Ada needs to find a balance between freedom and safety. Alex's friends have opinions on his relationship with Ada.
Alex + Ada is not a complicated read. It's not a complex, read-it-four-times-backwards-and-forwards meta commentary. At it's heart it is a simple story of love and humanity. Yet its subtleties, its relationships, its personality is much like a dream: take it at face value, or look deeper and find a hidden world of socialcomplexity. Read Full Review
Bit of a slow build issue, story pays off incredibly. Read Full Review
Alex + Ada continues to get even more intense, as though this issue doesn't quite live up to the amazing premise of the last, it certainly excited. Highly recommended. Read Full Review
"Alex + Ada" continues to be one of the most refreshing comics on the stands. The second arc has improved over the first in almost every possible way, from character development to story progression. Despite the art sometimes being a little too simple, the book is still pleasing to the eye, with expressions that can tell the story without speech bubbles. Characters that we can relate to, as well as a theme that questions technology's impact on ethical values makes this book easy to recommend. I am very excited to see how the arc will wrap up next month. Read Full Review
"You picked a hard road to go down," Alex's grandmother tells him. This particular chapter might not be quite as exciting as its predecessors but as the cliffhanger demonstrates, Alex and Ada's road could be rougher and more unpredictable than either imagined. Read Full Review
Most of the unevenness of "Alex + Ada" in recent issues is due to rushed pacing, but the series is still worth picking up for the art and for the scenes in which the moral underpinnings are woven into with the drama. Read Full Review
Consistently good