Arthur Ranson has long been one of 2000 AD's most popular artists; having made his initial impact working on Judge Anderson, he teamed up with John Wagner to create the highly acclaimed Button Man series, and later with Alan Grant for Mazeworld. He has also co-created the character of pyrokinetic Mega-City One citizen Juliet November, and illustrated both Judge Dredd and several Future Shocks.
Ranson's most recent non-2000 AD work has been for Marvel Comics, on X-Factor and latterly X-Treme X-Men X-Posé.
Dom Reardon is co-creator of Caballistics, Inc. and is already a 2000 AD fan-favourite. He has also pencilled several Terror Tales.
Gordon Rennie is one of 2000 AD and the Megazine's most prolific creators, with co-creative credits for Caballistics, Inc., Glimmer Rats, Missionary Man, Necronauts, Storming Heaven , Rain Dogs and Witchworld. He has also written Daily Star Dredd, Judge Dredd, Harke and Burr, Mean Machine, Past Imperfect, Pulp Sci-Fi, Rogue Trooper, Satanus, Terror Tales, Tharg the Mighty and Vector 13.
Outside the Galaxy's Greatest Comic, Rennie has written for anthologies Heavy Metal and Warhammer Monthly, as well as Species, Starship Troopers and White Trash.
David Roach stormed on to the 2000 AD scene with Book 8 of Nemesis the Warlock, before going on to illustrate Judge Anderson, Judge Dredd, Killer and a Past Imperfect strip. His most recent work has been on Rogue Trooper.
Cliff Robinson is one of 2000 AD's longest-serving artists, having made his debut with a Future Shock way back in Prog 362! Since then, he has co-created Mother Earth, and illustrated numerous Judge Dredd strips, as well as Future Shocks, Judge Anderson, Pulp Sci-Fi, Vector 13 and Venus Bluegenes.
Alex Ronald has contributed to the series Judge Dredd, Missionary Man, Rogue Trooper, Sinister Dexter and Vector 13. His work has also been published in Caliber Comics' anthology Negative Burn.