The coolest looking genre?


log in or register to remove this ad



It varies from month to month for me.. at current, I've been on a Western kick. However, Fantasy, from the John Buscema/Erol Otus style to the modern Todd Lockwood stuff, is good, as well as Post-Apocalyptic, Marvel or Image Superhero, to Pulp.

Post-Apocalyptic is always especially cool, because you get your WIld West mixed in with your future tech. :D
 

Job said:
Modern day, end-of-the-world confrontations between cults, terrorists, and otherworldly creatures and technology vs. everyday-joe investigators who are struggling to understand and stop the madness. Horror, evil organizations, despicable villains, gunplay, car chases, computer hacking, and a sense of the ticking clock.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Job.

i.e. Beyond the Mountains of Madness
 

Definately steampunk. I'm glad it's gotten so popular, I remember when no one had any idea what I was talking about when I'd mention it.

Required reading: The Difference Engine by William Gibson and all of China Mieville's work.
 

Space Western, particularly Firefly and Star Wars. The big steel of Star Wars could be duplicated very stylishly in a Steampunk setting.

Now... if you replaced the modern guns of the former and the laser guns of the latter with single action Navy .45s... and everyone had a sword on their hip, and you had wizards slinging firebolts back and forth on a ship-to-ship battle in the upper atmosphere...

Heh. Doesn't hurt that I'm currently working on a setting that looks like that.
 

I've come to really like the steampunk look and feel, particularly that done by the Iron Kingdoms. I also like Warhammer FRP's "grubby fantasy" feel.
 

Frazetta.

I also like the look of the 1982 Flash Gordon movie. Would like a game in that setting. Perhaps the Rocketmen RPG Decipher is doing for WK will punch the ticket.
 

jdrakeh said:
For me, it's easily Victorian Age mystery (ala Sherlock Holmes) or adventure fiction from the era (ala King Solomon's Mines). How can you not love foiling evil in the fog-shrouded streets of Victorian London, battling through leagues of cannibal savages in the distant African interior, or working to reveal the re-organized Thugee of 19th century India?
Though I'm not a big mystery fan, I agree with everything else that jdrakeh describes: Pathan tribesmen with nail-adorned jezails and wicked curved swords, sepoys in crimson or khaki marching in long lines behind elephants and camels carrying mountain howitzers, ruga-ruga askaris with leaf-bladed spears and zebra-hide shields, chasseurs d'Afrique in powder-blue uniforms riding through the Atlas or gathered at an oasis, corpulent Omani slavers in silk robes and turbans, a column of Russian soldiers dressed all in white marching across a lonely steppe with a screen of Cossack cavalry, women in white dresses and enormous hats with translucent mosquito nets taking tea in a frontier outpost...

It's the juxtaposition of the ancient and modern that I find so interesting about the period.
 

Remove ads

Top