Hold onto your braincells! Here come Australia's own Super-Powered Trouble Shooters, the Southern Squadron! Featuring special forces star Sergeant "Smitty" Smith, the psyhco-kinetic Southern Cross, muscle-bound Melbournian the Night Fighter and the animalistic Dingo. Published in Australia in the late 1980s and early 1990s, The Southern Squadron is something of a local cult fixture, though seems to have never really made its way outside of Australia the way some of our other pop culture has. First off, both The Southern Squadron comics and trades are pretty hard to come by, I only scored mine because a friend was working for a comics store for a little while and found them "out back", as it were. And honestly? They're probably more interesting as an artifact of a time and place in comics than they are high quality examples of the genre. Yes, I really enjoy The Sountern Squadron and am looking for suitable miniatures to represent them, but to say that the series and characters are generally good isn't all that honest.
What The Southern Squadron reminds me of the most, that you may have actually read, is the early Eastman/Laird Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, that was aping Frank Miller Daredevil specifically, and whilst you don't have to have read one to enjoy the other, knowing both improves the experience. The very first Southern Squadron story has them battling the "A-Men", a parody of not just the Claremont X-Men, but of the Iron Age of comics in general; the far more silly Squadron overcoming the team without too much difficulty. Although a lot of the language and ideas in the books can be pretty dated, the term "poofter" still flew in Australia at the time, there are elements of the social undercurrent to be found, be it Southern Cross' preference for curvier women, or Night Fighter's misogynistic "blokeiness" working against him when trying to pick up Kylie. Even Smitty's position as team leader is contrasted by an unnamed (and unlicensed) appearance from none other than Nick Fury, helping track down a werewolf in Tasmania. God, that's a great sentence.
So should you be trying to add The Southern Squadron to your collection? Well... probably not? The art is hit-and-miss, some of the stories are cringe and occasionally it's sexist and homophobic. But if you're an Aussie comic fan who grew up on American publications, even just seeing terms like "crow-eater" and "drongo" on the page is a nice change. I'm not that familiar with Sydney, being a superior Melbournite, but it's great to see more than Uluru and the Sydney Opera House in a comic, given the spread and diversity of locations in Australia. Of course I am currently searching through figure ranges for material to convert and kitbash my own Southern Squadron, and they will be showing up in games just as soon as I can get them done, I do want more Aussie heroes on my table, after all. There are periodic attempts to revive The Southern Squadron, but I'm not so keen on that idea, because Southern Cross, Smitty, Night Fighter and Dingo are so much products of their time, that a new take in the 2020s wouldn't really be the same thing.














