Second Coming: Only Begotten Son #4
Critic Rating
User Rating
| Writer | Mark Russell |
| Artist | Richard Pace |
| Cover Price | $3.99 |
From Renegade Game Studio.It's Jesus to the rescue when a bureaucracy menaces Sunstar's grandmother; and millions of lives are threatened by a villain Sunstar bullied in high school. PLUS: new AHOY prose stories & pictures.
CRITIC REVIEWS Back to Top
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10
COMICON - Olly MacNamee
Sep 02, 2021In just one issue Mark Russell, Richard Pace and Leonard Kirk deliver a variety of storylines and emotions that are both real and melodramatic and tinged with tragedy. I can't think of many more emotive comic books than this one that tries to evoke self-reflection in the reader than 'Second Coming: Only Begotten Son'. One to definitely recommend to the FOX News viewer in your life. Read Full Review
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9.0
Comic Crusaders - Daniel Clark
Sep 02, 2021Overall Second Coming continues to be one of the more fulfilling reads in comics today. The ideas are clear and precise and executed with a pristine vision. Somehow they have made a book costarring Jesus that could appeal to the most steadfast atheist or an open-minded Christian. If they are only willing to listen. Read Full Review
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8.0
ComicBook.com - Nicole Drum
Sep 01, 2021It's an interesting mix of things, bringing these two stories together, but it makes for a very balanced issue and while it's still a little unclear where the overall story is going, it doesn't really feel like there needs to be a strong, driving plot. It's a nice change of pace. Read Full Review
USER REVIEWS Back to Top
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7.0
This issue brings in a nemesis to Sunstar dubbed Cranius, who doesn't appear to have anything to do with the rest of the plot and merely serves to give the world a shakeup. He's introduced in the most clumsy flashback panels that look at first glance like they found their way into the comic by accident. There's are a number of other interesting moments beyond that, but I feel as though we've given up on maintaining a narrative. I enjoyed the short story in the backmatter called Roach, which was a Kafkaesque story about a teacher encountering Franz Kafka as a cockroach in his kitchen.
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9.0