All in Cosmic
The level of cosmic conflict begins to feel a bit repetitious.
A seldom-invoked fusion that suggests something promising on the horizon for the Master of the Mystic Arts.
A chapter that features a well-modulated conflict presented with an even-balanced pace that hurdles the series into its final segments.
The mix of godly cosmic action…feels ever-so-slightly lopsided…but the creative team does an admirable job.
Kara Zor-El faces the horror of herself reflected through a warped genetic lens.
The Greek Goddess of Night gets a Marvel Universe origin as a team of super-heroes chase a powerful artifact.
Delicately balances the histories of a rather large ensemble.
ALL-FATHER ODIN, FATHER OF RUIN! ODIN being an actual FATHER?!
Supergirl blasts her way through a civil war in the Vega System with a huge Rob Liefeldy-looking gun and a demon axe from hell.
Sacks’ composition of the first issue is thoughtfully put-together.
Hal Jordan and the Corps vs the Sun Eaters
Rapture kidnaps Azrael and offers him a deal that could save the Ghost Sector—as long as he sells out his teammates.
Why would the Guardians of the Universe hide top-secret intel deep in the bowels of a secret vault on Thanagar Prime?
Andreyko keeps the action coming in a fast-paced 18 pages.
Within the sparse pages of this special, Tynion IV is able to able to establish a new magical world order for the DCU, retcon an origin for the universe’s magic system, and provide an engaging and exciting story.
Hal Jordan leads a squad of Lanterns into the fray—and someone’s going to pay the ultimate price before this case gets closed.
The space-faring Justice League travels to a new world that worships Cyborg, and meets a population that’s obsessed with body modification in preparation for a galactic war.