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This is a list of minor characters in the British comic strip Judge Dredd appearing in 2000 AD, Judge Dredd Megazine and related publications. They are listed alphabetically by surname, in categories. For the 1995 film, see Judge Dredd (film). ...
Cover of the first issue of 2000 AD, 26 February 1977. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine is a British magazine featuring comic strips set in the world of Judge Dredd, launched in October 1990. ...
Judges of Mega-City One
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Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
Agee -
Psi-Judge Kit Agee was one of Justice Department's telepaths, and a friend of Judge Anderson. In 2112 she was abducted by Judge Kraken, who was being controlled by the Sisters of Death. The Sisters, who inhabited another dimension, used Agee to establish a psionic link to Earth, where they were able to seize control of Mega-City One, ultimately killing millions of people. On Anderson's advice, Judge Dredd killed Agee, severing the psychic link and banishing the Sisters back to their homeworld. Necropolis was created with the allegiance of the Dark Judges and the Sisters of Death. ...
PSI Divison is the branch of Mega-City One Justice Department that deals in supernatural phenomenon, using Judges with psychic abilities. ...
Judge Cassandra Anderson, created by writer John Wagner and artist Brian Bolland in 1980, is a fictional character that started as a supporting character in the comic strip Judge Dredd of 2000 AD and eventually rose in prominence and became the star of her own strip, which is entitled Anderson...
Judge Kraken is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip featured in the long-running UK comic 2000 AD. Kraken was originally one of the Judda, a tribe of rogue clones of Chief Judge Fargo created by the renegade Judge Morton Judd and based beneath Ayers Rock in...
The Dark Judges are recurring villains in the fictional Judge Dredd universe recounted in the UK comic 2000 AD. They are Judge Death, Judge Fire, Judge Fear and Judge Mortis. ...
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Beeny
Beeny (illustration by Colin MacNeil) -
A cadet in the Academy of Law, America Beeny was inducted by her father just before his untimely death and served the next ten years well (she is not at present a canditate for the accelerated graduation program, as far as we know). As with all tenth year cadets she was required to plan and execute an investigation on her own. Allowed to choose a partner, she chose to work with Judge Dredd and decided to take another look at the events of the previous America story, since she had decided that the first investigation had failed badly (leading to the Total War terrorist bombings). Image File history File linksMetadata No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata No higher resolution available. ...
Perhaps the quintessential Judge Dredd story. ...
The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
Perhaps the quintessential Judge Dredd story. ...
Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
Dredd has noted Beeny's skill, comparing her to a ten year man, though he did suspect that her insistence on going through the paper trail first was a means of needling him. (Dredd's hatred of paperwork is legendary). In spite of her parentage (she was descended from anti-judicial activists America Jara and Bennet Beeny), America Beeny appears to have the makings of a very good Judge. She does however want to reform the system from the inside. With both parents dead, the closest thing she had to family was her father's old robo-servant Robert. When Robert was destroyed in an attempt on her life Dredd observed "we're your family now."
Brufen Tek-Judge Brufen was head of Tek Division (2108-2110), Justice Department's research and development scientists, succeeding Judge Renbow and taking his seat on the Council of Five. By this time he had already invented the Manta Prowl Tank. He was assassinated by the Judda. His seat on the Council was taken by Judge Odell. However due to an oversight an artist on a later story, Tale of the Dead Man, depicted Brufen still alive two years later.[1] The Council of Five is a fictional legislative body in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
This is a list of future technology and equipment appearing in the British comic strip Judge Dredd appearing in 2000 AD, Judge Dredd Megazine and related publications. ...
Morton Judd is the name of a fictional character from the Judge Dredd universe and appears in progs 559-563 of the UK comic book 2000AD. Judd was originally a Judge, Head of Genetics at the Justice Department and a prominent member of the Council of Five. ...
Castillo Judge Laverne Castillo was a street judge who was taken off street duty when she froze in combat and allowed a fellow judge to be shot and seriously wounded. Transferred to administrative duties, she became the personal aide to Chief Judge McGruder and accompanied the Chief Judge on a diplomatic visit to the planet Hestia. When their spaceship crashed there, Castillo so impressed Judge Dredd that on their return home he recommended that she be transferred back to street duty. This time she excelled in her chosen role, and was Dredd's sidekick in a number of stories until she was murdered by aliens after eight years on the force. Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
Judge Evelyn McGruder is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. She was first female Chief Judge of Mega-City One, and the first Judge to become Chief Judge twice. ...
The outer planets of the Solar System are hypothetical or fictional planets on the edge of the Solar System, beyond the orbit of Neptune, which sometimes serve as settings or references in science fiction. ...
Don Quixote and Sancho Panza unsuccessfully confront windmills. ...
During her time on Hestia, Castillo developed a secret and unrequited crush on Judge Dredd. Writer John Wagner never developed this theme any further with her character, but this idea was taken up again with the character Galen DeMarco and used to greater effect, with significant repercussions in the relevant stories. John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Galen DeMarco is a fictional character in the world of Judge Dredd. ...
Dan Francisco A large and experienced Street Judge, Dan Francisco is the subject of a 24-hour reality show called The Streets Of Dan Francisco - a major public relations boost for Justice Department. Despite his experience, he will often do what the audience expects rather than what makes the most sense due to the pressure of the constant cameras.[2]
Dekker Judge Dekker first appeared in 1984 as a rookie judge, being evaluated by Dredd to assess her suitability to become a full judge. She passed with flying colours, with Dredd even telling her that she was the best rookie he had ever had.[3] She did not reappear in the strip again until 1991, when writer Garth Ennis used her as Dredd's sidekick.[4] By this time an experienced street judge, she was killed off in the 1992 story "Judgement Day" (set in 2114). 1984 in comics May - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1, Mirage Studios Categories: | ...
Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
1991 1990 in comics 1992 in comics Notable events of 1991 in comics. ...
Garth Ennis (born January 16, 1970 in Holywood, Northern Ireland) is a Northern Irish comics writer, best known for the DC/Vertigo series Preacher, co-created with artist Steve Dillon. ...
Don Quixote and Sancho Panza unsuccessfully confront windmills. ...
1992 1991 in comics 1993 in comics Notable events of 1992 in comics. ...
Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
(21st century - 22nd century - 23rd century - other centuries) The twenty-second century comprises, for some, the years 2101 to 2200. ...
An alternative, evil version of Dekker from a parallel universe appeared in the 1994 novel Dread Dominion.[5] Parallel universe or alternate reality in science fiction and fantasy is a self-contained separate reality coexisting with our own. ...
See also: 1993 in literature, other events of 1994, 1995 in literature, list of years in literature. ...
For the 1995 film, see Judge Dredd (film). ...
Feyy Psi-Judge Feyy was a psi judge with precognitive power. It was Feyy who on his death bed prophesised that Mega-City One would be destroyed unless the Judge Child, Owen Krysler, could be found and installed as the city's ruler. On average Feyy's predictions were assessed to be 88.8% accurate. PSI Divison is the branch of Mega-City One Justice Department that deals in supernatural phenomenon, using Judges with psychic abilities. ...
Mega-City One is a huge fictional city-state covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
The Judge Child (drawn by Ron Smith) The Judge Child was an extended storyline in the 2000 AD comic strip Judge Dredd that ran from issues 156 to 181. ...
Fish Deputy Chief Judge Fish was not a human but in fact a goldfish. When Judge Cal became chief judge he quickly went insane, and appointed his pet fish as his deputy. (The character of Judge Cal was based on the insane Roman emperor Caligula, who in real life nominated his horse for the office of senator.) Fish was assassinated by Judge Slocum, at the instigation of Judge Dredd. He was succeeded by Deputy Chief Judge Grampus, who himself was not human either, but of an alien race called the Kleggs. Trinomial name Carassius auratus auratus (Linnaeus, 1758) For the baked snack crackers, please see Goldfish (snack). ...
Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Germanicus (August 31, 12 â January 24, 41), more commonly known by his nickname Caligula, was the third Roman Emperor and a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, ruling from 37 to 41. ...
The Roman Senate (Latin: Senatus) was the main governing council of both the Roman Republic, which started in 509 BC, and the Roman Empire. ...
Kleggs are alien mercenaries in the Judge Dredd comic books. ...
Garcia -
Judge Garcia is deputy head of the SJS. She is the long-time partner of SJS head Buell and served in Dredd's anti-corruption squad during his term as Chief of Sector 301. Judge Arthur Buell is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in British comic 2000 AD. He is the current head of the Special Judicial Squad, the Internal Affairs division of the Judges of Mega-City One. ...
The SJS or Special Judicial Service, in the fictional Judge Dredd universe created by 2000 AD, are sometimes referred to as the Judges of the Judges. ...
Grampus Deputy Chief Judge Grampus was the leader of an army of Kleggs: alien mercenaries hired by the insane tyrant Judge Cal to oppress the population during his reign of terror in 2101. He succeeded Judge Fish as Cal's deputy. When Cal announced his plan to gas the entire population to death, he allowed the Kleggs to leave, but before they could board their spaceships Judge Dredd led an assault to stop Cal. The Kleggs tried to surrender, but the judges slaughtered them anyway for their crimes. Grampus was killed by judges Dredd, Giant and Kelso. He was succeeded by Deputy Chief Judge Pepper. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Bollands cover to Hellstorm: Prince Of Lies #16. ...
Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Kleggs are alien mercenaries in the Judge Dredd comic books. ...
Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine cover for the What ever happened to? issue about the Giant family, by Cliff Robinson. ...
Greel Tek-Judge Greel was head of Tek-Division and succeeded Judge Quiggley as head of the Mechanismo robot judge programme. He was briefly acting chief judge in the year 2116. However he was implicated in an assassination attempt on Chief Judge McGruder when one of his robots attempted to kill her. Although his alleged guilt was never proved, McGruder curtly demoted him to a junior position in Traffic Control, effectively finishing his political ambitions for ever. He was succeeded as head of Tek-Division by Judge McGovern. Mechanismo is a Judge Dredd story which was published in British comic the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
The Chief Judge of Mega-City One is dictator and head of state of the fictional future city of around 400 million people in 22nd-century America. ...
Judge Evelyn McGruder is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. She was first female Chief Judge of Mega-City One, and the first Judge to become Chief Judge twice. ...
Herriman Deputy Chief Judge Paul Herriman was originally a street judge. When in 2116 Judge McGruder resigned as chief judge, Herriman was one of the candidates in the election to replace her. Running against Judges Dredd, Volt and Hershey, Herriman came third. Chief Judge Volt appointed Herriman deputy chief judge. In 2117 Herriman became the first deputy chief judge to regularly preside over meetings of the ruling Council of Five following Volt's decision to abolish the chief judge's ex officio chairmanship of the Council. He was assassinated by Judge Mortis in 2120 while he was acting chief judge. He was succeeded as deputy chief judge by Judge Hershey. Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
Judge Evelyn McGruder is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. She was first female Chief Judge of Mega-City One, and the first Judge to become Chief Judge twice. ...
The Chief Judge of Mega-City One is dictator and head of state of the fictional future city of around 400 million people in 22nd-century America. ...
Chief Judge Hadrian Volt is a fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was chief judge of Mega-City One between 2116 and 2121. ...
Judge Barbara Hershey is a fictional character, part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Shortly after her graduation from the Academy of Law, Judge Hershey was the surprise choice to join the crew of the Justice 1...
The Council of Five is a fictional legislative body in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
The Dark Judges are recurring villains in the fictional Judge Dredd universe recounted in the UK comic 2000 AD. They are Judge Death, Judge Fire, Judge Fear and Judge Mortis. ...
Judge Barbara Hershey is a fictional character, part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Shortly after her graduation from the Academy of Law, Judge Hershey was the surprise choice to join the crew of the Justice 1...
Kruger Judge Kruger is a street judge with a short temper. He has numerous complaints of excessive violence against his name, second only to Judge Dredd, and also one of the highest convicton rates amongst the judges. He is also a daystick fighting champion, having taken out first place at least four years running, and almost always prefers to use the daystick as opposed to the Lawgiver. In Judge Dredd Megazine Issue 74 of 2001, Kruger accidentally kills a woman during a routine inspection by breaking her neck with his daystick, which is witnessed by her only son. To cover his tracks, he plants a gun in her hands and calls the incident in. When Judge Dredd arrives on the scene, he is initially sceptical, and is almost certain that Kruger's violent nature resulted in the woman's death for no actual reason. With only the son's word against his, Kruger is transferred to the Academy to train cadets in daystick combat while the investigation takes place. Dredd, angry at Kruger having escaped justice, challenges him to a daystick fight, to which Kruger accepts, taunting Dredd by labelling him the "old man." During the fight, both Kruger and Dredd inflict heavy damage upon one another, although Dredd's helmet protects him from several dangerous headshots, and is broken during the process. Dredd eventually defeats Kruger, informing the onlooking cadets that the daystick is a good way to subdue a perp, but only when used properly, obviously alluding to Kruger's overly enthusiastic use of the weapon. Kruger's prominence lies in the fact that, although Dredd is aware of his guilt, he stands as one of very few characters to have ever escaped Dredd's judgement.
Kurten Judge Barry Kurten was a street judge who developed mental problems, and had hallucinations of a little blue man called Mo who told him what to do. Mostly Mo told him to use excessive force when arresting people, leading Kurten to commit acts of increasing violence, culminating in murder. When he realised that Judge Dredd had him under surveillance he stole a large sum of money from drug dealers and fled the city, setting himself up as a judge in Ciudad Barranquilla, where the judges take a more relaxed view of judge brutality. Kurten thrived in his new city, and became so notorious for his violent behaviour that he became known among the locals as "El Diablo," the Devil. When Chief Judge Batista refused Mega-City One's extradition request, Judge Dredd secretly infiltrated Ciudad Barranquilla disguised as one of Batista's judges and assassinated Kurten. Cuidad Barranquilla, also known as Banana City, is a huge fictional city covering much of Central America in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
Logan Judge Logan is Dredd's assistant. He has made a number of appearances, first in 2003 in the story "The Satanist"[6] before appearing in the Total War storyline[7] and in "Origins". In "Origins" he was severely wounded in action and required major surgery, including an artificial lung, arm and spleen.[8] Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
For other use of the word, see Origin. ...
McTighe Tek-Judge McTighe is head of Tek Division and a member of the ruling Council of Five. He is the longest-serving head of Tek-Division to appear in the comic, as that office usually tends to have a high rate of turnover. He succeeded Judge McGovern in 2120, and joined the Council shortly afterwards, following the death of Judge Herriman. The Council of Five is a fictional legislative body in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
Morphy Judge Morphy was the senior judge who supervised Dredd's Final Assessment to become a full judge, when Dredd was a rookie in 2079. During most of Dredd's career he mentored him, giving advice when needed, and was in many ways a father figure to him. He was killed in the line of duty in 2112, only a few months short of retirement. Dredd took his death very badly and almost murdered one of the killers, restraining himself only at the very last moment. The perpetrators were sentenced to thirty years. Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
A recurring joke in the series is that for some unknown reason, Dredd always wears the wrong sized boots. This can actually be traced to Morphy's first appearance, where Dredd confided to his former supervisor that he'd been experiencing doubts about the job. Morphy advised him to requisition a pair of boots two sizes too small: "You'll be so busy cussin' those damned boots you won't have time to worry about anything else." In a much later episode, Dredd admitted to himself that Morphy was the closest thing he'd ever had to a father, and honoured his memory by following the old man's instructions to the letter.
Nimrod Nimrod was a cadet at the Academy of Law. He was cloned from the DNA of Judge Dredd or Chief Judge Fargo, but was genetically modified to give him greatly enhanced sensory abilities. Unfortunately the genetic modification process was far from perfected, and his body began to react adversely to the changes that had been wrought upon him. He lost his mind, and severely disfigured himself when he set himself on fire in a suicide attempt. Eventually he was scheduled for euthanasia, and was shot by Dredd after the Total War bombings. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 495 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (888 Ã 1076 pixel, file size: 724 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Cadet Nimrod, painted by Henry Flint in Judge Dredd (in prog 1408 of 2000 AD, 2004) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 495 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (888 Ã 1076 pixel, file size: 724 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Cadet Nimrod, painted by Henry Flint in Judge Dredd (in prog 1408 of 2000 AD, 2004) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Artist on British sci-fi comic 2000AD, Flint has established a cult following for his hyper-detailed and wildly inventive work on series such as Judge Dredd, ABC Warriors, Shakara and Aliens. ...
The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
Chief Judge Fargo (painted by Carlos Ezquerra) Chief Judge Eustace Fargo is an important fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He is Judge Dredds clone father. ...
Euthanasia (from Greek: εÏ
θαναÏία -εÏ
, eu, good, θάναÏοÏ, thanatos, death) is the practice of terminating the life of a person or animal with an incurable disease, intolerable suffering, or a possibly undignified death in a painless or minimally painful way, for the purpose of limiting suffering. ...
Total war is a military conflict in which nations mobilize all available resources in order to destroy another nations ability to engage in war. ...
Odell Judge Odell was an elderly judge who was responsible for rehabilitating the ex-Judda Kraken and training him to become a judge following the Judda's failure to conquer Mega-City One. Judge Kraken is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip featured in the long-running UK comic 2000 AD. Kraken was originally one of the Judda, a tribe of rogue clones of Chief Judge Fargo created by the renegade Judge Morton Judd and based beneath Ayers Rock in...
Morton Judd is the name of a fictional character from the Judge Dredd universe and appears in progs 559-563 of the UK comic book 2000AD. Judd was originally a Judge, Head of Genetics at the Justice Department and a prominent member of the Council of Five. ...
Odell joined the Council of Five following the assassination of Tek-Judge Brufen in 2110. Although seconded to the Academy of Law he continued to wear the uniform of a street judge. He firmly believed in Kraken's change of loyalties, and his frequent and passionate defence of Kraken persuaded Chief Judge Silver to overrule Dredd's judgement of him and promote him to full judge. Consequently when Kraken became a Dark Judge and participated in the destruction of the city, Odell took it badly and committed suicide. The Council of Five is a fictional legislative body in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
Chief Judge Thomas Silver was chief judge (2108 to 2112) of the fictional city of Mega-City One in the Judge Dredd comic strip. ...
The Dark Judges are recurring villains in the fictional Judge Dredd universe recounted in the UK comic 2000 AD. They are Judge Death, Judge Fire, Judge Fear and Judge Mortis. ...
Omar Psi-Judge Omar became head of Psi Division after his predecessor Ecks was killed in the Apocalypse War. He personally assisted Judge Dredd in his investigation into the haunting of a sector house, and later he exonerated Judge Anderson when she was accused of negligently permitting the Dark Judges to escape and threaten the city. When psi-criminal Shojun the Warlord unleashed the demonic Seven Samurai on the city, Omar volunteered to sacrifice his own life in a suicide attack to destroy them using a psionic amplifier. He was succeeded as head of Psi-Division by Judge Shenker. PSI Divison is the branch of Mega-City One Justice Department that deals in supernatural phenomenon, using Judges with psychic abilities. ...
The Apocalypse War is a storyline from the fictional universe of Judge Dredd, first published in British comic 2000 AD in 1982. ...
Judge Cassandra Anderson, created by writer John Wagner and artist Brian Bolland in 1980, is a fictional character that started as a supporting character in the comic strip Judge Dredd of 2000 AD and eventually rose in prominence and became the star of her own strip, which is entitled Anderson...
The Dark Judges are recurring villains in the fictional Judge Dredd universe recounted in the UK comic 2000 AD. They are Judge Death, Judge Fire, Judge Fear and Judge Mortis. ...
Illustration by Cam Kennedy Shojun, Warlord of Ji was a fictional villain in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD in 1986. ...
This is a list of future technology and equipment appearing in the British comic strip Judge Dredd appearing in 2000 AD, Judge Dredd Megazine and related publications. ...
Judge Shenker is a fictional supporting character in the Judge Dredd and Anderson, Psi Division comic strips in British comics 2000 AD and Judge Dredd Megazine. ...
Pepper Judge Pepper was deputy chief judge from 2101 to 2103, succeeding DCJ Grampus. After losing a leg in the 21st century he retired from active service and became a tutor at the Academy of Law, where he taught many of the city's most important and senior judges while they were cadets, including Judge Dredd and future chief judge Cal. When Chief Judge Cal became insane Pepper volunteered to fight with Dredd to depose the tyrant. In the moment of victory Dredd was offered the position of chief judge, but he declined in favour of Judge Griffin. Griffin then appointed Pepper as his deputy. The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
For the 1995 film, see Judge Dredd (film). ...
Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Chief Judge Griffin is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was chief judge of Mega-City One between 2101 and 2104. ...
Two years later Pepper was assassinated by game show contestants from a reality television show, in which contestants gained points by confessing to crimes they had not yet been caught for. Pepper's death led to the show being taken off the air. Reality television is a genre of television programming which presents purportedly unscripted dramatic or humorous situations, documents actual events, and features ordinary people instead of professional actors. ...
Perrier Judge Perrier first appeared in the story "The Apocalypse War". She did not appear again however until years later when writer Garth Ennis took over the strip and resurrected her and Dekker as sidekicks for Judge Dredd. Both were killed off in "Judgement Day". The Apocalypse War is a storyline from the fictional universe of Judge Dredd, first published in British comic 2000 AD in 1982. ...
Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Plaski Judge Ferd Plaski was a senior street judge who contested the first election for chief judge in 2116. However he was blackmailed into withdrawing his candidacy, and the election was won by Judge Volt. He had had a daughter following an illicit liaison with a civilian two decades earlier, and although Chief Judge Goodman had decided that a reprimand was sufficient punishment, the threat to make this information public made his candidacy untenable. The blackmailer, Judge Surly Porter (a play on the name Shirley Porter, a real-life politician accused of rigging an election), was arrested by Dredd. Mechanismo is a Judge Dredd story which was published in British comic the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Chief Judge Hadrian Volt is a fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was chief judge of Mega-City One between 2116 and 2121. ...
Dame Shirley Porter (born November 29, 1930) is a controversial British former local government leader. ...
Prager -
Judge Prager is one of the judges who chose to take the Long Walk into the Undercity. After four years down there he made his first appearance, in prog 328, when he saved Judge Dredd who had been transformed into a werewolf.[9] He next appeared decades later to warn the judges of a new threat to the city from Bones but it turned out Prager, himself, had now become a werewolf. Declining the cure he helped defeat Bones' army and resumed his Undercity patrol.[10] Image File history File links Size of this preview: 422 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (937 Ã 1330 pixel, file size: 1. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 422 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (937 Ã 1330 pixel, file size: 1. ...
Cliff Robinson may refer to: Cliff Robinson (basketball player born 1960) - former NBA player who played from 1979 - 1991 Cliff Robinson (basketball player born 1966) - current NBA player who played from 1989 - 200? Cliff Robinson (model railroader) - famous model railroader This is a disambiguation page â a navigational aid which lists...
The Undercity is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. In the comic strip, the cities of the Eastern Seaboard of the United States had become so polluted that by the end of the twenty first...
In the long-running British comic strip Judge Dredd, The Long Walk is taken by retired Judges who feel that they can no longer be effective within Mega-City One, instead choosing to take law to the lawless in either the radioactive wastes of the Cursed Earth or the Undercity...
The Undercity is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. In the comic strip, the cities of the Eastern Seaboard of the United States had become so polluted that by the end of the twenty first...
Priest Judge Priest was a street judge in Sector 301, Mega-City One's most crime-ridden sector. He became so frustrated with one criminal who kept being diverted from normal incarceration because of his psychiatric problems, and then released as pronounced cured, that one day he simply shot him when he surrendered. From that day on he began murdering any suspect who he either could not prove was guilty or could not sentence to an adequate punishment. His partner Judge Struthers was complicit in Priest's crimes, though Priest was the instigator. When Struthers was killed in the line of duty, Priest became mentally unbalanced. When Priest's crimes were uncovered he confessed, but later escaped from custody and embarked on a killing spree, this time slaughtering innocent citizens. He finally committed suicide.
Quiggley Tek-Judge Quiggley took over from Judge Stich as head of the Mechanismo robot judge programme after the Mark I robots ran amok. However he was demoted when his Mark IIs also failed a field test. He was succeeded as head of the project by Judge Greel. When Judge Dredd tried to interfere with his continuing work on the Mark IIA robots Quiggley became desperate, and ordered the robots to kill Dredd. He was sentenced to 20 years of hard labour on the penal colony on Titan. Mechanismo is a Judge Dredd story which was published in British comic the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Titan is the largest moon of Saturn. ...
Quincy SJS Judge Quincy was one of four SJS judges who assassinated Chief Judge Goodman in 2101 on the orders of Judge Cal. He also tried to kill Judge Dredd, shooting him in the head with a rifle. When Cal became chief judge, his first manifestation of his developing insanity was to order Quincy to undress and perform all of his duties in his underwear, as punishment for a uniform infraction (a missing button). His fate was not recorded in the comic. The SJS or Special Judicial Service, in the fictional Judge Dredd universe created by 2000 AD, are sometimes referred to as the Judges of the Judges. ...
Judge Goodman is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. Goodman succeeded Cheif Judge Fargo as Chief Judge of Mega-City One shortly after the Atomic Wars of 2070 and was well liked by his people. ...
Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Renga One of the four cadets involved in the "Hunting Party" storyline,[11] Renga had briefly worked undercover in a juve gang for Wally Squad; the experiences left him disgruntled and antisocial as well as sporting a gang tattoo (which was later removed). His attitude caused him to clash with Dredd while on a mission to locate the source of Dr. Bolt's Dune Sharks. After a disastrous attempt to 'save' a Cursed Earth girl from a ritual (which meant the end of her community), it appeared that he was going to be expelled from the Academy. However, he distinguished himself when he was part of a group of Judges that was temporarily thrown back in time to Erie, Indiana during the start of the Atomic Wars, as well as in the final clash against the Dune Sharks, and so Dredd gave him a second chance. This article is about the the comic-book character. ...
This is a list of minor characters in the British comic strip Judge Dredd appearing in 2000 AD, Judge Dredd Megazine and related publications. ...
The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
Eerie, Indiana was an American television show and that aired on NBC from 1991 to 1992. ...
The Atomic Wars or Great Atom War is a fictional event in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
After he graduated from the Academy, he was personally chosen by Dredd to assist in the Fargo mission in "Origins." For other use of the word, see Origin. ...
He has also appeared in the story "The Scorpion Dance".[12]
Roffman Judge Roffman works in the Public Surveillance Unit. He originally served in the SJS in Sector 301, but was transferred to Street Division in Sector 303 after bugging his superior officer's office. Due to his inexperience he bungled a raid and inadvertently discharged his weapon, shooting and wounding another judge. Suspended from duty, his efforts to make amends (again by spying on his new commanding officer) backfired and almost resulted in the end of his career. Instead Judge Edgar, head of PSU, recognised that his suspicious and devious character made him ideally suited to surveillance work, and she recruited him. He flourished in his new role, and continues to assist Judge Dredd in investigations, distinguishing himself in the search for the members of the Total War terrorism organisation when they began detonating nuclear bombs around the city. The Public Surveillance Unit or PSU is a fictional institution in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. It was introduced in prog 959. ...
The SJS or Special Judicial Service, in the fictional Judge Dredd universe created by 2000 AD, are sometimes referred to as the Judges of the Judges. ...
Judge Edgar (painted by John Burns) Judge Jura Edgar is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. She was the head of the Public Surveillance Unit from 2100 to 2122, and then the governor of a prison farm in the Cursed Earth. ...
Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
Roth SJS Sector Head Herman Roth was the SJS chief of Sector 301 in the North West Hab Zone. Accused of being involved in the corruption scandal rocking the sector, Roth was sensationally silenced in a gruesome mob execution. The SJS or Special Judicial Service, in the fictional Judge Dredd universe created by 2000 AD, are sometimes referred to as the Judges of the Judges. ...
Sanchez Judge Sanchez was a newly graduated Judge when Mr. Bones released the Incubus on Mega-City One. She fought alongside Dredd and Judge Giant in the defence of the Grand Hall of Justice but it appeared the strain would break her. However, the various perils (including being inpregnated by the Incubus) helped mould her into a strong judge. Consequently she was chosen as one of the team assisting Dredd in his mission to rescue Chief Judge Fargo from his kidnappers in the Cursed Earth (in the story "Origins"). Judge Dredd vs. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine cover for the What ever happened to? issue about the Giant family, by Cliff Robinson. ...
The definitive version of the current Grand Hall, designed and painted by Carlos Ezquerra. ...
Chief Judge Fargo (painted by Carlos Ezquerra) Chief Judge Eustace Fargo is an important fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He is Judge Dredds clone father. ...
The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
For other use of the word, see Origin. ...
Slocum SJS Judge Slocum served Judge Cal during his brief reign of terror. He killed Deputy Chief Judge Fish on Dredd's orders. His role in Fish's death went undetected, but he was later executed for inadvertently calling Cal "crazy," then a capital offence. He was paralysed and then pickled alive in a giant vat of vinegar. Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Cucumbers gathered for pickling. ...
Other Judges Armitage -
Main article: Detective-Judge Armitage Detective-Judge Armitage is a British Judge much hated throughout the Brit-Cit Justice Department. His real name is unknown and his trait is that he never carries a gun. Yet Armitage's knowledge of weapons is extensive, mainly due to his activities during the Brit-Cit Civil War of 2092-99, when he fought on the losing side. After the war Armitage joined up as a Judge, but became cynical and morose when his lover Liora was killed by the crime lord Efil Drago San, in revenge for the Detective Judge crippling him. Although this means he has gained a reputation for being impossible to work with Armitage has done outstanding work in the Brit-Cit Justice Department's plainclothes homicide division. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 403 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (1557 Ã 2315 pixel, file size: 2. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 403 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (1557 Ã 2315 pixel, file size: 2. ...
Sean Phillips is a comic book artist. ...
Detective-Judge Armitage is a fictional Judge in the Judge Dredd setting. ...
Rookie Judge Treasure Steel has, although both harbouring a grudging respect for each other, become his closest friend and ally.
Bhaji Psi-Judge Bhaji came to Mega-City One on a cultural visit at a particularly bad time, since it coincided with former Judge Grice's devastating attack on the city with a killer virus. Bhaji predicted the events in a psi-dream, warning him that Judge Dredd would be the man left to pick up the pieces. Bhaji helped recapture Mega-City One from within his renegade group. The visiting Judge worked well with Psi-Judge Janus during the struggle and their combined efforts helped saved the city from the virus and contributed to the ultimate defeat of Grice. Judge Grice in his chief judges uniform (painted by Carlos Ezquerra) Judge Grice was a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. Created in 1990 by John Wagner and Steve Dillon, Grice later had his own spin-off series, Purgatory (1993) by Mark Millar and...
Bulgarin and Kazan Supreme Judge Bulgarin was ruler of East Meg One until the Apocalypse War. He delegated the invasion of Mega-City One to his most trusted general, War Marshal Kazan. However Bulgarin's confidence was misplaced as Kazan assassinated him and took his place. Kazan was executed by Dredd at the end of the war. East Meg One is a fictional city in the world of Judge Dredd, the figurehead character of British weekly comic 2000 AD (comic). ...
The Apocalypse War is a storyline from the fictional universe of Judge Dredd, first published in British comic 2000 AD in 1982. ...
Hankerson Sov Judge Hankerson was the East Meg Two Judge in control of the Razors Program. He was taken prisoner by rioters in 2177 and presumably killed. Red Razors is a 2000 AD comic strip created by Mark Millar and set in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
Anatoli Kazan Anatoli Kazan is the crippled clone son of War Marshal Kazan. He originally served the surviving judges of East-Meg One and was a thorn in Judge Dredd's side, attacking him through his niece Vienna. He later defected to Mega-City One where he offered to help Defence Division. Dredd was highly suspicious of Kazan's true motives and persuaded the Chief Judge not to trust him, but the Council of Five overruled them and voted to employ Kazan (under strict supervision). Kazan's advice and inside information led to Mega-City One's regime change action in Ciudad Barranquilla, in order to prevent a Sov attempt to do the same; Kazan was drawn looking sinister at the end of the story, suggesting a deeper agenda to his actions. East-Meg One is a fictional city in the world of Judge Dredd, the figurehead character of British weekly comic 2000 AD (comic). ...
Vienna Dredd or Vienna Pasternak is a fictional character from the Judge Dredd Universe, first appearing in prog 116 of the UK comic book 2000AD. Vienna is Judge Dredds niece, the daughter of his corrupt brother Rico, and was orphaned when Dredd was forced to kill her father. ...
The Council of Five is a fictional legislative body in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
Kazan seems likely to become a significant villain in the stories by writer Gordon Rennie. Gordon Rennie is a former music journalist turned comics writer, responsible for White Trash: Moronic Inferno, as well as several comic strips for 2000 AD and novels for Warhammer Fantasy. ...
Joyce Judge-Sergeant Joyce is an Irish Judge. He partnered with Dredd when Dredd was sent to Ireland to extradite a suspect in 2113. In the following year he was supposed to accompany Dredd on a suicide mission to kill the necromagus Sabbat, but was knocked unconscious and replaced by Johnny Alpha, which saved his life. He was seriously injured during a hazardous extradition assignment to Mega-City One. Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Strontium Dog is a long-running comics series featuring in the British science fiction weekly 2000 AD, starring Johnny Alpha, a mutant bounty hunter with an array of imaginative gadgets and weapons. ...
Mega-City One is a huge fictional city-state covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
Perpetrators Don Uggie Apelino Don Uggie Apelino was a genetically altered intelligent ape that encountered Dredd several times - first during a gang war, and later after a foiled attempt to have Dredd assassinated. After the Apocalypse War, radiation returned him to the intelligence of a normal ape, whereupon he led a group of crazy and brutal apes in the Cursed Earth - and ran into Dredd for the last time. The Apocalypse War is a storyline from the fictional universe of Judge Dredd, first published in British comic 2000 AD in 1982. ...
The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
Don Apelino was often accompanied by his two henchmen Fast Eeek and Joe Bananas.
Bella Bagley Bella Bagley was an unlucky-in-love woman who fell in love with Dredd. When he rejected her advances she became insane and had to be incarcerated in the psycho-cubes. Escaping twice, on the second occasion she finally decided to kill Dredd in a fit of jealousy and was shot dead.[13] For the 1995 film, see Judge Dredd (film). ...
Dr. Bolt Dr. Bolt was a robot scientist who performed unauthorised mind control experiments on prisoners in a Cursed Earth prison camp. He also released dangerous alien Dune Sharks on Mega City One, which led to Judge Dredd leading a mission to locate their source. The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
Mega-City One is a huge fictional city covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
Mr Bones -
Mr Bones (original name Dan Riboshevsky) was born in Mega-City One in 2084. Routine scanning showed he had a genetic predispostion for evil and he was expelled from the city to live with other mutants in the Cursed Earth. He returned entering the Undercity to raise an army but when this was foiled he returned with an even more deadly threat - the Xenomorph. He came across them when he left the Cursed Earth for a career as a space pirate. It is their acid blood which disfigured him and he died when they turned on him. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 354 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (560 Ã 948 pixel, file size: 455 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Mr Bones, painted by Henry Flint in Judge Dredd (in prog 1329 of 2000 AD, 2003) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 354 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (560 Ã 948 pixel, file size: 455 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Mr Bones, painted by Henry Flint in Judge Dredd (in prog 1329 of 2000 AD, 2003) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Artist on British sci-fi comic 2000AD, Flint has established a cult following for his hyper-detailed and wildly inventive work on series such as Judge Dredd, ABC Warriors, Shakara and Aliens. ...
Judge Dredd vs. ...
Mega-City One is a huge fictional city-state covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
(Redirected from 2084) (20th century - 21st century - 22nd century - other centuries) Definition In calendars based on the Christian Era or Common Era, such as the Gregorian calendar, the 21st century is the current century, as of this writing, lasting from 2000-2099. ...
The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
The Undercity is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. In the comic strip, the cities of the Eastern Seaboard of the United States had become so polluted that by the end of the twenty first...
The xenomorph as it appears in Alien vs. ...
Call-Me-Kenneth Call-Me-Kenneth was a robot who appointed himself as leader of all rogue robots during The Robot Wars. Kenneth was a carpentry droid driven to rebel by his poor treatment by his owner. Kenneth, equipped with a chainsaw, attacked a number of humans and nearly killed Dredd before being disabled. The Robot Wars was the first extended storyline for Judge Dredd during which the character became the most popular in the comic book 2000 AD. In the last of his Dredd scripts (prog 8) Pat Mills had introduced the idea that the future society of Mega City One relied on...
In an unusual display of clemency Kenneth was rebuilt in a new body. Drawn by Ron Turner (the original version was designed by Carlos Ezquerra) this version is more human like and is equipped with a large drill and a third eye. Supposed to have been reprogrammed, he instead went on the rampage again and raised a whole army of robots to take over the city. Carlos Sanchez Ezquerra (November 1947, Zaragoza), is a Spanish comics artist who works mainly in British comics and currently lives in Andorra. ...
The Creep Beneath Mega City One is the Undercity (the remains of old New York City). Strangest of all the monsters and mutations that lurk beneath Mega City One is the one known as the Creep. Mega-City One is a huge fictional city covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
The Undercity is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. In the comic strip, the cities of the Eastern Seaboard of the United States had become so polluted that by the end of the twenty first...
The Creep was a brilliant but strange maniac able to morph his face and body into every terror imaginable. He takes great delight in torturing those who come from the Mega City down into the Undercity who disturb his playground of horrors. On one occasion The Creep tortured a hunting party that descends to the Undercity. An example of his bizarre behaviour was transplanting the head of one of the members on to the neck of his pet crocodile Yorkie. The tiny terror ventured into Mega City One during Necropolis, meeting the four Dark Judges. Judge Fire burned the Creep alive. Judge Fear stared into his face and Judge Mortis touched his flesh but the malignant mutant survived their attentions. In the end the quartet fled this invincible monster. For the record label, see Necropolis Records. ...
The Dark Judges are recurring villains in the fictional Judge Dredd universe recounted in the UK comic 2000 AD. They are Judge Death, Judge Fire, Judge Fear and Judge Mortis. ...
The Creep remains at large, apparently immortal and utterly inexplicable.
Vitus Dance Vitus Dance was a freelance assassin from the Cursed Earth. He had psionic powers, including pyrokinesis (the ability to set fires with his mind), levitation, and the power to control the minds of others. The strength of his powers was amplified by scorpion poison, and he carried two pet scorpions with him to sting him when necessary. In 2117 Dance was hired by mob boss Nero Narcos to kill an informer in judicial custody, a task which he accomplished by allowing himself to be arrested to get close enough to his victim, and then escaping. He was caught by Judges Dredd and Castillo, and served four years in solitary confinement, during which time he became insane. He escaped by faking his own death and then breaking out of the ambulance taking him to the morgue. Narcos still hoped to use him, but Dance tried to take over his mind. Narcos escaped and betrayed Dance to the Judges, who eventually killed him after many of them were slain. The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
-1...
Superfamilies Pseudochactoidea Buthoidea Chaeriloidea Chactoidea Iuroidea Scorpionoidea See classification for families. ...
Bert Dubinski Bert Dubinski was the first criminal Judge Dredd ever arrested, at the beginning of his Final Assessment to graduate to full judge. Dredd sentenced him to thirty-five years for murder in 2079. On his release in 2114 Dubinski tracked Dredd down to reminisce about old times, as he had followed Dredd's career ever since, but he found that Dredd was not interested in being friendly with a criminal. Enraged, he tried to kill Dredd, but failed and refused an offered opportunity to surrender. Dredd killed him without compunction.[14]
Father Earth Half-man, half-plant, Father Earth was a bizarre mutant and prophet who believed that Mega-City One had to be destroyed to free the Earth of its tyranny of concrete and steel. Attracting thousands of mutant and outcast followers, he combined his "oneness" with nature with a ruthless streak against the city dwellers. Mega-City One is a huge fictional city-state covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
Adjectives: Terrestrial, Terran, Telluric, Tellurian, Earthly Atmosphere Surface pressure: 101. ...
One key group of followers, The Doomsday Dogs, blew up Mega-City One's Power Tower and unleashed molten lava on its streets, which enabled Father Earth and his army to invade the city and attempt to overrun it. The threat of this artificially created "volcano" was soon ended, but the mutant leader set free a host of deadly exhibits from the Mega-City Botanic Gardens so continued to be a danger to the city. The Doomsday Dogs were Father Earths personal bodyguards. ...
For other uses, see Volcano (disambiguation). ...
Ironically, Father Earth was killed by the very thing he embraced, a plant, becoming entwined in a man-eating piece of vegetation he called the "God Plant".
Trapper Hag Trapper Hag is an alien bounty hunter who came to Mega-City One in search of Sancho Burr, Ruggly Kelp and Jacob "Retro" Jones, three perps who destroyed half a city to crack a bank on Signus 11. After taking these three prisoner, Hag killed several Judges attempting to stop him and went after Charlie Wateredge, whose grandfather committed offences on the Planet Einslag- a planet on which guilt extends to the third generation. Judge Dredd boarded Hag's space ship and captured the bounty hunter and, in a rare act of leniency, spared his life. After several years in captivity Hag escaped when his Iso-Block was breached during the Second Robot War in 2121. Dredd hunted him down and defeated him once more.
Ueno Hama Originally a 'sleeper' robot spy placed in Hondo City by the Mega-City One Justice Department, Ueno Hama became part of the population as a scaffolder. Unfortunately, a building site accident damaged his circuits and switched him into attack mode, so he began killing Hondo City officials with ruthless efficiency - on a kill or be killed policy. Hondo City is a huge fictional city covering most of Japan in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
It made an attempt to kill Judge-Inspector Totaru, but Judge Dredd stepped in to save his Hondo counterpart. Dredd engineered a massive explosion to destroy the robot - and therefore the evidence of Mega-City One's involvement in the whole sordid affair.
Hester Hyman -
Hester Hyman was an ordinary wife and mother who became so despairing of life under the tyranny of the Judges that she turned to terrorism to raise publicity for the cause of democratic reform. Her death at Dredd's hands spurred many ordinary citizens to campaign for democracy. Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
Robert Krush Robert Krush was the main villain in the "House of Pain" story. Robert appeared to be simply the aide of businessman Faustus Krush but revealed himself to have secretly been Faustus' half-brother; he left him imprisoned in the House of Pain and took Faustus' place after a face-change operation.[15]
Monkey The Monkey was an outcast that telepathically took over Chief Judge Goodman's mind in 2098-99. He made Goodman order the Judges to allow hordes of hostile mutants, who had been exiled from the Mega-City into the Cursed Earth radiation desert, to re-enter the city. This resulted in massive loss of life, and prompted Judge Cal to attempt to usurp Goodman as chief judge. Cal's coup d'etat was delayed when Judges Dredd and Chambers defeated the parasite at the eleventh hour, but came to fruition two years later when Cal had Goodman assassinated. Chambers and dozens of other judges were killed in the catastrophe, as well as thousands of civilians.[16] Judge Goodman is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. Goodman succeeded Cheif Judge Fargo as Chief Judge of Mega-City One shortly after the Atomic Wars of 2070 and was well liked by his people. ...
The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
Chief Judge Cal is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was loosely based on the real life Roman Emperor Caligula, who was insane. ...
Murd the Oppressor and Sagbelly Murd was an ancient necromancer and ruler of the planet Necros for ten thousand years. He was served by a multitude of creatures armed with swords, and had a giant man-eating toad called Sagbelly as a pet. Sagbelly had a wart from which a dangerous substance called Oracle Spice oozed, which could be used to foresee the future but which was fatal to most users. Dredd required the Oracle Spice to help him to find the Judge Child, but was actually killed by Murd when he arrived on Necros. Murd then brought Dredd back to life, intending to feed him alive to Sagbelly. This establishes Murd as one of Dredd's most dangerous foes of all time, since although Dredd has come close to death many times, only Murd has actually killed him. Once restored to life, however, Dredd wasted no time in killing both foul creatures. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 533 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (638 Ã 718 pixel, file size: 348 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Murd the Oppressor, drawn by Mike McMahon in Judge Dredd (in prog 171 of 2000 AD, 1980) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 533 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (638 Ã 718 pixel, file size: 348 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Murd the Oppressor, drawn by Mike McMahon in Judge Dredd (in prog 171 of 2000 AD, 1980) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia...
Judge Dredd by Mike McMahon, 2000 AD prog 2, 1977 Judge Dredd by Mike McMahon, 2000 AD prog 85, 1978 Michael (known as Mike or Mick) McMahon is a British comics artist best known for his work on 2000 AD characters such as Judge Dredd, Sláine and ABC Warriors...
This article is about necromancy in fiction. ...
The Judge Child (drawn by Ron Smith) The Judge Child was an extended storyline in the 2000 AD comic strip Judge Dredd that ran from issues 156 to 181. ...
Although Murd only appeared in two episodes before being killed off, he and Sagbelly were immensely popular with readers, and Murd was used again in a few cameos. Most notable of these was in a flashback to a time before his death in an episode of "Judgement Day", in which he appeared as the tutor and mentor of Sabbat the Necromagus. Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Another incarnation of Murd from a parallel universe appeared years later in the story "Helter Skelter."
Raptaur Raptaur is the name of a deadly species of alien. They can dismember people in seconds with razor-sharp claws, and their preferred food is human brains. They also secrete a toxin which saps the will to live and encourages their prey to submit without resistance; several Raptaurs were "milked" for this toxin to create a drug.[17] Dredd encountered and eventually killed one in 2113. Jack Point has owned two as pets (Cliq and Larf), and describes them as both "harder than a diamond on PCP" and being more dangerous than the xenomorphs Mr Bones found. Jack Point aka the Simping Detective is a character in the comic book Judge Dredd Megazine, a spin-off from 2000 AD. He was created by Simon Spurrier and Frazer Irving. ...
Judge Dredd vs. ...
Captain Skank
Captain Skank (left) and his first mate Tuskarosa (by Ron Smith) Metal-haired one-eyed mutant Captain Skank was a pirate in the Black Atlantic, until in 2103 he kidnapped a Mega-City nuclear scientist and launched hundreds of nuclear missiles on Mega-City One, wiping out an entire city sector and murderering around four million people. The Judges, led by Dredd, eventually boarded his floating fortress and killed both him and a giant mutant octopus that Skank thought was his mother! Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Ron Smith, born 1924, is a British comics artist best known for drawing Judge Dredd for 2000 AD in the 1970s and 80s, but whose career stretches back to Deed-a-day Danny in 1949. ...
The Judges discovered that Skank was in fact a robot being remotely controlled by a shipmate, Tuskarosa, who turned out to be an undercover East-Meg One judge, Nikita Kramm. To prevent a major nuclear war between the two cities (East-Meg One was not yet ready to fight the Apocalypse War which they started a year later), Supreme Judge Bulgarin was compelled to destroy part of his own city to prevent a more devastating strike by Mega-City One. East-Meg One is a fictional city in the world of Judge Dredd, the figurehead character of British weekly comic 2000 AD (comic). ...
The Apocalypse War is a storyline from the fictional universe of Judge Dredd, first published in British comic 2000 AD in 1982. ...
Spikes Harvey Rotten There have been two characters with this name. The first was a biker who was killed in Mega-City One while attempting to win an illegal race. He was not a noteworthy character. The second was created by Pat Mills as a sidekick for Dredd in the 1978 story The Cursed Earth. He was also a biker and a criminal. Dredd had him paroled from custody to accompany him on his perilous mission across the Cursed Earth desert, as he was familiar with the territory from his days smuggling guns there. When all of the judges who accompanied Dredd were killed along the way, Spikes still fought by Dredd's side. He was killed only a short distance from Mega-City Two. Pat Mills, nicknamed the godfather of British comics, is a comics writer and editor who, along with John Wagner, revitalised British boys comics in the 1970s, and has remained a leading light in British comics ever since. ...
The Cursed Earth was the second extended storyline of the Judge Dredd character to appear in 2000 AD. The series is most notable because it was written by Pat Mills and added many core elements to the backstory of the world of Mega City One. ...
The Cursed Earth is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Following the Atomic Wars of 2070 most of the U.S.A. became a radioactive wasteland. ...
Mega-City Two is a huge fictional city covering five thousand square miles of the Californian West Coast in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
Sabbat the Necromagus -
Sabbat was the villain in the story "Judgement Day". He started the Fourth World War and tried to kill everyone in the world. Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Judgement Day was a Judge Dredd story published with alternating episodes in both 2000 AD and the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Albert Sherman Albert Sherman was a child prodigy who wanted to become King of Mega-City One because he was bored. He planted five nuclear bombs in the city and threatened to detonate them unless he became King of the city. Dredd stopped him but was unable to punish him because he was too young to be prosecuted. Instead Dredd forced him to enlist in the Academy of Law, where he would receive extremely strict discipline.[18] A child prodigy is someone who is a master of one or more skills or arts at an early age. ...
âKingâ redirects here. ...
Mega-City One is a huge fictional city-state covering much of what is now the Eastern United States in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
Whitey Randolph Whitely, a.k.a. "Whitey" was the first perp to appear in the Judge Dredd strip, in 2000 AD prog 2. He murdered the first judge to appear in the strip, Judge Alvin, prompting Dredd to arrest him and sentence him to life on Devil's Island: a prison with no need for walls as it is located on a traffic island where the traffic never stops and attempting to cross the road means certain death. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 357 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (517 Ã 868 pixel, file size: 423 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Whitey, illustrated by Garry Leach in Judge Dredd (in prog 520 of 2000 AD, 1987) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including images...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 357 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (517 Ã 868 pixel, file size: 423 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Whitey, illustrated by Garry Leach in Judge Dredd (in prog 520 of 2000 AD, 1987) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including images...
Miracleman#2, art by Garry Leach. ...
Whitey was the first Judge Dredd villain to return in a sequel, when he escaped in #31. He also returned in the comic's tenth anniversary issue, #520. Dredd killed him in his last appearance. Whitey also had a brother, who tried to rescue him, destroying the World Trade Center in the process (in a story published in 1977).[19] This article is about the former World Trade Center (Twin Towers) in New York City. ...
Kenny Who? Kenny Who? is a comic artist from CalHab (Scotland), who was arrested by Dredd for assaulting comics editors who programmed a robot to imitate his style, without paying him. He first appeared in a 1986 story written as a satire on the then policy of British comics of not paying royalties to artists and writers. After this policy was ended, he appeared in two comedy sequels. The question mark was part of his surname, which was a running joke each time someone asked him what his name was, when people would become confused and rephrase the question. The character is actual based on artist Cam Kennedy and his storylines (drawn by Kennedy) dealt with issues he encountered in the American comic industry. Cam Kennedy is a Scottish comicbook artist. ...
Others Dolman Dolman was a cadet at the Academy of Law. He was cloned from Judge Dredd's DNA. Although he performed well at the Academy, he resented his lack of control over his own life and chose to leave the Academy and Mega-City One. He transferred to an offworld Space Academy. The Academy of Law is a fictional place of learning appearing in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. The Academy of Law is where the Judges of Mega-City One are trained. ...
Blondel Dupre Blondel Dupré was one of the leaders of the movement for restoring democracy in Mega-City One. She led the Democratic March of 2109 and the 2113 referendum campaign. She retired after losing the vote. Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
(Redirected from 2109) (21st century - 22nd century - 23rd century - other centuries) The twenty-second century comprises the years 2101 to 2200. ...
The twenty-second century comprises, for some, the years 2101 to 2200. ...
Dredd on democrats (drawn by John Higgins) Democracy in the fictional future city of Mega-City One has been a significant recurring theme in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. In particular, a number of stories published since 1986 have addressed the issue of the Judges dictatorial...
The Grunwalder The Grunwalder was a robot on the planet Xanadu, and the ruler of a kingdom of rogue robots. When Dredd abandoned the Judge Child there, the Grunwalder kept him as his slave, and used the child's psychic powers to take over the entire planet. After the Judge Child was later executed, the Grunwalder cloned him, hoping to create another psychic to maintain his rule of the planet. But he got more than he bargained for when the clone mutated into a malevolent monster with enormous power, who threatened to destroy Mega-City One. When Dredd finally destroyed the Mutant, he also took the precaution of executing the Grunwalder as well. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 300 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (742 Ã 1483 pixel, file size: 654 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) The Grunwalder, drawn by Ron Smith in Judge Dredd (in prog 180 of 2000 AD, 1980) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 300 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (742 Ã 1483 pixel, file size: 654 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) The Grunwalder, drawn by Ron Smith in Judge Dredd (in prog 180 of 2000 AD, 1980) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Ron Smith, born 1924, is a British comics artist best known for drawing Judge Dredd for 2000 AD in the 1970s and 80s, but whose career stretches back to Deed-a-day Danny in 1949. ...
The Judge Child (drawn by Ron Smith) The Judge Child was an extended storyline in the 2000 AD comic strip Judge Dredd that ran from issues 156 to 181. ...
City of the Damned is a Judge Dredd story which was published in British comic 2000 AD in issues 393-406 (1984-1985). ...
Mrs Gunderson Mrs Gunderson is an elderly, deaf and almost blind woman, who mainly appears in cameos to provide comic relief pertaining to her misinterpretations of what she hears people say or her failure to notice what is happening around her. Her main story was "Young Death", the story of Judge Death's origin, in which she unknowingly was Death's landlady while he lay low hiding from the judges. Miraculously she survived the encounter. Walter the Wobot presently serves as her house robot. Judge Death and his lieutenants Fear, Mortis and Fire - artwork by Brian Bolland Judge Death is a fictional character of the Judge Dredd universe recounted in the UK comic 2000 AD. He is the leader of the Dark Judges, a sinister group of undead law enforcers from the alternate dimension...
Walter was Judge Dredds house robot. ...
Maria Maria was Judge Dredd's maid who, along with Walter the Wobot, provided an early glimpse into Judge Dredd's homelife. (In early stories she was described as Dredd's landlady, but this was later revised to maid.) Written with a stereotyped Italian accent, the story Whatever Happened To Maria would reveal she was not Italian at all but faking it for reasons unknown. After years of working for Dredd and even joining in the resistance in the Apocalypse War, she was kidnapped by Mean Machine Angel and his brother Fink, who mistook her for Dredd's wife, after which she resigned and vowed never to work for Dredd again. She became a homeless alcoholic. Maria died in 2126 and left all her money (revealed to be a sizeable amount despite her homelessness) to Dredd. [20] Walter was Judge Dredds house robot. ...
Mean Machine Angel is a villain in the British comic book series Judge Dredd. ...
Max Normal Max Normal was, for a while, Judge Dredd's best informant. In a city teeming with citizens dressed in unusual, eccentric or downright bizarre fashions, Max stood out for dressing conservatively in clothes which in the mid-twentieth century would have been perfectly normal. He wore a pinstripe suit and a bowler hat, carried an umbrella, and wore a carnation in his buttonhole. He had refined tastes, eschewing water and only ever drinking champagne: this saved him from being contaminated by the Block Mania virus which infected the city's water supply in 2104. His one concession to 22nd-century living was his fondness for playing shuggy, an advanced version of billiards played on an uneven surface of hills and valleys. He stopped working for Dredd after criminals held him hostage in an attempt on Dredd's life. Block Mania is a Judge Dredd story that appeared in the British comic 2000 AD. The story starts off with what seems to be a typical Block War, as seen in the previous Dredd stories. ...
This article is about the various cue sports. ...
Normal has appeared outside the Judge Dredd series. He had his own title in the Judge Dredd Annuals from 1981 to 1984 (all but the first one collected in Extreme Edition #22)[21] and once appeared in Middenface McNulty's eponymous series. [22] He was also the model for the character of the businessman that appeared in the Doctor Who episode "Gridlock".[23] Archibald Middenface McNulty is a fictional character from the 2000 AD series Strontium Dog. ...
An eponym is the name of a person, whether real or fictitious, who has (or is thought to have) given rise to the name of a particular place, tribe, discovery, or other item. ...
Doctor Who is a long-running award-winning British science fiction television programme (and a 1996 television film) produced by the BBC. The series shows the adventures of a mysterious time-traveller known as the Doctor, who explores time and space in his TARDIS (Time And Relative Dimension(s) In...
Gridlock is the third episode from the third series of the revived British science fiction television series Doctor Who which aired on April 14, 2007. ...
Public Defender 314 Although citizens in Mega-City One do not have trials, they are still permitted a right of appeal, and those who can not afford human lawyers are assigned robots. Public Defender 314 is one of them. He has a malfunction which causes him to speak out loud parts of his internal monologue, which is used for comic effect in the stories he appears in.[24] In law, an appeal is a process for making a formal challenge to an official decision. ...
Also known as interior monologue, inner voice, internal speech, or stream of consciousness. ...
Satanus Satanus was a cloned dinosaur who attacked Dredd in "The Cursed Earth." Although Dredd believed Satanus to have been killed, he actually survived. He has since appeared in non-Dredd stories such as Nemesis the Warlock. Dinosaurs are a common theme in British comic 2000 AD, both in series focused on them and characters cropping up across the 2000 AD Universe. ...
The Cursed Earth was the second extended storyline of the Judge Dredd character to appear in 2000 AD. The series is most notable because it was written by Pat Mills and added many core elements to the backstory of the world of Mega City One. ...
Nemesis the Warlock is a comic strip created by writer Pat Mills and artist Kevin ONeill which appeared in the pages of the weekly comic book 2000 AD. The title character, a fire-breathing demonic alien, fights against the fanatical Torquemada, Grand Master of the Terran Empire in Earth...
Citizen Snork James Fenemore Snork is a man with an unnaturally large nose. He is an occasionally recurring character used mostly for comic effect, but also illustrating the eccentric and bizarre nature of futuristic life in the 22nd century, where unemployment is almost universal and the bored citizens take up all manner of strange and extreme hobbies to entertain themselves. Snork deliberately grew his nose to gargantuan proportions (using growth hormones and other methods) to gain the largest nose in the city (population 400 million). This however made him a target for assassination by various individuals, and at the height of his fame he had to be bodyguarded by Judge Dredd. In the final attempt on his life his original nose was severed and destroyed. However in his last appearance in the comic it had been regrown or replaced. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 516 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (759 Ã 882 pixel, file size: 322 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Citizen Snork, drawn by Ron Smith in Judge Dredd (in prog 356 of 2000 AD, 1984) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 516 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (759 Ã 882 pixel, file size: 322 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Citizen Snork, drawn by Ron Smith in Judge Dredd (in prog 356 of 2000 AD, 1984) Rebellion Developments have indicated that they agree to Wikipedia including...
Ron Smith, born 1924, is a British comics artist best known for drawing Judge Dredd for 2000 AD in the 1970s and 80s, but whose career stretches back to Deed-a-day Danny in 1949. ...
Tweak Tweak was a cute furry alien who played a major role in "The Cursed Earth". Image File history File links Size of this preview: 447 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (1397 Ã 1871 pixel, file size: 1. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 447 Ã 599 pixelsFull resolution (1397 Ã 1871 pixel, file size: 1. ...
Bollands cover to Hellstorm: Prince Of Lies #16. ...
The Cursed Earth was the second extended storyline of the Judge Dredd character to appear in 2000 AD. The series is most notable because it was written by Pat Mills and added many core elements to the backstory of the world of Mega City One. ...
After humans arrived on his home planet, Tweak arranged for his people to go into hiding underground until he could gather more information about them. After utilising the power of mind probes he was able to determine that human history was littered with violence, exploitation and hatred - so, as President of his world, he decided that no contact should be made with the humans at all. After his children were captured, Tweak decided to let himself be captured and posed as a 'dumb alien' rather than risk the humans exploiting the vast mineral resources of his planet - which Tweak's people ate - and leaving Tweak's race to starve. Convincing the humans he was unintelligent, Tweak and his family were sold into slavery in the Cursed Earth, although he was separated from them. After escaping and finding his family dead Tweak was recaptured but escaped again, thus the Slay-Riders were employed to kill him. Judge Dredd stepped in to save the alien, upon which Tweak helped him to deliver the 2T(FRU)T virus antidote to Mega-City Two. Mega-City Two is a huge fictional city covering five thousand square miles of the Californian West Coast in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
After the mission, Dredd arranged for Tweak to be returned to his home planet. Dredd insisted the planet was of no value, and Tweak's people were left in peace.
References - ^ 2000 AD #662, 1990
- ^ "The Streets of Dan Francisco" (by John Wagner and Rufus Dayglo, in 2000 AD, #1520, 2007)
- ^ Judge Dredd (all by John Wagner/Alan Grant and Kim Raymond):
"Super Bowl" (in 2000 AD #370-371, 1984) "Bingo" (in 2000 AD #372, 1984) "The Making of a Judge" (in 2000 AD #373, 1984) - ^ Judge Dredd: "Muzak Killer" (by Garth Ennis and Dermot Power, in 2000 AD #746-748, 1991)
- ^ Dread Dominion (Stephen Marley, May, 1994 ISBN 0-352-32929-7)
- ^ "The Satanist" (by John Wagner and Charlie Adlard, in 2000 AD #1350-1356, 2003)
- ^ Total War (by John Wagner):
"Terror" (with art by Colin MacNeil, in 2000 AD #1392-1399, 2004) "Total War" (with art by Henry Flint, in 2000 AD #1408-1419, 2004) - ^ 2000 AD #1535 and 1542, 2007
- ^ Judge Dredd: "Cry of the Werewolf" (by John Wagner/Alan Grant and Steve Dillon, in 2000 AD #322-328, 1983)
- ^ Judge Dredd: "Out of the Undercity" (by John Wagner and Carl Critchlow, in 2000 AD #1313-1316, 2003)
- ^ Details of the Hunting Party trade paperback
- ^ Details of the The Scorpion Dance trade paperback
- ^ Bella Bagley's 2000 AD profile
- ^ 2000 AD #775
- ^ "House of Pain" (by Gordon Rennie and artists Ian Richardson (1-3, 6) and PJ Holden (4-5), in 2000 AD#1485-1490, 2006)
- ^ "Monkey on My Back" (by Garth Ennis and John Higgins, in Judge Dredd Megazine #204-206, 2003)
- ^ Megazine #221-223
- ^ Judge Dredd: "New Year is Cancelled" (by John Wagner and Brendan McCarthy, in 2000 AD #146, 1980)
- ^ 2000 AD 1978 Annual
- ^ Whatever happened to?: "Maria" (by Gordon Rennie and Graham Manley, in Judge Dredd Megazine #215, 2004)
- ^ Extreme Edition #22
- ^ Middenface McNulty: "Wan Man an' His Dug" (with co-writers Alan Grant/Tony Luke and art by John McCrea, in Judge Dredd Megazine #1.15-1.20, 1991-1992)
- ^ See Doctor Who Confidential episode Are We There Yet?
- ^ "Who? Dares Wins," Judge Dredd Megazine #228-229, 2005; "Caught in the Act," 2000 AD #450-451, 2005.
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Rufus Dayglo Rufus Dayglo is an Irish comics artist whose style is often compared to Mike McMahons. ...
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Alan Grant is a Scottish comic book writer born in 1949. ...
Garth Ennis (born January 16, 1970 in Holywood, Northern Ireland) is a Northern Irish comics writer, best known for the DC/Vertigo series Preacher, co-created with artist Steve Dillon. ...
Dermot Power is an illustrator, comic book artist, and movie concept artist. ...
Cover of the first issue of 2000 AD, 26 February 1977. ...
Year 1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the 1991 Gregorian calendar). ...
Stephen Marley is a British author and video game designer, best known for his Chia Black Dragon series. ...
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Charles Charlie Adlard is a British comic book artist and penciller. ...
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
This is a list of comics-related events in 2004. ...
Artist on British sci-fi comic 2000AD, Flint has established a cult following for his hyper-detailed and wildly inventive work on series such as Judge Dredd, ABC Warriors, Shakara and Aliens. ...
The Undercity is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. In the comic strip, the cities of the Eastern Seaboard of the United States had become so polluted that by the end of the twenty first...
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Alan Grant is a Scottish comic book writer born in 1949. ...
Steve Dillon is a British comic book artist. ...
The Undercity is a part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. In the comic strip, the cities of the Eastern Seaboard of the United States had become so polluted that by the end of the twenty first...
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Thrud the Barbarian Carl Critchlow is a British artist working mainly in the field of science fiction comics. ...
Gordon Rennie is a former music journalist turned comics writer, responsible for White Trash: Moronic Inferno, as well as several comic strips for 2000 AD and novels for Warhammer Fantasy. ...
Paul Jason Holden is a Northern Irish comic artist based in Belfast. ...
2006 2005 in comics 2007 in comics Notable events of 2006 in comics. ...
Garth Ennis (born January 16, 1970 in Holywood, Northern Ireland) is a Northern Irish comics writer, best known for the DC/Vertigo series Preacher, co-created with artist Steve Dillon. ...
John Higgins is largely a comic book artist but he also written a number of stories. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine is a British magazine featuring comic strips set in the world of Judge Dredd, launched in October 1990. ...
John Wagner is a comics writer who has also written under the pseudonyms John Howard, T.B. Grover, Mike Stott, Keef Ripley, Rick Clark and Brian Skuter, among others. ...
Brendan McCarthy is a British artist and designer best known for his work in comic books, film and television. ...
Gordon Rennie is a former music journalist turned comics writer, responsible for White Trash: Moronic Inferno, as well as several comic strips for 2000 AD and novels for Warhammer Fantasy. ...
Graham Manley is a British comic artist. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine is a British magazine featuring comic strips set in the world of Judge Dredd, launched in October 1990. ...
Archibald Middenface McNulty is a fictional character from the 2000 AD series Strontium Dog. ...
Alan Grant is a Scottish comic book writer born in 1949. ...
John McCrea (born 1966 in Belfast, Northern Ireland) is a comic book artist best known for his collaborations with writer Garth Ennis. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine is a British magazine featuring comic strips set in the world of Judge Dredd, launched in October 1990. ...
The Doctor Who Confidential logo Doctor Who Confidential is a documentary series created by the British Broadcasting Corporation to complement the revival of the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. ...
The Doctor Who Confidential logo Doctor Who Confidential is a documentary series created by the British Broadcasting Corporation to complement the revival of the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. ...
See also The Council of Five is a fictional legislative body in the Judge Dredd universe. ...
Mayor of Mega-City One is a fictional office in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. The real political power in Mega-City One is not held by the mayor but by the unelected judges, headed by the Chief Judge. ...
PSI Divison is the branch of Mega-City One Justice Department that deals in supernatural phenomenon, using Judges with psychic abilities. ...
Hondo City is a huge fictional city covering most of Japan in the Judge Dredd comic book series. ...
External links - Judge Castillo's profile on official 2000AD website
- The Creep's profile
- Judge Dekker profile
- Mrs Gunderson's profile
- Judge Logan's profile
- Maria's profile
- Max Normal's profile
- Judge Roffman's profile
- Tweak's profile
- Walter's profile
- Kenny Who?'s profile
| v • d • e Judge Dredd | | Judges: | Mega-City One: Judge Anderson • Judge Buell • Galen DeMarco • Judge Dredd • Judge Edgar • Chief Judge Fargo • Judge Giant • Judge Goodman • Judge Grice • Judge Griffin • Judge Guthrie • Judge Hershey • Judge Janus • Judge Karyn • Judge McGruder • Mechanismo • Judge Niles • Judge Rico • Judge Shenker • Judge Silver • Judge Solomon • Judge Volt Other: Detective-Judge Armitage • Johnny Woo • Devlin Waugh • Shimura For the 1995 film, see Judge Dredd (film). ...
Judge is a title held by several significant spores in the Judge Dredd series, which appears in the British comic book 2000 AD. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of Judge combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for...
Judge Cassandra Anderson, created by writer John Wagner and artist Brian Bolland in 1980, is a fictional character that started as a supporting character in the comic strip Judge Dredd of 2000 AD and eventually rose in prominence and became the star of her own strip, which is entitled Anderson...
Judge Arthur Buell is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in British comic 2000 AD. He is the current head of the Special Judicial Squad, the Internal Affairs division of the Judges of Mega-City One. ...
Galen DeMarco is a fictional character in the world of Judge Dredd. ...
For the 1995 film, see Judge Dredd (film). ...
Judge Edgar (painted by John Burns) Judge Jura Edgar is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. She was the head of the Public Surveillance Unit from 2100 to 2122, and then the governor of a prison farm in the Cursed Earth. ...
Chief Judge Fargo (painted by Carlos Ezquerra) Chief Judge Eustace Fargo is an important fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He is Judge Dredds clone father. ...
Judge Dredd Megazine cover for the What ever happened to? issue about the Giant family, by Cliff Robinson. ...
Judge Goodman is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. Goodman succeeded Cheif Judge Fargo as Chief Judge of Mega-City One shortly after the Atomic Wars of 2070 and was well liked by his people. ...
Judge Grice in his chief judges uniform (painted by Carlos Ezquerra) Judge Grice was a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. Created in 1990 by John Wagner and Steve Dillon, Grice later had his own spin-off series, Purgatory (1993) by Mark Millar and...
Chief Judge Griffin is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was chief judge of Mega-City One between 2101 and 2104. ...
Judge Guthrie is a fictitional character from Judge Dredd. ...
Judge Barbara Hershey is a fictional character, part of the fictional universe recounted in the Judge Dredd series that appears in the UK comic book 2000 AD. Shortly after her graduation from the Academy of Law, Judge Hershey was the surprise choice to join the crew of the Justice 1...
Judge Judy Janus is a fictional character, a Judge within Mega-City Ones Justice Departments PSI Division. ...
Judge Karyn is a fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in British comic 2000 AD. Karyn, a psi judge, first worked with Dredd in the initial Raptaur invasion and would work alongside him several times afterwards. ...
Judge Evelyn McGruder is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the comic book 2000 AD. She was first female Chief Judge of Mega-City One, and the first Judge to become Chief Judge twice. ...
Mechanismo is a Judge Dredd story which was published in British comic the Judge Dredd Megazine in 1992. ...
Judge Rog Niles is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in British comic 2000 AD. He is the current head of the Public Surveillance Unit (PSU). ...
Rico Dredd is a fictional character who has appeared in the comics in 2000 AD magazine, notably in The Return of Rico (in 2000 AD #30, 1977). ...
Judge Shenker is a fictional supporting character in the Judge Dredd and Anderson, Psi Division comic strips in British comics 2000 AD and Judge Dredd Megazine. ...
Chief Judge Thomas Silver was chief judge (2108 to 2112) of the fictional city of Mega-City One in the Judge Dredd comic strip. ...
Judge Solomon (drawn by Mike McMahon) Judge Solomon is a fictional character from the Judge Dredd universe, in the comic 2000 AD. To date his only appearance in the comic has been in a flashback in #68, in the 1978 story The Cursed Earth. ...
Chief Judge Hadrian Volt is a fictional character from the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was chief judge of Mega-City One between 2116 and 2121. ...
Detective-Judge Armitage is a fictional Judge in the Judge Dredd setting. ...
Johnny Woo is a fictional character appearing in 2000 AD and then in Judge Dredd Megazine. ...
Devlin Waugh is a fictional comics character in the 2000 AD and Judge Dredd megazine. ...
Inspector Shimura is a Japanese Judge (a combination of policeman, judge and executioner) in Hondo-Cit, a futuristic version of Tokyo, in a long-running comic strip in the British science fiction anthology, the Judge Dredd Megazine. ...
| | Villains: | Angel Gang • Mean Machine Angel • President Booth • Oola Blint • Judge Cal • Dark Judges • Judge Death • Rico Dredd • Armon Gill • Morton Judd • Kleggs • Judge Kraken • Stan Lee • PJ Maybe • Nero Narcos • Sov Judge Orlok • Jacob Sardini • Shojun the Warlord | | Characters: | Chopper • Vienna Dredd • Fergee • Minor Characters • Yassa Povey • Otto Sump • Walter the Wobot | | Storylines: | "America" • "Apocalypse War" • "Block Mania" • "City of the Damned" • "The Cursed Earth" • "Democracy" • "Judge Child" • "Judge Dredd vs. Aliens" • "Judgement Day" • "Judgement on Gotham" • "Mechanismo" • "Necropolis" • "Predator vs. Judge Dredd" • "Origins" • "The Robot Wars" • "Judge Dredd in Oz" | | Spin-offs: | Anderson: Psi Division • Banzai Battalion • The Dead Man • Low Life • Red Razors • The Simping Detective | | Crossovers: | "Judge Dredd vs. Aliens" • "Judgement Day" • "Judgement on Gotham" • "Predator vs. Judge Dredd" | | Locations: | Academy of Law • Brit-Cit • Ciudad Barranquilla • Cursed Earth • East Meg One • Grand Hall of Justice • Hondo City • Mega-City One • Mega-City Two • Pan-Africa • Statue of Judgement • Undercity | | Other media: | Judge Dredd film • Dredd vs. Death computer game • Judge Dredd role-playing game • Judge Dredd pinball | | Publications: | 2000 AD • Dice Man • Judge Dredd Megazine • Zarjaz | | Miscellaneous: | 2000 AD crossovers • 2000 AD glossary • Atomic Wars • Chief Judge of Mega-City One • City Block • Council of Five • Diktatorat • Lawgiver • Long Walk • Mayor of Mega-City One • Organizations • Psi Division • Public Surveillance Unit • SJS • Sky-surfer • Technology • Wally Squad | |