Alan Moore is doing one last league book before he quits comics for good.
>Opening simultaneously in the panic-stricken headquarters of British Military Intelligence, the fabled Ayesha’s lost African city of Kor and the domed citadel of ‘We’ on the devastated Earth of the year 2996, the dense and yet furiously-paced narrative hurtles like an express locomotive across the fictional globe from Lincoln Island to modern America to the Blazing World; from the Jacobean antiquity of Prospero’s Men to the superhero-inundated pastures of the present to the unimaginable reaches of a shimmering science-fiction future. With a cast-list that includes many of the most iconic figures from literature and pop culture, and a tempo that conveys the terrible momentum of inevitable events, this is literally and literarily the story to end all stories.
>Commencing as a six-issue run of unfashionable, outmoded and flimsy children’s comics that will make you appear emotionally backward if you read them on the bus, this climactic magnum opus will also reprint classic English super-team publication The Seven Stars from the murky black-and-white reaches of 1964. A magnificent celebration of everything comics were, are and could be, any appreciator or student of the medium would be unwise to miss The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume IV: THE TEMPEST.
Is it sad that I want Orlando rule34?
>>94038781
>Earth of the year 2996
>modern America
What?
>Tomb Raider on LoEG
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qfDiULrnjI
>anyone still caring about LXG after Black Dossier
>>94038781
>Alan Moore is doing one last league book before he quits comics for good.
Is this gonna become a Miyazaki type situation?
God fucking damn it, Moore, always fucking playing to the fucking stereotype.
>>94038973
Nemo Trilogy redemption my friend.
All the failed promises of Century with none of the bs.