Giga #2
| Writer | Alex Paknadel |
| Artist | John Le |
| Cover Price | $3.99 |
Evan should never have gone back to the dead Giga, but he did, and now he's a murder suspect. Meanwhile, Legs is deteriorating at an alarming rate. The Red King--the oldest and largest of the Giga--is revealed, prophesied to unleash hell on a world whose sins the great mech took into itself centuries earlier. As an old friend of Evan's returns, he devises a desperate plan to locate the dead Giga's real killers.
CRITIC REVIEWS
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10
Comic Crusaders - Johnny "The Machine" Hughes
Dec 09, 2020This is a great read on many levels; a stand in part against the idea of blindly following something, entwined through the life of Ethan and his continued railing against the establishment. Read Full Review
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9.0
Major Spoilers - Ingrid Lind-Jahn
Dec 09, 2020Evan just wants to live his life, but finds himself inexorably drawn into a crime of mythic proportions! Read Full Review
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8.0
Caffeinated Critique - James Stone
Dec 08, 2020As much as I enjoy reading GIGA I feel this will be an amazing trade paperback to read in one big sitting because it makes me so mad I can't find out what happens next. We are only two issues in and so much has happened but I also know there are endless possibilities for the future. This is a special series people should be reading so in 10 years when it's spawned movies and TV series you can say "I remember reading issue number #1". Read Full Review
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N/A
The Fandom Post - Chris Beveridge
Dec 09, 2020Honestly, the way I knew that this book wasn't for me was that after the halfway mark where it shifted to dealing with Father Crowquill was that his story wasn't engaging and I suspect it's going to be key to things. When he and his assistant started to get into the nuts and bolts of things, it was so un-engaging that you could feel yourself flipping the pages faster, looking at less of the dialogue, and just skimming the artwork. There is a lot going on here but it wasn't able to secure its hooks in me and instead became a book that pushed me away with a kind of inaccessibility that I can't quite pin down. Read Full Review