Deep in space, in an uncharted corner of the cosmos, lies an enigma— unimaginably massive while simultaneously empty, containing the echoes of an evil thought dead. And now, with the child Kamal in their grasp, the Fourth World’s most sinister villains traverse the void toward this enigma…and if they reach their destination, the universe itself may never be the same.
This has been a brilliant series, with some of the best visuals in the entire DCU courtesy of Evan Cagle and a host of guest artists, but it's really hard to envision how this could possibly wrap up in only 22 more pages next month. Read Full Review
The New Gods #11 channels the grandeur of Kirby through the melancholy of modern myth. It's cerebral yet visceral, poetic yet bloody; an operatic crescendo hurtling toward inevitable ruin. If apocalypse ever had style, this issue wears it like a badge of honor.9/10We hope you found this article interesting. Come back for more reviews, previews, and opinions on comics, and don't forget to follow us on social media: Read Full Review
The New Gods #11 is a thunderous, visually stunning chapter that fuses divine-scale combat with mortal vulnerability, proving once again that Ram V and his art team are reshaping DC's cosmic mythos into something both epic and deeply human. Read Full Review
It's fun seeing another creative team engage in a very self-contained group of characters that have been visited and revisited upon the page over and over again over the course of the decades since they were created. It's always nice to see a new and a fresh perspective on these characters. What's interesting about it is that it's very rarely in a case where a creative team will try to mutate the characters too far from where they had been created. Kirby had a really solid approach to creating this particular ensemble. And there are very few ways to do it that would be engaging it or exploring it in any kind of a new fashion. And the characters are interesting enough that it doesn't really seem to matter that their story has been told so many times without too much change. Read Full Review