(AfroGamers.com) The last time when we talked Judge Dredd it was the short story arc The Robot Wars. It was a story of humans mistreating robots, the robots rebelling, a few robots who loved being enslaved to humans helping the most cold-hearted cop in Mega City-1, and one robot getting his ...

(AfroGamers.com) Between 1993 and 1997, Milestone Comics was the major imprint that addressed the lack of characters of colors in mainstream comics. There were other companies around at the time that tackled this such as Big City Comics with Brother Man but Milestone tends to get the kudos since its a ...

(AfroGamers.com) Todd McFarlane’s Spawn is one of those early 1990s comics that came out at the right point in time. It’s almost too “Xtreme 90s” when you look back on those 1992-1996 issues but it fit pop culture at the time. In the U.S, music was dominated by grunge, alternative rock, ...

(AfroGamers.com) When it comes to comics and the screen, I’ve always been a fan of television adaptation over film. Some might say “What?! TV over film?!” Yes, TV over film. While movies allow for these amazing visuals and makes for an awesome blockbuster experience, sometimes the story suffers. Looking at superhero ...

(AfroGamers.com) All-Negro Comics #1–the first and only issue–is a legend in Blerd comic book circles. Published in 1947, most of the stories weren’t particularly good but it is all on the weight being the first ever Black financed, written, and drawn comic book ever. It was an anthology magazine that featured ...

(AfroGamers.com) When it comes to comics, Judge Dredd is one of my favorites. It’s anthology-style making it a light read in one sitting–think the old Marvel Presents comics or a chapter of a manga. Storyline-wise, the world building starting in the late 1970s to now is interesting. Most of the early ...