Over the past few months, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles have faced off against twisted surgeons, corporate devils, and literal gods, all to protect their world from those that would burn it to the ground. Despite overcoming so much in such a short amount of time, the Heroes in a Half Shell are already about to go up against yet another seemingly unstoppable threat, one capable of destroying not just the world they inhabit, but the very timeline it exists as a part of. Worse still, the threat of Armaggon is one the Turtles created themselves. Or rather, that one of them did in the course of trying to stave it off preemptively.After parting ways with one another to embark upon separate journeys, the eponymous heroes of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #145 (by Kevin Eastman, Sophie Campbell, Vincenzo Federici, Ronda Pattison, and Shawn Lee) find themselves split between the open road, the streets of Mutant Town, and the expansive forest of Northampton. It is in the latter landscape where Donatello and Venus de Milo have set out to plumb the depths of the confluence between magic and science. Unfortunately, it is also there where they are accosted by none other than a variant of their newfound ally, the mutant baboon known as Bob, hailing from a dark future not all that unlike the one Donatello had hoped to stave off. When the situation goes awry, the Heroes in a Half Shell are thrust through a portal and ripped beyond the distant past. Worse still, they just so happen to pick up an errant megalodon along the way, and by the time they have reached their destination, it is painfully evident that their endeavors were what gave rise to the timeless horror known only as Armaggon.Though the earliest version of Armaggon wasn’t a particularly deep character, his next iteration was fleshed out well beyond what fans were used to. By the time Armaggon appeared in the 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series as voiced by Hollywood icon Ron Perlman, the character had transitioned to a mechanically enhanced bounty hunter rather than a brutish mutant. This Armaggon was also far more accomplished than his previous incarnation, boasting dozens of warrants across numerous galaxies, all of which carried a high price tag for the alien menace. With such a vast backstory already on the table, the animated iterations of Armaggon was able to make a home for himself within a multitude of stories instead of only a handful of loosely connected plots. As such, Armaggon became an infinitely more memorable character compared to his predecessor, not to mention a fan-favorite for those who grew up with that particular Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series. No matter how much fans loved that version of the character, the latest has gone through yet another major shift in both tone and physicality, culminating in what is easly the most dangerous Armaggon yet.
Over the past few months, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles have faced off against twisted surgeons, corporate devils, and literal gods, all to protect their world from those that would burn it to the ground. Despite overcoming so much in such a short amount of time, the Heroes in a Half Shell are already about to go up against yet another seemingly unstoppable threat, one capable of destroying not just the world they inhabit, but the very timeline it exists as a part of. Worse still, the threat of Armaggon is one the Turtles created themselves. Or rather, that one of them did in the course of trying to stave it off preemptively.
After parting ways with one another to embark upon separate journeys, the eponymous heroes of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #145 (by Kevin Eastman, Sophie Campbell, Vincenzo Federici, Ronda Pattison, and Shawn Lee) find themselves split between the open road, the streets of Mutant Town, and the expansive forest of Northampton. It is in the latter landscape where Donatello and Venus de Milo have set out to plumb the depths of the confluence between magic and science. Unfortunately, it is also there where they are accosted by none other than a variant of their newfound ally, the mutant baboon known as Bob, hailing from a dark future not all that unlike the one Donatello had hoped to stave off. When the situation goes awry, the Heroes in a Half Shell are thrust through a portal and ripped beyond the distant past. Worse still, they just so happen to pick up an errant megalodon along the way, and by the time they have reached their destination, it is painfully evident that their endeavors were what gave rise to the timeless horror known only as Armaggon.
Though the earliest version of Armaggon wasn’t a particularly deep character, his next iteration was fleshed out well beyond what fans were used to. By the time Armaggon appeared in the 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series as voiced by Hollywood icon Ron Perlman, the character had transitioned to a mechanically enhanced bounty hunter rather than a brutish mutant. This Armaggon was also far more accomplished than his previous incarnation, boasting dozens of warrants across numerous galaxies, all of which carried a high price tag for the alien menace. With such a vast backstory already on the table, the animated iterations of Armaggon was able to make a home for himself within a multitude of stories instead of only a handful of loosely connected plots. As such, Armaggon became an infinitely more memorable character compared to his predecessor, not to mention a fan-favorite for those who grew up with that particular Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series. No matter how much fans loved that version of the character, the latest has gone through yet another major shift in both tone and physicality, culminating in what is easly the most dangerous Armaggon yet.
#TMNT #FanFavorite #Ninja #Turtle #Destined #Universe
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