Reading – Car Warriors #1 (1991)
Published in 1991 under Marvel’s “Epic” imprint, the Car Warriors four issue mini-series (Amazon.com search*) was one of those few times when my love of games and love of comics collided in a very fun way. Sure, I’d read DC’s comics based on the Dungeons & Dragons roleplaying game (Amazon.com search*), but back in those days it was the Car Wars game that was closer to my heart.
With the newest Mad Max film opening in theaters I thought it could be fun to pull these four issues off of the shelf and give them a read. I think it has been at least a decade since I last opened these books, so let’s take a peek inside and figure out what we’ve got here.
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Fantastic Covers!
All four covers are a blast, but it’s only the first two in which the book’s artists — Steve Dillon and Phil Winslade — share the cover duties together. With books three and four Phil Winslade handles all of the cover art, and I think that the two artists working together created far more interesting and enjoyable covers. That first issue cover, above, is quite theatrical in design, showing a scene that doesn’t ever appear in the book. That’s okay, though, because the cover did the necessary work and sold books when the title was on the new releases shelf.
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Expanding the Car Wars World
Based on Steve Jackson’s Car Wars game and setting (Amazon.com search*), one of my favorite parts of the Car Warriors comic is how the story adds more depth to the game world. The little things — the above panel, for example, showing kids chasing down serial killer collector cups — are the best parts for world building and bring us ideas and info that were never shared in the games or stories that were published before the comic.
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Chevy Vasquez
The main character of the story, Chevy Vasquez, starts the story as a child who watches as his family is murdered. It’s those first six pages of the story that set things in motion and connect to the end of the mini-series, and Vasquez — an autoduellist working as a driver for a powerful religious leader and then a duellist for the “Circus of Doom” — is the first entrant into our larger tale of a race between cities. The entire first issue exists to introduce Vasquez, set up the background for the world and the race (which dominates books three and four in the mini-series), and give us just enough of a taste of the automotive violence to bring us back for more.
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Fun, but Not Great
This first issue of the Car Warriors four issue mini-series (Amazon.com search*) is definitely a fun ride. The art’s effective and decent enough (though not my preferred style; even when Dillon went to work on Preacher for DC I still wasn’t all that much a fan of his art style), the story fairly straightforward, and the actual writing’s quite enjoyable.
A single page at the end of the first issue was written especially for the Car Wars game (Amazon.com search*) fans and offers game rules for the vehicle introduced at the end of the story (see above), and overall I can say this is one of those comics you can read for entertainment and soak up casual violence when you need a break from the real world.
A work of art? Yes, but only in the sense that it’s a comic packed with artwork? A masterpiece? Not at all. But it’s fun, and that’s all I really needed from the book.