T'Challa and his agents have uncovered the source of dark energy emanating from a small town in Oklahoma. Is it a super villain...or a savior?
Reality-spanning espionage, defense and black ops, all backed by Vibranium-laced technology and the will to use it. The Agents of Wakanda are our first line of defense in a world under siege from all sides.
Rated T
Wow, this was a fun issue!! I liked the story a lot and I was glad that Zub didn't waste time building characters that we're all familiar with. Add to that the amazing art of Medina and this one's totally worth the price of admission!! Read Full Review
There's a bit of humor in this book in that the title character in this book isn't faced with any inner demons. The reason given is protection he receives from the Black Panther suit but I'm skeptical. It could have been for the sake of time, but my preferred theory is that it's hard to think of something a mature Black Panther would be convincingly shaken by. The conflict is resolved as all should be; energy blasts, hammers and eating. Next issue promises to utilize Broo and Gorilla Man so I'm all the way psyched. Read Full Review
Lan Medina's art is amazing. Everything from the characters to the detailed backgrounds are thrilling to look at. Really love the action throughout. Read Full Review
Black Panther and the Agents of Wakanda #2 teaches its readers two things: 1) Fat Cobra is awesome, and 2) This team-up book is a ton of fun. Read Full Review
Black Panther and The Agents of Wakanda #2 is a no frills book that isn't trying to do too much. But, what it does try to do it does competently. If you just want to see some superheroes fight and have a bit of an adventure then take a glance at this issue. Read Full Review
Jumping around to different characters every other issue may prove to be this book's downfall. Read Full Review
This team-up of very random characters just isn't doing it for me. Read Full Review
Jim Zub has a cool team at his disposal and yet decided to go pretty generic with these first two issues and the book suffers because of it. Maybe things will pick up the next issue when they head off to the Moon to meet up with Broo and Gorilla Man, but youll have to let me know since I am checking out with no regerts! Good Day Sir! Read Full Review
Sorry but i really love this. must read and own .
I like Mr. Zub's writing a lot more when he's drilling down on a few characters and a constrained fight rather than completing a "kitchen sink" survey as in the previous issue. The art's pretty appealing, too.
I wonder if the next step Mr. Zub needs to take is trying his hand at a solo title. He's always been a team guy and he always seems to end up driving his teams off into the tall grass.
"We recruit only the best, Janet."
- BLACK PANTHER
First off, I would just like to appreciate everything that is Fat Cobra. He literally ate the Void. Yeah, the same Void that killed Sentry and Loki a couple years ago. Anyways, I though issue 1 was super generic so I was pleasantly surprised with this issue. Each character gets a decent amount of time to shine and the humor was much more improved. Jim Zub comics aren’t for everyone but I love them
This was better than issue one. Probably because there was less table setting to do.
That was fun. Nothing too demanding, although I loved how it tied into the recent Sentry miniseries, as well as planted the seeds (or at least I hope it did) to whatever's coming next for the character.
Prelude:
While the first issue of BP and the Agents of Wakanda was passable, let's see how this issue goes.
The Good:
I liked the introspective into our cast.
Sentry was interesting.
The Bad:
Quite boring of a read.
Not sure why Thor is there all of a sudden.
Conclusion:
It's a step down from Issue 1, that's for sure. While there were some interesting parts, it is largely boring and some choices feel odd.
Heh god loves moon kills, nice one,
That's two issues without Black Panther doing or saying anything interesting 😒