
City Hall is rotten to the core, and the police force is equally on the take. In a near-future US city, corruption within the branches of government has reached unsustainable levels. Script: John Wagner / Art: Carlos Ezquerra / Letters: Jim Campbell SPECTOR // Incorruptible, part one

Toughest of them all is Judge Dredd – he is the Law! Crime is rampant, and stemming the tide of chaos are the Judges. Unemployment is endemic, boredom universal, and tensions run on a constant knife-edge. This vast urban hell on the east coast of post-apocalyptic North America is home to over 180 million citizens. Script: Ken Niemand / Art: Kieran McKeown / Colours: Quinton Winter / Letters: Annie Parlhouse JUDGE DREDD // One-Eyed Jacks, part four Judge Dredd Megazine #455 is out now from all good newsagents and comic book stores, plus digitally from our webshop and apps! Don’t forget that if you buy an issue of the Megazine in the first month of its release then postage in the UK is free! SUBSCRIBE NOW > DOWNLOAD THE APP > Elsewhere, we catch up with Devlin artist Rob Richardson, chat a life in comics with Dave Gibbons, and preview this year’s 2000 AD Free Comic Book Day special, which you’ll be able to pick up from participating stores on 5 May. John decided to carry on writing the story, and Dan Cornwell will be taking over on art from part three onwards.Īlso new is the Anderson, Psi-Division mini-series ‘The King of the Six Sectors’, which acts as a sequel to ‘Year One’, while both Mega-City Two and the current Devlin Waugh adventure come to a close. Many of you will be aware that this was the series Carlos was working on when he sadly died in 2018, and only the first two episodes were completed (published in the 2019 2000 AD Sci-Fi Special).

Secondly, those originators of the Judge Dredd universe itself, John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra, are back with Spector, a creator-owned robot-detective drama.

New series start this issue – first up we have the much-anticipated second arc of Dreadnoughts, courtesy of regular creators Mike Carroll and John Higgins, rewinding to the early days of Justice Department in the mid twenty-first century.
