Continuum #3
"The Blood Power" in Continuum #3 (2007) delivers a striking, layered dive into the world of forgotten serials, spotlighting the eerie "Fantôme" collection through reproduced covers of tales like "La tragédie du cirque" and "L'homme d'acier." With art by Paul Gustavson, Jack Burnley, Bill Everett, and Frank Frollo—each contributing distinct styles to the interior—this issue blends homage and mystery, all anchored by Everett’s iconic cover art. A free giveaway from 2007, it’s a must for fans of vintage serial aesthetics and the subtle power of visual storytelling.
In "null," Jo finds herself caught in a quiet, unsettling moment as she flips through old comic covers from the 1940s, her focus drawn to a series that feels both familiar and strangely out of place. The story unfolds in a sparse, intimate space where memory and media blur, leaving only the faint echo of a forgotten adventure.
In "The Blood Power," Yarko and Li Wan journey to Tibet seeking the legendary Hoshai Plant, a rare flower said to bloom with human blood. Captured by Lailani and her coven of vampiresses, Yarko must rely on his hypnotic abilities to survive, facing a deadly test of wills in a shadowed temple where blood and mind collide.
In "null," a struggling fair show owner finds himself locked in a tense rivalry with a seemingly uncanny competitor who replicates his every idea—down to the smallest detail. When the rivalry escalates to a deadly trap set during a high-stakes death dive, only the mysterious Fantom stands between the rival and disaster.
In "null," Jo finds herself adrift in a quiet, almost forgotten moment—caught between the echoes of a past she can’t quite recall and a present that feels too still. The story unfolds in a sparse, deliberate rhythm, its pages echoing with the weight of absence, rendered in stark, typeset letters that lend the narrative a haunting, almost mechanical precision.
In the stark silence of a desert oasis, Yarko’s quiet moment is shattered by the arrival of detective Burke, hunting a missing Major Hazlip. Before he can react, he’s taken to the ancient ruins of Alchaz, where a strange psychic link forms between him and Burke—now his only hope as Sarabin’s forces close in. With the Desert Patrol racing to intervene, Yarko must hold on as the past and present collide in a fight for survival.
In "Vs The Hawk," Jo finds herself caught in a tense standoff with a mysterious figure known only as The Hawk, their rivalry echoing through a series of vintage comic covers that blur the line between past and present. The story unfolds across two pages, weaving together fragments of old pulp adventures and forgotten detective tales, all rendered in stark, typeset lettering that gives the whole a nostalgic, almost archival feel.
In the Electric Utilities area of the World's Fair, a towering electro-robot erupts into chaos, unleashing deadly volts on helpless crowds. The Fantom races to stop the machine, only to uncover the hidden mind pulling the strings—now forced to confront not just the monster, but the man behind it.
A single page from *Continuum* #3 presents a stark, enigmatic moment in the world of Masked Marvel, where a mysterious figure named Jo finds themselves caught in a silent, fragmented scene. With no dialogue and only a typeset lettering style, the story unfolds through a single, isolated image that hints at a larger narrative—without revealing what comes next.
In a single, stark page from *Continuum* #3 (2007), a mysterious figure known only as Jo confronts a moment of quiet dread—no dialogue, no grand gesture, just the weight of a hidden truth unfolding in silence. The story, lettered in clean, typeset style, captures a fleeting, haunting glimpse of identity and loss, leaving only the echo of a name that doesn’t quite belong.
In "null," Jo finds herself caught in a shifting, dreamlike sequence where familiar faces and forgotten moments blur at the edges of memory. The story unfolds across two stark pages, its quiet tension underscored by a typeset lettering that feels both mechanical and intimate, as if the narrative itself is being reconstructed from fragments.
A mysterious, cover-only story titled "null" appears in Continuum #3, offering a fragmented glimpse into a world where images and identity blur. With no dialogue or traditional narrative, the two pages present a silent, stylized sequence of reproduced covers and a single episode excerpt—leaving the reader to piece together what’s missing.
In "null," Jo finds herself caught in a strange loop of fragmented memories and shifting realities, each page revealing a different version of a familiar moment—until the boundaries between them begin to blur. Written by a mysterious hand and rendered in stark, typeset letters, the story unfolds like a forgotten episode from a forgotten series, its meaning just out of reach.
In "null," Jo finds herself caught in a quiet but disorienting moment, navigating a world where familiar things feel just slightly out of place—like a memory slipping through her fingers. The story unfolds in two stark pages, its mood underscored by the stark, typeset lettering that frames a moment of stillness in a universe that never quite settles.
In "null," Batman confronts a sudden threat as ominous dirigibles descend upon Gotham, their crews intent on global domination—leaving the Dark Knight to question whether this new menace is a twisted echo of his own origins or something far more unsettling.
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