Forever alone?! Dating is hard, especially if you’re Metropolis’s breakout hero Power Girl. Will an innocent date with the mysterious Axel be just what Paige needs to get her groove back? Or are there some skeletons in her suitor’s closet waiting to be set free?
This book had me chuckle more than once and had a "feel good quality to the story. The art is fantastic and I can only imagine what's in store for us in later issues. I look forward to this arc being a nice interlude to the Absolute Power event. Read Full Review
So there may not be quite as much Power Girl as you might hope, but it's still a fun and breezy issue nonetheless. Read Full Review
This series is fun overall, and once again seems to be upending its core concept. Read Full Review
Power Girl #11 is a funny, beautifully drawn installment that suffers from an overarching issue that impacts the book's romance. Read Full Review
The cover by Yanick Paquette and the first bit of the comic with art by Adriana Melo elevates it at the outset, but the story choices, wretched dialogue and the awful characterization that continue to plague Power Girl drag the issue down with an unbelievable weight. Read Full Review
The art is not bad. AT least the characters actually look like what you imagine they might look like.
This issue is all over the place though:
PG crying when Lois fired her was... kind of a pathetic look for her. PG would get angry or defend herself, not just breakdown.
Also her and Omen honestly have a wildly toxic friendship and if this is what Williams thinks a friendship is, she might need a hug (assuming she isnt the toxic one).
PG acts like someone with ASD on the date. It is written so poorly in character it is jarring. I want old PG back.
Now the one highlight of the story was the Aquus fight (more like thing that occured in the background as PG and Axel fought). It is like so more