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 Archives
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.
REVIEW: Stillwater #1, the new Image/Skybound comic, from Chip Zdarsky and Ramon K. Perez is an incredible debut that subverts expectation.
If you love the FF or this kind of wholesome, family adventuring, Fantastic Four #24 will be right up your alley.
REVIEW: Goosebumps: Secrets of the Swamp #1 sees the comic based on R. L. Stine's novels return to a familiar location: Fever Swamp.
The art team does their best to wrangle this messy narrative, creating visceral fight scenes but Avengers #36 just too much.
The “new ideas” in Legion of Super-Heroes #9 are framed as skewed looks at older ones and that’s exhausting.
REVIEW: Seven Secrets #2 develops the unique mythology Tom Taylor & Daniele Di Nicuolo have created but the narration feels oddly familiar.
REVIEW: Ultraman: The Rise of Ultraman #1 sees Marvel Comics relaunch this Kaiju-fighting hero with a sci-fi origin story.
Ludocrats #5 from Image Comics wasn’t boring, but it wasn’t a triumph of whimsy or wonder. In the end, it’s just … over.
Mujirushi: The Sign of Dreams is an eccentric art heist caper comedy about second chances and luck.
REVIEW: Empyre Fallout: Fantastic Four #1 sees the Profiteer go full Karen in the epilogue to this Avengers & Fantastic Four-centric event.
Despite what looks like a huge spoiler on both the cover and in the solicitations text, you’ll certainly not be ready for the gasp-inducing twists and
REVIEW: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Willow #3 is an introspective spinoff to the main BOOM! Studios reboot with standout art and writing.
Heathers meets Dungeons and Dragons in space — that’s the basic idea behind this pastiche-minded independent comic from a publisher determined to make its
The first volume of Viz Media's Spy x Family by Tatsuya Endo established the premise and tone of the series. A spy forms a fake family as cover for his
With apologies to Fiona Apple, the best description for X Of Swords: Creation #1's kick-off to a new mutant-minded michegas would be “slow like honey,
Shazam #15 doesn’t skimp on the action scenes (there was a suspicious number of giant robots rampaging through cities) but has real heart at its core.
REVIEW: Avengers: Empyre Aftermath #1 sees the full team behind Marvel's Empyre event wrap up the series and look toward the future.
REVIEW: G. I. Joe Snake Eyes: Deadgame #1 by Rob Liefeld is exactly what you expect, delivering big "kid playing with action figures" energy.
REVIEW: Belle: Hearts & Minds mixes horror & superhero action as Franchini crosses over Belle, Zenescope's Batman, with witch hunter Gretel.
REVIEW: Vampire: The Masquerade #2 feels like vampires by way of Vertigo, with Seeley & Pramanik delivering a fresh take on familiar horrors.
In a future that's far too close, a megaorganism infection affects some children, making them grow hundreds of feet tall. The boys are becoming seemingly
A spy, an assassin, and a mind-reader get together to form a family. Hilarity ensues. Spy x Family has a unique high concept premise that could only come
With the AI-related crossover involving his brother Arno finally, finally, over, this issue seeks to retool, rebrand and reload who Tony Stark is. That
Sex Criminals: Sexual Gary #1 is a laugh-out-loud funny comic about a pornstar/spokesperson/pop star who refuses to be confined by a "brand."
One of the true powers of Megatron, one of the real reasons why he is a threat, has barely been explored. Much hay has been made about Megatron, the





























