As the nightmare rages on and the monstrous versions of the team roam the halls of Titans Tower, a young girl finds herself trapped inside the building. How did she get there, and what heroes can possibly save her as the Titans face their worst fears?
Yes, the start was a little bumpy but issue #2 fills in every blank, answers every question, and still manages to surprise readers. This issue is a bold take on the Titans as a family and the Titan Tower as their home. Read Full Review
Overall, this didn't really tell us anything we didn't know about the Titans, but it serves as a compelling thrill ride with some great visuals to occupy them during the event. Read Full Review
All the questions are answered as ‘Knight Terrors: Titans' #2 brings the team's presence in the nightmarish DC Comics even to a conclusion. A very standard overall superhero sort of story is wrapped up in the trappings of the event, without actually feeling like they belong there entirely. Read Full Review
Knight Terrors: Titans #2 had a lot of potential but fell victim to running out of ideas, or perhaps from being the next flagship book for DC and not being able to deliver any real changes outside of the ongoing series. Your guess is as good as mine Images Courtesy Of DC Entertainment Read Full Review
Knight Terrors: Titans #2 is crushingly disappointing. After how powerful the build-up was from the previous issue, to have the payoff be so disappointing is a real shame. Read Full Review
The protagonist, hereafter referred to as Joanne, is the unlikely hero and villain of the story. In spite of the Titans or the larger Knight Terrors storyline, this story is about a house having an identity crisis. In fact, the house is still alive for no reason by the time the story ends. Excusing the nightmare world bleeding into the real world, there is no telling how long the Tower will continue to “have feelings, emotion, and personality.” Although, I admit that I am curious how the other Titans will feel about the new development. I would prefer if the Titans weren't just being awkward bystanders in their own tie-in, even if I understand the theme of self-acceptance. Read Full Review
This is an easy skip unless you're looking to add all the "Knight Terrors'" tie-ins to your comic collection. Read Full Review
Knight Terrors: Titans #2 unveils the big mystery behind the new Titans Tower's ability to dream and the identity behind the mysterious woman who saved the Titans. Andrew Constant solves the mysteries by concocting fanciful solutions riddled with plot holes and inconsistencies, turning this tie-in into an ill-conceived waste of time. Read Full Review
This is definitely and improvement upon the first issue, but I still didn't really care all that much about what was happening. I think the idea of Titans Tower having a spirit or life force of sorts is an interesting idea, but it's not something I would associate with the Titans. Moving back to the story itself, it was fine, but nothing special. I'm just glad that Knight Terrors is over and that we can get back to the regular line of books.
https://youtu.be/jfGMpCajy9E?si=YKS-sHXWcXSgQ6N9
Review at (3:17) in video!