The series kept an irregular schedule due to main artist Dan Day's meticulous approach; by 1985 the book was aiming for a six-weekly schedule, with Eclipse editor-in-chief
Cat Yronwode hoping for nine or ten issues a year. Other contributors to
Aztec Ace included Mike Harris and
Mike Gustovich. The Aztec Ace logo was created by
Denis McFarling.
Aztec Ace featured appearances from numerous historical figures, including
Amelia Earhart,
Glenn Miller and
Ambrose Bierce. In 1988, a copy of
Aztec Ace #13 - featuring Bridget dressed as
Cleopatra - was part of an
Egyptology exhibit at the
Brooklyn Museum. For Eclipse's 10th anniversary in 1988, they commissioned the crossover mini-series
Total Eclipse, and the creators of
Aztec Ace gave permission for
Marv Wolfman to use the characters in the series. The characters had sizeable roles in the series, with Nine-Crocodile the overarching villain, in league with Misery, the spectral archenemy of the aviator and hero
Airboy, while Moench contributed a short "Interlude" story centred on Aztec Ace for the second issue, with art by
Tim Sale. This led to the announcement of plans to collect the earlier material as a
trade paperback and to continue the story as a three-issue mini-series - tentatively titled
Aztec Ace - Time Tripper - in 1992 with artist Doug Heinlein; however, these plans would not come to fruition. ==Synopsis==