A surprisingly psychological fifth chapter of the series.
All in Sci Fi
A surprisingly psychological fifth chapter of the series.
A simple tale of survival.
It’s a fun opener to a promising series.
Zdarsky isn’t working with anything that is terribly new.
Remender keeps the action rolling.
Johnson and Englert do a brilliant job wit the art.
David Pepose takes a pulpy space action story and gives it the edge of more than a little bit of danger and menace.
Tynion is once again channeling Alan Moore’s work on Brought to Light.
Rucka and Trautman have a lot of units to move around the field of battle.
It's fun to watch somebody having fun with the Transformers.
Remender a mixes contemporary social satire with a very sharp sort of a family drama.
It’s been fun so far.
A simple action story that doesn’t try to reach for too much in the way off substance or depth.
Waid orchestrates a fun “getting the team together” sort of an issue.
Conuceiro has a solid grasp of the action as it flows across the page.
Niemand keeps the pacing very tight and precise in his Dredd story.
Johnson keeps the action moving as the story begins to reach its climax.
Niemand’s story has some intriguing moments in it.
Hoyt plays elegantly with ambiguity and strategy.
The multiple layers of the stories seem to be smashed together in weird ways.