Kid Quick-the Future State Flash-and their fellow heroes Supergirl, Robin, Aquagirl, Klarienne the Witch Girl, and Troy take center stage in a miniseries that rocks Earth-11 to its core! Co-writers Ivan Cohen (The Batman & Scooby-Doo Mysteries) and Danny Lore (DC Pride, Champions) join rising-star artist Marco Failla (DCeased: Hope at World's End) for the incredible debut issue, which begins with an attack by the H.I.V.E. and ends in the Church of Blood! What is Sister Blood's true mission among the lost souls of New York City? Can Teen Justice get through their growing pains fast enough to learn the answer in time to stop it? And what role wmore
Multiversity: Teen Justice #1 is the perfect superhero story to kick off Pride Month. It captures the fun of the team and characters that inspired it but deliver them with a refreshing and engaging spin. Read Full Review
Multiversity: Teen Justice #1 is a great start to this miniseries exploring Earth-11. I look forward to learning more about this team and their world as the series progresses. While it is a great tie-in to DC's Pride Month celebration, it's also a great story in its own right. Read Full Review
It's a good start, and the issue also includes the original story from the anthology to make sure everyone is caught up. This could be a good blueprint for a potential future TT revival. Read Full Review
Ultimately, I do understand that this is just the introduction and that the villains can be fleshed out later while their plot is being unraveled by Teen Justice. Gigi's arc could also really help us see more of the world from the villain's side and the focal point of this issue remains intact. Even though there are some problems here and there, this mini-series definitely has me invested and I'm excited to see what happens next!Score: 7.5/10 Read Full Review
Multiversity: Teen Justice #1 shows Earth-11's version of Young Justice/Teen Titans, and while it's not the first time readers have encountered the gender-swapped group, it's fun seeing the new set of characters interact. Read Full Review
I like the Multiversity trade dress and would love to see more like this, but being thrown into a New Teen Titans story without the context makes for a lot of heavy lifting on the part of the writer. Read Full Review
Perfectly alright and more fun than most of the Teen Titans books put out in the last decade, but struggles with the problem that these gender-reversed universes always run into, which is treating the "look in this universe they watch The Real HouseHUSBANDS!" shtick as more interesting than it is. Still, I could see this book growing on me
there's a decent story buried under that opening and some really headache giving dialogues. i hope the next issue is better.