2000AD Progs 901-1000

As the “Galaxy’s Greatest Comic” approached the rarified air of 1,000 issues (how often does any publication reach a number like that?), it reached another type of milestone altogether when the Judge Dredd feature film was released on June 30, 1995. Its arrival was marked (in prog 950) by a new logo change, cover format, more pages, and a price hike from 80p to 1 pound.

The increase in visibility directed the content for the next few issues with Dredd stories oriented toward new readers, and more jumping-on points than usual. That’s the thing with those big issue numbers, which can be a barrier of entry. The comic dealt with it by launching new strips, starting new stories within existing strips, adding one-and-done stories, and otherwise promoting the idea that it was a great time for newbies to tune in. (The word “NEW” was used a LOT.)

Other highlights over this stretch were crossovers; Judge Dredd encountered both Skizz and the ABC Warriors in separate stories, and Rogue Trooper encountered himself (the two versions of the character meeting each other face to face). Time travel and/or dimension hopping was a reliable mechanism for these meetups.

A few new Judge Dredd spinoffs showed up (always a good way to enhance reading value; I never skipped one), and classic characters like Robo-Hunter, Slaine, Nemesis, the Strontium Dogs, etc. took the place of experimental strips that didn’t resonate with longtime readers. New strips that scored highly were Venus Bluegenes (a Rogue Trooper spinoff) and Sinister Dexter (a hit man duo inspired by Pulp Fiction) that are still part of the comic today.


Prog 901 • 8/19/94


Prog 902 • 8/26/94


Another experiment in grabbing new readers: multiple 3-part stories that began and ended in sync with each other.

Prog 903 • 9/2/94


Prog 904 • 9/9/94


Prog 905 • 9/16/94


Prog 906 • 9/23/94


Prog 907 • 9/30/94


Prog 908 • 10/7/94

New Dredd spinoff Red Razors, set in Sov-block


Prog 909 • 10/14/94


Prog 910 • 10/21/94


Prog 911 • 10/28/94


Prog 912 • 11/4/94

Skizz III premieres, created by Jim Baikke


Prog 913 • 11/11/94


Prog 914 • 11/18/94


Prog 915 • 11/25/94


Prog 916 • 12/2/94


Prog 917 • 12/9/94


Prog 918 • 12/16/94

Premiere of The Corps, judges in space


Prog 919 • 12/23/94


Prog 920 • 12/30/94


Prog 921 • 1/6/95


Prog 922 • 1/13/95


Prog 923 • 1/20/95


Prog 924 • 1/27/95

Judge Dredd crossover with Skizz


Prog 925 • 2/3/95


Prog 926 • 2/10/95


Prog 927 • 2/17/95


Prog 928 • 2/24/95


Prog 929 • 3/3/95


Prog 930 • 3/10/95

Rogue Trooper self-crossover begins


Prog 931 • 3/17/95


Prog 932 • 3/24/95


Prog 933 • 3/31/95


Prog 934 • 4/7/95


Prog 935 • 4/14/95


Prog 936 • 4/21/95


Prog 937 • 4/28/95


Prog 938 • 5/5/95


Prog 939 • 5/12/95


Prog 940 • 5/19/95


Prog 941 • 5/26/95


Prog 942 • 6/2/95


Prog 943 • 6/9/95


Prog 944 • 6/16/95


Prog 945 • 6/23/95


Prog 946 • 6/30/95


Prog 946 got the comic into legal trouble akin to the Cursed Earth “Burger Wars” debacle from back in the old days. Star Wars had faded into the background enough for the editors to assume they could invoke it satirically, but found out otherwise when Lucasfilm launched an immediate threat. They responded a few issues later with public acknowledgement and an apology for hijacking it.

Another interesting note about this cover was the announcement that 2000AD could now be e-mailed for the first time.

Prog 947 • 7/7/95


Prog 948 • 7/14/95


Prog 949 • 7/21/95


Prog 950 • 7/28/95

Movie tie-in issue with new cover logo and format shift


Prog 951 • 8/4/95


Prog 952 • 8/11/95


Prog 953 • 8/18/95

Start of 3-part triptych cover by SF artist Chris Foss


Prog 954 • 8/25/95


Prog 955 • 9/1/95


Prog 956 • 9/8/95


Prog 957 • 9/15/95


Prog 958 • 9/22/95


Prog 959 • 9/29/95


Prog 960 • 10/6/94

Judge Dredd crossover with ABC Warriors


Prog 961 • 10/13/94


Prog 962 • 10/20/94


Prog 963 • 10/27/94


Prog 964 • 11/3/95


Prog 965 • 11/10/95


Prog 966 • 11/17/95


Prog 967 • 11/24/95


Prog 968 • 12/1/95


Prog 969 • 12/8/95


Prog 970 • 12/15/95


Prog 971 • 12/22/95


Prog 972 • 12/29/95


Prog 973 • 1/5/96


Prog 974 • 1/12/96


Prog 975 • 1/19/96

Tie-in with Judge Dredd home video release


Prog 976 • 1/26/96


Prog 977 • 2/2/96


Prog 978 • 2/9/96


Prog 979 • 2/16/96


Prog 980 • 2/23/96


Prog 981 • 3/1/96

Premiere of Sinister Dexter


Prog 982 • 3/8/96


Prog 983 • 3/15/96


Prog 984 • 3/22/96


Prog 985 • 3/29/96


Prog 986 • 4/5/96


Prog 987 • 4/12/96


Prog 988 • 4/19/96


Prog 989 • 4/26/96


Prog 990 • 5/3/96


Prog 991 • 5/10/96


Prog 992 • 5/17/96


Prog 993 • 5/24/96


Prog 994 • 5/31/96


Prog 995 • 6/7/96


Prog 996 • 6/14/96


Prog 997 • 6/21/96


Prog 998 • 6/28/96


Prog 999 • 7/5/96


Prog 1000 • 7/16/96


Prog 1000, assumed to be an attention-grabber, made use of a reliable pattern when several new stories began simultaneously. This was a very effective way to offset that large issue number and has been used regularly ever since.


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