SORCERER SUPREME NO MORE!
Doctor Doom tricked Doctor Strange into surrendering the title of Sorcerer Supreme. Now Doom is ruling the world, and Stephen Strange is... experiencing a bit of an identity crisis. Searching for purpose - and maybe revenge - he travels to Asgard to see if Thor's kingdom might be looking for a Sorcerer Supreme of its own. Loki's willing to help, but that help comes with a wicked catch, and Strange quickly realizes that becoming Asgard's top magical authority is going to be more complicated than he thought.
Derek Landy (INFINITY WATCH) joins Carlos Magno (CAPTAIN AMERICA) to send Doctor Strange in a fantastica more
Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 provides a unique aesthetic while retaining much of Doctor Strange's signature charm. Read Full Review
The story itself has a lot of depth, like getting to know the Asgardians way of life, and how they live their day to day on Asgard. Derek Landy brought a lot of exciting factors to this story, such as Loki, and I'm excited to see where it goes. Read Full Review
Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 weaves a clever tale filled with action, suspense, humor, clever dialogue, likable characters. Expect Stephen Strange to conjure up a unique solution to his dilemma. Read Full Review
Overall, Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 is a promising start to a new and exciting chapter in the Sorcerer Supreme's life. It's a must-read for fans of Doctor Strange, Asgard, and those who enjoy seeing familiar characters in new and unexpected situations. Read Full Review
Mango delivers beautiful art in the issue. I love the look of Asgard as well as the character designs. The imagery perfectly captures the tone and mood of the story. Read Full Review
Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 offers an engaging and character-driven take on the Sorcerer Supreme's journey, though its dialogue-heavy approach may leave action fans wanting moreluckily, strong art and a compelling hook keep it spellbinding. Read Full Review
The One World Under Doom event banner on Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 is misleading to the point of almost being a bait and switch. The issue has virtually nothing to do with the event. That said, its a legitimately strong and entertaining issue on its own. The humor is top notch. The art mostly works, and the coloring excels. Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 deserves a chance regardless of whether youre reading One World Under Doom. Read Full Review
The art of Doctor Strange of Asgard, drawn by Carlos Magno and colored by Espen Grundetjern, is dark and heavy, interestingly contrasting a lighter story or at least, what appears to be one. The tone established thus far is not super serious, but the stakes of everybody involved are; the art reflects this sufficiently. Its not the most dynamic in terms of character expressions, but it gets the job done. Overall, Doctor Strange of Asgard #1 is likely a must-buy for both fans of Doctor Strange and anything Asgard-y, even with the connection to One World Under Doom, and that itself is kind of a magical feat. Read Full Review
Plot
Stephen Strange asks Thor to allow him to be the new Supreme Sorcerer of Asgard because it is the way he has to be able to recover his mantle from Doctor Doom.
Thor accepts but first he sends her with the sorceress Hulda, so that she approves it, since Asgard has never had a Supreme Sorcerer, it had always defended itself with its magicians called Skalds, but not any now. Besides, with Loki missing, someone who controls his magic is needed.
Stephen makes his journey on foot through Asgard to meet the people and try to understand a new millenary idiosyncrasy, he even manages to save Holt.
Stephen is taken to Hulda and she asks him to return a branch of Yggdrasil. She does not agree with Strange's pr more
Such a pathetic artistic effort. Why this exists? Why are we wasting resources in this? Why they decided to work in comics?