Crane's quest takes him across the Himalayas and into a sunken temple in the Indian Ocean, where he battles pirates and great white sharks to find clues about the missing scroll. But the evil lying in wait is getting stronger.
Edison Crane continues his winning streak and is quickly proving to be one of the most fascinating leads in comics. Read Full Review
Overall, I thought that this was a fun issue of Prodigy. Im loving the direction the story has taken, and Im pretty keen to see where things go from here. Read Full Review
The grand scale and scope of this story is punctuated by Rafael Albuquerque's extraordinary artwork. The issue looks amazingly detailed and is the perfect complement to this consistently fun and imaginative story. Read Full Review
Overall. I'm really liking where this is going and hoping to learn a little more about The Brotherhood of The Dragan in the next issue. Read Full Review
Prodigy #3 sets the world traveling tone of this series and explores the man Edison Crane has become. Strip away the publicity stunts, simultaneous world class chess opponents and his rockstar reputation, you find out how real Prodigy is. It's hard to make a suave, wealthy, genius feel so genuine but Millar is the one of the best to ever make a complex character completely relatable and endearing. Read Full Review
And they lost me with this treasure hunt.
Cover - I take the variant. Nice but not related. 1/2
Writing - Not bad, but they lost me in their, I cannot say when or why. 1.5/3
Arts - The arts is very good. Even if I have some doubt in the way Cross hang up after the train accident. Is that even possible with the weight he hold with another hand to have his arm in this position ? 3/3
Feeling - I think they lost me here. I will try to read it again. 1/2