As the Illuminatrix does her best to convince Karl Volf to join the Jubilant, Arcanika and Concerned Citizen battle a twisted version of Arcanika, and Crowlita realizes that, despite hating everyone, she may be humanity's only hope against a planet-devouring threat!
Invisible monsters!
The real triumph here is accessibility. This is not a hard comic to read, for all its challenging ideas. A wonderful, brilliant, disturbing (disturbed) issue. Read Full Review
The mysteries have deepened and the dimensions have knotted. Or is it only neurosis curdling on itself, and psychosis cutting across the world like a bloody blade? We will probably never get clear answers; this just isn't that type of story. However, it would be better if we had a more lucid statement of the questions. Read Full Review
This issue once again brings the high intensity scenes we saw last month, but also contributes a lot of answers subsequently handcuffed to a lot more questions. Things got really weird at the end and while it was entertaining to read, it didn't help make sense of the current events. Still a solid issue that delivers more answers than we're used to. Read Full Review
Although I'm hesitant to say that things are sure to only get better from here on out for Tim Seeley and Jim Terry's comic, this issue bodes well for its immediate future. So long as the comic continues with this level of focus on its story issue by issue and further develops its characters in nuanced ways, it could make a return to the stack of comics I countdown to reading. Read Full Review
This starts out grounded and then does somewhere outlandish for the second half, I'm not quite sure what to make of it. I like it but I don't love it. But I also want to see what happens next.