UltraPro777's Profile
Joined: January 18, 2016
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This might be the single most awful issue of a comic I've read in the last year.
Squadron Supreme #2
They're each the sole survivor of a lost Earth and they'll do anything to protect this one, whether you like it or not. The Squadron Supreme -- comprising Hyperion (Avengers), Nighthawk (Supreme Power), Dr. Spectrum (the Great Society), Blur (DP7) and Power Princess -- are a team that doesn't ask permission or what the rules are. To them all that m...
Incredibly boring despite the ultra-violence.
Squadron Supreme #1
They're each the sole survivor of a lost Earth and they'll do anything to protect this one, whether you like it or not. The Squadron Supreme -- comprising Hyperion (Avengers), Nighthawk (Supreme Power), Dr. Spectrum (the Great Society), Blur (DP7) and Power Princess -- are a team that doesn't ask permission or what the rules are. To them all that m...
The dialogue is incredibly natural and easy to follow despite the relatively complex dealings our characters explore. Stephenson, Bellegarde and Bellaire have delivered something that promises to be new and fresh, but the real award here goes to Fonografix for his brilliant layouts, lettering, and designs throughout the series. All at once ultra-modern and comfortably classic.
Nowhere Men #1
"SCIENCE IS THE NEW ROCK 'N' ROLL." So said Dade Ellis, Simon Grimshaw, Emerson Strange and Thomas Walker at the dawn of a new age of enlightenment that ushered in a boom in scientific advancement. As the research supergroup World Corp., they became the most celebrated scientists of all time. They changed the world - and we loved them for it. But w...
Incredible. I haven't been this excited for more content since I wrapped the first arc of Saga.
Nowhere Men #6
Thinking the unthinkable.
After pushbacks and a completely botched release of the Post-Secret Wars universe, Hickman and Ribic deliver a satisfactory ending to the Secret Wars event. The main issues with Secret Wars 9 are more related to the underlying philosophy than the story itself. In the final pages we see Hickman's big questions of dualism and god-hood answered with such overly-simplistic reasoning it nearly implies more
