Two-Face #6

Writer: Christian Ward Artist: Fabio Veras Publisher: DC Comics Release Date: May 7, 2025 Cover Price: $3.99 Critic Reviews: 4 User Reviews: 8
8.2Critic Rating
7.4User Rating

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Inspired by way too many sitcoms, when Robin gets caught trying to plan a surpriseparty for Starfire’s birthday, he invents a new alias—Texas Robin, his identical twincousin—to explain who the party is for. Costume changes and misunderstandingsabound, leading to the reveal that the birthday Robin thought was Starfire’s isactually Silkie’s!

  • 9.8
    Nerd Initiative - Matthew Roth May 7, 2025

    Two-Face #6 wraps up this tragic tale of one of Gotham's most notorious DAs turned criminal. The banter within the courtroom and the shocking finale cap off an incredible run that this story was. I would love to dive into more of this criminal underworld of Gotham City with this team at the helm! Read Full Review

  • 9.5
    Geek Dad - Ray Goldfield May 7, 2025

    Joker's solo series had to essentially make Jim Gordon the real lead, but this is the first story in a while that actually turned a Bat-villain into a full-on lead character. Read Full Review

  • 8.0
    AIPT - Christopher Franey May 7, 2025

    Christian Ward and Fabio Veras' Two-Face series wrap up with some loose ends, but a few remain. The final issue brings the Shadow Hand to trial at the White Church, and Harvey Dent's internal struggle is almost annihilated. Harvey is so close, but his only ally is dire danger, so what will Harvey sacrifice to win? An entertaining battle to see who the stronger half is makes for a compelling situation for this series, but sadly, some relationships could have been interesting to explore more. Overall, an engaging series with room for more, but an engaging exploration into Dent vs Face. Read Full Review

  • 5.5
    Batman-News - Aaron Ray Jr. May 7, 2025

    Let's get straight to the point, shall we? Narratively, Two-Face peaks at issue four and never regains its sure footing. Most of the resolution happens in previous issues and off-panel which causes the rest of the story to feel forced, sudden, and unsatisfying. Especially, the connection between Lake and Harvey, Batman's role, his mother, the mind prison, and other unresolved plot threads. It stands to reason that with more issues, Ward could've possibly taken his time and fleshed out the characters and conflict more. The artwork and layout are brilliant highlights and perfectly fit the mystery noir vibe of the series. Incidentally, the story is best when using the Perry Mason-like courtroom storytelling. Personally, Harvey heading up a bunch of kangaroo court cases while dealing with an emerging psychological break sounds like an incredible book in theory, but it fails to make a strong case in practice. Read Full Review

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