• Our heroes make it back to Earth! But...
• Shouldn't Earth be bigger? This is a big (small) problem!
Rated T+
This one of the best series I have read this year, if not the best series. Highly recommended. Read Full Review
For as great of a series as Ant-Man and the Wasp has been, the conclusion feels a little lackluster. Read Full Review
Ant-Man & The Wasp #5 is a satisfying conclusion to a well written, well drawn miniseries. Read Full Review
Ant-Man and the Wasp #5 finishes the series on a decent note. Its not the best issue of the miniseries, and the book doesnt give a narratively strong finish. That said, its still a good bit of fun and worth a recommendation if you want more of the wacky sci-fi adventures of Scott and Nadia. Feel free to check it out. Read Full Review
Ant-Man and the Wasp #5 played it safe with how things ended. Fortunately the dynamic that Mark Waid developed over the course of these five issues between Scott Lang and Nadia Van Dyne was enjoyable enough to be satisfied with how the story concluded. Though that dynamic was not enough to create a compelling story that suffered greatly because it lack a true antagonist for Ant-Man and the Wasp to overcome. That problem makes Ant-Man and the Wasp only a comic I recommend those who are fans of these two characters pick up. Read Full Review
What a wonderful mini series this was. I feel like i need more. Should've been an ongoing. Kudos to Waid for his great writing, Garron for his Amazing art and Silva's beautiful colors. Javier Garron has done an outstanding job here!!
The series as a whole is fun if slightly confusing with all the science thing. Hardly canon, but good exposure for Lang and especially Nadia, and a weird and endearing blue monster from a Microverse alien race.
Great art from Javier Garron.
Nice conclusion to an overall very nice mini.
Way too sciencey but not horrible I liked the art and Dalen Burr
Scott and Nadia wrap up their quantum adventure. Once again, Nadia's job is to spit up technobabble and wait for Scott to recombine bits of it into a street-smart "outside the box" solution. Grr. And, of course, Nadia has to cry one last time, double grr. I also wasn't a fan of the "Subatomica weirdness" getting illustrated as "general Marvel meta-gags" instead of the blend of Scott-and-Nadia-specific memories that Nadia suggests it should be. I don't think either of them have spent nearly enough time around the X-Men to justify all the mutant jokes, for example. Plus side, the meta-gags are funny in themselves - they blip through Swimsuit Special World for a panel - and the overall visual standards are sky high. The final pages are tops fomore
meh. too much of the silly stuff for my taste, but not bad enough to really sink it.
not much of a story. its like they finished one issue too soon and had to do something.
so this is what they did.
and.. its over. I could have liked this to continue.