Well, most of the fan interest is in the Avon/Blake axis, so once you split them up people aren't that interested in writing stories about Blake on his own ;-p
I think I've probably seen more post-Gauda-Prime Blake stories than S3/4 ones, and to be honest I can see why. Very few fans are interested in Blake's politics (which tend to get dismissed as 'idealism' or 'fanaticism'), so a story about Blake struggling against injustice *again* without the resources or the banter of the "Liberator" isn't going to have much appeal. And given the general tone of S3 & 4, it's pretty much going to have to end badly -- we know that the 'good guys' are losing ground at this point, and Blake clearly didn't manage to set up any kind of network successful enough for Avon to have heard about it. So at best it's probably going to be a question of winning a battle with implications of losing the war.
The one big hook left by canon is the question of how and when S4 Blake got that prominent facial scar, and I'd guess that a lot of post-"Star One" Blake stories probably concentrate on that...
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I think I've probably seen more post-Gauda-Prime Blake stories than S3/4 ones, and to be honest I can see why. Very few fans are interested in Blake's politics (which tend to get dismissed as 'idealism' or 'fanaticism'), so a story about Blake struggling against injustice *again* without the resources or the banter of the "Liberator" isn't going to have much appeal. And given the general tone of S3 & 4, it's pretty much going to have to end badly -- we know that the 'good guys' are losing ground at this point, and Blake clearly didn't manage to set up any kind of network successful enough for Avon to have heard about it. So at best it's probably going to be a question of winning a battle with implications of losing the war.
The one big hook left by canon is the question of how and when S4 Blake got that prominent facial scar, and I'd guess that a lot of post-"Star One" Blake stories probably concentrate on that...