Thundercats #6
| Writer | Stephen Mooney |
| Artist | Stephen Mooney |
| Cover Price | $4.99 |
Panthro beats the ever-living hell out of bad guys with his THUNDERTANK.
ALL COVERS CARDSTOCK
CRITIC REVIEWS
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9.0
The Comic Book Spot - Jaymee Remolde
Jul 19, 2024ThunderCats #6 is a satisfying look into the thoughts and motivations of General Panthro and a worthy debut of the next airborne threat to the ThunderCats. It looks like this general needs to create an air force. Read Full Review
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8.4
The Super Powered Fancast - Deron Generally
Jul 17, 2024Moss delivers great art in the issue. The visuals are beautifully detailed and the action is filled with thrilling imagery. Read Full Review
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8.4
You Don't Read Comics - Russ Bickerstaff
Jul 18, 2024The action is maintained with a great deal of energy throughout. Panthro is given quite a bit of time to capably brood over the course of the issue, which it benefits from quite a bit. And then there are little details that are fun too. Shalvey and company even manage to make Snarfer come across as something other than annoying. Theres actually a cuteness there, which theyd never really managed in four seasons of the original series. Thats a nice touch on a largely satisfying issue that adds to a largely successful run for the current series. Read Full Review
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8.0
ComicBook.com - Matthew Aguilar
Jul 17, 2024Panthro steps into the spotlight and absolutely commands it in Thundercats #6, as the series makes a major revelation that only builds the intrigue of the group's new home. Declan Shalvey's decision to view much of the issue through Panthro's internal monologue is one of the book's strongest elements, as we get a real glimpse of his internal conflicts about how he's approached Lion-O and Cheetara. Read Full Review
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6.0
Comical Opinions - Gabriel Hernandez
Jul 16, 2024THUNDERCATS #6 delivers a Panthro-centric issue to help the character learn from recent developments, put him in the thick of an almost issue-long fight, and unveil a few important revelations about Third Earth. This issue is one of Shalvey's strongest yet, but the good will of the script is offset by weak, flat, uninspired art. Read Full Review