Episodes include:
Mega-City One, 2075 AD. Home to over 800 million citizens, this urban hell is situated along the east coast of post-apocalyptic North America. Crime is rampant, and only future cops the Judges — empowered to dispense instant justice — can stop total anarchy. A teenage Cadet Dredd is a rising star in Justice Department, but the Judges and the metropolis itself are about to face a terrifying disaster...
In the future, the privatised prisons gave rise to the brutal sport of Spinball, where
the Death Row convict teams would play a live-action version of pinball, but on
motorcycles and tooled up with all manner of lethal weaponry. These violent games
were broadcast to a nation eager for spectacle until it was deemed too dangerous — but fifty years later, it’s back and it’s as bloody as ever...
1860s Texas, and the legend of El Mestizo is known throughout the land. Born a slave, he escaped the plantation upon which he was forced to work and made it across the border, re-emerging during the American Civil War as a mercenary, working for both the North and the South. He had no allegiance to either the Union or the Confederacy — he sold his talents to the highest bidder. But El Mestizo now has a terrible secret...
Former Royal Marine turned DI6 agent Dredger is not a man to cross, nor get in the
way of — tough, uncompromising and unwilling to negotiate, there isn’t a situation he isn’t prepared to punch, kick, or shoot his way out of. Few can get close to Dredger and though he was in the past partnered with former public schoolboy Simon Breed, who died in a bomb blast, his friendships tend to be short...
Major Kurt Hellman was a Panzer tank commander, taking part in the 1940 German
invasion of Belgium — but he refused to join the Nazi party, setting up ongoing
conflicts with the SS. But now, in 1943, German scientists have created a gateway to
Hell in a bid to overtake the Allies — and Hellman has found himself stationed there, punishment for his refusal to toe the line...
The African desert, 1942. During the Allied campaign, few officers were as singular as
Major Eazy — long-haired and laconic, this scruffy maverick never failed to irritate his superiors. With a cigar hanging from his lips and often found driving his distinctive Bentley, Eazy seemed crazy — but his eccentricities were overlooked because when it came to warfare, he always gets the job done...