Gabriel Winter always had one eye on the future. So how long did he know that the end of the internet was inevitable... or that the Lane family would be at the center of this conflict? Elsewhere, FBI agent Siobhan Silk's search for PH34R nears its end, but what she stumbles across is worse than she ever imagined.
The final pages inject more horror into the proceedings, but pound for pound, W0rldTr33 still has my vote for the best horror comic book on the market right now. Read Full Review
W0Rldtr33 remains dark as hell and refuses to let readers free from its hypnotic techno terrors. This issue may be a build up entry in the story, but one can only imagine what horrors will come next. Read Full Review
This latest issue of James Tynion IV and Fernando Blanco's W0rldtr33 shows flashes of what made the series great, but it ultimately is bogged down by slow pacing and disjointed world-building. Read Full Review
After the last two issues that left more to be desired, we get this really solid issue that pushed everything forward.
I get a good mystery required patience, but this feels like theyre drawing a lot of this out. Not saying it's bad, it's just starting to get kinda boring and expected.
The story crawls forward another inch in this issue. It also in many ways begins in this issue, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, except it begins by way of a long, indulgent exposition dump. Still, it felt like a step in the right direction. The premise is strong enough that I'm willing to accept a painfully slow pace and occasional obnoxious storytelling decisions, like cutting away whenever something interesting is about to happen. This book obviously has some cool stuff in store. The question is: will we reach that stuff in this decade?