Flash #28

8.6

Critic Reviews

5 Reviews
7.2

User Reviews

8 Reviews
Event\Storyline DC K.O.
Writer Mark Waid, Christopher Cantwell
Artist Vasco Georgiev
Cover Price $3.99

DC K.O. All Fight Month, round 6 of 8! It's the match you never saw coming!

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CRITIC REVIEWS

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user
  • 10

    Nerd Initiative - Matthew Roth

    Dec 24, 2025

    The Flash #28 features a battle between two long time heroes with very opposite outlooks on this tournament and history. They have been tried and tested through time and leverage their experience into one visually stunning battle. The multiple storylines being weaved throughout this issue take us on an excellent journey that at no point becomes too confusing but rather hypes us up for what is next. Read Full Review

  • 9.0

    Geek Dad - Ray Goldfield

    Dec 24, 2025

    This one feels like a foregone conclusion at times, but it manages to work in some great characterization for both heroes and show how different heroes approach this conflict some allow the tournament to make them indulge their worst instincts, while others stand tall until the very last bell tolls. Read Full Review

  • 9.0

    Comic Watch - Chad Burdette

    Dec 24, 2025

    Flash #28 is a solid issue that provides an interesting round 6 between two different characters that is more philosophical then it is physical with some visits from some of two combatants variants while moving the events of the tie-in that have been happening in the ongoing title seamlessly. Read Full Review

  • 8.0

    But Why Tho? - William Tucker

    Dec 24, 2025

    The Flash Issue 28 is a rapid-fire round. Hemmed in by other storylines, there is still a phenomenal fight in the middle of this issue. Read Full Review

  • 7.0

    Weird Science - Gabe Hernandez

    Dec 24, 2025

    The Flash #28 does what tournament comics rarely accomplish: it makes you care about the winner beyond bracket mathematics. Jay Garrick's exhausted defiance and psychological transformation elevate this above typical combat fare, and Wally's simultaneous timeline crisis adds weight that the tournament structure alone couldn't provide. The art serves the story effectively, and the dialogue consistently entertains. However, the Grodd interlude muddles clarity, Guy's final form feels narratively convenient rather than earned, and the comic leaves its most interesting thematic threads (Jay's fear of becoming the Heart's instrument) underdeveloped. Read Full Review

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