However, he doesn’t quite realise that means he has to go through the whole dead fluids, body decomposition process. They aren’t particularly grateful but he explains to them that he wants to be their manager, helping them to create death and destruction and all he wants in return is immortality. He knows about the Dark Judges and decides to free them. The rest of him makes it though and once he arrives, he sets a truly fiendish masterplan into action. However, the device malfunctions, leaving a dormant Joker behind, a body with no mind. Joker has a dimension jump device, the one that Judge Death brought to Gotham back during Judgement on Gotham, and he uses it to go to Mega-City One. Die Laughing also sits in the main timeline making it well worth looking up.ĭie Laughing starts in Gotham City with Batman following a goon back to Joker’s lair. Wagner and Grant do a good job of writing for the Joker character and this story is interesting because he is the fifth Dark Judge here. The story is no slouch either and is almost up there with Necropolis when it comes to epicness, weighing in at around 98 pages. Curiously, they switch artists half way through which is oddly jarring but both Fabry and Murray do a fantastic job here. ![]() Originally published in two parts in 1998 as two £2.95 volumes, Die Laughing has since been compiled into a graphic novel at least twice. This 2000AD/DC crossover story was the last of four, with Judgement on Gotham being the first (and only other one to feature Judge Death). First published as a standalone two-parter in 1998.
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