ItzStitch626
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2020
- Messages
- 391
Mistake2133
????
Aliens: Defiance #8, "Episode Eight: Environmental" (pg. 11-13)
223?
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Aliens: Rescue #1, "Episode One: Selection" (pg. 5-7)
2135
Mistake2133
????
Aliens: Defiance #8, "Episode Eight: Environmental" (pg. 11-13)
223?
????
Aliens: Rescue #1, "Episode One: Selection" (pg. 5-7)
2135
I think it might be a shout out more then anything, considering how Cygnus refers to a line of synthetics instead of one person![]()
Iggy Cygnus
Iggy Cygnus was a combat model Nexus-8 replicant. Iggy was stationed on Calantha, but after shooting his enemy and discovering he was also a replicant, Iggy realized that, to humans, this war was no more than "toy soldiers in a sandbox." He then deserted and escaped to Earth.[1] On Earth, he...bladerunner.fandom.com
You don't think the Cygnus replicant in Aliens: What If...? might be this guy? They're both black, they're both designed for combat, they're both replicants... yeah, that's my evidence, but still lol. (The 22nd century part is not mentioned)![]()
Cygnus (model)
Cygnus was a model of combat synthetic primarily utilized in the 22nd century before its entire generation had been decommissioned and sold for scrap. One such model synthetic had been salvaged by Carter Burke on a waste-disposal planet named Arcadia 234. Aliens: What If...avp.fandom.com
I honestly think it might be. The only problem is that there's 157 years between 2022 and 2179. Unless there's something in the atmosphere of Arcadia 234 or DNA of combat replicants that prevents decomposing, I'm not sure. In any case, I'm confident this was a reference. How many people do you know called Cygnus? And there's multiple Blade Runner references already... yeah, nah. It's got to be.
Death Race was mentioned in an actual novel... welp, that's fucked. I don't want to add freaking Death Race.AJ: Which part of the book was most fun to write?
OW: Something that hadn't really occurred to me when I took the job on was that I'd have to essentially write it in character. The idea is that it's a handbook for marines in the field, so I had to write it as if I was some sort of corporate suit at Weyland-Yutani. That ended up being quite fun, because it's this weird line between writing a companion to the films and actually writing in-universe fiction.
And I tried to sneak a lot of jokes in, which might not be immediately apparent. I was afraid that the "voice", by its nature, would be boring, so I tried to play around with some references and in-jokes that fans would enjoy if they got them. There's a crack about "inexplicable lapses in safety protocols" in Prometheus that I know people have picked up on. And as I said, we weren't allowed to use the AvP movies or the comics or novels, so I had some fun making veiled references to those here and there; or references to discrepancies between different cuts of the different films, or between the films and the novelisations. Any time I mention something like "uncorroborated evidence" or dodgy intelligence, or stories that are probably apocryphal, I'm basically talking about something outside what's officially canonical. I even slipped a reference to Death Race in (Paul WS Anderson used Weyland as his evil company in that as well as in his Alien Vs Predator).
It mentions that the earliest precursors to MU/TH/UR from earlier in the 21st century were reportedly based around an organic core.