He described himself as "Doomlord – servant of Nox, master of life, bringer of death!" Doomlord then killed Bob by seemingly merely grasping Bob's head in his hands. The meteor was in fact a spaceship bringing a sinister robed alien to Earth. The story tells of how journalist Howard Harvey and a policeman friend, Bob Murton, witnessed an apparent meteor falling into local woods. Like many of the strips then published in Eagle, it was made up of black-and-white photographs featuring models and actors, with text boxes and speech and thought balloons. A replacement Doomlord ruled in favour of Earth and eventually became its protector, fathering a son the strip evolved into superheroics drawn by Eric Bradbury.Ģ50px|left|Strip mastheadThe strip originally appeared as a 13-part story in the first 13 issues of the re-launched Eagle, and was science horror in tone. Initially an attempt in publishing science fiction/ horror in Fumetti form, Doomlord was a saga beginning with an alien judging humanity's right to exist, and failing in his attempt to execute humanity. It was written by Alan Grant and John Wagner. Reprints of previous Doomlord stories continued until 7 April 1990. Zyn, Vek, Enok (various individuals with the name)Ībsorption of people's memories, skills, and personalityĪwesome energiser ring (disintegration, levitation, force field, teleportation)ĭoomlord was a comic strip (and the shared title name of the central characters) published in the British comic book Eagle during the 1980s, from Issue 1 on March 27, 1982,until Issue 395 on 14 October 1989.
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