![]() ![]() The MK2 one also had a fantastic depiction of the second Sub-Zero, who was shown as being less of a mysterious assassin and more of a tech-savvy businessman with a heart of gold. These three comics were all decent enough and succeeded in what they were trying to do. ![]() You might remember seeing advertisements for these during the demo mode on old MK and MK2 arcade machines (ah, nostalgia), while the harder-to-find MK4 comic came with a pre-ordered copy of the PC version of MK4. ![]() Series co-creator John Tobias wrote and did the art for comics based on the events prior to Mortal Kombat, Mortal Kombat 2 and Mortal Kombat 4. This series isn’t to be confused with Midway’s promotional one-shots that came out as prologues for their respective games. All-in-all, that’s nothing to laugh at.īut there is stuff to laugh about. As a series of mini-series and one-shots, the Malibu Mortal Kombat run went on for 26 issues in total. Along with their forgotten attempt to make Virtua Fighter’s story look appealing (cancelled after the first issue), Malibu tried some of their magic on the Mortal Kombat series. As some of you might know, that wasn’t Malibu’s only attempt at a fighting game comic. In the last article, I covered Malibu’s horrific attempt to do a comic based on the hit fighting game Street Fighter 2. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |