

When Murphy finds out that he’s an unwitting participant in the extinction of humanity, he turns the tables by traveling forward into the future, in order to bring an end to Skynet’s war on the humans. One of the last surviving humans in the Skynet-dominated future travels back in time to Robocop’s Detroit, to assassinate him before his technology can be used to help develop Skynet. The four-issue series is currently digitally available in a special enhanced edition, with a brand-new cover by Simonson. Miller had already written the screenplay for Robocop 2, and would go on to finish off the trilogy (and almost the entire franchise) with the screenplay for Robocop 3. They also did Aliens vs Predator vs Terminator. Dark Horse’s early Terminator were good, as were their Robocops series. The game is pretty close to the comic from what I remember. The series was in four parts, with parts 24 having a tagline on their cover. Both were superstars in American comics in the ’80s and ’90s, which makes it weird that the comic has fallen into relative obscurity. Big Van Vader said: Dark Horse Comics had the licenses at the time and created the comic miniseries, which is also how Aliens vs Predator was done. Aliens versus Predator versus The Terminator is a comic published by Dark Horse Comics about characters from three separate movie series: Alien, Predator, and Terminator. It all started with a comic from Dark Horse, written by Frank Miller ( Sin City, Daredevil) and drawn by Walter Simonson (Thor, Fantastic Four). Robocop Versus the Terminator (Dark Horse, 1992)
