Contra Hard Corps (Konami - Genesis - 1994)
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Contra Hard Corps (Konami - Genesis - 1994)

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Bloodshot and H.A.R.D. Corps commission (2014)
Art by: Joseph Cooper
Contra Europe Version - With robots instead of humans
Mission: Improbable (2014) Reading Order is now live on Omniverse Comics Guide!
Obadiah Archer has gained way too much power, so Project Rising Spirit send Bloodshot and HARD Corps to take him down. Can Armstrong stay sober long enough to rescue Archer from PRS? And whose side is Bloodshot really on? MISSION: IMPROBABLE (2014) has been added to the Omniverse Comics Guide! Find out what you need to read, in what order and what to pick up next!
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Hard Corps
Snowflake Book Review’s
Title: Hard Corps(Selected Sinners MC #7)
Author: Scott Hildreth
Pages:328
Snowflake Rating:❄❄❄❄(4/5)
Synopsis: After fighting in the war for 12 years, Alec "A-Train" Jacob returns to the United States to find out while he was away, things changed drastically at home. In an effort to find peace of mind - and hopefully a new beginning - he rides his motorcycle from Wichita, Kansas to Austin, Texas. Filled with a desire to continue to protect those who he sees as a victim, he's always quick to step in and assist anyone in need. Through a newfound friend, he meets a woman who was the victim of as random act of violence. Initially, he hopes for nothing in return but the satisfaction of helping her. Katie "Bug" Ripton is attempting to quietly recover from being the victim of an assault. When she meets Alec, she sees a man who is kind, considerate, and not only capable of comforting her, but willing to protect her from harm. Apart, their lives are empty and seem to be haunted by the memories of their pasts. Together, their pasts disappear, and a future begins to unfold. A future every girl dreams of obtaining, but few ever do.
HARD CORPS - “DIRTY”
This chunky electronic tune was the first released by one of those bands that never quite came all the way together, the mostly-British Hard Corps. Their history is full of enticing near-misses with greatness--a track, “Respirer,” which served as “Dirty”’s flip side, produced by Daniel Miller of Mute Records, a gig supporting the Cure, an almost-gig supporting Depeche Mode, which may or may not have been canceled because of frontman Regine Fetet’s strange habit of removing her top while on stage. By the time their first full-blown LP, Metal and Flesh, dropped, their band had already fallen apart. (It was produced by the great Martin Rushent, most famous for his work with the Human League.) It’s a striking reminder of how thoroughly real talent can, somewhat unceremoniously, be poured into things that never truly materialize.
Well, at least we’ve got a few great tracks here that really hold up. “Dirty” boasts a hell of an infectious, frenetic groove, and Fetet’s evidently completely untrained vocals have a unique and somewhat dissonant quality that almost pushes it into proto-industrial territory. Also, dig the way a portion towards the end of it is actually being played in reverse! It’s strikingly experimental but actually sounds rather harmonious and pleasing. Reversed vocals and acoustic instruments generally create an uncanny feeling, as they sound, quite literally, “unnatural,” but something about reversed electronics hits differently, owing, I think, to their thorough artificiality. It’s a wonder that more electronic acts don’t play around with something similar...