Adley and Staden finally meet and form a strong bond as they begin training to rescue her parents. A new, unexpectedly dangerous technology takes them to an ancient city and an encounter with a mysterious, haunting figure.
Hexagon Bridge #2 doesn't suffer from any of the typical problems that 2nd issues tend to have. It moves things along nicely, it expands on what has already been established in interesting ways, and it creates excitement for what comes next. Read Full Review
If you havent given this story a shot, take a leap and give into Hexagon Bridge. Its a story that has already cemented a high standard of what makes a good comichell, a good story. Read Full Review
Blake delivers beautifully detailed art on every page. The world of this series is beautifully rendered and just as compelling as the story itself. Read Full Review
This book is interesting for managing to do so much world- and character-building in such an array of sizes and scopes. And even if that architecture is wildly compelling, it doesn't quite add up to the inner workings of the people in these spaces, who explore ideas both emotional and existential in really novel ways. Read Full Review
While the artwork of Hexagon Bridge remain as gorgeous as ever, the pacing issues from the first issue remains a problem. Read Full Review
The story is really intriguing and the art is absolutely incredible. It's hard to rate this issue-by-issue cause I feel like this is the kind of comic that demands to be read in one sitting and judged as a whole rather than each part separately. This seems like it was Richard Blake's intent; I'm reading the trade currently and they made the choice not to include cover pages to separate the issues, so it definitely seems like the goal was for the story to consumed as one cohesive unit. For what it is though, I'm really enjoying it and it has me very interested in where everything is going.
https://youtu.be/IDL47xhxzyg?si=rk4EGTg_GyjXPshi
Review at (6:35) in link!