Girl's Manga with Boy's Rules

  

It will not take much for the reader to figure out what Night Soldiers takes it's subject from. Magical Princesses, Evil Forces loosed on an unsuspecting populace, and a Kingdom at stake that is greater than the physical circumstanges they all are in has been the staple for countless comic books and animated shows. And web pages for them and their fans dot the Internet landscape by the millions.

  

But this site, and the comic it houses, takes a sharp right angle turn from where it originated, which makes the story a bit more heavy, a lot more meatier, and quite very different from what you have seen before.

You see, when the Powers of Good noted an demonic force settling into the unsuspecting city of Victory Falls, Texas, they called for a local teen who was brave and noble enough to be their agent.

They wanted a Champion of Love and Justice.

They settled for Star Mech Richard Kronos. And he's no Scout; Boy, Sailor, or otherwise.

Suddenly, bad boys become heroes, battle suits replace costumes, gunfire operates like wands, tables and ladders and chairs are as legal as magic attacks, and smash-mouth trash talking counts as the "In the name of the blahblahblah" speech. They have to; the baddies Star Mech and his team are going up against are capable of chewing up all of their predecessors at once and spit out the crystals, and they do not have any qualms about doing so.

Welcome to the flip side of Magic Shojo Comics.

Welcome to the world of the Night Soldiers.

Hardcore rules have been called.

Night Soldiers is copyrighted © 2002 by David Gonterman, and is created solely by himself and his associates, all rights are reserved. Any form of reproduction without Mr. Gonterman's concent, including MiSTings, is not only prohibited, it will also most likely result in getting beaten within an inch of your life by a Texan in a suit of armor and reeking of Barq's. Dispite the running jokes that are present, no resemblances of any other existing titles are intended, and all simularities to anyone living, dead, dusted, stranded, or voted off are coincidental.