REVIEW: Image Comics’ Petrol Head #1

Image Comics presents Petrol Head #1, an original action-adventure story set in the distant future, where the last of humanity clings to a dystopian world and sentient robots are custom-built to entertain the masses. One of the most recent fads to fade into obsolescence is the Petrol Heads: bots specifically created for street racing, now cast aside to wander the underbelly of society.Petrol Head #1 is written by Rob Williams, a Welsh writer who got his start writing in 2000 AD in the early 2000s, having caught the editor’s attention with his first-ever comic book Cla$$war, a hyper-influential six-part miniseries illustrated by Trevor Halfsin and Travel Foreman. Williams has been writing consistently for 2000 AD since its #1313th issue, over twenty-one years ago (now counting an immense #2357 issues), standing among distinguished alums who also debuted some of their earliest work in 2000 AD, such as Al Ewing, Mark Millar, Alan Moore, and Grant Morrison.The art, colors, and letters are all by fellow Brit and Rebellion alum Pye Parr, who has worked extensively on the Judge Dredd: Megazine and 2000 AD. Parr has worked almost exclusively for Rebellion up to this point, aside from creating a variant cover for Titan’s Blade Runner 2029, so Petrol Head #1 represents a major and impressive departure for him, taking the helm as sole visual artist for a miniseries.

Image Comics presents Petrol Head #1, an original action-adventure story set in the distant future, where the last of humanity clings to a dystopian world and sentient robots are custom-built to entertain the masses. One of the most recent fads to fade into obsolescence is the Petrol Heads: bots specifically created for street racing, now cast aside to wander the underbelly of society.

Petrol Head #1 is written by Rob Williams, a Welsh writer who got his start writing in 2000 AD in the early 2000s, having caught the editor’s attention with his first-ever comic book Cla$$war, a hyper-influential six-part miniseries illustrated by Trevor Halfsin and Travel Foreman. Williams has been writing consistently for 2000 AD since its #1313th issue, over twenty-one years ago (now counting an immense #2357 issues), standing among distinguished alums who also debuted some of their earliest work in 2000 AD, such as Al Ewing, Mark Millar, Alan Moore, and Grant Morrison.

The art, colors, and letters are all by fellow Brit and Rebellion alum Pye Parr, who has worked extensively on the Judge Dredd: Megazine and 2000 AD. Parr has worked almost exclusively for Rebellion up to this point, aside from creating a variant cover for Titan’s Blade Runner 2029, so Petrol Head #1 represents a major and impressive departure for him, taking the helm as sole visual artist for a miniseries.

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