
The closest Vallejo option is Olive Green (70.967) (Delta E 4.00).
Yes, Death Guard Green is currently part of the Citadel (Games Workshop) range. Check local stock or equivalent alternatives if the pot is hard to source.
Check Delta-E, finish type, coverage, opacity, and behaviour over your chosen primer. Run a full test with one shade and one highlight pass before applying the substitute to an entire unit.
The sickly green that defines Nurgle's chosen — Death Guard Green is a desaturated, muted olive.
The closest Death Guard Green equivalent is Green (AK Interactive) (ΔE 3.0).
For the Death Guard Green equivalent Vallejo, Olive Green (70.967) (Vallejo Model Color) (ΔE 4.0).
The best Death Guard Green Army Painter equivalent is Army Green (Army Painter) (ΔE 3.9).
The sickly green that defines Nurgle's chosen — Death Guard Green is a desaturated, muted olive.
The closest Death Guard Green equivalent is Green (AK Interactive) with Delta E 3.0. For a Death Guard Green equivalent Vallejo match, Olive Green (70.967) (Vallejo Model Color) with Delta E 4.0 is the closest pick. The best Death Guard Green Army Painter equivalent is Army Green (Army Painter) with Delta E 3.9.
The closest Vallejo match is Olive Green (70.967) (Vallejo Model Color) with Delta E 4.0.
The best Army Painter option is Army Green (Army Painter) with Delta E 3.9.
As a base paint, Death Guard Green requires specific handling that affects how any substitute performs. The colour sits in the deep green range, with strong coverage and opaque opacity over a grey or beige primer.
Death Guard Green is designed to cover primer evenly in one or two passes. Coverage is rated strong, so a substitute that falls below this threshold will require extra coats to block the undercolour. Test the replacement over the same primer — a base that shifts tone with each coat can alter the entire highlight stack.
This base paint performs best over a grey or beige primer. A substitute that behaves well over a light primer may struggle over black or grey, especially if its opacity is lower. Apply two thin coats, letting each dry fully before the next.
The deep green mid-tone of Death Guard Green anchors the layers above it. A replacement that dries glossier or rougher will change how shade and layer paints adhere.
Base paints carry more pigment than other types, so even a deep green substitute with a close Delta-E can read warmer or cooler once shaded. Run a complete test: prime, base, shade, and highlight before committing.
The most useful partners for Death Guard Green are Agrax Earthshade (universal brown wash), Nurgling Green (layer / highlight), Athonian Camoshade (wash) and Jokaero Orange (base colour). These supporting colours define how the base reads once the recipe is complete.
Agrax Earthshade, Nurgling Green, Athonian Camoshade and Jokaero Orange are common companions to this base. They were chosen in the original recipe because their coverage, drying speed, and finish layer in the same workflow without forcing extra corrections.
A base paint substitute only becomes trustworthy once it survives the same primer, shade, and highlight sequence as the original recipe.
Looking at the surrounding palette matters because a near match can still push the finished model warmer, colder, or flatter than expected.
That combination of colour distance, finish, and recipe context is what makes a base paint substitute reliable on an actual miniature.
That combination of colour distance, finish, and recipe context is what makes a substitute reliable on an actual miniature.
A paint substitute only becomes trustworthy once it survives the same primer, shade, and highlight sequence as the original recipe.
Looking at the surrounding palette matters too, because a near match can still push the finished model warmer, colder, flatter, or glossier than expected.
That is why the page keeps the recommendation anchored to painting workflow instead of treating Delta-E alone as the final decision.
A useful equivalent page should also reduce buying mistakes: the closer colour is not always the safer option if the bottle dries glossier, covers faster, or behaves differently on large armour panels.