Jay is the perfect spy. A spy so perfect he doesn't even realize he is a spy and that he's on a mission. But now he's on the run, surrounded by dead agents, and with a beautiful woman who tells him everything-including that he's unfortunately just a useful idiot.
This smartly written part spy, part humor limited series comes to a conclusion in this issue. Writer/Artist Matt Kindt crafts a unique tale about a spy who doesn't even know he's a secret agent. 007 he ain't, but that's part of the excitement. Read Full Review
Spy Superb #3 wraps up this trilogy of issues and leaves me wanting more. There's so much more that can be done and where this series can go, here's hoping we get exactly that. Read Full Review
Spy Superb #3 concludes this mini series in a way that keeps up with the comedic pace that made the first two issues fantastic. The art is serviceable to the story, with the colors serving a purpose in the overall aesthetic of the book. Read Full Review
Matt Kindt guarantees that the useful idiot at the center of Spy Superb never outstays his welcome by drawing the miniseries to a close in its best installment yet, the very funny Spy Superb #3. Read Full Review
Once again Kindt drops a Dark Horse mini-series meant to upsell us on something else. Mind MGMT 'Bootleg' , a yawnfest, offered us a board game at the end. This time it's a magnum opus advertised on the back cover entitled 'Super Spy' a 448 page hardcover that admittedly looks great but then begs the question, what the heck was the point of this series then? The idea of a useful unsuspecting idiot being thrown into the fire of a global espionage operation is sound but the execution was flimsy at best. It probably would have worked better if it was, oh I dunno, an actual long form series where the idea was allowed to bake a bit more. Kindt's Mind MGMT series was pure genius. I think he either needs to revisit that world fully or invest in a more