SECRET EMPIRE AFTERMATH!
• The Champions team was born from a fracture inside the Avengers. Now the events of SECRET EMPIRE have divided the Champions - and which ones are still with the team may surprise you!
Rated T+
Waid and Ramos continue to be a great team together especially when highlighting the team together or individually. It's like seeing a character on a couch in a session of therapy. While this issue mostly serves to grow Scott as a character it also serves as important reading for the end, to see how the team sees him afterwards. Listen man, Cyclops my mutant, I hate he had to get the raw end of the deal. Spider-Man (not the one on this team, the Parker one) always says “with great power, there must come great responsibility.” In Scott Summers' case he got a great power that continuously strips away all the norms most take for granted. Read Full Review
CHAMPIONS #12 moves away from SECRET EMPIRE and back to the antics that made the book click with readers. Mark Waid weaves a tale of emotional instability that shifts between laughter and heart-wrenching. Humberto Ramos and Edgar Delgado continue the bright, colorful style that is so important to the series. Read Full Review
Champions is one of the best team books out there. This isn't just a team of heroes, they're friends. And this issue really shows that from start to finish. Cyclops emotional roller coaster isn't just felt by himself. His entire team goes through it with him. There is no denying these teen heroes care for each other. Champions does what a lot of books fail to do these days. It goes beyond being heroes who beat up bad guys and shows a family of friends. And with all the angst of the last several years from IVX, Civil War 2, and Secret Empire. Champions is a breath of fresh air and reminds us, how fun comic books can be. Read Full Review
It's another excellent outing by writer Mark Waid and artists Humberto Ramos and Victor Olazaba - and thankfully, we're apparently done with the Secret Empire foolishness. Read Full Review
Writer Mark Waid and artist Humberto Ramos re-establish the world of the Champions in the post-Secret Empire world. Champions #12 is a done-in-one issue that gives readers a fun adventure alongside some fan favorite characters. Read Full Review
I think this series would probably be better served if it had a different artist. Read Full Review
The thing that I loved about the trio who started the Champions before they started the team was the building friendship. Seeing them in the pages of the Avengers and solo books learn about each other and become close was a lot of fun. He gave the titles a New Mutants feel that helped the characters feel their age since the rest of the time they are saving the world. In a case like Nova and Ms Marvel it started as a dislike and built up to close friends. This issue brings in more of that dynamic. Cyclops, the time displaced younger Scott Summers, has struggled with not wanting to become the man he is destined to be. In the pages of All New X-Men he thought about leaving the X-Men because it meant following that path. He also is a man insidemore
I love it! Very fun issue which focuses on the most underrated member of the Champions, Cyclops!
Funny, great art and great single issue storyline - that's Champions at its best! Read it!
A great story about Cyclops. It's funny and intelligent. The only thing is that a story I will more see in a X book.
I never read that with the original one when he debut. And I regret the Blue Team wasn't there.
That said. I find very wrong the fact we come from Secret Empire like nothing happen. The team is there like nothing happen and Ironheart, Patriot and Wasp aren't there anymore. That's very very weird.
Love the art. Ramos make the best of the character he draw.
Still better than Super Sons for me. Still in progress & close up with the feeling I had reading Peter David & Todd Nauck's Young Justice.
Fun issue, with a plot similar to what you'd expect from the original Teen Titans cartoon, which is, in my opinion, a step in the right direction for this book. It also revives the old Flyclops meme, which is always positive.
A one-shot fight against Psycho-Man unfilters all of Cyclops's emotions. The manic portions are cheesy comedy, but Mark Waid strikes a rich vein of heartbreak in writing Scott's darker moments. Humberto Ramos's art is a little uneven, but the attention lavished on some crowd fights toward the end shows that this issue doesn't actually have a net shortage of artistic effort. Overall it's well above average, and Cyclops's pain provides an sharp emotional hook that will help a lot of readers fall in love.
It's been a while since Champions has had a great overall issue, but Waid executed a great character deep-dive in this one.