Moon Knight By Huston, Benson & Hurwitz Omnibus... Access
Marc, wheelchair-bound and addicted to painkillers, must reclaim his mantle. He doesn't just put on the suit; he carves his way back into it, driven by a Khonshu who appears as a gore-slicked version of his former enemy, Bushman.
Marc Spector sat in the shadows of a decaying midtown brownstone, the silence broken only by the wet thud of rain against the glass. He wasn't alone. Inside his mind, the voices of Steven Grant and Jake Lockley bickered over the morality of their next move, while the booming, skeletal echo of Khonshu demanded blood. Moon Knight by Huston, Benson & Hurwitz Omnibus...
The Punisher crosses paths with Moon Knight. Their ideologies clash: Castle wants them dead; Spector wants them to suffer under the gaze of the moon. He wasn't alone
The story focuses heavily on Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) and the unreliable nature of Marc’s reality. Their ideologies clash: Castle wants them dead; Spector
This era is famous for its "no-holds-barred" approach to combat, emphasizing the physical toll of being a non-powered vigilante.
The story concludes in a rain-slicked shipyard. Moon Knight faces a gauntlet of his greatest failures. As the sun begins to rise, the white linen of his suit is stained entirely crimson. He stands victorious, but he is more hollow than ever. He looks into the sky, not for a god, but for a reflection of the man he used to be. Khonshu simply laughs. "We are just getting started, Marc."