Real name
Ro-Busters
Alignment
Universe
Origin
Creators
History[]
Ro-Busters was a disaster/rescue squad staffed solely by second-hand robots, owned by billionaire Howard Quartz. Prominent members of the squad included former sewer droid Ro-Jaws, former soldier Hammerstein, the sadistic robot bulldozer Mek-Quake, the insane robot medic Dr. Feeleygood and his practice 'patient', Casey, and the loquacious Chatterbox. The squad had a distinguished history despite the eccentric personalities involved, but Quartz eventually decided to scrap them all as part of an insurance scam after getting a large tax demand. Warned abbout their impending fate by Quartz's secretary Miss Marilyn, Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein led the Ro-Busters in a last ditch effort to flee Earth and reach the free robot world of Saturn Six.
Notes[]
- Pat Mills says that he created Ro-Busters (along with artist Carlos Pino) "as a favour, and as a way of pissing off the managing editor who pitched an idea to me about ex-servicemen with super powers who deal with disasters. It was a dreadful idea and I bypassed it by doing Ro-Busters, which he loathed — so I knew my story would be a hit." (Thrill-Power Overload by David Bishop.)
- Ro-Busters originated in Starlord, first appearing in Starlord #1, before transferring over to 2000 AD with #86. Ian Kennedy drew two of the Starlord stories and Chris Lowder wrote one. Jose Luis Ferrer also drew some episodes.
- Though Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein were among 2000 AD's most popular characters, arguably the most popular of the Ro-Busters strips featured neither of them; instead, 'The Terra Meks' revolved around Charlie, the pilot robot who protected the port town of Northpool.
- Both Hammerstein and Ro-Jaws appeared in two other 2000 AD strips, Nemesis the Warlock and ABC Warriors. Additionally, Ro-Jaws hosted an occasional series of short stories, Ro-Jaws' Robo-Tales.
- ABC Warrior Joe Pineapples guest-starred in the Ro-Busters tale 'Old Red Eyes is Back'.
- Steve Dillon drew a Ro-Busters story ("Bax the Burner") for the 1982 2000 AD Annual, written by Alan Moore. Moore also wrote Ro-Busters tales for the 1983 annual ("Old Red Eyes is Back", with art by Bryan Talbot) and the 1984 annual ("Stormeagles are Go!", with Joe Eckers).
Links[]
- Appearances of Ro-Busters
- Character Gallery: Ro-Busters
- Images that feature Ro-Busters
- Fan-Art Gallery: Ro-Busters
- Ro-Busters quotations
Discover and Discuss[]
- Search News for: Ro-Busters · Ro-Busters