Cafaro’s art that swiftly slices across the page.
All in Fantasy
Cafaro’s art that swiftly slices across the page.
Palicki’s pacing and dialogue are remarkably engaging.
Cloonan and Conrad are saying goodbye.
Dániel’s art feels vividly like something that Marvel would have put out in the 1960s.
Parrott enters the new plot arc with style and poise.
Haberlin and Wall seem to be in a bit of a hurry to wrap up the series.
Lewis finds a fresh spin on a traditional combat between magical entities.
Craig keeps the action moving without bogging the page and panel down in too much drama.
Young takes a while to get the story moving.
Brown runs an encounter between Dejah Thoris and the Goolians.
Writer Todd McFarlane does his...McFarlane thing…
Madureira picks up the series more or less where he left it 22 years ago.
Moreci cleverly mixes modern language and culture into a sword-and-sorcery fantasy adventure.
Some of the heaviest stuff on the comics rack today.
Layman’s weird cast of characters is fun by virtue of the sheer randomness of their backgrounds.
Really SHOULD be a more appealing issue.
Soule gives each moment a great deal of room.
Sebela has a hell of a lot of ideas.
Occasionally manage a kind of beauty.
Brusha focuses matters on Robyn for much of the issue.