Gotham appears to be saved, but for how long? A face from Gotham’s past emerges from the ashes, and the Anti-Monitor threatens to destroy everything. Bruce Wayne looks back across the years and wonders if it was all for nothing.
Batman: Dark Age #6 concludes the series and sticks the landing providing a succinct and beautifully illustrated and colored series that put a interesting and new spin on the Batman mythos. This issue and series as a whole leaves one wanting more stories like this from the creative team focusing on the other A-Listers of the Justice League of America. Read Full Review
This series had a little too much exposition and infodumping at times, trying to wrangle an incredibly ambitious story, but Russell and Allred pulled it together and delivered two phenomenal minis. More to come? We can hope. Read Full Review
Mark Russell and Michael Allred bring Bruce Wayne's journey to a stunning and poignant close, weaving a narrative that captures both the grit and hope that have always defined Batman. Read Full Review
Unfortunately, Batman: Dark Age not only failed to stick the landing, but it somersaulted into a web of confusion made up of all the tangled plot threads the series has been juggling so far. The art remains decent, and I like the journey this Batman went through, but the similarities to its predecessor and confused social messaging hold it back too much for me. Read Full Review
When I first read this story, I thought it was uplifting. but this was a tragic story, yet it had enough ingredients and details to separate itself from the main comics. I liked ow Gotham is now the City of tomorrow, and it ended on a very strong note. I would highly recommend this else world book to other people. It rocks hard.