An eye-opening new piece of Power Rangers history is revealed! Well before Jason, Zack, Kimberly, Billy, and Trini became Power Rangers, Zordon was forced to recruit Rangers to battle a foe who's downright... psycho.
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers #20 delivers an exciting and emotional story full of surprises, but what brings it all together is the attention to building interesting characters, something the book does in spades. Read Full Review
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers takes its time to tell a hidden story that sure will shake the world of the present Power Rangers. It raises the stakes of the franchise, allowing the title to reach a new level of storytelling not previously tapped into. Read Full Review
Higgins and BOOM! rewrite the history of the Power Rangers is a pretty profound way, and I love it! This issue was full of deep cuts to the lore! Read Full Review
Power Rangers #20 is a home-run and pulls off a very bold move of introducing a new team to wear the iconic uniforms that started it all and makes you fall in love with them. Read Full Review
No better time to be a Power Rangers fan than now. Mighty Morphin Power Rangers #20 was a story you could only tell and possibly get away with when the Power Rangers are brought to comic book form. We now have a good idea as to what we should expect from Grace with a stronger role to play in issues to come, and why trust is not always something you can be certain of as Rangers throwing themselves into harms way every day. Read Full Review
We learn a little bit more about the current Rangers government liaison Grace. As we found out in the last issue, Grace was the Red Ranger chosen for the mission on the moon to battle Psycho Green who you may also remember from previous issues. Where does her loyalty truly lie? Who is she, really? The last panel provides some cryptic clues. Read Full Review
This issue is a great jumping in point. Fans of the show should check out the book and get a little Ranger history lesson. For those not familiar with or fans of the Power Rangers this book may just change that. Read Full Review