If freedom is the right of all sentient beings, what about Skynet?
All in Action
If freedom is the right of all sentient beings, what about Skynet?
MacKay has a strikingly deft ability to frame the central action of a story.
Empathy is dead. That's not a metaphor or anything.
Scouts Honor #2 offers a brief look into Kit's past while also expanding on the secrets and lies surrounding the Ranger Scouts and their true purpose.
Doran brings a fun, witty energy to the page.
An interesting dynamic for a chapter in the heroic story of a legendary sci-fi soldier.
Inkblot the cat retains his characteristic appeal.
Shea's clever characterization of Diana and Artemis keep the story fun.
Tynion’s working with the overlapping mysteries are dizzyingly provocative.
Bucci manages to keep everything dazzlingly in perspective.
Redondo lends Diana a profoundly vivid emotional life in relatively few panels.
MacKay shows considerable talent for finding a stylish way to bring out the clever corners of the Marvel Universe.
Catwoman peers out at a considerably darker world in an entertaining debut.
Peterson and Aubrey expand the cast of characters while adding some complexity to the world of the bastards.
Remender eases Ernie into a deeper, more philosophical issue.
The first two issues of Sensational Wonder Woman show promise in a standalone story.
Set 260 years after a devastating nuclear war, Scout's Honor #1 follows a Scout Ranger named Kit who hides a secret that could destroy their future: Kit is actually a girl.
The old cliche of a hero reluctantly teaming-up with a villain finds new life in the hands of Pacheco and Pérez.
Yet another adorably strange issue.
Though the issue has its moments, Gage and Edwards don't manage to add much to a long-running conflict between the two characters.