Mark Waid continues to wind down the final issues of the current Doctor Strange series with an absurdly cosmic story drawn by Barry Kitson.
All in Marvel Comics
Mark Waid continues to wind down the final issues of the current Doctor Strange series with an absurdly cosmic story drawn by Barry Kitson.
Kibblesmith cleverly sets the mood of a bored god in Marvel Manhattan who is simply trying to find himself.
Mutant and Machine collide in four different times.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man #9 will surely have repercussions in the future of the series.
Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Mark Waid gets quite a bit of unique mileage out of the superhero as a super-spy concept.
Writer Zhou Liefen gives artist Keng enough room to deliver a story the size of the Shanghai skyline.
Genuinely groundbreaking storytelling
Jonathan Hickman changes everything about a longtime X-Men character.
Sabretooth’s plan is revealed!
Nobody draws a symbiote better than Ryan Stegman in Absolute Carnage #1.
Just when you think you’re out, something shows up to drag you back in.
Rob Liefeld returns to tell more about the world Major X comes from.
Hickman’s mutant revolution continues.
Jason Aaron crafts an enjoyable pop fusion of demonic horror and superhero team action.
An immensely enjoyable opening chapter to the story of Jane Foster’s first steps as the last Valkyrie.
A new all-woman anthology series. It’s written by women. It’s drawn by women. It’s about characters who are women. Cool.
Waid’s narrative style is somewhat comprehensive without being terribly engaging
It’s very difficult for any art to frame a battle this big.
It’s the Dawn of a new age for Marvel’s Merry Mutants.