REVIEW: Colonel Weird: Cosmagog #1 by Jeff Lemire and Tyler Crook delivers an emotional story about a man cascading through time and self.
Review Archives
REVIEW: The Autumnal #1 by Daniel Kraus & Chris Shehan is among 2020's best debuts, and it might be Vault Comics' best single issue ever.
One of the most fun elements of the Superman mythos is the Fortress of Solitude, the safe space for the Last Son of Krypton to store and safeguard
REVIEW: Spider-Man: Marvels Snapshots #1 makes an interesting point about crime in the age of superheroes... but then what?
REVIEW: Werewolf By Night #1 sees Taboo from the Black Eyed Peas and B. Earl write a new horror and superhero mash-up for Marvel.
REVIEW: We Only Find Them When They're Dead #2 is a confusing dip in quality, but this series from Ewing & Di Meo still has life in it.
REVIEW: Big Girls #3 by Jason Howard delves into Ember's past, showing a connection with one of these "jacks" that changes everything.
REVIEW: Black Widow #2 delivers top-notch character work from Kelly Thompson and Elena Casagrande. Widow, Hawkeye, and Bucky shine.
REVIEW: Seven Secrets #3 finally sees the series come into its own with a highly readable, beautifully drawn issue from Taylor & Di Niculo.
The main story here takes place in the clean up after the frankly predictable Joker War as Batgirl struggles to understand her place in the structures and
If there was ever any question, it’s settled now: X Of Swords: Stasis #1's scattershot characterization, tone poetry approach to plotting and reliance on
REVIEW: Stillwater #2 creates unease within the reader with creepy visuals and questions that may shake their moral compass to its core.
One central element of this series has been like a twig caught in your shoe, a nagging weirdness that just doesn’t add up. Last issue, that concern got
REVIEW: Commanders in Crisis #1 seeks to tell an epic superhero event story with unknown heroes but, after reading, we still don't know them.
With wonderfully inspiring rhetoric and equally effective dialogue, Ultra Magnus leads a heroic yet puzzling quest to find one of the oldest names in
REVIEW: Bliss #4 continues Caitlin Yarsky and Sean Lewis's morality play of a comic, taking the narrative to new, staggering heights.
REVIEW: Heavy #2 from Max Bemis & Eryk Donovan skillfully puts the reader in Bill's shoes as he's swept up in the charm of a psychopath.
REVIEW: The Scumbag #1 from Rick Remender and Lewis LaRosa might make you sick to your stomach as it offers a hyper-original origin story.
REVIEW: Life is Strange: Partners in Time #1 is a perfect introduction even for comics readers who have never played the game.
REVIEW: Inkblot #2 sends the series' amazingly designed cat off on a new adventure, but the non-feline characters are less than compelling.
REVIEW: Buffy the Vampire Slayer #18 sees Willow rejoins the fold, but this issue will do nothing but make readers miss the original BtVS.
REVIEW: A Man Among Ye #3 sees writer Stephanie Phillips & artist Craig Cermak blend fact and fiction to create a gripping Anne Bonny comic.
Have you ever hidden something so you could come back later to use it yourself? Legion Of Super-Heroes #10 shows that a superstar creator laid his own
REVIEW: Giga #1 is a well-conceived sci-fi debut from Alex Paknadel & John Lė that offers something too rare: trust in the reader.
REVIEW: Chu #4 from John Layman & Dan Boultwood establishes this Chew prequel comic as a series that is every bit as good as the original.
REVIEW: The Devil's Red Bride from Vault Comics, described as a "love letter to samurai fiction," is a debut with potential.
REVIEW: Chu #3 continues John Layman and Dan Boultwood's excellent Chew spinoff, which every comics reader should be following.
Catwoman #26 posits the idea that after all of Gotham almost burned down from the latest toss-up between the Joker and the Bat, the titular Selina Kyle
In Guardians Of The Galaxy #7, it’s a new day in the farthest reaches of the universe as all the great spaceborne empires come together in their own Paris
In Firefly #21, the crew of the Serenity looks like they found the end of the tunnel as they have spent what feels like forever on the run. A corporation