Birthdays are hard in Miles Morales #10.
All in Superheroes
Birthdays are hard in Miles Morales #10.
It's hard to match Gwenpool's raw, chaotic energy. Unless you're Deadpool, the king of chaos himself.
Pardon the expression, but Gotham City Monsters #1 is a strange beast.
The X-Men have attacked the Mother Mold… but the Orchis Initiative is ready for them.
Lois Lane #3 makes the superhero comics’ first couple feel somehow both iconic and real.
Petri and MacDonald deliver a story echoing some of the qualities of comic book great John Byrne’s pioneering work with the character.
Orlando and Rossmo hit a surprisingly deep issue.
The entire creative team does a good enough job of distracting from the tired, old central themes of the story to make it FEEL fresh,
The X-Men attack the Orchis Initiative.
The House Of El battles Rogol Zaar in the ruins of Krypton.
Clark Kent meets the new owner of the Daily Planet.
While Batman/Superman may be essential reading for those following the metastory of the DC Universe, it has some work to do to justify its own existence.
Dial H for HERO remains one of the most consistently entertaining titles DC has on the stands today.
The perpetually depressing Spider-Man: Life Story finally comes to a dour end.
Keeping the action within the Spider-family gives Absolute Carnage #2 tight focus and clear stakes.
The X-Men of the future tackle Nimrod.
Little more than a parade of events without much narrative connection.
The title is only half right.
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.