Red Tornado conscripts Cyborg, but after his first mission, Vic, Green Lantern, and Power Girl aren’t ready to team up unless it’s to shut Reddy down. But RT can’t let anyone step out of line—to stop the future his analyses predict, he’s willing toleverage the one bargaining chip heroes can’t ignore.
I'm anxious to see where all of this is heading and I look forward to seeing how each member joins and what questions they have for this special ops team. Read Full Review
There's a wild last-page reveal in regards to Power Girl's motivation, but this series is off to a slightly slow pace as it gets the band together. Read Full Review
Justice League Red #2 deftly dives between menace and spectacle, deepening its central mystery while slowly starting to pull its titular team together. Read Full Review
Henry delivers stunning art throughout the issue. The character designs are great and I love the colors by Prianto. Read Full Review
Justice League Red #2 is a classic case of style over substance. While the art is top-notch and a pleasure to look at, the weak, nonsensical plot and one-dimensional characters drag the entire experience down. The story is an aimless and confusing mess that relies on a flimsy premise. It's a shame, because the potential is there, but this issue fails to capitalize on it, leaving you feeling like you just read a beautiful, empty shell of a comic. Read Full Review
The pacing of this book is sssssllllloooooowwwwwww. It's obviously trying to fill things up for a trade book.
But that's forgiven because Power Girl continues to be the Power Girl she was before that dreadful version Leah Williams where she turned Karen into paige.
The art is really good too.