Ant-Man & The Wasp #4

8.5

Critic Rating

5 Reviews
7.6

User Rating

14 Reviews
Writer Mark Waid
Artist Javi Garron
Cover Price $3.99

• Every time Ant-Man and Wasp shrink in the Microverse, they enter a reality with new physics, new beings and new danger!
•  How much smaller can they get before there's no way back?
•  Marvel's weirdest science trip takes things up, er, down a notch!
Rated T+

Reviews (5) User Reviews (14) Rate / Write A Review

CRITIC REVIEWS Back to Top

  • 10

    ComicBook.com - Charlie Ridgely

    Aug 01, 2018

    A genuinely exciting story mixed with bright colors and smooth artwork makes for another A+ installment to this series. Read Full Review

  • 10

    Comic Watch - C. A. Wylie

    Aug 08, 2018

    This issue was fantastic and I was hard pressed to find any fault with it. So I gave it a perfect score. I really wish this series wasn't a mini. Read Full Review

  • 7.5

    AIPT - Russ Dobler

    Aug 01, 2018

    The emotional beats aren't what they could be, and the science-babble is thick, but the plot progresses and you're dying to know what happens next. Read Full Review

  • 7.5

    Bleeding Cool - Joshua Davison

    Aug 05, 2018

    Ant-Man and the Wasp #4 is probably the weakest issue of the miniseries, but its still an entertaining book. The charm of Nadia van Dyne and Scott Lang outshines the somewhat shallow plot. I can still recommend this one. Check it out. Read Full Review

  • 7.3

    Sequential Planet - Steven Martinez

    Aug 03, 2018

    With a good story and art to match, Ant-Man & The Wasp #4 is another in an incredibly enjoyable mini-series. Read Full Review

USER REVIEWS Back to Top

  • 9.0

    Nickweiser

    Aug 01, 2018

    Fun story. Great art and a big left field turn!

  • 9.0

    Kalaoui

    Aug 02, 2018

    Great story by Waid and awesome art by Garron beautifully colored by Silva. One of my favorite books because it's just fun!!!

  • 7.5

    Ryan

    Nov 07, 2021

    So ridiculous that it's good. I like the blue guy

  • 7.0

    CrazyforRAMU

    Feb 11, 2019

    Scott and Nadia technobabble their way to what looks like but of course is not their home. They realize the too-good-to-be-trueness just in time and keep on adventuring. The visuals here hit a very high standard, but the overall effect is undercut by a pair of splash pages that are blatant conservation of artistic effort. This was really close to good, but I'm still too prickled by the ongoing treatment of Nadia as a second-class protagonist due to her age and sex. Of course she's got a REASON not to be on point - the fakeout Earth offers up the father figure she desperately wants - but that's exactly how marginalization works: How compelling the reasons are is less important than the fact that the reasons are always there. Somehow, eve more

  • 6.0

    Spacey Medicine

    Mar 05, 2019

    This was fine but didn't really grab me or anything.

  • 8.5

    Grifter

    Aug 02, 2018

  • 8.5

    Freden

    Aug 05, 2018

  • 8.0

    mrDovydas

    Aug 13, 2018

  • 8.0

    StanielK

    Sep 06, 2018

  • 8.0

    Psycamorean

    Oct 09, 2018

  • 7.5

  • 7.0

    ÜberGinger

    Aug 02, 2018

  • 6.0

    CesarCastanha

    Aug 02, 2018

  • 6.0

    unratedlogician

    Aug 06, 2018

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