A dialogue/caption-heavy issue that feels like it could have been framed better.
All in Action
A dialogue/caption-heavy issue that feels like it could have been framed better.
While the flashbacks do some work providing details about Apocalypse in the dystopian utopia of The Age of X-Man, they seem unnecessarily tacked-on to an issue that isn’t doing a whole heck of a lot else.
There are a few novel aspects to the issue that distinguish it as one of the better ones in the series thus far.
A sudden lurching together of an adventure that could have been much more sweeping and massive.
Overcomes a disjointed plot structure to maintain the intrigue.
Wonder Woman and Giganta vs the Largest Titan EVER!
The Trickster plunges the entire city into madness
Rogue and Captain Marvel are hardly friends. Frenemies may still be too generous of a term, but they can usually tolerate the other's existence. But Nuclear Man’s interference is going to test even that tolerance.
With Deathstroke locked up in Robin’s secret prison can he swallow his pride to protect his team?
Wheres Ricks Body? Is there someone who can stop the Immortal Hulk!?
Mystery continues to bleed and pulse around the edges of aggression in a prison for super-humans.
Humphries’ mix of strangeness…enjoys another pleasant, little 22-page outing for DC’s ever-popular psycho clown girl.
Groom plays with expectations in a twist on certain cyberpunk sci-fi conventions.
Complexity looks good on Vindication as detective and suspected murderer come face-to-face.
Continues to make the unique web-slinging corner of the Marvel Universe feel fresh in spite of the fact that it’s been around for over half a century.
The level of cosmic conflict begins to feel a bit repetitious.
A seldom-invoked fusion that suggests something promising on the horizon for the Master of the Mystic Arts.