I’ve got an issue with comic books these days, where the artist tends to play second fiddle to the writer. As an expansion of the Dead Space universe, it answers certain questions but also runs into a stereotypical habit of creating more questions in the process.īut while Ian Edington’s writing helps flesh out certain characters while neglecting the rest of the cast, it’s the artwork of this book that really shines. The story is a fast one, sometimes too quick for its own good as it introduces and murders off characters at a rapid pace. On the planet of Uxor, a red marker lies in wait, preparing to spread the gospel of Unitology insanity amongst those who should know better.Įnter Carver, who soon finds himself caught up in events that won’t be spoiled here. Essentially a story set between the events of Dead Space 2 and 3, Liberation explains just why Carver was essential to the third game. Carver, already a broken and angry man by the events of that game, but a man with secrets of his own all the same.Īnd in Liberation, the tale of John Carver is expanded upon. Isaac Clarke had to endure all that horror in the Dead Space games, before dragging John Carver as his co-op pal into the madness in the third game. A reality where a pseudo L Ron Hubbard wasn’t just taken seriously, but also revered as a prophet for a new age of mankind, infectious insanity and guilt permeating the core of everyone around and just straight-up murder-your-face monsters make for a grim future. If there’s one universe that I do not ever want to find myself reincarnated into, it’s the galaxy of Dead Space. Need some decent reading material? Tired of words and want some nightmare fuel imagery in a hardcover collection instead? Then sit back and try not to relax too much, because we’ve got just the thing for you.
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