Forum:Halo: Escalation Thread 1 (Issues 1-17)

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For discussion on later issues, see the second thread

Issue 8

Thought I'd share some late thoughts/ramblings on the newest issue because it's the first one that delves into the series' primary plot line and characters and will probably matter the most going forward.

After the more subdued, character-focused Issue 7 which was a pleasant surprise coming from Reed after the underwhelming display that was Initiation, Halo: Escalation Issue 8 was mostly a disappointment. The biggest question in my mind is who thought it was a good idea to tell this story in comic form? There's just so much depth and complexity that could've been gained if this had been a novel (or perhaps even a CGI film?). Did they not have a novelist on hand? Did someone in a key position (say, in the writing staff) have a preference for the comic format for one reason or the other?

For one, the pace is uncomfortably hectic — what should be defining character moments, like John's reunion with his closest friends and comrades after so many years, are shrugged off in a couple of panels. And it's not like the subtleties of the Spartans' body and sign languages ("Spartan smiles", etc.) could be appropriately pulled off in a comic anyway. What's going through John's head after his loss of Cortana, or when he sees Osman (who I presume he hasn't seen for decades and didn't know was even alive) in the Security Council? What are the Spartans thinking seeing their comrades slaughtered? None of that comes through here. Comics can be a great medium for storytelling but the strengths of the format are all absent here. Everything that we see would've been better presented via prose.

It doesn't help that the art is frankly underwhelming for a series of this scope and story importance. I stress the latter because Escalation is no longer a side story about tertiary characters but a proper continuation of the series' primary storyline. Microsoft has no shortage of money, so why not make sure they have a top artist illustrating their flagship comic? I know Halo has had those in the past (Blood Line stands out for its vibrant, crisp illustration) or was that just a Marvel thing? (though to be fair the art in Fall of Reach was pretty sketchy too).

On a side note, what's with the Spartans' identical light blue eyes? This is a weird visual media thing that first appeared in the Birth of a Spartan trailer and was repeated in Forward Unto Dawn but never came up in the novels.

Spartan Black's demise has been discussed to death both here and on other forums, so I won't delve too much into that. Though one can make reasonable guesses on why 343i decided to get rid of them, I still disagree with the way it was handled. The same Prometheans which supposedly slaughtered Black like animals barely seem to pose a threat to Blue, and if the Didact was involved we get no indication of this. It doesn't raise the stakes or make the Prometheans feel more threatening, it just shows that our main characters are protected by the plot, at least for the time being. As an interesting thought experiment, I wonder how people would've reacted if Black had been replaced by Kilo-Five?

Another issue I have is that while the Didact's return was probably a surprise for no one at this point, I just can't take him seriously whenever he appears in a visual medium. His design is so cartoonish, over the top and injected with the average preteen's idea of "cool" it might easily pass for something scribbled by a 13-year old. He looks like a villain from an 80's kids' show, and the evil throne isn't helping things. I always thought he looked like a comic book villain, and I guess he literally is one now.

Now, the book Didact is another matter entirely — I'm starting to think only Greg Bear could make 343i's version of the Forerunners work by adding the appropriate levels of weight and nuance to their characterizations whereas at the hands of their in-house writers like Reed here they just come across as flat cartoon characters. Unlike some people I'm mostly fine with the Forerunner Saga and even some of its more esoteric aspects: it draws from a long tradition of "sufficiently advanced" technology in science fiction with some thought-provoking themes running in the background, as opposed to more superficial Hollywood and comic book ephemera.

And that's another thing: a lot of recent developments seem to be geared to making Halo less like the gritty, technical military sci-fi it used to be and more like the Marvel universe with the Spartans being turned from an elite special operations outfit into something more closely resembling a superhero team, a brooding godlike general of an immensely complex ancient civilization becoming an over-the-top cartoon villain, or zero concern to physics or technology with pulp silliness like tormented souls popping up from walls or ships no longer having to abide by the previous limitations of slipspace travel. I don't like to point fingers, but I do wonder if all this has to do with 343i's current lead writer's Marvel background. Now, despite not being much of a comic reader, I love pretty much all of the MCU movies which are filled with this kind of absurdity. But I'd rather they kept the Halo universe's tone as it was rather than molding it into something it's not. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 03:14, 13 August 2014 (EDT)

Couldn't agree with you more. And kind of amusing - "tormented souls popping up from walls". The whacky "composers abyss" is just out of place in the Halo universe and makes it seem as though I'm reading a Harry Potter comic. You already know my stance on these science-fantasy elements that 343i implemented since Halo 4. Anyway, I definitely agree that the latest entry in this comic series was a major let down especially compared to the previous issues. Its almost as though everything was rushed and there was little emphasis placed on anything really. Like I said in "subtracting canon" (I know everyone disagrees with the title but it came from lack of better wording, plus I wanted an interesting forum title) the reunion between John & blue team was insignificant, the slaughter of black team was unnecessary & uneplained, and then there's the didact in his great cartoony glory. Basically, when it came down to this issue, my main problem with it was execution and irrational decision making. Now some people may say that "developers may not want to revisit certain characters". If that's the case why bring them back in the first place only to kill them off rendering them nothing more than a skid mark? Leave it alone, leave them where they lay, leave well enough alone. Bringing them back only to immediately kill them off seems more like a slap in the face to most fans than if they just left them a mystery (and you don't want to disappoint the fans since they account for majority of revenues by the way). Just because 343i has the power to do something doesn't mean they should do it. Yes, you're not going to please the fans everytime but at least if they took the time and safest approach to doing things than at least you can lesson the damage. And some may say "what 343i does counts regardless of what the fans prefer". But again, just because they can do it doesn't mean they should. There is a such thing as reviewers, opinions, forums, etc...If 343i properly executed this story w/ proper explanations for things, less rushed plot lines, and better artwork, than there'd be a lesser chance of displeasing fans. And like Jugus said, if you can't do it in a comic, than reserve it for a book, game, or mini-movie like "Nightfall", rahter than trying to stuff and shorten things in a tiny 20 or so page comic.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 09:38, 13 August 2014 (EDT)
I agree. What annoys me about the art style is that it can go from pretty decent, then all of a sudden, it becomes horrid. I wonder if the artist knows how to draw humans, or what the alien species actually look like sometimes. I feel like the poor pacing of these comics has to do with the shortness of each issue. There isn't a lot of room to explore the story or add emotion unfortunately. Darth Maul's Son of Dathomir comic series (also created by Dark Horse) has forty pages per comic and a great art style. This gives each issue enough time to explore entire battles. I realize that Star Wars is more well-known than Halo, but still I would expect Mircosoft to put some money into Escalation to make it a better comic series. Although the series has made several mistakes (mostly due to art style) and has not accurately portrayed some of the characters, I still think it's one of the better comic series we have seen so far and explores interesting parts of the Halo universe, such as the Ealen peace treaties or New Phoenix's reopening. And I wouldn't mind if it continued beyond November.
However, I think my biggest problem with this series as a whole so far is how it ends stories. While I know that this is partially due to the length of each issue, a lot of the stories featured in Escalation are poorly wrapped up or forgotten. 'Gajat seemed to be an interesting character. He was a mercenary that was working with human insurgents, Kig-Yar, Sangheili, and Jiralhanae, and then he was killed off and his organization was forgotten about (I know it's a longshot, since the comic covers have been rather unreliable, but I hope the Kig-Yar on the cover of issue 11 is from the mercenary group and Tek has now taken over or something). The Spirit of Fire was advertised to be appearing in one of the issues, but only had a small cameo. Petra was kind of forgotten about. The Ealen IV storyline ended pretty well, especially compared to the others. I think that if the length of each issue and the art style was improved (maybe on par with Son of Dathomir), Escalation would benefit greatly.
And I agree that 343i is starting to portray Spartans as superheroes (especially Blue Team/Palmer/Majestic). I think it would have been better if the Didact never changed from his original appearance. It isn't over-the-top cartoon villainy, and I actually like his appearance/armor better. I really hope Halo doesn't begin to drift into the deep sci-fi/fantasy genre. As much as I love Star Wars, I've never been a fan of the hardcore fantasy elements like "Dathomir magic" or Force ghosts turning alive again. That's one of the reasons I prefer Halo. The science is kept relatively realistic and is more based on some form of actual science (real or not). However, some of the Forerunner abilities, like imprints, seem to be coming from the fantasy genre. Nonetheless, I'm excited for November and all of the upcoming Halo content. Broken Circle will hopefully be a refreshing read with the lack of Halsey hate (although I am still waiting for more news on the novel or some sort of preview). - NightHammer (talk) 11:10, 13 August 2014 (EDT)
In many cases, it's not the exotic technologies themselves that feel grating to me, it's the way they're portrayed. I can accept that a civilization as advanced as the Forerunners can upload their minds to and fro. But the needless mystification and vilification of the Composer, for instance, is out of place. It's a mind uploading tool (which should be a relatively everyday thing to a Forerunner-tier civ), but 343i's writers can't seem to get over the fact that mind uploading is not some arcane form of demonic magic, nor should it be as difficult as 343 wants to present it as — we're told that the digitized personalities fragmented and couldn't be restored to biological form, apparently because even the Forerunners just couldn't get the soul to work properly. Even though they had consciousness backups in something as mundane as their armor. This leaves the Composer as an oddity - why is this thing treated as so special when it's clearly inferior to many technologies they utilize in their daily lives?
The whole geas deal is one of the less compelling aspects of the 343i-era fiction for me, not only because the technology itself is firmly in the realm of the fantastical but because it diminishes human agency: previously, humanity was lauded for our ingenuity and our exceptional ability to innovate and endure in the face of impossible odds. Now, we're told none (or very little) of it was our own making. That we need arcane gene-magic to babysit us rather than being able to stand on our own. Humans have always been the Forerunners' inheritors which put us in a privileged position, but it used to be more subtle than literally saying specific technological breakthroughs are the direct result of genetic programming.
It's also emblematic of a problem that tends to plague long-running comic books and TV shows - the trend of making everything so "connected" and "meaningful" that the universe begins to feel small. I was perfectly fine with the idea of the Spartan-IIs being created, or John and Cortana meeting one another, just when they were needed by sheer coincidence. They didn't need to be part of a contrived millennia-long master plan. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:19, 18 August 2014 (EDT)
It seems pretty clear that Escalation is telling the stories that future seasons of Spartan Ops were supposed to tell. Future seasons were obviously planned, given the whole "Season 1" label we got, but these seem pretty definitely scrapped in favour of Escalation. To relegate such monumental story developments to a side-comic most players will never have even heard of is really irritating, even more so when elements like John's reunion with Blue Team and grief over Cortana's death are totally glossed over. I understand that the levels of Spartan Ops got pretty repetitive, and I'm sure that was a reason why future seasons were shelved. But if they had foregone episodic-based missions and instead focused on making the seasons as good and as long as they needed to be to fit the story, then these plots could have been given the spectacle, quality, and availability that they deserved. - Halo-343 (Talk) 21:25, 13 August 2014 (EDT)
That is most likely the case. I don't know if some of the previous story arcs would've been as long or exactly the same as they were in comic form (the Petra side story would've most likely been ditched had the story been told in the Spartan Ops format) but it's probable Escalation is built on the basic outline they had for the future seasons. Another reason for Spops' cancellation after S1 may have been the money and effort going into the Master Chief Collection, particularly the enormous undertaking that is Blur's remastering of the Halo 2 cutscenes. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:19, 18 August 2014 (EDT)
You know what? The gameplay already felt a bit detached from the cutscenes. They should have just made a series of animated episodes, and released them episodically, like Forward Unto Dawn, or on DVD ala Legends. That would have been fantastic. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 00:26, 18 August 2014 (EDT)

Issue 9

File:HaloEscalation9.jpg Shouldn't this have happened first?

Wow this was a loaded issue! Seems as if we now know (not confirmed) who broke Chief's visor. Looks like the Constraint field isn't working for Didact or he'd use it again. Anyways fun stuff! -- Names Gall. Sam Gall

I admit it was a fun read. And it was revealed that the Didact killed black team which helps rectify that issue and put to rest something that made the fans (including me) angry as hell. But it just makes me think, shouldn't they've placed that scene in issue 8? It seems as though they did the same thing in issue 4 where there was a scene that occurs after everything else, but was done in such a way that it made it seem pointless, unnecessary, or unintended. I don't know. But whatever the case I liked the issue but I'm not feeling that cliffhanger where John-117 is once again being treated as a rag doll.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 18:35, 27 August 2014 (EDT)

I tend to be light on praise even where praise may be due, but I have very few positive things to say about this issue or the whole 72 Hours arc. Somewhere along the way, and that's right after Issue #7, Escalation, up until then mediocre to decent, went into full camp mode. At this point I'm fully convinced I don't like Brian Reed's writing and that making him Halo lead writer was a baffling decision. I had a bad feeling from Initiation and its super Spartan who can her face slammed to a metal wall or breathe in space and here that same sort of schlock goes into overdrive. Reed is capable of decent writing, like Issue #7, but when he's doing story-driving content or action it's like he never left the Marvel verse (and what I think about that is further detailed in my Issue #8 rant above). 343i has released quality material and I commend them for their efforts to tie the games and the "expanded universe" together, but why is it that they can't seem to hire decent in-house writers? Broadly speaking, when you look at their releases, most of the ones that stand out from the rest have been written or otherwise produced outside the studio (Forerunner Saga, Forward Unto Dawn, and from what we've seen so far, Nightfall as well; and as much as I dislike the Kilo-Five Trilogy for what it does with the universe and the characters, at least it's not schlock).
Things just happen and nothing feels connected or planned out — it's like the story is being made up along the way. Why did the composed New Phoenix residents see one of the slipspace artifacts on Requiem? We may never know. An apt analogy to the story quality would be a kid playing with action figures. I can just imagine lil' Brian Reed sitting on the floor picking things from the toy box that is the Halo universe — Spartans, the Didact, Halos, Composers, Monitors, slipspace portals — and just smashing them together. Bam! Crunch! Kablam! Hey, who are these guys? Spartans with black armor? That's kinda cool but I don't really know them so THEY'RE DEAD! Then the Chief and the Spartans go through the portal and there's, like, a ton of new Composers! But then the Didact uses his special stomp attack! Then the Didact steals a Halo to kill all humans because he's sooo evil!
Reed (like Traviss) has people zipping across light-years through portals to no ill effect (if you could build instant-transit portals people can step through without being atomized due to exposure to slipspace, why bother having starships at all)? Why does a Halo have a portal connection to the Composer's Forge when the Composers had been long abandoned by the time the Halos were built? Even if you could, would you really have a portal you can just step through on an installation where there's Flood in containment? A Halo, no less, can now apparently be summoned by a monitor completely unrelated to the Array (though I kind of like Static Carillon). Compartmentalization? What's that? The Didact wants to use a Halo because... the series is called Halo so why not? MacGuffins and superweapons of the week galore.
At this point the Didact's lost pretty much any dignity he may have had left from the Forerunner Saga, broken as he may be from the Gravemind's torture - he might as well be Skeletor. He's just a big, buff dude with a couple of special comic book powers and completely devoid of the gravitas and tragedy of his portrayal in the novels. I get that they're intentionally going for the supervillain/nemesis angle, but I believe this was the wrong approach — they should've never made him something that you can go toe to toe with in a fight, much less hurt with something as mundane as a knife. The Forerunners should be far above anything like that.
And I still hold that the format was the wrong one for this story — this material would've been best served by a full-length novel. If they couldn't get an author to write one in time (or if Reed insisted it be he who write the story and nobody else because he's lead writer now, damnit) they could've at least trimmed the surrounding filler stories about secondary characters and stretched this arc over at least two or three more issues. As much as I liked Issue #7, having a similar low-key issue dealing with the Chief's return to Earth and reunion with Blue Team would've been much more called for. That they have a main character/plot continuation story this crucial squeezed between the otherwise unconnected Spartan Ops crew stories reeks of poor planning.
I'm thinking the Black Team scene had to be in this issue because they wanted to have the Didact's dramatic reveal at the end of the last one. Alternatively, the scene may not even have been originally in - maybe Reed pulled a Bioware due to the unexpected fan outrage and added an "Extended Cut" of Black's fate. After all, in the previous issue, the transmission implies that it is the Prometheans that "are appearing out of thin air" and are "slaughtering the Spartans". Hard to know for sure, but I don't think it's too far-fetched to speculate they added the scene to pacify the fanbase. Although I still disagree with the decision to kill Black off like this (they could've at least given their send-off its own story or comic) I have to admit it does more to justify their deaths than mere Knights. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:58, 28 August 2014 (EDT)
Honestly, I found this issue to be okay (still better than Initiation). I really liked Escalation issues 1-7, although the art style has always been my pet peeve with the series (and terrible panel placement). And at least the cover art of the comic, kind of, almost happened. And I don't know if it's just me, but the art style seems to have improved by a lot for the most part. And I'm glad that we got some clarification on Black Team's death.
However, in the entire past two issues, Static Carillon seems to be the only character with an sort of personality. The Didact's portrayal has also been ridiculous. Like you said, Reed is trying to make the Didact a typical, campy comic supervillian from the 60s. I'm surprised he wasn't petting a Crawler on his throne in issue #8. Next he will be twirling his space-moustache while stealing candy from humans. Not to mention his super-stomp. Or the fact that he just randomly appears behind/in front of the Spartans twice this issue. And I don't know if it is due to perspectives, but the Didact's height seems really inconsistent. It seems like Reed skimmed one book (maybe) from the Forerunner Saga before writing these comics. Why would the Didact ever use a Halo?!?! I also don't like that Blue Team seems to be able to hold their own, but Black Team was killed with ease. And I still don't understand how a knife was able to pierce the Didact's combat armor. They could have at least had him "unlock" his helmet and give him an evil monologue so the Chief would just be stabbing face, not armor. Once again, I think the series would have benefited if each issue was longer. I'm still really nervous that Reed is going to kill of Blue Team in Escalation. - NightHammer (talk) 01:41, 28 August 2014 (EDT)

I'm glad to know i'm not the only one to see that Black Team's death was altered a bit. I assume its from fan back lash.Kal825B (talk) 09:16, 28 August 2014 (EDT)

"they wanted to have the Didact's dramatic reveal at the end of the last one."
— Jugus

But a dramatic reveal only works when you don't know it's coming. And even casual fans would think it was obvious that the Didact was still going to be alive. Which means Black Team's death still feels needless. A bit less easy perhaps, given the fight Didact put up against John while distracted by enacting his genocidal plans, but still needless.

Not having read the story yet (or any of Escalation, really, beyond preview pages) I don't understand what the Didact's plan is. He's on a Halo, presumably with the full authority to use it that being a Forerunner entails, but he also has a whole mess of Composers at his disposal now. One makes the other redundant. I get that, in-canon, the Didact wasn't expecting to run into 859 Static Carillon, but from a storytelling point of view it means one or the other of these plot points are going to be dropped. Either he tries to take Gamma Halo to Earth, which renders the Composers pointless, or he leaves it behind and tries to bring the Composers to Earth which means Gamma Halo didn't need to be in the story. Gamma Halo was enough of a threat, why introduce this new story element? Unless it's because they're needed to compose something very specific before being abandoned - namely, in my full expectation and dread, Blue Team, souls implanted in Promethean shells and turned against the Master Chief.

There was also some speculation previously that the Monitor would turn out to be a repaired 343 Guilty Spark. I'm a little glad that it isn't - it gives 343 the chance to make his eventual fate and possible return to the series a much more dramatic story. I would like to see the Didact pick up a Monitor assistant - someone who carries out his orders, and is a more capable threat than the Covenant remnants. Maybe we could see Jul 'Mdama feeling threatened by being usurped as the Didact's emissary, and trying to either reclaim his place through earning his "god's" favour or by taking out Carillon himself? But of course, I fully expect the story to end with the Didact out of commission, the Composers Forge destroyed, and John once again the last Spartan-II, completely undoing the potential the series is trying to set up. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 17:37, 28 August 2014 (EDT)

Are you familiar with the Halo-Composer tuning theory?Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 20:38, 28 August 2014 (EDT)
Yeah, and I wish this arc's writing quality hadn't made me worry about that nonsense actually turning out to be the case. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:56, 29 August 2014 (EDT)
What's so bad about that? Tired of composers? Tired of Halos?Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 01:03, 29 August 2014 (EDT)
Because it's space magic. Granted, both Halos and Composers are already space magic (though the Composer is the more plausible one of the two) but I guess it's... double space magic. Combining them makes the space magic exponentially worse because two unrelated pieces of magitech/clarketech are easier to accept independently than in tandem when no connection between them was ever stated or implied. When you have two very specialized pieces of hardware designed to achieve a very specific effect, you can't just expect to be able to glue them together to make a special upgraded version of the two. It's Mass Effect 3 ending tier of clueless writing.
And yeah, guess I'm also kind of tired of constant new Forerunner gadgets, superweapons and existential threats to humanity. This story did not need the Didact procuring a Halo or a new Composer and threatening to kill humanity once again. It could've been something smarter. What immediately springs to mind (and I'm making this up as I go along, so bear with me) is a more low-key plot where more time is spent dealing with John's return to the UNSC (such as having him ask about Halsey since finding her was his main goal in H4) and his reunion with his lifelong teammates and friends he hasn't seen for years. The Spartans are then sent back to Requiem because sensor data Cortana left in the Chief's armor indicates the Composer's portal linked there and they must ensure the Didact is dead. On Requiem, the Spartans find the Didact brooding in grand solitude in a scene evocative of his return to Nomdagro in Silentium (holograms of his children may or may not be involved). The Spartans' first encounter goes something like it does in the comic, they open fire, and the Didact says what he does ("See that which you fear"... etc). We get not just monologue, but dialog between the Didact and the Spartans (something that never happens in H4). The Didact is sullen, tired, and visibly changed by the battle with the Chief. In a standoff-type situation which may or may not involve physical fighting, the Didact's driving motives and goals are disseminated and broken apart. The Didact is made to realize he has and will not have a future no matter what he might do. How this ends (i.e. whether the Didact will accept this or continue to delude himself) obviously depends on where the story is going on a larger scale.
My point being, we absolutely did not need a continuation of the Didact's schlocky supervillain antics from Halo 4. As it stands, the events of Halo 4 did nothing to change the characters of the Didact or even John — there's no visible arc, no change in attitudes or the way they view each other. Apart from the Didact finally deciding to kill the Chief. wow such depth --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:12, 29 August 2014 (EDT)
@Morhek: I really should have put "dramatic" in quotes to highlight I was talking about the writer's probable intent, not the result. Because Tron Skeletor in his evil lair was more silly than dramatic. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:56, 29 August 2014 (EDT)

"I can just imagine lil' Brian Reed sitting on the floor picking things from the toy box that is the Halo universe — Spartans, the Didact, Halos, Composers, Monitors, slipspace portals — and just smashing them together. Bam! Crunch! Kablam! Hey, who are these guys? Spartans with black armor? That's kinda cool but I don't really know them so THEY'RE DEAD! Then the Chief and the Spartans go through the portal and there's, like, a ton of new Composers! But then the Didact uses his special stomp attack! Then the Didact steals a Halo to kill all humans because he's sooo evil!"
— Jugus

Probably the BEST way to describe Brian Reed's writing style in regards to the first "two" 72 hours. And probably will be for the third. To continue my small review on the comic, I did find the comic to be a fun read because of the action (not all as I hinted above). Static Carillon was a likeable character. And like I said, I'm glad we got a more reasonable answer to how black team died rather than the illusion that promethean knights did it. But still the comic felt amateurish. My first issue was the plot order primarily when it comes down to the Didact killing black team. It should have happened in part 1. And even then, this still renders black team's death rather insubstantial or unnecessary to the plot since it cuts straight to the Didact w/ blood on his hands. Than there's the "supervillian" Didact. He's really starting to look like such, just take a look at the cover, the "stomp" attack, how he's just tossing the Spartans around and crushing their helmet. Stab, him in the eye and he doesn't even flinch. Seems like realism is tossed out the window in favor of making this guy seem invincible. Than there's the Halo and composers. Where'd they come from? And based on the Didact's intentions, it seems as though the composers serve no purpose. They're just there just because - "surprise!" Nothing that goes on in this issue serves a purpose or do anything to move the reader. No emotional impact whatsoever. No mystery explored (why are there more composers). It seems as though its just all action but no real story behind it. Just stop the shallow, petty, cheap bad guy from destroying the Earth just like it was in Halo 4. Only Static C. seems to stand out or serve a purpose in this issue. And a lot of what happens in this issue was rather predictable. I thought the next 72 hours was supposed to be about the chief. It's starting to seem more like its about the Didact. So now we have one more issue to explain "why the chief left" and I have a strong feeling that's not going to be accomplished properly if at all.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 19:45, 28 August 2014 (EDT)

Issue 10 Preview

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Issue 10! (Spoiler Preview) Apparently Master Chief gets thrown at Blue team and the Didact gets shot with Scattershot. [1]—This unsigned comment was made by SamGall (talkcontribs). Please sign your posts with ~~~~

Spoilers end here.
Interesting, but I think we should hold off on updating pages at the moment. If I recall, 343i said that any Escalation preview that isn't released by them or Dark Horse is considered leaked. - NightHammer (talk) 21:24, 7 September 2014 (EDT)

Understood. Just wanted y'all to see it first that's all. -- The name is Gall. Sam Gall.

Not suprised MC survived the encounter. Great suspense 343I! -_- Anyway, it's about time we see this guy get shot, look vulnerable for once. Honestly I just hope he gets killed this issue. We need a new vilian that we can take more seriously.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 08:33, 8 September 2014 (EDT)
@Killamin7: I agree. The Didact has lost all credibility as a villain. He needs to die so that 343i can replace him with something (hopefully) decent.--Weeping Angel (talk) 14:49, 8 September 2014 (EDT)

@Killamin7 in Issue 10 he does get hit with what seems to be a Scattershot slug which causes him to stagger. I believe Blue team will kill him in this issue but who knows? -- Sam Gall.

Yes, I saw the panels. Anyway, there is a chance that the Didact will meet his end in issue 10 but this is Brian Reed we're talking about so...But my problem is the emphasis that seems to have been placed on the Didact for the first two arcs of this storyline. My fear is that by the time we get to the reason why the chief left, we will be so far-gone from the plot that there will no real impact felt behind it. So far all we have is this crazed villian running around gathering magitech just to do the same thing he did in Halo 4. So even if he gets killed, what next? 343I should have went with a more substantial plot (like the one Jugus came up with above).--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 08:56, 9 September 2014 (EDT)

Issue 10

File:HaloEscalation10.jpg We still don't know why the chief left...whatever that means at this point.

Well the Didact was able to tank a direct hit to the head from a boltshot without visible damage. That's impressive. Also we see the UNSC Home fleet and the innards of the Slipspace capable Longsword. Good stuff in this article. -- The Name is Gall. Sam Gall.

I must say, this issue is actually pretty decent compared to the last two. But I don't know whether to buy it or not if the Didact is actually dead. You wouldn't think such a major villain from a video game would suddenly be killed off in a comic series. But he did look, well, dead. Looks like our next mystery is where Static Carillon placed the Halo ring. Finally, Chief reassigning himself and battling whatever else is still prevalent with Blue Team seemed anti-climatic. I can't describe it exactly, but it is. It's too bad this issue doesn't explore why Chief is wherever he is in the Halo 5: Guardians trailer, if it's meant to be taken literally. Thoughts? And as pretty as it is, again the cover page seems to have no relation whatsoever to what occurred. 120.144.131.19 17:15, 24 September 2014 (EDT)

Couple things

  1. Didact as foreshadowed by Chief seems to be dead but nothing is certain.
  2. Chief getting reassigned is confusing because it looks as if his helmet is fixed so the story arc was very pointless. I mean take it out and it did nothing to advance the overarching plot.
  3. I'm glad Blue team is alive so maybe we see them in a SpOps Season 2 or Halo 5: Guardians?
  4. Cover shows them running from explosion which I guess makes a bit of sense because there probably was a few on the planet wherever it was.

I really want to know what planet all that happened on. -- Sam Gall.

I think being "Composed" gives 343 room to manoeuvre where the Didact's future is concerned. He's already been composed and uncomposed once, as I understand it - the experiment that gave him his body. If he returns even more mutated and deranged, or more stable but in a robotic Promethean shell (or heck, maybe that massive thing from the trailer is his new body) it allows the player to engage him in terms that aren't near-godlike and therefore not fun for a game. If it is his final death, then it feels anti-climactic to kill him off in peripheral media, and a waste of storytelling opportunity, at least to me. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 22:27, 24 September 2014 (EDT)

Actually Reed already confirmed over Twitter that the Ur-Didact is alive and not composed.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 22:37, 24 September 2014 (EDT)
Tinfoil hat theory: the very ambiguous energy blast that cremated the Didact (yet doesn't seem to do any damage to the control room itself) was a security measure designed to extract and retain the essences of anyone in the control room in the event of catastrophic damage. This is how they'll bring back Sergeant Johnson and Faber. Doesn't explain why John wasn't affected since he was still there, but maybe you have to stand in the main chasm (the Chief was already outside the chamber).
If and when the Didact returns I hope they'll have the sense to redesign him into something that can be taken more seriously than his former incarnation and not another, even more dumbed down abomination. The Prometheans and the Didact were a really poor introduction to the Forerunners on a visual storytelling level — the first time we see a living Forerunner, ever, and then he turns out to be some unholy spawn of Lord Voldemort, Count Dracula, a blobfish, and a porcupine (not sure how that would even go down but I prefer not to think about it). I know he is a twisted shell of his former self but like I said it's still a poor way to introduce the Forerunners. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:36, 25 September 2014 (EDT)

You know what? Beyond the expected illogicalities and plot holes there are some things I liked in this issue (then again it could also be a case of lowering my expectations after the last two). I like the fact the Chief and the Didact have an actual conversation for the first time given that the Didact has been built up as John's ultimate nemesis, yet all we had before was the Didact monologuing. This is not without its problems, however — as I snidely noted in my edit summary for Issue 10's plot synopsis, there's nothing stopping the Didact from ending the Chief right there, fleeing the control room when he does, or taking John with him. Instead he just stands there like an idiot even though just a moment ago he was fully determined to slaughter Blue Team as he did Black (this could've been fixed with a simple bit of exposition - have the Didact's armor be so damaged he can barely walk to the command console). I still like Static Carillon, though I wonder how does it A: have authority to move Halos or access their teleportation systems and B: know about the final Halo Array in the first place (compartmentalization should be a thing and the newer Halos were the most carefully-guarded secret in the ecumene) or C: why does an emergency teleport take you to the control room of all places (actually, I'll answer that - because they needed a convenient way for the Didact to make it into the control room within the confines of the comic's limited amount of pages, another reason why this would've worked better as a novel).

And what's going on with John at the end? Lord Hood is telling him and his buddies to take some R & R, which is not really unreasonable even for Spartans, but then he basically goes rogue for no good reason. Him disobeying orders made sense in Halo 4 where his orders contradicted with a very acute threat he had to deal with, but that's not really evident here. He's just going on an ambiguous crusade with no apparent goal or cause. Is he supposed to be hunting the Didact or Gamma Halo? Or is this meant to hint that he's finally losing it? In this case I think the writing did a poor job at portraying either — the presentation felt more like it was meant to be endearing and illustrate how the Chief will always continue fighting and winning, etc, but it loses its steam when we have no apparent threat on the loose or a clear catalyst for John deciding to ditch the UNSC. Beforehand I think most people were under the impression something really major was going to happen that absolutely shook John's world (worst-case scenario being Blue Team dying, or at least appearing so, or being separated from John) but that isn't really the case — Blue Team kills the bad guy, saves the day is happily together again. This is another one of those cases that would've greatly benefited from an extended look into the Chief's head we would've gotten in a novel. As it stands, the ending comes out of nowhere. "After defeating the Didact, John-117 joined the crew of Infinity... but why did he leave?" says the promotional blurb for The Next 72 Hours, but upon its conclusion we're none the wiser. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:36, 25 September 2014 (EDT)

I was under the apparently mistaken impression that he had been composed. After reading your plot summary, and coming up with my own ideas of how he might return under those conditions, I wish he had been. It would have made more sense than the contradictory facts of a crispy fried Forerunner corpse and him apparently not being dead (is he only mostly dead? Will he have fun storming the castle?) As for the series as a whole, it seems entirely based on making grand promises and then delivering something entirely less, apparently on purpose. The first arc sounds great, dealing with politics and intrigue. Then it gets mired in a plot that promises (threatens?) to resolve the Spirit of Fire issue, then drops that thread like a hot potato. Then it promises the epic showdown between John and the Didact, while threatening to kill of Blue Team, and does neither. I just...I have no idea why these stories need to exist. It's as if they're trying to make grand stories that make sweeping changes to the Halo universe, but then decided they couldn't change anything at all. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 06:05, 25 September 2014 (EDT)
Honestly, as unlikely as it seems, I think they'll go with the "he's composed but comes out wrong" approach. The phrasing was specifically "(the Composer) will not work on my new form", which could mean any number of things. And comic visuals are notorious for being inaccurate, so the specifics of what we see in Escalation #10 can't entirely be relied on. I would prefer if they went out of their way to explain why the Composer won't work on him instead of it just being an acquired comic book superpower - given the Composer's nature, his neurology must've been radically changed to the extent the Composer cannot replicate it. Something that occurred to me is that he could've outsourced a large chunk of his cognitive processes to external substrates, ensuring part of him lives on even if his physical form is killed. Maybe his mind is running in his armor even more so than with ordinary Forerunners? Or maybe even slipspace, similar to Halsey's theoretical hyperspatial AI? Even though the last we see of him is a pile of charred gibs, as long as part of his armor survives along with his consciousness, it might theoretically be able to rebuild his physical form. Or he could just ditch the squishy biological parts and walk around in an empty suit. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:32, 13 October 2014 (EDT)

I'm glad they killed off the Didact, for now anyway. He was a bad villain done poorly from the very beginning, and I'd much rather see the Halo universe without him. Morhek hits it on the nail here. Why bring him back at all only to kill him off 3 issues later? He could have just died at the end of Halo 4.

The ending was the most disappointing part of this issue. the Chief was supposed to be going Rogue on some mission to find Cortana, the Didact, SOMTHING! Instead, he rebelled against command by doing the stuff he's always done. In order to fill this plot hole, I point the finger at ONI. What if Blue team never integrated into the SPARTAN branch, but instead went with ONI? Naturally, Osman might not want to keep Hood completely in the loop on what the Blue team is doing. --Weeping Angel (talk) 11:45, 25 September 2014 (EDT)

Replace the word "killed" with "contained" bro, since he's not dead. XD Sith-venator Wavingstrider(Commlink) 12:00, 25 September 2014 (EDT)
Honestly, they could've made the "Chief goes rogue" plot work a lot better if they'd had it happen because he somehow learned of ONI's shenanigans during the Kilo-Five trilogy and decided their influence within the UNSC had become too great (I could see him having a problem with their treatment of Halsey, for instance). As for Blue Team becoming a full-on ONI unit, I really hope that's not the case (and it doesn't quite look like that). --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 12:29, 25 September 2014 (EDT)

I still don't have the paper copy of this issue since the comic shop I get if from has yet to get the shipment for some reason, so I'm relying on Halo canon's review for the scope. I like issue 10 at the same time it left me disappointed. I like how Kelly's speed was displayed when she avoided the Didact and how Static Carillion demonstrated what could take down the Didact (a powerful laser). I like how the Halo was able to detach a piece from itself (although I think it would have made more sense to teleport the Didact to some random spot on the Halo and detaching that instead). As for the planet the composer's forge is on, it looks kind of like Requiem but that's another issue. And finally I like some of the smaller details like the return of some UNSC Destroyers (even though there was one in Glasslands). However, after taking a deep look at the final story arc, all I can say is this - the next 72 hours was nothing more than filler. And not the good kind of filler like HE#7. I hate to say it but the only real "things" we got out of this entire story arc was John reuniting with blue team (which wasn't sh$t), Static Carillion, the Didact survived, and a lil bit of John's childhood. Other than that, the story does nothing to move the series forward. Instead it seems to have kept it stagnant. It's basically just a retelling of Halo 4's story but shorter. There's so much that Brian Reed could have done to help bring out this entire arc. If I was him I would have done it like this: Issue 1 - The chief is reunited w/ blue team while John's personality after Cortana's death is explored, Issue 2 - It is discovered that the Didact is still alive and blue team heads out to investigate, Issue 3 - In the ensuing fight to stop the Didact something devastating occurs that causes John to depart the UNSC or "leave" (in other words give us a reason as to why he won't stop). Instead, what we get is a whole story arc that just waste time repeating the same two stories (the Halo & the composer) again and in the end accomplishes nothing other than leave us mystified as to why the chief "left". So hopefully Exposure moves the story forward and Brian Reed doesn't screw that up too.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 12:38, 27 September 2014 (EDT)

I agree with pretty much everything you guys have already said, and though not Escalation-specific, if we don't see the whole "Chief rebelling against power hungry ONI to find rogue Halsey with the help of his best friend Thel and bring back/save Cortana" bit in the near future, I'd sum up nearly all the new stories recently with "wasted potential". If they leave Cortana "dead" and/or (especially and) kill off/make an antagonist of Thel in Halo 5, I'm going to be very unhappy. Hopefully Thel's "how well do you know your friend" line from the trailer is as misleading as Escalation's preview descriptions. Alex T Snow (talk) 18:34, 1 October 2014 (EDT)

I have little to add to my previous complaints about this arc being schlocky, rushed and ultimately many kinds of pointless, but I don't think that's the core reason for my disappointment. I can deal with silliness and illogical situations as long as the story and characters are fulfilling. Where this arc really failed for me was the character beats. Blue Team has been separated from the Chief for so long and when they finally reunite there's next to no payoff to that. While Nylund was heavily action-centric, he still invested into the Spartans' more personal moments and interactions (for example, their reunion after Reach in First Strike, where they've been separated for a couple of weeks only, depending on your frame of reference). None of that's in here. We don't see what any of them are thinking or feeling apart from the Chief's little near-death experience; instead, the Spartans are little more than interchangeable action figures. Or what about John's quest to find Halsey? He still didn't ask about her at the end. And as I said in my Issue #8 rant, what is he thinking seeing a long-lost Spartan compatriot in the Security Council? And why does he choose to leave the UNSC behind with seemingly no incentive at all? This arc was full of missed opportunities and really highlighted the weaknesses of the comic format in comparison to a novel — at the very least, "The Next 72 Hours" should've been its own dedicated graphic novel and not a small part of a serialized comic. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:09, 2 October 2014 (EDT)

All I can say is that Brian Reed (just like Karen Travis) failed to show that he is a worthy writer for the series. He placed no emphasis on character development and could care-less to do so.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 02:36, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
Honestly, I don't think Reed is as callous and uncaring as Traviss who flat-out states she doesn't care about anything in the 'verses she writes about, it's just that he's not a very good writer and can't seem to be able to write things outside the Marvel superhero comic formula — which works brilliantly for Spider-Man but not for Halo, whose military sci-fi nature calls for a less over-the-top and in-your-face approach. As I said before, he's like a kid playing with action figures. Most of the time, that is; he did a pretty good character story with Escalation #7 and his portrayal of Halsey in Spartan Ops was decent enough (though I'm prepared to take that back if he turns her into a villain). But then you have the bad parts like the dissonance between how Palmer is portrayed and how she comes across (as well as the retconning of her rank), his apparent scorn at anything military (of which the anarchic nature of the Spartan branch or the Chief leaving the UNSC is probably a result), nonsensical comic book schlock like Ilsa Zane's augmentations, his total disinterest at the science and technology of the setting beyond magical MacGuffins, or his one-dimensional cartoon villain portrayal of the Didact. The list goes on. Point is, I would definitely be happy if they got someone else in his place as soon as possible. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 03:12, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
True. I just think the way he handled black team was "Traviss-like" lol. But yeah Reed is definitely writing from a superhero perspective with little emphasis placed on realism or plausibility. Ilsa Zane was a clear example of an invincible supervillian (surviving in the cold vacuum of space w/o a suit???). And the Didact's portrayal was extremely disappointing (especially his appearance). Reed has a lot to make up for. I may be out of the loop on this but when/where was Palmer's rank retconned?--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 09:08, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
On the Halo 4 website, Palmer's profile said she used to be a lieutenant when she was still a Marine. Halo: Initiation instead established that she was a lance corporal by the time she was recruited to be a Spartan. Which raises the question of how they were able to gauge her purportedly excellent leadership qualities when her rank would provide no leadership training nor experience. I speculate Reed changed this in response to criticisms about Palmer never actually getting her hands dirty in Spartan Ops and he probably thought a lowly grunt was more relatable than an officer, without considering the further implications at all. Though almost certainly unintentional, this casts her behavior in a new light - maybe she acts so erratic and unprofessional because she is overpromoted and grossly underqualified, and the only reason she got her job is because Osman wanted someone she could easily order around on Infinity.
Additionally, it's clear the Spartan branch or their lack of formal ranks wasn't a thing by the time the final Halo 4 campaign script was laid down. Del Rio refers to Palmer as a lieutenant when he orders her to arrest the Chief which suggests she's still Navy. They later retconned this so that Del Rio is apparently addressing an off-screen Navy lieutenant, which breaks the scene in basically every way possible ("I'll ignore the only other superhuman individual on the bridge and while it looks like I'm yelling and gesturing at said superhuman individual I'm actually addressing a nobody we don't even see"). You have to wonder if making the Spartans into the bizarre, anarchic bunch they are now was really worth it. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 13:20, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
And let's not forget that adding a massive Spartan branch of hundreds of regular people who are basically regular soldiers in fancy armour (so why don't they give every soldier augmentations and Mjolnir?), aside from making them common place and far less special, it basically writes ODSTs out of existence. I mean, space Marines are pretty badass, but then you have ODSTs, who drop from orbit and doesn't afraid of anything, while the few and far between Spartans are basically gods. Chief's arrival at Crow's Nest for example, among countless others. Now it's "lulz send in the Spartans. a dozen died today? oh thats fine, we have 500 more." Alex T Snow (talk) 23:06, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
Those are my two biggest problems with the Spartan-IVs for me, summed up quite nicely. One, they render the ODSTs obsolete, those wonderful mavericks with a badass rep of their own and already resented the IIs for their effectiveness. And two, so far, not a single one of them has sufficiently proven to me as a fan that they deserve to be Spartans, that they have that nearly unquantifiable spark of Spartan-ness. They still feel like soldiers or Marines in powered armour. Escalation did some good work, furthering Thorne as a character and introducing Ray, who seems capable. But it seems like every step forward is accompanied by two steps back - Scruggs murders his entire team, apparently with little effort. They get squandered dicking around looking for the Spirit of Fire, which turns out to not actually be ready to return to the plot yet. Then the IVs plot gets unceremoniously dumped in favour of showing us a complete divergence with the Chief. And the next arc of Escalation sounds as if it's going to be set up for Nightfall, so it's not their story again. I noticed a few minutes ago that I automatically corrected SPARTAN to Spartan. That's how it feels - they don't feel like capitalised SPARTANS like the Chief, Tom and Lucy and the criminally abandoned Saber Team did. They haven't earned those capitals. And the story could have been about that, proving they have what it takes - that they don't have the experience of their predecessors, or quite the physique, but they have that spark, that drive to get the mission done, to save others by taking the burden upon their own shoulders, to achieve the impossible. But it's all setup and no payoff. It all feels like a waste. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 05:45, 3 October 2014 (EDT)
Got it. 343I seems to come up with the silliest explanations for things and can't seem to stick to the script. They need better writers and coordination in order to avoid this type of confusion again.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 10:27, 11 October 2014 (EDT)

Issue 11 Preview

File:Halo Escalation 11.jpg This issue looks promising since Mr. Reed is taking a hiatus (I believe) and Thorne's story has always been strong.—This unsigned comment was made by SamGall (talkcontribs). Please sign your posts with ~~~~

Reed's still co-writing it, but I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt here (while Duffy Bodreau is a complete unknown to me at this point). I agree that Reed's handled Thorne decently enough so far, and a lot of the problems with The Next 72 Hours can be pinned on the fact he tackled characters people are used to reading about in much more detail (Blue Team and the Didact). When those characters get reintroduced in a very condensed and hectically paced comic book and their portrayals are as flat as cardboard, it's no surprise people are feeling let down. Meanwhile, Thorne is Reed's own baby and has always occupied that same comic-bookish narrative framework without a more nuanced portrayal (such as a novel) to weigh against. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 03:24, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
I want Thorne to ask Ray out. <.< >.> They'd be a cute couple.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 03:46, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
Thorne asking Ray out? I think its gonna be Ray asking Lasky out unless Ray spends more time w/ Thorne.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 09:08, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
I think we all know there's some kind of thing between Lasky and Palmer.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 12:26, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
Right. I just thought Ray might try to slide in-between that :).--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 12:35, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
Huh, I always thought it was Lasky/Palmer and Thorne/Grant. Also, I really hope Thorne or Ray aren't killed off, but I have feeling one of them will be. - NightHammer (talk) 16:17, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
I've always thought of Grant as that reliable friend to Thorne, but not much more than that. Grant is a bro though none the less.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 16:32, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
Yeah that makes more sense. Especially after Issue 7 of Escalation. Maybe Madsen has a chance making sure the female Spartans of Infinity feel "safe and secure". :) - NightHammer (talk) 23:17, 2 October 2014 (EDT)
If anyone is killed off, more likely it'll be Ray since she is a relatively new character who hardly has a backstory let-alone people may not be emotionally attached to her...except you, me, and sith :). Like you I don't want to see neither one of them killed off, but since 343i has a knack for amateurishly killing off characters w/o any thought of fan-reaction let's not get our hopes up.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 10:27, 11 October 2014 (EDT)
Paul DeMarco says hi. Alex T Snow (talk) 18:26, 11 October 2014 (EDT)
To be fair, I feel like Paul DeMarco was given a pretty decent death. Especially when compared to Black Team. - NightHammer (talk) 19:31, 11 October 2014 (EDT)
Yeah I didn't have an issue with Paul DeMarco's death. Just black team and saber team.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 07:15, 12 October 2014 (EDT)
Yeah, that's true. Just as long as they properly mention/reference his death whenever we see Majestic in a game again. Wasn't Saber just offhandedly mentioned as KIA by the Catalog? :/ Alex T Snow (talk) 23:23, 12 October 2014 (EDT)
Yep, worst way to kill off characters ever.... -_- Same with Nolan Byrne. I'm still amazed that even after that, people continued to ask for the status of other characters. - NightHammer (talk) 23:35, 12 October 2014 (EDT)
Reed is probably good at handling his own characters but other ones like blue & black team, he doesn't seem to have a clue. He also didn't seem to care too much about how the fan-base would react to how existing characters were handled. So yes, I'm a lil afraid of Reed throwing in something outrageous or over-the-top in exposure. We don't need anymore non-sense in the post-war Halo era. Looking forward, a bio-weapon sounds interesting. Perhaps it may be linked to flood.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 09:08, 2 October 2014 (EDT)

Issue 11

File:HaloEscalation11.jpgPretty on the outside...ugly on the inside.

Did anyone notice that the IVs seemed to use halo 5 guardians new abilities? It says booster pack in our article but... it looked to me like the halo 5 ability. And also Thorne had camo. There might be the, sneaking up on Ray issue although motion tracker doesn't show when you zoom in normally. Erickyboo (talk) 13:38, 22 October 2014 (EDT)

They clearly don't have any sort of external equipment - I did consider the wording but thought "booster pack" without a link to the article about the H4 gear would be neutral enough. Personally I thought it was just another artist goof (the art is more schizophrenic than ever - some panels look passable while others might as well have been drawn by a ten-year-old). Seriously 343i, with Microsoft backing you up you can't get better artists than this? --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 14:06, 22 October 2014 (EDT)
I like to concur. The art is rather atrocious. It's good in some panels but terrible in others. I was very disappointed with it and I also noticed that the characters are inconsistent with the previous issues. Once again, Thorne & Ray look too different from the other issues and it's extremely annoying. It's kind of like Renee Zellweger's new look versus her look a month ago. After reading through the comic, I found the story to be interesting and I like the mystery generated so far. I like the action and I see that this new spartan ability was put into action, though there's no real explanation behind it. I did find the pacing to be slightly fast but I guess that's what we'll get with a short two-part story. Overall I didn't have a big issue with this issue except for the art.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 20:39, 22 October 2014 (EDT)
The articles state it's the thruster pack armour ability. I have my doubts about that. We didn't see an attachment either. Erickyboo (talk) 01:04, 24 October 2014 (EDT)
Guess work from you know who.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 01:08, 24 October 2014 (EDT)
Actually that was changed per Jugus and I can't disagree. The thruster pack module isn't shown on their armor nor is there any indication of it. It looks similar but last time I remember, the thruster pack wasn't used as a melee tactic nor could I pull it off in Halo 4. It doesn't move fast enough or straight enough. I believe it's the new H5 Spartan ability and I think 343i included it in this issue as a clue or hint as to what it's capable of in gameplay. Maybe.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 12:40, 24 October 2014 (EDT)

As for overall thoughts (ignoring the art which is still terrible - I suspect they had schedule problems given the extra "artists" in addition to the regulars), the issue was pretty much as I suspected it to be in the previous section: inoffensive and lukewarm filler I've come to expect from Infinity/SPARTAN-IV-centric stories. For all my complaints about them ignoring the Nylund-era characters, it's starting to seem like a good thing when they're handled as horribly as they were in "72 Hours". I do have to give the writer props for not using a Forerunner artifact of the week too. And I kind of like the recent focus on the post-Covenant society, which makes the Covenant appear less like a sterile monotonous entity and more of a very old, lived-in interstellar civilization with its own history and fringe elements like the "wretched hive of scum and villainy" on Ven III. I would actually like the unidentified humanoid slaves to be a new race: after all, the Librarian indexed over 100 sapient species and the Covenant may have encompassed vassals that were unimportant in the big picture for one reason or the other (small population/population growth, recently discovered, homeworld too far away, limited utility to the Covenant in duties like warfare, etc). --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:34, 24 October 2014 (EDT)

The Covenant enemies that we encounter consistently sound like the most interesting characters - the capitalist Sangheili mercenary Vata 'Gajat, and now the planet full of Kig-Yar slavers. This, to me, is what Escalation should have been - scrap the Spirit of Fire teasing, scrap the non-story with the Didact, just have the UNSC having to deal with a new galactic community created by the Covenant's collapse. That would have interested me enough to try to buy them. As it is, it has good ideas but is wasting them to tease other things - possible foreshadowing something with the SoF, maybe a Halo Wars 2; teasing Halo 5 and why the Chief apparently left, which I'm still vague on; and now what seems to be setting up the events of Nightfall.
As for whether it's a new species or not...I don't know which would be worse, that it is or that it isn't. If they are, then 343i are blowing the introduction of a previously unseen species that could widen the galactic community and open up new storytelling possibilities as a throwaway background appearance. If they're not, then they're woefully drawn human or Sangheili women, which is only slightly less inexcusable.
343i have said they want to tie their media together more than Bungie ever bothered, but this highlights an inherent problem with that - if you want some things to be able to standalone, then the things that tie them together can't. Better to go the Nylund route - have self-contained one-off bits of media that, while they can sit comfortably alongside the other stuff, don't need you to play the games, and in turn don't need to be read to play the game, as happened with Halo 4. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 05:23, 24 October 2014 (EDT)

"Unknown" enslaved species

File:HE Slavers.jpg Is it possible that they are actually just female sangheili? Lord Susto 15:13, 22 October 2014 (EDT)

They could be female sangheili considering the one with the red drape has hands/claws similar to sangheili but at the same time they look too "human" and have "noses" similar to forerunners. But really, I don't know. Just another mystery 343i threw at us.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 20:19, 22 October 2014 (EDT)
Perhaps the bioweapon was tested on them? It would be interesting if it was a new species though. - NightHammer (talk) 20:27, 22 October 2014 (EDT)

Is it possible for someone to upload some pictures without violating copyright laws? That would be much appreciated. --Weeping Angel (talk) 15:19, 22 October 2014 (EDT)

Could it possibly be a subspecies of San'Shyuum? They look vaguely like the ones from the terminal. Perhaps another portion of the population escaped their homeworld's destruction and changed over the past few thousand years? --Am I a Lion, or a Lamb? Or a Boy? Saint or Sinner? The Lost Books 18:21, 23 October 2014 (EDT)

Female Prophets would be too valuable to keep as slaves, considering how rare they are. And introducing a new humanoid species as Jackal slaves sounds...anticlimactic. My guess is that they're either terribly drawn humans, or they're female Sangheili based on the Han type, which I disapprove of. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 18:26, 23 October 2014 (EDT)
Maybe they're just a never-before-heard-of species living in the periphery of the Covenant's former empire? Maybe one thing or the other made them ill-suited for incorporation into the Covenant (or they were just an insignificant slave race with a very small population used mainly for manual labor), or the Covenant at large never even got to hear about them (I can see there being a thriving and lawless fringe element to the Covenant's remote regions even during its height). I wouldn't actually disapprove of this as it would make the universe feel bigger and more lived-in. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:28, 24 October 2014 (EDT)
I'd love some new species to flesh out the universe beyond the Covenant. I'd be thrilled. I've been eager to see just who was flying the ship that crashed on Alpha Halo since we found out it wasn't Covenant. But I'm skeptical about them being a new species because they look too humanoid. We already have the Forerunners to fill the humanoid alien and ancient astronaut niches, and Halo's generally been very good about giving us diverse body types in its extraterrestrial lifeforms. Given its proclivity in science fiction (Star Wars and Star Trek just to name the two obvious ones) and its association with a restricted budget, I see that kind of thing as reflecting a lack of imagination. If 343i were going to add a new species, even a minor background one, they could do anything - a race of hexapods that look like insectoid centaurs! Space sloths who walk on their giant arms! Sentient slugs with robotic arms! Anything that doesn't just look a bit like us. I (just barely) buy the Forerunners looking like us, given the long buildup of that trope and the tampering of the Precursors, but I'd shake my head if this was the best 343i could do for another race. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 06:07, 25 October 2014 (EDT)
They may be female Prophets. The Stewards look quite similar, plus in Broken Circle it is mentioned that younger San'Shyuum bear a striking resemblance to humans. - NightHammer (talk) 16:47, 7 November 2014 (EST)

I find it interesting that the artists put humans in the same frame as these new creatures. It's like they're telling us that they know how to draw humans, and these are not just poorly drawn humans....--Weeping Angel (talk) 21:20, 27 October 2014 (EDT)

"I've often found it slightly disturbing that the humans managed to hold the covenant off for over 30 years. Could it be that the Covenant was fighting a war on 2 fronts? 343i seems determined to hing at a new species. First the unknown ship on on Alpha Halo, then the Humanoids in Escalation, now this. Surely they're building up to something. "
Jugus Weeping Angelwhoops sorry about that, Forum:Halo: Broken Circle

You've just reminded me of another problem I have with the Escalation humanoids being a new race - why haven't humanity ever seen them before? The Covenant threw everything it had against us - Unggoy slaves, Kig-Yar mercs, and Jiralhanae, to boster the Sangheili. If they had a population of other slave workers, why did they not field any? You can't really argue it's because they were unsuited to it - the Unggoy show that the Covenant had no regard for that kind of thing. And the Skirmishers were nearly wiped out by the ferocity of Reach alone, so you can't even argue that the Covenant didn't want to waste them. It literally makes no sense for them to exist...and yet, there they apparently are. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 07:14, 28 October 2014 (EDT)

Every species in the Covenant has a role they are best at, and brings something to the military that the others can't. For the Unggoy it's sheer numbers. They reproduce incredibly fast, which means there's always more to throw at the enemy. This other species, if they are in fact a client species of the Covenant, likely don't have that same ability.--Soul reaper (talk) 08:34, 28 October 2014 (EDT)
@Morhek: just a lil' correction, that's Weeping Angel you're quoting there, not me. Other than that I kind of agree with Soul reaper on this. Maybe the humanoids just had a tiny reproduction rate and were more useless than Grunts in combat. Or they are a very recent discovery. Dunno really. I am bothered by a great many things, many of them seemingly frivolous or indiscernible to most. For instance: the way they changed the Mark VI's shoulder vent thingies in H2A, making them look like a bizarre, useless ornamental part instead of a functional one. Or the way 343i insists on using their hideous alien and armor designs in everything as opposed to portraying variety in the former and starting the latter from scratch completely. Within Escalation #11, the one major bit that stuck out to me was the way Ray apparently forgot about her motion tracker in the end. With the previous issues, the list is much greater as can be seen above (and I was holding back with the complaints).
But for some reason, the new aliens don't bother me, at least not nearly as much. I saw the alien slaves and was like "a new species? Wait, they look kinda like un-mutated Forerunners might look. Probably not though. Not terribly original but sci-fi aliens rarely are.". I could see why people might have a problem with them coexisting with the Covenant, though one can easily contrive a bunch of explanations that are more fulfilling than a lot of the patchwork justifications 343i has come up with for other matters (some of them found in above posts). Yes, I would also like to see more truly alien aliens in Halo. I would love to see them explore the Lekgolo more. And I disliked the way they made humans and Forerunners into distinct species, which feels redundant. Would've been much more natural had they been an altered offshoot of humanity (something that was hinted at by the Librarian's comments about Earth and the Forerunners' own mysteries in Iris). But now that the Forerunners are what they are... somehow this new species doesn't annoy me that much. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 15:17, 28 October 2014 (EDT)
Another popular theory is that they're just shaven female Jiralhanae.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 18:37, 7 November 2014 (EST)
Can't. unsee. Damn... Imrane-117 (talk) 20:27, 7 November 2014 (EST)

They look kind of like the prophets from the first H2A terminal. --Weeping Angel (talk) 16:45, 8 November 2014 (EST)

File:HN Yonhet Axl.jpg File:HN Axl.jpg I think we may have gotten our answer...--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 15:26, 10 November 2014 (EST)

Saw that mentioned in a forum on Waypoint. This is going to be a very interesting week for Halopedia. -- SFH (talk) 15:46, 10 November 2014 (EST)
Son. Of. A.
Okay. There's a "fringe." Okay.
Still processing this, trying to decide whether I feel disappointed, infuriated, or alright with it. Leaning towards fury at the moment, but that may shift either way. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 21:27, 10 November 2014 (EST)
I kind of suspected that there were other lesser Covenant species, but I expected more than such a humanoid guy... Too common in sci-fi. Imrane-117 (talk) 21:39, 10 November 2014 (EST)
I understand the rationale for having a humanoid alien character in Nightfall instead of the regular species that would take the role of a trader intermediary, Kig-yar - budget restrictions, and the need to make it believable as a living creature and not a prop. Unfortunately, understanding is not agreement. For the We Are ODST ad, Microsoft commissioned a full-sized Brute prop, with working facial movement. This is a much bigger enterprise, and one that needs to tie into the greater canon, so having Jackal traders would have admirably tied them together. And, being much less humanoid than a Brute, or even these Yonhet guys, there was less risk of falling into the uncanny valley. As it is, this is the third humanoid species in the Halo universe, including humanity itself, and I'm worried we're going to see Ferengi next. The animal kingdom is full of diverse body types that have been successful in their own niches, that I'd love to see achieve sentience. Get creative! What would an intelligent species of cephalopod look like, with body armour, weapons and ornamentation? -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 22:12, 10 November 2014 (EST)
True. As I said before I like that they're opening up the universe and making it feel more lived-in with fringe species but I too would've preferred to see a more properly alien race. This one feels more like an afterthought, something they just slapped together with some make-up because they needed an alien. And there's no reason the character couldn't have been any of the classic Covenant species either unless there are specific contrived story reasons tied to the Yonhet's abilities or something. EDIT: Apparently they have perfectly human-like hands too. I was expecting them to at least do something with the hands, perhaps add a finger or glue some of them together, but apparently not. It's pretty lazy. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:29, 11 November 2014 (EST)

Covenant monotony

A couple more visual gripes. Given the flexibility of the comic medium in comparison to games where modeling assets is a limiting factor, this would've been the perfect opportunity to showcase the much-talked about diversity in the Covenant races, particularly Kig-Yar. Yet all of the aliens we see (mainly Jackals) are the Halo 4 designs (which I despise, but that's not even the core issue here). What's more, this supposedly raggedy band of pirates and slavers inhabiting the dark corners of the galaxy all use Jul 'Mdama standard issue gear. Why not use the opportunity to show the space Godzillas side by side with the Bungie-era Jackals and Skirmishers along with possible previously-unseen minor variations among them, wearing all sorts of motley assortments of alien clothing, armor, various accessories and paraphernalia? I can only imagine how this comic might have turned out at the hands of a more creative and invested artist*cough*Leviathan*cough*. As it stands 343i would've been better off just posing the preexisting models in their equivalent of Garry's Mod and that would've produced a better result. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 03:32, 17 November 2014 (EST)

I agreed. They could've at least used the Bungie-era assets rather than going with the 343i stuff. I find it to be rather lazy when they do this. It would've been very interesting to see diversity, and they seemed to be going with that approach early on in the escalation series but it seems as though they regressed as the issues progressed. And honestly, I'm not feeling the 343i Kig-yar to begin with. They're too "old" looking or not really unique. I guess with the Spartan Ops Janus Keys series coming, we might as well not expect to see any bungie-era designs show up since this is a continuation from Halo 4.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 09:30, 28 November 2014 (EST)
I have to say, it's probably a conscious decision rather than laziness. I think what Escalation is trying to do is to show that those using the 343 era designs are "evil" Covenant, as opposed to "good" Covenant under Thel 'Vadam, which use Bungie designs, as seen in Escalation 1-3 and the Halo 2 Anniversary prologue and epilogue. Honestly, it's a good way to differentiate them. -- SFH (talk) 11:25, 28 November 2014 (EST)
I do like that idea in concept, but hopefully they actually bring it into the games. Alex T Snow (talk) 15:02, 28 November 2014 (EST)
I do miss the Skirmishers SamGall (talk) 15:18, 28 November 2014 (EST)
I would concur with that analogy (and I like your explanation) but 343i did make Thel 'Vadam in Escalation 1-3 look like the 343i-era elites rather than maintaining his previous physiology. So that explanation is kind of rendered mute imo. Its no different from how they had these supposed explanations for why things changed in Halo 4 but had no explanation for why the FUD changed. That in itself renders all other explanations mute. Let's just keep it for what it is - 343i changed things because they felt like it. Though I agree with you that the 343i-era covie assets look evil. Too evil for Halo however, but ok for gears of war.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 11:25, 29 November 2014 (EST)
The thing I always liked about the Covenant was the way they were presented as quite alien but still people. They were diverse and they didn't look like mindless monsters. The diversity angle is another reason I have a problem with the Halo 4 versions—it's like they wanted all of the Covenant species to be related as everyone has the same skin tone and texture, much like GoW's Locust, which doesn't make any sense given their backgrounds. I suppose it's possible they're going for a "good Covenant-bad Covenant" divide through visuals, though that in itself has some unfortunate implications if you want to read too much into it (you were born Ibie'shan? Too bad, you're predestined to be evil). Now that they have introduced the Halo 4 versions and the damage has already been done, I'd just like to see more than one subtype at once. On the plus side, at least the pirate queen had a unique garb even if her underlings used Jul 'Mdama's gear for no reason.--Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 03:40, 1 December 2014 (EST)
That's an excellent point and something I noticed when Halo 4 first came out. The covie species look as though they are related with the same scaly, texture skin. Basically they all look reptilian or just flat out similar. I think 343i's approach with the species wasn't a good one. Just keep them the same and come up with some new species if you want to change something. Lol at "you were born Ibie'shan? Too bad, you're predestined to be evil". Now that you described it from that perspective, the whole good-bad covies explanation doesn't seem likely. Like I said earlier, 343i changed them for the sake of change - "It's a brand new Halo, brand new company, so let's show off our artistic capabilities". And when they did that they forgot about consistency and what makes sense.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 14:31, 6 December 2014 (EST)

Endgame

So after all... Was it a Mission to Ven III or a Battle of Ven III, for those of you who have read the final issue? Should the name be standardized or do we keep it as it is? It looks like there was some action finally. Imrane-117 (talk) 07:11, 29 November 2014 (EST)

I say keep it as it is. Even though it turned into a battle near the end, the mission was more covert rather than an actual engagement. That's just my opinion.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 10:47, 29 November 2014 (EST)

Issue 15's cover

File:Halo Escalation 15.jpg Is it me, or the sky looks like the interior of a shield world? It's possible that it's just my imagination, or that the artist didn't pay attention to that when he took inspiration from some Halo 4 screenshots / concept art. But if the battle between 'Mdama and the Infinity's crew leads to the introduction of a new shield world, that would be interesting. (I'm still wondering what kind of Forerunner installation the Absolute Record is supposed to be.) Anyway, it's just a cover, and we all know that Escalation's covers are far from being reliable. (sigh) Imrane-117 (talk) 18:38, 18 November 2014 (EST)

I'm not seeing a Shield World. The perspective is just generally warped, at least to me. It looks like a generic landscape, not much obvious Forerunner involvement. Hopefully it is set near the Janus key, or at least representative of the events in the comic. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 19:08, 18 November 2014 (EST)
Cover needs more Mantises.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 20:04, 18 November 2014 (EST)
Only the covers depicted by Sparth were inaccurate. Still this looks pretty badass. I want a mech for my desk. SamGall (talk) 13:22, 28 November 2014 (EST)

Issue 12

File:HaloEscalation12.jpg Finally, a cover that depicts what actually happens!

After reading the last entry in the Exposure story arc, I have to say I'm impressed with the writing of this new author. Particular the ending of this issue is what caught me off guard. It was a clever idea and nice to add a curve-ball to further fuel our interest in ONI's shenanigans. That alone will make me want to see what happens next in the next story arc. Other than that I liked the overall comic. The action was welled paced and I like the addition of the queen (who was rather ruthless - "Kill him!"). It's nice to see other areas of the Haloverse explored. I also liked the character development primarily from Ray, how she seems emotionally attached to Thorne. I see them dating in the Spartan Ops: The Janus Key story arc. You know it's going to happen, just a matter of time. The only true flaws I saw with this issue was two things. First is the art, mainly with the human characters. I always had a problem with the consistency of the way characters were drawn. In the previous issue it was Throne and Ray, now Palmer and Majestic squad get the "lazy artist" treatment. Its a bit of a disappointment and I wish the artist took better care in maintaining character appearances from issue to issue to avoid making it seem like different artist worked on the issues (even if different artist work on the issue). They should operate like a company, where the work produced by this company is consistent across all drawings, looking like it the company has their -yoink!- together. The second problem is the forgotten slaves. We don't see any of them mentioned or show up in this issue. Maybe they were rescued, killed, or fled. Who knows? And that's a problem. It would've been interesting to see them being led to a dropship or something at least in one or two panels. Oh well. Anyway, it was a good conclusion to this story arc and adds something to the Haloverse compared to the last 72 hours.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 19:58, 30 November 2014 (EST)

I agree it was pretty solid. There was more to the plot than "bad guys threaten Infinity" or "we must stop the Covenant from getting Forerunner artifact X". And it didn't have any of 72 Hours' superhero comic schlock ("the evil Forerunner supervillain is going to destroy Earth!"). The only problems I had were the unresolved fate of the slaves, and the way the UNSC just starts dropping nukes on the place with the Spartans still in there. Why such a hurry? The art seemed to be a minor improvement from last issue, though it was still very inconsistent. All in all it was a good start for Duffy Boudreau; we'll see how he handles the Janus Key arc (I've got a bad feeling about where they're taking Halsey's character but it remains to be seen if I'm right). --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:19, 22 December 2014 (EST)

Issue 13

File:HaloEscalation13.jpgShe didn't use that machine gun!

After reading the issue, I'm satisfied with the beginning of Spartan ops "season 2". The idea of a battle to draw out the UNSC was pretty clever and I'm glad we got introduced to a planet that was introduced in multiplayer. The battle itself was short and the UNSC "victory" was a lil "offscreen" (at least that's how I interpreted it) but seeing a warthog land on top a phantom was entertaining. And once again Thorne is injured during a battle. How many times are they going to hurt this dude? It seems as though Palmer is still holding a grudge towards Halsey. You'd think w/ the shenanigans that Osman & ONI have played over these past couple issues and the fact that Halsey gave the UNSC half the janus key, that Palmer would have some sort of understanding to what's going on but I guess she still sees no good in Halsey. Now, Halsey's clever manipulation of the Infinity's slipspace drive was interesting, though it's almost similar to what was done to the Infinity back at Requiem. Overall the story was short but alright. Its a nice slow start to what we may see next. Now hopefully Halsey doesn't turn evil like Jul.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 14:13, 25 December 2014 (EST)

I don't know why but most characters seemed a little out of place in this issue. They seemed more like exaggerations of what they were and why.--Kal825B (talk) 10:09, 26 December 2014 (EST)

The only character I saw that was out of place or was the most out of place was Palmer. Her being so hell-bent on finding Jul in order to find & kill Halsey just didn't seem to make a whole lot of sense. It was her objective from Spartan ops S1 but you'd think by now she have some sort of understanding to the situation. For one Halsey was kidnapped and before she was, she gave Thore half of the janus key. Now there's no excusing her communicating to Jul on Infinity but that was brought about from the UNSC keeping John a secret from her. As from a real world perspective, it may just be that the writers simply don't know how to handle the characters.--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 14:26, 27 December 2014 (EST)

I mostly find myself agreeing with Halo Canon's review. I really hope Halsey ends up having played Jul all along (which I admit is very likely to happen) since her flat-out turning against humanity would go against everything we know about her. I'm still not super happy about the way 343i have apparently discarded Halsey's character development from the Nylund novels—here we don't see her showing any remorse for the SPARTAN-II program whereas her actions in First Strike and Ghosts of Onyx were driven entirely by her guilt. While post-Kilo-Five Trilogy portrayals of Halsey don't quite rise to the Traviss levels of absurd cartoon villainy it still feels like that version of her informed subsequent characterizations more than Nylund's repentant, post-First Strike Halsey. In terms of character motivation, that is; at least they've kept her intelligence intact. I'm also not a huge fan of the way they added yet another Forerunner MacGuffin that lets them do this one very specific plot-important thing.

Glassman is still the inept nerd stereotype he has always been, and Lasky's still way too lenient with Palmer's antics. His comment about it not being like Palmer to "play cowboy" left me wondering if that was meant to be sarcastic—if it was, this wasn't communicated too clearly. I suppose my problem with her character is the way she never suffers any real consequences for her recklessness. At this point it would be kind of refreshing if one or more Spartans actually got killed as a direct result of one of her stunts, forcing both Lasky to take proper steps to ensure she doesn't become a liability and for Palmer herself to confront her failings and grow as a character. And what is up with Palmer's enormous beef with Halsey anyway? Did she spend time with Kilo-Five or what? I'm generally averse to the idea of deconstruction but to me the Infinity crew would really benefit from one. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 03:38, 28 December 2014 (EST)

I guess 343i can't get enough of creating new Forerunner toys to help impede the UNSC in some way. We'll probably see another one in the next issue. And speaking of that, where the hell is the Vociferous in all this? Shouldn't there be some mention of it by now? Or did 343i just forget about it. And what about the presence of other UNSC ships? It seems as though the Infinity is being assigned for EVERYTHING keeping us, the audience, stuck on just the "crew of the Infinity". Will we ever see some post-war UNSC fleet action? As for Halsey it would be nice to see her show some regret towards her actions. But I guess 343i is intent on molding her into something else, especially since Frank O' Connor claimed there was some reasoning behind why they are portraying her in this way. I just hope we see her reunited with the UNSC and maybe Lasky and/or Thorne can explain to her that they were trying to rescue her, at least to keep 343i from screwing up her character any further. Maybe in the next issue we'll see Palmer have a change of heart for Halsey or something, to keep her character from going downhill again. She was going somewhat uphill for some time but 343i might take her in the wrong direction in a matter of 4 issues. But I agree with you that Lasky is being way too lenient. He needs to show some backbone and shut Palmer down. Right now he comes off too nice. He's the freakin' captain for god sakes!--Killamin7 [Comm|Files] 12:48, 2 January 2015 (EST)

Issue 14

File:HaloEscalation14.jpg Uh, Jul never left his ship 343I.

After reading through the comic, I have to say, I like where this story is headed. Just like Sali, I'm just as angry that Jul sent Requiem into its sun. So a nice three way battle is what I'd like to see right now. Though I wish they would make the Infinity crew more creative and smarter. I'm kind of annoyed with the crew doing things "by the book" and finding themselves in all these traps. For instance, I wish they'd suspect that there was a trap waiting for them once they brought the key off the Infinity but nope. Only Roland was smart enough to mention that it would be best to keep the key onboard the ship. Otherwise Lasky just happily sends the key off the ship. And as predictable, the Pelican carrying it is shot out the sky. I would've like to see like a decoy Pelican that could've flew in front of the real one or multiple Pelicans to throw Jul & Sali off a loop. Overall the issue is a fun and decent read but some parts of it were predictable.--Killamin7i /// 13:10, 3 February 2015 (EST)

Sangheili ranks

There is a golden Sangheili Commander. Meh. Mistake? (very likely) High ranking subclass, perhaps? I wouldn't mind the latter, since it would be very similar to the Major/Officer case in the original Covenant. I also find the armor of the Sangheili guards odd. Not surprisingly, there are some similarities with the Hesduros Zealot armor. Anyway, perhaps the prison guards deserve an article for their "rank" in Jul's Covenant. What do you think? (I like how we might end up with yet another splinter group) Imrane-117 (talk) 04:28, 28 January 2015 (EST)

I doubt it's a mistake. Jul's Covies aren't so color strict to start with.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 05:16, 28 January 2015 (EST)
Keep in mind that Halo 4 shows a fair bit of color variation within the lower ranks, though sadly it's never been elaborated upon. The Elites escorting the prisoner seem to be Zealots in blue armor, just like the one in Nightfall. Maybe they're Jul's personal guard. --Our vengeance is at hand. (Talk to me.) 11:40, 29 January 2015 (EST)
Yes, I actually went back to check the Halo 4 official game guide, because I remembered it mentioned something about the new Covenant's colors. Sadly it just said that they had no apparent meaning, I wish 343i could elaborate on that. Same for the blue Zealot armor, like Jul's armor, or that of the Zealot in Nightfall. I didn't really like those choices, but I'd be ready to accept them if 343i could at least confirm that colors don't matter anymore for some ranks (or, in the best possible case, they could actually make up a good explanation). Imrane-117 (talk) 15:32, 29 January 2015 (EST)
For what it's worth, Merg Vol's Lieutenants wear gold in Halo: Spartan Assault. SamGall (talk) 23:45, 31 January 2015 (EST)

As you have already noticed, there seems to be many kinds of Zealots in 'Mdama's Covenant. Just in this preview, we can see several blue Zealots, maroon Halo 4-era Zealots, a golden Zealot (the traitor killed by Jul's Knights), and finally a Halo: Reach/CEA-era Zealot but with a white/silver armor. I'd be very curious to see how 343i is going to handle that. There seems to be too many Zealots at the same place. But I can understand this since it may be part of Jul's plan in order to capture the Janus Key. Imrane-117 (talk) 20:17, 14 February 2015 (EST)

So in Issue 15, we see the return of not only the Covenant War-era Sangheili Zealot armour, but the Minor variant as well. Is this evidence of former Covenant ranks continuing to be in use in Jul 'Mdamas faction, or just old armour being used by new ranks, for example Minor armor being used by Storm Elites? Thoughts? Opinions? SLiD1nG Pr0Xy (talk) 11:36, 25 February 2015 (EST)
I would guess it's because the remnant factions don't really have the resources to enforce rigid standardization among their ranks. Maybe a lot of the individual members bring their own armor along as they come and go between the different groups. Regardless I doubt the nonstandard armors are indicative of rank anymore. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 11:42, 25 February 2015 (EST)
Yeah, that's what I'm starting to believe too. I just wish we could get a little bit of clarification from 343... SLiD1nG Pr0Xy (talk) 11:52, 25 February 2015 (EST)

Split

I've only seen the half-dozen or so page online preview, but I'm interested by the idea of the Mdama Covenant, already fairly radical and zealous, splitting between Mdama's hardcore and an even MORE radical and zealous faction led by Sali 'Nyon. Hopefully this doesn't get resolved in the next three issues, and becomes an ongoing theme. What I'd like to see is Mdama to lose near-total control of his own Covenant, forced to temporarily ally with his hated enemies for survival until they can both disengage - Infinity to find the Janus Key, now in enemy hands, and Mdama to crush the dissent within his own ranks. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 03:03, 29 January 2015 (EST)

I too hope this schism-within-a-schism continues to play out in future media. 'Nyon's faction may be wiped out but the repercussions could continue to resonate. Duffy Boudreau's first story arc showed his skill at writing a self-contained story arc, but this just seems like it's setting up something bigger. On an unrelated note, I was thrilled when Dr. Halsey called out Jul for his false piety; it's nice to see continuity with the better parts of Kilo-Five. --Our vengeance is at hand. (Talk to me.) 11:40, 29 January 2015 (EST)
I like the way Boudreau is introducing more depth to his stories than merely "UNSC and Covenant fight over Forerunner artifact". But that formula is what this story arc is ultimately about, mind you, and I've never liked the Janus Key from a storytelling perspective so I hope they'll use these comics to conveniently get rid of the thing. With all these different species and factions and motivations the post-war Halo universe has so much potential it doesn't need to follow the tired Forerunner MacGuffin paradigm of old. Schlerf began to move past that formula (which Reed still clung to in full force in Spartan Ops) and it looks as though Boudreau is taking after him in that respect. Sure, Escalation still has yet to blow me away with quality storytelling, and I'm not particularly engaged in the Infinity and its crew, but I have to commend them for trying to tell different kinds of stories in the first place. On the subject of Halsey, what I most liked about that bit was that they're showcasing she doesn't get called a genius for nothing. I only hope this arc can follow through with the expectation that there's more to her motivations than revenge and blind obsession; she's smarter than that. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 12:32, 29 January 2015 (EST)
Escalation has a chronic problem of its villains being far more interesting or sympathetic than its ostensible heroes. We liked Vata 'Gajat quite a bit, he was a good change from a traditional religious zealot. They killed him off. The Jackal pirates were an interesting idea. Killed off. They can't kill off Halsey or Mdama, so we don't see anything of them. The entire point of having a fractious Covenant remnant is that it gives you an opportunity to have a vast sandbox with diverse groups, some friendly, some not, and most neutral or apathetic with their own struggles. But instead, we continue to focus on the Spartans of Majestic and Commander renegade FemShep Palmer, without seeing why we should like or root for anybody besides Thorne.
The best thing Escalation could do, frankly, is to focus on the Covenant intrigue. Have the Infinity in refit or something, take it out of the game. Have Halsey be our POV character, with all this stuff happening around or to her. The zealots who just want to re-impose the worship of the Forerunners, the fearful who want to destroy humanity before they can destroy them, and the opportunists who are just in it for the pay and loot. Mdama protecting her from his own subordinates, working with her to understand some Forerunner relics, talking about what both of them want out of this partnership, coming to an understanding. Not necessarily a friendship, but he doesn't keep Halsey on a literal leash like he did Glassman, and there has to be a reason why he's shown her the respect he has. Get us to KNOW our bad guys. That's how you raise tension - make the enemy more than just one-off villains or cannon fodder. Make us question whether we even WANT the UNSC to win. And keep us guessing about Halsey's motives - I doubt Halsey would allow them to wipe humanity out, but maybe she's fine with hurting the UNSC? Or maybe she's been playing a long Xanatos Gambit to create a situation where, whatever happens, she can pick up the pieces? -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 18:26, 31 January 2015 (EST)

Issue 17's cover/story and is 18 "the end"?

File:Halo Escalation 17.jpg I like issue 17's cover. But what I really like about it are the new covenant ship designs. Finally, we get something that isn't the typical copy-paste-change detail design 343i kept going with. The question is, will they be implemented in that issue or are we going to see yet another "something on the cover that doesn't happen in the comic". Also, what currently unseen ships could they be? I was thinking along the lines of Covenant frigates or RPV-class light destroyers but who knows. As for the story, who could this mysterious Spartan-IV be? I'm really hoping for a S-III finding him/herself in the S-4 program, especially since there's not much mystery being the S-4 program itself. And finally, will issue 18 be the final comic in the escalation series? Halo Canon made a good point about 343i creating these comics to make the paperback editions which contain 6 issues each making 3 volumes so far. So IMO 18 may be the last issue for the escalation series. Otherwise, if they announce issue 19 then that'll mean 24 issues or more depending on where Escalation is headed.--Killamin7i /// 13:10, 3 February 2015 (EST)

This probably will not be the last arc because there are a lot of stories to tell. The ships are probably the RPV light destroyers and the ships on the map Truth look like Covenant frigates. SamGall (talk) 17:54, 3 February 2015 (EST)
It's funny because I just thought they were poorly drawn cruisers (or at least, "simplified" in some way). Sparth's concept art are often not representative of what the thing is supposed to look like. Anyway I don't care if they are really new ships, it would be great. For the Spartan, I'm thinking that we may just end up with Locke. There's still a void in his story between Nightfall and H2A/H5, we don't know how he became a Spartan. Imrane-117 (talk) 18:11, 3 February 2015 (EST)
I can't see how they'd be "poorly drawn" because of the wingettes and Sparth's art isn't representative that's true, but the story matches with the art. They would have said if it was Locke, but then again they denoted he was a mysterious Spartan. Technically the only S-IV besides Thorne and Palmer we care about is Locke. SamGall (talk) 18:28, 3 February 2015 (EST)
I can't see the "mysterious Spartan-IV" being anyone other than Locke. It'll probably illustrate his origins described in the Waypoint article as well as his becoming a Spartan-IV, as Nightfall largely failed in providing a proper origin story for him. It could always be an all-new character, though I doubt this.
On the subject of Sparth, I like his art in and of itself but in relation to Halo the man needs to learn to get out of his comfort zone and better adapt to established aesthetics. For instance, this image is great visually, but nothing about it says "Halo" to me. It's just Sparth doing what he always does; sweeping alien vistas with his signature bulbous-profiled ships (which almost always have very defined Space Age-esque rocket thrusters) and a bunch of indeterminate figures in the foreground for scale. His lack of flexibility gave us the Forward Unto Dawn redesign after all. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 00:58, 4 February 2015 (EST)
It would be nice to reveal more about Locke and find out how he got into the Spartan-IV program. I wonder what Locke will look like in comic form. But you never know. 343i might throw in an all new character for suspense. Though we don't need anymore new characters right now as we have a good bunch of them already, ones that may need more character development.--Killamin7i /// 13:18, 5 February 2015 (EST)
I also agree with it most likely being Locke, but I also think Zane from 'Initiation' may be another possibility. SLiD1nG Pr0Xy (talk) 13:42, 5 February 2015 (EST)
The super villain who "doesn't need any armor" and can "survive in the vacuum of space w/o a suit"?? What would make you think it's her? How can you continue her story? 343i is better off making her a redshirt and eliminating her in whatever media she shows up in to minimize the damage Initiation has already done. You can't develop her any further than where it left off because she's a meaningless character. In fact, IMO, Some of the events and characters in Initiation never belonged in the Halo universe. I never liked the "first" S-4 program let-alone Zane simply because there's no reason for either existing.--Killamin7i /// 10:14, 9 February 2015 (EST)
I'm not a big fan of her either, I just thought it could be a possibility since we were never told who the mysterious person was who she seemed to recognise. I stand by the general consensus that it is Locke who is the 'mysterious Spartan-IV'. The Zane theory was just another idea I had. Now that I think about it, It is most certainly going to be Locke. Like you said, I think that the Zane side of things has been forgotten, and is unlikely ever to be revived. SLiD1nG Pr0Xy (talk) 12:08, 9 February 2015 (EST)
To be honest I don't think they're gonna do a back story of an evil Spartan especially one as cheap as Zane. I do believe she will be revived at some point since the story of "Drake" is still on the table. But like I said earlier, I just hope they kill her off. Like Jugus said above, we need a backstory of Locke since Nightfall failed to provide it. Though, I'm not entirely sure how any Spartan-IV can be considered mysterious. The S-II's & III's were the only ones that seemed mysterious IMO. But who knows.--Killamin7i /// 15:28, 9 February 2015 (EST)

Issue 15

File:HaloEscalation15.jpg Palmer. Palmer. Palmer.

Is it just me or do they need to put an end to Palmer? Or is Palmer going to meet her end in the next issue? It seems as though they're making Palmer even worst with this "vengeance" against Halsey. She's hell-bent on eliminating Halsey that she renders all other objectives mute. It doesn't really make any sense why she should have this hatred towards her. Unless she's still trying to fulfill Osman's orders, I don't see why she has to continue pursuing this. Overall issue 15 was a decent, fun read. It had a lot of action and I like where the story is headed.--Killamin7i /// 07:17, 28 February 2015 (EST)

Having seen Halo Canon's review of Issue 15, I'm surprised by how invested I am in this plot about Mdama's Covenant splitting apart. I find myself rooting for him over Sali 'Nyon (a name my mind refuses not to convert into Sally Nyan) and hoping that he and Halsey will come through this not only intact, but still together. I don't think I ship them, but the dynamic they have together interests me - alien and human achieving a level of respect, when one wants to wipe out the other's species and the other has an agenda of her own. I could care less what the Infinity and the Spartans do during this little arc, but I'm fascinated - does 'Nyon have something up his sleeve, that trumps control of the Prometheans? Is Halsey's arrival on the planet an elaborate trick to get the Spartans to bring their half of the key to her when they try to assassinate her? If Nyon ends up successfully wresting control of the Covenant, and the Prometheans, from Mdama, do we get him as an unlikely protagonist, an anti-hero still devoted to destroying humanity but forced to be the anti-Halsey, working with them against his former troops?
I know I'm probably hyping myself up needlessly, but it still highlights how little I care about the Spartans still, except Thorne and what I've seen of Naiya Ray. The two of them at least seem capable and professional. Meanwhile, Halo Canon is right when he says that Palmer is needlessly endangering herself and her Spartans in an obsessive campaign to win. She needs to learn how to lose, how to reign herself in and let her defeats go, and she needs to learn that lesson urgently. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 07:20, 28 February 2015 (EST)
Edit: another thought. I would be INCREDIBLY impressed if the Elite who wants back in 'Mdama's good books was the same Elite from the Pirate Queen's base, working for ONI to infiltrate both Mdama's and Nyon's factions, and by interfering the Spartans utterly blow his cover and ruin a plan that could have accomplished their objectives? I would count that as a much-needed lesson in humility for Palmer. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 08:04, 28 February 2015 (EST)
Its funny how you don't care about the Spartans but I guess it's a case of how lil emphasis has been placed on them except for the ones you mentioned (love Ray). Some these Spartans have become nothing but canon fodder. As for 'Nyon, I don't believe he has anything up his sleeve. Based on how his forces were taking a beating, I think he already lost this one or either that, he'll attempt to escape. But it would be interesting if he somehow manages to wrestle control of the covenant from 'Mdama. As for that special elite, he's already dead.--Killamin7i /// 17:54, 14 March 2015 (EDT)

A few points:

  • You'd think that either side in the ship-to-ship battle would've made more progress after seven hours of constant conflict. Either the Infinity would've wrecked Jul's fleet and they'd have a lot less ships, or the other way around. And where are the Infinity's underslung frigates in all this? In fact I don't think we've seen them since Spartan Ops even though they would've come in handy a lot of times after that.
  • Why is Halsey so insistent to travel to the planet in person? I know she tends to have that "someone else might have gotten it wrong" type attitude when it comes to science, but she should know her presence isn't at all necessary in a war zone with fully-armored Elites and Spartans running about. It's almost like... the plot demanded it. And it's awfully convenient how the Spartans in the Forerunner structure were able to receive Hoya's transmission right after he spotted Halsey (despite getting nothing in the hours before that).
  • Spartan-IVs sure love removing their helmets in war zones for no reason.
  • Evil Palmer is evil.

But other than that I don't hate this arc. I just hope Halsey comes out unscathed (we know Palmer does, unless Issue 20's cover is completely false), or even somehow manages to clear up the unfortunate misunderstanding with the UNSC that happened at the end of SpOps. It's hard to imagine they'd dare kill her in a comic book, but then again you never know... --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 04:34, 16 March 2015 (EDT)

Good point. The Infinity definitely should've dominated Jul's fleet. But instead its depicted as being overwhelmed and "unable" to do anything. I guess the Infinity's frigates (or even MAC guns & missles) were all forgotten about after Halo 4 or the artist didn't feel like drawing them or didn't have enough panels. But that's from a logical perspective. Either way, it would've been cool to see them in action outside SpOps. As for Halsey, either she secretly has intention of returning the key to the UNSC or, like you said, its for the plot later. List of Spartans who removed their helmets for no reason that I can think of: Palmer, Hoya, DeMarco, Scruggs, and Ray.--Killamin7i /// 10:24, 22 March 2015 (EDT)

Issue 16 Preview

File:Halo Escalation 16.jpg Well crap in the preview the Sangheili Minor got shot by the Zealots. There goes your cool theory Morhek.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 17:56, 14 March 2015 (EDT)

Funny how that works. I'm actually not surprised that Minor got shot.--Killamin7i /// 18:09, 14 March 2015 (EDT)
I'm not surprised either. I actually find it kind of funny how casually he was executed by the one Sangheili. - NightHammer (talk) 18:12, 14 March 2015 (EDT)
The only thing that surprised me was the return of the plasma rifle. Must've been easier to draw than the storm rifle.--Killamin7i /// 18:18, 14 March 2015 (EDT)
  • Sigh* I don't know why I bother, I really don't. I look forward to seeing how this issue is playing out, including Halo Canon's summary. I do still hope that 'Nyon's involvement is more than a one-off crisis, and that it mixes things up among the Covenant status quo. I also find it a bit...suspicious that the Zealot is totally uninterested in locating Nyon's base. Almost as if it's part of the plan... aw hell, there I go again, think of interesting scenarios and setting myself up for disappointment. -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 19:46, 14 March 2015 (EDT)
Darn. I really liked that theory. --Weeping Angel (talk) 19:52, 14 March 2015 (EDT)
Well actually the zealot stated that they already located Nyon's base and were attacking it. The other zealot wasn't informed about it though.--Killamin7i /// 16:29, 15 March 2015 (EDT)

So yeah this jewel was in the preview.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 16:45, 15 March 2015 (EDT)

Yeah I caught onto that right away. The next panel with her turning around is just as hilarious.--Killamin7i /// 17:21, 15 March 2015 (EDT)

Cool. Forerunner space magic has turned Dr. Halsey into a Yonhet. --Our vengeance is at hand. (Talk to me.) 17:45, 15 March 2015 (EDT)
Clearly a nasty case of demonic possession. Come to think of it, though, this may actually be a very accurate representation of Karen Traviss' mental image of Halsey. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:58, 16 March 2015 (EDT)

New theory: what if the Zealot is the ONI double agent? (I can't stop myself, somebody help me) -- Qura 'Morhek The Autocrat of Morheka 07:09, 17 March 2015 (EDT)

Yeah, you might want to not get ahead of yourself. You know its not going to happen. 343i isn't that clever or are they? lol at "Karen Traviss' mental image of Halsey".--Killamin7i /// 10:24, 22 March 2015 (EDT)

Issue 16

File:HaloEscalation16.jpg What'd they need the harvester for? Palmer??

To start, it looks like your question got answered Jugus. At the very beginning the Infinity finally deployed it's underslung frigates. Funny how that popped up right after you questioned it. Anyway, I have to say, this was a pretty decent read. Unfortunately there were a few problems. First, the art. The art was consistent for the first three issues of this story, and then BAM! All of a sudden it looks atrocious, primarily the human faces. We already got a glimpse of demonic Halsey above, but towards the end we get a mushy looking Palmer. Why didn't they just maintain the same artist throughout this story arc? Second, the harvester served no real purpose. It was almost like a setup specifically for Palmer, which didn't make much sense to me. Why drop that behemoth for 1 Spartan? Why drop it at all? Was it there for some other purpose? Also, why didn't Palmer rush Halsey back in the other direction instead of "following" her? Also, no showdown between Sali & Jul this time folks. I understand the issue is limited to a certain number of pages but come one! Still, can't wait to see the Absolute record and "Tanaka".--Killamin7i /// 09:49, 25 March 2015 (EDT)

As of this issue, consider me officially sold on DuffyB. Halsey's systematic dismantling of Palmer's arguments was a glorious thing to behold, mostly because of how unexpected it was and how far it went with tearing down the Travissian view of her character. And I'd never have guessed they'd call Palmer out for her flaws so directly. A few issues back I commented that Palmer should have to face the consequences of her actions at some point and I have to give credit where credit is due because that seems to be finally happening now; hopefully this'll serve as a catalyst for some much-needed character growth for her. The presence of Infinity's sub-vessels was a welcome sight too, and despite 'Nyon's rebellion ultimately amounting for nothing it was somewhat refreshing that there was more going on in this conflict than merely the tired UNSC vs. Covenant setup. And yeah, some of the faces were extremely awkward-looking, though I thought the linework was better overall (barring some exceptions like one obviously Photoshop-filtered-from-a-screenshot DMR). Still, this issue was definitely a winner for me for the satisfying Halsey-Palmer interaction alone. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 13:10, 25 March 2015 (EDT)
Other than what's probably going to get said, did anyone notice that thruster pack action? It seems to be able to be used like a jetpack at least for a bit. Well, vertical lift. Erickyboo (talk) 14:35, 25 March 2015 (EDT)
Well, that's the end of Sali 'Nyons Covenant faction. I would have liked to see the group in future instalments/other Halo media but alas, it wasn't meant to be. Ah well, the issue was a good one, and like you said Jugus, it was great to see Palmer being put in her place XD SLiD1nG Pr0Xy (talk) 21:24, 26 March 2015 (EDT)
I also liked the ending because it didn't bring the story back to the status quo like all previous arcs have done. A major complaint of mine about Escalation has been that nothing substantial ever happens for the story or the characters; at the end of every arc we have Lasky and Palmer sitting down for a nice little chat while everything returns back to normal. Here we have a concluding Lasky-Palmer conversation, but there's more going on than that. Hopefully this will end up paying off going forward (e.g. Palmer's failures not getting shrugged off with a couple of lines) but I have more faith in Boudreau than that. I'm not sure why they decided to put a filler arc about a new character between this and the Absolute Record, though it could be that Tanaka will play a role in Hunters in the Dark and they want to introduce the character before that. Then again, I also thought the bioweapon arc would tie in to Nightfall so it's just as possible it'll have nothing to do with the novel. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:39, 27 March 2015 (EDT)

I'm not sure. The way Duffy put his phrasing in his interview a little over two weeks ago...

“The Glass Horizon” is an interlude during the larger “Janus Key”/“Absolute Record” arc. I don’t want to give away too much, but it’s a very personal story about a particular character that we’ll be seeing much more of in the near future. As the title suggests, it’s set on a glassed world, so we’ll be exploring the struggle for survival in that unforgiving and desolate environment."

I'd think this Spartan has relevance to Guardians, due to him using the words, "much more of". Although, considering how close it is to the novel's release, i think you might be right. Who knows? Maybe the character is in both the game and book.Kal825B (talk) 19:13, 27 March 2015 (EDT)

Cover

Is it just me or is there something very Craig Mullins-esque about that cover? Maybe it's the rocket launcher that does it. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 16:07, 18 March 2015 (EDT)

The art style and sense of scale remind me a lot of his work on the Marathon series. --Our vengeance is at hand. (Talk to me.) 09:02, 19 March 2015 (EDT)
Yeah, that's what I was thinking of. I thought one of his Marathon pieces was framed almost exactly the same way as that cover, though looking up his work this piece comes closest, while this one has a very similar atmosphere. But there are a lot things that contribute to the overall impression. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 13:13, 19 March 2015 (EDT)
Those two are the main pieces that crossed my mind when you brought it up. --Our vengeance is at hand. (Talk to me.) 13:18, 19 March 2015 (EDT)
I like how the cover more or less happens in the comic proper, only without the rocket launcher. From the cover I also got this eerily calm and serene vibe that's common in Mullins' pieces though the mood of that scene is completely different in the actual comic. I don't think that's a coincidence. --Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 02:39, 27 March 2015 (EDT)

Issue 17

File:HaloEscalation17.jpg Ay lmao

Since no one has discussed this yet, I thought the issue was pretty solid. Was nice to see two types of Kig-Yar on the same pane.Sith-venator Wavingstrider (Commlink) 10:11, 28 April 2015 (EDT)

#17 certainly isn't the series' best issue but Tanaka's story is interesting. It's a shame that the vessels on the cover don't actually appear in the issue, but I'm happy that my favorite Covenant warship class is featured prominently. It's also nice to see the Halo 2 Anniversary ODST armor, which seems to be the most recent in-universe model despite being the first version introduced in the real world. The idea of Covenant extremists glassing planets as recently as 2556 definitely needs to be explored further - in fact, I wouldn't be surprised if that's the nature of "colony worlds [being] unexpectedly attacked" in Halo 5. --Our answer is at hand. (Talk to me.) 10:43, 28 April 2015 (EDT)
I liked the issue too, but the technology that they colonists on Minab (such as the 20th century crane and excavator) kind of bothers me. But if Tanaka is in Halo 5, then this is a good way to introduce the new character. - NightHammer (talk) 11:08, 28 April 2015 (EDT)
Yeah that was a bit funny. The shotgun Tanaka had also looked 20th century. Overall the issue was alright and I definitely want to see what happens next in the concluding issue. Like Braidenvl, I was hoping to see those new vessels on the cover but I guess we can't get everything we want. And a lot of new ideas have been explored in this issue and that's good for keeping the series alive. And the two kig-yar subspecies appearing next to each other was interesting. I guess it's 343i's way of differentiating the two to avoid making the kig-yar they came up with look like a recon.--Killamin7i /// 12:17, 28 April 2015 (EDT)
I liked this issue too and while it doesn't take the greater story anywhere it's refreshing to see more grounded stories on occasion amids all the galactic MacGuffin chasing and over-the-top Spartan action. Tanaka is quite likable so far, though I almost feel like her past as a glassing survivor and Army engineer will be more interesting than her future as a Power Ranger Spartan-IV. I'll gladly be proven wrong, though. The 20th century-esque tech (especially the shotgun) bothered me too. It's also kind of funny how little regard is being paid to the Covenant's glassing capabilities after all the fuss that was made about it circa 2011 - those CPVs' glassing fireballs must be thousands of kilometers in diameter. I really liked the way they showed two subtypes of Kig-Yar side by side as I've previously complained about them never doing this despite it being a lot easier in a comic than it is in a game.--Jugus (Talk | Contribs) 13:04, 28 April 2015 (EDT)