|
|
007: For King and Country |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
007: For King and Country #5
September 27, 2023
|
|
Even as a casual James Bond fan at best, and even with 007 survival assured for future adventures, I find myself determined to learn how this clash of ideologies resolves itself and whether there's anything left of the relationship caught in the crossfires.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
A Calculated Man |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
A Vicious Circle (2022) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
A Vicious Circle #1
December 14, 2022
|
|
A Vicious Circle #1 indulges in the too-familiar trope of killing a barely developed, innocent supporting character to motivate its protagonist in what feels like a transparent attempt to add unearned, instant emotion to the plot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
A Vicious Circle #2
July 19, 2023
|
|
The plot reads like a spec script for an action movie, specifically the part where the protagonist fills us in on the minimum backstory required to justify the fight scenes. The artwork remains strong but offers fewer opportunities for Bermejo to play with different styles, making it less exciting than the previous issue, if not any less skillfully done.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
A.X.E. One-Shots: X-Men #1 |
Oct 05, 2022
show
|
|
The Progenitor refuses to let Jean off the hook for the death of the D'Bari people, but Jean doesn't seem to learn or change based on his judgment. Instead, she deflects, focusing on the Celestial's hypocrisy rather than her anything interior. It's a shame because tackling questions about whether fictional characters need to be held accountable for crimes committed decades ago under another writer's pen seems like the kind of thing writer Kieron Gillen would knock out of the park. Instead, he sidesteps, and all that remains is a sparse, basic infiltration story drawn in something approaching the early 2000 shadowy realism popularized by Bryan Hitch and others, minus the obsession with cinematic framing and lacking depth.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Age of X-Man |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Age of X-Man: Alpha #1
January 30, 2019
|
|
Age of X-Man: Alpha looks to be required reading for anyone interested in the larger event. And if you're not interested already, you probably will be once you've finished reading the issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Age of X-Man: Omega #1
July 17, 2019
|
|
All of the "Age of X-Man" stories coalesce into Age of X-Man: Omega. Considering Nate Grey's outlook on the X-Men's never-ending cycle of violence, it's fitting that the climax of the event is a philosophical debate rather than a knockdown, drag-out battle.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Age Of X-Man: NextGen |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Age Of X-Man: NextGen #2
March 20, 2019
|
|
We only seem to have scratched the surface of where Brisson and To are taking this story, having just come upon a generational divide between violent and non-violent means of resistance, but two issues into NextGen, and we're already hoping that it proves to be the pilot for an ongoing young X-Men series featuring these characters in the near future.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Age Of X-Man: NextGen #4
May 15, 2019
|
|
NextGen continues to be the highlight of the "Age of X-Man" line by concerning itself less with the high concept itself and more with how the characters in this world manage to live in it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Age Of X-Man: Prisoner X |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Age Of X-Man: The Marvelous X-Men |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Age Of X-Man: The Marvelous X-Men #1
February 6, 2019
|
|
It's an interesting premise and while Marvelous X-Men #1 retreads some ground already covered by last week's Age of X-Men: Alpha, mostly introducing the concept and characters and seeding the conflict to come, the idea still hasn't lost any of its shine.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Aliens: What If...? #2 |
Apr 10, 2024
show
|
|
This whole exercise could have been a by-the-numbers extrapolation of what happens when a writer chooses option A over option B or when a character outlives their relevance. Instead, the tale is adding more depth to the character without fundamentally undercutting the thematic underpinnings that defined him in the first place.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
All New Firefly (2022) |
10 issues
show
|
|
|
All New Firefly #2
March 23, 2022
|
|
There's still hope that this series will find its footing and learn to walk a balance between fresh and familiar, but this issue isn't it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All New Firefly #4
May 25, 2022
|
|
The issue frames the story again by focusing on Jayne, first with another flashback and then with a surprising ending that could go in a few different directions but will unavoidably change the character. Is Jayne Cobb ready to grow up? That seems to be the question All-New Firefly is looking to answer, which could lead to either a frustrating or delightful new status quo.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All New Firefly #5
June 22, 2022
|
|
All-New Firefly #5 makes the case that this story will read better in the eventual trade-paperback collection. It takes this issue's reactions to the unexpected revelation at the previous issue's end for seemingly random asides from earlier issues to begin congealing into a cohesive narrative.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All New Firefly #8
September 21, 2022
|
|
There may be a bit too much going on in this story arcspeaking for myself, between the Tax Collector and the monks, I'd almost forgotten the whole Jayne has a son subplotand I may be grading on a curve because the series has been on shaky ground lately, but this totally unremarkable but competently crafted issue of All-New Firefly somehow feels like a win.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All New Firefly #10
November 16, 2022
|
|
While All-New Firefly has had its ups and down thus far, and the arc has gone on perhaps too long, the idea of introducing Jayne Cobb's son, Owen, into the mix is starting to pay off nicely.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Amazing Mary Jane #6 |
Mar 18, 2020
show
|
|
It's a fun opening chapter for this new story that's easy to jump into if you missed the first few issues of the series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Amazing Spider-Man Annual #42 |
Feb 14, 2018
show
|
|
The story isn't particularly memorable, but there's a certain boldness to be appreciated in how it escalates despite how contrived the payoff ultimately is.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Anansi Boys (2024) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Anansi Boys #1
June 26, 2024
|
|
As long as readers can accept Anansi Boys for what it isa serialized graphic novelthey'll be in for a fine time in the Gaiman mold.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Anansi Boys #2
July 31, 2024
|
|
While it's a bit awkwardly paced for a monthly release, the strong, if straightforward, visual storytelling keeps it from being a cumbersome read, and one that will likely be elevated once the entire adaptation is complete.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Angel (2022) |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
Angel #1
January 19, 2022
|
|
It feels a bit like the issue throws readers into the middle of an ongoing series, and the lack of familiarity with these particular versions of the characters makes it hard to feel invested when apparent tragedy strikes. But there are hints at multiverse madness afoot, and while the story may not fully get readers to invest emotionally, it'll likely have them curious enough to want to see what happens next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Angel #2
February 16, 2022
|
|
Even as is, it isn't a terrible diversion for Angel fans, but it doesn't transcend that as its purpose.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Angel #3
March 16, 2022
|
|
It's not bad but suffers from the same lack of focus and direction that seems to have infected all of Boom's Buffy-based efforts.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Angel #4
April 13, 2022
|
|
The first arc of Angel never really established a reason for its existence beyond simply putting out more Angel content. As far as that goes, it isn't bad. However, the decision to set it in a just-slightly-different timeline is ultimately more confusing and distracting than additive, and judging by the final pages of this issue, that problem may only worsen.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Angel #6
June 15, 2022
|
|
Boom Studios' current Angel series from Christopher Cantwell, Daniel Bayliss, and Patricio Delpeche fails to shake some of its frustrating flaws in its sixth issue. Again, it feels like we missed an installment as a significant amount of time appears to have passed since the previous issue's events.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Artemis and the Assassin #1 |
Mar 18, 2020
show
|
|
There might be something to this new series, but that something doesn't show up in the first issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Astonishing X-Men (2017) |
10 issues
show
|
|
|
Astonishing X-Men Annual #1
August 15, 2018
|
|
The actual plot of the issue"which involves the return of Xavier's old foe Lucifer"may not be the most memorable, but expectation-defying characterizations and their potential ramifications will linger.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing X-Men #14
August 1, 2018
|
|
Astonishing X-Men should be a really enjoyable X-Men comic with a more comedic bend than any of the other books in the current line, but the art is working against it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing X-Men #15
September 5, 2018
|
|
The dialogue, the tone, the plot are all there for an exciting and unusual X-Men series, but without the visuals to match it continues to feel half-baked.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing X-Men #16
October 17, 2018
|
|
The banter between the X-Men and the Reavers remains a strong point in Rosenberg's script, especially certain characters finally calling out Beast on his tendency to end up on the wrong side of nearly every conflict for the past several years.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing X-Men #17
November 21, 2018
|
|
The latest volume of Astonishing X-Men comes to a close in much the fashion you would expect, with the underdog X-Men squad having their big damn hero moment. As much as it may be expected, it is also expertly crafted.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Avatar (2019) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Avengers (2016) |
11 issues
show
|
|
|
Avengers #680
February 14, 2018
|
|
"Avengers: No Surrender" continues to be a throwback to the epic, cosmic, do-or-die superhero fare that so many Avengers fans fell in love with in past eras.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Avengers #681
February 21, 2018
|
|
The origin of the mysterious Voyager, the formation of the Lethal Legion, and the resurrection of the Black Order are all finally explained. Mark Waid, Jim Zub, and Al Ewing manage to make it compelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Avengers #682
February 28, 2018
|
|
This issue is primarily told from the point of view of Red Wolf, who gets a rare moment in the spotlight in the midst of the Avengers mega event.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Avengers #683
March 7, 2018
|
|
The visuals don't quite do the concept justice, but it's a fun, almost self-contained adventure that also manages to push forward some of the central mysteries of the larger "No Surrender" story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Avengers #684
March 14, 2018
|
|
Both parts of the story are well executed, and the former dovetails nicely into the latter as "No Surrender" continues to escalate in exciting ways.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Avengers #685
March 21, 2018
|
|
Another stellar chapter in the "Avengers: No Surrender" saga as the Hulk continues to threaten every Avenger left standing.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Avengers #687
April 4, 2018
|
|
Its all executed well enough, and in the grand scheme of things, this breather of an issue is necessary to reset the board for the final act of "No Surrender", but it's also not the most memorable chapter of the saga.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Avengers Assemble #1 |
Sep 11, 2024
show
|
|
Avengers Assemble #1 is an endearing debut that'll give readers a dose of what Avengers comics have been missing.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Avengers: Tech-On |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Avengers: Tech-On #1
August 11, 2021
|
|
But even setting aside cultural sensitivity issues, with the central premise not coming to the fore until the final page, Avengers: Tech-On #1 is running on nothing but wasted potential.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Batman '89 (2021) |
10 issues
show
|
|
|
Batman '89 #1
August 11, 2021
|
|
The essence of those Batman movies is present here, and this issue will allow those who always wanted more of them to revel in the continued saga.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman '89 #4
December 8, 2021
|
|
Leonardo Ito may be the breakout here. He manages to find the right visual tone to make Gotham City feel like a world of perpetual twilight.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman '89 #5
April 13, 2022
|
|
Despite some muddled storytelling, the overall vibe remains intact and this series' most significant asset. If you've come this far with Batman '89, this issue won't disappoint.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman '89 #6
July 6, 2022
|
|
The issue proves to be a satisfying conclusion, elevated by brilliant artwork, making Batman '89 a worthwhile successor to the films that inspired it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman '89: Echoes #1
November 29, 2023
|
|
When thinking back on Tim Burton's Batman films, it's the gothic aesthetic that endures. Quinones' tight linework and framing, and Ito's blue-purple color palette imbue it onto every page of this issue. With its unexpected ending, Batman '89: Echoes #1 is a thrilling return to a fan-favorite era.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman '89: Echoes #3
July 10, 2024
|
|
Much of Batman '89: Echoes #3 is spent on a flashback explaining how Bruce Wayne found himself in Arkham Asylum impersonating Firefly. However, this story is moving at such a crawl, with such little forward momentum, that it's hard to appreciate it now moving backward.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Batman / Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Batman / Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: III #3
July 3, 2019
|
|
The idea New Gotham City, this amalgamation of the DC Universe and the Turtles mythology, is fascinating. Yet we're spending almost no time exploring it. Instead, we're searching out those least changed by it so revert things back. That's the endgame in any situation, but going in that direction with little time to meander seems like such a missed opportunity.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman / Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: III #5
September 4, 2019
|
|
Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III hasn't done a great job of capitalizing on the fun potential of its premise. Its fifth issue offers a taste of that untapped potential, but the supposedly epic battle that makes up the bulk of the issue is shapeless, taking up space rather than telling a story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Cloak (2022) |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
Black Cloak #3
March 15, 2023
|
|
Black Cloak's first arc is still unfolding, but one hopes Kelly Thompson isn't drawing comparisons they're unwilling to address head-on down the line. Further, this issue introduces some familiar police story tropes into its narrative, such as the cop with a newborn at home, and some of the ribbing between the partners, while providing some levity, clashes with the gravitas of a murder investigation, especially one that could have such devastating effects on the city.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Cloak #4
April 12, 2023
|
|
The issue's ending promises answers, but the current lack of them remains a pain point distracting from the mystery at the series' heart.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Cloak #5
May 10, 2023
|
|
As with past issues, there are too many moments that seem meant to be significant but don't quite land because the reader lacks all the requisite contextual information to understand its impact.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Cloak #6
August 2, 2023
|
|
Those who demand those answers might be disappointed, but the issue is a game-changing conclusion that promises a very different type of story when the series returns.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Cloak #7
August 21, 2024
|
|
Black Cloak returns with its seventh issue set several years after the fire that closed out its first arc. After all that time, it was shocking how fast the new issue reads, concluding just as it feels like it's getting started, but that's not to say what's here isn't worthwhile.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Panther (2018) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Black Panther #10
March 27, 2019
|
|
The "Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda" storyline that's been running through Black Panther for almost a year slows down a bit here where it feels like it should be speeding up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Blade Runner: 2019 #1 |
Jul 10, 2019
show
|
|
The comic nails the sci-fi noir tone of the films but doesn't feel like its retreading familiar ground. The art seems confused in places as if Guinaldo and colorist Marco Lesko had a communications breakdown resulting in misbalanced layouts, but Blade Runner 2019 is likely to hooks fans and have them coming back for more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Books of Magic (2018) |
15 issues
show
|
|
|
Books of Magic #7
April 24, 2019
|
|
Tom Fowler continues to make Books of Magic a stunning comic to look at. In this is he has some fun playing with magic, boundaries, and the comic book form.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Books of Magic #10
July 24, 2019
|
|
There's a beautiful moment in comics where an unassuming panel from one issue can be revisited with powerful new resonance in a later issue. Books of Magic #10 includes one such moment. With a single panel, a single line of dialogue, a relationship established in the series' first issue is turned on its head, going from sad to outright tragic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Books of Magic #15
January 1, 2020
|
|
Tim is a hard protagonist to connect with because his behavior is so offputting, and that's proving to be a real problem for Books of Magic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Books of Magic #19
May 29, 2020
|
|
Readers will have to wait until the next issue to learn whether Barnett has anything interesting to say about this era or its storytelling tics. Still, this issue in a vacuum is a delightful dose of wry nostalgia.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Books of Magic #22
August 26, 2020
|
|
David Barnett had some fun as the new writer of Books of Magic by sending Tim Hunter on some adventures detached from the series's overarching plot. Now that he's returned to that main narrative throughline, the book has lost the life that he brought to it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Books of Magic #23
September 23, 2020
|
|
The issue shows the symptoms of being an unplanned finale, with some long-simmering conflicts coming to abrupt resolutions, but Barnett and Fowler manage to send the Books of Magic off with a sense of closure, warmth, and hope.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (2019) |
38 issues
show
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #2
February 27, 2019
|
|
Bellaire is building to something -- Xander's detachment makes it clear that keeping the gang separated is intentional and not an oversight -- but without those core relationships intact, this issue of Buffy feels like its missing something.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #3
March 13, 2019
|
|
Whereas the previous issue of Buffy the Vampire Slayer felt like it was moving too slowly, this issue goes hard in the other direction. There's so much going on that it feels like two or three different stories crashed into other.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #4
April 17, 2019
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #4 has everything a Buffy fan could ask for, beginning with the Scoobies' perfect reaction to Giles offering them a night off. From there we get relationship drama, internal conflict, the big bads plotting, and a cliffhanger right as a key character reaches a major turning point.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #5
June 5, 2019
|
|
Jordie Bellaire provides a strong script that both feels like a perfect replica of a traditional Buffy TV episode structure while being wildly different from any particular episode in interesting ways, and that's enough to make up for Lopez's mixed artwork.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #9
November 6, 2019
|
|
The story lacks a smooth flow, but the characters"while not at their most endearing here"are still those lovable Scoobies. Now that Jordie Bellaire, David Lopez, and company have broken them down, it should be fun to see them built back up again (presumably) over the course of the crossover event.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #10
December 4, 2019
|
|
What stands out most in this issue is how insufferable Giles is, a far cry from his composed, paternal television counterpart. It's another example of the series jumping into the deep end.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #14
May 20, 2020
|
|
The issue makes two minor missteps towards the end"an awkward inset mars a beautiful splash page, and the final tease is too vague to be tantalizing"but this issue everything Buffy fans crave.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #15
July 1, 2020
|
|
With this issue, she appears to be treading familiar ground at first until one of the characters questions the premise. Bachs' art isn't the strongest we've seen on the series, but the issue is still keeping the series headed in exciting directions.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #17
September 2, 2020
|
|
This issue is an example of the series' creative team taking full advantage of the unique opportunity they have with this fresh comics continuity to improve upon the source material.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #18
October 7, 2020
|
|
Unfortunately, Ramon Bachs' artwork is a distraction here. Bachs tries to give these high school students a youthful look, as you'd expect, with character manga-inspired character models, but his faces and bodies are inconsistent from page to page, resulting is something that looks like Dan Mora's work minus discipline.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #24
April 7, 2021
|
|
The Buffy the Vampire Slayer ongoing series stumbles through another issue that should be revelatory but is jumbled and forgettable due to subpar storytelling and lack of proper setup.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #25
May 12, 2021
|
|
The story does channel some of the tone fans of Buffy love, with the Lurkers being appropriately creepy and the beats about shrimp tacos bringing the humor. But it also suffers from all of the usual problems this series struggles with"a lack of grounding and mediocre visual storytelling"making it hard not to feel like this forgettable issue could have been something more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #26
June 2, 2021
|
|
Buffy's narrative may lose its power without a seasonal structure to mark a meaningful passage of time, force it into periodic climaxes, and organically mark the start of a new chapter in its characters' lives. Instead, it's devolving into the worst type of superhero story, an endless string of things happening simply to keep things happening, which is disappointing given how much potential there is in the building blocks of this relaunched timeline.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #29
September 1, 2021
|
|
There's also still too much going on here narratively, burying the emotional core that's vital to making Buffy work, but this is a solid issue with some notable high points amid continuing series woes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #31
November 17, 2021
|
|
The series is overly-busy, and it hasn't given Joyce and Buffy's relationship enough weight for any of this to feel meaningful. This comic just can't land the big beats, making it feel like a hollow endeavor.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Faith #1
February 24, 2021
|
|
Carlini's expressive, loose artwork fits in well with the tone set by the main Buffy title. She and Lambert get creative using Faith's affection for cinema to visualize her trauma, doing what Buffy does best by overlaying monsters over the mundane.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Tea Time #1
June 30, 2021
|
|
If they'd had different artists, or a perhaps a more versatile single artist, craft each, it would have enhanced each character's perspective in a way that fully embraces comics as a visual medium. Perhaps Xander's story would become a full-on superhero tale, and Willow's something more retro horror. Instead, the issue feels like a shadow of what it could have been.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Willow (2020) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer/Angel: Hellmouth |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Buffy: The Last Vampire Slayer (2021) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Buffy: The Last Vampire Slayer (2023) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Buffy: The Last Vampire Slayer #2
September 6, 2023
|
|
Despite the wrinkles, it all rings a little too familiar to be genuinely exciting, and the busy artwork makes it hard to connect with the characters. However, it at least feels like a story built on firmer ground than some of the Buffy comics that preceded it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Buffy: The Last Vampire Slayer #3
October 4, 2023
|
|
Thessaly remains a compelling character and a believable evolution of the Slayer role for a new generation. However, Buffy the Last Vampire Slayer needs greater focus in its plotting and visual storytelling if its creators hope to do the character justice.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Cable (2017) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Cable #155
March 21, 2018
|
|
Cable being Cable, those specters are especially literal and deadly, but its good to see "the man called Cable" fulfilling his potential again.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Cable #157
May 16, 2018
|
|
Cable continues to weave a terrifying web through Cable's history, this time through a locked room scenario in which everyone happens to be an incredibly powerful mutant.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Captain America (2017) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Captain America #699
March 7, 2018
|
|
Chris Samnee sure knows how to draw a Captain America action sequence. He gets to draw a few in this issue, the middle chapter of the three-issue "Out of Time" arc, and they are as dynamic and graceful as fans have come to expect.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Captain America #703
June 6, 2018
|
|
Any attempt at subtlety that Mark Waid may have been making in his latest Captain America story goes out the window in #703 as the conflict becomes defined as the technocratic, universalist, elite blue-skinned Kree against the retrograde fascism and hate of the Red Skull, with regular people caught in the middle, their only hope resting with America's youth -- literally, youngest descendant of Captain America.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Carnage (2023) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Carnage #3
January 31, 2024
|
|
Even as Carnage #3 offers up the series' centerpiece a showdown between the original Cletus Kasidy and the Carnage symbiote, with its coughed-up clone it lacks the focus and seems at odds with itself.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Carnage #4
February 28, 2024
|
|
The book slow crawl and lack of clear purpose make it ill-positioned for a crossover with another title, but all Carnage stories seem to inevitable lead back to Venom, and here we are.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Carnage #6
April 10, 2024
|
|
It feels like there are ideas buried here, but the lack of mood and motion makes it hard to invest in whatever the narrative is trying to say.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Casual Fling |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Casual Fling #4
May 26, 2021
|
|
Casual Fling started as the kind of sex thriller you don't see much of in comics and lost its focus a bit in the middle, but at least it wraps up tidily, even if the finale lacks flair.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Chris Claremont Anniversary Special #1 |
Jan 13, 2021
show
|
|
Only die-hard fans will want to glance at this, and even those will likely forget it soon after.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Clear (2021) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Clear #1
October 13, 2021
|
|
With the impeccable execution of two masters at the top of their game to back it up, this is easy to recommend for anyone who wants unnervingly relevant genre fiction.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Clear #2
November 17, 2021
|
|
Manapul doesn't get quite the same opportunities to flourish here as he was in the first issue. However, he still turns the high-quality visuals expected of a master as Clear continues to dig into what is so subtly haunting about our current existence.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Clear #3
December 22, 2021
|
|
The explanation for Dunes' helmet handprints comes dangerously close to being over-the-top melodramatic, but the grounded tone helps rein it all in for another engrossing issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Clear #4
January 26, 2022
|
|
The issue begins with Dunes hanging on for dear life and ends with him willingly diving off a bridge, a poetic microcosm of Dunes' descent through the pages of this masterfully crafted slice of tech-noir storytelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Clear #5
March 23, 2022
|
|
It's a largely conversational issue, meaning Manapul doesn't have as many opportunities to flex. However, he still delivers an exceptionally crafted issue of teeth-grinding noir accented by burnt-out colors as everything Dunes had taken for granted falls apart around him. Bring on the conclusion, and soon, please.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Clear #6
June 1, 2022
|
|
Clear's dystopian future feels frighteningly familiar, making it a vital, essential work of cyberpunk neo-noir.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Conan The Barbarian (2019) |
11 issues
show
|
|
|
Conan The Barbarian #2
January 16, 2019
|
|
Mahmud Asrar continues to excel with his depiction of Conan's fantasy world, and he and Aaron seem to be settling into an episodic rhythm with the series that fans of Howard's short stories will likely appreciate.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Conan The Barbarian #5
April 3, 2019
|
|
Conan the Barbarian #5 feels a bit like a greatest hits of Conan stories. Jason Aaron and Mahmud Asrar offer a tale with pirates, cursed idols, elder gods, monsters, and storms at sea; it's Conan at his most anguished and most joyous.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Conan: Serpent War |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo #1
June 2, 2021
|
|
Crush & Lobo #1 does an excellent job of entirely investing readers in Crush's story and the internal conflict that will almost certainly manifest as external butt-kicking in the issues to come.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo #2
July 7, 2021
|
|
Tamaki is still having fun having Crush address the reader with a vague air of disdain, and it works because we understand how much that attitude is a front to protect Crush from herself.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo #3
August 4, 2021
|
|
Crush & Lobo has been excellent thus far, and while this issue has to do some heavy lifting to keep the story moving at a decent pace, it seems set to only get more wild from here on out.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo #5
October 6, 2021
|
|
Crush & Lobo takes a turn for the weird(er) in its fifth issue, somehow turning this chapter into a riff on fairy tales, Hansel & Gretel in particular. It's an odd choice, but it maintains the clever, reader-facing writing, brilliant penciling, and neon coloring that have defined the book's aesthetic from the start.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo #7
December 8, 2021
|
|
This installment may not be the most emotionally rich issue of the series, but who can argue with a lovingly crafted game of capture the bounty between Crush and her deadbeat space dad?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Crush & Lobo #8
January 5, 2022
|
|
The final chapter of the excellent Crush & Lobo series suffers from a case of narrative indecision, seemingly caught between providing a sense of closure and leaving the conclusion open-ended enough for a sequel.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Daredevil (2015) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Daredevil #599
February 21, 2018
|
|
It all comes together beautifully in a brutally understated moment of surprise from Muse and a final page that promises a big finale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Good Deeds |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Good Deeds #1
May 17, 2023
|
|
What comes next as Dark Space: Good Deeds continues will ultimately determine whether this introduction is worthwhile, but the chances seem good that'll only get more interesting from here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Good Deeds #2
June 28, 2023
|
|
Dark Spaces: Good Deeds #2 keeps the Vertigo vibes established in the first issue but still hasn't firmly differentiated itself from other stories in the genre, ultimately repeating the same narrative bits.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Good Deeds #4
September 6, 2023
|
|
It's a version of the old "built on a native burial ground" trope, but Good Deeds treats the idea with more respect, nuance, and detail than usually afforded by shlocky horror stories.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Hollywood Special |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Wildfire |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Dark Spaces: Wildfire #4
October 12, 2022
|
|
Dark Spaces: Wildfire #4 reads faster than the previous three. That may be because, as the metaphorical fire running parallel to this story reaches the "high heat" phase, there's not much left to do but step on the gas with action and twists.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Dark X-Men (2023) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Dark X-Men #1
August 16, 2023
|
|
Even if the reader doesn't recognize or appreciate the issue's subtext, this is an enjoyable superhero book for anyone attracted to the darker side of the genre.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dark X-Men #2
September 20, 2023
|
|
The focus on mood results in a sluggish pace of the plotmuch of Dark X-Men #2 is spent on bickering between teammates and the filling in of backstoriesbut it's a worthwhile tradeoff when the mood is apple this well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dark X-Men #3
October 25, 2023
|
|
The pacing is a bit on the slow side, but Foxe is still nailing that horror-tinged narration, and there's enough weird going on here to want to keep reading.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dark X-Men #4
November 15, 2023
|
|
Dark X-Men #4 starts on a strange foot. Gambit touches base with his wife Rogue, who hasn't appeared previously in the series, seemingly as a reason for him to recap the series thus far. Given this is the penultimate installment of a five-issue series, that hardly seems necessary. Once that's out of the way, Steve Foxe, Jonas Scharf, and Frank Martin kick things into a higher gear with a mercilessness typically reserved for horror stories rather than superheroes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dark X-Men #5
December 13, 2023
|
|
The artwork remains as appropriately dark as it has been, setting a grim mood, but much of the action feels uninspired, perhaps because the real conflict is in the staredown between the Goblin Queens while other threats previously built up as formidable fall fairly quickly.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Dazzler: X-Song #1 |
Jun 06, 2018
show
|
|
|
|
|
Natalie Abrams;Michael Conrad;Ethan Sacks;Josh Trujillo #1 |
Dec 13, 2023
show
|
|
As a package deal, DC's 'Twas the Mite Before Christmas is hardly essential reading but should satisfy anyone with a craving for holiday heroics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Deadweights (2024) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Deadweights #1
April 10, 2024
|
|
A clashing of tones that fails to commit to one sensibility or another, or even to the tension between, creates a disorienting reading experience that fails to pose some obvious and important questions about its central characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Deadweights #4
July 10, 2024
|
|
There's still the lingering question about making restitution for their past deeds, but by giving us a glimpse at the normal, mundane lives they may choose to live, Deadweights #4 goes a long way in creating empathy for these burned-out henchmen.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Deadweights #5
August 7, 2024
|
|
Ultimately, this is all thematically muddied, with Deadweights suffering an identity crisis that mirrors its main character.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Death Orb |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Death Orb #1
October 3, 2018
|
|
Death Orb #1 doesn't offer a lot of substance to sink your teeth into, so far it has a pretty basic lone-desert wander on a quest plot and not much else, but the execution is good enough that if you appreciate any of the influences mentioned above you may want to keep an eye on it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Death Orb #2
November 7, 2018
|
|
What action is included is competently done, but there's just not enough substance or flair in this comic to be truly memorable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Demon Days (2021) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Demon Days: Blood Feud #1
March 23, 2022
|
|
"The Yashida Saga" ends true to form, with gorgeous artwork and a fable-like tone, but an ambition to expand the Demon Days universe further keeps the ending from being entirely satisfying.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Demon Days: X-Men #1
March 3, 2021
|
|
It's Japanese mythology with a Marvel universe glamour. The company's characters are stretched and contorted to fit into the legend rather than the other way around.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Demon Wars: Down In Flames #1 |
Feb 01, 2023
show
|
|
If you love Momoko's work or are interested in Japanese folklore, that's likely enough to make the issue worthwhile, but the storytelling leaves something to be desired.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Doctor Strange (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Doctor Strange #386
February 28, 2018
|
|
Donny Cates continues to do a great job of redefining Stephen Strange's personality. Other writers have pegged arrogance as Strange's tragic flaw, but Cates goes deeper, showing Strange's pride, temper, and wariness.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Doctor Strange #387
March 14, 2018
|
|
The ongoing petty rivalry between Strange and Loki is enough to make this issue worth checking out, but the way Nico Henrichon depicts Las Vegas as a stygian abyss makes it a must-read comic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Doctor Strange: Damnation |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Doctor Strange: Damnation #2
March 7, 2018
|
|
With all of the overblown setup and tying into Secret Empire out of the way, Doctor Strange: Damnation #2 is able to play to writer Nick Spencer's strength: his ability to write fun banter for a motley crew of B-list characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Doctor Who: The Thirteenth Doctor |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Dune: House Atreides (2020) |
13 issues
show
|
|
|
Dune: House Atreides #3
December 23, 2020
|
|
When it isn't confounding, it's merely dull, going through the motions to tell a story we already know the most important beats of and failing to add anything of interest to the larger narrative.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dune: House Atreides #8
June 30, 2021
|
|
Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson's prequel story hasn't been all that compelling of a read before this, but now that it's just checking boxes, it's somehow even more rote than before.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Dune: House Atreides: Blood of the Sardaukar #1
July 28, 2021
|
|
But the issue's greatest sin is trying to convince us of the nobility of these political death troopers with the trite notion that, if not for Bashar's flash of conscience during the raid, the Dune saga might have played out differently. Color me unconvinced.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Dune: House Harkonnen #2 |
Feb 22, 2023
show
|
|
The plot is spread too thin, is so lacking in focus that it's a struggle even to enjoy it as a fictional history of a fascinating universe. It's almost literally a shadow of what spawned it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Dune: The Waters of Kanly |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Dune: The Waters of Kanly #3
July 13, 2022
|
|
Ultimately, the issue doesn't do much that one couldn't gather from a Wikipedia summary, failing to truly engage the reader at any point with its thin plot, near-nonexistent characterizations, and competent but unmemorable artwork.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Elfquest: Stargazer's Hunt |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Extermination (2018) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Extermination #3
September 26, 2018
|
|
Extermination gets another strong chapter that isn't quite as jaw-dropping as its first, but avoids the pacing pitfalls of its second.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Extermination #4
October 31, 2018
|
|
It may not be Extermination's strongest chapter, but it ends on a note that is sure to have X-Men fans talking until the final issue arrives.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Exterminated: X-Men #1
December 5, 2018
|
|
X-Men: The Extermined features two separate stories. The first is a direct follow-up to the death of Cable in Extermination. Written by Lonnie Nadler and Zac Thompson, the story focuses on Hope Summers and Jean Grey and feels like both an epilogue to Extermination and a coda to the writers' recent run on the Cable ongoing series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Extreme Carnage: Scream #1 |
Jul 14, 2021
show
|
|
The most noteworthy thing about Extreme Carnage: Scream is how bluntly it shows Marvel symbiote events' dull, repetitive nature.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Faithless #1 |
Apr 10, 2019
show
|
|
Azarrelo is unfurling this mystery slowly, and much of the dialogue is oddly affected, but Llovett's artwork is stunning throughout.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Fall of the House of X (2024) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Fall of the House of X #1
January 3, 2024
|
|
They say you can't go home again. After reading Fall of the House of X #1, it feels like Marvel and the series' creative team may be poised to test that maxim, clumsily stumbling all the way back to Xavier's front door. -
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Fall of the House of X #3
March 13, 2024
|
|
At three issues in, Fall of the House of X has become the antithesis of the House of X miniseries from which it takes its name. Where Jonathan Hickman insisted that all other X-Men titles end before he began his run to ensure that House of X (and Powers of X) were the sole, singular X-Men narrative for readers to focus on, Fall of the House of X feels less like a story in itself and more like a highlight reel of events happening in the handful of other Fall of X stories that are running simultaneously.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Fearless (2019) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Fearless #1
July 24, 2019
|
|
Fearless #1 is an excellent package that shows off some of Marvel's best established and up-and-coming talents. Anyone looking for the future of comics should look here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Fearless #2
August 21, 2019
|
|
Fearless #2 isn't quite the perfect anthology that the first issue was, but it's a solid showcase of Marvel's female talent and characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Fearless #3
September 25, 2019
|
|
Alyss Wong and Alti Firmansyah close it out with a short, light-hearted Wolverine and Jubillee story. Fearless remains an excellent showcase for Marvel's female talent and characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Firefly (2018) |
38 issues
show
|
|
|
Firefly #1
November 14, 2018
|
|
Excellent craft and a compelling story come together to create a comic book that Browncoats are likely to be very, very pleased with.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #2
December 19, 2018
|
|
Like most episodes of Firefly, all of this ends up putting a lot of pressure on the relationships between the members of that crew, which inevitably leads to more than one of them doing something noble but stupid that may only make the situation worse. In other words, it's exactly the kind of story Firefly fans crave.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #3
January 16, 2019
|
|
It seems influenced by classic sci-fi and western comics which, considering Firefly's premise, makes a lot of sense. And it feels less like a comic book doing its best to imitate the television series or the film and more like Firefly re-imagined as story native to the comic book form.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #4
February 27, 2019
|
|
Since this comic takes place before the events of Serenity, we know that the crew is going to make it out OK, but it is to the creative team's credit that finding out how -- which remains unclear at this point -- still feels like something to look forward to.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #7
June 19, 2019
|
|
As usual, Dan McDaid draws pulpy action with as much skill as he does expressive characters. He also offers one of the most beautiful renditions of Serenity fans have ever seen, with the help of Marcelo Costa's colors.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #8
July 17, 2019
|
|
Watching the relationship between Mal and Boss Moon blossom into a friendship has been delightful, and Pak again gives the less violent members of the crew"Inara, Book, Wash"ample time to shine. This series is a delight for Firefly fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #9
September 18, 2019
|
|
This story is getting a bit long in the tooth and its time to find its resolution, but that's not to say it hasn't been fun a ride getting there.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #10
October 16, 2019
|
|
It feels a bit like Greg Pak is playing a game of "yes, and" with himself that has gotten out of hand, as each new issue of Firefly adds more chaotic elements to the mix.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #11
November 20, 2019
|
|
It may not be the most cohesive and concise tale, but it's still fun and man can Dan McDaid draw sci-fi goodness.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #12
December 18, 2019
|
|
Now that it's all told, "The Unification War" is a wild ride that gives Firefly fans a dose of the familiar and double dose of the unexpected.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #13
January 22, 2020
|
|
Mal's motivations here seem slightly out of character as his whole mission has always been to keep Serenity flying, not to set done for good, but conflict is interesting enough to roll with that indiscretion for now.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #14
February 19, 2020
|
|
Though the storytelling is muddy in places, the style is strong, and Firefly fans will find plenty to enjoy here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #18
July 29, 2020
|
|
With the arrival of someone calling themselves "The Bandit King," this arc may be falling into the same problem as the previous arc, with too much going on to keep the focus where it needs to be. Still, for now, it remains a decent way to spend time with the Serenity crew.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #19
August 19, 2020
|
|
The issue builds up to twist that's telegraphed well in advance, and there's the creeping sense that this storyline"built on a quality premise"may be past its prime.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #20
September 16, 2020
|
|
Francesco Segala shows some real versatility as a colorist, switching between the Boros desert's earthiness to jungle vistas and lush plains, even if his lighting effects occasionally wash out characters in an odd way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #21
October 21, 2020
|
|
It is a little strange having RoboCops running around the Firefly universe, especially those with Mal's face. Still, it's exciting to see that Pak is taking the crew into some complicated and relevant territory.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #22
November 18, 2020
|
|
Both Lalit Kumar Sharma and Danil Bayliss turn in solid line work, though the former's sudden switch to the latter is jarring. A stellar issue all around.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #23
December 9, 2020
|
|
As with the last issue, they both do decent work, but their different styles make for a jarring transition, especially when there's no apparent logic as to who draws which pages. Despite that, Firefly fans are likely to have a smile on their faces after putting this issue down.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #24
December 16, 2020
|
|
For the most part, the issue hangs together on the strength of Pak's dialogue and enjoyable, if not coherent, artwork.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #25
January 27, 2021
|
|
Firefly #25 from Greg Pak and Pius Bak is a sudden and drastic departure from what the series has been up until now.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #26
February 24, 2021
|
|
While the resolution of the previous issue's cliffhanger doesn't live up to the hype, it'll still further invest fans in this new future for the Serenity crew.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #27
March 31, 2021
|
|
The issue provides mostly smooth storytelling and proves a fascinating chapter for Firefly as this new age continues to take shape.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #29
May 26, 2021
|
|
All in all, it's a solid enough entry in the continuing comic book misadventures of the Serenity and its crew members.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #30
June 23, 2021
|
|
The artwork veers too far into the cartoonish, at times feeling empty and flat, to convey the weight of the situation. It's serviceable and gets some bonus points for trying to imbue the comic with more worthy thematic underpinnings than its source material.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #33
October 27, 2021
|
|
There are the bones of a good story here, and Pak's characterizations are always spot on, but it's all a bit too muddled to appreciate fully.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #34
December 1, 2021
|
|
The Firefly series is way out of the franchise's comfort zone at this point, but this installment makes for solid reading.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly #36
January 26, 2022
|
|
It's not the conclusion most would expect, but little about Pak's run has been, and this finale radiates that he's entirely at peace with that.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly: 20th Anniversary Special
August 31, 2022
|
|
In a way, it's a microcosmic example of the odd direction the Firefly comics have gone in since coming to Boom, with the characters behaving like cartoonish versions of themselves ("It's Jayne time"?) and a heavy reliance on sci-fi plot devices, neither of which helps to elevates a mediocre celebration.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly: Bad Company #1
March 20, 2019
|
|
There's a nice bit of connectivity hidden here that will reward those who have been reading Boom's ongoing Firefly series. Otherwise, it's frustrating to see a good idea fall to confounding and disappointing execution.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly: River Run #1
September 29, 2021
|
|
River Run doesn't live up to its full potential. Still, for a story that probably never needed telling, it proves a much more enjoyable read than most such interstitial franchise tie-ins.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Firefly: Blue Sun Rising (2020) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Firefly: Blue Sun Rising #0
October 2, 2020
|
|
This issue's story is somewhat muted, with the problem child robot partner introduced and dispensed of without any real rise in tension. But the narrative raises some interesting questions about where Firefly is going, sets the stage for exciting things to come, and looks good while doing it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Firefly: Brand New 'Verse |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Firefly: Brand New 'Verse #3
May 12, 2021
|
|
It isn't a perfect issue, as Simon explicitly stating that his family's safety is paramount and then ignoring Zoe's warning boggles the mind, and Lucia Di Giammarino's colors are still too washed out. However, it's a step in the right direction.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly: Brand New 'Verse #6
August 18, 2021
|
|
Brand New 'Verse's peak into the future of the Firefly universe ends quietly. With most of the character conflicts resolved in the previous issue, the finale is a pretty by-the-book escape with the aid of a conveniently place Inara and River's telekinetic friend.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Firefly: The Fall Guys (2023) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Firefly: The Fall Guys #1
September 6, 2023
|
|
It's a newcomer-friendly issue as it goes out of its way to present a full crew roll call over multiple pages. While the sci-fi elements may be toned down, the story still operates on a larger-than-usual scale, involving a political assassination that could affect the whole galaxy.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly: The Fall Guys #3
November 8, 2023
|
|
There's a rocket-powered stagecoach in this issue of Firefly: The Fall Guys, and I feel like that's somehow symbolic of how far the Boom Studios take on the series in comics has fallen.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Firefly: The Fall Guys #4
January 10, 2024
|
|
Firefly: The Fall Guys #4 feels like it is retreading old ground as the Serenity crew and the Archambeau Gang continue this endless process of trying to frame and/or kill each other.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Future State (2021) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Future State: Superman/Wonder Woman #2
February 10, 2021
|
|
Dan Watters' narration has the tone of a storyteller recalling a myth to children gathered around a fire, giving the tale an epic quality. Leila del Duca's artwork is up the task, depicting the heroes taking on Herculean challenges with a statuesque style befitting the gods.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (2023) |
10 issues
show
|
|
|
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #302
December 20, 2023
|
|
Larry Hama proved that gets how to use "silence" effectively in comics long ago, with the release of "Silent Interlude," his memorable silent story published in GI Joe: A Real American Hero #21. GI Joe: A Real American Hero #302 isn't entirely silent, but there are pages where Hama steps back and lets Chris Mooneyham and Francesco Segala's beautifully dramatic visuals breathe, and the issue is better for it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #307
June 19, 2024
|
|
This issue sees the cold war between the various factions turning hot, affecting the vibe of an action movie, with standout moments like a Joe pulling the trigger on a cyborg's eye socket from point-blank range. If that sounds like your thing, this book will speak to you.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. (2023) |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. #1
October 4, 2023
|
|
G.O.D.S. #1 meets and subverts expectations, leaning into some familiar Hickman tropes while shining the narrative spotlight in unexpected places.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. #2
November 8, 2023
|
|
Jonathan Hickman's commitment to treating the new additions he's introduced into the Marvel Universe in G.O.D.S. as if they've always been there is commendable and effective.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. #3
December 20, 2023
|
|
G.O.D.S. is still laying out the full enormity of its mysteries, but it's doing so in a way that will ensure readers are too hooked to do anything but see all the way through.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. #5
February 21, 2024
|
|
G.O.D.S. #5 is the most streamlined, quickest read issue of Jonathan Hickman, Valerio Schti, and Marvel Gracia's high-concept Marvel Comics series thus far.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. #6
March 27, 2024
|
|
Reading G.O.D.S. feels a bit like watching the creators pull a sleight-of-hand trick. Many of the flourishes associated with Jonathan Hickman's writing style are a presenta sense of gravitas and mystery, systems within systemsyet, underneath that veneer, the series hasn't revealed much conflict or plot to latch onto and remains content to slowly build out its new take on Marvel's cosmic power balance as an exercise in pure worldbuilding.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
G.O.D.S. #7
April 24, 2024
|
|
It's a personal issue that doesn't shy away from having Dimitri may a defiant, definitive statement on what matters to him. It's also tragic, though not quite as a heart-rending it seems intent on being, perhaps because it isn't all that hard to figure out what the downer twist before it lands. That said, the art remains gorgeous, and G.O.D.S., as it nears it (apparent) end, continues to feel like it is just now beginning to ramp up to something.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Generation X #87 |
Feb 21, 2018
show
|
|
It's disappointing that this series was cut so short, but at least it's going out in style.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Giant-Size: Thor #1 |
Aug 21, 2024
show
|
|
Right now, this feels like an inessential addition to Ewing's ongoing Thor saga, but only time will tell if that proves to be the case in the long run.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Go Go Power Rangers #27 |
Jan 15, 2020
show
|
|
Go Go Power Rangers maintains that powerful alchemy of melodrama, giant robot fights, and action that makes Power Rangers what it is.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
God of Tremors #1 |
Aug 18, 2021
show
|
|
Peter Milligan and Piotr Kowalski do their best gothic horror impersonation in God of Tremors from AfterShock Comix. As an exercise in genre, it's largely successful.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
God of War (2018) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
God of War: Fallen God #1
March 10, 2021
|
|
Perhaps the series will pick up as we get closer to uncovering how Kratos go to where he was at the beginning of the 2018 series relaunch, but this opening salvo is an uninspired bore.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
God of War: Fallen God #2
April 7, 2021
|
|
After two issues of hollow navel-gazing and half an issue of working up to it, perhaps the next issue will eventually see this God of War series living up to its namesake.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Godzilla: Here There Be Dragons (2023) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Gone (2023) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Gone #1
October 25, 2023
|
|
While Gone #1's visuals are as strong as anyone familiar with Jock's work would expect, its vagaries fail to build a setting readers can believe in, leaving much of the issue's narrative scaffolding feeling like half-formed thoughts in Jock's mind.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Gone #2
February 7, 2024
|
|
Jock's artwork is as stellar as ever, walking that line between gritty realism and impressionistic flair, but while focusing on Abi and her father may be beneficial, it still feels like much of Gone's narrative picture is unpainted.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Gone #3
May 8, 2024
|
|
In wrapping up Gone, Jock provides a sensible conclusion to Abi's story that doesn't fully cover some of the weaknesses in the series overall.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Green Arrow #7 |
Dec 27, 2023
show
|
|
The issue wobbles a bit but doesn't fall down, keeping this stellar series on the right track.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Hardcore (2018) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Hardcore #1
December 19, 2018
|
|
Basically, if you're a fan of action movies that take clever sci-fi concepts and do basically nothing with them concoct increasingly ridiculous action pieces, then Hardcore might be your jam. Otherwise, not so much.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Head Lopper |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Head Lopper #11
March 13, 2019
|
|
If knights fighting wizards and goblin hordes that worship toad gods sounds like your jam, Head Lopper will not leave you disappointed.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
High Level |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
High Level #1
February 20, 2019
|
|
High Level #1 is an introductory issue at its core, but it's introducing readers to a world that is worth investigating. The themes here are rich, reflecting the tension inherent in consumerist society.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Hit-Girl (2018) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Hit-Girl #11
December 12, 2018
|
|
It is all feels a bit rote at this point. At least Rafael Albuquerque looks good, even if it isn't pushing any boundaries.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
House of Whispers (2018) |
15 issues
show
|
|
|
House of Whispers #8
April 10, 2019
|
|
Nalo Hopkinson and Dan Watters are turning the disjointed narrative that House of Whispers began with and turning it into a cohesive narrative, though there's still some work left to do.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
House of Whispers #11
July 10, 2019
|
|
Of all the Sandman Universe series, House of Whispers has been the hardest to latch onto, but the series continues to improve as we get to know these characters more and the story gains greater focus.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
House of Whispers #20
May 6, 2020
|
|
It's a story that needs more room to breathe, but there's something to be said for a single comic packing in this much thematic strength into a single issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
House of X |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
House of X #1
July 24, 2019
|
|
The era of X-Men has arrived. It's fascinating, it's well-drawn and well-colored, it has great character moments, and it has direction. But it is not the X-Men as you've ever seen them before.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
House of X #2
August 7, 2019
|
|
Jonathan Hickman and company continue to stun with their reinvention of the X-Men. House of X #2 hits pauses on the story of Krakoa begun in the previous issue and builds tangentially from a major moment in Powers of X #2.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
House of X #4
September 4, 2019
|
|
On a plot level, we're still asking the same questions we were after reading last week's issue, but this issue proves some moments are worth lingering on.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
House of X #6
October 2, 2019
|
|
Anyone expecting Hickman to pull the rug out from under readers by the end will be disappointed (though there's still next week's Powers of X), and that makes the series as a whole that much more powerful.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Howard the Duck #1 |
Nov 29, 2023
show
|
|
|
|
|
Hunt For Wolverine #1 |
Apr 25, 2018
show
|
|
If you're in it for the craft, then the work that was done on "Secrets and Lives" may be worth the inflated cost that comes from being bundled with "Hunter's Pryde." Maybe.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Ice Man (2018) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Ice Man #2
October 10, 2018
|
|
It will prove satisfying to some hardcore X-Men fans, but lacks much of the energy and excitement that infused the first issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ice Man #3
November 7, 2018
|
|
This five-issue Iceman revival is only three issues in and already it seems to be spreading itself pretty thin.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ice Man #4
December 19, 2018
|
|
Iceman was supposed to be one of Marvel's canceled-too-soon, returned from the dead fan-favorite series, but at this point it seems like maybe it really has run its course.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Immoral X-Men (2023) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Immoral X-Men #2
March 15, 2023
|
|
As a Star Trek and X-Men fan, this issue has me squarely in its crosshairs, but regardless, it's compelling and well-crafted stuff.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Immortal Hulk |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Immortal Hulk #14
March 6, 2019
|
|
There's a moment that, taken in a vacuum, feels like a cheap attempt to shock the reader, but it is clear before the issue ends that there's more going on. Plus, Ewing has been doing this, and doing it well, long enough to earn the benefit of the doubt.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Hulk #16
April 3, 2019
|
|
The world continues to grow darker around Bruce Banner, and this issue's final page hints that his mind may be more fractured than anyone thought.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Immortal Thor (2023) |
14 issues
show
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #1
August 23, 2023
|
|
Despite the return of Thor's classic Jack Kirby-designed costume, fans of Ewing's Marvel work know better than to expect a retrograde "back to basics" approach. Instead, this opening chapter offers something more foundational, elemental, and compelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #3
October 25, 2023
|
|
While it fits nicely into the overarching Immortal Thor story, Immortal Thor #3 also serves as a self-contained story done in the style of a Norse fable and it all works perfectly.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #4
November 15, 2023
|
|
If there's an award to be given out for the best first page of a comic book in the year 2023 then I'd like to nominate the opening splash of Immortal Thor #4.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #6
January 24, 2024
|
|
The issue's abrupt end is its weak point and feels haphazardly attached, but the rest of the issue moves at a deliberate pace as Loki recounts the tale of Thor's first meeting with the Utgard gods.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #7
February 28, 2024
|
|
It's an entertaining read but feels primarily invested in laying groundwork and seeding themes that will pay off later in the series' run.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #9
April 3, 2024
|
|
The Immortal Thor is now verging on becoming fully metatextual, a rumination on the compromises made to turn a god of myth into a marketable superhero and the responsibilities that such an icon has accrued since comics have gone from being the disposable entertainment of certain relatively small subcultures to a dominant global entertainment force.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #11
May 22, 2024
|
|
Immortal Thor becomes one of the early adopters of the new cosmic Marvel paradigm laid out in Jonathan Hickman and Valerio Schti's GODS, and it's a fine fit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #13
July 31, 2024
|
|
Most importantly, Immortal Thor #13 presents a compelling and entertaining story with strong characterizations, captivating action, and an immersive atmosphere.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal Thor #14
August 14, 2024
|
|
Part of why the action-packed issue works as well as it does is that it isn't simply a fight, but lesson, a test that Hercules and Thor must pass, challenging their wit as well as their combat skills, creating a clever and satisfying experience for the readers.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men (2022) |
18 issues
show
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #1
March 30, 2022
|
|
Gillen, Werneck, and Curiel have successfully managed to find an inventive, exciting, and surprising new angle on what's already the freshest take on the X-Men in decades, and this finely crafted debut issue will quickly have readers hooked.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #3
June 22, 2022
|
|
While the layouts do an admirable job of giving the story the gravity appropriate to the writing of a new mutant testament, it's a shame that the visages alternate between lifelessness and overly-exaggerated, and the colors fall somewhat flat. These shortcomings may fail to elevate the issue to greatness, but neither do they too-greatly impede an otherwise enthralling read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #4
July 13, 2022
|
|
Kieron Gillen has proven time and again that he's able to find great nuance and depth in almost any character. He's put that talent on display with each issue of Immortal X-Men thus far and Immortal X-Men #4, focusing on Emma Frost, is no exception.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #5
August 3, 2022
|
|
The issue is probably the most interesting character work Exodus has received in his 30-year history, but this issue needed a stronger emotional underpinning for the ecclesiological thought experiment to land with a stronger impact.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #6
September 7, 2022
|
|
The visuals are as they have been, perhaps too realistically rendered and a bit flat but otherwise serviceable, which is also how I'd describe the issue holistically.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #7
October 12, 2022
|
|
Immortal X-Men #7 succinctly shows Kurt's roguishness and devoutness come from the same place, which may make this issue the definitive Nightcrawler story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #8
November 16, 2022
|
|
Leave it to Kieron Gillen to take the question of why Chris Claremont decided to give Destiny the same name as Irene Adler from the Sherlock Holmes stories and turn it into a stellar story that reads like it was always meant this way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #10
January 18, 2023
|
|
This issue of Immortal X-Men is a bold one, tackling multiple complex ideas wrapped up in the X-Men mythology, from the flawed character of Professor X to the self-policing politics of the X-Men as a superhero team, to the limits of the mutant metaphor.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #11
May 3, 2023
|
|
Gillen's depiction of Storm at her righteous best and self-righteous worst is beautiful character work that, combined with Werneck's excellent artwork and wrapped in layers upon layers of intrigue, makes this one of Immortal X-Men's best issues yet.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #12
June 7, 2023
|
|
Gillen leverages Colossus' Russian heritage to play into parallels with Russian literary tragedies to clever effect, and the idea that fear of terrible things happening is what causes those things rings true throughout multiple subplots.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #13
July 12, 2023
|
|
Marvel has been teasing the "Fall of X" for a while now, playing with the idea that it may be the end of the Krakoan era or a play on words as the X-Men line heads into autumn. Kieron Gillen writes that ambiguity into Immortal X-Men #13, the final issue of the series before the 2023 Hellfire Gala special, Krakoa's leaves falling from its branches.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #14
August 9, 2023
|
|
Gillen and company have interpreted the Fall of X to be in the same vein as the Fall of Man, and that's a gripping direction to take the series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #15
September 6, 2023
|
|
It's two fronts of the war for Eden, fought amongst the fallen, and if this is going to be Krakoa's last act, that's a hell of a note to go out on.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Immortal X-Men #17
November 22, 2023
|
|
With Lucas Werneck moving on to other things, Marvel Comics calls on Juan Jose Ryp to draw Immortal X-Men #17 and it proves to be an issue that plays to the artist's considerable strengths.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Indigo Children (2023) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Indigo Children #1
March 29, 2023
|
|
Indigo Children #1 doesn't deliver enough. It's derivative, ineffective at the basic tenets of the genre it's trying to play in, and the execution of its simple plot is rough around the edges.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Indigo Children #2
April 26, 2023
|
|
The whole thing feels hollow, a style in search of a purpose, and a mystery imploring readers to place unearned trust in the book as it unravels.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Indigo Children #3
May 24, 2023
|
|
It still reads like a lesser version of other comics, particularly the 2012 Harbinger relaunch, but this installment reads smoothly, at least.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Indigo Children #4
June 28, 2023
|
|
The artwork is a little looser in spots here, but it is unlikely to change anyone's mind about the series, which continues to be a dry and unmemorable read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Indigo Children #5
July 26, 2023
|
|
Indigo Children continues to be a case of style over substance, essentially a prolonged action movie sequence in search of even a shred of emotional resonance and reconfigured into comic book form.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Inferno (2021) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Inferno #1
September 29, 2021
|
|
Inferno #1 looks to be a powerful ending to Hickman's time working on the X-Men line, bringing forth all the same attributes that set readers abuzz during his debut. It provides the sense he's leaving nothing on the table.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Inferno #3
December 8, 2021
|
|
Hickman and company manage to create a palpable sense of tension in every segment of this issue as they rewrite the past, present, and future of Marvel's mutants. It's an impressive feat to behold.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Inferno #4
January 5, 2022
|
|
It's a fascinating and compelling way to end this era, even if it can't quite match the brilliance of how it all began.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Infinity Wars #1 |
Aug 01, 2018
show
|
|
Gerry Duggan, Mike Deodato, and Frank Martin have delivered a brilliant opening salvo for a series that seems to be truly aiming for the stars. The issue is engrossing and leaves readers wanting more. With Infinity Wars #1, the next true Marvel epic has arrived.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Invisible Kingdom |
10 issues
show
|
|
|
Invisible Kingdom #2
April 24, 2019
|
|
It still feels a bit like we're waiting for liftoff when it comes to the plot, with G. Willow Wilson taking her time to thread these two narratives into one, and that's fine as long as the payoff is worth the wait.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Invisible Kingdom #8
December 18, 2019
|
|
Christian Ward's art is still beautiful, but looking rushed in place in this issue. There's a whole conversation where one character's face is a featureless, yellow slate. But with a statement of intent made, it'll be interesting to see where the creative team takes it through the rest of the arc.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Invisible Woman (2019) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Invisible Woman #1
July 10, 2019
|
|
A solo adventure crafted with reasonable competency like this one could be enough of a draw. For those less invested, the appeal is hard to see.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Invisible Woman #2
August 7, 2019
|
|
Somehow, after more than a year of consistent excellence, Immortal Hulk continues to remind readers why it's the strongest superhero series around.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Invisible Woman #3
September 11, 2019
|
|
The storytelling is solid, characterization on point, and it looks good, there just isn't much going on beneath the surface, at least not in this issue. But if you're a fan of the Fantastic Four or Invisible Woman in particular, this issue will deliver.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Jack Kirby's Starr Warriors #1 |
Sep 20, 2023
show
|
|
However, while it's hard to tell how much Scioli has changed without the original work to compare it to, the finished product hardly feels like a fully formed vision of what might have been.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Kaijumax: Season 5 |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Kaijumax: Season 5 #1
October 23, 2019
|
|
As a newbie, Kaijumax: Season Five is unlike anything else in serialized comics, a potent blend of the reality filtered through the absurd. Even five seasons in, Kaijumax reads like a giant-monster kick to the gut.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Kaijumax: Season 5 #4
August 26, 2020
|
|
Zander Cannon never ceases to amaze with his ability to blend the fantastic elements of kaiju with the harsh realities of prison culture and legal systems.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Kaijumax: Season 6 |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Kaijumax: Season 6 #4
October 27, 2021
|
|
It's incredibly affecting, and Cannon's stellar character designs, clean linework, and vibrant colors ensure the emotional storytelling never feels maudlin or manipulative. It's another brilliant issue of a brilliant comic book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Kaijumax: Season 6 #6
April 20, 2022
|
|
Zander Cannon's Kaijumax finally comes to its end with Kaijumax: Season Six #6, andlike its charactersthe issue manages to find a balance between hope and despair.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Kick-Ass (2018) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Knock Em Dead |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Knock Em Dead #1
December 2, 2020
|
|
Knock Em Dead #1 is a stellar character piece. Here's hoping the additional supernatural element in future issues proves additive rather than a distraction.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Knock Em Dead #3
February 10, 2021
|
|
The way the series expresses the act of performing standup visually is still interesting, but this issue may have derailed the entire plot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Knock Em Dead #4
March 10, 2021
|
|
It's a tricky beat to land in the confines of a monthly comic, and while the execution is flawed, the ambition, at least, is admirable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Kroma (2022) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Kroma #1
November 16, 2022
|
|
While readers will have to wait for another issue to see the main thrust of the plot revealed (one would assume), Kroma #1 stands tall as a solidly constructed feat of worldbuilding, and a considered musing on the colors of life, primarily those we fear and those of which we deprive ourselves and others.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Kroma #2
December 21, 2022
|
|
Kroma continues to be a story that is both gorgeous and compelling, deftly balancing thoughtfulness with thrills.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Kroma #3
January 18, 2023
|
|
The story's shift in its pacing as Kroma makes her journey to her new destination feels unnatural given the flow of the story thus far, but it doesn't take much away from what remains a compelling and affecting tale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Legion of X #2 |
Jun 08, 2022
show
|
|
Legion of X proves an exciting and thoughtful comic book that indulges its philosophical side while still providing sharp dialog and characterizations and an almost slapstick sense of humor and action. In other words, it's the good stuff.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Life of Wolverine #1 |
Jul 03, 2024
show
|
|
Life of Wolverine #1 adapts the vertically scrolling "Infinity Comic" by writer Jim Zub and artist Roman Bachs into print with passable results. Knowing that Life of Wolverine existed first as a webtoon-style comic, it's hard not to look for the seams where the phone-sized pieces were sewn together.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Locke & Key/Sandman: Hell & Gone |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Locke & Key/Sandman: Hell & Gone #2
September 29, 2021
|
|
This issue makes Hell & Gone a poignant end to the tale of Chamberlin Locke's family. It doubles as a wonderfully enjoyable addition for Sandman completists to enjoy, or a first taste of what's ahead for those Locke & Key fans discovering that universe for the first time.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Looney Tunes |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Looney Tunes #243
May 23, 2018
|
|
If this is your thing, you probably already know that it is. If it's not, then there's little reason to change that unless you're a very curious Westworld fan.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Looney Tunes #244
July 25, 2018
|
|
If you're not already interested, I can't say I recommend it -- I'd just as soon go watch the cartoons these are inspired by -- but I also can't really fault it for being what it is.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Looney Tunes #245
September 26, 2018
|
|
Looney Tunes #245 is another example of a comic taking typical Looney Tunes characters and humor and depriving them of the inherent energy of animation to create a kind of carbon copy homunculus of a cartoon in comic book form.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Looney Tunes #246
November 28, 2018
|
|
The rest of the issue is your pretty standard fare for Looney Tunes, which means pretty forgettable attempts at recreating the charm and energy of the cartoon.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Lucifer #1 |
Oct 17, 2018
show
|
|
Lucifer is ripe with depth and mystery that is poised to unfurl in captivating and compelling fashion.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Magic (2021) |
27 issues
show
|
|
|
Magic #2
May 11, 2021
|
|
Guara's artwork still somehow feels both incredibly busy and somewhat empty at the same time, pairing over-emphasized figures in the foreground with often blank backgrounds. Still, if you're going to do mystery in Magic, Ravnica is the place for it, and you can sense the fun McKay is having while weaving these threads.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #3
June 9, 2021
|
|
Magic: The Gathering #3 sees writer Jed McKay slowing the pace to spend some time fleshing out the Planeswalkers' backstories. Unfortunately, it's an exercise in telling instead of showing.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #4
July 7, 2021
|
|
The issue touches on worthwhile themes as the conspiracy could pit the Guilds against the guildless, an almost literal representation of the haves and the have-nots, but that's not enough to excuse such poor pacing and dull means of revelation.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #5
August 4, 2021
|
|
It's the kind of fan service you often expect from these licensed books, nothing more and nothing less.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #6
September 1, 2021
|
|
Magic: The Gathering #6 is almost entirely a backstory info dump solving the series' great mystery and setting up the story's next act, but it's least it has some depth to it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #7
October 6, 2021
|
|
As a climax to this story's first act"with much more teased by the ending"Magic: The Gathering #7 fails to deliver.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #8
November 10, 2021
|
|
The issue has the tone of a middle chapter of a long-running superhero series, restrained in action but allowing for the relationships between the heroic Planeswalkers of Ravnica to shine through and further solidify.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #9
December 8, 2021
|
|
It's a fine enough issue if you're already deeply invested in the series' story and promises a big climax in the next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #10
January 5, 2022
|
|
As the climactic chapter in this Marit Lage saga, Magic: The Gathering #10 suffers somewhat from too much going and yet not enough at the same time.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #11
February 9, 2022
|
|
While uneven, the issue assembles an exciting cast of characters for further adventures. Plus, it's full of action that's exciting enough moment to moment to overlook the thin plot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #13
April 6, 2022
|
|
While the issue doesn't do much to advance the plot, it does offer insight into these new, emerging character dynamics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #14
May 4, 2022
|
|
It's a self-contained issue that doesn't contain much action or events until the end, but it's hard to complain about a solid, standalone-ish, character-focused episode.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #15
June 1, 2022
|
|
It's a dull read that entirely focuses on the make-believe mechanics that make the plot function and little else.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #16
July 6, 2022
|
|
Magic: The Gathering #16 isn't a total wash, and fans of the series will likely find it passable, but it is significantly worse for its poor pacing, ill-suited art, and lack of attention to detail.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #17
August 3, 2022
|
|
Jed MacKay gives Niko a strong characterization in the issue, as they are shown to be fiery, empathetic, full of wonder, and also perhaps a bit reckless and impulsive.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #18
September 7, 2022
|
|
The fast-paced script plays to Ig Guara's strengths as an artist, and the colorswhile still a bit soft in softare vibrant and varied. It's an action-heavy payoff to the plot thus far and ends on a note of excitement as things seem poised only to escalate from here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #20
November 2, 2022
|
|
He adorns the plot with simplistic posturing dialogue and overbearing narration. It's a muddled end to this long Magic: The Gathering saga.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #21
December 7, 2022
|
|
The three different artists aboard make the reading of it feel disjointed as the styles are not similar nor are they sectioned off in a way that makes any particular sense. It's a minor annoyance in a functional if not particularly eventual issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #22
January 4, 2023
|
|
While reading Magic: The Gathering #22, I'm struck by how small Magic's supposedly infinite multiverse feels.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic #23
February 1, 2023
|
|
This Cliffs Notes version of the epic metaplot isn't likely to compel the uninitiated. At some point, you have to trust that those who don't know and care enough to be curious know how to look things up on the internet and tell the story with the confidence that this issue is lacking.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Magic: Planeswalker (2023) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Magic: The Hidden Planeswalker (2022) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Magic: The Hidden Planeswalker #1
April 20, 2022
|
|
While some of the lettering choices stand out poorlythe book would need a much more comedic tone for "CHOMP, BITE" to appropriately represent the sound a monstrous grub makes attempting to eat someoneThe Hidden Planeswalker #1 is a stellar start nonetheless.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic: The Hidden Planeswalker #2
May 25, 2022
|
|
For an issue primarily comprised of people doing research in a school library, Magic: The Hidden Planeswalker #2 is an engaging read. That's largely thanks to the delicate line work and iridescent colors
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magic: The Hidden Planeswalker #3
June 22, 2022
|
|
Magic: The Hidden Planeswalker has been stellar enough until now, but this issue feels like it tried to make a hairpin turn now that its secret character has been revealed and ended up skidding out. Hopefully, it can course correct in the next issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Man's Best (2024) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Man's Best #2
April 24, 2024
|
|
In its second issue, Man's Best remains a charming, well-crafted endeavor, though the pace isn't quite what one might expect.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Man's Best #3
May 22, 2024
|
|
Fans looking for a unique artistic experience won't be disappointed, but those looking for an animal adventure may be less fulfilled.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Man's Best #4
June 19, 2024
|
|
As Man's Best nears its end and the journey becomes increasingly weird, more chances are taken with layouts and compositions, which adds some flair and excitement to this issue, including one especially arresting two-page spread.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Man's Best #5
July 17, 2024
|
|
There are some questionable plot points (A brilliant scientist builds a walking death machine with only one flimsy control device?), and narrative cohesion is sacrificed for thematic grandeur, but Man's Best ends on the right note.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Marvel 2099: Fantastic Four #1 |
Nov 20, 2019
show
|
|
It's a thin tale that leans too heavily on a twist that will leave readers annoyed more than enamored.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Marvel Rising (2019) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Marvel Rising #1
March 27, 2019
|
|
Unfortunately, the simplified release program may be the most memorable thing about Marvel Rising #1 as the content of the issue uses an odd setup to present some of Marvel's most exciting new heroes at their most generic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Marvel Rising #5
July 24, 2019
|
|
. The scaffolding of all of this is by-the-books superhero fare, but the emotional core is there and shines bright enough to make it a worthwhile read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Marvel Two-In-One #12 |
Nov 28, 2018
show
|
|
Marvel Two-in-One comes to a satisfying conclusion, wrapping up all loose ends before bowing out so that the relaunched Fantastic Four comic can pick up the torch.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Merry X-Men Holiday Special #1 |
Dec 05, 2018
show
|
|
This is one that X-Men fans will enjoy and that can probably be revisited in future holiday seasons as well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Milestone 30th Anniversary #1 |
Mar 22, 2023
show
|
|
Milestone 30th Anniversary Special #1 is a lovingly crafted celebration of the Milestone legacy with something to offer fans of any version or era of these beloved characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X |
11 issues
show
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X #1
July 25, 2018
|
|
With Thompson's delightful dialogue and characterizations, Bazaldua's balance of the intimate and the exciting, and D'Armata's tone-setting, Mr. and Mrs. X seems set to deliver equal parts overdue emotional payoff and endearing adventure.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X #2
August 22, 2018
|
|
In Mr. and Mrs. X #2, Kelly Thompson and Oscar Bazaldua continue to infuse Rogue and Gambit's cosmic honeymoon with the energy and amusement of a wildy caper.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X #4
October 17, 2018
|
|
The high adventure continues in this issue, with Oscar Bazaldua delivering some great action shots and sequences of Gambit showing off his escape skills while in a Shi'ar prison.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X #5
November 21, 2018
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X slows down in its fifth issue, taking a break from the rollicking space adventure to focus in on the relationship at the core of the series, that between newlyweds Rogue and Gambit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X #8
February 13, 2019
|
|
It all adds up to an issue that's a bit flat compared to other installments of the series, but considering how good the series has been so far, that's still not bad at all.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. X #11
May 22, 2019
|
|
As Mr. and Mrs. X draws closer to its end, we get a fun, action-packed issue that begins by focusing on Gambit before putting the marriage between Remy and Rogue more in focus.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Multiple Man (2018) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Multiple Man #1
June 27, 2018
|
|
By the time readers are done with Multiple Man #1, they may not be entirely sure what just happened or where they're headed, but they'll almost certainly have enjoyed the ride and be looking forward to more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Multiple Man #5
October 31, 2018
|
|
While it isn't quite the return to form for Madrox that some may have been hoping for, this series is a worthwhile read for any fan of the character.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Nebula #1 |
Feb 12, 2020
show
|
|
Vita Ayala and Claire Roe team up for a new Nebula series, but the first issue feels more like a prologue than a true first chapter.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
New Mutants (2019) |
31 issues
show
|
|
|
New Mutants #1
November 6, 2019
|
|
It's exciting to think that Hickman and Brisson want to dig into these characters. Moving them away from the rest of the X-Men forces the focus onto their unique roles and personalities. Let's just hope they have something more interesting to say about these characters going forward.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #3
December 11, 2019
|
|
New Mutants #3 is the first issue of the series without Jonathan Hickman as a cowriter. It's also the first issue to shift focus away from the original New Mutants. The results are a bit clumsy.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #6
January 29, 2020
|
|
Compared to how engaging and interesting Sunspot's team is in the other New Mutants, Armor's group falls flat, failing to give readers a reason to care about what's going on. And Flaviano's artwork, while beautiful in its own right, still feels ill-suited to this grittier tale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #9
March 11, 2020
|
|
Ed Brisson writers some fun interactions here as Magik stand her ground when Cyclops gets condescending and the New Mutants insist clinging to their "better to beg forgiveness..." attitude.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #11
July 22, 2020
|
|
The issue puts Flaviano's penchant for drawing cartoonish exaggerations and surrealness to good use as the New Mutants get pulled deeper into the Carnelian mutant's nightmare dreamscape.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #12
September 2, 2020
|
|
We do get some new insight into Glob Herman's past, which is nice, but on the whole, the issue would have served its subject better by delivering its message through story instead being a sermon in comic book form.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #14
December 16, 2020
|
|
This issue is a strong start for Ayala and Reis and a great jumping-on point for anyone enjoying this era of X-Men that isn't already aboard the series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #18
May 26, 2021
|
|
The issue has a few odd pages where the artwork and dialogue seem to disagree about what the characters are supposed to be doing, but this a beautiful and emotionally rich story that's some of the best character-centered storytelling to take place in the modern X-Men era.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #20
July 21, 2021
|
|
The issue ends a bit clumsily with an awkward but heartfelt, ad hoc eulogy and an abrupt cliffhanger. Still, otherwise, it's another wonderful installment of what may be the X-line's most underappreciated series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #21
September 1, 2021
|
|
Artist Rod Reis proves more than up to the task, his painterly linework and his colors proving equally suited to the barren moon as to Krakoa's lush wilderness.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #22
October 6, 2021
|
|
While character voices in this issue again verge on the unbelievably measured, New Mutants #22 brings the overarching themes of Vita Ayala's run writing the title into focus.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #23
December 1, 2021
|
|
Vita Ayala approaches the conflict with nuance as the newer mutants attempt to distinguish the Shadow King and its host, Amahl Farouk.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #24
February 9, 2022
|
|
Much of New Mutants #24 focuses on mending lingering wounds, with text pages introducing each character-focused vignette. It's a conversational issue suited to Beyruth's style, which is slightly cartoonish and more akin to a slice-of-life comic than the more pose-focused superhero fare.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #25
May 18, 2022
|
|
With Ayala adding their best Chris Claremont pastiche narration to the mix, it's a total commitment to the concept that few would dare but is pitch-perfect from this team.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #26
June 22, 2022
|
|
Rod Reis has been a revelation throughout this volume of New Mutants and doesn't miss a step here, while Jan Duursama's flashbacks, recreating the style of the original New Mutants run, remain delightful.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #30
September 21, 2022
|
|
New Mutants #30 pulls triple duty as Vita Ayala's sendoff issue, a 40th-anniversary anthology, and, for some reason, a teaser setting the stage for Marvel's upcoming Deadpool series. It succeeds on all fronts.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #31
October 26, 2022
|
|
For readers with a high tolerance for cheesy geek speak who want to see a trans hero in the spotlight, New Mutants #31 provides, but there's no escaping the sense that it is a broader and less sophisticated take than the one that preceded it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #32
December 7, 2022
|
|
There's a commendable attempt here to make a new character stick in the Marvel Universea challenge, for surebut there's a sense that this is being rushed which makes it hard to invest.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Mutants #33
December 28, 2022
|
|
The story's intent is admirable, and there's at least one good gag, plus the comic-strip style interludes which, while awkwardly placed, are sincerely sweet. However, the execution lacks the polish and depth needed for the story to leave a lasting impression.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
New Mutants Lethal Legion (2023) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
New Mutants Lethal Legion #3
May 24, 2023
|
|
New Mutants: Lethal Legion #3 has a clear message that it wants to impart, and that's commendable. However, the message is almost too clear, as one character verbalizes it point-blank to another in the middle of this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
New Mutants: Dead Souls |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
New Mutants: War Children #1 |
Sep 25, 2019
show
|
|
Bill Sienkiewicz drew this comic book. That's all you should need to know, but if you're still wondering then, yes, he still knows how to do that job better than almost anyone else who has ever tried.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Oblivion Song |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Oblivion Song #9
November 14, 2018
|
|
As usual, the book looks great, with some unique monster designs. This feels like a point-of-no-return moment for the series, and one that's sure to excite fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Oblivion Song #10
December 12, 2018
|
|
It's captivating stuff, though some of the action sequences in this issue are a bit hard to follow. Still, the series seems to be building up to quite the climax.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Oblivion Song #14
April 10, 2019
|
|
With the sibling rivalry that was once the backbone of the series now resolved and a time jump allowing the world to grow, Oblivion Song is better than its ever been.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Original X-Men #1 |
Dec 20, 2023
show
|
|
What more can readers get from another take on Marvel's first five mutants after 60 years and all those previous returns? Based on The Original X-Men #1, not much.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Outer Darkness |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Outer Darkness #1
November 7, 2018
|
|
Where the issue fails is in providing a compelling introduction to the characters, who so far feel a one note and flat. In particular, the main protagonist is very angry, but the issue provides only the vaguest hints as to why, making it hard to empathize with his anger. Still, it's a good-looking comic that involves emergency space exorcisms, so it earns some leeway to grow.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Outer Darkness #4
February 13, 2019
|
|
It's still hard to really care about anything that happens to anyone on this ship, and even Elox's character is undermined by the trite conclusion of this issue, but the issue does hint at the potential of this series if it could just find a way to make readers care about anyone in it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Peter Cannon: Thunderbolt (2019) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Peter Cannon: Thunderbolt #3
March 27, 2019
|
|
This series is operating on such a high level, taking on ideas like how a fictional universe exerts itself over the characters that crossover into it, that's it's hard to guess where it's headed next, and that is absolutely thrilling for the reader because it has already been an incredible ride.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Planet-Size X-Men #1 |
Jun 16, 2021
show
|
|
Planet-Size X-Men may primarily be spectacle, but it is an impressive spectacle and one that will leave hungry X-Men readers even more eager to see what comes next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Proxima Centauri |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Proxima Centauri #1
June 13, 2018
|
|
Proxima Centauri's visuals are some of the best in comics and they depict a fascinating world, though the wandering narrative may be an acquired taste.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Proxima Centauri #5
October 17, 2018
|
|
Proxima Centauri continues to be one of the most beautiful comic books being released on a monthly basis, and that more than makes up for its meandering plot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Proxima Centauri #6
November 14, 2018
|
|
Not for those hooked on straightforward stories and consistent fantasy logic, Proxima Centauri is quite a trip for those willing to embark.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 |
May 16, 2018
show
|
|
It may not have come out of the gate at full-speed, but Quicksilver: No Surrender seems likely to pick up momentum as it goes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Rat Queens (2017) |
13 issues
show
|
|
|
Rat Queens #8
February 28, 2018
|
|
The mystery Kurtis Wiebe has woven around this mysterious and "helpful" mage has its hooks in deep, especially after this issue's stunning final page.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rat Queens #11
September 12, 2018
|
|
Rat Queens feels like its in a strange space. The previous story arc was the series' most ambitious so far, but so much happened that's it is almost hard to keep track.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rat Queens #16
June 19, 2019
|
|
All these changes are causing friction, which leads to an angst-ridden episode. The artwork is solid but doesn't fit the usual tone. Its linework and colors are a touch too realistic for the book's over-the-top personalities. Then again, that may be reflective of the issue's atypical mood.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rat Queens: Neon Static Special #1
July 18, 2018
|
|
The result is mostly a lot of fun. Kurtis Wiebe is able to maintain these characters' voices across genre and William Kirkby's use of jagged lines and fluorescent color gradients sells the setting, though there are a least a few panels where it gets a bit simple, to the point that it seems unintentionally comical.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Refrigerator Full of Heads (2021) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Refrigerator Full of Heads #1
October 20, 2021
|
|
On the upside, Tom Fowler's artwork is always delightful and fits the expected grindhouse stylings. Still, the script is a confusing jumble, and fans of the original series are bound to be disappointed.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Refrigerator Full of Heads #6
April 20, 2022
|
|
Refrigerator Full of Heads finds some of that grindhouse goodness in this final issue, but the heart that made Basketful of Heads delightful was excised from this subpar sequel long ago.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Return of Wolverine (2018) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Return of Wolverine #3
November 28, 2018
|
|
While Declan Shalvey's artwork is good, it feels poorly matched to this series, too tight and controlled to convey Wolverine's savage side or the raw emotion driving most of the action.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Return of Wolverine #5
February 20, 2019
|
|
The series offers nothing new to say about Wolverine and no evolution, with Wolverine triumphantly exclaiming that he is the exact same character that he was before this overlong story started. Which leaves readers to wonder why they bothered.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Rick and Morty (2015) |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Rick and Morty #35
February 28, 2018
|
|
The art is on-model, the story is solidly told, the character voices are accurate, and Oni Press provides another strong issue to hold fans over during the wait between seasons.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rick and Morty #40
July 25, 2018
|
|
The first story, written by Kyle Starks, is a riff on a Hunger Games scenario. The second, written by Josh Trujillo, starts as a parody of courtroom dramas and becomes something else by the end. Each is fine, garnering at least a few laughs, but no substitute for the source material.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rick and Morty #42
September 26, 2018
|
|
In Rick and Morty #42, Kyle Starks and Marc Ellerby bring the "Rick Revenge Squad" story to a close (or do they?) in funny and satisfying fashion.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rick and Morty #44
November 28, 2018
|
|
It plays out pretty much exactly as you'd expect, but leaves it all feeling a bit forgettable, though Marc Ellerby does sneak in some great shots of the villain, Worldkiller, and his army.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Rick and Morty Presents |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Rick and Morty vs. Dungeons & Dragons |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1
October 17, 2018
|
|
At the outset, the slapstick humor and goofiness is a stark departure from past TMNT show and IDW's current line of original Turtles comics. That rambunctiousness doesn't go away, but if you can stick with you'll be rewarded with some genuinely funny moments, including an amusing concept for a mutant villain.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Rogue & Gambit (2023) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Rogue & Gambit #3
May 10, 2023
|
|
Rogue & Gambit continues to deliver straightforward superheroics in its third issue while adding some texture to the tension between the lead characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rogue & Gambit #4
June 14, 2023
|
|
Rogue & Gambit might bring satisfaction to the die-hard fans of these characters, but it does little to stand out from its peers within the genre.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Rogue & Gambit #5
July 12, 2023
|
|
Rogue & Gambit's final issue contains several high points for the series. The rest of the issue wraps up a run-of-the-mill superhero story in predictable and familiar ways, except for Rogue's dealings with Destiny.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
ROM: Dire Wraiths |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Roxxon Presents: Thor #1 |
Apr 17, 2024
show
|
|
Roxxon Presents: Thor #1 is a comic book artifact made real. It's the issue that the Minotaur gives Thor to read, an issue thatwith the help of Enchantress and Skurge the Executionerwill rewrite Thor's existence to better synergize with the Roxxon Corporation's corporate goals. As part of Al Ewing's ongoing Immortal Thor story, Roxxon Presents: Thor #1 is a crucial look at a core theme, what corporately-owned comics and other mass media could door is it, have doneto how we tell stories. And within these pages, Ewing makes the case for why that is a vitally important thing to consider.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
S.H.I.E.L.D. (2011) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
S.H.I.E.L.D. #6
June 13, 2018
|
|
The bigger picture is that Hickman and Weaver have crafted a brilliant Marvel epic that begs to be re-read as much for its depth as to simply steal another glance at Weaver's artwork.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. (2020) |
11 issues
show
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #1
December 9, 2020
|
|
With Schti and Gracia providing stunning artwork and Ewing plotting the course, S.W.O.R.D. promises to be a cosmic victory for Marvel's X-Men line.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #2
January 13, 2021
|
|
It lacks the series debut's ambition, but there are enough fun beats here to make it a worthwhile read, and Valerio Schiti and Marte Gracia make it a lush and gorgeous book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #3
February 10, 2021
|
|
The issue ends somewhat abruptly as these early S.W.O.R.D. issues seem dedicated to planting seeds more than giving us a full narrative arc of their own. Still, if the sowing is this entertaining and well-crafted, readers should be eager to what Ewing and company reap.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #6
June 23, 2021
|
|
Valerio Schti sweeping, dramatic art couple with Marte Gracia's lush colors make the diplomatic negotiations feel operatic where they could be dull. Add to that a more personal b-plot involving Magneto and S.W.O.R.D. #6 proves to be a weighty and beautifully crafted issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #7
July 28, 2021
|
|
The overall "The Last Annihilation" story is, thus far, pretty simple "bad guy attacks" material at the moment. Still, Ewing, Caselli, and company take what's simple, at least on the surface, and make it worthwhile by executing exceedingly well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #8
September 29, 2021
|
|
Ewing, surprisingly, doesn't have much new to add to the template. Coupled with Villanova's clumsy fight scenes and Fernando Sifeuntes' flat colors, the issue doesn't offend, but it does underwhelm.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #10
November 17, 2021
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. is now neck-deep in cosmic conspiracies, and it should be exciting to see how those wheels within wheels continue to turn.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. #11
December 22, 2021
|
|
S.W.O.R.D. may have dug itself too deeply into the game of intrigue, making it difficult to connect with the plot for all the redirects. Perhaps "Destiny of X" will offer its successor series the opportunity to renew its focus.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Sabretooth & the Exiles (2022) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Sabretooth & the Exiles #5
March 29, 2023
|
|
From start to finish, Sabretooth and the Exiles proved as thoughtful, compelling, and unpredictable as the creative team's first Sabretooth series. Bring on the "Sabretooth War" and whatever else comes next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Saga |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
Saga #51
April 25, 2018
|
|
As usual, Fiona Staples' art is gorgeous, and this issue quietly sets up what will likely be a much more dramatic next issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Saga #52
May 30, 2018
|
|
It is impressive how much tension Brian K. Vaughn and Fiona Staples are able to build even during an issue that is, for the most part, about a relaxing day at play.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Saga #54
July 25, 2018
|
|
Read this one and savor it. It may be the last Saga for a while, but it will likely stick with you throughout the series' entire year-long absence.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Saga #55
February 2, 2022
|
|
It's wild, adventurous, unbridled, funny, touching, and beautifully crafted. It's Saga. It's back. Enjoy.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Samurai Doggy |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Samurai Doggy #1
August 10, 2022
|
|
Overlooking the opening pages of the issue, brutal as they are, readers' enjoyment of Samurai Doggy will likely come down to how much they appreciate the visuals, and there is a lot to like in that regard.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Samurai Doggy #2
September 14, 2022
|
|
If the idea here is the have Samurai Doggy wander in and out of other people's stories or even the opposite, that's fine, but the creators will have to execute much better than this if they want to keep readers interested.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Savage Avengers #1 |
May 01, 2019
show
|
|
The results are something like mixing together two different action figure toy lines, but the tone makes it feel like whoever is doing that mixing is a bit too old to be playing this seriously with toys.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Search For Hu |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Search For Hu #1
September 8, 2021
|
|
The colors are a little flat, but otherwise, this is the start of what promises to be an exciting fight comic with unforeseen depth.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Secret X-Men #1 |
Feb 09, 2022
show
|
|
There are some clever moments here, but for an issue that seemed primed for hijinks, it's surprisingly forgettable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Sentient #1 |
May 06, 2020
show
|
|
Any fan of sci-fi storytelling and well-crafted comics owes it themself to check out this incredible tale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Shadowman #8 |
Oct 24, 2018
show
|
|
Renato Guedes and Simon Bowland's visuals skew heavily towards realism, which helps with the conspiracy-thriller tone of the book. Whether Andy Diggle and his collaborators can help elevate the plot to something more than it's basic structure remains to be seen.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Sins of Sinister #1 |
Jan 25, 2023
show
|
|
Alternate timelines and dark futures are familiar tropes throughout X-Men history, dating back to "Days of Future Past." Yet, the setup here feels fresh and exciting in ways a jaded comics reader might not expect.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Something Epic (2023) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Something Epic #1
May 10, 2023
|
|
Something Epic has a strong premise and great artwork, but all the hand-wringing over the burden of creativity gets in the way of any semblance of plot, which makes it a nebulous read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Something Epic #2
June 14, 2023
|
|
Perhaps those internal monologues that read like essays will become more relevant as Something Epic reveals more about the rules and secrets of the imaginary world and Danny's increasingly dangerous relationship with it, making them more than curious, if at least refreshingly personal, sidetracks.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Something Epic #3
July 12, 2023
|
|
There are technical skills on display herethe framing of the dream conversation nicely mirrors the real-life conversation, and the red glow of sunset speaks to the ending of the mother's lifebut that's not much to recommend.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Sons of Star Trek (2024) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Sons of Star Trek #1
March 13, 2024
|
|
Star Trek: Sons of Star Trek #1 is a shining example of approaching a long-running series by combining the fresh and the familiar. Q Junior is unabashedly pulling from his father's bag of tricks by sending the mortals who have caught his attention to an alternate timeline to learn their lessons. However, the focus on Deep Space Nine's younger characters who were rarely the show's main focus stops it from reading like a retread.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Sons of Star Trek #2
May 1, 2024
|
|
It's a solid character arc told against the starship battle happening alongside it, and even Tuvix is put to good use getting everyone on the same page in understanding the whole time loop thing. It's a stellar issue of character-first Star Trek.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Space Job (2023) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Space Job #1
February 8, 2023
|
|
Since The Orville veered more into straight sci-fi as it progressed, Space Job feels like an alternate timeline where the show went in the opposite direction. It's one familiar premise crossed with another but executed well enough to hit the mark.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Space Job #3
April 12, 2023
|
|
As with previous issues, anyone who sees the appeal of The Office meets Star Trek elevator pitch will likely enjoy Space Job. Any who doesn't won't.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spawn |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Spawn #295
March 27, 2019
|
|
Jason Shawn Alexander is still a stellar fit for the series, but here's hoping he gets something more interesting to draw than mangled fingers in the near future.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spawn #296
April 24, 2019
|
|
Jason Shawn Alexander gets to draw a lot of pinup-style pages here and the way he incorporates a bit of McFarlane's style into his renditions of moments from those early Spawn issues is a nice touch.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen (2015) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #29
February 28, 2018
|
|
The "Gwenom" arc has brought Spider-Gwen to new levels of emotional intensity, and everything comes to a head in this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #30
March 21, 2018
|
|
Jason Latour spends a lot of time on conversations between the two, which should be riveting, but it doesn't feel like much of anything new was learned about either character.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #34
July 18, 2018
|
|
The issue brings a well-earned sense of closure to the saga of the Spider-Woman that fans who have been following the series won't want to miss.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Man (2016) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Spider-Man #239
April 4, 2018
|
|
The penultimate issue of Brian Michael Bendis' Spider-Man run is, unfortunately, little more than an average throwdown between superheroes and supervillains.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Man (2019) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Spider-Man #1
September 18, 2019
|
|
Spider-Man #1 is an inauspicious start to what might be the biggest Spider-Man comic of 2019. Fans of Spider-Man, Abrams, or Pichelli may hope to find something to love here. Unfortunately, the poor storytelling, bland characterizations, and less-than-memorable visuals combine to make Spider-Man #1 hard to recommend.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Man #2
October 16, 2019
|
|
The second issue of the Abrams' Spider-Man isn't offensively bad in the way the first issue was, but it feels like a pale imitation of other, better stories.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Man #4
September 23, 2020
|
|
The most impressive thing about this Spider-Man series is how seamlessly it blends its derivative story to its clumsy execution.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek (2022) |
24 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek #1
October 26, 2022
|
|
IDW has done stellar work with his Star Trek comics for years, but with Star Trek #1, it feels like they're finally reaching their full potential. It feels like the beginning of something special.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #2
November 30, 2022
|
|
The series also continues to borrow a modern X-Men vibe, with a data page explaining how the Klingon Empire the threat of fascism from within, and it works to give the issue some heft. It's a bit unwieldy compared to the debut issue, but still a stellar read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #3
January 4, 2023
|
|
Comics fans and creators like to talk about how the medium is like television or film without budget restrictions. It's a flawed analogy, but Star Trek #3 is a near-perfect test case for it. The issue takes a tried and true Star Trek formula, the Q episode, and presents it in comic book form. What you get is all of the hijinks of a classic Q story, but with his omnipotence on display far beyond what television would ever have allowed.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #4
February 1, 2023
|
|
This series keeps digging deep into Star Trek lore, finding new corners of the universe to explore and new lights to shine on these characters, and Star Trek fans could hardly ask for more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #5
March 15, 2023
|
|
There are twists and turns here that are legitimately surprising and set the stage for much bigger and more dramatic things to come, all while keeping up the high quality of artwork that has been typical of the comic thus far.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #7
April 26, 2023
|
|
Collin Kelly and Jackson Lanzing have the voices of these characters down perfectly to the point that readers may find themselves reading dialog in the voices of the actors who played them, from Avery Brooks' jazz-like line deliveries as Sisko to Gates McFadden's playful bemusement at Quark's advances as Beverly Crusher.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #8
May 17, 2023
|
|
Star Trek #8 feels even more like a direct successor to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine than any of the issues preceding it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #9
June 14, 2023
|
|
Mike Feehan and Manuel Bracchi acquit themselves well, with one moment in particular of Sisko awaiting Cardassian judgment bringing the weight of the moment to bear on both character and reader with appreciable scale. It's a compelling read that should delight Star Trek fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #12
September 27, 2023
|
|
The creative team behind Day of Blood has recreated that cinematic experience in these pages, creating a worthy entry into the Star Trek canon.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #14
November 22, 2023
|
|
Any Star Trek fan is going to enjoy this issue (and series), but it'll be especially fun for fans of the characters named above.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #15
December 20, 2023
|
|
Marcus To again shows his talents as he draws giant dinosaur people, Kim and Paris' quiet hearth-to-heart, and Scotty and Dr. Crusher's spelunking expedition with equal aplomb. It's hard to imagine what more any fan could want from a Star Trek comic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #16
January 17, 2024
|
|
It's got brilliant character moments, political intrigue, ethical quandaries, and weird sci-fi shenanigans; in short, everything a Star Trek fan could ask for.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #17
February 21, 2024
|
|
It's a credit to Collin Kelly and Jackson Lanzing's grasp of Star Trek's characters and the subtle touches applied by letter Clayton Cowles that I practically hear Avery Brooks' voices giving one of his dynamic deliveries (often compared to jazz music by his peers) while I read Sisko's dialogue in Star Trek #17.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #18
March 20, 2024
|
|
Star Trek #18 is about as perfect a distillation of what's good about Star Trek into comic book form as I can imagine.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #20
May 15, 2024
|
|
Star Trek #20 offers artist Megan Levans a chance to show what she can do when put to the test. She plays with time over a two-page spread that shows the stationary Theseus ship in various states of upgrade (I did find myself wondering if a less explicit angle would have preserved a grander reveal later on, but what the issue offers is undeniably stellar), and gets to cut loose when things get psychedelic upon the ship's attempt to reach the pleroma through the galactic barrier.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #21
June 19, 2024
|
|
There's some concern here that the story is growing too big, too godly, to remain concise and relatable, the erasure of the Organians from the timeline feeling like a mere statistic compared to the individual lives of those among the ship's crew, but the plot plays out like a classic, diplomacy-heavy Star Trek episode and concludes on a strong enough hook to leave fans eager for more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #22
July 17, 2024
|
|
Star Trek #22 runs the gamut of emotions, lines up themes with plot expertly, and is a total joy for a Star Trek fan to read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek #23
August 21, 2024
|
|
The Star Trek franchise has told stories that are epic in scale, but a pissed-off android breaking into the clubhouse of the gods and threatening to erase all existence out of apparent spite has to be up there with the grandest.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek Annual: 2024
July 17, 2024
|
|
The story is surprisingly emotional as conflicts internal and external hinge on a lapse in Data's learned humanity that may have derailed Lore's redemptive arc as Data is unable to reckon with his error in judgment, the slight he inflicted on his brother when the hand of reconciliation was outstretched. All of this makes Star Trek Annual 2024 an essential and rewarding read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek One-Shots (2022) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek One-Shots: Klingons
February 23, 2022
|
|
Readers who aren't already familiar with the story of Kahless and his brother, Morath, may find these panels confusing. However, the way they allow the final page to weave a bit of ambiguity into Kahless's supposedly noble motivations is a nice touch.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek One-Shots: Trill
November 9, 2022
|
|
There's some awkward plotting in the issue, such as Vanah lamenting that she doesn't know the names of Vors' past hosts right after a scene in which she asks a docent about Vors' history. Meanwhile, the artwork gets the story across, although some flashbacks struggle to convey their intent. Otherwise, the issue proves to be a thoughtful use of Star Trek aliens.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek vs. Transformers #1 |
Sep 26, 2018
show
|
|
The Star Trek vs. Transformers crossover hits the ground running with the gleeful energy of a child mixing two sets of action figures for the first time.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Boldly Go |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Celebrations #1 |
May 29, 2024
show
|
|
It's a front-loaded title, with its best efforts being the swashbuckling fairy tale focusing on the Hikaru Sulu of the Kelvin Timeline that kicks off the issue followed by a story about the dynamics of Raffi Musiker's relationship with Seven of Nine, the kind of micro-story that there wasn't much time for in three packed seasons of Star Trek: Picard. Stories featuring Paul Stamets, Jett Reno, and Christine Chapel get too bogged down in the pseudo-scientific details.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Day of Blood #1 |
Jul 19, 2023
show
|
|
Star Trek: Day of Blood #1 puts that concern to rest by punctuating the arc Sisko has been on since returning from the Celestial Temple in Star Trek #1, gradually shedding the trappings of divinity and rediscovering his humanity. Star Trek fans are in for something special.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - The Dog of War |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - The Dog of War #5
August 2, 2023
|
|
In the end, The Dog of War may have been balancing a few two many subplots, but it's hard to complain about a competently crafted adventure where the Deep Space 9 crew set out to save a good boy and happen to help out the rest of the quadrant in the process.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Too Long a Sacrifice |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Too Long a Sacrifice #1
July 16, 2020
|
|
One of the reasons the Tiptons have lasted so long on the Star Trek line is their uncanny ability to mimic character voices and plot structure from the television shows, sometimes to a comic's detriment. Here they nail each character except for Worf, who comes off as a regressive caricature of himself as he looks to arrest suspects based on their species' reputation. Otherwise, leaning into the noir helps keep this issue from becoming merely a pale imitation of its source material
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Too Long a Sacrifice #3
October 7, 2020
|
|
Greg Scott's pencils are tighter in this issue than they were and the last. Combined with Felipe Sobreiro's coloring, the visuals effectively set the desired noir mood, though Sobreiro's seemingly random colors to fill Scott's blank backgrounds are a distraction. Even so, this is the most successful and engrossing issue of Deep Space Nine's returns to comics yet.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Defiant (2023) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Defiant #15
May 22, 2024
|
|
Star Trek: Defiant offers a Star Trek story that is unlike almost any other Star Trek story to exist, even if it is drawing on familiar inspiration. But wearing its influences on its sleeve doesn't stop it from being an absolute blast to read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Defiant #17
July 24, 2024
|
|
The shadow art fits perfectly with Defiant's darker tone, though it falters during the sunnier scenes. However, that's a minor flaw in what is otherwise a strong start to this series' next chapter.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Discovery |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Discovery Annual #1
April 4, 2018
|
|
This is exactly what a Star Trek: Discovery tie-in comic should be, providing insight into the show's characters by telling a story that doesn't fit into the narrative of the television series itself.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Discovery #4
May 30, 2018
|
|
It's definitely a plot over character kind of story, but if you're seeking additional context for the events that kickstarted Star Trek: Discovery's first season, then this will not disappoint.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Discovery - Adventures In the 32nd Century |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Discovery - Aftermath |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Discovery - Succession |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Hell's Mirror #1 |
Aug 26, 2020
show
|
|
It's a fascinating mold to cast Khan in, and one that leaves me wishing Hell's Mirror was a miniseries instead of a one-shot, as good of a one-shot it is.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Holo-Ween |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Holo-Ween #4
October 25, 2023
|
|
Having the Enterprise haunted without a sci-fi explanation would break Star Trek rules, but trying to ground a haunted house scenario in Star Trek's logic leaves little room for the themes or anything beyond the base plot to shine through.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Lore War #1 |
Feb 17, 2025
show
|
|
Star Trek: Lore War #1 arrives at a time when the Star Trek franchise is going through an identity crisis and while the creators of the comic book event couldnt have known these conversations would be taking place at the time of its debut the story feels no less timely for it. The Star Trek of the franchises golden era, where intensely competent people apply their crafts to problems to uphold a future that is as close to perfect as a 20th-century-human could imagine, is replaced by a world built on conflict for the sake of conflict, where real change is impossible and better futures are beyond imagining. Star Trek: Lore War #1 kicks off a fight for Star Treks very soul, as told in a story with a scope like Star Trek fans have never seen before.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Lower Decks (2022) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Lower Decks #3
November 30, 2022
|
|
As if a sentient holographic Dracula isn't enough, the added issue of, as the footnote asides call it, "programs programming programs" increases the threat exponentially in short order. And yet, there's not much tension here as the crew simply acquiesces to Dracula's demands and he behaves well, even heroically, in return.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Picard - Countdown |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Picard - Stargazer |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Picard - Stargazer #1
August 31, 2022
|
|
Star Trek: Picard Stargazer isn't the most ambitious comicit isn't even the most ambitious Star Trek comic that IDW has published recentlyand it's unlikely to transcend the expectations that come from it being a tie-in story filling the gap between two seasons of a television series, but its strong character work is enough to fulfill its mandate as worthwhile reading experience for fans of the series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Picard - Stargazer #2
October 5, 2022
|
|
The line work is tighter than in the previous installment, but the coloring is still splotchy when applied, and the splash pages have some compositional problems. However, the characterizations of Picard and Seven remain spot on, and the conflict at the story's core remains interesting.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Resurgence |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Resurgence #1
November 16, 2022
|
|
For the most part, it's a solid debut, leaning heavily on familiar designs from the Next Generation era to set the stage ad the mood, but the plot gets a little muddied in places.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Resurgence #2
December 14, 2022
|
|
Despite soaking in the vibe of the Next Gen era, this issue is more action-oriented, focusing on a covert rescue mission that ends up being less undercover than intended. The visuals aren't up to the task of depicting the action, with bodies distractingly contorted after being struck by phaser fire, inappropriately over-the-top reactions, and an at least one instance where an officer trying to shield his captain looks more like he's going in for a hug.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Resurgence #3
January 18, 2023
|
|
There's an unusual conflict in this Star Trek: Resurgence prequel, in that the hero ship's captain, typically cast as the pinnacle of Starfleet values, is perhaps too close to another character, too invested in the research, to see the danger all around him clearly.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Resurgence #5
March 15, 2023
|
|
Nonsensical dialog, weak jokes, and disjointed artwork plague the story, yet it gives Sutherland an epic, if familiar, last hurrah while drawing some interesting parallels between Sutherland and Leah Brahms. This final installment, like the miniseries collectively, is uneven but not without some merit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2022) |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds: The Illyrian Enigma #1
December 21, 2022
|
|
The visuals bring clean and expressive characters, and the coloring has a retro vibe. That aesthetic doesn't sell the awe intended by the two-page ship shot that has become a standard of any new IDW Star Trek first issue but does compliment the journey into the mysterious unknown quite well, making for an intriguing debut.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds: The Illyrian Enigma #4
March 29, 2023
|
|
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds The Illyrian Enigma #4 closes out the Star Trek: Discovery spinoff's first comic book adventure by keeping up the stellar quality of the previous issues. That perfectly-balanced blend of seriousness and lightheartedness is intact, best exemplified by Captain Pike's dialogue, equal measures passionate and playful.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Mirror War |
13 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Mirror War #0
September 8, 2021
|
|
The pieces are all here"the Tipton's dialogue is the correct pitch, and Carlos Nieto's artwork is solid, despite a couple of awkward faces"and the issue does some needed scene-setting. Still, it will mostly leave readers eager for the story to start in earnest next month.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Mirror War #1
October 13, 2021
|
|
Star Trek: The Mirror War #1 is an inoffensive start, if not particularly exciting, but if the series is to live up to the event hype around it, it will need to hit the gas hard and find something new to do with the 55-year-old plot device that is the Mirror Universe.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Mirror War #2
November 3, 2021
|
|
After a slow start, this issue picks up some speed, so here's hoping The Mirror War builds on that momentum going forward. There's still a lot of potential here waiting to be worked with here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Mirror War: Captain La Forge #1
March 2, 2022
|
|
The issue functions as an origin story that twists the sadly stereotypical TNG Geordi story, with a woman taking a strong interest in Geordi before his arrival on Utopia Planitia. This officer stands out among her Terran counterparts for being "too happy" and possibly naive. It's a playful twist that helps the story amount to more than the tiresome wanton backstabbing that often characterizes Mirror Universe stories to the exclusion of all else. However, the framing device turns out to be preposterous, though perhaps less so in the Mirror Universe than the Prime Timeline.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Motion Picture - Echoes (2023) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Motion Picture - Echoes #3
July 12, 2023
|
|
It isn't exactly new ground, but it's written well enough to be compelling and has some character depth to an otherwise action-heavy plot, while making the best case for this story being set within The Motion Picture's narrative orbit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Terra Incognita |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Terra Incognita #1
July 18, 2018
|
|
Writers Scott & David Tipton will also be familiar to Star Trek comics fans and they begin this story on a slow burn, but it seems like a tale destined to go in some interesting directions as we see mirror Barclay redefine the character's relationships with his colleagues.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Terra Incognita #3
September 12, 2018
|
|
Star Trek: The Next Generation - Terra Incognita continues to be a curious series. Billed as the next installment in The Next Generation mirror universe series, the issue minimizes Barclay's role. Instead, the issue plays out like a lost episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Captain Picard plays the familiar role of mentor when one of his crew members comes to a emotional turning point.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Terra Incognita #5
December 5, 2018
|
|
There are some characterization issues -- Worf seems strangely standoffish even by his standards when dealing with Dr. Crusher -- but the story, on the whole, is still solid Star Trek goodness, and the surprise ending promises that Barclay's storyline will finally be resolved in the next chapter.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Through The Mirror |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Q Conflict |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Q Conflict #1
January 30, 2019
|
|
Scott and David Tipton, veterans of IDW Publishing's Star Trek comics line, know these characters well and draw out their voices effortlessly. Nonetheless, this issue is all set up, an overture before the story really kicks off. Readers will have to wait until next issue for the follow-through.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Q Conflict #2
February 27, 2019
|
|
The mixing of crewmembers hurts the series on a conceptual level -- crew vs. crew was more interesting than pitting semi-random assortments of Starfleet officers against each other -- but also on a practical level since most of the characters have no established chemistry with their teammates.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: The Q Conflict #4
May 22, 2019
|
|
The Tiptons provide some of their best characterizations yet as they bring out some of each character's history, and Silvia Califano proves more than up to the task of taking over for David Messina, offering crip artwork with stellar likenesses.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Voyager: Mirrors and Smoke #1 |
Dec 11, 2019
show
|
|
Star Trek: Voyager makes its first journey into the Mirror universe in this Mirrors and Smoke one-shot. J.K. Woodward is the artist that defines the look of mirror universe stories for IDW's Star Trek line, having drawn Star Trek: The Next Generation's mirror universe comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Voyager - Seven's Reckoning |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Waypoint: Special 2019 #1 |
Apr 24, 2019
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five |
24 issues
show
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #5
August 28, 2019
|
|
Fans would be hard-pressed to find a Star Trek episode that makes use of Uhura's xenolinguistic skills as well as this issue does. Another excellent installment of a must-read Star Trek series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #7
October 30, 2019
|
|
The issue shines in depicting Capt. Kirk at his best through an intimate scene between Kirk and Sulu on the turbolift. Star Trek: Year Five continues to set the high bar for Trek comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #13
August 5, 2020
|
|
There's a lot of heavy lifting in this issue as it sets the stage for what's to come, but Star Trek: Year Five continues to be easy to recommend to any Star Trek fan.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #14
September 9, 2020
|
|
Angel Hernandez put in some solid work with the issue's layout as well, though his stiff linework combined with Fran Gamboa's colors creates the sense in some panels that the characters are wearing masks of their faces. It's a minor distraction in places, but otherwise, this is strong homecoming for Kirk and crew.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #16
November 12, 2020
|
|
Califano does well, bringing Houser's script to life in a solid installment of this ever-stellar series, all while building the intrigue around Gary-Seven's mission as it goes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #21
June 30, 2021
|
|
As a time travel story in the Star Trek-mode, it's fine enough, but it's hard to shake the feeling that the issue squandered the opportunity to transcend its familiar premise.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Star Trek: Year Five #24
September 15, 2021
|
|
With the epilogue issue still to come, Lanzing, Kelly, and Califano provide an appropriately-scaled conclusion to what has been an incredible and essential Star Trek story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Wars Adventures: Clone Wars #5 |
Oct 02, 2020
show
|
|
Thanks to strong scripting from Michael Moreci, and stellar artwork from Dere Charm, Philip Murphy, Louis Antonio Delgado, and Rebecca Nalty, Battle Tales is going out on a high note.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Stellar |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Stellar #1
June 13, 2018
|
|
The first issue may not quite stick the landing, but Stellar is beautiful and promises a world of possibility to come.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Stellar #2
July 18, 2018
|
|
Stellar is epic sci-fi superhero action with gorgeous artwork and haunting themes and if any small part of that peaked your interest, or even if it didn't, you should give it read.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Storm (2023) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Storm #1
May 24, 2023
|
|
Storm #1 is a throwback to the X-Men of the 1980s, and writer Ann Nocenti leans hard into the melodrama that defined the series during that era, with interpersonal conflict around every corner.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Storm #2
June 28, 2023
|
|
The issue digs deeper into the conflicts and relationships surrounding Storm at a breakneck pace. At times, this means characters come off like one-note caricatures of themselvesKitty a petulant child, Rogue a thoughtless bruiser, Wolverine a possessive and rage-fueled admirerwith even Storm seeming to be in an unusual hurry to bring this man she's known for about a day home to meet the found family.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Storm #3
July 26, 2023
|
|
While it's easy to appreciate what its creators are attempting to do with Storm, something still feels not quite right with this throwback to 1980s era X-Men.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Storm #5
September 27, 2023
|
|
The bones of an interesting Storm story are here, but overall, the series feels muddled and overburdened with subplots, distracting from the character it intended to spotlight.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Storm #1 |
Oct 02, 2024
show
|
|
At a time when new superhero comics often struggle to justify their existence, Storm #1 creates the framework to position Storm as a leading superheroine she perhaps should have become a long time. Here's hoping they can build on this strong start.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Supermassive: 2024 |
Jul 24, 2024
show
|
|
This year's iteration of the Supermassive crossover one-shot is full throttle from start to finish, with a visual style that is kinetic to the point of exhaustion and replete with exaggerated fight scenes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Sword Daughter |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
Sword Daughter #1
June 6, 2018
|
|
If you're a fan of Wood's past Viking-era dramas like Northlanders and Black Road, or even his Revolutionary War series Rebels, Sword Daughter is the spiritual successor you've been waiting for.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Sword Daughter #4
December 5, 2018
|
|
Sword Daughter #4 flashes back and forth between the two narratives. It is a bit of an adjustment, with the future scenes feeling a bit divorced from context, but there is an added texture in being able to see the ramifications of this father-daughter journey immediately in Elsbeth's future.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Sword Daughter #5
January 2, 2019
|
|
Perhaps it's the jumping back and forth between time periods or maybe they've lost the thread of the original impetus for this father-daughter journey, but Sword Daughter hasn't quite congealed into a cohesive narrative whole and so the heavy emotional beats just don't land like they should.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Sword Daughter #6
February 6, 2019
|
|
The payoff could have been a bit stronger with a little more time spent emotionally investing readers in Elsbeth and Dag, but the thematic resonance is strong.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2011) |
73 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #79
February 28, 2018
|
|
Up until now, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has always felt like it was at its best during its more intimate stories. The fourth chapter of "Invasion of the Triceratons" shows that Tom Waltz and company can be just as adept at telling a story about urban warfare.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #88
November 28, 2018
|
|
The art is stellar, as usual, and while there are still some loose ends to wrap up, this definitely feels like turning the page into the next chapter for the Turtles and their extended cast of characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #91
February 13, 2019
|
|
The issue impresses by delivering solid character interactions that work in and of themselves, but also reminding fans of how far these characters have come over the years - especially how all their lives were changed by the "City Fall" story and the milestone issue #50, which helps build anticipation as the series marches towards the "City at War" arc issue #100, a story that seems increasingly likely to revisit certain choices and fallout from "City Fall."
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #100
December 11, 2019
|
|
With the help of co-plotters Kevin Eastman and Bobby Curnow, the strong artwork of Mike Dialynas and Dave Wachter, and colors by Ronda Pattison, the issue is a fitting conclusion to an inspired reimagining of a fan-favorite franchise.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #114
February 10, 2021
|
|
The team embarks on a recon mission to search for the wayward mutants Tokka and Rahzar, which is standard fare. Still, it is elevated by Campbell's artwork and Bebop and Rocksteady's return, injecting a chaotic uncertainty into the proceedings.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #126
February 16, 2022
|
|
IDW's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has long established that it's about the long game and this is one of those slow burn issues that builds the stakes and the tension. Fans of this Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series will eat it up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #127
March 30, 2022
|
|
For a story about a fringe community trying to support itself, broadly, and its members, specifically, the idea of someone like Barlowe preying about such personal needs and vulnerabilities is fascinating and appropriately sinister.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #128
May 4, 2022
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #128 proves to be a somewhat claustrophobic issue as Donatello and Alopex remain "guest" at Jaspar Barlowe's body modification clinic. The rich artwork sells this mood well without making the visuals challenging to parse.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #130
June 29, 2022
|
|
Sophie Campbell's plotting and characterizations are strong as ever, and Pablo Tunica brings a gnarliness that befits both the grisly violence at hand and the frequently horrified expressions such acts elicit from the characters involved.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #137
February 15, 2023
|
|
The issue trips over its breakneck pace slightly in the middle as the cavalry arrives with no warning, making their sudden appearance jarring. However, overall it's another stellar issue of this typically stellar series. "The Armageddon Game" is only getting better and more exciting as it ramps up while heading into its final phase.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #138
March 22, 2023
|
|
Fero Pe's artwork is sharp as hell. While mentioned before, it bears repeating as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #138 again shows Pe's linework, paired with Ronda Pattison's colors, creating the perfect look for a cartoony action comic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #143
September 20, 2023
|
|
The pacing is a little off on the issue as it spends much of its time delving into the dark fantasies of each character, and the artwork is a bit stiff and almost overbearing in the darkness of the sewers and the lightning effects wreathing many of the layouts.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #145
November 8, 2023
|
|
IDW has a knack for picking the right artist for each story arc of its Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series. Case in point, where Gavin Smith's stiff linework suited the urban action of the previous storyline, Vincenzo Federici's more fluid style makes the transition into the magic-and-time-travel-based Armaggon arc seamless.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #147
January 24, 2024
|
|
Another cliffhanger time jump closes the issue, making Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #147 a stellar, well-crafted issue that doesn't land enough memorable beats to be counted among the series' best.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #148
February 14, 2024
|
|
Much of this issue is spent reading about the Turtles and their allies attempting to understand what the heck is going on with Armaggon the timeline-devouring shark and various other time travel shenanigans going on, but that doesn't make for the most compelling comics book storytelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2024) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1
July 24, 2024
|
|
In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1, Aaron and Jones offer longtime fans something that feels undeniably inspired by the original TMNT comics published by Mirage 40 years ago without being slavishly devoted to them, all while making the Turtles' wild and expansive universe easily digestible for new fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #8
April 10, 2025
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has settled into a solid groove. The Turtles are reunited, but the strife between the brothers continues to create emotional distance and drama, helping to drive up the tension as the narrative draws closer to a turning point moment. Inhabiting Leonardos perspective shows Aaron's solid grasp on what makes each Turtle tick. After finishing the issue, Im left wondering if Aaron plans to shift perspective to each of the other Turtles during the next few installments as they come together through breakthrough moments similar to what Leonardo experienced here, which would be a fitting conclusion to this arc considering where it began. Regardless, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #8 proves again that the series is in good hands.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles / Usagi Yojimbo: WhereWhen |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles / Usagi Yojimbo: WhereWhen #5
July 26, 2023
|
|
The battles between WhereWhen's robotic minions and the assembled parties of the Turtles and Usagi Yojimbo and his allies could have taken up the entire issue. Instead, Sakai keeps the combat relatively brief and straightforward, emphasizing the sacrifice involved in defeating WhereWhen over the spectacle of the conflict itself.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: 40th Anniversary Special #1 |
Jul 10, 2024
show
|
|
It's a strong collection with something for every TMNT fan and plenty of reasons to revisit after the 40th-anniversary festivities conclude.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Macroseries |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Nightwatcher (2024) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Nightwatcher #1
August 14, 2024
|
|
Nightwatcher #1 has the vibe of a compelling pilot episode, making a clear case for the book's existence (Who is looking after the people of Mutant Town while the Turtles are scattered to the wind?), and giving its mystery hero the opportunity to break out like never before. Readers and TMNT fans should be looking forward to seeing what Ba and Pe build on this cornerstone.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder in Hell |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Armageddon Game |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Armageddon Game #6
March 15, 2023
|
|
It may be beating a dead horse to say again that the flagship miniseries of "The Armageddon Game" taking a larger view of the story's events makes it feel a bit hectic and stuffed and unable to affect the more intimate storytelling tone as the other titles tying into the event, but it's true.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Armageddon Game - The Alliance |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Armageddon Game - The Alliance #4
February 8, 2023
|
|
Campbell's ability to vacillate between kinetic action beats and softer but not less bold emotional moments is crucial to executing this story, which involves time travel, a deadlier threat beyond the Armageddon Game, and themes of finding self through transformation, both physical and those that come with existing in the flow of time.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin |
13 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Untold Destiny of the Foot Clan (2024) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Universe |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Universe #13
June 20, 2018
|
|
Mondo's descent into punk rock raging against the machine is a bit on the nose, but Ryan Ferrier provides a solid foil in how he writes Michelangelo and Pablo Tunica's loose linework and Patricia Delpeche's saturated colors are the perfect aesthetic for Mondo's worldview.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Universe #25
August 1, 2018
|
|
Still, while it may be familiar territory, Flynn and Daniels do a solid job of bringing this spiritual realm to life and, much like the most recent arc of the core Turtles book, this helps build tension heading into the coming showdown between the Turtles and the Pantheon.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Book of Evil (2022) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
The Book of Evil #1
October 5, 2022
|
|
This debut issue suffers for having to explain this new world, and some may doubt that even the vaunted Snyder/Jock team can pull off this story in as stripped-down a format as this. However, what they (and book designer Emma Price) accomplish with lettering choices and the application of highlighter colors is unnerving enough to suggest that Book of Evil stands to become a worthwhile new addition to their celebrated oeuvre.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Book of Evil #2
January 11, 2023
|
|
What illustration is here is up to Jock's usual quality, but readers should know that they're getting something that walks the line between a comic book and a chapter of a sparsely illustrated prose story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Closet |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
The Closet #1
June 1, 2022
|
|
The Closet #1 is a page-turner. It's unfettered by overwrought narration, rendered obsolete by the impeccably crafted, atmospheric artwork.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Death of Doctor Strange: Bloodstone #1 |
Jan 12, 2022
show
|
|
There's simply too much going on here, and not all of it is as interesting as the rest.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Department of Truth #25 |
Sep 11, 2024
show
|
|
For longtime readers, this issue will offer both catharsis and excitement for what comes next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Dreaming (2018) |
17 issues
show
|
|
|
The Dreaming #5
January 9, 2019
|
|
The Dreaming continues to enthrall readers with the epic and mysterious tale of realm in flux. Or, as this issue would put it, caught between an ending and a beginning.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming #8
April 3, 2019
|
|
Abigail Larson's flowy pencils with Quinton Winter's soft colors were the perfect companions to this surreal, secondhand retelling of Dream's time on the mortal plane.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming #12
August 7, 2019
|
|
This issue suggests that things may never be as they were in the Dreaming and pulls the veil back"if only slightly"on the puppetmaster causing the upheaval, drawing already engrossed readers further into the series' narrative web.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming #13
September 4, 2019
|
|
The issue is packed with ideas from the fight to retain one's identity in their twilight to the LGBTQ community's embrace of monsters as mascots.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming #16
December 4, 2019
|
|
It's a sign of success that a story remains as engaging after a mystery has been solved as it was before, and The Dreaming succeeds at that.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming #18
February 5, 2020
|
|
Writer Si Spurrier continues to weave his threads together, nimbly reuniting Cain and Abel and giving new life to Dora under a new battle cry, "Nobody gets to make our myth but else."
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming #19
March 4, 2020
|
|
It's a thrilling issue in its own right, a rousing set up for the finale, and a satisfying set of revelations for longtime Sandman fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Dreaming: Waking Hours (2020) |
12 issues
show
|
|
|
The Dreaming: Waking Hours #1
August 5, 2020
|
|
Wilson, Robles, and Lopes offer a fresh start for readers curious about The Sandman or its universe, and the team follows through on that opportunity with a well-crafted introduction broaching questions of identity, attribution, and intersectionality.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming: Waking Hours #3
October 7, 2020
|
|
G. Willow Wilson falters a bit here as her Puck sounds a bit too much like a stock supervillain and not, well, puckish enough. But she's still spinning and enchanting tale about legacy, consequences, and responsibility that will leave readers excited to see how it all ends.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming: Waking Hours #7
February 3, 2021
|
|
Despite being billed as an intermission, a standalone story breaking up two larger arcs of The Dreaming, this story seems to lead straight into what comes next. Despite that, it has the air of a backdoor pilot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming: Waking Hours #9
April 7, 2021
|
|
Have the tales of once righteous revolutionary turned tyrant been overblown? Have the heroes been fed lies? Or does Nuala's outward faade mask something more dreadful? Those questions linger as this issue of the series draws to a close, but after another stellar installment, fans will be eager to learn the answers.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Dreaming: Waking Hours #10
May 5, 2021
|
|
It's exciting to see Ruin come into his fullness as the creative team approaches the climax of this story. If there's a weak point to the issue, Perker's art in Heather's flashback doesn't match the level of quality on the surrounding pages, with some askew faces and an unexciting depiction of magic at work. Still, there's much to love as The Dreaming's tale continues to unravel.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Expanse |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
The Expanse #3
February 17, 2021
|
|
The darkness and desperation in the issue's script also play into Alejandro Aragon's artistic strengths"his loose lines and long shadows"helping this penultimate chapter coalesce into the series's best installment thus far.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Great British Bump Off: Kill Or Be Quilt #1 |
Apr 09, 2025
show
|
|
Theres a warm, joyous energy crackling beneath the surface of The Great British Bump-Off: Kill or Be Quilt #1. Its welcoming and possibly even wholesome, but without feeling childishly twee. The Great British Bump-Off is in fine form in the first issue of its return and is as inviting to new readers as it is to those anticipating its comeback since the final issue of the first series. With its confident pacing the first issue introduces the cast of characters before hinting in the mystery to come, with the energetic cartooning ensuring it all still feels vibrant and entertaining throughout Kill or Be Quilt #1 is a finely crafted comic that'll have readers yearning for more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Last Mermaid (2024) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
The Last Mermaid #5
July 3, 2024
|
|
The Last Mermaid #5 again reads like enhanced storyboards for an animated feature without feeling like a studio pitch disguised as a comic book. That makes for another thrilling, masterly crafted installment of one of 2024's best new series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Life And Death Of Toyo Harada |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
The Life And Death Of Toyo Harada #4
June 12, 2019
|
|
It's another fascinating and appropriately bombastic chapter in the story in the story of one of the Valiant universe's most interesting characters, as well as a turning point for the motley crew of allies he had assembled around him.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Madness #1 |
Aug 09, 2023
show
|
|
The Madness #1 feels like a comic that's been in hiding for 20 years. Like many of AWA's comics, ACO affects a Bryan Hitch-like "widescreen comics" style.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Moon Is Following Us #1 |
Sep 18, 2024
show
|
|
With visuals this stunning, readers should be more than willing to hop onboard and enjoy the ride wherever the epic journey may ultimately take them.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The One Hand (2024) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
The One Hand #1
February 7, 2024
|
|
The One Hand #1 proves a dark and deeply satisfying introduction to Neo Novena, a setting shared with The One Hand's upcoming sister series, The Six Fingers, in a Rashomon-style retelling of the same story from multiple perspectives and with different creative teams.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Orville |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
The Orville #1
July 17, 2019
|
|
The issue is written by David A Goodman, a writer and executive producer on The Orville, so it should come as no surprise that the issue's dialogue and plot are pitch-perfect.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Orville #2
August 14, 2019
|
|
The Orville fans will feel at home and like they're reading an unproduced episode of the TV show, while more comics-literate fans will be let down by that same feeling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Orville #4
October 16, 2019
|
|
The series' art remains unremarkable, but it shouldn't be a barrier to entry for anyone looking for an offseason Orville fix.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Orville: Artifacts #2
November 24, 2021
|
|
The story still unfolds as if written network television, failing to leverage the comics medium in any way. Still, anyone primarily coming at this issue for a dose of the Orville to tide them over during the long gap between seasons will find in Artifacts a satisfying adventure.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Power Fantasy (2024) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
The Power Fantasy #1
August 7, 2024
|
|
It's intense, yet understated, and gripping. Ripe with the potential for drama, intrigue, nuance, depth, and meaning, The Power Fantasy is primed to explode superhero comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Sandman Universe: Thessaly #1 |
Aug 02, 2023
show
|
|
The Sandman Universe Special: Thessaly #1 is an issue that holds up perfectly well by itself, yet by the end, the full consequences of Thessaly's transaction with Tommi remain uncertain, and that's a story readers will likely have a great desire to follow.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Sandman Universe: Nightmare Country |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
The Six Fingers (2024) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
The Six Fingers #5
July 24, 2024
|
|
There are no easy or clear answers to be found in The Six Fingers, any more than there were in The One Hand's finale, and nor should there be as such tidy summations would only betray the weighty spirit of the world these creators have built but the conclusion will likely linger with readers for some time.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Six Million Dollar Man (2019) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer (2022) |
17 issues
show
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #1
April 20, 2022
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #1 starts Boom Studios' latest foray into the Buffy the Vampire Slayer multiverse, and it hits the same stumbling block. Like its peers, The Vampire Slayer leans on readers' assumed familiarity and attachment to Buffy's cast of characters to hook readers in but never clarifies how much previous knowledge they should assume applies to this particular branch of the multiverse.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #3
June 29, 2022
|
|
The Vampire Slayer has struggled to find a consistent focus, but this is at least an interesting reinterpretation of some of the original series' familiar tropes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #7
October 26, 2022
|
|
The excellent artwork combined with some of Gailey's best character writing to date (including Xander and Spike playing Mario Kart, a delightful aside) makes this The Vampire Slayer's strongest installment yet.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #9
December 21, 2022
|
|
Perhaps the most striking thing about The Vampire Slayer is how well the indie slice-of-life comic visual style brought by Hanna Templar (and some past artists) fits the comic's tone. Here, it works better than the superhero-like style used in many past Buffy comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #10
January 18, 2023
|
|
Willow reflects on each of her close friends, highlighting their strengths, flaws, and internal struggles. It's a narrative move that feels insecure as if double-checking to make sure readers have been paying attention, or that the point has come across effectively enough before moving on to the next act. The issue is thus left redundant, if not condescending, for any reader who has invested enough to stick with this iteration of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer universe for 10 issues.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #11
February 15, 2023
|
|
Gailey employs signature Buffy dialogue with enough restraint that it doesn't become obnoxious, and leans on Hannah Templer's ability to make the characters "act" to bring out all the emotion in the narrative. It's stellar stuff.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #13
April 19, 2023
|
|
The status quo is familiar, but the dynamics are different enough to keep things interesting. The dialog is recognizably Buffy, with subtle adjustments to delivery to account for it being read rather than heard. Lastly, the teases of a couple of familiar faces and locales are likely enough to keep readers hooked.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #14
May 17, 2023
|
|
It feels like an issue that's standing still, and then awkwardly chooses to have characters dump their emotions all at once during what should be times of urgency.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Vampire Slayer #16
July 19, 2023
|
|
The Vampire Slayer was an uneven attempt to start the Buffy the Vampire Slayer mythology over anew, proving too familiar at times and pointlessly different at others but it had its high points as well. This finale is not one of them.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Thief of Thieves #42 |
Nov 14, 2018
show
|
|
|
|
|
Time Waits #1 |
Sep 11, 2024
show
|
|
Time Waits #1 is a strong debut, introducing a cast of endearing characters, an intriguing mystery, and visual storytelling that is clear and easy to appreciate.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
TMNT: Bebop & Rocksteady Hit the Road |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
TMNT: Saturday Morning Adventures: Halloween Special |
Oct 11, 2023
show
|
|
The book looks as one might expect, with the artwork matching up to the television series perfectly. Similarly, the stories which are more comedy than horror rely mostly on puns and pop culture references for their jokes, the Creepy Eddie story throws in some clever metafiction into its plot involving Eddie having to stay legally distinct from Freddy.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Transformers '84 |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Transformers '84: Secrets & Lies #4
October 28, 2020
|
|
If it wasn't clear from the start (and it probably should have been), Secrets & Lies isn't a series meant to bring in new readers. It's a love letter to the original Transformers comics as much as it is a prequel.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Transformers (2019) |
29 issues
show
|
|
|
Transformers #18
March 11, 2020
|
|
The result is a flight through dangerous territory that's a nice change of pace, but not entirely successful as it doesn't spend enough time digging into the emotional impact of everything that's happening.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #20
June 17, 2020
|
|
Brian Ruckley is weaving a vast, political conspiracy thriller, and the dividends are still paying off. At 20 issues in, it's a take on the Transformers that still feels fresh.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #21
July 22, 2020
|
|
There's still something interesting at the core here as Orion Pax finally begins to see that Megatron is at the center of the upheaval that's struck Cybertronian society. We get a single page dedicated to that core as the issue buries it under harder to follow, less engrossing asides.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #22
August 19, 2020
|
|
Anna Malkova's artwork could stand to be more detailed and flesh out Cybertron, but she tells the story well, and for the first time in several issues, I'm curious about what will happen next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #23
September 16, 2020
|
|
Transformers #23 proves to be the end product of a narrative with all the moving parts of a great political thriller, but that can't deliver the goods.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #25
December 9, 2020
|
|
It's another stellar installment of a series now operating like a well-oiled machine, but it could stand to find a way to connect on a more emotional level.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #26
December 30, 2020
|
|
With this current "War World" arc, political machinations fall to the wayside while the Autobots and Decepticons begin marshaling their forces and taking up arms for civil war. It's a welcome shift as, after 24 issues, the subterfuge and plotting started to wear thin. Yet, instead of being an exciting transition, the series is taking on such a familiar shape"the classic robot versus robot warfare that defined the original Transformers toys and cartoons -- that it feels like more returning to a status quo.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #29
April 21, 2021
|
|
Transformers' most impressive achievement is making war between alien robots that transform into planes and cars an unintelligible bore.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #30
June 2, 2021
|
|
Now that the conflict is in full swing, 30 issues of running in circles while pursuing a Game of Thrones level of intrigue done, there's reason to believe Transformers is about to heat up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #31
June 23, 2021
|
|
The last page offers a fun tease for fans of the series and possibly a drastic shift in direction, but this issue is a small step towards getting there.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #35
September 22, 2021
|
|
The Transformers #35 gives Transformers fans their most basic desire: a big, old-fashioned Autobots versus Decepticons battle.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #36
October 27, 2021
|
|
The newest issue of Transformers turns out to be another dull and unwieldy mess of characters and plotlines that are difficult to distinguish and untangle.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #37
November 24, 2021
|
|
This issue feels like prologue as it is mostly Optimus Prime getting vague warnings from immersive Transformer, but there's some solid action beats here and Winston Chan brings a little more texture to the series' visuals.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #40
February 16, 2022
|
|
There's not much of a narrative arc here, just pushing the pieces closer together so that they can have the big fight next issue (presumably).
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #41
March 23, 2022
|
|
It's hard not to be a little exhausted by this Transformers series. There are many characters and so much happening at any time, yet everything moves at a glacial pace.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #42
April 27, 2022
|
|
There have been some action-packed issues lately, but the series consistently reverts to this state of near inertia, forcing readers to wait for the next random fit of action to happen, and the characterizations are not strong enough to carry these quieter issues.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers #43
May 18, 2022
|
|
There's some good old-fashioned robot blasting fun in this issue, and it's a welcome change of pace from what's been a morose march towards the series' conclusion.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Transformers: Beast Wars |
10 issues
show
|
|
|
Transformers: Beast Wars #1
February 3, 2021
|
|
Writer Erik Burnham delivers that, and Josh Burcham's art makes the transition from 3-D to 2-D a graceful one. But it does feel like a missed opportunity to do something a little more transformative (no pun intended) with this property.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers: Beast Wars #9
October 27, 2021
|
|
Not much happens here beyond a long walk and a fight with some robotic wolves. Apropos of nothing, another character lays out certain time travel rules, priming readers for the return of of the fourth-dimensional interlopers watching events unfold, which feels out of place in this particular issue. But if Erik Burcham continue to build of Beast Wars' cast of characters as he does with Skold here, then Transformers: Beast Wars could grow into a compelling ensemble adventure series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Transformers: Galaxies |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Transformers: Galaxies #8
August 12, 2020
|
|
Maggs relies heavily on internal monologue captions to express Gauge's uncertainty. That leaves little for the art team to do then to spend another issue depicting Gauge's cult-assigned routine fo menial tasks that are as boring as to look at as they are to execute.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers: Galaxies #12
December 30, 2020
|
|
The final few pages bring this story up to date with IDW's main Transformers comic and feel mostly perfunctory, but the rest of the issue is a solid enough action comic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Transformers: Shattered Glass #1 |
Aug 25, 2021
show
|
|
The issue may not end the way readers expect either, which only digs this fun new spin on a tried and true franchise's hooks in even further.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Transformers: War's End |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Transformers: War's End #1
February 23, 2022
|
|
Exarchon is one of the more exciting aspects of this take on Transformers, serving as an otherworldly being of pure destruction antithetical to the political intrigue that has defined this run. Yet, War's End maintains the same sluggish pace as the main Transformers series, with readers waiting for everyone else to catch up to what they already: that Exarchon is indeed back and ready to begin the Three-Fold Spark's conquest once more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers: War's End #2
March 30, 2022
|
|
There's plenty of action to be had, though it remains difficult to feel invested in much of it. There are some nice cartooning bits, especially involving Soundwave and Starscream's jockeying for Megatron's favor.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Transformers: War's End #3
April 27, 2022
|
|
All this mustache twirling leads to one exciting development from the previous issue resolves in the most obvious way possible (at least as it appears here). At the same time, the Decepticons and Autobots continue their tiresome bickering on the outskirts. Additionally, the artwork has some noticeable issues with perspective and foreshortening, making this installment one irksome frustration after another.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Trinity Special #1 |
Jan 31, 2024
show
|
|
It's not a bad collection of shorts, especially if you're interested in catching up on Trinity's story without hunting down a copy of Wonder Woman #800 or the other places where the bulk of this issue's contents have appeared previously. However, none of it feels essential, and the new material is the issue's weakest, making it redundant to those most invested in its title character's existence.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Typhoid Fever: X-Men #1 |
Nov 07, 2018
show
|
|
|
|
|
Ultramega by James Harren |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men (2018) |
23 issues
show
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men Annual #1
January 23, 2019
|
|
The issue has solid art and some strong character work, but otherwise, it feels like a continuity bridge between two different eras of X-Men and little else.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #2
November 21, 2018
|
|
With all of the attention-seeking stunts of the first issue out of the way, the second issue of Uncanny X-Men -- drawn by RB Silva, an unsung hero fo the X-Men line -- moves at a much steadier pace, giving its large ensemble cast proper room to breath and readers something to latch onto.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #4
December 5, 2018
|
|
The fourth issue of Uncanny X-Men takes the "Disassembled" arc from "not living up to expectations" territory to being actively frustrating.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #5
December 12, 2018
|
|
The story still feels a bit too much like a pastiche of '90s X-Men events like "X-Cutioner's Song," but it's a big step up from last weeks nadir.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #7
December 26, 2018
|
|
The quiet is welcome in a series that has been so much cacophony so far, and hopefully, the sense of focus will carry through the final act of "Disassembled."
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #9
January 9, 2019
|
|
This story has been unfocused and detached and failing to invest readers early means the payoffs aren't paying off the way they should.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #10
January 16, 2019
|
|
Despite the many talented creators involved, "Disassembled" was not the rousing return of the flagship X-Men series that it was made out to be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #11
February 6, 2019
|
|
Mutants being on the verge of extinction for different reasons has been Marvel's status quo for the X-Men for years. Uncanny X-Men #11 sells that idea better than any attempt before.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #13
March 6, 2019
|
|
There's a bit more handwringing about Cyclops' time as a revolutionary than seems necessary, and there's also a couple of moments where another panel beat would have helped. Otherwise, Rosenberg has a solid take on the X-Men for the era they're in, and the execution issues that have hounded the series seem to be improving.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #14
March 20, 2019
|
|
Larroca provides stellar artwork and Matthew Rosenberg writes the team with a sense of camaraderie the infuses each scene with joy. The issue ends with the team toasting to small victories, and that's an apt reaction to this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #16
April 17, 2019
|
|
This issue has more great character moments, though does suffer from some clumsy pacing in the back half of the issue, which has way too much going on for its own good, even if they are all good, entertaining things in their own right.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #17
May 1, 2019
|
|
The melodrama that creeps in is understandable but feels cheap compared to what is at the core of the story. Still, this a standout issue of what has already been a stellar run.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #22
July 17, 2019
|
|
Matthew Rosenberg's run on X-Men started off feeling fresh, focused, and energetic. As it's continued on it's grown a bit unwieldy, and that feeling is present in this final issue as well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Under York #1 |
Mar 27, 2024
show
|
|
It reads like someone took the basic premise of Neil Gaiman's television show-turned-novel Neverwhere and adapted it to appeal to fans of supernatural teen dramas like The Vampire Diaries with tedious results.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo (2023) |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo: Ice and Snow #1
September 27, 2023
|
|
Ice and Snow #1 keeps the high level of quality that they've come to expect from Sakai, weaving a tale of serene beauty mixed with understated horror, maintaining Usagi Yojimbo's well-earned reputation as one of comics' best series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo: Ice and Snow #4
January 10, 2024
|
|
Usagi and Jei are both compellingly expressive in their struggle, Jei's vengeful leering and Usagi's angry grimace both drawing the reader into the conflict. It's the latest in a long line of Usagi Yojimbo issues that never disappoint.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2
May 8, 2024
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #2 features Sakai's fine cartooning, as strong as ever with great expressiveness from its character, and its central theme, that of Yukichi with his youthful idealism regarding the samurai code confronted with the reality of what one must do to survive without a master, is compelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #4
July 17, 2024
|
|
With its straightforward and clear storytelling different permutations on three-tier pages throughout Sakai blends simplicity with depth, making Usagi Yojimbo consistently excellent comic book reading.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow #5
August 21, 2024
|
|
Some bits in the ending don't completely satisfyI'm not sure the series ever gave a satisfying explanation for what Jimmu's whole deal was, and it's unclear why Stray Dog remains so standoffish about his true morality with his peersbut on the whole, its another compelling adventure for Usagi Yojimbo.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Vampire: The Masquerade |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Venom (2016) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Venom #162
February 21, 2018
|
|
The "Poison X" crossover between X-Men Blue and Venom continues in Venom #162, and the story may be suffering from symbiote overload.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Venom #163
March 7, 2018
|
|
Perhaps when the larger Poisons storyline that Cullen Bunn is telling is complete this chapter will feel more worthwhile, but for now, it just feels like a derailment of what he had going on in X-Men Blue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Venomized |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Venomized #1
April 4, 2018
|
|
The first issue of Venomized makes it clear that Cullen Bunn has thought long and hard about how the mechanics and ecology of symbiotes and Poisons work. Unfortunately, those details aren't particularly interesting to have explained.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Venomized #3
April 18, 2018
|
|
Venomized remains hard to recommend, but at least it's pretty and the plot seems to be going somewhere in this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Venomverse Reborn #2 |
Jul 24, 2024
show
|
|
|
|
|
Vinyl #3 |
Aug 25, 2021
show
|
|
|
|
|
War of the Realms #2 |
Apr 17, 2019
show
|
|
The issue stumbles a bit at the end when the heroes regroup and transparently lay out the pitches for the many "War of the Realms" tie-in series being published alongside this main event, but it's a minor sin for such an epic tale ot commit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Wesley Dodds: The Sandman (2023) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Wesley Dodds: The Sandman #3
December 13, 2023
|
|
Wesley Dodds: The Sandman continues to be one of the best-looking comic books published today, full of well-realized characters and compelling mysteries with meaningful moral weight.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
What If?: Magik #1 |
Oct 31, 2018
show
|
|
|
|
|
Wild's End (2023) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Wild's End #4
September 20, 2023
|
|
In Wild's End #4, INJ Culbard puts on a masterclass in using various layouts, panel shapes, and compositions to achieve the desired effects.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wild's End #5
October 18, 2023
|
|
In an industry where gimmicks and flashy styles are often employed to draw attention to stories not worth the effort to read, Wild's End stands out as a testament to how effective a compelling story told well can be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
William of Newbury (2024) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
William of Newbury #1
May 29, 2024
|
|
William of Newbury #1 is a masterclass debut. It's thematically rich, gorgeous, and dripping with atmosphere and personality. It's as close to a perfect first issue as I've seen this year, and it makes me hope for many more adventures to come.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
William of Newbury #3
July 31, 2024
|
|
If this continues, William could soon be standing alongside the likes of Hellboy, Miyamoto Usagi, and the Goon as part of the pantheon of iconic adventure heroes published by Dark Horse Comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Wolverine: The Long Night |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Wolverine: The Long Night #2
February 6, 2019
|
|
The comic book adaptation of Wolverine: The Long Night continues to be an engrossing bit of rural noir as the federal agents continue to dig up the mystery at the heart of this small, Alaskan town.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wolverine: The Long Night #3
March 13, 2019
|
|
Most of the story feels like it happened before the first issue and we're playing catch-up along with the investigating agents. Even with that small tic, Wolverine: The Long Night is one of the best Logan stories that Marvel has published in years.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X Deaths Of Wolverine (2022) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
X Deaths Of Wolverine #1
January 26, 2022
|
|
Perhaps future issues can build on the groundwork lain here and find the sense of scale it's reaching for by playing off of events in its companion series, but this debut issue is a frustrating start.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X Deaths Of Wolverine #5
March 23, 2022
|
|
It was unwise to prop these Wolverine-centered series as spiritual successors to House of X and Powers of X. It set them up to disappoint, and disappoint they did.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X Lives Of Wolverine (2022) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
X Lives Of Wolverine #1
January 19, 2022
|
|
Based on the first issue, X Lives of Wolverine isn't going to set the mutant world on fire the way HoX/PoX did, but it is easily Percy's most ambitious story to date, and this is a stellar start.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X Lives Of Wolverine #2
February 2, 2022
|
|
When telling a story about time travel, moving back and forth in the "present day" portion of the narrative is risky, and X Lives of Wolverine #2 is evidence of that.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X Lives Of Wolverine #3
February 16, 2022
|
|
X Lives of Wolverine continues to be the slightly better of the two largely underwhelming Wolverine focuses miniseries leading into the "Destiny of X" era. That's mainly due to Joshua Caassara's artwork.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X Of Swords (2020) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
X Of Swords: Stasis #1
October 28, 2020
|
|
When the level of craft is as high as it is in X of Swords: Stasis, that's every bit as rewarding as anything that comes before or after. X of Swords: Stasis is a vital, enthralling chapter in the X of Swords saga.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Factor (2024) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Factor #2
September 18, 2024
|
|
X-Factor #2 feels less like a case of early 2000s deja vu than the series' debut, focusing on Havok and Polaris' increasingly complicated relationship.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Force #3 |
Sep 25, 2024
show
|
|
There's not much memorable here and the issue is likely to be forgotten once its closed.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men '97 #4 |
Jun 26, 2024
show
|
|
Ultimately, X-Men '97 lacks the thematic ambition that characterized the TV show and helped it transcend mere nostalgia play into something more resonant and essential. However, as a prequel, the comic appropriately fits the more indulgent mode that X-Men '97 starts with before shifting into more serious matters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men (2019) |
20 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men #1
October 16, 2019
|
|
As long as Marvel keeps teaming Hickman with talented artists like Yu, X-Men seems primed to be one of the most exciting and talked about superhero stories published today.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #2
November 13, 2019
|
|
It shows the potential in this intricate Dawn of X machine, with Hickman making minor references to almost every other series that has debuted since X-Men #1. It makes the entire X-Men universe feel like a finely woven tapestry within being so knotted as to lose anyone following X-Men alone.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #6
February 12, 2020
|
|
This should be a breakout issue of artist Matteo Buffagni, whose creative choices help cast even moments fans have read before in entirely new emotional lights.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #7
February 26, 2020
|
|
X-Men #7 is a dense and rewarding issue that somehow feels both packed and like we're only touching the tip of the iceberg.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #8
March 11, 2020
|
|
This issue, more than any other, is about spectacle and action and tapping Madmun Asrar for the job was the right choice.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #10
July 29, 2020
|
|
Despite some distracting artistic shortcuts, it's still a stellar installment of the flagship "Dawn of X" title.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #12
September 16, 2020
|
|
It's all scene-setting, but it'll have readers eager for "X of Swords" to get into full swing next week.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #13
October 21, 2020
|
|
The issue redefines Apocaypse's existence in a way that longtime X-Men nerds are sure to appreciate. Otherwise, it's a fine but not particularly memorable installment in the "X of Swords" saga.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #14
November 4, 2020
|
|
For an installment dedicated almost entirely to the backstory, X-Men #14 does a stellar and subtle job of pushing "X of Swords" forward.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #15
November 25, 2020
|
|
Since House of X/Powers of X reshaped the X-Men line for the "Dawn of X" era, some fans have complained that this new status quo does not resemble the X-Men they've known and loved for decades. In X-Men #15, writer Jonathan Hickman addresses those concerns head-on. His response? Yes, you are correct.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #16
December 30, 2020
|
|
Despite Noto's issues with environments, X-Men #16 still succeeds at setting the stage for an exciting new phase in the Krakoan era of X-Men.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #18
February 24, 2021
|
|
Whether the plot points are enough to sate the hungry X-Men fan, Mahmud Asrar's slick visuals should satisfy with his depiction of this otherworldly locale, these mutant's unusual powers, and the battle within.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #19
March 31, 2021
|
|
It's an inventive and exciting issue that sees every creator involved excelling at doing the things they're best at to create a tense and emotionally impactful adventure.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #20
May 26, 2021
|
|
It's a well-crafted issue that simultaneously gives a sense of closure to this X-Men series, revisiting important but understated narrative seeds and bringing to the fore of readers' minds ahead of the grand Hellfire Gala. X-Men fans should be plenty excited for what comes next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men (2021) |
36 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men Annual #1
December 21, 2022
|
|
It's good stuff all around, providing entertaining X-Men adventures and meaningful development for a character desperately in need of it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #1
July 7, 2021
|
|
X-Men #1 succeeds in achieving that goal, but it all feels somewhat juvenile when compared to what preceded it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #4
October 13, 2021
|
|
There's the start of a good idea here, but the execution is boring, and the whole thing runs its uneventful course too quickly to be fulfilling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #5
November 24, 2021
|
|
It's a stellar issue, especially for fans of Lorna Dane, some of the best art currently offered by the superhero genre.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #6
January 5, 2022
|
|
The stakes seem to be rising for Cyclops' X-Men as the X-line prepares to pivot into the "Destiny of X" era, and all creators involved are rising to the occasion.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #7
January 26, 2022
|
|
Gerry Duggan's self-aware style of superheroes suits the premise well, allowing him to build Cyclops' importance as a fighter, leader, and symbol sincerely without becoming overbearing. Artist Pepe Larraz and colorist Marte Gracia make the most of the opportunity to unleash their complete mastery of superhero aesthetics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #9
March 2, 2022
|
|
This issue is a refreshing change of pace that sets the stage for what's to come for the flagship X-Men title in the "Destiny of X" era.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #13
August 17, 2022
|
|
There's little in the way of dialogue beyond combat orders, leading to a confusing, off-putting mess of an introduction that also doesn't feel terribly essential to Judgment Day's plot, making it a miss on all fronts.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #15
September 28, 2022
|
|
It's ultimately an issue that is more likely to leave readers excited about what's coming next issue to satisfy in itself, but it's still not a disappointment.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #17
November 23, 2022
|
|
X-Men's return to the vault takes some twists and turns, with Gerry Duggan furthering and resolving certain plot threads left dangling by Jonathan Hickman's exit from the X-Office.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #18
January 11, 2023
|
|
Gerry Duggan's signature banter and humor are on display, and C.F. Villa and Matt Milla provide visuals in the style of, if not on the same level, as the X-line defining team of Pepe Larraz and Marte Gracia.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #19
February 15, 2023
|
|
There's enough cool stuff in this issue of X-Men to keep anyone into its brand of super heroics hooked, even if the execution doesn't hit all of the marks.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #20
March 8, 2023
|
|
The big battle should be the issue's setpiece, but it lacks the epic punch and vibrant grandeur of earlier installments of the series, feeling faded and by the numbers by comparison. A lot is going on here, and yet nothing stands out.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #23
June 7, 2023
|
|
The series still feels like it's in a holding pattern as it waits for Fall of X to begin, but it's a stellar issue in its own right.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #24
July 5, 2023
|
|
At least the story looks great, with Joshua Cassara and Frank Martin synergizing into something that brings out the best in the linework, and there are enough stellar action beats to be worth reading for fans of the series, but some of the scenes are confounding.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #25
August 2, 2023
|
|
The issue raises some questions about what exactly happened during the Hellfire Gala (If Professor X marched practically all mutants through the gates, then who is it Orchis is deporting to Mars?), but is a stellar enough start to mutantkind's dark days.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #26
September 6, 2023
|
|
With its slow pace, X-Men makes Fall of X feel less like it has anything to say and more like another awkward holding pattern for Marvel's mutants.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #27
October 4, 2023
|
|
Duggan is hardly the first writer to tell stories about conditions and times more dire than those he has lived through. However, the coopting of contemporary watchwords that have already run their course and other unsubtle parallels makes the entire endeavor feel dated and too literal.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #28
November 1, 2023
|
|
A lame-duck pall hangs over this run of X-Men, which feels increasingly like a retread of the "X-Men: Disassembled" arc that preceded House of X/Power of X. Krakoa isn't even dead and buried yet, and already the X-Men are back to retreading old ground. It's a real shame.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #29
December 6, 2023
|
|
X-Men #29 is a stellar issue that serves as a bright spot during what has been an otherwise uneven Fall of X era for this series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #31
February 7, 2024
|
|
Phil Noto's soft artwork helps the tragic end of Talon and Synch's time together go down smoothly but is less well suited to life-threatening throwdown with a killer robot, though some of that lack of menace can be placed on the issue's awkward timing in relationship to Fall of the House of X #1.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #32
March 6, 2024
|
|
The issue is hampered a bit by lots of references to events occuring in other "Fall of X" books. Otherwise, this issue represents a solid outing that will put a smile on the face of a longtime X-Men fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #33
April 3, 2024
|
|
It's beginning to feel a bit like X-Men is stretching out its finale to ensure it makes it to the upcoming milestone 700th issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #34
May 1, 2024
|
|
The issue does bring some closure to the Synch/Talon/Wolverine situation that has been at the heart of the book, but with even the considerable artistic talent involved struggling to make something out of what little the script has to offer, X-Men #34 feels like the tail-end of a story stretched too thin.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men Annual: 2023
September 20, 2023
|
|
It feels like there's a disconnect between the story the creators think they're telling and the story that appears on the page, and I'm not entirely sure they envisioned the same one to begin with.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men (2024) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men #1
July 10, 2024
|
|
X-Men #1 isn't poorly crafted but is indebted to a version of the X-team we've seen in the past. X-Men #1 lacks a strong hook, seemingly hoping that simply sending out these characters under familiar circumstances will be enough to make its case. It's not. Perhaps that's overly criticalthe issue is functional and capably sets the stage for future adventure, and it isn't a bad-looking comicbut it doesn't make much of a statement.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men #2
August 14, 2024
|
|
I'm not sure what X-Men #2 is trying to achieve beyond possibly turning X-Men into a straightforward power fantasy and not even doing that particularly well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Before The Fall (2023) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Black (2018) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Black: Juggernaut #1
October 24, 2018
|
|
Robbie Thompson's story dives into Cain Marko's psyche, both literally and figuratively, but rather than revealing anything new, it doubles down on who we already understood the Juggernaut to be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Black: Magneto #1
October 3, 2018
|
|
As the opening chapter in a story that will continue throughout X-Men Black, it's just enough to whet your appetite, but Nadler and Thompson's take on classic archvillain Apocalypse, Geraldo Borges' artwork, and the hook that reveals itself at the twist at the chapter's end will have readers intrigued.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Black: Mystique #1
October 17, 2018
|
|
The Apocalypse backstory slows the pace down a bit in this installment, but the chapter ends on a note that suggests things are going to pick up in a big way next week.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Blood Hunt: Psylocke #1 |
Jul 03, 2024
show
|
|
While it will most fully appeal to those with prior investment, or at least curiosity about, the Psylocke character, X-Men: Blood Hunt Psylocke #1 is a stellar outing for the fan-favorite mutant ninja.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue (2017) |
16 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #21
February 14, 2018
|
|
The idea of pairing up the X-Men and Venom is still fun since its so unusual, the story Bunn is telling is still resting on solid legs especially given the interesting final page turn, but this issue stumbles a bit in its execution.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #26
April 25, 2018
|
|
X-Men Blue feels like it had a lot of its life sapped out of it due to its main character being elsewhere during what feels like the culmination of over 20 issues of stories.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #27
May 9, 2018
|
|
Marcus To does a solid job with the art, but there's still the lingering feeling like X-Men Blue became a different book at some point.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #30
June 27, 2018
|
|
X-Men Blue #30 is a textbook example of a serviceable superhero comic book. There's some melodrama, some fighting, some teases of things to come, but none of it is particularly memorable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #32
July 25, 2018
|
|
It is hard not to feel a little divorced from the rest of the issue's events as a result, those events comprised mostly of seven mutants yelling very passionately at each other.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #33
August 8, 2018
|
|
Marcus To delivers stellar visuals in what is a solid issue that seems primarily interested in setting up bigger thing to come.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #34
August 29, 2018
|
|
Marcus To shows some of his best work, building to a final visual note that will leave readers, longtime X-Men fans in particular, with chills.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Blue #35
September 12, 2018
|
|
The biggest flaw here may be that it will leave fans wishing we saw those vignettes explored in more depth. But all good things come to an end, and X-Men Blue #35 is a thoughtful, satisfying beginning of the end for the original five.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Forever (2024) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Forever #1
March 20, 2024
|
|
Immortal X-Men was one of the highlights of the latter half of the Krakoan era. X-Men: Forever continues its narrative, but trying to service the scale of the "Fall of X" meta-narrative means sacrificing some of the sharp focus on character that made Immortal captivating.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Forever #2
April 24, 2024
|
|
While arguably not as essential as Rise of the House of X, X-Men Forever #2 enhances the reading experience while feeling substantial.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold (2017) |
16 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold Annual #2
August 1, 2018
|
|
McGuire's story strips down the character to her basest parts to discover what it is at her core that really defines her and Failla's artwork does a great job of depicting the character and her campmates as being at that transitionary early teenage.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #21
February 7, 2018
|
|
The character work and plot set up is of a high enough caliber to carry the issue few, but the rough around the edges artwork keeps the issue from truly soaring.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #26
April 18, 2018
|
|
The road to the wedding of Kitty Pryde and Colossus begins here, with a flashback drawn by David Marquez. It's beautiful, but given the problematic elements of the early days of Kitty and Peter's relationships, one wonders if reminding fans of those early days is a wise choice.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #28
May 23, 2018
|
|
Still, despite some small art hiccups, the strengths of this issue far outweigh the flaws, delivering one of the best installment of X-Men Gold in weeks.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #29
June 6, 2018
|
|
While X-Men Gold has been inconsistent as of late, issue #29 gets back to what made the series' early issues so much fun: high action-adventure and enjoyable dynamics between the characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #30
June 20, 2018
|
|
It's a beautiful, complicated issue that's sure to bring out some complicated feelings from fans, and it's all the better for it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #33
August 1, 2018
|
|
The result is a relatively quiet but solid chapter that moves X-Men Gold closer to its finale and whatever may be next for the X-Men.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Gold #34
August 22, 2018
|
|
It is a strange way for X-Men Gold to be heading towards its end. With most of the cast unrepresented, this feels like a postscript to the wedding. Perhaps Guggenheim will bring it all together for the finale, right now the book feels a bit listless.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends (2021) |
11 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #1
February 17, 2021
|
|
It isn't even hard to imagine revisiting those original comics and inserting X-Men: Legends #1 into the reading order to see if and how it all holds together. However, for anyone but the most dedicated fans of that bygone era, X-Men Legends #1 is little more than a baffling contradiction, a new thing made to be old that it may provide shelter to those who live in the past.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #2
March 31, 2021
|
|
The idea of a series existing alongside the main X-Men line that revisits eras from the past isn't inherently a bad one. However, this is a prime example of how to go about it in all of the wrong ways.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #4
June 23, 2021
|
|
Louise Simonson still has a strong grasp on these characters, and Walter Simonsons is a singular artistic talent, but X-Men: Legends continues to feel like a pointless endeavor.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #5
July 21, 2021
|
|
As with the rest of X-Men: Legends to date, the premise doesn't feel strong enough to justify the trip back through time, but the execution is stellar enough that diehard fans and those nostalgic for the era should find it enjoyable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #6
August 11, 2021
|
|
These X-Men: Legends stories often struggle to justify their existence, but this one may make the previous work it intends to complement retroactively worse.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #10
January 12, 2022
|
|
Nicieza tries to make something of nothing, turning it into a character piece about Sinister, but it ultimately feels at best like part of a larger story that doesn't exist.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #11
February 2, 2022
|
|
The style may seem dated to newer readers, but anyone who knows the tone and style and maintains a taste for it will enjoy this slice of nostalgia.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends (2022) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #2
September 21, 2022
|
|
The story is unlikely to disappoint his fans, and David Wachter draws it well, but for anyone else, its existence is likely to raise more questions than are worth pondering.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #3
October 26, 2022
|
|
If not for a reference to emoji, X-Men: Legends #3 could be titled Longshot #7 and have come out right after the end of the original Longshot miniseries, and that's perfect.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #4
November 9, 2022
|
|
X-Men: Legends #4 is likely one of those comics that some will bemoan as a story where "nothing happens," and, in fairness, the plot is circular, but that's not the point. Instead, Ann Nocenti uses her two issues on X-Men: Legends not to plug some hole in continuity, answering questions almost nobody was asking, but to show her skill as a satirist with a distinct and strong authorial voice.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #5
January 4, 2023
|
|
Whilce Portacia returns to X-Menand his creation, Lucas Bishopin X-Men: Legends, teaming with writer Brian Haberlin and colorist Arif Prianto to tell the story of what happened to Bishop before he stepped through that time portal in Uncanny X-Men #282. The story is thematically complex.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Legends #6
February 8, 2023
|
|
For any X-Men fans who feel like they need a little insight into how Bishop became a member of the X-Men Gold Team after showing up through a time portal in a murderous rage, this will provide that. The issue offers no hook for anyone outside of that narrow demographic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Red (2018) |
12 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #1
February 7, 2018
|
|
X-Men Red teases the return of a villain who is perfectly suited to the story the series is looking to tell. In their first issue, Taylor, Asrar, and company present a story that has plenty of visceral energy and that seems interested in carving a new path for these characters rather than recapturing past glory. That combination of big ideas and big action makes X-Men Red one of the boldest new X-Men comic in years.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #4
May 16, 2018
|
|
While some of the books in the X-Men line seem devoted to recapturing past glory, X-Men Red continues to be the one interested pushing the X-Men into the future just as much as Jean Grey is trying to build a future for mutantkind.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #6
July 18, 2018
|
|
Even without all of that long-term X-Men history in your head, X-Men Red is an exciting, relevant, high-concept, and epic superhero adventure.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #7
August 22, 2018
|
|
X-Men Red #7 is arguably the most pedestrian issue of the series so far, but it is a still very good superhero comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #9
October 24, 2018
|
|
This issue is lighter on the metaphor than most of the series has been, but has enough strong relationship moments and excellent characterizations that it will likely still leave X-Men fans with the urge to pump their fists in the air.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #10
November 7, 2018
|
|
Tom Taylor's script starts slow here, but before the end, he's managed to toss out another big, ridiculous idea that no one was likely to have seen coming and that will have will have fans ready for the big finish.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: Red #3 |
Jun 15, 2022
show
|
|
|
|
|
X-Men: The Trial of Magneto (2021) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #1
August 18, 2021
|
|
The series has potential as the ending hints at something far more significant than Magneto's tantrums happening, but this opening chapter can't seem to settle on a consistently compelling tone.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #2
September 15, 2021
|
|
The Trial of Magneto continues and it highlights all of Leah Williams' strengths and weaknesses as a writer. The issue's script navigates and expresses the nuances of mourning and grief in ways that superhero comics often gloss over, but there's also a least one line in the script that will likely leave readers confused unless they belong to a specific subset of online fans.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men: The Wedding Special |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Men: The Wedding Special: Vol. 2 #1
May 29, 2024
|
|
Marvel Comics celebrates the renewal of Mystique and Destiny's vows in X-Men: The Wedding Special, which doesn't shy away from the complexities inherent in the celebration of two women who have had careers as terrorists and been unrepentant murderers or accessories thereof. The
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Ray Robot |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Ray Robot #2
October 2, 2020
|
|
The wild, sci-fi plot involving living robots and time travel gives Allred an excuse to render multiple two-page spreads depicting techno-psychedelic wonder, which pop perfectly with Laura Allred's colors. As a story, it leaves something to be desired.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Ray Robot #4
November 25, 2020
|
|
You may not be able to hang on to the story's narrative thread too title as you turn pages, but the visuals never disappoint.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Terminators (2022) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Terminators #3
November 30, 2022
|
|
X-Terminators #3 sees Leah Williams pushing the grindhouse buttons perhaps too much, as some of the team's raunchier dialogue seems somewhat contrived in places where it came naturally in the first two issues.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Terminators #4
December 28, 2022
|
|
Those who believe superhero comics are and should only be serious business need not bother. Those who are looking for a good time should call on X-Terminators.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Terminators #5
January 25, 2023
|
|
This final issue is a and fast read, little more than pure catharsis for everything the team has had to endure, but Leah Williams, Carlos Gomez, and Bryan Valenza know how to make that fun. Gomez brings pure joy to the characters' faces and body language.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Treme X-Men (2022) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Treme X-Men #1
December 7, 2022
|
|
It's entirely possible that, with this bit of homework out of the way, the remainder of this miniseries will be something enjoyable for fans of Claremont's X-Men voice, but this issue is a waste of everyone's time.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Treme X-Men #2
December 28, 2022
|
|
It's better than almost all of what appeared in X-Treme X-Men's pages during the second half of its run, meaning anyone who found anything to enjoy in that original series will likely find something to appreciate here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Treme X-Men #3
February 15, 2023
|
|
X-Treme X-Men #3 is chock full of patented Chris Claremont dialogue, from the hammy "body and soul" style dialogue to the mutants losing their power beat. The issue feels scattered as Claremont, over the course of only two previous installments, established at least four subplots playing out simultaneously, making it hard to connect with any of them.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Treme X-Men #4
March 22, 2023
|
|
X-Treme X-Men #4 is fueld by familiar Chris Claremont tropes. Characters lose their powers only to show how formidable they are without them, and the power of teamwork overcomes seemingly insurmountable odds.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|