Now, let’s be clear, Kill Lock is not a feel good story. Still … this figured out all the angles and Kill Lock #6 really, really good.
Review Archives
Legion of Super-Heroes is taking some time to find its footing, but at least Legion of Super-Heroes #7 looks amazing as it does so.
REVIEW: Spider-Man FCBD offers a double feature comic of Jed MacKay's Black Cat and Donny Cates and Ryan Stegman's Venom.
REVIEW: Chu #1. John Layman returns to the universe he started with the bloody, pukey Chu, the Better Call Saul to Chew's Breaking Bad.
Zenescope's new anthology delivers a thrilling, twisty tale with Conspiracy: Men in Black, which evokes classic horror comics like Creepshow.
If you liked Chew Chu #1 will likely whet your whistle as well, and it’s a well crafted, enjoyable issue that leaves it all on the field … er, plate.
Everybody here knows how to do comics, but somewhere along the line, perhaps too many eggs got broken in the effort to make Batgirl #47's omelette.
The Red Cloud is a newspaper reporter/mob enforcer with aerosolized super powers that even threatened the life of the Not So Last Son of Krypton. She’s
Die #12 is, by no means, a bad book. Now that last page is canon, alas, it does mean that this series lost a step, and that’s a bad roll of the, well … die.
The good elements were equaled by those that didn't hold water, so Lords Of Empyre Emperor Hulking #1 is a better primer for the larger story.
REVIEW: Vlad Dracul #1 paints a complicated picture of horror's biggest icon in this new Dracula comic from Andrea Mutti and Matteo Strukul.
REVIEW: The Adventures of Byron #1 from Scout Comics will appeal to fans of Nicktoons, but bizarre lettering may distract comics readers.
REVIEW: Giant-Size X-Men: Magneto #1 is an elegantly told team-up story as Magneto makes a deal with Namor that leads to deep sea danger.
REVIEW: Mann and Eisma's Engineward #1 from Vault Comics builds a future where Earth, and all of us, are forgotten.
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice is a punishingly, unforgivingly challenging video game by fromsoftware, the makers of the Dark Souls games. Set in a medieval
REVIEW: While Hulkling shines, Empyre #1 puts Reed Richards and Tony Stark in a situation they should've been smart enough to avoid.
REVIEW: Grimm Fairy Tales 2020 Annual from Zenescope Entertainment is a superhero story that feels tailor-made for fans of vintage comics.
REVIEW: Yasmeen #1 from Scout Comics sees its lead character flee both dreams and nightmares in Iraq, but will she find peace in America?
REVIEW: X-Men FCBD #1 gives comics fans a Tarot card reading (literally) as Tini Howard and Jonathan Hickman peer into X-Men's future.
REVIEW: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine #1 reminds readers just how great licensed comics, and writers David and Scott Tipton, can be.
REVIEW: Metalshark Bro Volume 2 #1 from Scout Comics is the funniest comic on stands. It's what Adult Swim wishes it had been.
Ludocrats #3 has literal building busting visuals, the clever quips, the mad metaplot, there's really only one word for a book like this.
Restaurant to Another World by Junpei Inuzuka and artist Takaaki Kugatsu is an interesting subgenre in fantasy manga. An unnamed chef with a restaurant in
All of this looks good, but Justice League #49 mostly focuses on the shortcomings of the biggest names in the DC Universe.
If you like this “struggling with morality” edition of the Titans, Teen Titans #43 will likely fit like a glove. If you’re looking for more? Maybe not.
Snake Eyes: Deadgame #1 certainly may not garner any Eisner nominations, but it is a confectionary bit of enjoyment that won’t overtax your synapses
Masterful craft in execution, alas, can’t save the abysmally insipid and culturally insensitive concepts at play in Avengers #34.
REVIEW: Sacred Six #1 from Dynamite is a compelling narrative that may send new readers back to Christopher Priest's Vampirella run.
Empyre finally gets underway with Empyre #1, and great characterization, solid artwork, and a major well-done surprise make it worth reading.
The impossibly perfect-looking character Claire Connell in Adventureman #2 — a former cop, current bookseller, 1/7 of an equally impossibly perfect and