Once more, DOOM has one of the best books of 2099.
All in Cyberpunk
Once more, DOOM has one of the best books of 2099.
In the future of 2099, the police only look out for the rich and famous. The Punisher aims to fix that.
This issue just goes to show that you can take the man out of the Hyborian Age, but you can’t take the Hyborian Age out of the man.
Sometimes, family isn’t who you’re born with. It’s who you find along the way.
A very vivid narrative in spite of its somewhat uneven pacing.
Thumbs is at its best when drama mixes with action in a dizzyingly tumultuous world of exploitation and revolution.
Both a fun, mindless action adventure with a simple premise AND a deeply biting socio-political satire.
Thumbs delivers a lot, but it’s difficult to tell quite where things are going in a blurry rush of exposition.
A dense, little cyberpunk fantasy that closes itself off for good just as it was beginning to get interesting again.
This final chapter in the story doesn’t make a terribly compelling case for further adventures in this particular dark future.
The series take on a refreshingly fairytale storytelling quality as the origins of the mysterious world of Azoth are revealed.
Groom plays with expectations in a twist on certain cyberpunk sci-fi conventions.
The story at the center of the action is genuinely impressive.
A fish out of water story in which a powerful superhuman android is being hunted.
A flashback from the Dark Age of Comics makes for an amusing ride.
Cassandra Price is the Oracle of Garbage. It’s not the most pleasant title imaginable, but she learns its value.
Cassandra Price has about nine panels to adjust…then the Daemons attack.
If traditional Rat Queens is a Dungeons & Dragons campaign, then Rat Queens Special: Neon Static is its Shadowrun cousin.