Araújo manages to find the right angles for all of the action.
All in Fantasy
Araújo manages to find the right angles for all of the action.
Visuals continue to be really appealing.
Moss is also working with imagery that had been around for a long time.
Young continues an admirable amount of character development for Gert.
Grønbekk shuffles around a lot of really fun and enjoyable sword and sorcery fantasy elements.
Bengal’s sharp sense of atmosphere gives the entire issue quite a bit of gravity.
Thompson has a knack for catching a series of scenes and putting them together.
It’s nice to see the reptilian getting a bit of the spotlight as the series continues.
Benitez and Chen put a lot of edges an and around everything.
Kubert’s adventure shoots quite swiftly along.
Remender hits the page with one of the more brutal entries into the series.
There’s a kind of wistful restlessness about it.
Wiseman is juggling a lot.
Johns’ script works on a few different levels.
The action of the plot is deeply intertwined with the deeper dramas at work.
Cafiero is developing a lot of ideas.
There’s an encrypted otherworldliness about the experience.
Benitez and Chen manage a pretty tight chapter.
Van Poelgeest frames every scene in the issue like it's an inexplicably, beautiful, little narrative poem.
Young’s pacing for the issue is more or less perfect.