MAD GHOST COMICS presents a MONSTROUS 80 PAGES of all-new stories featuring GEIGER, as well as his allies and enemies! First, in an extra-sized lead story, GEOFF JOHNS & BRYAN HITCH introduce the mysterious man known as REDCOAT and reveal his bizarre ties to the American Revolution, the Unknown War, and Geiger himself. Then, discover the secrets of the Warlords of Las Vegas - Bonnie Borden! Goldbeard! Mr. Karloff! And more! - in a series of tales written and drawn by some of the greatest writers and artists today! Plus, the special origin tale of Geiger's favorite two-headed dog, BARNEY, and a PREVIEW of GEOFF JOHNS & GARY FRANK's new upcominmore
This bumper 80-page piece of loveliness gives us the third character in an ever-growing pantheon (after Junkyard Joe, and Tariq Geiger himself) and also delivers an in-depth look at the Las Vegas of this beautifully imagined dystopian future. We get terrific teases for the Junkyard Joe and Redcoat series, and the opening tale sets up a future conflict between at least two of them. Read Full Review
Though the Geiger series itself had its fair share of ups and downs, the 80-page-giant seems like it should have been the first thing out of the gate for this new universe from Geoff Johns. Read Full Review
Geiger was cool, knowing there's a bigger universe and timeline was cooler, but seeing here some hints of what might be coming our way... It's just awesome. Geoff Johns has done it again, and I am all here for it. The ministories of each ruler were a nice touch. Junkyard Joe and Redcoat look great, cant wait. For a giant issue, this didn't felt like a filler nowhere, just context of the world and hype for what comes next. Loved it.
This was great, just like the main series. Excited to read the minis that spin out of it.
I know Geoff is coming back to DC do a Flashpoint sequel but I wish he’d just focus on his creator-owned stuff.
Loved reading this! Very ambitious ideas at play here. Hopefully they can pay off and have a nice cohesive universe of characters where continuity matters and everything lines up with the other books. Good luck Geoff and company!