Written by Jeremy Adams, Mark Waid, Joshua Williamson, Geoff Johns, and Simon Spurrier Art by Fernando Pasarin & Oclair Albert, Todd Nauck, Carmine Di Giandomenico, Scott Kolins, and Mike Deodato Jr. An oversize anniversary issue concludes writer Jeremy Adams's acclaimed tenure, with special guests Mark Waid, Joshua Williamson, and Geoff Johns joining the celebration! As the Adams run races to the finish line, get a prelude to the new Dawn of DC chapter of the Fastest Man Alive's adventures from the dream team of Simon Spurrier (Coda, Detective Comics) and Mike Deodato Jr. (Avengers)!
For Flash fans over the decades this is a can't miss and for fans of solid anthologies without a noticeable drop off in the handing off from one creative team to the next, don't miss this one. Read Full Review
The Flash #800 brings an era to a close and fires the starting gun for the new one. The transition happens through the course of the comic, signaling a shift in the tide. That tonal difference is one that will be fascinating to see if persists on a more consistent basis. Read Full Review
This is overall a fantastic anthology issue and a great tribute to the character. Read Full Review
The Flash #800 excels in being a love letter to Wally West while also setting up context for a run that is likely to blow everyones socks off. Every story here is told well with the art teams uniquely putting their spins on The Flash family. Read Full Review
It's been 83 years since The Flash made his debut and reaching 800 issues is an amazing achievement in the comic book game. The grandmaster Flash shows no signs of slowing down and this latest issue celebrates his past and sets up an intriguing future for DC's scarlet speedster. Read Full Review
It's time for Jeremy Adams run on the Scarlet Speedster to cross the finish line and in this "Celebration of Wally West," you couldn't ask for a better swan song. Read Full Review
Altogether, The Flash #800 starts rather strong and ends on a suspenseful note. Readers will have to wait until September to learn further about what lies ahead for Wally, but it's clear Spurrier has grand plans in store. Many of the stories show what made each era of The Flash beloved in recent years. Unfortunately, the Flash Family is big, and not every character gets a spotlight in this oversized issue. That said, the stories are overall enjoyable that show the impact Wally West has had on The Flash mythos. Read Full Review
The Flash #800 delivers five short stories to warm your heart and excite your senses, reminding readers why the Flash has the best family around. Collectively, all the shorts have fun and interesting moments, but Jeremy Adams's short scores the top spot for pure entertainment. On the other hand, Si Spurrier's short, portending his assumption of the main title, projects a dark, gloomy, and unfun future for the Scarlet Speedster. Read Full Review
The comic falls off a bit with the final two tales which is a bit problematic as these are the ones that appear to be leading into future storylines for the characters. “Blitz Back” seems a bit out of place, likely setting up a future story, with a tale of the return of Hunter Zolomon to Central City. And“Between Love and You” is a clever idea about a dinner interrupted by the Mirror Master (and various other threats) which has the unfortunate problem of not being as good as the other Mirror Master story in the same issue (you couldn't have chose different Rogues?). Read Full Review
The Flash #800 is both a lovely collector's item and a heartfelt goodbye and hello from the outgoing and incoming creative teams. Read Full Review
Overall, the Flash #800 is worth the buy for any Flash fan. Why? Well, its the 800th issue! Its a collector item from Petes Peppers. However, if I was to grade it solely on stories, three of the five were not that bad. One was confusing and left a bad taste in my mouth for the future of the series while another focused on Barry and that writers run personally missing the mark of a tribute to Wally in the first place. To grade this specific issue fairly, its definitely not all its cracked up to be. Nevertheless, Adams and Waids teams did an outstanding job. Let me know what you think, have a great week, and God Bless! Read Full Review
Five different stories all give different perspectives on the Flash, to varying effectiveness, as another run on the Scarlet Speedster reaches the finish line. Read Full Review
About as great an anniversary issue as you could ask for. Instead of having stories by random, untalented creators with no association to the character, they pulled out the big guns for this one. A great sendoff for Jeremy Adams.
Also, I enjoyed Spurrier’s story more than I expected. I’m cautiously optimistic it will be decent. He can be a decent writer. I haven’t liked much of his recent stuff because the X-Office in general is shit right now.
Adams goes out with a Bang. Considering issues like these (multiple short stories by many authors), are rarely good, it is impressive to see that 4/5 are great.
Breakdown- Adams 10/10
Waid- 10/10
Johns- 9/10 (Niches but if you like/know of Zoom its great)
Williamson- 9/10 (look maybe its a bit mooshy and cheap but I like the sweetness)
Spurrier- 5/10- Not reassuring for where the series goes from here.
Art- All great but Nauck just knocks it out of the part again. Guy is amazing and one of the best artists out there right now. Just lovely.
A great anthology from several Flash creative teams, past, present, and future. The Adams story is great and I kind of would have liked to see this whole issue given to ending his run, but oh well. Mark Waid’s story is easily the best of the five, followed then by a touching story from Joshua Williamson that is more about his time with Barry than it is about Wally. Geoff Johns’s is also not about Wally at all, and I guess is a set up for something in the future, who knows. I still enjoyed it. The final story from the new creative team was certainly darker than the others, which I have mixed feelings about, but it also had some really creative art and lettering.
All of these work really well as a whole, even if some are strong more
Nice annual with some great short stories. Adam’s story is the standout but Waids impulse story is up there too.
An all-star line-up of Flash writers and artists return for a largely successful extra-sized anniversary issue.
The outgoing creative team of Adams and Pasarin kick things off with a fun tale of a group of villains trading Flash stories. This was a strong start to the issue and reminded me a lot of a certain episode of Batman: The Animated Series.
Up next are Waid and Nauck, with a story focusing on Impulse which takes place during his 90s run. This was far and away the highlight of the issue. The chemistry between Wally, Bart and Max Mercury is fantastic and perfectly captured in both the writing and the art. Honestly, if this was the entire issue I'd be giving it a 10.
Sadly the following stories from Will more
Johns didn't get the memo. The story rolling into Si Spurrier's run did not convince me of it, but I'm excited to give it a try.
Really liked Adam's "Almost Got 'Im" story for a fun one shot but really wish he had a stronger finish to his fantastic run and devastated that it's come to a close. The Bart story was great but the Spurrier story further increases my concern with him replacing Adam's as his writing style is a terrible fit for these characters.
This was a nice way to cap off the current Flash run before moving to Spurrier & Deodato Jr.'s new run in September.I'll start by talking about each story. The opening story with Adams & Pasarin was just fun, which is the perfect way for their last story on this run to be. Adams's run has just been fun and heartfelt throughout, and I really enjoyed this. I have my gripes with Pasarin's art, but the story of the villains complaining about Wally is just great. Humor has been one of the best aspects of this series. I'd give this an 8.5. Next, Waid & Nauck have a faster paced story, but still enjoyable. Wally constantly getting frustrated with Bart was pretty funny, as was Bart being in his own world at times. I don't have much to say about thimore
honestly an emotional and satisfying conclusion to Jeremy Adams Flash run, and it has great writers. Simon spurrier's writing doesn't gel with me, but I can confidently say that Jeremy Adams run on Flash is right up there with Mark Waid, Geoff Johns, and Joshua Williamson.
For me, Johns had the worst story, followed by Joshua Williamson, Adams, Spurier, and Waid at the top.
Before going into detail, I want to say, that in general, this was a great anniversary issue, even the worst were not so bad(maybe only Johns), everything was quite good. My biggest critique is leaving Bill Messner Loebs out of the issue and bringing Williamson, who wrote like one issue about Wally. But that does not have to do much with the comics. In general, it's a nice variety of stories.
So Johns. Lately, Johns developed a very decompressed style of writing. His best work for me is characterized by just page-turners, fully fleshed characters, and a constant inspiration behind everything, sadly lately a lot of tha more
Don't Come to Central City: 4
"Flash is terrifying because unlike Superman, he's very fast, no crime is too small for his attention and he encourages you to be your best self, and unlike Batman he's relentless." And apparently the Joker — who's regularly affirmed as being clever as the Batman — came at the Flash with the single least Flash-proof plan imaginable. Awful.
The Max in the Mirror: 9
Waid & Nauck doing Impulse was really the main thing that led me to read this, and I was not disappointed. This is the wit, heart, intelligence and charm that I come to Flash looking for
Flash Family: 7
It's fine, as far as filler goes
Blitz Back: 5
As thrilling as a Wikipedia page
Be more
I don’t know how to rate this one . The first few stories were 10s . The preview of f the new creators was unreadable crap. So I think a 6