Garth Ennis began his career on Crisis, 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd
Megazine, for which he wrote Judge Dredd, Strontium Dogs, True
Faith and others. Outside of the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic he is
known for Preacher, The Boys, Hitman, The Punisher and a great many
war comics- including War Stories, Battlefields, Out Of The Blue,
The Stringbags and Sara.
John Wagner has been scripting for 2000 AD for more years than he
cares to remember. His creations include Judge Dredd, Strontium
Dog, Ace Trucking, Al’s Baby, Button Man and Mean Machine. Outside
of 2000 AD his credits include Star Wars, Lobo, The Punisher and
the critically acclaimed A History of Violence.
Rob Williams is the writer of Suicide Squad and Martian Manhunter
for DC Comics, Unfollow for Vertigo and Doctor Who: The Eleventh
Doctor for Titan Comics. His previous work for 2000 AD includes
Judge Dredd: Titan, The Grievous Journey Of Ichabod Azrael (And The
Dead Left In His Wake) and The Ten-Seconders, and he is currently
writing Roy of the Rovers for Rebellion.
Dan Abnett is a seven-times New York Times bestselling author and
an award-winning comic book writer. He has written over fifty
novels, including the acclaimed Gaunt’s Ghosts series, the
Eisenhorn and Ravenor trilogies, volumes of the million-selling
Horus Heresy series, The Silent Stars Go By (Doctor Who), Rocket
Raccoon and Groot: Steal the Galaxy, The Avengers: Everybody Wants
To Rule The World, The Wield, Triumff: Her Majesty’s Hero, and
Embedded. In comics, he is known for his work on The Legion of
Super-Heroes, Aquaman, The Titans, Nova, Wild’s End, and The New
Deadwardians. His 2008 run on The Guardians of the Galaxy for
Marvel formed the inspiration for the blockbuster movie. A regular
contributor to the UK’s long-running 2000 AD, he is the creator of
series including Grey Area, Lawless, Brink, Kingdom and the classic
Sinister Dexter. He has also written extensively for the games
industry, including Shadow of Mordor and Alien: Isolation. Dan
lives and works in the UK. Follow him on Twitter @VincentAbnett
Keith Burns is a member of the Guild of Aviation Artists, and has
previously worked on Rat Pack for Battle, and the Johnny Red
mini-series.
Comic artist and illustrator based on the south coast of England.
Early work was on titles such as Futurequake, Dogbreath, 100%
Biodegradable. Big break came in 2014 when John Wagner and Alan
Grant spotted his work and offered him the chance to illustrate a
new sci-fi comic called Rok of the Reds. Since then he's worked on
characters including Judge Dredd, Judge Fear, Max Normal and others
for 2000AD and Judge Dredd The Megazine. Also illustrated Dredd for
the Cursed Earth card game and Crime Files mobile game. Recent work
includes the critically acclaimed sequel to Rok of the Reds - Rok
the God, again written by John Wagner, and Roy of the Rovers
illustrations for their fiction novels. Continues to work with
2000AD on stories including the upcoming series Department K and a
new John Wagner Judge Dredd story. He is also working with Steve
MacManus on Blazer!
Chris Burnham is best known for his work on Batman Incorporated
with Grant Morrison, but he has also drawn Nameless written by
Grant Morrison, and Die! Die! Die! written by Walking Dead's Robert
Kirkman.
Phil Winslade is a veteran of the industry. As well as his work for
2000 AD, his considerable talents as an artist have graced the
pages of a variety of comics for DC, Vertigo and Marvel, including
Batman, Daredevil, Goddess, Spider-Man and the legendary Steve
Gerber’s Howard the Duck and Nevada. As well as being the
co-creator of Lawless, his work with the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic
includes a story for Tharg’s Terror Tales, several Judge Dredd
strips including a one-off Judge Dredd for Free Comic Book Day
2017.
Henry Flint, winner of the National Comics Awards for Best Comic
Artist 2004, is one of the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic’s rising
superstars. Co-creator of Sancho Panzer, Shakara, and the
fan-favourite strip, Zombo, his incredibly versatile pencils have
also graced A.B.C. Warriors, Judge Dredd/Aliens, Deadlock, Judge
Dredd, Rogue Trooper, Nemesis the Warlock, The V.C.’s and Venus
Bluegenes. He has even written a Tharg’s Alien Invasions strip! He
has also worked on several American comics, including Omega Men,
Haunted Tank and Fear Itself: Fearsome Four. Away from the comics
industry, Henry produced art of the cover of DJ Food’s 2012 album,
The Search Engine.
John Higgins is a multi-talented 2000 AD artist and writer; as well
as scripting a Future Shock and Judge Dredd, Higgins has
illustrated Chopper, Freaks, One-Offs, Tharg the Mighty and Time
Twisters. His work outside the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic is also
highly respected, and he has contributed to some of the most
important series of recent times, including working as a colourist
on the modern superhero classic Watchmen, and on Vertigo’s Animal
Man, Hellblazer and Pride and Joy.
Paul J. Holden has illustrated The 86ers, Judge Dredd, Tharg’s
Future Shocks, Rogue Trooper and Johnny Woo for 2000 AD and the
Judge Dredd Megazine. P.J. lives and works in Belfast, and is
married with two children.
Stewart “Staz” Johnson started his artistic career working on RPG
magazines. From there he got work at Marvel UK, where he worked on
weekly comic book series such as Transformers and Action Force.
Having worked on the majority of Marvel’s A-list titles such as
Thor, The Avengers and Spider-Man, he moved over to DC Comics,
working on several Batman titles. His work for 2000 AD includes
Judge Dredd, Future Shocks, Rogue Trooper and the strip Killer,
which he co-created with Steve Moore.
Mike Dorey joined 2000 AD following its merger with rival action
comic Tornado, where he pencilled Victor Drago. Following his move
to greener pastures, he pencilled several Future Shocks and a Time
Twister, as well as M.A.C.H. 0, M.A.C.H. 1, Ro-Busters, Invasion!,
Rogue Trooper and Tharg the Mighty.
Patrick Goddard’s clean art style has graced many strips in the
Galaxy’s Greatest Comic. Co-creator of the Megazine series Wardog,
he has penciled Judge Dredd, Mean Machine, Middenface McNulty,
Sinister Dexter and took over the art duties on Savage from Charlie
Adlard.
"Ennis’ new series is a revisionist take on this comingling of two
tonally disparate comic properties; one that takes the characters
and situations found in Battle, then re-imagines them through the
antagonistic, anti-establishment prism of Action ... where lurid
full-color mayhem sits alongside the hollowed-out pathos earned
over dozens of installments of episodic bloodletting." – The Comics
Journal
"A fabulous comic ... There is so much passion here" - Down The
Tubes
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