The strange mix of space fantasy and cyberpunk continues to wind and twist.
All in Satire
The strange mix of space fantasy and cyberpunk continues to wind and twist.
It’s fun stuff even if it’s really obvious.
Wijngaard’s work is brilliantly muted. Gillen’s script is cleverly concise.
Delivers some cleverly dark political-cultural satire.
Remender a mixes contemporary social satire with a very sharp sort of a family drama.
Robinson is now ready to dive more deeply into the central conflict of the series.
Starer’s humor works on a whole bunch of different levels.
Young takes a while to get the story moving.
it gets pretty weak a couple of pages after the opening.
It’s fun, though.
Duggan’s central idea is pretty silly.
Hurwitz’s script DOES allow for some pretty stunning visuals.
A deliciously imperfect comedy.
Ernie makes a great deal of progress in a largely satisfying fifth issue in the series.
Cain’s satire is bright and timely.
Second Coming #6 leaves the story unsettlingly up in the air.
Second Coming remains one of the best comics on the stands right now. Fans of novelists Douglas Adams and Christopher Moore in particular should seek this title out, ASAP.
It’s a weirdly satisfying end to a pleasantly odd satire.
Second Coming remains clever enough, which goes a long way in this otherwise unfocused third issue.
“The greatest temptation in the world isn’t to do evil,” Jesus tells his new roommate, the superhero Sunstar, in the second issue of Ahoy Comics’ Second Coming, “but the need to be seen doing good.”