
That thematic essence is still present in its latest issue. Nothing sends a chill down your spine like reading Yotun’s interpretation of Eldon Tyrell’s Replicant program – a way for Tyrell to beautify his nightmares by creating a being worthy of his legacy. The analogy is simple – this is a character who is too far gone. The lines crossed irredeemable to the point where this battle can only end one way (if it is to be expected). But it’s not the only driving factor. At the heart of issue #7 is the return of the female perspective. It’s not perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but it is a necessary move that helps underpin the characters and the stakes involved. After all, it’s better to have something than nothing at all.
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And the stakes are massive – a powerless city on fire, a hellbent Replicant feeding into the fierce rage of his beliefs and a Detective on a mission to rescue the woman she loves. But the approach writer Mike Johnson adopts comes with profound confidence in the storytelling, knowing he has the time and space to execute the emotions at play. Because to understand the current circumstances, we must venture into the past.
It opens with a flashback to 2011, a young, twenty-one-year-old Ash sitting in Police headquarters and interrogated by Detective Wojciech. Seeing Wojciech again is a welcome return knowing the role she still plays in the series (however brief that is). But her re-introduction serves as a foreshadow to the future.
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The biggest triumph from the issue is not Ash and her steely determination to get her lover back. That was expected. Inevitable even. Issue #7 corrects a longstanding concern and gives Freysa her overdue investment in the story. We finally hear her voice. Fresya’s backstory is given a profound reflection as a combat medic in the battle of Mesa Echo Erebus. Guinaldo serves this exploration with a deftly executed reveal, pulling back panel by panel until it reveals the scale and visual traumas of war with a double-page spread. Freysa’s use here is all about compassion finding humanity in those darkest corners, even in the threat towards her own life. And again, in a clever bit of paralleled foreshadowing, her experience in war is comparable to the trojan horse actions at the hands of Yotun.
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It feels like the chapter is on the threshold of achieving something more, with Johnson using this to blur between the lines between humans and Replicants. And the women of Blade Runner 2029 (albeit separately) are slowly coming to terms with that reconciliation. To borrow a quote from The X-Files, issue #7 comes full circle to find the truth. With the past acknowledged, it’s the future that’s ready for the taking. And in classic fashion, in how each chapter concludes, it continues to be an engaging and exciting entry into the series.
Blade Runner 2029 #7 is out now from Titan Comics.

