#astro city

LIVE

Limited Run brings the adorable mini Astro City cabinet to North America ⊟

What a wonderfully fun, fulfilling job it must be to pick weird niche things for your phenomenally successful niche publishing operation. ~Sigh~…

LRG is publishing, I guess, a console? Basically? The Sega Astro City Mini, available March 26 at 10am Eastern, is a mini arcade cabinet (with HDMI out) containing a bunch of Sega arcade classics. LRG is also selling the compellingly cute Astro City Mini Gamepad and a “Style Kit” to make it look more like an authentic arcade cabinet for extremely small gamers.

I loved this thing but dared not make the impractical purchase when it was released in Japan. But now… now it’s being presented to me again, with a waggling eyebrow and an “Eh? Ehhhh?”

JOIN CLUB TINY AND OUR DISCORDSupport Tiny Cartridge!

And I’ve just finished the Tarnished Angel arc, the whole comic’s been incredible so far and it definitely deserves it’s reputation, but there’s something that popped up during said arc, revolving around the villain of that arc, that I wanted to talk about. Spoilers ahead.

So, a lot of Astro City revolves around archetypes familiar to superhero comics and what influences said comics, and there’s plenty of direct shout-outs to existing creators in the city’s locations, sometimes related to the subject of the stories. A giant mountain called Mount Kirby, a streetpass named after Shuster, Kiefer Square named after Henry C.Kiefer, etc. During the Tarnished Angel arc, we’re following Steeljacket, our ex-con supervillain turned detective, as he’s trying to uncover who’s been killing supervillains in his hometown, and he ends up meeting an old superhero named Hidalgo, who used to be a Zorro / Batman / Oliver Queen type of character. The story hints at Hidalgo’s nature as Steeljacket lists the places he’s crossing before he’s taken to the mansion, referencing both Bob Kane (Batman’s bastard dad), as well as Walter Gibson (The Shadow),

image

And sidenote, it’s pretty funny that Steeljacket’s meeting this character at a place called Patterson Heights, considering James Patterson would write The Shadow about 25 years after the release of this story. But moving on,

image

It’s revealed that Hidalgo used to be a great hero who was distraught and tormented over his repeated failings and unpopularity and his growing awareness of his own problems, so he ended up hatching a plan. He had a mad scientist enemy of his named The Assemblyman create a giant rampaging robot he could easily defeat to win back the crowd;

image

(Man, that scientist’s haircut and goggles sure look familiar…)

It didn’t work, people died, and his involvement was discovered, which led to his downfall. Eventually Steeljacket encounters a mysterious robotic supervillain by the name of Conquistador, who’s been hiring villains from Steeljacket’s hometown Kiefer Square for one big job across the entire city. He very quickly figures out that it’s Hidalgo setting up a trap, and later, Hidalgo tells him he intends to kill all the villains under his employ in order to make a grand debut under a new identity. 

image

Eventually Steeljacket holds him off long enough for the heroes to arrive and stop him for good and so on. But just to recap here, here’s the story of Hidalgo / El Hombre / Conquistador:

He used to be a heroic masked vigilante who fought crime on the streets, explicitly modeled after the pulp heroes who would most heavily influence urban superheroes like Batman, but who eventually committed great failings and/or underwent terrible tragedies that caused them to “die”, in ways figurative and literal, and eventually be reborn as cybernetic supervillains.

image
image

(Images from Al Ewing’s El Sombra trilogy, and Venture Bros)

Is this enough of a pattern for this to be a thing? I don’t know why this keeps coming up, nevermind those times the actual Shadow was turned into a cyborg or was seemingly used as a basis for cyborg characters

image

(Pictures from Bob Morane and Yu-Gi-Oh)

image

(Covers from Andy Helfer’s Shadow run and Masks 2)

Why this? Why cyborgs specifically keep cropping up in these contexts? Wouldn’t vampires or ghosts make more sense? What is it with Dark Avenger pulp heroes and killer cyborgs? 

image

Something’s going on, man.

loading