WAR OF THE REALMS TIE-IN! DEADPOOL GOES DOWN UNDER!
• As the War of the Realms rages, Deadpool is sent to Australia to take care of a pesky troll problem!
• No, not those obnoxious internet nerds. REAL TROLLS!
• How many didgeridoo jokes can one comic book make? Let's find out together!
Parental Advisory
This is everything a Deadpool comic should be. Read Full Review
Skottie Young takes some swipes at the War of the Realms Event as his main character gets involved inthe War of the Realms Event. Its all good fun that looks fantastic, thanks to Nic Kleins awesome art and made me chuckle pretty much the whole time. Read Full Review
'Deadpool #13' is an outlandishly hilarious story packed full of classic Wade Wilson antics. What it lacks in seriousness, it more than makes up for with pure unadulterated fun! Read Full Review
The comic could have done more by allowing these metaphors to live beyond just a quick laugh here and there. An example, maybe allowing these characters to serve as different entities of Deadpool and how he sees himself in comparison to others? Relating mundane objects to the idea of mediocrity versus strength? I know there were many ways to do this, but I'm oddly excited to see the next entry. Read Full Review
Skottie Young finds a whole new way to get self-aware with this issue's dialogue, and seeing Nic Klein's art used in the overall context of the "War of the Realms" event is a delight. Read Full Review
Deadpool #13 so far is a solid tie-in to the WotR event. One might hesitate with books when they break off to do tie-ins, though this is an exception for the way that it stays Deadpool. This one may not be action-packed, but the next one surely will be. For this chapter you simply sat back to enjoy the hilarity in Wade going to a place where the jokes pretty much write themselves. Read Full Review
Deadpool is dispatched to Australia to fight trolls, and with his new, silly local hero pals, that's exactly what he'll do. Excellent indie-style art and a solidly humorous "endearing jackass" voice for Deadpool. The Australian heroes work just fine for a brief arc where their main duties are to be punchlines.
Same complaint as always, this comic is the definition of try-hard.
A lot of the humor falls flat. In fact, the Tasmanian Devil joke is so try hard, I literally made that joke in a writing project I did as a child. The story is barebones. The only redeeming factor here is Nic Klein's art. I really like it.