JohnRogers

War Rocket Ajax #113: John Rogers Talks ‘D&D,’ Thrillbent and the Catwoman Movie
War Rocket Ajax #113: John Rogers Talks ‘D&D,’ Thrillbent and the Catwoman Movie
War Rocket Ajax #113: John Rogers Talks ‘D&D,’ Thrillbent and the Catwoman Movie
This week on War Rocket Ajax, writer John Rogers joins the podcast to talk about the new digital comics initiative he's a part of with Mark Waid, Thrillbent! But the interview doesn't stop there, as he tells Chris and Matt about writing Blue Beetle for DC, his take on making Dungeons & Dragons fun for comics, and yes, how he became one of 28 writers credited in the Halle Berry Catwoman movie -
Mark Waid Launches New Digital Comics Site and ‘Insufferable’ New Strip
Mark Waid Launches New Digital Comics Site and ‘Insufferable’ New Strip
Mark Waid Launches New Digital Comics Site and ‘Insufferable’ New Strip
Mark Waid continued the roll-out of his digital comic announcements (including his contribution to Marvel's "Infinite" initiative and he and Jeremy Rock's "Luther" story) at this weekend's C2E2 convention with the news of a brand new digital publishing website called Thrillbent, as well as a new digital collaboration with his Irredeemable co-creator, Peter Krause...
IDW’s ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ Will Make You Save Versus Awesome
IDW’s ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ Will Make You Save Versus Awesome
IDW’s ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ Will Make You Save Versus Awesome
Considering how much their target markets overlap, you'd think that comics based on Dungeons & Dragons would go together like peanut butter and chocolate, but historically, they've gone together more like... well, whatever two things you'd have to combine to get generic fantasy stories that were often more concerned with depicting rules and campaign settings than telling a solid story. De...
‘Assassin’s Creed: The Fall’ #1 & ‘Dungeons and Dragons’ #1: No, Really, They’re Pretty Good
‘Assassin’s Creed: The Fall’ #1 & ‘Dungeons and Dragons’ #1: No, Really, They’re Pretty Good
‘Assassin’s Creed: The Fall’ #1 & ‘Dungeons and Dragons’ #1: No, Really, They’re Pretty Good
I always approach tie-in comics with an element of suspicion. Even when the comic in question is connected to an existing fictional universe that was designed as a story first and foremost, and has pre-existing, likable characters -- something like Farscape or Doctor Who or Metalocalypse or Fraggle Rock -- I'm not initially hopeful that it will to live up to the source material, often out fear tha