The illustration is a wraparound and the signature is on the back cover, but as there is so much "copy" superimposed on top of the art there, it receives its own sequence.
Editorial and production credits, indicia and central image from #1's cover superimposed over a map of The Village.
Central image from the cover of the miniseries' second issue, flanked by title and main creative credits.
Still more credits, flanked by the central image from the cover of #3.
Biographies of Dean Motter and Mark Askwith, flanked by the central image from the cover of #4 of the miniseries, on top of a drawing of a penny-farthing bicycle.
"Dedicated to Terry Anderson and to the memory of Charles Hopewell English Askwith" on a grey background.
A recreation of the finished penny-farthing bicycle image from the original TV series' closing credits, underneath which is the text of Shelley's poem, "Ozymandias".
Alongside the text on the first page is a column of new comic panels; the other pages are illustrated by stills from the television series itself, some in black-and-white, some hand-colored, one (of The Village) in actual color. "Mrs. Butterworth" was a character in the original TV series episode "Many Happy Returns", while "Drake" is also the surname of the character "The Prisoner" star, etc., Patrick McGoohan played in his prior series "Danger Man" (US title: "Secret Agent"), John Drake, and whom many fans feel is the same man as Number Six/The Prisoner.
Drake's full name is not given during the 4-part story.
Features a character who closely resembles Number Six and, therefore, may or may not be Number One as seen in the TV episode "Fall Out". Mrs. Butterworth is a former Number Two featured in the TV episode "Many Happy Returns" (the only Number Two to be referred to by a name).