2000 AD crossovers

2000 AD crossovers are crossover stories appearing in British comic 2000 AD, its sister title the Judge Dredd Megazine, and other related output, such as novels, audio plays, films and role-playing games.

Not all of the stories told in 2000 AD and its related publications exist in the same shared universe, unlike in some other comics, for example the Marvel Universe. Indeed the majority of stories which have appeared in 2000 AD since 1977 have never been connected with each other. However, the series which are so connected are generally the most significant ones in the comic in terms of the number of issues they have appeared in, their popularity with readers, and their significance in the history of the comic.

Stories in a shared universe

Those 2000 AD stories which occupy a shared universe and have crossed over with each other include:

Connections between stories

Series can be linked to each other in either of two ways: crossovers and spin-offs. There are also combinations of both.

Crossovers

Firstly, series which were completely independent of each other when they were created – often by different writers, and sometimes even in different comics – were later linked to each other. This could be done either by a crossover story in which two or more characters from the respective series meet each other, or by a caption or piece of dialogue explicitly referring to events which occurred or characters who appeared in an earlier story in another series. Two examples of the former kind are the Judge Dredd stories "Top Dog" and "Judgement Day", which both featured Johnny Alpha from the series Strontium Dog in a major role. Alpha lived over half a century in Dredd's future, and the crossover was accomplished by having Alpha time-travel back to Dredd's era. An example of the second kind is the Judge Dredd story "The Cursed Earth," which featured a dinosaur called Satanus who was described as the clone of the offspring of the female dinosaur which had appeared in most episodes of the earlier series Flesh. Flesh was a previously unconnected series about humans time travelling back to the Cretaceous era to harvest dinosaurs for their meat.

Sometimes the link between two series can be of paramount importance to the story (such as Alpha's appearance in Judge Dredd); in other stories the reference can be a passing homage to an earlier tale with no effect whatsoever on the plot of the story in which it occurs (such as the reference to Satanus' ancestry in "The Cursed Earth"). In either case, once a connection between two series was established, it was often repeated. For example, "Top Dog" was followed up by "Judgement Day," and the reference to Flesh in Judge Dredd was reciprocated by the cameo appearance of a Mega-City judge in Nemesis the Warlock Book V, which was itself a crossover with Flesh because it featured Satanus in a major role.

This latter example illustrates how series were not just linked to each other in pairs, but in multitudes. Pat Mills, the first editor of 2000 AD and creator of many enduring series, was responsible for many such connections. He deliberately connected his own series ABC Warriors to Flesh, and then linked Nemesis to both. (All three series were created by him, but they had originally had nothing to do with each other.) For example, ABC Warriors made a passing reference to a dinosaur being the son of Satanus. Satanus himself subsequently played an important part in Nemesis Book V, by which time the entire cast of ABC Warriors had themselves moved to the Nemesis strip. This therefore established that Judge Dredd, Flesh, Nemesis, and ABC Warriors all existed in the same continuity: a list which would be added to many more times.

Spin-offs

Secondly, a new series can be created as a deliberate offshoot from a parent series. This can also occur in two ways. One method was to take a supporting character from an existing series and start a new series with that character in the lead (sometimes with the lead character from the original series appearing in a cameo). Two examples are Judge Anderson, first introduced in Judge Dredd, being given her own series, Anderson: Psi Division, five years later; and Durham Red getting her own series after her debut in Strontium Dog. Since Judge Dredd and Strontium Dog occupy the same universe, it follows that Anderson and Red do too (although they have never both appeared in the same story).

Another method was to create a brand new character for a new series, but to state from the outset that the story took place in an existing environment from an established strip. Most of the series in the Judge Dredd Megazine were created in this way. In 2000 AD The 86ers was a series set in the world of Rogue Trooper which did not feature the established cast of its parent strip.

Early progs

In the earliest progs and annuals, connections and crossovers would link up many of the earliest strips. The most prominent examples are Harlem Heroes ending and then Giant's son turning up as a cadet judge in the next prog; The Cursed Earth linking Dredd's future to Flesh with Satanus, the cloned son of tyrannosaur One-Eye; and ABC Warriors starting as a prequel to Ro-Busters, sequel to Invasion!, and then introducing a sequel to Flesh and Cursed Earth with Satanus' son. Minor links included Ro-Jaws watching the Harlem Heroes and a comrade of Hammerstein referring to the under-construction Mega-City One in Ro-Busters flashbacks; a Mega-City Time Tour feature in an annual, where Flesh corporation Trans-Time offered holidays to both 2103 Mega-City One and 1999 Volgan-occupied England.[1]

Rogue Trooper

The series Rogue Trooper was the most complicated example of all, as it became a combination of both categories: a crossover and a spin-off from itself. The original series ran in 2000 AD from issues 228 to 635, when it ended. A completely new series of Rogue Trooper then began in issue 650, by a different writer. This was not intended to be a sequel to the old version, but was a brand new, modernised reinterpretation of the character, with significant differences from the old version. It was not supposed to be set in the same universe or continuity, but was a total replacement of both. However, years later and in the hands of a new writer, a story was written which established that the new and old Rogue Troopers were two different people inhabiting the same universe, and a convoluted continuity was contrived to explain their co-existence. In an unusually complicated crossover, the two Rogue Troopers actually met each other. This state of affairs did not continue for long, however, and the old version was killed off. Ironically, the new version declined in popularity and the strip was discontinued, only to be replaced with the original version, in stories set before the original's death.

There have been a number of less complicated Rogue Trooper spinoffs largely following the adventures of the various G.I.s, like Venus Bluegenes, Rafaelle Blue and Tor Cyan.

Laissez-faire approach

It should be noted that while writers and editors have generally ensured that events occurring in spin-offs and their parent series are usually mutually consistent with each other, so that events in one such strip do not contradict events in another, much less care – if any – is taken to ensure a uniform continuity between crossover series. Therefore, while events which occur in the Anderson, Psi Division spin-off may have repercussions in Judge Dredd and vice versa, the continuity of Strontium Dog might be ignored.

This can even occur within the crossover story itself: in "Judgement Day" Johnny Alpha travelled back in time from 2178 to 2114 to arrest a time-travelling criminal so he wouldn't wipe out Earth (and thus, the future). The death of three billion people and destruction of five whole mega-cities then seemed to have no impact on Alpha's era. It was never explained in the story how an event as significant as a world war did not appear to be remembered by history in Alpha's era. On top of that, the future history of Strontium Dog bears little resemblance to Dredd, with no mega-cities and mutants as an underclass in 'norm' cities in 2150. (The Americans in Judge Dredd Megazine no. 283 implied that Strontium Dog's nuclear war will occur in 2150, but this was a MacGuffin to drive the story forward.)

In these cases, the crossover is not a serious attempt at world-building and continuity, simply a means of having two popular characters meet. Writer John Wagner has even stated that he does not view Strontium Dog and Judge Dredd as being in the same continuity.[2]

Writers have also changed their minds over time. In the 2000s ABC Warriors stories, there's no attempt at fitting the Volgan War into Dredd's timeline or Harlem Heroes (but he does refer to Nemesis The Warlock in Dredd: Blood of Satanus II, in order to declare Satanus Unchained out of canon). Other writers have also made no mention of this, and generally don't link up non-Dredd strips. It's also a habit of writers who created a strip to ignore the work of others if they feel like it. The John Wagner story Origins refers to Pat Mills' Dredd stories but makes no attempt to acknowledge Invasion!, ABC Warriors, and Ro-Busters (or Harlem Heroes); Life and Death of Johnny Alpha acknowledge and retcon his death under Alan Grant, but deliberately erase Strontium Dogs (with a narrator calling Peter Hogan's strips the work of "notorious fantasist Ho Gan"). In the sequel series Savage, Mills acknowledges the original Invasion! (to the extent that there's a King Charles III in the 2000s, just as prog 1 said) but ignores the prequel strip Disaster 1990!. And while Harlem Heroes was linked to Dredd, the sequel strip Inferno was left separate until Al Ewing's Dredd Year One: Wear Iron novella.

Crossovers

As most of the 2000 AD crossovers occur on the same timeline, not in parallel universes, the majority of crossovers take place thanks to the widespread, but temperamental, time travel technology that was invented at the beginning of the 22nd century.

Stories by Pat Mills

Pat Mills was responsible for the majority of the crossovers.

Stories by Ian Edginton

Writer Ian Edginton has begun linking his pseudo-historical strips together, both covertly and overtly. Images of both Jack Dancer from The Red Seas and Hastur from Leviathan later appeared in Stickleback; the pub "The Jolly Cripple", a haunt of the Red Seas pirates, reappears as the haunt of the character Detective Valentine and contains a portrait of the original proprietress from Red Seas;[4] and Leviathan villain William Ashbless briefly appears in Stickleback as a member of the sinister City Fathers group.[5]

In the second Stickleback, the eponymous lead visits the London-based Brotherhood of the Book from The Red Seas, in the process meeting (and revealing history with) Seas villain Orlando Doyle. There is also an appearance by Herbert Sewell, an unfortunate and long-suffering scientist/time traveller in Edginton's Judge Dredd stories, being dragged into Bedlam; and an ogre of the same species seen in Edginton's American Gothic Wild West strip is seen at the villain's Wild West show. The Red Seas would later reveal that Stickleback's Orlando was from an alternate universe, and that the Brotherhood of the Book exists in multiple universes.

Ampney Crucis Investigates made the connections stronger: characters referred to the Leviathan ship and the myth of the Hollow Earth from The Red Seas; the otherwordly monsters were given a similar background as in Stickleback; and a shadowy antagonist was shown to have a staff with a bust of Hastur's head. Stickleback's son appears in the fourth Ampney Crucis story as an adult, London's crime lord in an alternate dimension where the First World War never happened; in the same world, an underground society of cyborg fanatics called "Babbagists" has sprung up around the works of Countess Bernoulli, a Stickleback villain.

Stories by John Smith

The writer John Smith often places a number of his characters in the same stories, which has become known among fans as The Smithiverse. These have never been explicitly linked to the other 2000 AD stories, but stand together as an independent universe of their own. However, one particular species of alien of Smith's creation has appeared in both the Smithiverse (in Firekind and Tyranny Rex) and in a Judge Dredd universe story (Pussyfoot 5, a spin-off from Devlin Waugh).

Smithiverse stories include Indigo Prime, Tyranny Rex and Firekind.

Stories by other writers

Judge Dredd stories

A number of characters have appeared in Judge Dredd stories (or vice versa).

Ant Wars

Dredd spinoff Zancudo! by Simon Spurrier revealed itself to be a sequel to Ant Wars, a 1970s strip about giant ants rampaging through South America, in the cliffhanger ending to Part 2. The giant ants were revealed to be living in the jungles near Ciudad Barranquilla, and were at war with the giant mosquitos that formed the strip's villains.

Harlem Heroes

The first Judge Giant was the son of Giant of the Harlem Heroes, and his father was shown upon Giant's graduation from the Academy of Law.[6] Later on, Judge Giant Jr (the first Judge Giant's son) would meet his aged grandfather a few days before he died.[7]

Rogue Trooper

Souther troops flee Nu-Earth back through time to Mega-City One in 2116. They reach an agreement with the judges where they swap medical aid for technology. Friday is blamed for the massacre but, as his memory returns, he realises a traitor is at work and tries to track him down. Unfortunately it seems a far more famous clone may try and stop him – Judge Dredd.[8]

An early version of the Genetic Infantry program is shown in Judge Dredd: Warzone.[9]

Skizz

The Gunlords of Omega Ceti try to kill Skizz by travelling back in time but somehow end up in 22nd century Australia where they met Dredd.[10]

Strontium Dog

Dredd has crossed the path of Strontium Dogs Johnny Alpha and Wulf Sternhammer a couple of times. In the first encounter they travelled back in time to Mega-City One, 2112, and were nearly arrested by Dredd.[11] Later, Johnny Alpha again stepped back in time to 2114 and helped Judge Dredd save Mega-City One from a zombie apocalypse during Judgement Day.[12] A spin-off audio drama, Pre-Emptive Revenge, by Big Finish showed Dredd and Alpha in the immediate aftermath of Judgement Day.

Judge Dredd: "Helter Skelter"

Helter Skelter was a storyline by Garth Ennis, featuring an invasion of Mega-City One by an alliance of villains from parallel universes. Due to the distortion of reality, characters from dozens of 2000 AD strips made cameo appearances, either in the background or as parts of the plot (Dredd is attacked by the vampires from Fiends of the Eastern Front and then has to avoid Old One-Eye from Flesh).

Judge Dredd: "The Cold Deck" and "Trifecta"

The Cold Deck was a story written by Al Ewing which ran in 2000 AD at the same time as two other series set in Dredd's world, The Simping Detective and Low Life. These stories initially appeared to have no other connection with each other, but after each of them had been running independently for a couple of issues their plotlines unexpectedly intertwined with each other, and it became apparent that Ewing had collaborated with the writers of the other two series, Simon Spurrier and Rob Williams, to create a single large crossover story. The three series merged into a single story for their concluding part, called Trifecta, which took up every page of 2000 AD #1812.

Rogue Trooper and Mercy Heights

Spin-offs

This list does not include direct sequels, such as Inferno and Savage.

Judge Dredd spin-offs

Main article: Judge Dredd Megazine

Judge Dredd spin-offs include:

Rogue Trooper spin-offs

The original Rogue Trooper led to:

See also Tor Cyan

Other spin-offs

Parallel universes

As well as the tying together of a lot of the stories in 2000 AD, other parallel universes are known to co-exist alongside the main one, and some of them have intruded into it. Most famously in Judge Dredd, this has happened with Judge Death and the Dark Judges, coming from a reality where life is a crime. The aforementioned "Helter Skelter" had a wide range of deceased villains coming from alternate dimensions where they had won, and "Rehab" (progs 1644-8) featured an incursion from a utopian Earth where the Judges are pacifists focused on rehabilitation.

Since 2003, Sinister Dexter has been running a storyline where criminals from a parallel Earth, led by "Holy" Moses Tanenbaum (dead in the main universe), have been trying to take over the city of Downlode in the main universe. When the other Earth was shown, it was revealed a major reason for the move was that China ("the ChiComs") were winning a war against Russia and rapidly advancing towards Downlode. The final part saw Sinister and Dexter chasing a target through other 2000 AD strips, which turned out to be other realities.

Intercompany crossovers

Judge Dredd meets Lobo. Art by Val Semeiks.

There have been numerous intercompany crossovers between 2000 AD stories and with stories published by other companies (DC Comics and Dark Horse Comics). Given his high profile these often mix other characters with Judge Dredd. These include:

Aliens

Mr Bones eventually manages to launch his revenge on Mega-City One, unleashing the Xenomorph (called the Incubus here) into the Grand Hall of Justice itself.[13] The story has been mentioned a few times, though the xenomorph's exact origin was kept quiet.

Batman

Main article: Judgement on Gotham

There have been four crossovers with Batman: a team-up with Dredd to defeat the combined might of Judge Death, Mean Machine, and The Scarecrow, with the two heroes clashing; Dredd going to Gotham City to save Batman from the Ventriloquist; both heroes being part of a faked deathmatch run by the Riddler; and the Joker and the Dark Judges teaming up, with the Joker becoming a fifth Dark Judge.[14]

The Batman crossovers have had significant impact on Dredd's world. A vision of the fourth crossover, Die Laughing, causing Cassandra Anderson to return to being a Judge, as the crossover was written before she had quit and had been delayed. Judge Death was finally captured due to the events of Judgement on Gotham. Die Laughing had the Dark Judges encased in plasteen crystals, which is how they would always be shown in later stories and the Judge Dredd: Dredd Vs. Death video game; the 2002 story My Name is Death had Dredd refer to "that Gotham clown".

Lobo

Lobo, the intergalactic mercenary, became a popular character when Alan Grant took on the writing duties so a run-in with Dredd was a logical progression.[15]

Predator

The Predator has made many visits to Earth throughout history, and in a number of parallel universes, so it was almost inevitable that they would eventually clash with Dredd. The events of the first Predator film and the first comic issues[16] are placed in Dredd continuity: not only are the Judges aware of the events, Psi-Judge Schaefer is a direct descendant of the film character "Dutch" Schaefer.[17]

Doctor Who

There has never been a crossover between a 2000 AD character and Doctor Who. However writer Dave Stone, who has written several Judge Dredd and Doctor Who novels, planned a crossover novel featuring both Dredd and the Doctor, called "Burning Heart." This idea was cancelled due to the lack of success of the 1995 Judge Dredd film, and the book was published in 1997 as a Dr Who book without Dredd.[18][19] The Virgin Books Who stories featured the Guild of Adjudicators, a law enforcement agency who were often presented as similar to the Judges.

In the revived television series, the episode Gridlock was based on Mega-City One, and one character was deliberately dressed like Max Normal. Character Sally Calypso was also homage to 2000 AD strip Halo Jones, which featured a similar character named Swifty Frisko.[20][21]

Pseudonyms and cameos

Occasionally real life creators and individuals pop up in disguise.

Pseudonyms

Some work in 2000 AD has been done by people using pseudonyms to prevent readers from guessing that their series were connected, when writing stories where the connection was to be a surprise:

Cameos

People from the comics world, as well as public figures, have made cameo appearances within 2000 AD including:

Timeline

Unlike both the DC and Marvel Universes, many of the 2000 AD crossovers are done via a timeline: characters and concepts appear in the past/future of other strips, and may time travel to each other. Listed in chronological order, these are:

c. 13.8 billion years BC
c. 200 million years BC
c. 65 million years BC
c. 20,000 years BC
793 Common Era
Late 15th century
1945
Late 1970s – late 1980s
1978
1980s
1987
1990
1999
2010
2014
2031
c. 2040s
2050
c. 2050s
Mid 21st century
2061
Mid 21st century
2065
2066
2070
2071
c. 2070s
2070s
2078
2070s
2079
2080
Late 21st century
2099
Judge Dredd – first appearance: Prog 2
2100
2103
2104
2105
2106
2109
2110
2112
2114
2121
2126
2134
2180 – mid-2180s
Strontium Dog – first appearance: Starzine 1 (StarLord)/Prog 86 (2000 AD)
23rd century
unconfirmed
Rogue Trooper – first appearance: Prog 228
the far future
Durham Red (later series) – first appearance in far future: Prog 1078
the far future
Comic Rock – first appearance: Prog 167
the far future
Nemesis the Warlock – first appearance: Prog 222
the far future/21st century
ABC Warriors [second series] – first appearance: Prog 555

References

  1. reprinted in Judge Dredd: The Restricted Files vol.4
  2. Wagner's Facebook page, statement in reply to a November 6, 2009 comment
  3. 2000 AD progs 1800-1812
  4. D'Blog of 'Israeli: References In Stickleback Parts 1 & 2
  5. D'Blog of 'Israeli: Stickleback Part 8 References
  6. "The Academy of Law" (by John Wagner)
  7. Judge Dredd Megazine #216
  8. Judge Dredd: "Casualties Of War" (by John Wagner and John Higgins, in 2000 AD #900, 1994)
  9. Judge Dredd Megazine #440-43
  10. Skizz: "Skizz Book 3" (by Jim Baikie, in 2000 AD #912–927, 1994)
  11. "Top Dogs" (by John Wagner, in Judge Dredd Annual 1991, 1990)
  12. Judgement Day" (by Garth Ennis/John Wagner; art by Peter Doherty & Carlos Ezquerra tpb, 1999, collects Judgement Day in 2000 AD #786–799 and Judge Dredd Megazine #2.4–9, 1992)
  13. Judge Dredd vs. Aliens: Incubus (written by John Wagner and Andy Diggle, with art by Henry Flint, in 2000 AD #1332–1335, 2003, tpb, 104 pages, Rebellion, 2003, ISBN 1-904265-10-3, Dark Horse, 2004, ISBN 1-56971-983-7)
    Aliens crossover publication details
  14. Judgement on Gotham (written by John Wagner and Alan Grant, with art by Simon Bisley, graphic novel, 1991) and three sequels
    Batman crossover publication details
  15. Judge Dredd vs. Lobo: Psycho-Bikers vs The Mutants From Hell (written by John Wagner and Alan Grant, with pencils by Val Semeiks, inks by John Dell and colours by Gloria Vasquez, 48 pages, DC, 1995, ISBN 1-56389-239-1)
    Lobo crossover publication details
  16. The Judges say it had visited New York. This never happened in the film but did in the Predator comic book story Concrete Jungle, written by Mark Verheiden
  17. Predator vs. Judge Dredd (written by John Wagner, with art by Enrique Alcatera, 80 pages, Titan, 1998, ISBN 1-84023-021-5, Dark Horse Comics, 1999, ISBN 1-56971-345-6)
    Predator crossover publication details
  18. "I, Who" Lars Pearson, Sidewinder Press, 1999
  19. FinnClark.org (book review)
  20. See Doctor Who Confidential episode "Are We There Yet?"
  21. Davies, Russell T. "The Next Doctor Commentary Podcast". BBC. Retrieved June 2, 2010.
  22. Strontium Dog "Incident at the Beginning of the Universe", 2000 AD Winter Special 1988
  23. Flesh Book 2, 2000 AD Progs 86 – 99
  24. 1 2 q.v. Judge Dredd "The Cursed Earth", 2000 AD Prog 73
  25. 1 2 Flesh [Book 1], 2000 AD Progs 1 – 19
  26. Nemesis the Warlock Book Seven: The Two Torquemadas, 2000 AD Prog 552
  27. Flesh – Chronocide, 2000 AD Progs 973 – 979
  28. Strontium Dog "The Ragnarok Job", 2000 AD Progs 445 – 465
  29. Nemesis the Warlock Book Seven: The Two Torquemadas, 2000 AD Progs 546 – 557
  30. Strontium Dog "The Schicklgruber Grab", 2000 AD Progs 182 – 188
  31. Nemesis the Warlock Book Nine: Deathbringer, 2000 AD Progs 586 – 593, 604 – 608
  32. Ant Wars (Progs 71 to 85)
  33. q.v. Harlem Heroes [first series] "The Flying Scotsmen", 2000 AD Prog 12
  34. Strontium Dog "Bitch", 2000 AD Progs 505 – 529
  35. 1 2 Predator VS Judge Dredd #1
  36. Disaster 1990, 2000 AD Prog 6
  37. Invasion!, 2000 AD Progs 1 – 35, 37 – 38, 40, 42 – 51; 2000 AD Annuals 1978, 1979, and 1980
  38. q.v. Harlem Heroes [first series] "The Siberian Wolves", 2000 AD Prog 6
  39. q.v. Judge Dredd "Meet Mr. Moonie", 2000 AD Prog 46
  40. q.v. Harlem Heroes [first series] "The Sport of Tomorrow", 2000 AD Prog 1
  41. q.v. Inferno, 2000 AD Prog 72
  42. q.v. ABC Warriors "The Mek-Nificent Seven", 2000 AD Prog 135
  43. q.v. ABC Warriors "The Black Hole", 2000 AD Prog 562; q.v. Ro-Busters "Hammer-Stein's War Memoirs", 2000 AD Prog 88 – 92; q.v. ABC Warriors "Dishonourable Discharge", 2000 AD Winter Special 1992; q.v. ABC Warriors "Volgo, the Ultimate Death Machine", Dice Man #2
  44. q.v. Judge Dredd "Luna-1", 2000 AD Prog 42
  45. ABC Warriors "The Mek-Nificent Seven", 2000 AD Progs 119 – 128; ABC Warriors "Retreat From Volgow", 2000 AD Annual 1981
  46. ABC Warriors "The Mek-Nificent Seven", 2000 AD Progs 129 – 139; ABC Warriors "Red Planet Blues", 2000 AD Annual 1985
  47. q.v. Judge Dredd "The Cursed Earth", 2000 AD Prog 73; q.v. Flesh "The Trans-Time File", 2000 AD Annual 1989
  48. q.v. Judge Dredd "Mutie the Pig", 2000 AD Prog 34; q.v. Judge Dredd "A Case for Treatment", 2000 AD Prog 389
  49. q.v. Judge Dredd "The Cursed Earth", 2000 AD Prog 68; q.v. Hammerstein, 2000 AD Prog 960; q.v. Judge Dredd "The Cursed Earth", 2000 AD Prog 83
  50. q.v. Judge Dredd "The Cursed Earth", 2000 AD Prog 83
  51. q.v. Judge Dredd "Dredd's World", Judge Dredd Mega-Special No. 1;q.v. Anderson: Psi Division "Shamballa", 2000 AD Prog 701
  52. Judge Dredd "Oz", 2000 AD Prog 559
  53. Harlem Heroes [first series], 2000 AD Progs 1 – 27
  54. Inferno, 2000 AD Progs 36 – 75
  55. Hammerstein, 2000 AD Progs 960 – 963
  56. q.v. Judge Dredd "The Academy of Law", 2000 AD Prog 27
  57. q.v. Judge Dredd "The Return of Rico!", 2000 AD Prog 30
  58. Ro-Busters "The Rise and Fall of Ro-Jaws and Hammer-Stein", 2000 AD Progs 103 – 115
  59. q.v. Anderson: Psi Division "The Haunting", 2000 AD Annual 1984
  60. Judge Dredd "Civil War" wraparound cover, 2000 AD Prog 169
  61. Judge Dredd "The Academy of Law", 2000 AD Progs 27 – 28
  62. Judge Dredd "The Statue of Judgement", 2000 AD Prog 7
  63. Judge Dredd "Robots", "Robot Wars", 2000 AD Progs 9, 10 – 17
  64. Judge Dredd "The Return of Rico!", 2000 AD Prog 30
  65. Judge Dredd "The Cursed Earth", 2000 AD Progs 61 – 85
  66. Walter's Wobo-Tale "Shok!", Judge Dredd Annual 1981
  67. Judge Dredd "Block Mania", 2000 AD Prog 242
  68. Judge Dredd "The Apocalypse War", 2000 AD Progs 245 – 270

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.