Megacities in Judge Dredd

Megacities in the Judge Dredd comics are a fictional exaggeration of the real megacity concept: instead of just being a large conurbation, they cover most of their original country and have replaced nations as the dominant political entity. The most commonly seen megacity is Mega-City One. In the strip, these cities are all that remains of their original countries after the Atomic Wars of 2070, and are mostly dictatorships run by the Judges.

The exact number, location, nature, and even name of megacities is dependent on the writer of any given Dredd strip. For the Shamballa strip in prog 701, Alan Grant told artist Arthur Ranson that he could make up a number of cities and features for a map: he told Ranson “probably nobody will ever bother with it again”.[1]

Concept

The first mention of other megacities came in Robot Wars, with a Texas City Oil freighter.[2] This was followed by Luna 1, when Dredd was appointed Judge-Marshall of the Luna-1 colony, with his order calling it a colony of "the United Cities of North America"; the narration referred to three separate cities, in existence from 2061.[3] The next issue would mention Texas City as one of these cities, and The First Luna Olympics would introduce "the Sov-Cities" and "Brit-Territories".[4]

These early strips also referred to nations, but as the strip went on it would be megacities that would be the dominant concept. Luna 1 also showed a modified US flag – three stars instead of 50 – and mentioned the "United Cities of North America" under a body called the Triumverate. The start of The Cursed Earth[5] would then show Mega-City One and Two as autonomous and prog 128 would refer to the Soviet East-Meg One as an independent entity. This would be the default from then on.

In Dredd backstory, the megacities formed out of growing urbanisation and reached crisis point in 2027, forcing the United States to impose an "instant justice" form of law enforcement.[6] This was widely copied by the foreign megacities,[7] which included the Union of Soviet Mega-Cities, the European City-States, Brit-Cit, and the Sino Block by 2070.[8] During the run of Dredd, eight cities have been destroyed.

List of cities

Two previous maps had appeared in The Cursed Earth and Oz, identifying Mega-City One and Two and various Australian cities, respectively. The Judge Dredd Mega-Special No. 1 (1988) had the first global map, with the locations all the previously depicted Mega-Cities and two unnamed African ones. To give room for future strips, it said that "only cities bound by the Hiroshima Accord are shown... others exist but choose not to acknowledge anything beyond their defensive walls" and that the Sov-Block were keeping the location of all their cities secret. The next map was in prog 701 in Anderson: Shamballa, naming a larger number of cities (and naming the previous African cities as Simba City and New Jerusalem). A post-Judgement Day version of this map, with some added features, was placed on the 2000 AD website.[9] A further map was printed in Judge Dredd Megazine for the Pan-African Judges strip.[10]

Outside of these, the number and names of megacities comes from the comic strips they appear in, and may contradict the earlier maps (who can be inconsistent with each other). One example is that the "Dredd's World" map shows the Sov-Block covering not just the USSR and Warsaw Pact, but also Scandinavia, North and Central Asia, the Koreas, and most of China. In later strips, the Mongolian Free State, Korea, and the Scandinavian Confederation would be separate polities; and China was covered by the long-standing Sino-Block, a long-time rival to the Sov-Block.

North America

Latin America

Europe

Asia

Oceania

Africa

Africa also contains the Guinea, Congo, and Katanga Development Areas: large swathes of the continent open to private buyers, as a compromise after the Credit Wars. Microstates exist within.

Other

The Judge system is in operation here. Due to the low gravity there, the Judges rode hover versions of Lawmaster bikes and wield specially designed Lawgiver guns; by the 2110s, they were using electric STUP (Scalar-Tesla Uniform Pulse) guns instead of projectiles. They are not answerable to any Earth jurisdiction but traditionally the three North American Mega-Cities did send units of Judges to its Justice Department, governing under the title "the Triumverate"; they also appointed a Judge-Marshal from their cities every six months. Until Dredd's appointment as Marshall in 2099, the Marshals were often killed and the Judge force struggled to control the city; the force become more powerful and in 2100, Dredd promoted Deputy-Chief Tex as a permanent Marshal. Foreign cities began sending their Judges under the Partnership Treaty (retroactively created in Eclipse to explain the foreign Judges in Darkside) but numbers declined after Judgement Day, as megacities felt they could no longer spare the numbers (except Judges they wanted rid of).[78] Personnel were sent from the Pan-Andes Conurb, East-Meg 2, Brit-Cit & Cal-Hab, Simba City, Hondo, Casablanca, Sydney-Melbourne Conurb, and Vatican City. After 2126, most of these foreign judges were recalled and the Luna-1 Justice Department was purely local, except for Mega-City One/Texas City Judge-Marshalls. Local Judges in the 2120s wore a navy blue uniform, and by 2127 were using wheeled bikes instead of hovers due to budget cuts.

Nations

Several traditional nations have also been mentioned:

References

  1. 2000 AD Thrill Cast: 18 March 2015, 32:12 to 33:37
  2. Prog 17
  3. 2000 AD prog 42
  4. prog 50
  5. Prog 61
  6. Origins, prog 1510
  7. Origins, prog 1515
  8. Origins, prog 1516
  9. Dredd World Map, archived at 2000 AD Database
  10. Megazine Pan-Africa map, reprinted at
  11. Prog 61
  12. Judge Dredd Megazine 2.07
  13. D'Blog of 'Israeli: Details, Details
  14. Judge Dredd Megazine 2.01, "Texas City Sting"
  15. Prog 539: "The Alabammy Blimps"
  16. Prog 169
  17. Prog 160
  18. Megazine 2.82
  19. Progs 79–80
  20. Judge Dredd Megazine No. 216, Death: The Wilderness Days
  21. Judge Dredd: Wetworks by Dave Stone
  22. Harmony: Genocide, Megazine 3.01 to 3.06
  23. Prog 1835
  24. The Wally Squad, Prog 390-2
  25. Judge Dredd: Eclipse book
  26. Judge Dredd: Eclipse book
  27. Judge Dredd Megazine #246-9, Regime Change
  28. Judge Dredd Megazine 2.07
  29. Judge Dredd Megazine 2.07
  30. 2000AD Annual 1986, On The Waterfront
  31. Red Razors Judge Dredd Megazine v1 13 pg 24
  32. 2000 AD prog 1141
  33. Red Razors Judge Dredd Megazine v1 12-13
  34. Red Razors Judge Dredd Megazine v1 13 pg 24
  35. 2000 AD prog 830
  36. Red Razors Judge Dredd Megazine v1 12-13
  37. Red Razors Judge Dredd Megazine v1 12-13
  38. 2000 AD prog 830: "Meet Jonni Kiss"
  39. Megazine #330
  40. Megazine #217: "Master Moves"
  41. Prog 1808
  42. 2000 AD prog 1150: "Devil Waugh: Sirius Rising"
  43. "Dredd: Your Beating Heart", 2000 AD progs 1469 to 1474
  44. 2000 AD prog 1184, Pussyfoot 5
  45. 2000 AD prog 1289
  46. 2000 AD prog 1778: "Day of Chaos: Eve of Destruction"
  47. 2000 AD prog 1148
  48. 2000 AD prog 1317
  49. Lawcon, Judge Dredd Megazine3.76 to 3.79
  50. Judge Dredd Megazine 2.07
  51. Judge Dredd Megazine#209-10
  52. Eclipse, featuring Indo-Cit national Judge Auxiliary
  53. "Reign of Frogs: Prologue", Prog 1158
  54. Prog 842-53, "Inferno"
  55. Judge Dredd Megazine No. 289, Armitage
  56. Wetworks
  57. Deathmasques and The Medusa Seed, both by Dave Stone
  58. "Judge Dredd: Web", Judge Dredd Megazine 3.19
  59. Judge Dredd Megazine 3.72: "A Mouthful of Dust"
  60. Dredd Mega-Special #1: "Dredd's World"
  61. Chopper: Earth, Wind, and Fire, Megazine 1.01-6
  62. Prog 1783
  63. Prog 560, "Oz Part 16"
  64. Prog 560, "Oz Part 16"
  65. Prog 560, "Oz Part 16"
  66. Prog 798
  67. Prog 1017
  68. Prog 860
  69. Devlin Waugh: Reign of Frogs Progs 1158 to 1167
  70. Wynter: Cold Justice, Megazine 2.70
  71. 2000 AD prog 660: "I'm Manny, Me Fly"
  72. Megazine 2.46
  73. 2000 AD prog 485
  74. 2000 AD prog 47
  75. Judge Dredd: Eclipse book
  76. 2000 AD prog 1451-1452, Breathing Space
  77. 2000 AD prog 1806
  78. 2000 AD prog 1451
  79. Judge Dredd: War Planet audio drama
  80. Megazine 328
  81. Megazine 330
  82. Megazine 2.27–34, "Anderson: Childhood's End"
  83. 2000 AD prog 1483
  84. Megazine #217
  85. Megazine 2.01 to 2.09
  86. "Devlin Waugh: Chasing Herod"
  87. Judge Dredd & Lobo
  88. Prog 1559: "Mandroid – Instrument of War"
  89. Prog 62: "Tweak's Story", the cover of prog 245, and prog 355: "Bob's Law"
  90. Megazine 2.09
  91. Judge Dredd Megazine #247: Regime Change Part 2
  92. Prog 1765
  93. Prog 1482
  94. Megazine 4.15: "The Girlfriend"
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