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I'm a little tired of the Judge Death stuff, but I respect how the comic continues to reinvent things rather than telling the same story over and over. Another great collection of Dred strips!
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More excellent Dredd comics! The Complete Case Files are all excellent reads, and it really helps an American like me to get a better sense of how Dredd slowly evolved over time.
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After Dredd's experimental phase in the 90s, here it starts settling down and becoming a really good comic.
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The story turns a little more serious and interconnected here, but there are still some funny bits (including some thinly-veiled swipes at superhero comics). The art jars at one point -- I think a comic produced later was jammed into the ongoing storyline -- but still a good collection.
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Fun comic in the vein of Teenagers From Outer Space (or, more accurately, the reverse). With over 500 pages of comic, it's well worth the price!
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This is an amazing collection of TEN Doc Savage novels. I've only read three, but there were very few typos, and each is very well formatted (in epub, at least - I haven't read the others to check). Some elements haven't aged well, naturally, but otherwise it's a collection of good, pulpy adventure!
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A great space fantasy novel. It start off feeling a lot like Star Wars, but it goes in different and interesting directions.
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A good (if quite short) collection of parodies published around the time of the original Sherlock Holmes stories. Easily read in a couple of hours, and quite entertaining!
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Great pulp fun. At times the action is a little muddled, and there are some typos here and there, but its a short, fun read about a master of disguise fighting against an organization that pushes him to the limit.
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This is my first time reading Strontium Dog, and it was a lot of fun! It has the satirical edge of classic Judge Dredd, but due to the focus on mutant bounty hunters, it can tell different stories of prejudice and crime drama. Plus some great art from classic 2000 AD artists. Definitely worth a read!
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A decent sword and sorcery comic set in ancient Ireland. The art is pretty inconsistent, but the story is fun.
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An interesting collection of short stories about a group of robot soldiers. It definitely wears its inspirations like "The Magnificent Seven" on its sleeve. Also has a good dose of Pat Mills' humor. I almost wish I read this before the first Nemesis the Warlock collection, because there's a lot of backstory here that plays out there.
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When I was looking into this, I was told that Nemesis is a lot like a proto-Warhammer 40k setting. And that's technically true, but it does not indicate the sheer level of glorious chaos this comic provides. Planet-wide mass transit systems co-exist with space Inquisitors! A villain turned into a ghost after a transporter accident that uses telephone wires! An entire empire of space aliens that pretend to be Victorians! A hero that looks like a demon, and whose head is the same shape as his spaceship! It's a gloriously bonkers action comic.
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An detailed, engaging, and well-researched breakdown of the birth of the RPG industry. A fascinating read for anyone interested in how RPGs started, as well as a great "whatever happened to that one company?" for people like me who have been around for a while now.
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I LOVE Star Power! It's a great blend of Green Lantern and Star Trek, with a fun lead character and a great supporting cast. Even though it's a free webcomic, I've still purchased every collection and issue on DriveThruComics. One of my favorites!
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