

LOL! Now that would be a game to sit in on! That would have been a funny character to see played.

I'd say go ahead and build one.Ī friend online created a wolfen CK that acted like Gnort from DC Comics Green Lanterns. There is nothing that says they can't be CKs. He'd look like a good version of Dark Helmet from Spaceballs in his armor.ĮDIT Are Lynn Serial Skyknights SN? Could they be CK's? THAT would kick ass. Holmes and Watson should turn out to be very nasty and mean CK's when I finish with them. Not many people commented on my little friends Holmes and Watson on the other CK thread. That would be a very scary CK Duck-foot! You are right. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.Forums of the Megaverse® :: View topic - Favorite Race for Cosmoknights? Forums of the Megaverse®Ī friend of mine played a Marduk cosmoknight. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. No fee was paid by the publisher for this review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. Science fiction fans in search of new frontiers should give CosmoKnights a try.ĭisclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. Characters and their motivations carry the story through a universe that is well built, and this first collection of a popular webcomic leaves off with a hint of bigger and better things to come. Impeccable in how it is drawn and colored, the art will leave fans of BattleTech and similar armored fighting scenarios with much to appreciate.

Queer representation is integrated in a natural way. Women’s empowerment is tucked inside a message of freedom and self-determination for all. Then Pan receives a mysterious message from Tara, recorded years before, begging for help. Pan joins them and is pulled into a wider resistance movement-not just against the institution of the games, but against the aristocracy itself. Pan helps Tara escape off-world, then five years later crosses paths with a couple of rogue women fighters who make a habit of battling in the games to win the freedom of “prize” royals. Her friend Tara wants to become a pilot, but tradition dictates that Tara is to be married off to whichever royal family wins a gladiatorial contest, a brutal showcase of fighters who compete in mechanized battle suits.

Set in a future full of human-inhabited planets, the book begins as a mechanically inclined teenage girl, Pan, aspires to one day work on the biggest and fastest ships in the galaxy. Hannah Templer’s graphic novel CosmoKnights introduces an exciting space-operatic world with a queer twist.
