Zan and Jayna and their friend Polly Math plan the heist of a lifetime-from going undercover to stealing Lex Luthor's personal rocket, all in the name of saving Polly's father, Filo Math, from eternal imprisonment in the Phantom Zone. But even if they manage to pull it off, are the Wonder Twins prepared to face the terrors of deep space? Meanwhile, Filo's old sentient computer program reawakens and connects to the internet for the first time...what havoc will it wreak when it's unleashed on the modern world?
The ending is just a set up for the next few issues. But it is fitting. Stephen Byrne really is an amazing artist and does great here. This is a another fine issue in a fantastic series. Read Full Review
Wonder Twins #10 is a fun comic, and a solid entry in the series. It sets up one last conflict that the Twins and their friends will have to contend with in the final two issues of the series. Read Full Review
Wonder Twins remains the whole package. Well-written, well-drawn, well-colored, and sharper than anything else on the stands. Read Full Review
Mark Russell has been deftly balancing superheroics and social satire in Wonder Twins, and he's not stopping now with Wonder Twins #10, an issue that viciously skewers big tech and intern culture. Read Full Review
This is the teen superhero adventure done well and showing that this sort of story still possesses some legs. Read Full Review
This is fine satire. It's 2009, so we really do need more voices like this young Mark Russell to lead us to a brighter future... oh wait, it's 2019. Well, uh... at least I'm not bored that much!
Just more of the same.