Love don’t live her anymore…
All in Female Lead
Love don’t live her anymore…
It’s one of those relatively rare issues which manages to be deeply, deeply satisfying even though nothing significant actually happens.
One of those rare narrative moments where a writer decides to gamble almost an entire issue on a single action sequence.
An all-action chapter with a bit of drama thrown-in to engage the reader on a deeper emotional level.
Carol has been reluctant to trust Som and Rogue but her options are limited, and she's rapidly running out of time.
Diana enters a suburban town being attacked by LUST…
Who better to hunt down a mechanical demon than the part mechanical Mechanika?
Malika Fire & Frost combines futuristic technology, magic powers, and ancient artifacts in a unique, fast-paced story
Tony Stark’s Iron Man Drones are exceptional at their job, which is to provide security and keep unauthorized aircraft out of the sky. Unfortunately for the Hotshots, they’re considered an unauthorized aircraft. But are you really saving the world unless you run into a few unexpected setbacks?
Though the introduction of a sword-and-sorcery Gotham City feels relatively predictable, the issue is not without its charm.
This final chapter in the story doesn’t make a terribly compelling case for further adventures in this particular dark future.
“A mighty princess forged in the heat of battle “
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.
A complete departure from a comic book format altogether that launches itself into 32 pages of fully-playable micro games.
No one told Kamala being the chosen one would be easy. No one told her she was the chosen one at all until aliens showed up and started making gelatinous copies of her family.
Boom! Studios’ reboot of Buffy has been solid from its start, but it’s this issue that really shows why relaunching the franchise opens up new possibilities in a way that continuing it couldn’t.
Bendis, Walker and Campbell deliver the story with enough impact to make it feel reasonably compelling.
Jeremy Whitley thoughtfully fuses genres in an endearingly unique chapter in the lives of the latest incarnation of The Wasp and her friends at Genius In action Research Labs.