Wayne Reynolds (1)
Author of Visions of WAR: The Art of Wayne Reynolds
For other authors named Wayne Reynolds, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: Wayne Reynolds at Lucca Comics & Games 2014, by Niccolò Caranti - own work
Series
Works by Wayne Reynolds
Kal Jerico: Crimson Tide 2 copies
Associated Works
Freeeport Companion: The City of Adventure Sourcebook for 4th Edition (2010) — Cover artist — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Dewsbury and Batley Technical Art College (pre-BA)
Cleveland College of Art & Design (HND) - Occupations
- illustrator
artist - Birthplace
- Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK
Members
Reviews
Scourge and purge!
It's been a long time since I last read The Redeemer in the black and white pages of Warhammer Monthly, so I was a little trepidatious about returning to it, but it is all the more utterly ridiculous and ludicrously fun in colour and, mostly, holds up.
What is The Redeemer?
Warhammer 40K has the Inquisition, the paranoid, brutal, bloody Spanish Inquisition turned up to 11. Now imagine the Inquisition was distilled into one maniacal Mad Max boss zealot with a flaming brazier show more on his head and an eviscerator, a colossal chainsaw sword, the big book of torture, and a merry band of alternatingly bloodthirsty and craven acolytes, who roams the post apocalyptic-esque desert and delves into the dank, mutant and zombie infested underhive caverns, and you're getting closer. He has catchphrases, a theme hymn, and a steampunk cathedral landtrain. Oh, and the brazier on his head can act like a flamethrower!
This is Warhammer at its most ridiculous, calling 200AD cute and tame with their timid Judge Dredd, while the Redeemer scourges, purges, eviscerate, consecrates, and immolates across the wastelands betas and under the hive cities of Necromunda. Sheer ludicrous action, quips, and silly, gory, cheesy fun, and good times.
I am not one who usually goes in for what some call 'Bolter Porn', I like a good action or battle sequence with my Warhammer, but, honestly, I'm usually there for the tragedy and drama, especially with the Horus Heresy. BUT, a comic as utterly nonsensical, maximalist, and violently, righteously fun is absolutely the kind of thing I will thoroughly enjoy once in a blue moon, as a treat.
This is an incredible relic that certainly didn't change the world of comics or make a huge impact, but it is bloody good with sublimely ridiculous scripts from Mills and Gallagher, and truly mind-blowing and frenetic art from Reynolds.
The only criticism I can raise is that the characterisation and affect of the Ratskins feels a little too close to Native American stereotypes to be comfortable.
Otherwise, this is just a really silly good time! show less
It's been a long time since I last read The Redeemer in the black and white pages of Warhammer Monthly, so I was a little trepidatious about returning to it, but it is all the more utterly ridiculous and ludicrously fun in colour and, mostly, holds up.
What is The Redeemer?
Warhammer 40K has the Inquisition, the paranoid, brutal, bloody Spanish Inquisition turned up to 11. Now imagine the Inquisition was distilled into one maniacal Mad Max boss zealot with a flaming brazier show more on his head and an eviscerator, a colossal chainsaw sword, the big book of torture, and a merry band of alternatingly bloodthirsty and craven acolytes, who roams the post apocalyptic-esque desert and delves into the dank, mutant and zombie infested underhive caverns, and you're getting closer. He has catchphrases, a theme hymn, and a steampunk cathedral landtrain. Oh, and the brazier on his head can act like a flamethrower!
This is Warhammer at its most ridiculous, calling 200AD cute and tame with their timid Judge Dredd, while the Redeemer scourges, purges, eviscerate, consecrates, and immolates across the wastelands betas and under the hive cities of Necromunda. Sheer ludicrous action, quips, and silly, gory, cheesy fun, and good times.
I am not one who usually goes in for what some call 'Bolter Porn', I like a good action or battle sequence with my Warhammer, but, honestly, I'm usually there for the tragedy and drama, especially with the Horus Heresy. BUT, a comic as utterly nonsensical, maximalist, and violently, righteously fun is absolutely the kind of thing I will thoroughly enjoy once in a blue moon, as a treat.
This is an incredible relic that certainly didn't change the world of comics or make a huge impact, but it is bloody good with sublimely ridiculous scripts from Mills and Gallagher, and truly mind-blowing and frenetic art from Reynolds.
The only criticism I can raise is that the characterisation and affect of the Ratskins feels a little too close to Native American stereotypes to be comfortable.
Otherwise, this is just a really silly good time! show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 13
- Members
- 36
- Popularity
- #397,830
- Rating
- 4.2
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 10

