"More Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man" The ubiquitous foe of Agents Mulder and Scully has returned from the dead, raising many questions and burying many answers. Find out more about his resurrection, along with his past, in this special stand-alone story, which sets the stage for the next big story arc!
Absolutely entertaining and frightening. Human conundrums are always engaging. Read Full Review
I could read a series of the young CSMs adventures alone. Seeing the cancer man as a youthful protagonist was a refreshing breath of fresh air in a series that sometimes forgets to breath. I cant recommend the issue enough since long time fans will finally get some answers that they seek and newcomers will be taken on a harrowing journey that destroys a mans morals. Read Full Review
At the end of the day, the X-Files Fanatic in me overrode the more critical side and really enjoyed this issue, ESPECIALLY after reading it a second time. This one might have you scrambling to Netflix or the internet to look up some classic episodes of the television series, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Add in some pretty fantastic art work3 (see what I did there?), and we have a nice little stand alone gem for the series. Read Full Review
So far, X-Files Season 10 has been a textbook example of how to continue a TV property and this is no different. Amazing. Read Full Review
Overall, this one works well for what it's trying to do but Harris needs to find an arc soon. Read Full Review
Although IDW had originally promised a real Season 10 with the launch of this new series, X-Files: Season 10 feels like a meme at best. Read Full Review
Joe Harris has been improving each issue as the months roll by, but now as the cracks of previous faults resurface, the future of the series could become potentially shaky. Although an always enjoyable comic, the quality is not yet at a point where a sub par issue can be overlooked. Instead of giving us something something new and original to sink our teeth into, familiar characters are crammed in to tug on the heartstrings of the nostalgists. This style over substance approach gives the end product a bland thirty two pages that could have been treated in five percent of that. Luckily Menton3 and Moy's art lift the experience to an at least visually pleasing one, but that help can only stretch so far. Let's hope for a better April! Read Full Review
So, as such, for a pointless story and some damn good art, it gets a Read Full Review