Unrest on the Orpheus, an entity from beyond reality itself, and a therapy session gone horribly awry-Security Director Deva Karrell's investigation turns up few clues but many fresh horrors.
We may only be two issues in, but Infinite Dark is already one of the most intriguing mysteries in comics. Read Full Review
The atmosphere and environment in this story is sound and there is great drama and fear to be mined in an environment as chilling as the vacuum of space devoid of stars and life. Read Full Review
Infinite Dark works on a few levels, merging not only the genres of horror and sci-fi, but adding in a thriller as well. This creates a tense read full of twists and turns where no one is safe and hope is fading fast. Read Full Review
I'm willing to let this series develop more, as the debut interest left me wanting more and calling this a must-read, but Issue #3 has to bring some excitement because all work and no play makes for a dry reading experience. Read Full Review
A deep mystery set in space combining horror, science fiction, and mystery to deliver a fresh take on all the genres. Read Full Review
The mystery deepens as the thriller aspects of "Infinite Dark" rise up in its second issue. Read Full Review
Infinite Dark #2 continues the story of a murder after the end of the universe. The story is still interesting, but besides the main character, everyone else feels flat. The art is good and captures the bleak vibe, but the characters lack expression throughout. Read Full Review
This comic is still really neat but struggles to get itself to just the right balance of explaining too much and not enough. I’m interested in the monster but concerned about the way it’s being written. Art isn’t amazing.