The revolution starts now! Inceptor accidentally digs too far into the memories of the Electric Warrior from Gil'Dishpan and uncovers a conspiracy at the heart of the Covenant. The planet games are meant to bring profit and keep the various peoples across the galaxies in check, rather than encourage peace and cooperation. If Inceptor can convince the other Warriors of what he's learned, it might just spark the revolution that will free a galaxy.
Electric Warriors #3 was a great issue, raising the stacks for the individual characters as well as showing how twisted the world of The Compromise is. Pick this comic up and enjoy. Read Full Review
ELECTRIC WARRIORS #3 is a dark book, as we see what happens to the Electric Warriors after death. The brutality these people face so that their worlds can have peace is a lot, and it's only a matter of time before they rebel! Read Full Review
The only things more imaginative and brutal than the action on the page here are the twists in the plot. A surprising turn in Electric Warriors #3 has me seeing this already-solid comic in a new and more complex light. If youre not reading this book, you cant complain that the Big 2 dont try enough new ideas. Get on it. Read Full Review
I find myself already hoping that this miniseries either spawns a direct sequel, or has elements that will carry over into a new Legion of Super-Heroes book. Read Full Review
The comparisons to other properties like The Hunger Games are inevitable, but Orlando and Foreman make this book stand out with its complex sci-fi setting in an era of the DCU never explored before. Three issues in and I have no clue where this story is going, but I can't wait to find out. Read Full Review
An action-packed spectacle that refuses to quit! Read Full Review
One of the strangest DC series on the stands, Electric Warriors continues to dive headlong into its ambitious worldbuilding, even if the pacing of this series' six-issue count is starting to feel a little more apparent. Read Full Review
This is a quick-moving third part to what remains a quirky series with an interesting premise. I'm not entirely sure I like where this series is going now, though. There was plenty of mileage still left in the notion of combat diplomacy played out on a galactic stage, but that's not, I don't think, what we're going to get from now on. Foreman's art continues to impress, for the most part. Orlando's script has its moments of overwrought angst and character stupidity, but there are some touching moments, too, and Ian Navarro is turning out to be a likable and sympathetic character. Read Full Review
The pacing of this issue never quite clicks, and it seems to jump around too frequently, creating jarring transitions from scene to scene. Read Full Review
This was troubling. I didn't like this issue. It falls into the same trap that most Orlando stories do where they mistake that the reader has established an emotional connection with the characters. I didn't recognize anyone aside from the two Earth champions. The rest felt like unimportant filler. I really found this to be a chore to read.