Robots Become Human And Its Hilarious “D4VE #1” Review

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Interests

D4VE #1
IDW Publishing

Story and Letters: Ryan Ferrier
Art and Colors: Valentine Ramon
Edits: David Hedgecock

D4VE is going to be the next big sci-fi comedy comic book. Each page had me laughing at the dialogue and situations our main character, D4VE puts himself in. This is a story about a defense robot who is no longer needed to save the world. The best way to describe this comic, is to imagine the American classic “Death of a Salesman” but all of humanity (and life) has been eradicated from the universe and the robots they created, which of course revolted and won, have now filled the everyday roles of humans. Robot-kind has essentially become mimics of their former masters, filling in the meaningless dead end jobs, coming home to a robotic partner who reminds you of how much you miss the glory days and of course endless day dreaming about what made you special.

The writing and art of this comic is very smart and makes you laugh. Ferrier and Ramon have a great idea going and each page has me re-reading panels to see if there was some kind of subtlety that I missed. One such example is how they have no problem swearing and showing the words in the lettering, but the minute someone goes to say “Blue screen of death” it is censored, because that is the society that we are viewing. This is just a story about a robot who wants to be useful again, all the while making his life harder for himself. The parallel to humanity that this comic is exposing even goes as far to say that the robots have become so much like humans, that they have parades for everything (which is to say that parades are wasteful).

With the way this comic is going, I can’t wait for the issue where we get to see D4VE finally prove to his robotic partner, his kid that they ordered months ago (which is just another funny situation), and to himself that he’s “still got it”. This was just a really fun read that wipes the slate clean (in terms of human culture mucking things up) and lets us see the ridiculous notions that people (robots) keep and hold onto, such as the sometimes over glorified days of our past (Thank you Arthur Miller for first capturing that story in 1949.)

By Cory Anderson

Born in Boston MA, raised in NH. Fully functioning adult who happens to read any and every comic under the (yellow)sun. Of course there are the favorite comics I must read when they're released, but any comic is fair game in my eyes. Of course my love for pop culture doesn't end with comics, but branches out to movies, toys, video games and most importantly Dungeons and Dragons (which I withheld this last hobby from my Fiancée until she said "Yes"). Point of Origin for my nerdy condition may have been in '93 when I got slimed at Nickelodeon(now closed), and a teenage accident or two(collapsed lungs) landing me in the hospital around the same time the Tobey Maguire Spiderman movies started coming out. When my dad stopped at the local comic store and brought me the essential comics for Spiderman and the X-Men, I stood no chance. (Which also created a secret aspiration to start a fundraiser of sorts to bring comic books to kids in hospitals to keep their spirits up(nothing has come of this to date)) Add in a heavy dose of trip to Disney World, upcoming Disney themed wedding and a career aspiration to become a Disney Imagineer, I think it's safe to say I never want to grow up. Xbox Live Gamertag: AllusiveReaper7 (If you notice my xbox achievement score, you might assume I game a bit) Twitter: @AllusiveReaper7 Recent comic addictions(Non "Big Two"): Saga, Crossed, Coffin Hill, Rat Queens, Pathfinder and Rover Red Charlie Collects: Old Comics (Green Lama), Miniatures (D&D, Heroclix, Star Wars), Action Figures preferably 90s and older, and comic book themed hats Systems Owned: NES (though it was my sister's), Game Boy(The gray brick), Sega Genesis, N64, Dreamcast, PS2, Game Boy Advanced, Nintendo DS, Xbox, Xbox360, Wii, Xbox One, Junk PC

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