This week I decided to review Alien
versus Predator: The Rage War: Armageddon by Tim Lebbon. For our reviews of the previous two books in this series, see http://thegamecalledrevolution.blogspot.com/2016/06/james-review-alien-invasion.html.
The story
begins with Space Station Hell under attack by Rage forces led by the
android General Alexander which are seeking to capture the Rage
defector/android Liliya. Predator forces reinforce the defenses and Liliya's
group manages to lure Alexander's ship into a Predator ambush before
continuing on their quest to intercept the Rage flagship Macbeth. But
as they approach a Rage-controlled drophole they find the Rage forces
they had hoped to surprise and Alexander, who had survived the
destruction of his ship and replaced his damaged limbs with Xenomorph
parts is in hot pursuit using a captured Predator craft.
Meanwhile, the renegade Colonial Marines of the Devil Dogs and their Predator
allies make their way to a predator outpost where they can study the
captured Rage general Oscar. The leader of the predator science team
soon recognizes some of the technology used in Oscar as belonging to
the Drukathi, what the Rage call the Faze, an alien power far older
an more powerful then the Predators who left the Milky Way galaxy
long ago but left forces and traps as safeguards against the species
they left behind advancing too far technologically. The Rage launches
a massive offensive against the heavily populated human colony on
Weaver's World, inflicting tremendous causalities on the civilian
population. But this horrifying attack is just a diversion while the
Macbeth uses a Faze-enhanced drophole to jump directly to the Sol
system, launching an attack on the core of the human sphere. As the
battle to defend Humanity's home rages, the Devil Dogs, the
independent unit escorting Liliya, and their Predator allies unite
to launch one final desperate strike against the heart of the Rage.
I give this book 8.5 out of 10. The
combat sequences are brilliant. However, I do wish that we had gotten
to see some more of the ongoing fighting over Weaver's World rather
than just hearing about it during the portions covering the fighting
on the ground. The ending was a huge surprise and does a great job
setting things up for possible sequels and new directions for the
plot of the setting. And I feel that once the story shifted its focus
to the Sol system it narrowed down and should have shown more of what
was happening elsewhere, especially reactions to a major event that
occurred in the late middle section of the book.