BEHOLD, CONQUEST!
• At last - CABLE face-to-face with CONQUEST!
• But with an army assembled from throughout time, what chance does Cable have of surviving?
• A desperate play is all Cable has left...
Rated T+
Well there is only one more piece of the time sword left and thanks to some Celestial tech using Mayans, Cable has a better idea of where it is than Conquest. Looks like this story arc is going to draw to a close with a bang. Read Full Review
Admittedly, this one has a bunch of Cable being Cable. So if you dont care for Cable, you probably wont enjoy this book, no matter how much I did. But lets face ithe takes on about 20 guys on horseback with futuristic weaponsand kicks their collective behinds. Its a fun romp and while its not a terribly deep story, its fun seeing Cable back. Still, I wouldve given it a higher score if this didnt feel so 1990s. Read Full Review
Cable's newest adversary introduces himself in this issue and he's every bad guy clich that you've ever seen. It's very disappointing, even if it is an intentional choice by the writer. Read Full Review
A skippable issue in a series that's got a lot of decompression problems. Read Full Review
Cable turns the tables on Conquest during their visit to Tsarist Russia. Unfortunately, when Cable tries to cut off Conquest's exposition with an "I don't care," he's speaking for the readers as well as himself. Conquest is a bargain-basement Kang knockoff, and depriving him of the Time Sword is just an average Wednesday for Cable. Artist Yildiray Cinar delivers some outstanding visuals that lend more weight to James Robinson's script than it deserves. The bones of the plot and the pacing are fine, but this issue is a notable storehouse of Terrible Dialogue - line after line that you regret reading.