Gryffen: Galaxy’s Most Wanted is antifascist space opera with an irreverent and sardonic bent.
All in Comedy
Gryffen: Galaxy’s Most Wanted is antifascist space opera with an irreverent and sardonic bent.
Kibblesmith and Bazaldua give Loki a suitably charming entrance in a profoundly entertaining first issue.
A relatively rare, nearly issue-length opportunity to hang out with heroes during their down time.
DC’s loss is AHOY’s gain with the compelling first issue of Second Coming.
“Pain can turn people into heroes… or twist them into monsters.”
The hard edge of the satire suffers a bit as the series switches gears to a much more confrontational dynamic.
Heavy moments between Harley and her mother are balanced against the comedy of Harley and Death.
“If we don’t remember our scars… then everything we’ve survived loses it’s meaning."
“My father always believed that suffering builds character, maybe he was right.”
A story of rising tension of political drama peppered by strikingly hilarious bits of humor.
A fun and breezy head trip of a story.
The strange dynamic between the four giant heroes is remarkably witty.
This story is over the top ridiculous in the best way. It's an absolutely hilarious meme-filled shitposting dream. There's no better way Spider-Man and Deadpool's adventure could've ended.
A complete departure from a comic book format altogether that launches itself into 32 pages of fully-playable micro games.
The first arc of the smartest funny animal comedy around today makes an engagingly witty end in its sixth monthly installment.