Miles Morales: Spider-Man #13 is a case of wasted potential.
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Miles Morales: Spider-Man #13 is a case of wasted potential.
In The Magnificent Ms. Marvel #10 — written by Saladin Ahmed with art by Minkyu Jung, inks by Juan Vlasco, colors by Ian Herring, and letters by VC's Joe Caramagna — Kamala's hectic life spirals more out of control despite her best attempts to stay on top of everything.
In the future of 2099, the police only look out for the rich and famous. The Punisher aims to fix that.
Far Sector #1 is a compelling first issue, and a great comics debut for fantasy superstar N.K. Jemison.
All superheroes have problems- usually of the supervillain variety, but occasionally it’s alien invasions or time travel shenanigans. Then there are the problems that you can’t fight with your superpowers, the problems that you can’t call in the Avengers for.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man remains one of Marvel’s more consistent titles, and the return of artist Javier Garrón means a return to form for this issue.
Boy, does this young Wizard rumble and have some fire in the future for the Aegis!
If the theme of Kamala's journey thus far has been growth and development, then this issue shows the often-overlooked consequences of these phenomenons. Saladin Ahmed writes about topics like corporate expansion and workers rights through the lens of a superhero/supervillain power struggle. Artists Joey Vazquez and Alex Arizmendi, colorist Ian Herring, and letterer VC's Joe Caramagna lend their talents to this very topical story.
The writing alone makes Miles Morales: Spider-Man #11 still a worthwhile read, but the use of fill-in artists really hurts this issue.
A genuinely bizarre crew of obscure Marvel superheroes brought together by the Black Panther to fight crime in the absence of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Writer Saladin Ahmed partners with artist Joey Vazquez, color artist Ian Herring, and letterer Joe Caramagna to make a story that's one part YA contemporary and three parts superhero adventure.
Birthdays are hard in Miles Morales #10.
Resonant is a standout among other Dystopian future tales
A promising series with LGBTQIA characters of color at the center of their own story.
The newest Installment of Excellence is simply BLACK MAGIC!
Kamala's up against a threat she can't fight as Ms. Marvel leaving her feeling powerless. Luckily she's got Tony Stark on speed dial. But she's about to learn even Tony's super genius can't solve everything.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man #9 will surely have repercussions in the future of the series.
Dial H for HERO continues to be a hidden gem of DC Comics’ current lineup, and possibly the most heartfelt of the uniformly fun Wonder Comics line. Highly recommended.