If you’re an Aliens fan, Aliens: The Original Years Omnibus Volume 1 might just scratch that itch. It collects the early Dark Horse comics that picked up after Aliens but before Alien 3 rewrote the timeline. The early stories focus on Newt and Hicks, offering a satisfying — if "safe" — continuation where nobody major dies and PTSD is explored, but the stakes never feel quite as brutal as the films.
The volume really hits its stride when it embraces bold storytelling and creative expansion of the mythos:
- "Theory of Alien Propagation," written by Mark Verheiden and illustrated by Mark A. Nelson, serves as a perfect jumping-on point. It mixes chilling biological horror with stark, textured artwork that feels both grounded and nightmarish.
- "Aliens: Earth War" by Mark Verheiden and Sam Kieth pushes the chaos even further. Kieth’s hyper-expressive, almost cartoonish character designs amplify the emotional intensity and physical horror at the heart of the story.
- "Aliens: Genocide,: written by Mike Richardson with art by Damon Willis, unleashes a brutal alien civil war, pairing savage, kinetic visuals with a bold expansion of the xenomorph mythos.
- "Aliens: Hive," Jerry Prosser and Kelley Jones dive deep into obsession and body horror. Jones' gothic, shadow-drenched art stretches the visual tone of the franchise into pure nightmare territory.
- "Aliens: Newt’s Tale" by Mike Richardson and Jim Somerville offers a retelling of Aliens through Newt’s eyes, capturing both raw terror and fragile hope with expressive, emotional artwork.
Taken together, these stories show the franchise at its best—mutating familiar ideas into something grim, inventive, and visually unforgettable.
Not everything lands. The Alien 3 adaptation is rough, and the toy tie-in comics range from goofy to forgettable. "Aliens: Tribes," a prose-heavy novella written by Stephen Bissette, offers a different flavor — beautifully illustrated but heavily text-driven. If you’re expecting a typical comic book experience, this story won’t be for you.
Still, for anyone who loves the Aliens universe, this omnibus is a fascinating glimpse into where the expanded lore could have gone — full of ambition, atmosphere, and unforgettable imagery. I’m looking forward to diving into the next volume and reading it cover to cover.