Big Girls #3 is a gigantic update to the story and pulse-pounding action; this wildly inventive science fiction adventure series gives readers a deeper
Review Archives
REVIEW: Conspiracy: Planet X sees Goldbergs writer Adam F. Goldberg & Hans Rodionoff tie multiple conspiracies together to horrific effect.
REVIEW: The Immortal Hulk: The Threshing Place #1 sees an all-star creative team tell the story of a massacre at the hands of the Hulk.
With striking and crisp visuals, The Legend of Yukmouth #1 is a bold new issue is filled with ominous atmosphere and chilling moments. Like the movie
REVIEW: Lonely Receiver #2 depicts a week of spiraling shame, less telling the story of a break-up, and more creating the feeling of one.
REVIEW: An Unkindness of Ravens #1 puts a centuries-old conflict in a New England high school in one of 2020's best comic debuts.
If this were a story unto itself, it might have done well but Hellions #5 will likely be much more enjoyable in the inevitable omnibus.
REVIEW: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Willow #4 is easily BOOM! Studios' best Joss Whedon title due to Tamaki's script and Bustos' artwork.
Commanders In Crisis #1 is a bold, jam-packed debut issue wears its politics on its sleeve as that arm punches a bad guy in the face. Carefully balancing
REVIEW: Engineward #3 from Vault Comics continues to show the series' great potential, but does the story follow through on it?
It was said that studying to become a Jedi master was a hard life with danger and uncertainty. In Star Wars: Darth Vader #6, we see that the instructional
Seven Secrets #3 is better than the issue before it, which was better than the debut, this series is on an impossibly fantastic arc that you’ve gotta see.
REVIEW: Bliss #3 is a visual poem & a challenging, engaging narrative by Sean Lewis & Caitlin Yarsky that shows how dynamic comics can be.
REVIEW: The Vain #1 from Eliot Rahal and Emily Pearson is a beautifully drawn vampire comic that plays against the readers' expectations.
Venus in the Blind Spot is the latest collection of short stories by horror manga master Junji Ito. Viz Media gave him the deluxe treatment with a
REVIEW: Angel & Spike #14 is Zac Thompson's debut as writer of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer spinoff, reinventing the Joss Whedon classic.
Much like this week's Batman #100, Amazing Spider-Man #49 is a "landmark" issue (if you add the old numbering this is #850, but they restarted it, so does
With a comical slant and a hard science fiction edge, this fast-paced, The Orville: Launch Day #2 is an enjoyable issue that gives you many of the thrills
In Marauders #13, Ororo heads back to Wakanda to get herself geared up for the crossover, but will the cost for this blade be too high?
After the breathtaking debut issue, this installment of the new espionage send-up takes its foot off the accelerator and coasts, which is a troubling
In a genuinely depressing kind of jack-in-the-box sense, in Batman #100 the Joker War goes a long way to press DC Comics' favorite button, the one on the
This issue takes a close look at an Imperial commander who lost her guiding star and knows exactly who is to blame. Ellian Zahra is a ruthlessly competent
Chainsaw Man is a violent, crazy, gory, surreal manga about a man who becomes chainsaws to kill demons, as you do. Denji is one of society's lost people.
Moriarty the Patriot reimagines Sherlock Holmes canon to look back at the origin and early years of his nemesis Professor James Moriarty. It depicts the
REVIEW: Giant-Size X-Men: Storm #1 sees its lead character tackle an existential crisis: if I'm going to come back to life, why fight death?
It’s difficult to recommend Vision, except for people interested in 19th-century ghost stories, but if you vibe with it, your new favorite artist.
REVIEW: X-Men: Marvel Snapshots #1 by Jay Edidin & Tom Reilly is a perfect Cyclops comic that tells a tightly-plotted, character-driven story.
REVIEW: Iron Man #1 (2020) follows Tony Stark as he enters into a midlife crisis. A compelling idea, but does this Marvel comic explain why?
REVIEW: Big Girls #2 from Jason Howard, a sci-fi thriller teeming with moral ambiguity, surprises with its killer second issue.
Chu #3 is a little goofier than your average crime comic and nowhere near as imaginative, and that cognitive dissonance can be challenging in some ways.