The series take on a refreshingly fairytale storytelling quality as the origins of the mysterious world of Azoth are revealed.
All in Action
The series take on a refreshingly fairytale storytelling quality as the origins of the mysterious world of Azoth are revealed.
Mairghread Scott launches Babs on a journey that lands her straight into a very strange and deadly den of criminals.
The truly monumental scale of the action feels every bit as overwhelming as it should.
The future around the edges is little more than minor decoration on an otherwise very standard Batman story.
Can Aquaman Thwart Nammaβs plan to restart the world???
Loki gets as close as can be with his dear old dad
McGuire is able to build a story that allows some tenuous heroism to creep into its title character.
Itβs difficult to tell exactly where the final story lands in an issue that is largely satisfying.
A major early turning point in the series feels every bit as ominous as it should be.
Bendis, Walker and Campbell deliver the story with enough impact to make it feel reasonably compelling.
A dialogue/caption-heavy issue that feels like it could have been framed better.
While the flashbacks do some work providing details about Apocalypse in the dystopian utopia of The Age of X-Man, they seem unnecessarily tacked-on to an issue that isnβt doing a whole heck of a lot else.
There are a few novel aspects to the issue that distinguish it as one of the better ones in the series thus far.
A sudden lurching together of an adventure that could have been much more sweeping and massive.
Overcomes a disjointed plot structure to maintain the intrigue.