You've dreamed of it, you've asked for it, you've longed for it - and now, you're going to GET it! No Avenger is safe from - the fan fiction of Kamala Khan! Featuring a bevy of special guest creators!
Rated T+
All-New All-Different Avengers Annual #1 was a true delight. Ive had my own issues with the Marvel line, so to see this surface means that maybe theres a chance that the line could continue to grow in diverse stories that give us a break from event-laden storylines. By the end, I was cracking up, reveling in my experience reading this comic. If you love Kamala and fanfiction, even ironically, I highly suggest you read this issue. It does not disappoint and was absolutely entertaining. Read Full Review
This comic is witty and biting and on point. This comic is like Twitter without the Trolls and the Trump. It is what I needed this week, and may be what you need next week. If you're a Ms. Marvel fan, or a fan fiction fan of any sort, this needs to be in your collection. Read Full Review
With plenty of shout outs to ships and a heap of good-natured ribbing, All-New All-Different Avengers Annual #1 is a delightful love letter to the new generation of Marvel fans. Read Full Review
All-New All-Different Avengers Annual #1 looks at fandom and fan fiction in a mostly humorous and sometimes critical light through the POV of Kamala Khan, the Marvel Universe's biggest superhero fangirl. Add in the varied art styles from creators, who mainly work on indie titles or webcomics, and it's worth picking up even if you're not keeping up with the main All-New All-Different Avengers series. Read Full Review
It's not a laugh out loud experience all the way through, but it's a highly enjoyable smirk worthy read none the less. It's plain fun all the way through and you can't say that for most comics these days! Read Full Review
While I'd love to have seen more of a meta-discussion of online culture and fanfiction, there is some of that, but that's not really the point. The point is to provide something different and fun and this annual succeeds when it comes to that. Read Full Review
Because these stories needn't be constrained by logic anything can and does happen within these pages. I only wish the various creative teams had room to get a bit more in-depth with their epic fantasy tales. Read Full Review
This issue's biggest crime is that it doesn't let us read the story that pissed off Kamala in the first place: "Ms. Marvel and the Teenage Love Triangle from Space." We do get to see who wrote the offending tale, and now we really want to know what was in it! But that didn't detract too much from a very enjoyable issue. Read Full Review
This issue's biggest crime is that it doesn't let us read the story that pissed off Kamala in the first place: "Ms. Marvel and the Teenage Love Triangle from Space." We do get to see who wrote the offending tale, and now we really want to know what was in it! But that didn't detract too much from a very enjoyable issue. Read Full Review
ANADAA#1 suffers from the comics format. It's an anthology with a low page count (six stories, 31 pages to share). With each writer garnering 5-7 pages max, they don't have a lot of space to make their individual voices heard. This leads to some heavy-handed punchlines at the end of a few tales (I'm looking dead at you 'The Once and Future Marvel'!) It's either that, or, like Natasha Allegri's "The Adventures of She-Hulk," exercises in the non-sequitur. Read Full Review
Really fun concept that was, for the most part, decently pulled off. I was slightly annoyed at how Spider-Mole was suddenly able to see at the end of his bit. Mostly, I did not see a reason to include Natasha Allegri's story in it at all. The story and art were a mess, but mostly, why include a She-Hulk story in an Avengers book? Did they ask her to come up with something and she completely missed what she was writing for but because of deadlines they printed it!? Ugh. Anyways, other than that, the rest of the stories work well as fan fiction adaptations.
The stories are very fun and enjoyable to read and watch. Writing the development of Kamala Khan and the punch-lines on the jokes into the stories are their highest fortress.
Pointless, meaningless, waste of 5 dollars.
Shit