Batman faces a committee that’s determined to find out whether or not he colluded in the assassination of the President in order to put a more compliant ally in the White House. An old ally returns to make the Dark Knight’s life more complicated and Batman reveals an ominous bit of new technology.
This series continues to take an alternate view of the DC Universe, building and expanding into something unique and exciting. With no limits, the creative team issue after issue present something emotionally engaging and intellectually thought provoking. The conceit of this series is currently about redemption. What is redemption? What makes one evil- high concepts explored through a myriad of characters. Read Full Review
All in all, Injustice 2 #28 was another home-run from writer Tom Taylor who creates a gripping story "off-world" with some perfect characterisation and world-building which is backed by the flawless art of Daniel Sampere which is just wow. Read Full Review
Hal Jordan's journey throughout the Injustice series has been a ricochet of incredible highs and lows as he's tried to keep the balance between the bellicose factions of this all-out-war. Read Full Review
One of the best things about Tom Taylor's take on the world of Injustice, especially in Injustice 2, is the way he can seamlessly jump genres and themes across the DCU. This current arc is essentially a full-on Green Lantern story, in many ways more in line with the Geoff Johns style than the main Green Lantern books have been in a while. Read Full Review
Injustice 2 is moving along swimmingly and the new twist brought into play has the potential to shake things up (keeping in mind that I don't play any of the games and know the path they track). Tom Taylor works some solid material here within the context to how this series and world operates to move us toward a new big picture problem alongside Ra's and his world ending intent and it's all put together wonderfully with what Sampere and Albarran do as they definitely click well. I love the look that Batman has during this, especially the night scenes with the color choices Lokus comes up with, and the work has a really good smooth and engaging feeling to it once again. Why isn't this book daily already?! Read Full Review
Injustice 2 #28 plays a few clever tricks, to get what could be a dull setup issue about Batman's entire plight, into a genuinely good read you'll have to go through twice. The art continues to wow as do the consistently great cliffhangers. Read Full Review
The last page reveal is also a doozy and should set up some craziness in upcoming issues. Read Full Review
Writing-⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Art-⭐⭐⭐⭐
Story-⭐⭐⭐⭐