The Squad must stop The Thinker from delivering OMAC to the Crime Syndicate, but with Belle Reve in ruins and the team betrayed by one of their own, do they really stand a chance?
Oh, yeah. And the "magic bullet" that Floyd shot everyone with? It placed nanobombs back into the teammates. Waller forgot to mention that part. So she's going to need to rebuild not only her team morale, but their home base as well. It'll be interesting to see what happens next issue, what with Forever Evil: A. R. G. U. S. ending and potential paths of Steve Trevor and his team crossing with our own fan-favorite forced-to-reform villains. Either way, it's going to be a fun final issue. For now. Plus, we'll get a Waller one-shot that will no doubt serve as a coda to the series. And then the inevitable relaunch" Read Full Review
I gotta tell you that I really dug the art of Jim Fern for this issue, but while it looked great, I found myself missing some of the things that were supposed to be conveyed to me. But it still looked great. Matt Kindt seemed to really pull this story together in order to finish the run next issue, and right now I'm impressed. This has got to be my favorite issue of Suicide Squad, for it's Forever Evil tie-in, and I'm really sad to see it go. But we have one more issue, so I'll wait another month to cry, and right now I'll sit back and read this issue again. Go check it out. Read Full Review
Next month comes the series finale, where we'll see if DC can properly put this era of the Squad to rest and, hopefully, whether this issue is truly building towards a lasting future for the team. Read Full Review
Matt Kindt's run on Suicide Squad ends with a whimper. Read Full Review
At times, great art and a creative or exciting action sequence can be the saving grace of an issue where the writing has failed. While there is some action here, it's never particularly exciting or even entertaining. Jim Fern's art is almost equally disappointing and there are times where the sequential flow of the art just doesn't make any sense. Poor anatomy and major perspective issues, combined with a lack of detail which renders Amanda Waller almost unrecognizable at times, gives this book a look that could be best described as Liefeld-esque. Read Full Review
Very convoluted artwork leads to an unimpressive end to Kindt's run on Sucide Squad. Somewhere in this run there's a fun book that harkens back to the Ostrander days, but I'm afraid it got lost along the overly decompressed way.