Void Rivals #29
| Writer | Robert Kirkman |
| Artist | Andrei Bressan, Patricio Delpeche |
| Cover Price | $3.99 |
The Quintesson War nears its conclusion as Darak and his father, Minister Dulin, are put on trial! Oh, wait—what is an ELITE SHARKTICON?!
CRITIC REVIEWS Back to Top
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9.5
Lyles Movie Files - Jeffrey Lyles
Apr 22, 2026Void Rivals 29 ends on a familiar cliffhanger for Transformers fans with things looking especially bleak for the Agorrians and Zertonians. Hopefully for their sake, something will happen to light their very darkest hour. Read Full Review
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8.1
Comic Watch - Anthony Bergamini
Apr 22, 2026Void Rivals #29 delivers strong visuals and long-awaited narrative momentum as the Quintessen War nears its climax. Read Full Review
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8.0
Comic Book Revolution - Kevin Lainez
Apr 25, 2026Void Rivals #29 does a great job at feeling like everyone in this issue has thrown all their cards down on the table. Read Full Review
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7.5
Comical Opinions - Gabriel Hernandez
Apr 22, 2026Void Rivals #29 is a fast-paced, action-packed issue that puts the citizens of the Sacred Ring on the ropes against the invading Quintessons. Robert Kirkman provides significant plot movement, and the art by Andrei Bressan looks great. However, there are too many plot threads to manage, and the book is losing its focus; everyone is moving in the right direction, but no one is taking center stage. Read Full Review
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7.5
Fanlight Zone - Richard Coryell
Apr 22, 2026Void Rivals #29 puts us on the final path to the end of the Quintesson War. The action is non-stop and, in your face, which creates a great deal of excitement. The art captures all of this action in great detail. The only downside is that the story is kind of all over the place which can be confusing at times. This arc has felt a little underwhelming and will really need to stick the landing on the finish to be memorable. Read Full Review
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6.0
AIPT - George Loftus
Apr 21, 2026Void Rivals #29 gets back on track and moves the story forward to set up an epic conclusion to the Quintesson War arc, but while the scenery changes at a breakneck pace, consequential moments of the story feel like like they're being rationed, dripping out at a snail's pace so you don't enjoy the story too much. With no solution for our heroes in sight, the finale has the potential to be explosive, but the penultimate chapter still falls a little flat because of its reliance on things we’ve already seen, and lines we’ve already heard. Read Full Review
USER REVIEWS Back to Top
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8.0
This was a much better issue...felt like more happened and was better put together...and the art was top notch. Bressan has really been shining through this arc...
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8.0
I didn’t know what to expect when I cracked open Void Rivals #29 … the cover felt nostalgic, harkening back to the 1986 Transformers movie, what I got was shades of that and so much more. Where as the Transformers series is a love letter to the classic Transformers of the 80s, Void Rivals seems to be madly deeply in-love with the insane elements of the (post movie) third season of the cartoon. Everything about this book so far (including this Quintesson War story arc) screams third season, and we are all better off because of it. This chapter finds Zerta Trion communing with Vector Theta in a last ditch effort to stop the war. Meanwhile on the surface the battle is turning against the Agorrians, making things feel hopeless and yet still epi more