Mortal Kombat (Malibu Comics)


Mortal Kombat is the series of comic books published by Malibu Comics based on the Mortal Kombat video games series license between 1994 and 1995. While the comic books by Midway Games depict the games' official storyline, Malibu's story arcs are official publishings of the game providing alternative scenarios for the early Mortal Kombat series, thus favouring the "what if" theories. The series also features several original characters, mostly exclusive to it. It was published by Trielle Komix in Australia.

Overview

The Malibu comic books, almost all of them written by Charles Marshall, were a sort of "re-imagining" of the Mortal Kombat franchise as numerous details were altered. Characters with no particularly defined backstory at the time were radically different when comparing their comic book appearances to their in-game appearances. In addition, certain characters were tweaked, mostly for the sake of the plot. For example, in Mortal Kombat II, Baraka is subservient to Shao Kahn and follows his orders without question. In the comics, however, he joins an alliance with Kung Lao, Kitana, and Sub-Zero, among others, who wish to bring Kahn down.
Throughout the Malibu series, several concepts are raised that, while not always part of the game's official storyline, are, in fact, part of the "what if" hyperextension of the game:

''Mortal Kombat: Blood & Thunder''

  1. Untitled
  2. Light and Darkness
  3. A Slow Boat to China
  4. The Art of War
  5. Kombat Zones
  6. Tao
  7. Mortal Mayhem
The Blood & Thunder story arc depicts the early Mortal Kombat series in greater detail, yet it also uses the "what if" theme extensively. The storyline, in addition to following the structure of the video game, also creates a storyline of its own. Blood & Thunder focuses on one primary source of power, which is a mythical book known as the Tao Te Zhan which, when opened, can unleash greater power that anyone can imagine. Originally, there were many, but over the years in which the powers of each book were unlocked and abused, the Elder Gods destroyed each separate book and placed all its previous powers into the one book and devised a powerful spell in which was to keep the book permanently closed and placed in somewhere in the mountains, never to be found again. The Tao Te Zhan is that it requires a great power to break the spell keeping it closed and the answers to seven riddles in which unlock the great power. Each solved riddle advances to the next page and is answered by various warriors, specifically Sub-Zero, Scorpion, Liu Kang, Johnny Cage and Sonya. Sub-Zero answers two riddles and at some stage of their adventures they try to unlock the book's power. The books' last riddle is solved by Goro, but Raiden and Shang Tsung join forces to strip Goro off his newfound power.

''Mortal Kombat: Battlewave''

  1. Where The Wild Things Are
  2. A Fighting Chance
  3. No Guts, No Glory
  4. Days of Thunder, Nights of Pain
  5. The Killing Fields
  6. Death Moves

    ''Mortal Kombat: Goro, Prince of Pain''

  7. Stranger in a Strange Land
  8. Down and Out in Outworld
  9. Armed and Dangerous
The Prince of Pain trilogy revolves around the storyline elements of chaos and order, the themes later officially introduced in the video game . The story is starred by Goro and the possible reason why he disappeared from the first game's tournament during the battle against Liu Kang, Sonya and the others. He appears in Earth and is led to Zaggot, the God of Chaos, who is the responsible of Goro's disappearance from Outworld. This story continues in Blood & Thunder storyline.

''Mortal Kombat: Raiden & Kano''

  1. Eye of the Storm
  2. The Evil that Men Do
  3. When Part the Heavens

    ''Mortal Kombat: Tournament Edition''

  4. Tournament Edition: With Friends Like These...
  5. Tournament Edition II: A Cold Day in Hell

    ''Mortal Kombat: U.S. Special Forces''

This comic is not related to the later video game .
  1. Secret Treasures & Kano in "Break Out"
  2. Secret Treasures II

    Character specials

Malibu canceled their line after ten months and 27 issues due to increasingly low sales. Dustin Quillen of 1UP.com featured the Malibu comics in his 2011 article "The Top Ten Times Mortal Kombat Went Wrong", opining it suffers from "sloppy artwork, a truly baffling sense of human anatomy, and strange lapses in continuity."