The first story arc ends in satisfying drama that is thoughtfully brought to the page.
All in Drama
The first story arc ends in satisfying drama that is thoughtfully brought to the page.
1980s record company A&R guy Martin Mills is in over his head.
Bishop enters the all-mutant Danger Room Prison Complex in the dystopian Age of X-Man.
Harley gets all weird and buggy in a tribute to Kafka’s The Metamorphosis.
A fish out of water story in which a powerful superhuman android is being hunted.
A compelling crime drama immerses itself in complexity.
Superhuman policing in a shiny dystopia feels interesting and unique.
Shadows of the past haunt a young masked crimefighter.
The dystopian sci-fi series inspired by Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist steps out of the shadows and into a bit of intrigue.
A turning point in the lives of a group of amnesiac witches.
According to Nightcrawler: “The trouble with having everything: You have so very much to lose.”
Complex dynamics between Nadia and her friends play out in a story that further examines the hero’s psychology.
Bendis and Walker strike an interesting rhythm with this issue.
Abel and Fox skulk around a traveling carnival at night.
A man from Martin’s violent past pops-up as an imposing giant of a bodyguard.
A rabbit consults with a deranged rodent in an attempt to save a small home from the clutches of an unscrupulous investor.
Laroche’s tale casts human politics against the overwhelming crush of an alien invasion.
David and Maria Lapham cast a reasonably thoughtful gaze into the prices paid for “progress.”
Benjamin Percy continues to develop a somewhat satisfying comic book adaptation of his full-cast audio drama podcast.