THE BEGINNING OF A NEW ARC-"ALL THIS AND THE WORLD TOO"!
When global communications are shut down by an unknown militant force, the Avengers are called to stop them. But armed with powerful vibranium weapons and eerie knowledge on how to take down the Avengers one by one, this new squadron has T'Challa especially worried. And the reveal of who is leading them threatens to shatter everything T'Challa has come to understand and trust!
RATED T+
Peralta delivers some great art throughout the issue. The story is very character focused and the art takes advantage of that by showcasing the characters and their emotions. Read Full Review
‘Black Panther' returns to where it all began, revealing the mastermind that has been pulling the strings since issue one in a story that continues to test T'Challa and pull the character apart more and more. Some solid conversations and some great bits with the Avengers as well as solid powerful artwork make this story work pretty well. Read Full Review
From Black Panther's sleeper cells being revealed to a Wakandan civil war, we finally get answers to a long-running question. Read Full Review
Black Panther #11 starts the next arc of Ridley's run by bizarrely forcing T'Challa to consider whether or not he agrees with terrorists as long as they have good intentions. The pacing and plotting are excellent, but T'Challa's continued maltreatment at the hands of Ridley verges on shocking. Read Full Review
The ending reveal...is certainly interesting. Aside from that, I thought this was a good issue. This was well-written for the most part. I'm not sure how I feel about how Captain America was written here at times, but that didn't take too much away from my enjoyment of this. Also, I felt as though Peralta's art wasn't as good as the previous two issues, though it wasn't bad by any means.
Not bad. Interesting setup that needed another issue to ruminate before we got the reveal.
But ill take it.
This issue grew on me the closer I looked at it. It's fast and plot-heavy, which is not entirely good -- it needed a lot of exposition, and I think the "Shuri pep-talks T'Challa" scenes didn't get enough space. The art's good.
T'Challa is terrifyingly close to making another terrible "I must solve this all alone or possibly with my sister's help" decision, which is great dramatic irony given that the whole point of this volume is that he can be too devious for his own good.
(When Shuri lampshades how she's played an over-large role lately, though, I find it more annoying than charming. I'd rather storytellers FIX their problems instead of winking at me about them.)
This has interesting parts but I still don't know what happened to this book, I hope the series can regain its footing from now on...