Heartbreaker Miniatures
The story of Heartbreaker is a complex ringwallbilder, but it started quite strong, grabbing a number of (at the time) "prestigious" IP licences, including FASA's Earthdawn (a fantasy RPG set in the pre-history of the fantasy/cyberpunk blend Shadowrun) and Mutant Chronicles (once considered the main contender against 40K).
In regards to fantasy, Heartbreaker had a main line, the Heartbreaker Fantasy Range featuring the standard parallels of the Warhammer factions, and then a prestige line highlighting the work of named sculpting talents Kev Adams, Chaz Elliott, Phil Lewis and Tim Prow. The aforementioned caveat "sort of" is in reference to the difference between these two lines.
The Fantasy Sculptor range contains, in my opinion, some of the best "Oldschool" style fantasy sculpts outside of Jes Goodwin's work for Citadel in the 1980s. And this includes Heartbreaker's Ratmen. Chaz Elliott's line featured the impressive Wererat Champion (5010)...
Unfortunately (sigh) then we get to Heartbreakers standard fantasy range. I haven't explored fully the other armies to make a blanket condemnation, but their Ratmen/Wererat army is limited and features frankly bizarre sculpts. The physiques are wildly inconsistent (with some looking weirdly bloated) and as a whole the range is largely forgettable.
231A Wererat Champion 1 222A Wererat Command Champion 223A Wererat w/Hand Weapon 1 224A Wererat Fighter 1 229A Wererat w/Axe 1 232A Wererat Shaman 1 425A Ratman with Pistols | 231B Wererat Champion 2 222B Wererat Command Standard 223B Wererat w/Hand Weapon 2 224B Wererat Fighter 2 229B Wererat w/Axe 2 232B Wererat Shaman 2 425B Ratman with Rifle |