| rdfs:comment
| - Benjamin R. Kovacs was one of many clones in volume two of WatchmeX. In his first appearance a thug called him Inkblot and the name stuck. He was known for his unique speech bubbles and his sense of humor. His costume was similar to Rorschach's, but he wore a blue trench coat instead of Rorschach's tan. For a brief time, Ben Kovacs took up the name Rorschach when Rorschach had both of his legs broken. When Rorschach was on his own two feet again, Ben became Inkblot once again. To get around, Inkblot used his vehicle, the Inkmobile. Unfortunately for his fans, Ben was killed at the hands of Rorschach's Russian counter-part, Propaganda while investigating Russian Bear. Strangely, in one of the few scenes where we can see Ben Kovacs' face, he appears to be an African American.
|
| abstract
| - Benjamin R. Kovacs was one of many clones in volume two of WatchmeX. In his first appearance a thug called him Inkblot and the name stuck. He was known for his unique speech bubbles and his sense of humor. His costume was similar to Rorschach's, but he wore a blue trench coat instead of Rorschach's tan. For a brief time, Ben Kovacs took up the name Rorschach when Rorschach had both of his legs broken. When Rorschach was on his own two feet again, Ben became Inkblot once again. To get around, Inkblot used his vehicle, the Inkmobile. Unfortunately for his fans, Ben was killed at the hands of Rorschach's Russian counter-part, Propaganda while investigating Russian Bear. Strangely, in one of the few scenes where we can see Ben Kovacs' face, he appears to be an African American. Curiously, while Inkblot began the series embracing the same Randian Objectivist viewpoints espoused by Rorschach, by the time of his death he had shifted almost entirely to the opposite end of the spectrum. In his famous "Inkblot Monologe", he was heard to say "It's not that it's nothing. It's not that the blot is meaningless. You just find your own meaning in it. It's all things to all people, thought not all at once. The inkblot... the mask I wear... is ultimately... subjective."
|