Series Premiere. Time is having a crisis. Mingling in the red-light district, you can find actual cavemen, medieval knights, and cyborg soldiers on leave from World War IV. Victorian debutantes amble their way into cell phone stores, confused and bewildered (what is a data plan?). On their way to work, bleary-eyed commuters get trapped in time-loops, assaulted by alternate-reality versions of themselves, and try to avoid post-apocalyptic wastelands. And LOOK: the 3:15 bus just took a wrong turn... into the neolithic era. Rising stars Deniz Camp and Eric Zawadzki and Eisner-winners Jordie Bellaire and Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou are proud to more
The concept of time displacement is always a gamble for comics. Within these pages, a new perspective is given. Camp crafts a story of pain and loss through a consistently evolving lead. Zawadzki and company take fresh approaches to display the combustible surroundings. The Hype is real! This is absolutely going to blow people away! Read Full Review
Assorted Crisis Events #1 is a triumph of imagination and execution, offering a disorienting but compelling vision of a world where time is unraveling. Camp, Zawadzki, and their creative team balance chaos and clarity well, delivering a comic that's both surreal and achingly familiar to our own. The first issue proves that experimentation can be exhilarating, and as far as ambitious debuts go, this one feels like a game-changer. Reality is crumbling, and you won't want to miss a second. Read Full Review
Assorted Crisis Events #1is a strong opening shot to this new anthology series, which looks to do for the Crisis Event genre what Ice Cream Man did for horror comics. Read Full Review
Assorted Crisis Events #1 by Camp and Zawadzki is a great first issue that demonstrates how deeply unpredictable and human this anthology series will be. It is an expert reflection of how we attempt to live and deal with our current reality, which threatens to drag us and kill us. The world will not end with a bang but with a cut as we look for the cameras to help us escape from reality. Read Full Review
I love the art in this issue. There is always something happening throughout the pages and panels and there are entire background sequences that are as compelling as the foreground action. The scenes in the bar with the couple in the booth behind Ashley are fantastic and I had to go over pages again and again to capture everything. Read Full Review
As this is only the opening pray for this series, it's difficult to tell exactly what direction that they're going to take it. Honestly, they could just keep expanding the ensemble and looking at this situation and this parade of crises from multiple different people within the contact. However, it would be really tragic if. Camp and company didnt focus more on Ashley. Shes just a really, really cool character. Read Full Review
With Assorted Crisis Events #1 Deniz Camp and Eric Zawadski create an incredibly compelling comic book. You are completely ingrossed by the incredible imagination as your concept of the reality that creates a journey where you are truly following the lead character's experience. Read Full Review
Assorted Crisis Events #1 delivers a mind-bending journey through a world where time is unraveling. With its captivating premise and stellar creative team, this debut issue sets the stage for what could be one of the year's most innovative new comic series. Read Full Review
Absolutely superb. Deniz is becoming quite the talent.
This was a cool book. Really unique idea and did a great job of keeping the entertainment high.
This is a cool and different book. Worth checking out.
The concept is easy to get you going into Deniz Camp Assorted Crisis universe. Although its not communicated as a universe, you can see the potential. Anything is possible and it's kinda all over the place: time, distraction, cuts, life and drama. That is a lot of fun, but also something to get use to. All-round a strong first issue and Deniz lives up to his promise!
The next few issue will decide if this is a series has any potential to become a big Image title.
this was a good issue, if not a bit all over the place with a lot of time mumbo jumbo that may turn readers off. I don't say this often, but Jordie Bellaire is my definitive colorist.
I found Issue 1 meandering and a bit too easily satisfied with itself, a bit glib, which is not a trait I would have expected from Camp. I still want to know more about this world, but my excitement has dropped considerably for Issue 2.