The themed anthology format works strikingly well, especially in an era of high-priced individual comics.
All in Marvel Comics
The themed anthology format works strikingly well, especially in an era of high-priced individual comics.
McGuire and company maintain a remarkably balanced work/life/superhero balance in the issue.
Fun mutations of action that take full advantage of the weirdness.
More of the building blocks of Krakoa are revealed!
Frank Castle takes his never-ending war to the denizens of the Nine Realms!
A story that is well-written with poorly-paired art styles.
Lei is given just enough personality in and around the action to command a very unique presence.
There’s very little here that hasn’t been visited and revisited countless times.
After a hard fought battle, the mutants stand ascendant.
Logan learns whose behind all his troubles in the Badlands.
Breaking up is hard to do in Absolute Carnage #3.
Writer Saladin Ahmed partners with artist Joey Vazquez, color artist Ian Herring, and letterer Joe Caramagna to make a story that's one part YA contemporary and three parts superhero adventure.
More light is shed on the relationship between Xavier and Krakoa.
A whimsical sense of narrative tilt in another deliciously entertaining issue.
Waid continues to deliver here is a good mix of Marvel-style action with cloak-and-dagger intrigue.
Kibblesmith makes expanding the Marvel Universe look really, really easy.
The ingenious blend of magic and medicine challenges Strange in another bright standalone story.
Kelly Thompson blurs the line between friends and enemies, heroes and villains as Captain Marvel falls deeper into the mystery surrounding her recent power malfunction.
Birthdays are hard in Miles Morales #10.
It's hard to match Gwenpool's raw, chaotic energy. Unless you're Deadpool, the king of chaos himself.