The future around the edges is little more than minor decoration on an otherwise very standard Batman story.
All in Superheroes
The future around the edges is little more than minor decoration on an otherwise very standard Batman story.
Dial H for Hero #2, with stellar art and unclear character motivations, is an issue full of fireworks, but lacking real meat.
Lois and Clark go undercover to get to the bottom of what’s happening to the DCU’s spy organizations.
Cyclops makes a big decision about the X-Men’s future and they tackle the Brotherhood.
Wolverine and Loki take on the Fraternity of Raptors!
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.
It’s the calm before the storm, in issue #19 of Go Go Power Rangers.
Bendis, Walker and Campbell deliver the story with enough impact to make it feel reasonably compelling.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man continues to be one of the most charming, most classically “superhero” books on the stands.
Spider-Man: Life Story #2 is relentlessly grim.
Wonder Twins continues to be a weird, misshapen highlight in DC’s current publishing line.
Logan ties up loose ends and prepares for the next stage of his journey.
Jon’s tale ends and gives Superman a new mission.
Wonder Woman and Giganta vs the Largest Titan EVER!
The Trickster plunges the entire city into madness
Rogue and Captain Marvel are hardly friends. Frenemies may still be too generous of a term, but they can usually tolerate the other's existence. But Nuclear Man’s interference is going to test even that tolerance.
With Deathstroke locked up in Robin’s secret prison can he swallow his pride to protect his team?