![]() ![]() Nexus Uprising tells the story of the Nexus’ arrival in Andromeda one year before the arrival of Ark Hyperion. Due to inconsistency with lore, this novel is not considered canon. ![]() Set not long after the events of Mass Effect: Retribution, and follows Gillian Grayson’s search for her father’s murderer, the Illusive Man. Khalee Sanders and David Anderson team up to find and save him. They start experimenting on Paul Grayson. Set one year after the events of Mass Effect 2, and concerns Cerberus, and their investigation of Reaper technology. Grayson is aided by Kahlee Sanders, who also had a significant role in the previous novel. Set a few months after the events of Mass Effect, and concerns a young biotic prodigy, Gillian Grayson, pursued by Cerberus. Its plot involves David Anderson and Saren Arterius investigating an attack on a human research station. Novels:Ī prequel to Mass Effect, set in the year 2165. This page will contain more information soon. You can find a list of all Mass Effect canon works in chronological order here. What You Missed: Liara T’Soni being a complete bad arse, the introduction of the dashing Drell Feron.Here is our list of all Mass Effect canon with an explanation for each work. ![]() Writers: Mac Walters, John Jackson MillerĪrtists: Omar Francia, Daryl Mandryk on coversĬhronology: Takes place before the events of Mass Effect 2 Odds are if you do go through all of these series, you’ll come out the other end with a deeper understanding and appreciation for your favourite character.Ĭase in point… (there be spoilers ahead!) Mass Effect: Redemptionįour-Issue Series, Published January – April 2010 by Dark Horse Printed fiction is the perfect way to flesh out characters as well. Screwing around with different perspectives, telling side-stories that aren’t completely neccessary to the main plot - that’s where novels and comic books excel. Video games, as free-form and massive as some of them may be, are nearly as restricted as movies are when it comes to telling a story. ![]() Between digital comics and Dark Horse’s series, Mass Effect series scribe Mac Walters and some excellent artists and writers have added magificent layers of depth to the series you’ll never see unless you read. This is a universal truth, and it’s doubly universally true for the Mass Effect trilogy. ![]()
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