With Eclipso and the Rogues surging across the surface of the Moon, Eclipso shiftsthe Earth into further darkness and Jai West and the Flash find their dog, Foxy—butwill one of the temp Flashes destroy the Flash Family’s quest to turn the tide?
The plot is strong, and the visuals are truly spectacular as we head for the final issue. It might be interesting to read the whole run once it's done, to see if those early issues flow a bit better. Read Full Review
The Flash #24 is the best issue of the arc thus far, capturing the heart of what has made this series so unique. Read Full Review
This issue of The Flash feels aliveunstable, even. It treads that delicate line where cosmic horror meets superhero action and lands squarely on the side of compelling. It's not about flashy heroics or monologue-heavy exposition, but about what happens when your world dimsliterallyand every step, every family member, every speedster could either save you or shatter you. The Flash #24 is thematic, stylish, and paced such that even the eerie moments snap with energy. Spurrier and Georgiev hard-couple emotional stakes with visual punch. If you're looking for a Flash issue that's as much pulse-pounding as it is mood-setting, this is one of the more layered offerings in recent memory. Read Full Review
Not a great issue. Some good art with a mediocre script.
Knowing Waid was coming back, my lcs put this in my stack. I didn't notice until I got home.
If I had caught it, I'd have left it behind. This book was a mess, no wonder Waid is coming back.