As the Black Panther and an Avenger, T'Challa has had to save the world time and again -- but those duties pale in comparison to his responsibilities as king of Wakanda. As the nation rebuilds in the wake of revolution, T'Challa finds his people besieged by a massive monster tearing through the country, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake!
Part of the comiXology Originals line of exclusive digital content only available on comiXology and Kindle. This title is available as part of comiXology Unlimited at release.
No critic ratings have been found for this issue.
Fun almost Saturday morning cartoon feel.
The Hatut Zeraze are hardcore operatives, I'm not saying that they shouldn't be depicted without personality, but they shouldn't act this informal in the presence of their king. What I do like is the expansion of the communities within Wakanda with this Mute Zone that operates with its own sovereignty, it makes for a more rich and diverse kingdom.
T'Challa heads into the Mute Zone with Wardog Bros 1 & 2 and meets a pack of smug teens and a female chief with whom he has a mysterious history. Also he has to fight a literal Panther. André Lima Araújo's art is still dumpy but polished, and at this point I'm suspecting that Nnedi Okorafor's story outline clocked in at about four issues and the editor said, "Ennnh, we'll just let André stretch it out." There are some interesting ideas being unfolded v-e-e-e-ry slowly. The amount of teenaged smugness emanating from both appropriate (the Mute Zone's tech teens) and inappropriate (the Wardog Bros) sources is kind of overwhelming to me, but I'm a crotchety geezer. If I had a tween daughter she'd probably *love* reading this, and that is *demore